General Assembly Post-Game Wrap-Up/Pre-Game Show: Wed., Jan. 12, 2022

Filed in Delaware, Featured by on January 12, 2022

Here is yesterday’s Session Activity ReportAll of the bills we discussed yesterday were released from committee, including HB 183.  The skeptic in me (about 80% of what comprises ‘me’) wonders what’s behind this bill although, on the surface, I see nothing wrong with it.  Anybody with inside info?

Today is solely devoted to committee meetings in both the House and the Senate.

Today’s Senate Committee highlights:

SB 197 (Gay) provides ‘…that child protection treatment caseload standards be reduced from 18 to 12 families per worker.’  Funding for the additional workers will be phased in over two years.  The bill is ‘ a key recommendation of the Child Protection Accountability Commission Caseloads and Workloads final report’ that was released in 2019.  Why we’re only now getting around to passing this and funding this is a question to be answered by Governor Budget-Smoothing.  Elections & Government Affairs.

SB 204 (Gay) ‘ would allow DSCYF (Services To Children, Youth & Families) to conditionally hire an applicant and begin training the person after they have provided proof that they have submitted to the required drug testing’.  The current process is so cumbersome that the agency has been unable to fill vital vacant positions. Elections & Government Affairs.

SB 203 (Townsend) is yet another bill from the Corporate Section Of The Delaware Bar.  Neither you nor I are expected to understand it.  But, kids, it’s time to tell you all about The Third Rail Of Delaware Politics: Nobody in Dover messes with the Court Of Chancery, The Delaware Division Of Corporations, and most importantly, Delaware’s role as the ‘Incorporation Capital Of The United States’. Any and all illegal activities enabled by Delaware’s secretive incorporation laws are, by definition, legal.  Worker exploitation, child slavery, political dark money, all legal.  Judiciary.

SB 172 (Lawson) is yet more Rethuggery in bill form.  Introduced, I suppose, b/c the citizenry of Delaware is inadequately armed.  The bill ‘allow(s) a person who is 21 years of age or older and not a prohibited person under either Delaware law or the laws of the United States to carry a deadly weapon concealed on or about their person for the purpose of defending self, family, home, and State’.  I recommend that you read the entire synopsis to see how Lawson (and presumably Anthony Delcollo) makes that case.  Bill’s not going anywhere.  Judiciary.

The Senate Executive Committee considers a few key nominations today, including that of Mark Holodick (true story, I used to umpire him when he was in Little League, I’m old) to be Secretary of Education.  Also, Claire Dematteis will be considered for yet another office.  Probably an office where she is once again called upon to bury the worst abuses taking place in said agency.

Slim pickins’ in the House today:

HB 274 (Osienski) does away with the arcane requirement that those seeking to change their names must publish notification in the classified section (do they still exist?) of a newspaper. Judiciary.

HB 254 (Griffith) ‘requires all public schools that serve pupils in grades 7-12 that issue pupil identification cards to have printed on the identification cards the telephone or text numbers for the National Suicide Prevention and National Domestic Violence Hotlines and allows them to add the National Sexual Assault, Teen Dating Violence and Bullying Hotlines’. Education.

That’s, uh, it.  Join us tomorrow for the very first legislative Agendas of the year!

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  1. Jason330 says:

    “Any and all illegal activities enabled by Delaware’s secretive incorporation laws are, by definition, legal. Worker exploitation, child slavery, political dark money, all legal. Judiciary.”

    Thanks Senator Townsend!

    • This bill appears to be about corporations’ uses of captive insurance companies. It’s one of several ‘corporate’ bills that routinely go through the General Assembly every year.

      The issue of challenging the Third Rail is one that rarely surfaces. The trade-off goes something like this: ‘We get a shit-ton of money from this, enough to keep taxes low and to fund the occasional good program. We’re Delaware, we don’t have much to offer other than this scheme to fund government. Do you really want to mess with that?”

      This reminds me–you know who would make the likeliest candidate to replace Jeff Bullock as SOS in the next administration? John Carney. You can book it if BHL gets elected.

  2. mediawatch says:

    El Som,
    Any truth to rumors that Holodick got the nomination because the governor needs a slick-fielding lefty-hitting shortstop for the Cabinet softball team?

    • Oh that’s RIGHT. You were a manager. Was it during the Holodick years? Didn’t Brandywine win the state championship when he was on the team?

      • mediawatch says:

        Don’t recall a BLL state championship when Mark was playing, but I do recall when the son of a former DelDOT secretary got us kicked out of the Senior League tournament by playing simultaneously with an American Legion team.
        The state title came in ’88, when we missed winning the East regional in Bristol, Conn., and going to Williamsport, by the radius of a baseball. (A line drive to center field, potentially a game-winning grand slam, hit the rail at the top of the fence, stayed in play and became a one-run single.)
        Damn, I remember baseball better than I do politics.

        • Arthur says:

          Marks biggest thing was he was fast on the bases. When I was on the mound I kept him close all the time.