State Legislature

Hillbilly SD legislator of the day; Don Kopp

Que song please;

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tqxzWdKKu8[/youtube]

I knew it would not take long for the legislative session to turn into ‘Guns and Abortion

RAPID CITY, SD – A Rapid City lawmaker says South Dakotans shouldn’t have to get a state permit to carry a concealed gun. Republican state Rep. Don Kopp says he’s introducing a bill in the South Dakota Legislature to get rid of the permit requirement. Kopp says if a South Dakota resident doesn’t have a criminal record, he or she should be able to carry a concealed gun without getting a permit and having to pay $10 for it. Kopp believes the permit requirement violates a person’s right to bear arms. His bill has been assigned to the South Dakota House’s Judiciary Committee.

But can the unborn carry a concealed weapon? Oh, wait, I can almost hear the faint sound of Don’s wheels spinning.

More bait & switch, this time from Pierre

As I have said in the past, Pierre plays this game every year, tons of optimism about the state budget in the Fall, but once the legislative session hits and schools come a crawling, doom and gloom;

But the sales tax, a barometer of the broader economy, was up 6.2 percent in October from a year ago.

And Dilges is already trying to soften the blow;

Budget conversations among lawmakers have been dominated by state employee raises, K-12 education and Medicaid. But restoring too much money too fast as the economy perks up would defeat the purpose of the “reset button,” Dilges said.

“We have to start thinking about doing business differently than we did before,” he added. “It’s not just a one-year cut, it’s a forever cut. We are going off a new base.”

In other words, an increase in education funding is never going to happen.

If the governor leaves funding untouched in K-12 education and Medicaid, those programs will be worse off in fiscal year 2013 than this year.

That’s because last year, the Legislature — working with the governor’s office — found about $24 million to ease cuts to both. But that money will be gone in fiscal year 2013, leaving education funding 8.6 percent lower than fiscal year 2011 and Medicaid funding 10 percent lower.

And it looks like they will be forcing South Dakotans to vote for a tax increase (5th penny) if they want education and Medicare funded. Not only is it irresponsible and pathetic, it is underhanded. This quote by Assistant Senate Majority Leader Corey Brown, R-Gettysburg says it all;

“Obviously, the hope would be that we would be able to find a way to replace that (education funding) on a more long-term basis,” he said.

Funny how there was zero mention of the $800 million sitting in an investment fund in the entire article. It seems the governor’s office, legislators, the media, the healthcare industry and educators are only giving us one choice this year, an increase in regressive sales taxes. No mention of a corporate income tax, ending tax breaks for foreign industry that comes to our state or tapping into the investment fund. Why? The GOP elite in our state love when the working class and poor pay the lion’s share of taxes especially on bread and milk. Then they wonder why the lines are so long at food pantries. Actually, I don’t think they wonder, they don’t care.

Now that Republicans in SD have ransacked public education funding on all levels, what’s next?

The Repugs managed to succeed at all levels, governor’s office, the legislature and now our courts;

In upholding the constitutionality of the state’s school funding system, a unanimous South Dakota Supreme Court said Thursday it isn’t convinced that the money appropriated for schools is inadequate or that more money would produce higher test scores and graduation rates.

Of course, this ruling has to do with timing, they were ruling on the funding setup before the state cut education by 6.6%. Of course our governor is in a state of denial when it comes to funding education;

“I am pleased with this opinion because the appropriate place to determine school funding is the Legislature, not the courts,” Gov. Dennis Daugaard said in a written statement. “I believe we should focus on student achievement, not spending, as the best measure of educational success. That approach is very consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision.”

Yeah, let’s keep cutting education and watch those test scores soar . . . .

Abdallah thinks he’d succeed with that argument today. The Legislature balanced its budgets by freezing per-student funding last year and cutting it by 6.6 percent this year. “Although the court didn’t find that the system was unconstitutional at the time of the trial … I seriously doubt that our current system would survive this type of analysis,” Abdallah said.

But it doesn’t stop one Republican lawmaker from crying about how we need to just let him do his job;

The five-year legal battle has frustrated some observers, including Sen. Mark Johnston, R-Sioux Falls, who said he’s “very upset” that a majority of the state’s school districts would pay for a lawsuit against the state. “The Supreme Court has spoken that it’s our job as legislators to fund schools,” he said.

So Mark, when you going to start doing your job? I hardly think cutting education by 6.6% when there is $800 million sitting in an investment fund to pick up the slack is DOING YOUR JOB, in fact, you and your party should be charged with child neglect, that would be a more appropriate lawsuit.

But there was one small victory from this lawsuit;

While the lawsuit was pending, the state threatened to audit the coalition of school districts, taking the position that it’s illegal for them to finance a lawsuit against the state. When school officials asked for a judge’s declaration that they can sue, Wilbur agreed with the state; but in that case, a unanimous Supreme Court overturned Wilbur’s decision.

Of course, Repugs bring back the tired old argument;

House Republican leader David Lust of Rapid City said Thursday that most people think school funding should be up to the governor and the Legislature. If the public disapproves of the way the Legislature pays school districts, he said, voters can make a change by electing new legislators.

Good luck with that, your party has a stranglehold on the public because of your bullshit ‘lower taxes’ campaign slogans, and the fact that most (but not all) Democrats in the legislature are a bit timid, except one;

House Democratic leader Bernie Hunhoff of Yankton, a supporter of increased state aid to schools, said he agrees that funding decisions must be made in the Legislature. The lawsuit was filed only because parents and school district officials are frustrated with lawmakers, he said.

Exactly. They sit around and talk about guns and vaginas. Instead of legislating how life may begin or end, why not legislate what happens in between, part of that is providing a good education and investing in our youth. But hey, that reality makes sense, and reality is something Repugs in this state can’t grasp.

 

 

Why would SD legislative representatives Wick and Steele allow corporations to write legislation?

(H/T – Helga)
Just a few of the corporations that are helping Wick & Steele write legislation for our state.
Did Manny Steele and Hal Wick enjoy New Orleans soul food while at the ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) annual meeting this past weekend? Enquiring minds would be interested to know if ALEC members Steele and Wick spent the weekend in New Orleans getting their marching orders from a long list of corporations. Corporations who write model legislation and then pass it on to legislators in all states to pass. ALEC drafts and promotes legislation that has crippled social service budgets, deregulated industries, slashed medical care for the poor and undermined consumer and worker protections in state after state. Big on their list is to close Planned Parenthood and remove the right of choice for women. This a full time job in SD for some legislators.
A state legislator pays only $50 a year to join ALEC. And corporate sponsors put up $5,000 to $50,000 — which gives legislators the privilege to write “model” laws that come from ALEC. ALEC is funded by a host of conservative corporations including the Koch brothers, Chevron, BP, Shell, Coors, Well Point, The Walton Family Foundation who work in secret to draw up bills that benefit specific business interests.
Steele and Wick have both held hunting events in SD for ALEC. Wick hosted an ALEC Pheasant Hunt fund attended by more than 20 SD state legislators along with out of state representatives that hunted and partied for 2 days at R & R Hunting in Seneca, SD.  Not to be outdone Steele had a 2009 ALEC Hunting party also.
Enquiring minds would also like to know if Larry Diedrich, Duane Sutton, Bill Peterson, Jay Duenwald, Mike Jaspers, Ken Juhnke, Mike Buckingham, Phyllis Heineman, Tom Hansen, Kermit Staggers, Tom Hacki or Dennis Daugaard to name just a few, went on an all paid trip to New Orleans this past weekend.
MORE UPDATES ABOUT ALEC:
2009 ALEC Pheasant Hunt (Manny Steele, top row, 2nd from left)
Hal Wick ALEC Pheasant Hunt

Do NOT SIGN THIS PETITION!

Here we go again, the bleeding heart liberals want education funding while the Repugs don’t want to pay for it. Their compromise? A sales tax increase;

A group of advocates for health care providers and public schools is moving forward with plans to initiate a ballot measure that would permanently raise the state sales tax by 1 cent.

Motivated by deep cuts in state spending during the past legislative session, the coalition polled likely voters on their appetite for a sales tax increase to pay for state services.

This is misguided for a number of reasons, and I will give you the basics;

• The money exists to fund education already. Over $800 million sits in an investment fund specifically for rainy day situations, but the Repugs in the state would rather give massive tax cuts to corporations instead of spending that money on education. It is idiotic to raise taxes when we simply just need the legislature to authorize spending these funds.

• Sales taxes are regressive, they affect the working class and poor more then the rich. It is NEVER a good idea to raise sales taxes, especially to fund education (which is traditionally funded by property taxes).

• Let’s say the investment fund did not exist. Fine. Why not start a petition drive to have a state income tax on households making over $100,000 a year? Or taxing advertising, or even better yet, a corporate income tax? People say any of these things are job killers. Bullshit. Corporations set up shop in SD because they can get away with paying shit wages. It has nothing to do with taxes.

• Healthcare costs are over the top. There needs to be healthcare reform instead of continuing to feed this monster with more tax increases.

Instead of tax increases, a more prudent thing to do is to encourage legislators and the governor to tap into the investment fund. I would also suggest we do some house cleaning in Pierre.

DO NOT SIGN THIS PETITION!