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Rep.
Randy Nix Weekly Capitol Update
February
25, 2008 - We
have officially completed the twentieth legislative day of the
2008 Georgia General Assembly session, which signals we have passed
the half-way point of the constitutionally mandated "no-more-than"
forty-day legislative session. The reconciliation budget, called
the "little budget" is the document that looks at where
the state stands, especially with federally-mandated Medicaid
and education funding. If we are short, usually due to unanticipated
growth, the General Assembly must infuse new funds to offset those
required expenses. The
House
of Representatives took the lead in adding $53 million to help
establish a state trauma care network; $6.5 million was added
for indigent care trust fund, a federally mandated program; and
$15 million for the PeachCare health insurance program that assists
working families who cannot afford health insurance. Because of
the ongoing drought conditions, we added $40 million for the development
of new reservoirs. The House and Senate Appropriation Committees
have put the final touches on the Fiscal Year 2008 Reconciliation
Budget and will now go to a conference committee to iron out the
differences.
The
reason we are insisting on a conference committee is to insure
that the austerity cuts the Governor made last year are restored
to our school systems.
We
continued our "War on Drugs" by making trafficking of
the drug Ecstasy only bailable by a judge in superior court, joining
trafficking in cocaine, methamphetamine, heroine, and marijuana.
Ecstasy has become a drug of choice for many of our children.
This bill, House Bill 960, passed unanimously.
In
our efforts to streamline the Department of Transportation, and
make it more accountable, we unanimously passed H.B. 1123. The
legislation will require the DOT commissioner to file annual reports
to the General Assembly, as well as, the Governor. The reports
would mark the progress that DOT has made in disposal of county
maintenance barns and surplus equipment; the commissioner's plan
for road maintenance and the funding amount and source for the
funding; and the commissioner's plan for inspecting and maintaining
existing bridges and the money's source.
In
an effort to protect our children who attend a daycare, we strengthened
the law that requires daycare center directors to undergo a Georgia
Crime information Center check. The new legislation would require
all employees of the daycare center to undergo a background check
both with the Georgia Crime information Center and the National
Crime Information Center. It would also require any individual
18 years of age or older who resides in a home that operates a
daycare, to undergo the required background check. This bill,
H.B. 904 passed 159-1.
In
an effort to help our disabled military veterans, we unanimously
passed Senate Bill 369 that would allow military doctors to submit
affidavits stating that a service member or a veteran is disabled,
regardless if the doctor is licensed to practice in Georgia.
Finally,
one piece of legislation I am happy for us to pass is the creation
of a Legislative Service Award. The bill, H.R. 1081 wouldallow
each Representative, on an annual basis, to present a Legislative
Service Award to an individual or group who has contributed to
the public good. This resolution was unanimously passed.
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