Tag Archives: 2006 legislature

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Legislature briefs
Ban on Gay Clubs Debated, Held
Utah’s disabled decry years’ wait for help
Protest at Capitol: Democrats say $8.4 million can and should be used to fully fund the waiting list

With budget debate ahead, education tops public’s list
Surplus grappling set to begin today
House, Senate, Governor’s Office: With projections over $1 billion, expect a three-way budget battle

Republicans Shoot Down Redistricting Reform
Education Briefs from the Legislature
Lobbyist Reform Bills Caught in Logjam
Measures gaining to limit info
Open records: The public’s right to know versus privacy is at issue in the controversial House bills

Deseret News
Spending showdown: Less money than hoped could alter tax-cut plans
Battle looms over disclosure of lobbyist gifts
Who will get a tax cut and how much? Several tax bills advance while another one dies
Hotel-tax bill that aids Real is OK’d
Ralliers want funds for disabled
Toll-roads bill earns preliminary approval
House panel approves nuclear waste override bill
Prison-privatization bill gets early OK in Senate
House vote kills measure tied to ‘social promotion’
Redistricting measure fails in House committee
Bourdeaux aiming to earmark funds for English learning programs
Bill that would help alleviate NCLB costs passes committee
Bill suspending drivers’ licenses of dead-beat parents advances in Senate
Support offered for foster kids’ benefits bill
Committee advances ‘tougher tattoo’ bill to full Senate debate
Measure reimbursing dentists, docs for Medicaid treatment advances
2 bills target gay-straight clubs
Graduation test option progresses
House panel OKs resolution against fed curricula rules

My letter in the Deseret News

Last week I wrote here about my disabled friend getting hit by a car in a pedestrian crosswalk, ironically on the same day the Utah House voted down a measure that would have made it law for cars to stop (currently they only have to yield) for pedestrians.

I wrote a letter to the editor that was published in today’s Deseret News:

Put people ahead of vehicles

It was ironic to hear of the Utah House vote against implementing extra safeguards at pedestrian crosswalks for the disabled. The reason given was “traffic would be tied up.” The same day as the vote, my disabled friend was hit by a car that failed to yield for her as she approached the middle of such a crosswalk with an orange flag. Two other cars had stopped. The car that hit her did not even slow down. As a result, my friend now has two broken legs, a totaled wheelchair and weeks of recuperating from surgery.

Put people ahead of automobiles. I urge our lawmakers to reconsider this bill.

Deanna Taylor
West Jordan

Hill Happenings

Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Legislature 2006: Today’s agenda
Big push remains midway on Hill: Utah Legislature: Tax, budget issues are pending
Utah’s homeland money under ax–Bush plan: The president wants to cut $2 million from the state’s security funds

Deseret News
Legislative tally
Nuclear power is safe and clean – opinion
Utahns want more for education – opinion
House to clear logjam
Stadium at heart of hotel-tax battle

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Big push remains midway on Hil–Utah Legislature: Tax, budget issues are pending
Ruzicka grooming a nest full of eaglets
Following Mama Bird: They oppose a hate-crimes bill but back restrictions on abortion and gay rights

Deseret News
Huntsman threatens vetoes: Governor says ‘extreme’ bills ‘weaken’ his office
Would HB7 create a Catch-22?
Board of Education split on HB7 Measure would deny in-state tuition to illegal immigrants
Mom hopes to see nurse in every school: Measure in House Rules would fund study of issue

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
More Legislative Briefs
SHORT SESSIONS
‘Lost Boys’ measure advances
Plan to slash tax rate debuts in Legislature–Income: Supporters say three-quarters of Utahns would profit if the bill passed
All back Bramble on RDA: Redevelopment agencies: Bill creates 3 categories with their own uses, rules
Bill on teen abortion goes to Senate: Legislators wrangle over parental consent, notification

Deseret News
‘Flatter’ tax OK’d despite protest
Panel tables IHC bill after a testy debate: Lawmaker concedes his measure targets the health-care giant
Panel OKs health bill for small businesses
Measure to expand child-data registry
Committee unanimous in passing RDA overhaul: Bramble confident the bill will end abuses of power
Tuition bill ready for Huntsman’s pen: Out-of-staters, troops to get leg up on school funds
Senate panel approves parental-consent bill
Ban on lobbyists’ gifts passes in House panel
Measure would mitigate some sex convictions

Politics and the safeguards for the disabled/pedestrians at crosswalks in Utah

An ironic twist:

Yesterday a good friend of ours who is wheelchair bound, due to complications from Multiple Sclerosis, was hit in the middle of a pedestrian crosswalk by a car whose driver failed to stop for her, despite the fact that she was carrying a bright orange flag and that other cars had stopped.

Yesterday afternoon the Utah House voted down a measure that would have provided extra safeguards for the disabled in such crosswalks.

Our friend is one of the most faithful vigilers at our weekly sidewalk vigil (now in its 5th year), always arriving on time and holding a sign. She comes to other peace and justice events as well. We were arriving to our vigil place when we saw a horde of emergency equipment and as we approached our parking spot saw our friend’s empty wheelchair. Needless to say, I was opening the car door before Tom stopped it to jump out and find out what was going on. The ambulance was just pulling away with our friend. The police officer told me that she was “o.k.” but had a fractured leg.

Long story short, in the midst of emergency equpipment, reporters and tv crews, we helped provide some information about her, got her wheelchair out of the intersection and had a friend with a truck come get the parts after Tom disassembled it. The wheelchair is no longer operable. We then went to the hospital where another friend had arrived and was able to be with our injured friend (she has no family in the area). In summary, our friend has two fractured legs and is facing surgery (probably today) and at least a week at a rehabilitation center. Tom is going to attend to getting her a replacement chair today.

The driver of the car that hit our friend (Tom is quoted in the D-News article below) did not slow down or stop for her. The impact sent her flying out of her chair, along with her dinner she had had in her lap, about 30 feet from her chair. Our friend does not remember being hit but does remember being on the ground with people around her.

It is highly ironic that this happened on the heels of the Utah House decision to vote down extra safety measures for the disabled at crosswalks. Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson was instrumental in having canisters of orange flags for pedestrian’s safety which has helped pedestrians tremendously, but obviously more is needed. I also find it twisted that lawmakers would put automobiles’ interests ahead of pedestrians (see article below – reasons why the measure was voted down).

That was a bad move, Utah lawmakers.

I have submitted a letter to the Deseret News for publication in the opinion section.

From today’s Salt Lake Tribune:


Crosswalk users such as this one – seen on South Rio Grande Street in The Gateway on Thursday – will get no extra protection after a vote in the Utah House of Representatives. Representatives decided not to give disabled Utahns in crosswalks new safeguards. HB96, by Rep. Brad Daw, R-Orem, would have required drivers to stop while a person in a wheelchair or using a cane or walker made their way through a crosswalk. Current law only requires drivers to yield. But amid complaints about such restrictions tying up traffic, the bill died in the House on a tie vote.


Pedestrians use the cross walk on South Rio Grande Street in The Gateway. HB 96 modifies the Motor Vehicles Code by amending provisions related to certain pedestrians’ right-of-way in a crosswalk. (Chris Detrick/Salt Lake Tribune)

From today’s Deseret News:

Woman in wheelchair is struck in crosswalk
A peace activist on her way to an anti-war vigil in downtown Salt Lake City was hit by a car Thursday night.
The 59-year-old woman was in her motorized wheelchair in the crosswalk about 150 S. Main when she was struck. Salt Lake City police said she was carrying one of the orange pedestrian flags, but the driver of the car did not see her.
How could people not see a woman in a wheelchair? asked Tom King with People for Peace and Justice, who was headed to the vigil when he came upon the accident involving his friend. The group has been leading a weekly vigil against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan outside the federal building.
The woman was taken by ambulance to the University Hospital where she was reported to be in good condition.

Sympathy Votes???? Buttars says his bills are his “legacy”

Chris Buttars, the Utah Senator sponsor of the evolution and anti-gay club bills in this years legislative session, has been reported as “gravely ill”.

Buttars has been replaced on the Senate Judiciary Committee, due to illness.

Buttars…. has told his colleagues that the legislation he sponsored this year is part of his legacy, a life’s work of promoting conservative morals.

There is some speculation as to whether or not senators will vote on his bills out of sympathy.

Senate President John Valentine acknowledged a wave of sentiment for Buttars among lawmakers. Voting for his legislation may be another matter.
“I’ve seen a lot of sympathy to move his bills forward. But I haven’t seen sympathy as far as actual votes cast,” Valentine said.
And Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, who regularly has visited Buttars in the hospital

and has taken on his less flashy legislation, said, “Certainly there has been sympathy to keep his bills alive. Would we pass legislation because of that? No.”

Word has it that another senator is going to be bringing an anti-gay club bill to the floor next week.

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
Legislature Short Takes
TODAY’S AGENDA HIGHLIGHTS
Crosswalk safeguards stall
Measure to grant Council its own attorney advances
House rethinks, decides crime should be a felony
Panel OKs bill to hinder over-the-counter cold medicine purchases
House OKs limits on records access
Buttars is ill; bills ‘still alive’: Hospitalized: The senator tells colleagues his controversial legislation is his legacy
House to consider parental rights bil: Measure would limit gays’ ability to define families

Deseret News
Child advocates see poverty rise: Group is tracking nearly 30 bills that directly impact children
Tourism, tax funding in spotlight again
War on meth heats up: Sale of decongestant may be restricted
Bills to regulate adult internet sites introduced
Unanimous support for exempting dinner theaters from tax
House caucus says schools should get school surplus: Also, group is against borrowing any money for budget next year
Senate panel approves measure on rental fees
Update on child support is moving to full Senate
House OKs unanimously anti-gang, murder bills
House backs pay increase of $17,895 for Herbert
House votes to increase animal torture to a felony
Seniors want state park access back
Measure to reinforce the rights of biological, adoptive parents advances
Buttars replaced on Senate Judiciary Committee
Bill to authorize voluntary contribution for protecting access to public land passes to House floor
Measures on curbing illegals fail

Disturbing action on bills in Utah Legislature

I was encouraged when I saw in this morning’s news that the bill banning gay clubs was pulled from the senate. I thought “at last they’ve come to their senses!” “Hallelujah!” from Handel’s “Messiah” began playing through my mind.
(Historical side note: Handel wrote “Messiah” because it was his job to compose music for the King. “Messiah” was written purely for entertainment purposes and not necessarily solely religious. Entertainment of the day often revolved around religious text, as dictated by the King. I recognize “Messiah” as a piece of musical brilliance….)

Then I read that the reason it was pulled was because there was no quorum.

(Music comes to screeching halt)

The bill’s sponsor, Chris Buttars, is ill and unable to attend. Other senators were not present, either, preventing a quorum.

Then I saw that the all-male senate committee voted not to require Utah insurance companies to extend contraceptive coverage to women. This was done by not even allowing it to get to the floor for disucssion. This is very frustrating to activists who support women’s reproductive rights (including me).

We need more women in the Utah Senate (This is a call to you women: RUN FOR OFFICE!)

The Senate has voted on making seatbelt violations a primary offense. Now there’s a good useage of time (and dollars) spent on issues.

A House committee passed a proposal to support a bill that would require citizens to post a $100,000 bond to sue the government. This would put roadblocks on anyone wanting to take the government to court for violating laws. Or if you are a group of science teacheres or the state Board of Ed wanting to challenge the evolution bill in court, you’d have to get this bond. I scratch my head……just who is the government accountable to?

And then I became even more discouraged over the state of our state: The evolution, or “origin of life”, bill has passed the House Committee by one vote.

If teachers teach origins of life, they would have a curriculum available from the State Office of Education.
But Education Office attorney Carol Lear fears the bill opens the door to religious discussion in science classes. “Proponents of the bill want to make sure there’s an opportunity for intelligent design or creationism . . . to have some moment in the classroom. I think (this bill) certainly allows for that. One of the questions is, does it require it,” said Lear, director of school law and legislation for the State Office of Education.
“This discussion has been so involved with people’s religious points of view . . . (that) it becomes a discussion about legislation with a religious viewpoint,” she said. “The court in reviewing that gets to look at the whole discussion, even how people perceive the discussion, and you can’t just say . . . King’s X, this isn’t about religion.”

If this bill passes, I guarantee you there are going to be some very, very unhappy science teachers out there (I work with one of them).

Hill Happenings

Yesterday’s Utah Legislative Report Summary
Articles in published in today’s Utah newspapers about the Yesterday’s Utah Legislature news:

Salt Lake Tribune
LEGISLATIVE AGENDA
Legislature Briefs
A day on the Hill
Bill banning gay clubs from Utah high schools pulled from a Senate committee
Minority, women business bill OK’d Tracking: Measure may keep Utah from losing millions of dollars in federal contracts
Bill that would outlaw smoking in clubs advances
Women’s ‘pill bill’ dies again
Contraception: Planned Parenthood director tells lawmakers to provide ‘health care that eliminates the need for abortion’

Media: Contact law is overkill HB258: The BlackBerry bill is ending up limiting all types of public access
Evolution bill survives by a vote: Critic asks why lawmakers are telling teachers how to teach
Budget battle brews on Hill: Despite a huge surplus, look for a war of wills over how much to spend

Deseret News
Origin of life bill survives
Noncompete clauses for MDs may see limits
Cannon wants state control of tuition costs: Issue of in-state fees and immigrants on his agenda
Stance on contraceptives frustrates activist: She says lawmakers sending mixed messages this session
Property-tax shift clears House panel
System would track minority businesses
House panel backs a smoking ban: Measure targeting bars, private clubs passes in 6-1 vote
Panel passes 5-day week for building inspectors
Senate panel approves street-racing measure
Measure would halt city, county cell-phone bans
Panel OKs bill on bonds for those seeking N-stays
Bill advances on skipping graduation requirements
Senate OKs measure tightening seat-belt law
Senate committee OKs bill on contact lenses