Tag Archives: politics

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 Briefs
More from the Legislature
Gay Clubs Bills Moving Forward
‘Updated’ law would allow sexual insults, false reports
Child support tabs may go up: Senate approves update of the guidelines
Senator softens bill on illegal residents’ tuition
Compromise Tax Plan Being Readied
Bill Advances to Shrink Governor’s Budget Power
Legislation gets rubber stamp from state lawyers–
Weighing constitutionality: Virtually every bill in the Utah Legislature passes the test

Good Samaritan Bill Put Aside
Panel says cities shouldn’t use occupancy permits as leverage
House OKs proposal for an all-day kindergarten
$7 million: The voluntary program, endorsed by the governor, aims to bridge the achievement gap

Plan to eliminate rail line receives backing in House

Deseret News
Most favor toll roads — asap
HB7 may include a reprieve:A revised bill would have no impact on current undocumented students
Correction: Poll chart

Hill Happenings

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

Salt Lake Tribune
Utah lawmakers explore nuke-plant possibilities: In the House: A vote is scheduled for today on a bill calling for the study of nuclear power generation
Do special interests sit too high on the Hill?
Utah: As more lawmakers dabble in real estate, new questions arise about conflicts of interest

Soccer stadium politics heat up: As session winds down, S.L. County’s share of project, RSL’s finances remain contested issues

Deseret News
Loophole-filled tax code eroding education – Opinion by Gov. Huntsman
Most favor toll roads – asap
HB7 may include a reprieve: A revised bill would have no impact on current undocumented students
Researchers watch stress glide away

Hill Happenings

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

Salt Lake Tribune
Do special interests sit too high on the Hill?
Utah: As more lawmakers dabble in real estate, new questions arise about conflicts of interest

Soccer stadium politics heat up
As session winds down, S.L. County’s share of project, RSL’s finances remain contested issues

State officials seek best ways to help Lost Boys find way Polygamists’ castoffs: Lawmakers and the attorney general weigh tactics
Off the Agenda: Downtown stadium dreams die hard in SLC Council
DC Notebook: Hatch knows how to work a D.C. crowd

Deseret News
Guv’s threat: a special session
700 fee changes proposed: Small increase to consumers will bring $2.5 million to state
Banks, credit unions like bill: Legislation would give state financial service examiners a pay hike

Utah house Committee Approves Anti-Gay Club Bill

The saga continues on the bill desigend to keep Gay-Straight Alliance Clubs (GSA) from meeting in Utah’s schools.

Yesterday a Utah House committee approved a version of Chris Buttar’s bill. HB393, introduced by Rep. Aaron Tilton R-Springville, dictates how clubs would operate. Instead of banning the clubs, students would be required to obtain parental permission to participate in the club.

A high school student I know attended yesterday’s hearing and was able to speak to the issue. She told me that Rep. Tilton claimed that topics in GSA meetings were all about sex. The student challenged that since Mr. Tilton has never attended any GSA meetings. She also refuted the claim that topics were all about sex in her speech to legislators.

Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff states that this bill, if passed, will be able to be consitutionally defendable, since it would be violating the Equal Access Act. Furthermore, Utah School Boards and Utah School Superintendents associations sees this measure as an “unnecessary encroachment” into public schools.

The Deseret News has a published survey in today’s paper on the public’s opinion of GSA’s in schools. The public, according to the poll, is split on the issue.

Buttars is scheduled to return to session after an undisclosed illness at which time he will pick up the bill he introduced to ban GSA clubs.

Tilton said he will work with Buttars on which version they would jointly push.
Buttars has said he is against Gay-Straight Alliances because they are “conditioning clubs” meant to create sympathizers to a social group that goes against his morals.

I sound like a broken record: His morals? Who does Buttars represent – himself or his contituents?
This legislation of morality continues to infringe upon the constitutional rights by our legislators upon citizens. Where will the line be drawn? What precedent will this set for future moral legislation issues if this passes?

Gifts to Lawmakers

Yesterday I posted a piece on a Utah lawmaker’s outburst against the media with regards to the issue of legislators receiving gifts.

Today’s Deseret News reports that a Salt Lake Tribune reporter decided to give Sen. Howard Stephenson R-Draper, a gift:

The reporter gave Stephenson a can of bug repellent he said was supposed to be able to kill not just one bee but “the entire nest.”
The note accompanying the extra-large can specified the gift cost less than $5, a reference to Thursday’s committee debate over a change in the state’s ethics laws that sparked the senator’s nine-minute tirade about the media.

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
Senate opposes plan to eliminate food tax
Panel rejects boost in minimum wage $5.15 to $7 per hour: Only one Republican on the House committee supported the increase
Audit: Restore condemnation power to RDAs
Only last year: A Provo senator’s bill nullified the ability of cities in Utah to snatch property

Mixed bill gets mixed reactions
Committee blocks change in gun rules
Panel OKs bill on gay clubs
School issue: The House version is not as strong as the Senate’s and sponsors will need to negotiate

Voucher bill heads to House floor

Deseret News
Ethics honor roll – Opinion
School voucher bill faces battle — again
Panel OKs tamer school-clubs bill
Child-support bill gets a Senate OK: SB195 would adjust parents’ payment for first time since ’94
House and Senate spar over tax cuts: Huntsman’s office takes a swipe at the GOP
Gun-bill maneuver backfires on 4 senators: Quartet slip off to vote 4-0, spurring panel to table SB24
Use of RDA funds is under scrutiny: Legislative audit calls for oversight — plus district, county input
House OKs letting cities create school districts
Measure amends voting precincts of 4 lawmakers
House committee refuses to raise minimum wage
High schoolers may have to pay for college courses
Lawmakers urged not to cut Medicaid benefits
State school board says no to education reform
Stephenson gets a gift to hold off media ‘swarm’

Utah legislator accuses “crooked” media for making lawmakers loook bad

In the midst of the debate of SB102 and HB101, the Utah bill that would regulate gifts to lawmakers, Sen. Howard Stephenson, R-Draper, attacked the news media for making lawmakers look bad. The bill was defeated. The measure would have lowered the dollar threshold for lobbyists to report gifts to legislators.

“We are giving an irresponsible media more fodder to demonize the Legislature,” he said. “We are giving them too much fodder to destroy us.”
The media consistently paints lawmakers, he said, “as crooks on the take.”
Stephenson, the only sitting legislator who is also a registered lobbyist, said, “The problem is ethics in the media, not ethics in the Legislature. . . . We have a media that is about making money.”
No one wants to run for the Legislature because of the yellow-journalism media, causing a direct “threat to representative democracy,” said Stephenson, who is president of the Utah Taxpayers Association, one of the most active lobbyists groups on Capitol Hill. (The UTA itself doesn’t spend money entertaining legislators.)
The media are “like a swarm of killer bees,” said Stephenson, “using snide innuendo and invective to attack their prey.”

A Deseret News headline in today’s Utah Legislature section reads Legislators say gifts make up for sacrifices

In explaining the sacrifice made to serve in the Legislature, [Darin Peterson, R-Nephi]Peterson choked up with tears as he said he missed the smell of his beautiful wife’s hair and the companionship of his six children as he had to spend 45 days away from them during the general session.

45 days, making around $18,000 (including stipends).

Candidates for the House and Senate offices know well what the duites are for being elected to office. By creating this big fuss over “sacrifices” and extra “gifts”, these lawmakers are telling us that it’s not enough that they perform their duty as a service to their constituents and the citizens of this state. Lawmakers like Stephenson and Peterson insist that the “sacrifices” they make warrant receiving gifts.

I, for one, did not vote for my legislators to receive gifts on top of what they already received. I voted for them to perform the duties expected of them to represent the citizens of their districts, knowing that my tax dollars are funding their salaries for 45 days of work (and beyond if warranted).

If teachers (like me) were to begin receiving gifts above their salaries that tax dollars pay, I wonder if our lawmakers would deem that “o.k.”?

CNN’s reporting on Abu Ghraib photos released

Jeremy Scahill, a correspondent for Democracy Now!, has a piece on Common Dreams entitled On CNN The Real Abu Ghraib Scandal is The Photos, Not the Abuse. Scahill scolds CNN for reporting that the real scandal was the release of the photos – not the actual abuse.

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
Legislation briefs
Senate sends along bill for lockup–By 2014? Any such facility would accept only minimum- or medium-security inmates
Lodging dispute is rural vs. urban
Campaign funds and family members
Bear River water project close
Grocery tax relief a stumbling block: Senators’ dislike of measure hinders agreement
Huntsman set for slew of restriction bills
Public access: Governor says he is concerned about several of the measures, and he must be convinced

Legislative debate turns into condemnation of ‘killer bee’ media

Deseret News
Tax-cut compromise falls apart
Financial-incentive plan for companies advances
Legislators say gifts make up for sacrifices
Minorities panel is mum on tuition bill
Sex offenders may have to pay a fee to register
Senate OKs bill banning rental application fees
Nonpartisan regents bill resurfaces, advances
Legislation on dangers of skiing heads to House

My interview on local radio today

Today I was interviewed by Brian Schott, news director of Utah’s local NPR affiliated public radio station, KCPW on the ballot access petition drive of the Green Party of Utah.

(I thought I did well in the interview, but I definitely need to work on my “uh” and “ums”!)

Listen to the interview HERE.