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Email Newsletter of April 3, 2006

Senator Nancy Jacobs: District 34: Maryland: Cecil and Harford Counties
News Update from Senator Nancy Jacobs
District 34: Harford and Cecil Counties
April 12, 2006

In this Issue...
* The Politics Behind the Baltimore City School Take Over
* BGE- We're Not Done Yet
* The Lack of Eminent Domain Laws
* The Teachers New Retirement Plan
* My Opinion on the 2006 Session
* News You Can Use
* I Want to Hear from You

We are not going to forget this session for quite some time. The BGE rate hike is still undecided and there has been no change to eminent domain laws. The Democrats have made it easier to tamper with the election process in this state, but when it comes to the education of students, the Democrats sided with the Mayor of Baltimore to block the state from taking control of 11 Baltimore schools that are in dire need of help. This was an unusual session and I am sure it will be followed by an unusual election especially since the Democrats passed early voting laws for precincts in heavily Democratic areas.


The Politics Behind the Baltimore City School Take Over

On Monday the Maryland State Senate voted on the future of the Baltimore City school students and the outlook isn’t good. Both the house and senate voted to overturn the Governor's veto of HB 1215.

The General Assembly blocked the state from taking control of 11 schools in Baltimore City that are in dire need of help. The following Washington Post editorial illustrates the unacceptable situation the students have faced because of the city’s lack of leadership. Allowing the city to maintain the status quo is unacceptable. The students of Baltimore City deserve better and the state was prepared to give them the leadership and hope for their future that the city has failed to do.

The Washington Post editorial article: Baltimore's Disgrace

 


BGE- We're Not Done Yet

The BGE issue has been with us these past 90 days, and Mike Miller, the President of the Senate, failed to allow the senate to vote on a bill to bring about a resolution to limit the electric price hike. In the final minutes of session on Monday night, a bill was presented to the senate that would have reduced energy rates for a million BGE customers, something the citizens of Maryland have been looking for the past three months.

There is plenty of criticism to go around. But the real hindrance to passing the piece of legislation to help the citizens of Maryland was Senate President, Mike Miller. He couldn’t bring himself to put policy before politics. In fact, Mike Miller pulled out of negotiations with the Governor, Constellation Energy, Speaker Bush and other key legislators because he couldn’t get what he wanted, which is a new Public Service Commission with his handpicked choices on the payroll.

The General Assembly knew the BGE rate hike was going to be the most important issue facing us this year, yet we were not able to come to an agreement in the senate. When the leader of the senate doesn’t bring the bill to the senate floor until twenty minutes before our 90 day legislative session ends, one has to wonder about his motives. He had a copy of the bill for hours and yet he chose not to bring it to the senate floor to be voted on until 11:40 pm. The General Assembly can resolve legislation about the closing of failing Baltimore Schools in 72 hours but when it comes to something as political as energy rates, we cannot find a solution in 90 days.

Mike Miller has made this issue partisan and political when there was no need for it to be either. When are people going to realize that there are consequences for such blatant actions? We are not elected to the senate to play politics with the most important legislation and issue of this term. We are here to do the people’s work. Unfortunately, we were not given the opportunity to do so.

I only hope that the Governor can find a way around Mike Miller’s partisanship to fix our energy situation. If not, a special session will be next on the agenda.

BGE Customers Face 21 Percent Rate Raise

Power Rate Relief in Md. Squelched in Final Minutes

 


The Lack of Eminent Domain Laws

I am sad to say that during this session, the General Assembly failed to protect the residents of Maryland from the consequences of unfair eminent domain laws. Both of the bills that I co-sponsored, SB173-Property Protection Act of 2006 and SB155- Harford County- Eminent Domain- Limitation on Condemnation Authority to correct this problem, failed to get out of committee.

I, like many of my constituents, wanted something done about this important issue. However, the majority party has once again put politics before policy. The leadership made this session partisan to the point of hurting the people that voted us into office. Even when Marylanders make it evident that they want something done about this issue, the democrat leadership finds a way to not pass legislation to correct the situation. Now they are trying to blame the Republicans and Governor for the demise of the bills they killed.

I promise that next year I will sponsor another bill that will protect my constituents from overreaching government. My only hope is that next year we can find a way to put what our constituents want first and leave politics out of it.

The Teachers New Retirement Plan

I am happy to announce that we passed a bill that will help thousands of our teachers. The result is very similar to SB 1019, which I co- sponsored. The senate bill contained the provision of retroactivity back to 1998, whereas the house bill didn't offer this long over due and needed benefit. If Maryland hopes to keep our teachers from leaving the state then we need to start providing our teachers with better benefits. We’re on the right track with this bill.

The multiplier will also increase in the new teachers plan from 1.4% to 1.8%. Teachers in this pension plan will also be putting in a 5% contribution phased in over a three-year period. This bill has the backing of the Maryland State Teachers Association.

Teachers play such a vital role in our children's lives that it is only right that we give them a way to better prepare for life when they retire. With the passage of this bill, Harford and Cecil Counties will be able to not only persuade teachers to enter our school system but will also keep the wonderful teachers that we already have.

I have received hundreds of emails, letters, phone calls and petitions from teachers and I am truly happy that we were able to pass a bill to help them.

MD Lawmakers Approve Pension Overhaul


My Opinion on the 2006 Session

This past session has truly been one of the hardest sessions in recent memory. Right from the start with the overriding of the Governor’s vetoes in the first two weeks of session right up to Monday at midnight, partisanship has ruled this session.

It is clear that the Democrats are afraid that the Governor will win reelection. Never before have bills been submitted to directly weaken a governor’s legislative authority. Whether it’s a bill that forces one member of the Board of Regents to resign if he continues helping the governor to raise money for his campaign or a bill that would make the Governor’s departmental appointees go through another round of confirmation hearings, the democratic legislators had only one purpose- to thwart our republican governor.

The Democrats continually pushed their bills through and then held up bills sponsored by the Republicans. The Democrats can conjure up a bill and pass it in 72 hours but they cannot pass a bill to help Maryland residents with electric rates in 90 days. The Democrats fail to realize that their actions have consequences.

In one session the Democrats can defend a dysfunctional school system that effects thousands of children and the next minute pass voting laws that will give them a distinct advantage at the polls by opening early election polls in heavily Democratic areas with no paper trail, leaving the election process open to fraud.

During this session we were happy to see the morning after pill legislation fail again however, stem cell research pass without limits on the testing of embryonic stem cells.

This session has been purely about politics. Party came before constituents, party came before good policy, and party came before the education of thousands of Baltimore City school children.

This session has been tough but there is a way to fix that problem. We need to elect representatives that represent us, not those that only follow the party lines and the party leadership.

This session has been very difficult but my spirits are not down. We have issues that need to be addressed, and I will work hard to see that those issues are resolved next session if not before.

I thought you may be interested in seeing the Republican Party's take on this session. Here is their review of the session.

End of the 2006 Session—Miller and Busch are the leaders of the "Do Nothing Good Party"

The 2006 General Assembly session wrapped up this week. After the confetti fell in the Assembly chambers, and partisan Democrats slapping each others backs for their litany of petty legislation, Marylander's woke up to the fact that their elected officials failed to accomplish some of the biggest issues facing the state. The House and Senate, led by Busch and Miller, failed to provide relief for Maryland's electricity rate payers. They failed to pass legislation to protect children from child sexual predators. They failed to pass a veterans tax credit. Nothing was done on eminent domain. But, guess what folks, you can now carry an unfinished bottle of wine out of a restaurant! Oh, joy! And pets can have trust funds. Isn't that crucial?

The deal with BG&E fell apart in the waning hours of the session. The deal fell apart because of Senate President Mike Miller. You know, Dr. Deregulation, himself. The man who has accepted more than $100,000 in energy money. The man who pushed for deregulation in 1997, 1998 and was finally successful in 1999. Then he appointed himself to the conference committee to tailor the legislation to his own liking, all the while ignoring the pain he knew the legislation caused Maryland's rate payers down the road. But it's all about Mike, right? Even House Speaker Mike Busch railed against Miller, saying "You left $600 million on the table," Mr. Busch said of the senators in an interview after the legislature adjourned for the year. "People who voted against this voted against $600 million to bring home to their constituents," (BGE rate deal short circuits, special session up next?, Annapolis Capital, April 11, 2006.)

Here's another delegate who's frustration lead to calling out Miller's failure: "But a furious Del. Dereck E. Davis (D-Prince George's) said he could not believe the Senate balked at the deal just before midnight. On a procedural motion, it failed by one vote. 'They're rolling the dice with people's pocketbooks,' he said. 'That's one thing you just do not do.'" (Legislators in MD stay partisan to session's end, Washington Post, April 11, 2006.)

The legislature had time to draft petty partisan legislation aimed at the governor's cabinet secretaries, members of the University System's Board of Regents, former Insurance Commissioner, and stripping the governor's constitutional powers, yet DID NOT do the job they are sent to Annapolis to do: work on behalf of the people of the state. Instead of putting the people first, the Democrat-led General Assembly put themselves and their re- elections before Maryland. The people once again come in a distant second to the political agendas of the Democratic monopoly.

Governor Ehrlich will now finish the job the legislature failed to do. Governor Ehrlich has always put Marylanders first. He will clean up this mess created by Mike Miller and the monopoly and he will protect Maryland's electricity rate payers. Governor Ehrlich is leading while the out-of-touch Democratic legislators go back to their districts and pat themselves on the back.


News You Can Use

Property Tax Bill is Signed
 

General Assembly Fails to Resolve Electric Rate Debacle; Governor Looks into Solving the Problem on His Own

Governor Calls Assembly Session Extremely Partisan

Let Marylanders Protect Themselves

Lawmakers push tighter sex offender measures

 


I Want to Hear from You

If these issues or others are of concern to you please contact me. I represent you and your interests in Annapolis.

Click here to access our contact page.


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