2009 Session
Lee Ware's Columns
January
16, 2009
|
January 30, 2009
February
4, 2009
|
February
11, 2009
|
February
27, 2009
________________________________________________________________________
Virginia General Assembly
Session
2009 Introduction:
Without doubt, the New Year and
the economic challenges that
encompass the entire U.S. economy
have affected Virginia ’s state
budget. Analyzing the depth of that
challenge and re-configuring state
spending accordingly will be and
should be the main focus of the
Virginia General Assembly session,
which opens on Wednesday, January 14
in Richmond .
Gov. Kaine has
estimated a $2.9 billion shortfall
in the $77 billion state budget,
though it is noteworthy that staff
and leading members of both houses
of the legislature say (for the
second year) that those numbers are
optimistic. I look forward to
working with the Governor and
colleagues to craft responsible
amendments to the budget.
Whatever the final numbers turn out
to be, they will require a realistic
assessment of what is possible, and
will entail some painful cuts.
Analyzing the budget, my first
conviction is that we, like families
and businesses across Virginia , are
going to have to live within our
means.
This means first and
foremost that raising taxes during a
recession is not an option. It also
means pointedly re-asserting, hewing
to, and protecting to the greatest
extent possible, our priorities. It
will require eliminating or reducing
programs which are not central to
our core responsibilities and
priorities, or that have failed to
meet the test of productive value
for Virginians.
As I examine
the programs which we fund in
Virginia , the categories that rise
to the top are: (1) public
education, (2) public safety, (3)
the agreed-upon safety net of
services for the disadvantaged, and
(4) transportation. These are our
central responsibilities as elected
representatives of the people of
Virginia . It is in these core areas
that I will fight to minimize the
fallout from the economic downturn.
Parenthetically, I have voted
three times in the last decade
against state budget proposals. In
doing so, I also stated that the
Commonwealth was embarking on
spending that would not be
sustainable in future economic
downturns that history tells us are
sure to come. Further, as recent
data demonstrate, the state's budget
has grown by 80 per cent over the
past decade, a figure that,
accounting for inflation and
population growth, etc., averages
right at 3 per cent per year.
However, in several years the
growth in state spending--and
obligations through
indebtedness--have far exceeded the
average taxpayer's growth in
expendable income.
Preserving
funding for development of the state
park in Powhatan County will of
course remain among my highest
legislative and budgetary
priorities.
Amid these somber
notes, it bears observing that
Virginia maintains certain
strengths. We have had a relatively
lower number of foreclosures than
most of our sister states, and due
in significant part to federal
contracts and defense installations
in the Commonwealth our job and
income data are stronger than much
of the rest of the country.
Moreover, the Old Dominion has been
recognized both in publications and
by our continued AAA bond rating (a
ranking held by only a handful of
States) as among the best-managed
fiscally.
It also bears
remarking in these difficult days
that Virginia ’s state employees
will be tasked with the practical
challenge of working through the
difficulties of a reduced state
budget. They will be required to
take up additional work of unfilled
positions and layoffs. In my
experience, many state employees
have been diligent and purposeful in
undertaking the duties of their
office. I am grateful for the care
and professional response they have
given in addressing concerns of
constituents who have sought
assistance through my office.
As we look to the New Year, one
of the new tasks I will undertake is
chairing a subcommittee reviewing
our generation-long moratorium on
uranium mining in Virginia . Given
the heightened challenge of energy
costs and needs in Virginia and the
United States, and the substantial
deposit of uranium which exists in
Pittsylvania County a subcommittee
of Virginia’s Coal and Energy
Commission has been appointed.
We will undertake a
comprehensive review of the
environmental, scientific and
economic costs and opportunities of
uranium mining, assisted by
professionals at Virginia Tech and
the National Academy of Science. The
study is expected to take
approximately 18 months.
Lee
Ware represents the 65th District,
comprised of Powhatan County and
western Chesterfield, in the
Virginia House of Delegates. During
Session, which begins January 14, he
can be contacted at 698-1065 and via
email at dellware@house.state.va.us
________________________________________________________________________
One of the privileges of serving
in the state legislature is the
opportunity to learn more about the
range of businesses that operate in
Virginia. The largest
business in Virginia, in terms of
its product sales is agriculture.
A recently-released study by the
University of Virginia’s Weldon
Cooper Center reports that the
annual value of the Commonwealth’s
farmers’ labors is $79 billion
dollars.
Having begun at
Jamestown, it is Virginia’s oldest
business as well.
Annually,
far the largest event of the
legislative season is the Virginia
Agribusiness Dinner held at the
Arthur Ashe Center in Richmond.
Nearly 1,000 people attend including
farmers, lumbermen and a host of
people who serve their needs.
The dinner highlights the sheer
range of farm products from the
traditional: apples, dairy products,
beef cattle, peanuts and barbeque
sauce, to newer: unusual flowers and
vegetables, exotic cheeses and an
array of wines.
Gov. Timothy
M. Kaine headlined the program (held
the night after his State of the
Commonwealth Address) and fittingly
noted that farmers work each year in
the face of adversity: fluctuating
prices for both supplies and
products, the unpredictability of
the weather, and pests.
In the current recession, we can
learn much those whose livelihood is
daily earned in the face of these
and more challenges.
The
elemental work of farming benefits
Virginians in these obvious ways,
and in some not so obvious.
By far the largest amount of land
which is currently held in
conservation easements is land
devoted to farming and lumbering.
These easements permanently limit
the land from development.
Tens of thousands of acres across
Virginia, have been placed in these
easements.
Moreover,
farmers across Virginia expend
countless hours and dollars in
limiting run-off from their land
into the state’s streams and
waterways. They do this
in conjunction with regional Soil
and Water Districts under a program
titled Best Management Practices.
In 2008, the General Assembly
invested $20 million to assist in
this effort, and it is my hope that
we will maintain that effort this
year.
The annual legislative
session got underway last week,
Wednesday, January 14. I have
been hearing from many people about
matters we will consider this year.
Lee Ware represents the
65th District, comprised of Powhatan
County and western Chesterfield, in
the Virginia House of Delegates.
During Session, which begins
January 14, he can be contacted at
698-1065 and via email at
dellware@house.state.va.us

________________________________________________________________________
January 16, 2009
One of the privileges of serving
in the state legislature is the
opportunity to learn more about the
range of businesses that operate in
Virginia. The largest
business in Virginia, in terms of
its product sales is agriculture.
A recently-released study by the
University of Virginia’s Weldon
Cooper Center reports that the
annual value of the Commonwealth’s
farmers’ labors is $79 billion
dollars.
Having begun at
Jamestown, it is Virginia’s oldest
business as well.
Annually,
far the largest event of the
legislative season is the Virginia
Agribusiness Dinner held at the
Arthur Ashe Center in Richmond.
Nearly 1,000 people attend including
farmers, lumbermen and a host of
people who serve their needs.
The dinner highlights the sheer
range of farm products from the
traditional: apples, dairy products,
beef cattle, peanuts and barbeque
sauce, to newer: unusual flowers and
vegetables, exotic cheeses and an
array of wines.
Gov. Timothy
M. Kaine headlined the program (held
the night after his State of the
Commonwealth Address) and fittingly
noted that farmers work each year in
the face of adversity: fluctuating
prices for both supplies and
products, the unpredictability of
the weather, and pests.
In the current recession, we can
learn much those whose livelihood is
daily earned in the face of these
and more challenges.
The
elemental work of farming benefits
Virginians in these obvious ways,
and in some not so obvious.
By far the largest amount of land
which is currently held in
conservation easements is land
devoted to farming and lumbering.
These easements permanently limit
the land from development.
Tens of thousands of acres across
Virginia, have been placed in these
easements.
Moreover, farmers across Virginia
expend countless hours and dollars
in limiting run-off from their land
into the state’s streams and
waterways. They do this
in conjunction with regional Soil
and Water Districts under a program
titled Best Management Practices.
In 2008, the General Assembly
invested $20 million to assist in
this effort, and it is my hope that
we will maintain that effort this
year. The annual legislative session
got underway last week, Wednesday,
January 14. I have been
hearing from many people about
matters we will consider this year.

________________________________________________________________________
January 30, 2009
Powhatan certainly was well
represented in the corridors of the
Capitol this week, and it was good
to have so many homefolks visit
during an exceptionally busy time.
Some twenty-eight
participants in Powhatan Leadership
Institute spent much of Tuesday
attending meetings in both the
General Assembly Building and the
Capitol. We began our
time together with a private
conference at which both Senator
John Watkins and I were able to
review major bills wending their way
through committees. Institute
members also sat in on committee
meetings, toured the Capitol, and
then were recognized from the
gallery when Session convened. Joe
Lowenthal made arrangements for the
activities, and I was glad both to
see many old friends and, not least,
to meet quite a few newcomers to
Powhatan who took advantage of this
Institute event to gain an
introduction to the state government
of the Commonwealth.
Donna
Moyer and about twenty of her 4-H
Club youths were able to sit in for
part of the Institute's group
meeting. And, Johns and Dorothy
Bailey and Anne Lewis came by to
make their annual presentation on
the importance of agriculture in
both the county and the whole state.
Donnie Hatcher and Dickie
Baltimore dropped by the office on
other matters. Earlier,
I was glad to see Billy Kornegay and
George Lee, who are keenly
interested in veterans’ issues. All
in all, then, it was a good week in
Richmond for Powhatan.
Numerous county citizens
contacted me via email or 'phone
about their concerns for sufficient
funding for public education.
Fortunately, my long years of
experience as a teacher gives me
confidence that the legislature, and
certainly the House of Delegates of
which I am a member, will labor to
ensure adequate monies for K-12
schools, despite the severe economic
downtown not only in Virginia but
around the world.
It still is unclear how great
the budget shortfall will be.
Estimates range from a "low" of
$2.9 billion to as much as nearly $4
billion. Apparently a significant
portion will be covered by the some
$1.3 billion projected for Virginia
in the "economic stimulus" bill
being debated in Congress.
It is likely to be aimed at
construction rather than operating
costs; in addition, large portions
may be targeted at impoverished
areas. This week,
several teachers from Powhatan
Schools are scheduled to meet with
me, so I expect to have latest
budget figures to hand for their
review. The bottomline is that
I am confident that the legislature
will protect our schools from
too-severe cuts in the wake of an
economic decline that may prove to
be one of the landmark experiences
of the next generation.
One
of my bills of interest to Powhatan
eked through a subcommittee of the
House Transportation committee this
week. House Bill 1648 would require
counties to give due consideration
to scenic and historic qualities
along Virginia's Byways when
planning for future commercial or
residential development. Roughly
3,200 miles of Virginia's 58,000
miles of state roads are designed as
"Byways." In current law a byway is
merely a voluntary designation that
alerts travelers--and, not least,
tourists--to the prospect of a
two-lane roadway winding through
scenic or historic countryside. Our
own Huguenot Trail (Route 711) is of
course one of Virginia's Byways.
In some areas of the state
squabbles among neighbors have been
left unresolved because the Code
does not give localities sufficient
incentive to preserve the scenic or
historic qualities by which a byway
was designated in the first place.
My bill would nudge localities
toward better planning in this
regard--and I must be quick to point
out that Powhatan is in the
forefront in striving to protect the
qualities of our own byway.
Of course some commercial and
residential developers worry that
HB1648 could become a hurdle to
their proposals, though that is not
my direct intent. Consequently, the
bill was advanced by the razor-thin
margin of 3-2. Its fate in full
committee is difficult to predict.
I am thankful to District 1
Supervisor Joe Walton for responding
immediately to my request for
assistance in advocating for the
bill. Though his duties in the
county prevented him from attending
the subcommittee hearing, Joe
prepared a letter that admirably
helped me make the case that state
legislators and county officials can
cooperate in behalf both of
commercial and residential
development while conserving the
singular qualities that make
Virginia different from, say, New
Jersey.
As Joe noted,
"District 1 in Powhatan is at a
literal and figurative crossroads of
rural, exurban, historical, and
cultural as well as modern
transportation and economic
development concerns. The Huguenot
Trail corridor with its intersection
at Route 288 in Powhatan continues
to be a designated Virginia Byway
and the residents have a deep-seated
interest in preserving that
designation AND accommodating
appropriate future development in a
compatible manner--the two concepts
CAN coexist." I will be
reiterating this conviction when the
full Transportation hears my bill
this week.
Lee Ware
represents the 65 th District
consisting of all of Powhatan County
and thirteen precincts in western
Chesterfield. During Session his
office number is (804) 698-1065.
Email address is
dellware@house.state.va.us

________________________________________________________________________
February 4, 2009
Powhatan certainly was well
represented in the corridors of the
Capitol this week, and it was good
to have so many homefolks visit
during an exceptionally busy time.
Some twenty-eight participants
in Powhatan Leadership Institute
spent much of Tuesday attending
meetings in both the General
Assembly Building and the Capitol.
We began our time together with
a private conference at which both
Senator John Watkins and I were able
to review major bills wending their
way through committees. Institute
members also sat in on committee
meetings, toured the Capitol, and
then were recognized from the
gallery when Session convened. Joe
Lowenthal made arrangements for the
activities, and I was glad both to
see many old friends and, not least,
to meet quite a few newcomers to
Powhatan who took advantage of this
Institute event to gain an
introduction to the state government
of the Commonwealth.
Donna
Moyer and about twenty of her 4-H
Club youths were able to sit in for
part of the Institute's group
meeting. And, Johns and Dorothy
Bailey and Anne Lewis came by to
make their annual presentation on
the importance of agriculture in
both the county and the whole state.
Donnie Hatcher and Dickie
Baltimore dropped by the office on
other matters. Earlier, I was glad
to see Billy Kornegay and George
Lee, who are keenly interested in
veterans’ issues. All in all, then,
it was a good week in Richmond for
Powhatan.
Numerous county
citizens contacted me via email or
'phone about their concerns for
sufficient funding for public
education. Fortunately, my long
years of experience as a teacher
gives me confidence that the
legislature, and certainly the House
of Delegates of which I am a member,
will labor to ensure adequate monies
for K-12 schools, despite the severe
economic downtown not only in
Virginia but around the world.
It still is unclear how great
the budget shortfall will be.
Estimates range from a "low" of
$2.9 billion to as much as nearly $4
billion. Apparently a significant
portion will be covered by the some
$1.3 billion projected for Virginia
in the "economic stimulus" bill
being debated in Congress. It is
likely to be aimed at construction
rather than operating costs; in
addition, large portions may be
targeted at impoverished areas.
This week, several teachers from
Powhatan Schools are scheduled to
meet with me, so I expect to have
latest budget figures to hand for
their review. The bottomline is
that I am confident that the
legislature will protect our schools
from too-severe cuts in the wake of
an economic decline that may prove
to be one of the landmark
experiences of the next generation.
One of my bills of interest to
Powhatan eked through a subcommittee
of the House Transportation
committee this week. House Bill
1648 would require counties to give
due consideration to scenic and
historic qualities along Virginia's
Byways when planning for future
commercial or residential
development. Roughly 3,200 miles of
Virginia's 58,000 miles of state
roads are designed as "Byways." In
current law a byway is merely a
voluntary designation that alerts
travelers--and, not least,
tourists--to the prospect of a
two-lane roadway winding through
scenic or historic countryside. Our
own Huguenot Trail (Route 711) is of
course one of Virginia's Byways.
In some areas of the state
squabbles among neighbors have been
left unresolved because the Code
does not give localities sufficient
incentive to preserve the scenic or
historic qualities by which a byway
was designated in the first place.
My bill would nudge localities
toward better planning in this
regard--and I must be quick to point
out that Powhatan is in the
forefront in striving to protect the
qualities of our own byway.
Of course some commercial and
residential developers worry that
HB1648 could become a hurdle to
their proposals, though that is not
my direct intent. Consequently, the
bill was advanced by the razor-thin
margin of 3-2. Its fate in full
committee is difficult to predict.
I am thankful to District 1
Supervisor Joe Walton for responding
immediately to my request for
assistance in advocating for the
bill. Though his duties in the
county prevented him from attending
the subcommittee hearing, Joe
prepared a letter that admirably
helped me make the case that state
legislators and county officials can
cooperate in behalf both of
commercial and residential
development while conserving the
singular qualities that make
Virginia different from, say, New
Jersey.
As Joe noted,
"District 1 in Powhatan is at a
literal and figurative crossroads of
rural, exurban, historical, and
cultural as well as modern
transportation and economic
development concerns. The Huguenot
Trail corridor with its intersection
at Route 288 in Powhatan continues
to be a designated Virginia Byway
and the residents have a deep-seated
interest in preserving that
designation AND accommodating
appropriate future development in a
compatible manner--the two concepts
CAN coexist." I will be reiterating
this conviction when the full
Transportation hears my bill this
week.
Lee Ware represents the
65th District consisting of all of
Powhatan County and thirteen
precincts in western Chesterfield.
During Session his office number is
(804) 698-1065. Email address is
dellware@house.state.va.us

________________________________________________________________________
State Funding for
Public Education
February 11, 2009
Concern for proper funding of our
public schools rightly occupied a
great deal of attention during
deliberations in the House this
week--and many local citizens,
including of course parents and
teachers, contacted me to emphasize
their support of adequate state
funding of K-12 education.
Robin Shortridge of the faculty
of Pocahontas Middle School led a
local delegation of teachers who met
with me at the Capitol. The Powhatan
teachers were joined by teachers
from Chesterfield’s public schools.
And of course I received a large
number of calls, emails, and
letters.
Governor Kaine surprised many of
us by recommending severe reductions
in state support for public schools.
In response, the House has been
working on an alternate budget, and
the House proposal was to be
announced a couple days after these
lines were written. To all of
our citizens I must remark that I
deeply share the concerns about
funding for our public schools and I
also share an unshakeable commitment
to maintaining the quality of
education we provide to our
children.
Accordingly, though we may not be
able, given the current economic
conditions, to 'save' all of the
school budget, certainly we will be
able to alleviate the originally
projected reductions. It also bears
noting that the cuts are not
permanent. Budget figures lapse
with the current budget, which ends
on June 30, 2010. There is not
separate legislation that would
permanently diminish the Standards
of Quality (SOQ), as some have
worried. (The SOQ create
the framework for state funding for
K-12 education.)
It is
important to offer the assurance,
too, that I and my colleagues in the
House, especially in the majority,
are determined to protect K-12
funding against the too-severe cuts
proposed by the Governor. As both a
legislator and also a teacher (and
as the father of four children who
were graduated from our public
schools), I think we will fare much
better, when the final budget
decisions are made, than the first
figures suggested.
Of course
there are some respects in which we
legislators have very little power
over the events--for example, the
collapse of banks, the international
pressure on energy markets,
etc.--that account for the
significant decline in state tax
revenues over recent months.
Our best response, and it is
similar to the response being taken
by county supervisors and schools
officials, is to tighten the belt.
For example, the figures cited in
the Richmond paper the other day
suggest that the cutbacks locally
are somewhere between 7 to a bit
more than 9 percent. Those are
serious figures, of course, but, the
federal economic stimulus will, as
only recently reported, infuse near
$2 billion into Virginia's budget,
including $1.6 toward our budget
shortfall of roughly $4 billion.
And, importantly, both school
systems in the district have more
recently reported that reductions in
programs or staff should finally be
considerably less than originally
feared. Data released last Friday
showed that the unemployment rate
nationally had exceeded 7 percent
for the first time in many years.
Economists tell us that the private
sector is a long way from regaining
the energy and dynamism that
generate jobs--and taxes. And of
course we legislators can tax only
what the private sector is
generating in revenues. Because the
private sector is shedding
jobs--hence revenues--by the tens of
thousands, we need to be very
prudent for the foreseeable future.
All that said, I am pleased to
report that I am working hard, both
on votes and in behind-the-scenes
conversations with my colleagues, to
protect K-12 funding against
too-severe cuts by the Governor. As
we move into the final three weeks
of Session, I remain confident that
the House will be able to advance a
budget that reaffirms our commitment
to the best possible public
schooling for the rising generation.
Lee Ware represents the 65th
District consisting of all of
Powhatan County and thirteen
precincts in western Chesterfield.
During Session his office number is
(804) 698-1065.
Email address is
dellware@house.state.va.us

________________________________________________________________________
February 27, 2009
AN OVERVIEW OF THE
2009 GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Dear Friend,
As these lines are written we are
within hours of the scheduled
adjournment of a surprisingly busy
“Short Session” of General Assembly
for 2009. Not surprisingly, a
shortfall in tax revenues now
estimated at $3.7 Billion has
dominated our deliberations.
From now ‘til we adjourn,
modifications to the budget will
occupy almost all of our attention.
Exactly a year ago my focus was
on what The Financial Times
predicted could become “the mother
of all [economic] meltdowns.” Now
we know that too-high rates of
taxation and governmental spending,
a too-high rate of consumer spending
and too little private savings, have
combined to create what may be an
economic downturn of a severity not
experienced since the Great
Depression. It is indisputable
that governmental policies,
especially at the federal level,
contributed to the “housing bubble”
that lured too many homeowners into
borrowing against equity that has
evaporated because of too many
exorbitant loans.
Reining in state spending may be
difficult. The federal
“stimulus” package approved by
Congress last week will direct $1
Billion in new monies to Virginia ’s
government. Governor Kaine has
said that this development “means
near term [that] we don’t have to
make any more cuts.” This
remark came immediately after
reports that the state budget
deficit had increased by another
$821 million.
Though we can breathe a sigh of
relief, my concern is that the
federal stimulus is based on more
borrowing by government. We
may be saddling our children, and
even our children’s children, with
large indebtedness for decades to
come. In sum, we still need to
wrestle state spending into a
reasonable—and sustainable—rate of
annual growth.
Three times in the past decade I
have voted against entire budgets
owing to my concern about the rate
of increase in state spending.
Just before Session we learned that
state governmental spending from
1998 through 2008 had increased by
80 percent. Even when adjusted
for inflation and growth in
population, this rate came to a
year-by-year increase of 2.4
percent. That figure alone was
greater than the private sector’s
ability to sustain—and greater than
the average individual’s or family’s
annual increase in net income.
Protecting K-12 Spending
The truly good news about the
budget is that the House will be
able to protect spending for public
education from the most severe cuts
originally proposed by the Governor.
Probably no issue generated more
contacts from constituents this
Session than protecting state
support for K-12 spending, and I was
pleased to be able to oblige.
Powhatan State Park
Powhatan supervisors were
rightly concerned with the
Governor’s original budget proposal
because it did not include funding
for improvements to Routes 711 and
522. I will be meeting with
officials of the Department of Parks
and Recreation, including, I hope,
our own Joe Elton, director, as soon
as the final budget is determined,
and I will report on the project’s
status in a later column.
Also, county officials and I will be
meeting about a park-related issue
in early March.
Other Issues of Interest
Beyond the budget, only two
issues rose to prominence this year.
One, the Governor’s proposed total
ban on smoking in restaurants, was
amended by the House to allow for
some exceptions. The Senate
then excised the House amendments,
the resulting compromise was passed
handily by both chambers, and the
Governor has indicated he will sign
the legislation.
For several reasons, I voted
against the Governor’s proposal.
For example, fully 70 percent of the
private restaurants and businesses
in Virginia have responded to their
respective clienteles by either
adopting no-smoking policies or
effectively separating smoking and
non-smoking portions of their
establishments. This kind of
private response, through sound
business practices and the free
decisions of well-mannered
customers, is far preferable, in my
judgment, to a one-size-fits-all
dictate from government. Further,
“more than 90 percent of Virginians
live in localities in which the
majority of restaurants are
smoke-free,” according to a major
study of the issue. Not
surprisingly, many of the smaller
restaurants that accommodate a
variety of customers are located in
rural counties, many in the
Southside. Suddenly, then, the
proprietors and customers of these
businesses are to be denied the
ability—the liberty—to decide the
question on their own, apart from
the heavy hand of government.
The other widely discussed
bill was House Bill 1588, a proposal
to mandate insurance coverage for
autism. The stories we heard
from parents of autistic children
were at once inspiring and
distressing. However, the bill
would have affected only about 26
percent of insurance policies.
For example, large corporations and
also state government would have
been excluded. As a result, we
were advised by insurers and
small-business owners that the
mandate would force them to increase
rates to levels that would have
forced many businesses to quit
providing coverage altogether.
HB 1588 and a similar bill in the
Senate were, therefore, not advanced
in respective committees.
Bills Introduced by
Delegate Lee Ware
Of my ten major (10) bills,
eight were passed unanimously by
both the House and Senate and are
expected to be signed into law by
the Governor. Of the other
two, one (House Bill 1648) was
passed by the House but defeated in
the Senate, and one bill (HB 1976)
was Left in the Finance committee of
the House. My bills were as
follows:
·
HB 1648, to require state agencies
and local governments to give “due
consideration” to Virginia Byways in
planning for development was passed
by the House, 73-25. It was
defeated in the Senate committee on
Transportation, 9-3. I was
pleased that Senator John Watkins of
the Senate committee voted for the
measure.
·
HB 1649, will exclude telegraph,
telephone, or cable companies from
certain restrictions in serving
subdivisions;
·
HB 1970 will exclude propane and
similar non-utility gas supplies
from the definition of “public
utility” in some instances but also
to enhance safety oversight on
propane. (Lengthy negotiations
between natural gas and propane
providers greatly assisted me in
this complicated legislation.)
·
HB 1971, and also HB 1972, will
combine to improve terms of credit
life insurance for consumers.
·
HB 1973 will target grants to
localities under the Litter
Prevention and Recycling Grants
program.
·
HB 1974 authorizes the Division of
Motor Vehicles (DMV) to approve a
crash prevention course for drivers
55 years of age and older, through
the Internet. (Local AARP
officials were instrumental in
conception and advancement of this
legislation.)
·
HB 1975 authorizes counties to grant
incentives to encourage the use of
environmentally-friendly “green
roofs.”
·
HB 1976, to allow a tax credit for
taxpayers for purchase of school
supplies, was, as noted, left in the
Finance committee.
·
HB 1977, to mandate insurance
coverage for prosthetic devices, was
rolled into a similar Senate bill.
·
Resolutions were passed unanimously
commending retired former Powhatan
High School Principal Rick Cole,
retired former Powhatan Chamber of
Commerce Executive Director Kathy
Budner, and also Laura Marshall, of
Grange Hall Elementary School ,
Moseley, who was selected for the
nationally prestigious Milken Award.
A separate Resolution commends James
River Advisory Council for its
admirable endeavors in protecting
James River .
General Assembly Reconvenes
April 8
Assembly will reconvene on
April 8 for the “Veto Session,” to
consider actions that will have been
taken by the Governor on bills that
passed both chambers of the
legislature. In the meantime,
Session will have concluded, so I
will be able to report on the final
status of numerous other bills of
high interest to 65th District
constituents. Thanks to
Constituents
As usual, hundreds of
constituents sent me emails, regular
mail, called by ‘phone, or visited,
helping me maintain the proper
connection with the fundamental
purpose of the General Assembly,
which is to represent the people’s
interests and conduct the people’s
business. Each constituent’s
message is reviewed and taken into
account as my votes are cast, and I
do my best to make sure that
everyone receives at least an
acknowledgement, and more often than
not a brief original reply, to their
question, concern, or suggestion.
I also kept in touch with the
locally elected officials of both
Powhatan and Chesterfield counties.
Chesterfield supervisors met with
Members of the House and Senate who
represent some portion of
Chesterfield . Powhatan
supervisors and staff keep me well
informed of their interests and
concerns. Schools officials
also provided me helpful
information. And of course I
kept in touch, too, with our Senator
John Watkins. After adjournment
I look forward to seeing
constituents to review the final
outcome of the Session’s actions on
bills that were pending in the final
days. And, of course, because
2009 is an election year, I hope to
see you along the way.
Delegate Lee Ware and Kiernan
Ziletti, who served as a Page during
the 2009 Session. Kiernan is
the son of David and Mimi Ziletti of
Powhatan and Frank and Amy Moore of
Richmond .

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