Delaware General Assembly Pre-Game Show: Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Filed in Delaware, Featured by on January 26, 2021

Yet another truncated session (wash, rinse, repeat) featuring (not highlighted by) Gov. Carney’s State Of The State Address.  For reasons I can’t explain, most of Delaware’s recent governors deliver these addresses robotically, Markell being the exception.  Robotically–say, you don’t suppose…?

Carney will also submit his budget proposal on Thursday. A real Democratic governor would embrace the proposal to raise taxes modestly on the top earners in the state. Keeping in mind that your first $125K remains at the lower rate, with only your income over $125K being subject to the added tax.  Carney has two chances this week. Today and Thursday.  Will he embrace the modest increase on the people who have made out like bandits during Covid, or will he buy the propaganda from the Chamber and his wealthy ben(mal)efactors?

Here is last Thursday’s Session Activity Report.  You will note that Our PAL Val Longhurst’s plan to fast-track some more Ft. DuPont skulduggery was taken off the fast track.  It will be back. Stay alert.

The Senate will not be conducting any major business today.  Senate committee meetings will take place tomorrow, and we’ll discuss the bills in committee then.

While the House will not meet in session today, there are some scheduled committee meetings, with others set for tomorrow.  Here is this week’s House committee schedule.  Today’s highlights:

HB 16 (Baumbach)  ‘modifies Delaware’s Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to allow recipients to choose the most beneficial credit to be applied against their Delaware Personal Income Taxes.’ (Revenue & Taxation).

SB 31 (Brown):  This second leg of a constitutional amendment ‘ to explicitly declare that protection against discrimination based on race, color, and national origin is one of Delaware’s fundamental rights’ unanimously passed the Senate last week.  I look for this to be on Thursday’s House Agenda. (Administration).

SB 22 and SB 33 passed the Senate last week.  SB 33, which increases the renewable energy goal for the state, got 13 yes votes.  All the Rethugs plus Bruce Ennis voted no.  (Natural Resources)

Last week’s Corrections Committee meeting was canceled due to technical issues (‘Zoom Doom’?).  This week’s meeting has the same agenda.  Hmmm, looks like I’ve got a chance to cut-‘n-paste:

HB 37 (Minor-Brown) attempts to partially respond to the Covid epidemic in Delaware prisons (misinformation spewing out of Claire Dematteis’ mouth notwithstanding).  From the synopsis:

There is no real way to prevent an outbreak and the spread of a highly contagious disease inside a prison where inmates share cells, communal recreation and dining spaces, and in some instances reside in large bunk rooms. Furthermore, the COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted the operations of the prisons as they struggle with staff shortages due to illness and quarantines, and curtail activities to reduce opportunities for community spread within the prison. This bill seeks to address both the COVID-19 pandemic as well as any future public health emergency that impacts prison operations and conditions by creating a “public health emergency credit” that would automatically be awarded when a public health emergency is declared. Credits would be awarded at the rate of 6 months for every month served during the public health emergency up to a maximum reduction in sentence of 1 year. This has the practical effect of moving forward release dates for inmates whose release would come within the next year regardless of the emergency. This will reduce the prison population in an orderly and fair manner, relieving pressure on staff and creating better conditions for those inmates who remain incarcerated to socially distance and control the spread of infectious disease. By applying additional credit towards sentence completion, this legislation also recognizes that the conditions of confinement during a public health emergency like the current one can be considered significantly more punishing – since visitation, communications, programming, and recreation are all significantly negatively impacted by the emergency conditions and modifications to operations.

I highlighted that line because you can bet that the remaining demagogues in Dover will misrepresent the impact of the bill in order to defeat it.  This is good legislating, and I hope that this bill passes. I suspect that supporters will need to be mobilized, especially in the House, to get this enacted into law. Corrections.  Here are the members of the Corrections Committee:

Melissa Minor-Brown

Nnamdi O. Chukwuocha

Eric Morrison
Gerald L. Brady
Franklin D. Cooke
Andria L. Bennett
Shannon Morris
Stephen Smyk
Jesse R. Vanderwende
Ruth Briggs King
We literally can’t afford any D defections on this bill.  Meaning, if Gerald Brady, Franklin Cooke or Andria Bennett are your state reps, contact them and urge them to release the bill from committee.  I think we’ll be OK with Brady.  Not sure about the ex-cop Franklin Cooke. And as always, the untrustworthy Andria Bennett could be the wild card.  Perhaps a call from Kerri Evelyn Harris will set her straight.
I know what you’re thinking: Why do I do so much cut-‘n-pasting?  I’ve got the musical answer from one of my fave artists to ever grace the Arden Gild Hall stage (BTW, Al & Nathan, she often appears with Steely Dan and Donald Fagen’s various other projects):

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  1. Kevin Ohlandt says:

    Definitely a bill to watch out for, Senate Bill 52. A ton of Easter Eggs for Sussex Tech in here that caused me to blog which I rarely do these days:
    https://exceptionaldelaware.wordpress.com/2021/01/26/what-the-heck-sussex-tech/

    • Wow, that bill stinks to high heaven. If anything, you UNDERplayed the preferential treatment to be afforded family of Board members.

      BTW, that bill has been scheduled to be heard in the Senate Executive Committee TOMORROW. Here are the Executive Committee members:

      Chair: David P. Sokola
      Vice-Chair: Bryan Townsend
      Members: S. Elizabeth Lockman
      Stephanie L. Hansen
      Gerald W. Hocker
      Brian Pettyjohn

      There is no bleeping way this bill should be rushed through. Call the members and tell ’em how you feel.

    • Alby says:

      This serves as a reminder that the state’s vo-tech school system is in severe need of an overhaul. And given the financial mismanagement history at Sussex Tech, giving them more money would seem to beg for greater oversight, not a rushed-through bill.

    • So. The bill has been rewritten. There is now a substitute bill. The substitute is on Wednesday’s Senate Agenda. They’ve removed the preferential treatment provision.

      I’d love to know the story behind what’s going on here.

  2. Here’s Matt Bittle’s report on Carney’s State Of The State Address:

    https://delawarestatenews.net/government/our-state-is-resilient-gov-carney-delivers-state-of-the-state-address/

    Here’s a line that Matt could cut-‘n-paste for each year that Carney has been in office:

    “The address largely shied away from anything controversial…”

    As to any initiatives, this is all he gave us:

    “The governor urged lawmakers to make mail-in voting permanent, to provide funding for clean water initiatives, to tackle racial inequities, to support small businesses and to provide extra funding for needy students.”

    The Incrementalist.

  3. Joe Connor says:

    HB 37 Released!

  4. All Seeing says:

    No imagination, no vision, no spirit or spine. He only prioritizes shit he gets sued over like school funding. Water is major in DE, only has 10% fresh water left. He could have said something about our air that is only 6% of DE’s ozone and he did sue why not update us on that? WTF is he doing about cancer? DE is 2nd from the bottom in the 50 states. Bad air & bad water = cancer and not one word on this. My guess it is not a priority? Even the Republicans fail to bring that up to busy prioritizing tax cuts for people that do not need them. When are these yesteryear lame-brain politicians going to update our infrastructure and give us fair re-district maps?