General Assembly Post-Game Show/Pre-Game Report: Wed., June 23, 2010

Filed in National by on June 23, 2010

The bullies were out in full force in Dover yesterday. And the ‘Honorables’ responded in less than Profiles in Courage fashion. AKA, a ‘Dog Bites Man’ story.

The armed thugs who are the NRA and the Delaware Sportsmen’s Association, aided and abetted by ‘law-abiding citizen’ John Atkins, forced their bill through the House to turn housing projects into armed camps. Take a look at the roll call to see how your representative voted. Suffice it to say that if their names were not Barbieri, Brady, J. J. Johnson, Keeley, Kowalko, Mitchell, Schooley, D. E. Williams, or D. P. Williams, then they voted the wrong way. Take a close look at the purported D’s from New Castle County who voted for this brutal joke of a bill: Carson, George, Jaques, Q. Johnson, Longhurst, Mulrooney, B. Short, Viola, and Speaker Gilligan. You might just want to let them know how you feel about their (a) ignorance and/or (b) cowardice.

Organized labor also pushed through the laughable HJR 10, which would basically enable a group of labor ‘leaders’ to create a ‘fair and unbiased’ history of organized labor curriculum to be taught in Delaware’s public schools. For those who support this: Don’t come over here and cry about Texas rewriting their textbooks in a ‘fair and impartial manner’ to herald the invaluable contributions of Newt Gingrich and Phyllis Schlafly and/or to teach Creation Science as a science. Curricula should be left to educators, not to legislators with reelection on their minds and/or union leaders with intimidation on their minds. And/or, in this case,  retiring Rep. Bill Oberle, with mischief on his mind. Just watch this become an issue in the 24th RD primary.

Some less unsavory developments took place yesterday as well. The Budget Bill was introduced. However, as near as I can tell, you can’t read it online. I tried, but only got the first page. Computer geeks? Help!

Sen. Peterson’s FOIA bill passed unanimously. I want to be Karen Peterson when I grow up. More of the Bradley package passed in each House. by now, virtually all of the bills that originated in the Senate have passed and gone to the House, and the bills that originated in the House have passed and gone to the Senate. The lone exception is HB 456, which may need to have some logistical issues ironed out. The News-Journal’s Ginger Gibson provides a progress report here. The ban on using cellphones while driving passed in the House and goes to the Governor for his signature. This is likely to be the, pardon the expression, ‘signature’ accomplishment of this General Assembly, and it’s long overdue.

And congrats to the House for unanimously passing HB 481(Kowalko), which will significantly improve, IMHO, the practice of both dentistry and dental hygiene in the State of Delaware to the benefit of those who require such services. And it’s also at least one more symbolic rejection of ‘the Delaware Way’.

It should be a very busy day in Dover on this Dog Day Afternoon. The Senate Agenda is chock full of interesting bills. A few highlights:

SB 227 renames the Georgetown State Service Center in honor of former President Pro-Tem Thurman Adams. Not 100% sure, but I believe that gays will be permitted there.

The Presidential Popular Vote bill is once again on the agenda. Legislation requiring the online posting of nursing home inspection reports by the Division of Long-Term Care Residents’ Protection will be considered. The fact that Vince Meconi and his lackey Carol Ellis resolutely refused to do this tells you all you need to know about the ‘Bulldog’s tenacity.

Senate committee highlights today:

One of the few remaining nominees for Worst Bill of the Year will be considered in the Senate Education Committee today. Sen. Venables’ (D-Mars) SB 293, co-sponsored by Rep. Gerald Brady (D-Catholic Diocese of Wilmington), would ‘require schools to notify parents of information being taught to their children relating to human sexuality issues, sexual acts, profanity, violence, drugs and/or alcohol. Such policy would ensure parent/guardian notification no less than 48 hours prior to introduction or instructional use. Such policy would afford parents or guardians the flexibility to exempt their children from any portion of said curriculum or materials through notification to the school principal.’ As churches have argued for centuries, ‘Ignorance is the best protection.’ Worked for the pedophile priests.

Uh, that’s pretty much the only Senate committee highlight for the day. The Senate Executive Committee is holding nomination hearings today and tomorrow, but, of course, no further information, i. e. names, is forthcoming from Sen. DeLuca’s office. He’s decided that you don’t have the right to know. And, if you don’t bitch about it, he’s right.

Let’s skip across the lobby to the House. And, yes, the House has an agenda, actually two, on the next-to-last Wednesday of session. Highlights:

Perfect for this Dog Day Afternoon is HB 466(George), which seeks to improve the humane handling and care of dogs.

The administrative reorganization of DNREC would be accomplished by passage of this bill. This is an administation initiative. I will leave discussion of the particulars to Tommywonk. After all you can’t have Tommy w/o the ‘Wonk’.

I’m sure there’s lots of other stuff that you’d find interesting. So peruse the agendas and comment upon them.

Just because Wednesdays will no longer be Committee Days through the end of session, House committees will still meet, as needed. And, there are some notable bills being considered today:

The House Appropriations Committee will consider HB 414(D. Short), which would provide an additional $4 million in Municipal Street Aid, to help compensate municipalities for lost funds last Fiscal Year. This has broad bipartisan support, and appears likely to pass. Just a comment on Rep. Dan Short. While I disagree with him on some of his parochial (i. e. Sussex- centric) votes, he is, IMHO, a skilled and constructive legislator. The bills he has introduced this session by and large reflect a thoughtful and serious approach to legislating. And more than a hint of what I consider the good type of populism. As someone might have written recently on this blog, ‘substance over sound bites’.

The House Energy Committee considers three laudable green initiatives, SS1/SB 119, SB 266, and SB 267. Sen. McDowell and Rep. Kowalko have found a ready and willing co-conspirator in DNREC Secretary Collin O’Mara. To quote rock critic Robert Christgau on Bruce Springsteen circa ‘Born to Run’:

He may not be God yet, but his sleeveless T-shirt is in the ring.

O’Mara has been a wonderful gift to Delaware. I only wonder how long we can keep him here. Maybe we should get him a dog.

“If there are no dogs in Heaven,

then when I die I want to go

where they went.”

Will Rogers, 1897-1935


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  1. The Delaware Book Burning Mobile Returns. : Delaware Liberal | June 23, 2010
  1. jason330 says:

    Fucking A dude!! (I have to bring profanity into my praise for these posts because mere unprofane language falls way short.)

    One correction. The bill bans holding a cell phone up to your head while driving, not talking or dialing. No?

    So McDowell is a good guy now. Okay…I guess.

    Here is a video for the “opt out” crowd.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ650dn5v1Q

  2. AQC says:

    At last…someone on this site agrees with me about the stupidity of the Atkins bill! But, consider the source and all the fucking rednecks, or political whores, we have voting for it!

  3. Right. Handheld devices only. Guess it had been mentioned so many times that I didn’t bother to write it this time. Correction duly noted and appreciated.

    Oh, and AQC, I can’t remember how many times I’ve written about the stupidity of the Atkins bill. It’s at least in double figures, though.

  4. liberalgeek says:

    Personally, so long as the Atkins bill only applies to housing, and not all public spaces, I support it. I am not ready to suspend Constitutional rights to people just because they are poor and live in public housing.

    And for the record, I also would oppose any rule that suspended these other rights; people praying, blogging (speech), association, illegal search and seizure, due process, the right to vote. It is wrong to pick and choose the rights that you like.

  5. jason330 says:

    NRA stooge. And or the record, I’d support suspending blogging rights across the board. It is a gateway drug. In the long run it will fuck your shit up and leave you digging in dumpsters for old quotes from HL Mencken.

    Won’t anyone think of the children ?!?

  6. liberalgeek says:

    At the NRA meetings, they call me Shemp.

  7. Phil says:

    You are right AQC. People in public housing shouldn’t have weapons when the police are around to protect them.

    NYC cop beats war vet senseless

  8. Brooke says:

    Agree on the Atkins Bill, El Som. Public housing doesn’t need more guns.

    And I will NEVER believe the second amendment was intended or designed to force mothers, of any income bracket, to feel that they need to go armed to a schoolbus stop to protect their kids. When people are feeling that, it’s time to stop the madness and oppose the NRA, and their pernicious lies.

  9. anon says:

    El Som,

    What is a parochial vote? Does it only apply to Sussex legislators? Or do the sainted souls representing the holy city of Wilmington also earn that label?

  10. AQC says:

    Yeah Phil…the people in public housing should shoot the cops!

  11. anon says:

    You’re all a bunch of dumbasses! Why shouldn’t minoritys in public housing be afforded the same right as you rich white guys? It’s discrimination. They are not second class citizens because they are poor.

    Heres a suggestion. Why dont we evict all the gang banging, drug dealing thugs out of public housing so the law abiding citizen doesnt have to fear for thier safety? Geek is right, you cant pick and choose which constitution you want to enforce.

    By the way, I wonder if Williams & Mitchell (both retired police) have a concealed carry permit or own a gun for home defense to protect THIER homes and children? Probably yes.

  12. liberalgeek says:

    There are people that think that people collecting welfare or food stamps or unemployment should have to submit to drug tests. Just like this, I think that is a Constitutional violation. I am not going to oppose one thing and not the other because of my prejudice about guns.

    I don’t own a gun, never have, and probably never will. But that isn’t really the point. I want people that don’t have a compelling interest in expressing themselves to stand up for free speech and I want people with nothing to hide to oppose illegal searches and seizures.

  13. Phil says:

    Wow geek, are you sure you’re not a libertarian in democrats’ clothing?

  14. liberalgeek says:

    Actually, a libertarian would be pushing for the abolition of public housing. I’m just a proponent of the Constitution, come what may.

  15. AQC says:

    My opposition is twofold. First, I think the “landlord” should have an absolute right to disallow guns and second, I don’t believe increased gun ownership makes anyone safer.

  16. jason330 says:

    ” I don’t believe increased gun ownership makes anyone safer.” Unless, like the NRA, you construe a much higher likelihood of being shot, as being “safer.”

  17. RSmitty says:

    I’m just a proponent of the Constitution, come what may.
    Tea Partier.
    ‘Geek and Evan sitting in a tree…

    Couldn’t resist. Ah…good times…good times. 😛