State Net ************************************************** C A P I T O L J O U R N A L ************************************************** News & Views from the 50 States ================================================================= Volume XIV, No. 22 Monday, July 17, 2006 ================================================================= ##### TOP OF THE NEWS ##### SNCJ SPOTLIGHT .............................1 * Line hardens on illegal immigration BUDGET & POLITICS .............................2 * NJ budget epilogue POLITICS & LEADERSHIP .............................3 * Redistricting reform on shaky ground in CA GOVERNORS .............................4 * Vilsack offers eminent domain alternative IN THE HOPPER .............................5 HOT ISSUES .............................6 ELECTIONS .............................7 ONCE AROUND THE STATEHOUSE LIGHTLY .............................8 IN CASE YOU MISSED IT .............................9 ***************************************************************** ***** #1--SNCJ SPOTLIGHT ***** Line hardens on illegal immigration in COLORADO and across the nation Not long ago, COLORADO's political landscape seemed fairly hospitable for undocumented immigrants. The state's Democrat- controlled Legislature had killed several anti-illegal immigrant bills that party leaders described as extremist. In the spring, tens of thousands of immigrants and their supporters had taken part in the largest political rallies the state had ever seen. And last month, the state Supreme Court had struck down an anti- illegal immigrant measure bound for the November ballot. But last week, Centennial State lawmakers, assembled in a special session called by Gov. Bill Owens (R) specifically to reverse that high court ruling, passed a package of bills denying state services to illegal immigrants and sanctioning businesses that hire them. While that action marked a fairly significant change of course for the state, it mirrors a national trend. The key measure approved during the special session (HB 1023) will require people 18 and older to prove legal residency in order to receive state benefits, including Medicaid, Medicare, unemployment insurance and energy assistance. Though modeled after a law adopted by GEORGIA in April, COLORADO legislators -- including Democratic leaders -- touted it as one of the toughest in the nation. "This is tough, effective, enforceable and practical," said Assembly Speaker Andrew Romanoff (D), while Senate President Joan Fitz-Gerald (D) declared, "At the end of the day, everybody who serves in this building as senators or representatives knows we're making COLORADO history." Immigrant-rights activists were dejected over the Democratic turnabout. "It's a sad day for COLORADO when our Democratic majority Legislature brags about new laws that would lead to people being cut off from aid," said Bill Vandenberg of the COLORADO Progressive Coalition. Vandenberg and his fellow activists won't find much to be encouraged about in other states either. According to a recent tally by the National Conference of State Legislatures, over 60 bills targeting illegal immigration have been passed by 27 states this year. Along with COLORADO and GEORGIA's benefit-cutting measures, they include a bill in LOUISIANA toughening the penalties for businesses that hire undocumented workers, a measure in WYOMING denying some scholarships to students in the U.S. illegally and a MISSOURI law terminating unemployment benefits for non-citizen workers. States have been taking action because of Congressional gridlock on illegal immigration, with the House advocating a border enforcement-only bill and the Senate favoring a measure that includes not only enforcement provisions, but a guest-worker program providing a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants as well. Polls show that U.S. voters are similarly divided over the issue, but the hard-liners appear to have gained the upper hand. That certainly seems to be the case in COLORADO, where Democrats have been hammered by Republicans for allegedly being soft on illegal immigration, attacks which had some political analysts warning that the issue could cost the Dems their legislative majority in the fall. (Republican lawmakers had actually hoped to get the benefit cut measure on the November ballot, believing it would bring out voters who were more sympathetic to the GOP.) Tanya Broder, a CALIFORNIA-based attorney for the National Immigration Law Center, however, points out that the legislative actions in COLORADO and other states are largely symbolic because federal law already restricts public aid to illegal immigrants. The measures allow state lawmakers to send "a message to constituents that they're doing something about illegal immigration," Broder said. Vandenburg, the COLORADO immigrant- rights activist, put it a little more cynically. "Every election year needs a scapegoat, and this year...it's beating up on illegal immigrants," he said. (LOS ANGELES TIMES, WASHINGTON POST, ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS [DENVER], USA TODAY) -- Compiled by KOREY CLARK ***************************************************************** ***** #2--BUDGET & TAXES ***** NEW JERSEY BUDGET EPILOGUE: Last Saturday, NEW JERSEY's Legislature passed, and Gov. Jon Corzine (D) then signed, the state budget agreed upon days earlier, officially ending the impasse that had shut down the government for a week (see BUDGET DEAL ENDS 6-DAY SHUTDOWN in July 10 issue of SNCJ). Garden State casinos resumed operation hours later, parks and beaches reopened the following day, and government employees returned to work on Monday. A couple of days after ending their budget standoff, Corzine and legislative leaders wisely agreed to put off a special session on property tax reform until the end of the month, the 28th or later. "This has been grueling for all participants," said Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts (D). "It will be good to recharge everyone's energy." Delaying the session will also allow lawmakers to officially pass the constitutional amendment that was part of the budget deal, which, if approved by the state's voters, would dedicate half of the proceeds from the new budget's 1 percent increase in the sales tax towards property tax relief. (Rules bar the full Legislature from taking up a constitutional amendment less than 20 days after it receives committee approval.) "Although it wasn't intended this way, the timing fits very nicely," said Roberts. In related fiscal news, officials at Princeton University were stunned to discover that the new state budget denies aid to all colleges in the state "with endowments in excess of $1 billion," a category that currently includes only the Ivy League school, which has an endowment of $11 billion. Princeton officials had been expecting to receive about $538,000 in state funding (ASSOCIATED PRESS, STAR-LEDGER). BUDGETS IN BRIEF: NORTH CAROLINA Gov. Mike Easley (D) signed an $18.9 billion budget for his state, and as in NEW JERSEY, the action came more than a week after the start of the new fiscal year (July 1). But since the spending plan merely adjusted the second year of a two-year budget passed last summer, the Tar Heel State was spared the drama of a government shutdown (ASSOCIATED PRESS, WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL). * The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced last week that it has released $4.2 billion to LOUISIANA and $3 billion to MISSISSIPPI to help residents of those states recover from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (USA TODAY, CLARION-LEDGER). * RHODE ISLAND's Supreme Court will return from its summer recess to consider whether a pair of nonbinding questions posed by Gov. Don Carcieri (R) will appear on the state's November ballot. Carcieri wants to ask voters if they support caps on increases in local property taxes and state spending, and if they would like the power to place their own initiatives on the ballot through petition (PROVIDENCE JOURNAL). * The SOUTH DAKOTA Supreme Court, meanwhile, will consider whether a proposal to repeal the state's tax on cell- phone companies will appear on its fall ballot. The sponsor of the measure, Verizon Wireless, had petitioned the court to take up the issue after the secretary of state disqualified the measure, maintaining that a legal opinion issued by the attorney general stated that initiated measures can not be used to repeal existing state laws (ASSOCIATED PRESS, RAPID CITY JOURNAL). * A pair of WISCONSIN-based airlines will continue to be exempt from property taxes, thanks to a decision by the state's Supreme Court last Friday. The ruling rejected a challenge by MINNESOTA-based Northwest Airlines Corp. to a Badger State law granting property tax exemptions for airlines that operate hub facilities in the state (ASSOCIATED PRESS, BRAINERD DAILY DISPATCH). -- Compiled by KOREY CLARK ***************************************************************** ***** #3--POLITICS & LEADERSHIP ***** REDISTRICTING REFORM ON SHAKY GROUND IN CA: Last month's historic U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding TEXAS' mid-decade redistricting has hurt the chances for another redistricting- related first in CALIFORNIA. Democrats in the Golden State Senate, given pause by the high court's reaffirmation that there is nothing wrong with a political party using redistricting to maximize its advantage as long as minority voting rights are protected, decided to postpone a vote on a measure (SCA 3) that would turn redistricting authority over to an 11-member commission until after the Legislature returns from its summer break next month. "Many Democrats were concerned we were headed down treacherous waters and, perhaps, in the long run we would eventually regret it," said Sen. Martha Escutia (D). No state legislature has ever voted to give up its redistricting power. In the dozen states where voting lines are drawn by independent commissions, that authority was granted by the voters. "It's monumental for a legislature to vote to give up its own power," said Sen. Alan Lowenthal (D), the author of the bill. Experts say given that two-thirds of each house must approve the measure by the end of August in order to get it on the Nov. 7 ballot, that monumental event is not likely to happen this year. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R), however, has offered lawmakers a tasty incentive to get behind redistricting reform: "The Govenator" said he will support the easing of term limits if they'll agree to change the way CALIFORNIA draws voting districts. Schwarzenegger said last week that he does not believe term limits have improved the state's political culture. He also reasons that lawmakers may not want to change voting districts, most of which favor incumbents, but they dislike term limits even more. His proposal met with support from at least one significant Democrat, Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuņez, who said, "I'm open to anything voters will support that will allow legislators a little more time to focus on policy and less on politics." (SACRAMENTO BEE, LOS ANGELES TIMES) RANK AND FILE REVOLT IN PA: Legislative leaders in PENNSYLVANIA have had a rough year, losing two of their highest-ranking members -- Senate Majority Leader David J. "Chip" Brightbill (R) and Senate President Pro Tem Robert Jubelirer (R) -- this past May as a result of voter outrage over last summer's pay raise scandal. Now they're facing another challenge -- from within the statehouse. Rank and file members, emboldened by the public's continuing calls for change in Harrisburg, are trying to institute reforms that would reduce the leaders' power and make the legislative process more open. A bipartisan group in the House that includes at least 59 of the chamber's 203 members has suggested mandating that all bills be in final form at least three days before any vote is taken, to give members time to find out what they're actually voting on, and banning votes between midnight and 8 a.m., the non-prime-time period during which the pay raise was passed. Another group, calling itself the Jefferson Reform Initiative, wants to impose term limits on committee chairmen and shrink the size of the Legislature. Although this isn't the first time such reforms have been sought in the Keystone State, their chances may be better this time around. As one of the reformers put it, "We have good strength in numbers and we have the public to move this forward." (PITTSBURGH POST- GAZETTE) VOTER ID LAW DRAWS COURT CHALLENGES: Last Friday, with less than two weeks to go before GEORGIA's July 18 primary election, a Superior Court judge issued a restraining order blocking implementation of the state's new voter ID law. In his strongly-worded ruling, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Melvin Westmoreland stated that the law initially passed last year by the state's Republican-controlled Legislature requiring voters to present a valid, government-issued photo ID, "unduly burdens the fundamental right to vote rather than regulates it" and would do "irreparable harm" to Georgian's voting rights. Westmoreland, an appointee of former Gov. Zell Miller (D), went on to decree that the 17 forms of ID allowed in previous elections - - including social security cards and utility bills - - could be used in the upcoming primary. The state immediately appealed the ruling to the state Supreme Court. That court won't be the only one deliberating the constitutionality of GEORGIA's voter ID law, however. A separate challenge to the law was scheduled to begin last week in federal court, although the judge in that case said it could be postponed if the state Supreme Court upholds Westmoreland's decision rejecting the law. (ASSOCIATED PRESS, MACON TELEGRAPH, AUGUSTA CHRONICLE, ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION) POLITICS IN BRIEF: The 27 vetoes issued by HAWAII Gov. Linda Lingle (R) last Tuesday will stand, since House Speaker Calvin Say (D) announced -- after looking over the governor's list of potential vetoes the day before -- that the House would not return for an override session this year. "We don't agree with the governor's position, but for the sake of ensuring that we pass the best laws possible, we will take another look at these issues next session..." he said. Lingle didn't show much gratitude, however, vetoing the one bill Say asked her not to, HB 3116, which would have provided basic health coverage for uninsured children. Lingle argued that the measure would have encouraged families that already had insurance to drop their plans (HONOLULU ADVERTISER). * ILLINOIS Green Party gubernatorial candidate Rich Whitney said at a news conference last week that the Democrats have filed challenges to the 39,000 signatures the Greens gathered to qualify for the fall election. The Greens are seeking to field a full slate of candidates for statewide office in the Prairie State for the first time this year (QUAD-CITY TIMES [DAVENPORT]). * UTAH state Rep. Peggy Wallace (R) has requested a recount of the GOP primary in District 42 on June 27, in which she lost to insurance agency owner Jim Bird by 25 votes (SALT LAKE TRIBUNE). -- Compiled by KOREY CLARK ***************************************************************** ***** #4--GOVERNORS ***** VILSACK OFFERS EMINENT DOMAIN ALTERNATIVE: In June, IOWA Gov. Tom Vilsack (D) became one of three governors this year to veto bills that would have made it tougher for state and local governments to use eminent domain power to acquire blighted property. Last week, as Hawkeye State lawmakers were preparing to begin a special session in which they will consider an override of that veto, Vilsack offered his own vision of how eminent domain should work. Vilsack' s plan would allow local governments to seize property for economic development in neighborhoods where at least 50 percent of the area meets standards for "slum and blight," significantly less than the 75 percent threshold lawmakers wanted. He would also allow the seizure of property to make way for manmade lakes and airports. The original bill would have required a local county board to approve an airport plan, and manmade lakes were acceptable only if they provided drinking water. The governor said he would also create an ombudsman's office to help citizens who feel their property rights are being violated. Vilsack also defended his veto, saying that "our citizens are worried about their rights as property owners, yet do not want to see IOWA at a disadvantage in attracting businesses that will provide new jobs and opportunities." He cited an Iowa Department of Economic Development study he says shows the bill he vetoed would have cost the state at least 1,000 jobs per year. He did not explain how or why that would have occurred. Republican House Speaker Christopher Rants was clearly not impressed with Vilsack's proposal, calling the governor's plan "nothing more than a bait and switch." (QUAD CITY TIMES [DAVENPORT]) ROMNEY GETS LAST WORD ON BIG DIG PROBE: MASSACHUSETTS Gov. Mitt Romney (R) asked for and received control over inspections and any decisions on reopening the troubled $14.6 billion Big Dig highway project through downtown Boston. He made the announcement after 12 tons of concrete fell inside the tunnel, killing a woman. Romney also started legal proceedings to oust the chairman of the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, which oversees the project. "There should no longer be any doubt that the Turnpike Authority has failed to do its job effectively," Romney said in announcing the measure. (BOSTON GLOBE, ASSOCIATED PRESS) MI HITLER ADVERTISEMENT DRAWS FIRE: It isn't easy to get MICHIGAN Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D) and her challenger in this fall's election, Republican Dick Devos, to agree on much these days. But a recent full-page ad in the Detroit-based MICHIGAN Chronicle that featured photographs of Hitler and Granholm and accused Democrats of taking African-American voters for granted earned immediate condemnation from both camps. Granholm called the ad "outrageous" and "repugnant," while Devos called it "appalling," "despicable" and "wrong." Adolph Mongo, the political consultant behind the ad, defended it as a legitimate way to communicate the idea that Democrats have ignored the African American community. The ad features the story of Jesse Owens, a multiple gold medal winner at the 1936 Munich Olympics. Owens, an African American, supported the Republican presidential candidate in that year's election, Kansas Gov. Alf Landon, in part because, like Hitler, Democratic President Franklin D. Roosevelt would not shake his hand after the Olympic performance. "Nobody is saying that Granholm and Hitler are the same person; it's just telling a story," Mongo said. (DETROIT FREE PRESS) SCHWARZENEGGER GOES ROADLESS: CALIFORNIA Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) asked the federal government last week to protect 4.4 million acres of national forests from any new roads for timber, oil or gas exploration or other development. The governor's request was in response to a controversial Bush administration rule that opened millions of "roadless" areas nationwide that had been closed to such development by the Clinton administration. Although environmental groups were generally pleased with Schwarzenegger's proposal, CALIFORNIA Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer (D) was not so moved. Lockyer and officials of five other states have sued the Bush administration over ending the ban on development in roadless areas. Lockyer spokeswoman Teresa Schilling said the attorney general's office would continue with its lawsuit, noting that "There is no guarantee the Bush administration will approve the state's plan or any other state's plan." To date, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA and VIRGINIA have had similar petitions approved by the federal government without major changes. (LOS ANGELES TIMES) GOVERNORS IN BRIEF: With the threat of a federal takeover of the state's child welfare system hanging overhead, NEW JERSEY Gov. Jon Corzine (D) signed legislation that removes child welfare oversight from the Department of Human Services and places it with a newly-created cabinet-level Department of Child and Family Services. Corzine said making the new department a cabinet-level agency was necessary because "aggressive reform of this system requires a degree of focus that simply is not possible under the current structure" (NEW YORK TIMES). * OHIO Gov. Bob Taft (R) has agreed to receive a public reprimand for his conviction last year on misdemeanor ethics violations. The deal was reached between the governor's private attorney and the OHIO Supreme Court's disciplinary counsel. The agreement must still be approved by the 28-member state Court's Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline as well as the Buckeye State Supreme Court itself (TOLEDO BLADE). * ILLINOIS Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) issued an executive order that, among other things, will require all Prairie State health care providers to use paperless prescriptions by 2011. The measure is designed to combat drug errors caused by doctors' illegible handwriting on prescription forms (CHICAGO SUN-TIMES). * MISSOURI Gov. Matt Blunt (R) said last week that if House and Senate leaders reach agreement on toughening laws against fraud by health care providers, he would call them back into session to pass that legislation and to restore government health care for some disabled workers. Blunt said previously he would not call a special session for any reason, but offered to reconsider provided lawmakers would address the two issues (KANSAS CITY STAR). * NEW HAMPSHIRE Gov. John Lynch (D) said MASSACHUSETTS Gov. Mitt Romney (R) has agreed to appoint an arbiter to help negotiate and resolve differences with NEW HAMPSHIRE over flood-control dams (see "LYNCH TO MASS -- SHOW ME THE MONEY" in Governors section of July 10 SNCJ). Lynch said the Bay State owes his state $3.2 million in back payments from the Merrimack River Valley Flood Control Compact of 1957 (FOSTER'S DAILY DEMOCRAT [DOVER]). -- Compiled by RICH EHISEN ***************************************************************** ***** #5--IN THE HOPPER ***** State Net tracks tens of thousands of bills in all 50 states and Congress at any given time. Here's a snapshot of what's in the legislative works: Number of 2006 prefiles last week: 306 Number of 2006 Intros last week: 240 Number of bills enacted/adopted last week: 745 Number of 2006 prefiles to date: 21,013 Number of 2006 Intros to date: 96,293 Number of enacted/adopted overall in 2006: 28,389 --Compiled By JAMES ROSS (measures current as of 07/13/2006) Source: State Net database ------------------------------------------------------------------ The week in session States in Regular Session: DC, MA, MI, NC, NJ, US States in Informal Session: States in Skeleton Session: OH States in Reconvened Session: States in Veto Session: States in Special Session: AK "c" States in Recess: CA, NY, PA States in Budget Hearing Recess: Special Sessions in Recess: CA "a", CA "b", PA "a", VA "a" States Projected to Adjourn: States in Special Session Projected to Adjourn: IA "a" States Adjourned in 2006: AK, AL, AZ, CT, CO, DE, FL, GA, HI, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MD, ME, MN, MO, MS, NE, NH, NM, OK, RI, SC, SD, TN, UT, VA, VT, WA, WI, WV, WY States in Special Session Adjourned in 2006: AK "b", AR "a", AZ "a", CO "a", KY "a", LA "a", MD "a", OK "a", OK "b", OR "a", OK "b", TN "a", TX "c", UT "a", WV "a", WI "b", WI "c" --Compiled By JAMES ROSS (session information current as of 07/14/2006) Source: State Net database ***************************************************************** ***** #6--HOT ISSUES ***** BUSINESS: The NORTH CAROLINA General Assembly approves legislation that will raise the Tar Heel State minimum wage by $1- per-hour. It heads to Gov. Mike Easley (D), who has pledged to sign it into law (WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL). * Still in NORTH CAROLINA, the House approves a proposal to allow cable TV providers and other video service providers to obtain a blanket statewide license. Current law requires those provides to negotiate individual deals in each community they wish to operate in. It moves to Gov. Mike Easley (D) (WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL). * In contrast, LOUISIANA Gov. Kathleen Blanco (D) vetoes HB 699, which would have allowed Pelican State telephone companies to negotiate directly with the state to provide broadband video services and begin competing with cable television companies. Blanco cited a potential loss of government revenue for her veto (TIMES-PICAYUNE [NEW ORLEANS]). * PENNSYLVANIA Gov. Ed Rendell (D) signs legislation that will raise the Keystone State minimum wage to $7.15-per-hour by July, 2008 (PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER). * DELAWARE Gov. Ruth Ann Minner (D) signs legislation that allows consumers to have credit reporting agencies put a freeze on their credit reports. Freezing their data will cost consumers a one- time $20 fee to each of the three major credit reporting agencies (NEWS JOURNAL [NEW CASTLE-WILMINGTON]). CRIME & PUNISHMENT: An ALASKA court tosses out a new state law that makes it a misdemeanor to possess small amounts of marijuana. The judge ruled that the statute violates a 1975 state Supreme Court decision that allows residents to have less than ounce of marijuana in their home for personal use (JUNEAU EMPIRE). * A CALIFORNIA court blocks implementation of SB 1137, a measure that allows Golden State judges to impose jail time on drug offenders who fail to complete court-ordered treatment. The court's decision came just days after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) signed the new statute into law. SB 1137 overrides a voter- approved initiative that requires treatment instead of prison for certain nonviolent drug offenders. Statistics show that three out of four of those sentenced to treatment never show up for the program (SACRAMENTO BEE). * The MONTANA Supreme Court agrees to review an ACLU request to suspend executions in the Treasure State until a court can review whether lethal injection is humane. The state has until July 24 to submit an argument defending its execution procedures (BILLINGS GAZETTE). EDUCATION: Federal education officials rule that NEW YORK's method of testing the annual progress of disabled students and students with limited English proficiency does not comply with the No Child Left Behind law. The Empire State was given a year to change the system or risk losing federal education funding (NEW YORK TIMES). * The NORTH CAROLINA House and Senate approve a measure that requires Tar Heel State school districts to set aside time every day for students to recite the Pledge of Allegiance. It now moves to Gov. Mike Easley (D) (CHARLOTTE OBSERVER). ENVIRONMENT: A NORTH CAROLINA Senate committee unanimously endorses an 18-month moratorium on new landfills in the Tar Heel State. Lawmakers want to study the effect that a proposed quartet of large new landfills will have on the state's environment before allowing construction to begin (WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL). HEALTH & SCIENCE: MISSOURI Gov. Matt Blunt (R) signs legislation that requires insurance companies to base their medical malpractice rates on their loss-experience within the state, not losses in other states. Insurers must also give a 180-day notice if they plan to stop doing business in the Show Me State (NEWS TRIBUNE [JEFFERSON CITY]). * NEW JERSEY officials announce the Garden State will resume Medicaid coverage for prescription impotence drugs like Viagra. The state stopped coverage for the medications last year in an effort to cut rising Medicaid costs, a decision that was reinforced when it learned that dozens of convicted sex offenders were legally obtaining the drugs through the taxpayer-funded program (STAR-LEDGER [NEWARK]). HOMELAND SECURITY: The COLORADO House and Senate endorse HB 1023, which would require applicants for taxpayer-funded benefits to show they are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents before receiving those services. The measure moves to Gov. Bill Owens (R), who says he will sign it into law (DENVER POST). * COLORADO lawmakers also approve HB 1017, which requires Centennial State business owners to verify that new hires are legal U.S. residents and to keep copies of every employee's documentation. A business found violating the law could be fined $5,000 for the first offense and $25,000 for each additional offense. The bill migrates to Gov. Bill Owens (R), who says he will sign it (ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS [DENVER]). * The COLORADO House and Senate also endorse a measure that would place a proposal on the November ballot to allow the state attorney general to sue the federal government for not enforcing current immigration laws (NEW YORK TIMES). * Meanwhile, a COLORADO Senate committee kills HB 1018, which would have forced employers to ask prospective employees for specific COLORADO identification. Ski and agricultural businesses opposed the bill because they depend on out-of-state labor to fill seasonal jobs (DENVER POST). SOCIAL POLICY: The MASSACHUSETTS Legislature postpones a vote on a proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage in the Bay State. Lawmakers moved the vote to Nov. 9, two days after many lawmakers face re-election. The decision to put off the vote came days after the state Supreme Judicial Court validated the proposed constitutional amendment. Lawmakers must approve the proposal this year and next in order for it to go before voters as a 2008 ballot measure (BOSTON GLOBE, NEW YORK TIMES). * The TENNESSEE Supreme Court rules that parents of children being raised by someone besides the other parent still have an obligation to pay child support. The ruling stemmed from the case of a Volunteer State man who claimed he should not have to pay child support after the death of his ex-wife because their kids were being raised by her parents, who had no specific court order compelling him to pay the support to them (TENNESSEAN [NASHVILLE]). POTPOURRI: HAWAII Gov. Linda Lingle (R) signs legislation that requires the state and county governments to develop plans to provide interpretative services and translated documents for people with limited English skills. More than 26 percent of Aloha State residents speak a language other than English in the home (HONOLULU ADVERTISER). * LOUISIANA Gov. Kathleen Blanco (D) vetoes HB 1380, which would have guaranteed a child the right to see the body of a deceased parent before it is sent to burial or cremation (ADVOCATE [BATON ROUGE]). * The NORTH CAROLINA House approves legislation that would bar drivers under the age of 18 from talking on a cell phone while driving. The measure would exempt conversations with parents, law enforcement and spouses. It roars off to Gov. Mike Easley (D) for review (WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL). * The CALIFORNIA Supreme Court rules that out-of-state parties cannot surreptitiously record telephone conversations with a person in the Golden State, even if doing so is legal in the state they are calling from (LOS ANGELES TIMES). -- Compiled by RICH EHISEN ***************************************************************** ***** #7--ELECTIONS ***** UPCOMING ELECTIONS (07/13/2006 - 08/03/2006): 07/18/2006 Georgia Primary Election House (All) Senate (All) Constitutional Officers: Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, School Superintendent, Insurance Commissioner, Agriculture Commissioner, Labor Commissioner US House (All) 07/25/2006 Oklahoma Primary Election House (All) Senate (All) Constitutional Officers: Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer, Attorney General, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Commissioner of Labor, Commissioner of Insurance US House (All) 08/03/2006 Tennessee Primary Election House (All) Senate (Odd) Constitutional Officers: Governor US House (All) US Senate () ***************************************************************** ***** #8--ONCE AROUND THE STATEHOUSE LIGHTLY ***** SCREWBALL TAX OF THE YEAR is applied to drug dealers in TENNESSEE. No, not Eli Lilly & Company or the local pharmacist. The dealers in question peddle cocaine, marijuana and other illegal drugs. According to the Nashville Tennessean, dealers are required to buy tax stamps, much like those for tobacco and alcohol. If this sounds like the dumbest tax assessment in human history, don't be so quick to judge. As expected, the state actually sells very few of these tax stamps to dealers. The money rolls in when one of the dealers is nabbed by police or the feds and the state then sues the nabbee for back taxes. That is precisely what happened to Jeremy Robbins not long ago. Arrested on federal charges, Robbins was ordered to pay back taxes on marijuana he wasn't supposed to have. Last week, a TENNESSEE judge tossed the tax law as unconstitutional because the very act of buying the tax stamp was tantamount to a person incriminating himself. Could cost the state as much as $3 million. IVY LEAGUE INSULT: When the NEW JERSEY Legislature finally passed a budget last weekend, it delivered a poke-in-the-eye to one of the state's most prestigious institutions. As the Star-Ledger reports, the budget contained a one-sentence footnote that denied state aid to any college or university with an endowment over $1 billion. How many such institutions lie within the NEW JERSEY borders, you ask? One. Princeton. A private independent university, Princeton sports an endowment in excess of $11 billion and was scheduled to receive only $538,000 from the state -- a mere pittance. Still, it was difficult to hold that Tiger, or at least keep its mouth shut. "We always thought of ourselves as a good investment," sniffed a Princeton official. No other university comes close to the legislative threshold. Drew University's endowment ranks second, and it is less than one- quarter of Princeton's. JUSTICE AT LAST: It's been quite some time since Grace Sherwood was convicted of being a witch, but justice delayed is justice nonetheless. So, last week, VIRGINIA Gov. Timothy Kaine issued a pardon, restoring her good name. The event took place, reports the Associated Press, at a ceremony re-enacting the 300th anniversary of Sherwood's "ducking" -- a trial of sorts designed to determine whether a person was or was not a witch. An accused was guilty if he or she floated in the river. Sherwood floated. WHAT'S IN A NAME? Plenty, in TEXAS. Gubernatorial candidate Richard Friedman, it has been decreed, shall be known on the ballot this November as "Richard Kinky Friedman," reports the Houston Chronicle. Friedman had asked Secy. of State Roger Williams for the official designation because, as an entertainer, he is known the world over as "Kinky Friedman." Unfortunately, the same status was not granted to Friedman's fellow independent candidate -- state Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn. She had wanted her ballot designation to read "Grandma Strayhorn." The secretary deemed Strayhorn's moniker a "political slogan" rather than a recognized nickname. ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL: They've been married for 25 years, so something must be going right in the Ippel household. But politics does not seem to be one of those things. According to KCCI.com and the Associated Press, husband Jeff and wife Pam could oppose each other for a seat in the KANSAS Legislature in this November's election. Pam is on the ballot, having run unopposed for the Democratic nomination in next month's primary. Jeff is in a three- way Republican tussle, and his GOP opponents are crying "sham," accusing the couple of trying to confuse voters. The Ippel's deny it. Republican voters get to decide. -- By A.G. BLOCK -- By A.G. BLOCK ***************************************************************** ***** #9--IN CASED YOU MISSED IT ***** Immigration has become a flashpoint issue for the entire nation. States that border Mexico -- TEXAS, CALIFORNIA, ARIZONA, and NEW MEXICO -- have taken sometime vastly different approaches to dealing with this situation. One of the more controversial has been TEXAS Gov. Rick Perry's decision to spend $5 million to place cameras along his state's border, with video images they capture being streamed in real time onto a Web site that is open to the public. On June 19, the State Net Capitol Journal examined the ongoing debate over Perry's plan. In case you missed it, the article can be found on our Web site at Default_XREF_styleREFhttp://statenet.com/capitol_journal/06-12- 2006. ***************************************************************** State Net Publications """""""""""""""""""""" Editor: Rich Ehisen, e-mail: capj@statenet.com Assoc. Editor: Korey Clark, e-mail: capj@statenet.com Contributing Editor: A.G. Block, e-mail: capj@statenet.com Copyright 2005, Information for Public Affairs, Inc. ***************************************************************** To receive future issues in PDF or HTML format contact our Help Desk at 800/726-4566 or email helpdesk@statenet.com. To unsubscribe, go to http://statenet.com/unsubscribe *****************************************************************