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HOUSE INFORMATION
OFFICE Weekly Wrap-up #1 The House of Representatives of the 147th General Assembly of Georgia convened its second regular session at 10:00 a.m. on Monday, January 12, 2004. The state constitution requires all regular sessions of the General Assembly start on the second Monday in January and last for forty legislative days. Next week, the General Assembly will be in recess. On Monday, the Capitol will be closed for the MLK Holiday and the remaining four days of the week will be used for committee hearings on the proposed state appropriations bills. Lawmakers will reconvene January 26th at 1:00 pm for the 6th legislative day. Session Schedule - House and Senate leaders have agreed to a session schedule for four weeks. Beginning January 12th thru February 16th, Monday sessions will convene at 1:00 p.m. in order to provide flexible travel options for members living across the state. Also in that time period, the General Assembly will recess every Wednesday and use the entire day for committee meetings. Leaders of both chambers hope to shorten the length of the session and adjourn by the end of March. To
read the schedule click here State of the State - On Wednesday Governor Sonny Perdue gave a combined state of the state and budget address before a joint session of the House and Senate at 8:00 pm in the house chamber. He reported the state of the state is strong and getting stronger and that Georgians remain as confident....as energetic....as resourceful....and as optimistic as he has ever seen. Highlighting the speech was a pledge to not allow any new taxes and that tough choices will have to be made in the form of budget cuts mixed in with some new spending proposals. Included in the Governor's speech: *$1 billion in bonds to jump-start Georgia's recovery with building projects which includes $176 million for K-12 school construction and improvements, $47 million for the state's technical schools, $42 million for ports in Savannah and Brunswick, $10 million for a state-of-the-art biological research building at the University of Georgia; $5 million for the Medical College of Georgia Research Initiative; and $2 million to help construct a nanotechnology research center at Georgia Tech *2 percent raises for teachers and state employees *Claimed the HOPE college scholarship isn't going anywhere, but said it should be linked to a minimum SAT score *Touted a proposal to push legislation to delay driver's licenses for students who are chronically disruptive or truant, drop out of school, or commit a serious crime on school grounds *Proposed a shift of 65 child protection workers to local county office and sending $24 million to Level of Care Placement Program, which matches children with foster families that can best serve their needs. To
read the Governor's speech click here State of the Judiciary - Chief Justice Norman Fletcher
of Georgia's Supreme Court addressed a joint session of the House and
Senate on Friday at 11:00 am in the house chamber to give his State of
the Judiciary speech. First and foremost the Chief Justice implored lawmakers
not to change the Uniform Indigent Defense System (HB770) adopted during
the 2003 legislative session. He also urged lawmakers to fully fund the
system so it can be operational by 2005 and warned the courts would implement
their own system if money is not appropriated. The Chief Justice also
stressed the need for non-partisan elections for probate judges, sentencing
reform because judges need flexibility to ensure sentences are fair and
just, decriminalization of certain traffic offenses and concerns about
across the board budget cuts adversely effecting the courts.
To go to the Georgia
Supreme Court's Website click here Reducing School Truancy - On Thursday the House passed HB 395 by a vote of 162-3. The measure allows school officials to set up a protocol committee, made up of juvenile justice, law enforcement and social service authorities, to adopt guidelines that spell out punishments and consequences for students being truant. The guidelines would be distributed to parents and their children when they reach age ten and they would have to sign a statement outlining the consequences of being truant. Parents or guardians who violate the guidelines could face fines of between $25 and $100 and the protocol committee would be required to report truancy results they gather to the Georgia Department of Education every 3 months. The bill also allows the revocation of a truant student's driver's license. Invitation to the President of the United States - On
Monday the House passed HR 942 by a vote of 176-0. The resolution, which
is co-sponsored by House Speaker Terry Coleman (D-Eastman) and House Minority
Leader Glenn Richardson (R-Dallas), is an open invitation for President
George Bush to address a Joint Session of the legislature during the 2004
session. President Bush was in Atlanta on Thursday to observe Martin Luther
King's Birthday who would have been 75 yrs old. Atlanta Mayoral Visit - On Tuesday the House took time to greet Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, who spoke briefly before members. Mayor Franklin welcomed lawmakers to the state's capitol city, and expressed her eagerness to work with the General Assembly for the best interests of Georgia and its citizens. Legislation allowing Atlanta to impose a 1 cent sales tax to help fund upgrades on the city's dilapidated sewer networks is currently working its way through the Senate. Other Legislation Passed this Week Thursday, January 15, 2004 - 4th day of the session
Georgia House of Representatives ----------------------------------------------------------- |
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