 On Wednesday, the House of Representatives passed overwhelmingly with bipartisan support the Medical Marijuana Bill that legalizes medical marijuana, gives doctors the ability to treat their patients with one more approach to healing. I intend to sign it. I think it's a grand step forward for Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Medicine, and certainly for the individual Pennsylvanians and their families who are suffering from so many different diseases that can be helped with medical marijuana. On Thursday I was in Pittsburgh at the Heinz School in Carnegie Mellon to talk about government reform and really what I talked about was building on what I had been doing since I was inaugurated in the executive branch in terms of making government work better and more democratically and more openly. And I want to broaden that to the rest of government, state government, so that people have a reason to trust their public servants in Harrisburg. There's a broad feeling in Harrisburg that we need to do a better job with things like the gift ban, with things like campaign finance reform and lobbying disclosure, that kind of thing so that we can actually get to a place where people we serve in Harrisburg. Citizens of Pennsylvania actually have confidence in their government. On Wednesday I was presented a budget, a so-called budget, by Republicans in the Senate and the House. And it had the problem that the number of their budgets, sort of a pattern of the past, that the budget didn't actually add up. We need a budget that actually balances. We have to have a conversation and debate discussion about what the priorities of any budget ought to be. But there shouldn't be any need for a debate, a discussion over whether the math should work. Constitutionally the math has to work in practice. It has to work. The state needs to appropriate only the money that it has to appropriate no more.