The Pennsylvania Treasury Department

04/21/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/21/2026 09:19

Treasurer Stacy Garrity: More than $160,000 Returned to Blair County Organizations

Altoona, PA - Pennsylvania Treasurer Stacy Garrity today announced that more than $160,000 worth of unclaimed property was found for participating employers at the Blair County CareerLink's Spring Job Fair held at the Jaffa Shrine Center in Altoona.


"Employers at the job fair were hoping to find new, valuable employees, but Treasury was able to provide them with a little financial boost too by returning this unclaimed property. Unclaimed property is owed to all types of organizations across the state, so I always encourage everyone to search for themselves, their families and any business, nonprofit or other entity they're involved in."


Pennsylvania State Treasurer Stacy Garrity

Treasury's outreach team assisted participants of the job fair in their search for unclaimed property, resulting in $161,105 being found for 17 employers including:

  • Penn Highlands - $55,722.95
  • Conemaugh Health - $27,268.01
  • First Commonwealth Bank - $24,538.96
  • City of Altoona - $14,645.19
  • Skills of Central PA - $8,380.00
  • Altoona School District - $5,352.02
  • Spectrum Control - $5,016.49
  • Lampire Biological - $4,861.89
  • Estes Express - $4,313.01
  • UPMC Altoona - $3,069.40
  • Cove Forge Behavioral Health - $2,365.12
  • Saint Francis University - $2,238.20
  • New Pig - $1,254.91
  • Leonard S. Fiore - $704.99
  • Spring Cove School District - $691.77
  • Champion Homes - $379.48
  • Burgmeiers Hauling - $302.65

"I would highly encourage more employers to check for unclaimed property with PA Treasury. Having PA Treasury onsite to provide the unclaimed property component was highly valuable. This is something employers should be aware of and take advantage of as part of their regular business operations, not just during events."


Joe Razo, CWDP, PA CareerLink Program Supervisor Blair County

Unclaimed property can include things like dormant bank accounts, uncashed checks, insurance policies, contents of forgotten safe deposit boxes and more. State law requires businesses to report unclaimed property to Treasury after three years of dormancy.


Treasury is working to return more than $5 billion in unclaimed property, including nearly $19 million owed to Blair County residents. More than one in ten Pennsylvanians are owed unclaimed property, and the average claim is worth over $1,000.


Since taking office, Treasurer Garrity has returned more than $1 billion, including a record $334 million last year.


To search for unclaimed property, visit patreasury.gov/unclaimed-property.

The Pennsylvania Treasury Department published this content on April 21, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 21, 2026 at 15:19 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]