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State Representative Lee Thompson
GEORGIA LEGISLATIVE REPORT
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March 29, 2009
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Dear Constituent,
The House of Representatives returned to the
Capitol on Monday, March 30, for the 38th day and final
week 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 again rejects homestead exemption mandate
For the second time this session, the House of
Representatives rejected a proposal to double the
homestead exemption from $2,000 to $4,000. This
proposal
would have reduced local revenue and forced local
governments and school
boards to choose between eliminating vital services
and raising tax millage rates.
In my years as an attorney for city governments
and the Gwinnett County Board of Education, I have
seen the effects one-size-fits-all
legislation such as SB 83 can have at the local level. Usually
these measures
often result in little or no true tax relief for the
property owner.
I went to the well of the House to speak in opposition
to this proposal. If the legislature wants to provide true
tax relief, it should come from state funds and not from
local funds. SB 83 failed to receive the needed
two-thirds majority approval in the House on
Wednesday and is dead for the 2009 session.
In the remaining days of the 2009 session of the
Georgia General Assembly, final action on the
annual state budget for fiscal year 2010 and major
decisions on transportation funding and oversight are
still at the top of the agenda.
As I reported last week, the House of Representatives
passed an $18.6 billion budget proposal on
March 19, but the Senate has yet to send its plan back
to the House. When the Senate does finalize its
budget, the Appropriations Conference Committee will
have only a short time to work out differences between
it and the House plan before final adjournment of this
session, which is scheduled for Friday, April 3.
Meanwhile, there are still major disagreements
between the House and Senate on the transportation
issues of funding and governance. On Wednesday,
the House voted to approve a compromise version of
HR 206 and HB 277, which would allow voters to
decide on a statewide 1 percent sales tax to generate
$25 billion to fund transportation projects over the next
10 years.
The amended version of the legislative package
provides that if the statewide referendum fails, then
counties would be authorized to implement a regional
sales tax, which matches the Senate's preferred
approach. But the Senate rejected that compromise
on Thursday, meaning that a conference committee
must work out a final agreement before April 3, or the
legislature's chance to come up with a transportation
funding solution in this session will be lost.
Gov. Perdue's proposal to strip the state Department
of Transportation (DOT) board of its authority and
replace it with a new State Transportation Authority,
whose members would be hand-picked by the
governor, lieutenant governor and House speaker,
has yet to reach the House floor for a vote. Many
lawmakers feel moving away from the current process
of the legislature electing the DOT board members by
congressional districts would weaken the voices of
many areas of the state, and this particular plan
appears to be losing support in the House as the
session draws to a close.
The following legislation originating from the
Senate was approved by the House this week:
SB 13, which would allow a sentence of life
without parole to be imposed, even when prosecutors
do not seek the death penalty. Currently life without
parole is allowed only as an option in death penalty
cases.
SB 14, which would prohibit anyone on the
national or state sex offender registry from being
eligible for election to or service on local school
boards.
SB 44, which would require school
systems to give preference to products manufactured
in Georgia when purchasing supplies, equipment and
food.
SB 61, which would establish the Life
Settlements Act, providing oversight and regulation of
life settlement contracts and requiring brokers to be
licensed and regulated by the Georgia Department of
Insurance.
SB 69, which would increase the ability of
citizens to
report suspicions of sexual exploitation of children.
SB 155, which would remove buffer zones
from streams carrying mostly rainwater. I voted
against this proposal because I believe the definitions
in the bill provided too broad an
exemption from current stream buffer laws designed
to protect our water sources.
SB 165, which would authorize the
Department of Community Health to obtain income
eligibility verification from the Department of Revenue
for Medicaid and PeachCare for Kids applicants.
SB 170, which would prohibit companies
that do business in Sudan from submitting proposals
for Georgia state contracts in the future.
House members also approved an amended
version of HB 233, which would freeze property
valuation reassessments for the next two years. The
Senate agreed to final changes, sending the bill to the
governor for his signature.
Lee's legislation...
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Public information meetings on I-85 HOV/HOT lane conversion
The Georgia Department of Transportation (DOT), in
cooperation with the Atlanta Regional Commission
(ARC), is holding a series of public information open
house meetings concerning the I-85 High Occupancy
Vehicle (HOV) to High Occupancy Toll (HOT)
Conversion Project in Gwinnett and DeKalb Counties.
The meetings are being held to provide general
information and gather input regarding the proposed
project.
The proposal consists of the conversion of 14.3 miles
of HOV lanes to HOT lanes on I-85 just south of I-285
in DeKalb County to Old Peachtree Road in Gwinnett
County. The purpose of the project is to provide
travelers wtih reliable options to avoid the daily traffic
congestion on I-85 and to get to their destinations on
time.
The meetings scheduled for this week are:
March 31, 2009 - 5 pm-8 pm,
Gwinnett Fire Academy, 3608 Braselton Highway (SR
124), Dacula, GA 30019
March 31, 2009 - 5 pm-8 pm,
Senior Connections, 5238 Peachtree Road,
Chamblee, GA 30341
April 2, 2009 - 5 pm-8 pm,
Ashiana's Banquet Hall (inside Global Mall), 5675
Jimmy Carter Boulevard, Norcross, GA 3007
April 4, 2009 - 10 am-2 pm
Discover Mills Mall, 5900 Sugarloaf Parkway,
Lawrenceville, GA 30043
Representatives from DOT, ARC and the project
consultant team will be available at the open house to
share information and answer questions. There will
be no formal presentation. Comments may be
submitted orally at the meeting to a court reporter or in
writing to: I-85 HOV to HOT Project Comments, 1718
Peachtree St. NW, Suite 400, Atlanta, GA 30309.
Written comments should be submitted by April 16.
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