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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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May 4, 2010
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Dear Constituent,
The 2010 session of the General Assembly
concluded Thursday evening. Also this week, I
qualified for re-election to another term as your State
Representative. I look forward to meeting with you and
discussing the issues during the upcoming campaign.
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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$17.9 billion budget approved as session adjourns
The 2010 session of the Georgia General Assembly
came to an end late Thursday night, several hours
after lawmakers finalized a $17.9 billion state budget
for fiscal year 2011. Having started Jan. 11, this was
the longest legislative session on record since the
1880s.
The new budget reflects an overall revenue reduction
of more than $3 billion from two years ago. The
Republican majority approved a hospital tax and fee
increases totaling around $300 million but refused to
consider measures that would improve sales tax
collections, roll back hundreds of millions of dollars in
tax credits or raise the cigarette tax.
As a result, this budget will cause more layoffs and
furloughs for teachers and other state employees and
shift the tax burden to local property owners. Public
school funding through the Quality Basic Education
formula is slashed by another $527 million. I am
pleased to report that nearly $800,000 in funding for
the Georgia Council for the Arts, which had been
eliminated in the previous House budget, was
restored by the Senate and remained in the final
report.
The budget legislation, HB 948, now goes to the governor for his
signature. He can also veto specific line-item
appropriations. The new fiscal year begins July 1,
2010.
Trauma Care Funding: Georgia voters will
have a chance to approve a reliable funding
mechanism that would help enhance the state's
trauma care network following passage of SR 277. The proposed constitutional
amendment would implement a $10 fee on auto
license tags to bring in $80 million each year for a
trauma care trust fund. The proposal will be on the
General Election ballot this November and requires a
majority approval.
Property Tax Assessments: Lawmakers gave
final passage to comprehensive property tax
legislation Thursday. SB 346 is aimed at protecting taxpayers
from unfair assessments and guaranteeing the right
to appeal. The bill requires that every property owner
receive an annual Notice of Assessment that includes
the estimated property tax and expands the appeal
time from 30 to 45 days. All relevant sales, including
distress sales, must be included when determining
Fair Market Value.
In other action during the final two days of the session,
the House:
Approved HB 1069, which includes a number of tax
exemptions but eliminates a tax
refund for low-income Georgians. I voted against this
bill.
Rejected the governor's attempt to push through
legislation that would have based teachers' job
evaluations, in large part, on student test scores. SB 521 never made it to the House floor
because it did not have enough support to win
approval.
Approved SB 308, which expands the number of
public areas where persons with firearms licenses
can carry guns and removes the prohibition against
consuming alcohol while carrying a gun in public, and
SB 291, which would authorize the
carrying of firearms in some areas of airports. The
bills
now go to the governor for his signature. I voted
against these bills.
Approved SB 299, addressing problems with so-
called "zero tolerance" school disciplinary laws, would
prevent the immediate jailing of a student without a
hearing and give judges more discretion as to how
they handle cases. The zero tolerance laws were
intended
to crack down on serious charges of having weapons
in school but have instead often resulted in students
being criminalized for minor and insignificant
infractions.
Approved SB 360, which bans motorists in Georgia
from texting while driving, and HB 23, which bans teenagers from talking
on cell phones while driving. A violation of either law, if
signed by the governor, would result in a fine of up to
$150 and one point on the driver's license of the
offender.
Approved an amended version of SB 364, which would increase the
penalties for criminal offenses in massage parlors
and spas. The Senate agreed with House
amendments, and the bill now goes to the
governor.
Approved SB 458, which would remove the
exemption in Georgia's seat belt law for drivers and
passengers in pickup trucks. Georgia was the only
state with a seat belt law that still allowed the pickup
truck exemption, which cost the state millions of
dollars each year in federal highway funding. The bill
now goes to the governor for his signature.
Approved SR 821, which would change the
Constitution to allow the state Department of
Transportation to sign multi-year contracts without
having the entire dollar amount of the contract set
aside at the beginning. Supporters of the measure
say the move would free up millions of transportation
dollars that cannot now be used. The constitutional
amendment must be approved by a majority of
Georgia voters in November.
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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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