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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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March 23, 2009
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Dear Constituent,
The House of Representatives returned to the
Capitol on Monday, March 23, for the 35th 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 budget passes financial burdens to local governments and homeowners
A majority of the House of Representatives voted
Thursday to adopt an $18.6 billion annual state
budget for fiscal year 2010, which begins July 1. In the
House plan, a $3 billion shortfall in state tax revenues
is offset by $1.6 billion in spending cuts from the
governor's original proposal and $1.4 billion in
additional funding from the federal stimulus package.
I voted against HB 119 because it fails to include funding
for the state's Homeowner Tax Relief Grants, which
will result in the largest property tax increase in
Georgia history. The elimination of these grants will
cause a $200 to $300 increase for the average
Georgia homeowner on the property tax bills they
receive from their cities, counties and school boards
later this year.
This tax increase comes at a time when Georgia
families are struggling to pay their mortgage, put food
on the table and keep the lights on. House Democrats
have been working throughout this session to
preserve the tax relief grants, by introducing HR 7, which would change the Constitution
to require the General Assembly to fund the grants on
a permanent basis.
We also proposed HB 356, which would give local
governments the power to recoup sales tax revenues
that have gone uncollected. A similar program in
Alabama was successful in collecting more than $1
billion, which would be more than enough to fund the
tax relief grants.
The House budget proposal also cuts another $197
million in state funding to local school systems, which
pushes to approximately $2 billion the total amount of
these cuts by Gov. Perdue and the legislative majority
during his administration. These cuts have forced
local boards of education to increase class sizes,
property taxes or both.
On the positive side, thanks to federal stimulus
funding, the House budget restores more than $200
million in Medicaid payments to hospitals and
physicians that the governor had proposed to cut. This
will hopefully allow many struggling Georgia hospitals
to keep their doors open and our doctors to continue
treating all their patients. The House also put $30
million in the budget to retain school nurses and $33
million for the state's trauma care network.
Prior to the vote, which was 123-49 in favor of the
budget, Speaker Glenn Richardson took the well of
the House and unleashed a partisan attack against
President Barack Obama and congressional
Democrats regarding the economic recovery/stimulus
program. This seemed odd, considering that
Appropriations Committee Chairman Ben Harbin (R-
Evans), when presenting HB 119, had acknowledged
the stimulus funding had helped balance the budget
by "softening the blow of cuts in Medicaid and
education."
The budget plan now goes to the Senate for its
consideration. The speaker also said the General
Assembly may have to be called back into session
later in the year to adjust the budget if state revenues
continue their decline.
With only six legislative days remaining in the
2009 session, the House has been busy
approving bills that have already passed the Senate
and are now on their way to the governor's desk for his
signature. This week, those included:
SB 76, which would remove the
requirement for workers' compensation insurers to
submit an annual report to the Department of
Insurance in paper format. Instead, this report would
be filed electronically.
SB 79, which would expand access to child
abuse records in cases of "near fatality." Currently,
records can only be released when there is a fatality.
SB 80, which would make it a felony for any
company or individual to fail to report the discovery of
salmonella or other food-borne disease to the State
Department of Agriculture. This legislation addresses
the problems resulting from salmonella-tainted
peanut butter products manufactured at the Peanut
Corp. of America in Early County.
On Thursday, a majority of House Republicans
voted to reject HR 673, which would honor President
Obama on his election and inauguration as the 44th
president of the United States and recognize the
president as an honorary lifetime member of the
Georgia Legislative Black Caucus. In the past,
resolutions such as this have been adopted without
controversy. Many of those who voted against HR 673
on Thursday are at the same time lining up to spend
part of the President Obama's stimulus funding on
projects in their districts. The House did vote Friday to
reconsider the resolution later in the session.
Hopefully, partisanship can be put aside at that time.
The House passed two significant resolutions last
week. HR 161 would award $700,000 in
compensation to Jerome White, who was wrongly
convicted of rape in 1979 and served almost 30 years
in prison before he was exonerated by DNA evidence.
The payments to White, now 48 years old, would be
disbursed over a 20-year period, as long as he does
not commit another crime.
HR 562 encourages all Georgia motorists
to be aware of blind pedestrians and their rights. It
also directs the Department of Driver Services to
review and assess current efforts to inform new and
experienced drivers that persons with visual
impairments have the right of way at all times.
Lee's legislation...
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