Pennsylvania has the dubious distinction of having one of the smallest amounts of money stashed away for a rainy day than most other states in the nation, according to a new study released on Friday by the Pew Charitable Trust.

In fact, it says the commonwealth's reserves are so low they could only fund state government operations for a tenth of a day.

Gov. Tom Wolf said on Thursday during a radio interview the state's Rainy Day Fund balance stands at $245,000 but said a revenue package the Senate passed last week to fully fund the state's $32 billion enacted spending plan for 2017-18 would start to build that back up.

For comparison, the balance in the Rainy Day Fund was $755 million just eight years ago, according to Governing magazine.

The fate of that Senate-passed revenue package now rests with the House of Representatives. As of Friday morning, the House had not set a date for when it will return to consider the Senate-passed revenue plan.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, state Treasurer Joe Torsella authorized a short-term $750 million line of credit to keep the state's general fund from dipping into negative territory. Torsella said it is the earliest in 25 years the state has had to borrow money to deal with a cash-flow problem and also unprecedented for the state to be doing it with an out-of-balance general fund budget.

While Pennsylvania's savings account balance looks rather dismal, New Jersey and Nevada appear to be worse off. Their piggy banks are empty.

The Pew study said five other states have a little more than Pennsylvania but not enough to get through a full week if they were forced to live on their reserves. Connecticut has enough to cover 4.8 days; Hawaii, 5.4 days; Illinois, 3.7 days; Virginia, 4.5 days; and Wisconsin, 6.5 days.

Alaska has the most with enough to cover 477.8 days worth of spending, it states.

In total, the report, which is based off data collected by the National Association of State Budget Officers and surveys Pew conducted last spring, says states had $80.8 billion in reserves at the end of the 2015-16 fiscal year.