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This year the federal government is conducting the 2010 Census. The census is a count of everyone residing in the United States. All U.S. residents must be counted, including both citizens and non-citizens.
The census is important for a number of reasons. It will determine state population counts and determine representation in the U.S. House of Representatives, as well as boundaries for state and local legislative and congressional districts. Census data also guides planning for new hospitals, roads, job training centers, schools and other programs essential to communities.
Your participation is particularly important in this year's census. Georgia is poised to pick up one or two Congressional seats, expanding our representation in Congress.
Most of you should have already received the Census in the mail. If you do not receive a questionnaire by the end of March, you can pick one up from several public sites. Households should complete and mail back questionnaires upon receipt. Households that do not respond may receive a replacement questionnaire in early April. Census takers will visit homes that do not return questionnaires to take a count in person.
I encourage everyone to participate in the 2010 Census. It is critically important and only takes a few minutes.
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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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March 23, 2010
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Dear Constituent,
Monday, March 22, was the 28th legislative day of the
2010 session of the General Assembly, the start of a
very busy week at the Capitol. See details below.
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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Busy week in House before cross-over day
Friday, March 26, will be the 30th legislative day of
the 2010 session of the Georgia General Assembly.
Day 30 is known as "cross-over day" because it is the
final day for the House of Representatives to pass
legislation in time for it to be considered by the Senate
during this session, and vice versa. Because this is
the second session of a two-year term, legislation that
has not been approved by either house by the end of
Day 30 will be considered dead.
As a result, the pace of the legislative process picked
up this week, with numerous bills approved by the
House and sent to the Senate, including the following:
HB 571, which would change portions of
the state's sex offender laws that have been rejected
by recent court decisions. The legislation would allow
low-risk inmates to petition the courts to be removed
from the sex offender registry after completing their
sentences, including those who are disabled,
confined to hospice care or who were convicted
in "Romeo and Juliet" cases of consensual teen sex.
A judge could approve or deny the petition.
HB 788, which would prohibit animal
shelters from using carbon monoxide to euthanize
stray dogs and cats. Only lethal injections would be
allowed for euthanasia in shelters.
HB 936, which would assist local school
systems with their student transportation expenses by
authorizing the use of the replacement allowance for
purchasing new school buses to refurbish existing
buses. I co-sponsored this legislation, which was
authored by Rep. Paul Battles (R-Cartersville).
HB 965, which would authorize local
governments to choose whether they want to allow
bicycle riding on their sidewalks and also to require
motorists to yield to bicycles when they are required to
yield to pedestrians.
HB 979, which would increase the
penalties for assault and battery on a member of a
law enforcement agency's explorer program.
HB 982, which would would allow the
Department of Revenue to garnish wages for past due
taxes without going through the same legal process
as all other creditors. While I support greater
enforcement of current laws and collection of unpaid
taxes, I voted against this bill because I believe it
takes away due process rights currently provided to
the taxpayer by the required court proceedings.
HB 1093, which would require city and
county governments to furnish the state Department of
Revenue with information about businesses that are
licensed locally. The department would then cross-
check that information against its records to crack
down on businesses that are not submitting sales tax
to the state. This is a step in the right direction toward
increasing state revenues that are now going
uncollected.
HB 1106, which would require animal
shelter personnel to scan dogs and cats for implanted
microchip identification prior euthanizing the animal.
HB 1188, which would allow the
Department of Revenue to hire up to 10 tax agents
trained as state-certified law enforcement officers to
handle tax fraud and theft cases. I voted against this
bill because I believe it improperly mixes the duties of
the revenue department and the duties of law
enforcement.
HB 1332, which would block law
enforcement agencies from distributing certain explicit
crime scene photos of victims. Credentialed
journalists would be able to inspect the photos under
supervision by GBI personnel but not copy or publish
them.
Property Maintenance: Earlier this month, I
introduced HB 1340, which is legislation that would
assist local governments in dealing with maintenance
issues related to property and buildings within their
jurisdictions. My proposal, which has bipartisan
support, would authorize city and county governments
to require owners of property for which a homestead
exemption is not claimed to provide the tax
commissioner or the city clerk with the name and
address of an agent responsible for service of
property maintenance issues associated with
structures. HB 1340 was assigned to the House
Judiciary committee for its consideration. The Georgia
Municipal Association has expressed support for this
legislation.
Water Bill Sent to Governor: The House gave final
approval to SB 370, which is the Senate version of
legislation that would implement a number of water
conservation measures, including requirements for
low-flow plumbing devices in newly constructed
homes and buildings, an outdoor watering restriction
and other measures. The bill, which is similar to HB 1094 passed earlier by the House,
now goes to the governor for his signature.
Transportation Funding: The House
Transportation Committee approved HB 1218, which would allow voters to
consider a transportation sales tax on a regional
basis in 12 special districts around the state. The
committee's version of the bill includes an opt-out
provision for regions and counties, which Gov. Perdue
has said would cause him to veto the legislation. HB
1218 now awaits a vote on the House floor.
State of the Judiciary: Chief Justice Carol
Hunstein of the Supreme Court of Georgia addressed
a joint legislative session on Tuesday, reminding
lawmakers of the serious consequences that deep
funding cuts in the court system are having on public
safety and business in our state. The chief justice
said judicial budget cuts have contributed to a
considerable backlog of criminal and civil cases in
Superior Courts around the state. She quoted the Wall
Street Journal as recently reporting, "The wheels of
justice in Georgia are grinding more slowly each day."
Record Unemployment: Georgia's jobless rate
climbed to 10.5 percent in February, up from 10.4
percent in January and 8.7 percent in February 2009.
There was a significant decrease in first-time
unemployment insurance claims for the month, which
indicates Georgia's job market may be bottoming out,
state Labor Commissioner Michael Thurmond said.
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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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