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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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March 2, 2009
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Dear Constituent,
Wednesday was the first-ever Gwinnett Day at the
State Captiol, sponsored by the Gwinnett County
Chamber of Commerce. Numerous elected officials
and community leaders came to the Capitol to meet
with legislators and other state officials and discuss
issues important to our county. It was good to see
the "home folks" Wednesday.
The House of Representatives will return to the
Capitol on Tuesday, March 3, for the 25th day of the
2009 legislative session.
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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House majority approves Georgia Power rate increase
After a long debate, a majority of the House of
Representatives voted Thursday to authorize Georgia
Power to begin charging its customers higher rates in
2011 for advance financing of the construction of two
new nuclear reactors, which will not be in operation at
Plant Vogtle before 2017.
I opposed this legislation, SB 31, for several reasons. Utility rate
decisions are under the authority of the Georgia Public
Service Commission (PSC), not the state legislature.
Supporters of the bill were unable to give a clear
reason as to why the Senate and House were being
asked to act on this prepayment scheme, bypassing
the PSC. Also, the measure provides certain
exemptions for large companies, leaving residential
consumers to shoulder the burden.
The additional charges allowed under the bill will
provide immediate benefits to Georgia Power
stockholders, but the consumers will not see any real
benefit in rates for more than 20 years.
Concerns over how rates would be affected if, for any
reason, the nuclear reactors are not built also went
unanswered by the bill's supporters. But the measure
passed by a vote of 107-66, and it is expected to be
signed into law by the governor.
House members also voted Thursday to approve
an amended $18.9 billion state budget for the
remainder of fiscal year 2009, which ends June 30.
The budget had to be trimmed by $2.3 billion because
of the shortfall in state tax revenues resulting from the
economic recession.
Thanks to an influx of federal funding from the
economic recovery plan passed by Congress and
signed into law by President Barack Obama, budget
writers were able to come up with $428 million to
restore the homeowner tax relief grants. These grants,
which were marked for elimination in Gov. Perdue's
budget proposal, will save the average homeowner
$200-$300 this year.
Although the supplemental budget did not contain all
of the funds I would have preferred for education, HB 118, does include $145 million in
federal funds for Georgia's schools and funding for
additional Department of Agriculture inspectors in the
wake of the recent salmonella contamination at a
peanut butter processing plant in Early County. The
House version of the plan also eliminates or reduces
the
furloughing of state employees in the Department of
Human Resources and Department of Corrections.
The Senate will now consider the supplemental
budget while the House continues to work on the
annual budget for fiscal year 2010.
Other legislation approved by the House and sent
to the Senate this week includes:
HB 100, which would expand a state
program implemented last year that provides income
tax credits to individuals and corporate entities that
donate to organizations set up to provide scholarships
for parents to pull their children out of public schools
and send them to private schools. I voted against this
measure because it is another reduction in state
revenue at the expense of our already underfunded
public school system.
HB 149, which would allow students in
their junior or senior year of public high school to
study at a post-secondary college, university or
technical college and receive high school credit, which
would count toward graduation.
HB 156, which would allow elected
magistrate judges who are serving on ordered military
duty to remain in office and eligible for re-election
during such duty.
HB 229, which would require local school
systems to conduct an annual fitness assessment
and comply with state physical education instruction
requirements.
HB 343, which would establish the
position of weight inspector for the Department of
Public Safety. The inspectors would enforce weight,
registration, size and load regulations for commercial
trucks.
Lee's legislation...
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Rep. Thompson named to House Judiciary (Non-Civil) Committee
State Rep. Lee Thompson (D-Lawrenceville) has
been appointed by Speaker Glenn Richardson to the
House
Judiciary (Non-Civil) Committee. This
committee handles legislation related to the criminal
justice system in Georgia.
Thompson also serves on the House Natural
Resources & Environment, Information & Audits and
MARTA Oversight Committees.
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