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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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April 26, 2010
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Dear Constituent,
The General Assembly will reconvene on Tuesday,
April 27, for the 39th legislative day of the 2010
session. Thursday, April 29, is scheduled as the 40th
and final day.
Please contact
me with your views on any issue that needs to
be addressed or whenever I can be of service.
Lee Thompson
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Legislators reach agreement on transportation funding
After three years of trying to reach agreement on a
solution to the state's transportation funding
problems, the House of Representatives and the
Senate gave final approval to HB 277 on Wednesday.
Under the legislation, Georgia will be divided into 12
regions, each of which will hold a referendum in 2012
for a special 1 percent sales tax to be used for
transportation improvements within that region.
Individual counties cannot opt out of the funding plan,
but a "roundtable" of local elected officials can decide
not to hold a tax referendum in their regions, whose
boundaries mirror those of Georgia's regional
commissions, including the 10-county Atlanta
Regional Commission.
The bill also gives MARTA more flexibility to
spend its sales tax revenues on new projects, a
beginning step to helping the transit agency address
a $120 million budget shortfall.
This is not a perfect piece of legislation by any means.
Putting these votes off until 2012 means it will be at
least 2013 before any revenue comes in from the
special sales tax to fund the transportation
improvements needed in our area. Holding the
referendums during the 2010 election cycle would
have been preferable.
But after three years of failing to come up with any
transportation funding solution, HB 277 is certainly
better than nothing. It now goes to the governor for his
signature.
Ethics Legislation: The House and
Senate also sent new ethics legislation to the
governor's desk for his signature on Wednesday. SB 17 doubles the fines for late reporting
and other violations of campaign disclosure rules,
demands more timely reporting of expenditures by
lobbyists, makes sexual harassment by legislators a
punishable offense and bans lobbyists from
communicating with legislators by Blackberry or other
electronic devices while the legislature is in session.
An amendment also brings the members of the State
Transportation Board under ethics law provisions
regarding personal financial disclosure and lobbyist
spending.
Amended FY 2010 Budget: On Wednesday, the
House gave final approval to the supplemental budget
for the remainder of the current fiscal year, which ends
June 30. HB 947, the amended version of the fiscal
year 2010 budget, reduces overall spending by $1.5
billion from the budget's original form passed last
year. The Senate signed off on the plan Tuesday, so
the bill awaits the governor's signature.
Other House Action: Last week, House
members approved a number of other legislative
measures, including the following:
HB 16, which would prohibit the electronic
tracking of
the location or movement of another person without
that person's consent.
HB 344, which would provide immunity
from lawsuits to voluntary physician assistants in
safety net clinics.
HB 567, which under the Crime Victims'
Bill of Rights would strengthen the rights of victims of
acts of juvenile delinquency.
HB 883, the Sanitary Activity for Food-
Processing Enterprises (SAFE) Act, which gives the
Commissioner of Agriculture authority regarding
safety plans in the processing of food products.
HB 908, which would allow local school
systems to increase class sizes over the next three
years. I voted against this legislation because, while
understanding the difficult financial situation that local
schools are in, this legislation provided no restrictions
on class size. The state has caused
the budget problems for local schools through QBE
funding cuts, and we should be focusing on ways to
provide our local schools the resources they need to
educate our children.
HB 1021, which would include Salvia
divinorum A on the state's list of dangerous drugs.
HB 1179, which would require hospitals
to offer annual flu shots to their employees.
HB 1435, which would create a House
study committee and citizens advisory council on the
hotel-motel tax.
SB 1, which would require the application
of "zero-based" budgeting to the state budget process.
SB 6, which would give judges more
flexibility regarding the penalties
for violations related to driving with a restricted license.
SB 340, which would require public and
private schools to adopt a reporting system for high
school juniors, sophomores and freshmen for the
purpose of determining their HOPE Scholarship
eligibility.
SB 346, which changes how property
owners appeal the assessed value of their parcels. It
extends the period for appealing property valuation
from 30 days to 45 days.
SB 409, which would require that any tax
break or exemption granted to a business that
uses "raw forest products," such as a biomass energy
plant, must also be granted to the owner of the
property where that product is harvested.
SB 427, which would establish the
Georgia Foundation for Public Education, the purpose
of which is to solicit and accept contributions of
money, services and property to support educational
excellence in Georgia.
SR 822, which would urge the
Department of Transportation to seek a waiver from
the Federal Highway Administration in order to allow
retail developments in rest areas along interstate
highways.
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Lee's Legislation
Click here to review
2009-2010 legislation sponsored or co-sponsored by
Rep.
Lee Thompson.
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