Monday, April 2, 2012

This Week at the Circus: The Finale


Last one out has to clean up after the elephants!
 It's the finale!

With 83 days down, the circus will fold its tent seven long days from now, precisely at midnight on Monday, April 9. The 90-day run of the 2012 General Assembly session will be over.

Before the streets can be hosed down and safely reopened for the Spring tourist season, a lot of work remains to be done. Big issues, like the budget, must be decided. Smaller issues will also scramble for attention, because after the gavel comes down and the confetti falls, you are out of chances.

This year, a combined 2,579 bills were introduced in the House and Senate. Here are some of the issues left to be decided as the clock ticks down:

Budget!: As we mentioned above, the $35-billion budget still has to be decided. There is a budget conference committee, tasked with working toward a compromise on the multiple budget plans. They definitely have a lot of work to do in a very short time.

Gas Tax: This failry unpopular bill did not cross over Rowe Boulevard in either direction yet. With gas already at $4 a gallon, and heading toward $5 per gallon by the Summer, many are hoping it doesn't make a last hurrah in the next week.

Medical Marijuana: We spoke about this one earlier in the Session. This bill didn't get out of committee, and will not likely make any more progress this year.

Wind Farms: In the on-going quest to find sustainable energy sources, Governor O'Malley is casting his lot with the off-shore wind farm team. At this point fees to residential users and cuts to large commercial energy users has the bill remaining in committee. Just Friday morning, there was a rally on Lawyer's Mall regarding the wind bill, and we'll see if that puts any 'wind' in this bills sails in this final week.

Fantasy Sports: Did you win a couple bucks in your online fantasy football league this year? Though fantasy sports have been around for almost 30 years, the explosion in the last decade or so is something Maryland law has never taken into account, therefore it's technically illegal to participate in those games in the state. This has passed the house and will be in hearing for the Senate on Wednesday. If it passes the Senate, fantasy sports will be exempt from the prohibitions of gambling and betting in Maryland.

Ethics: The House passed a bill creating a task force to look into the possibility of requiring state officials who are convicted of a criminal act to forfeit or temporarily lose their State of Maryland pension and retirement benefits. The committee will report back in November, and this will likely be a discussion for next year's Session.

Public-Private Partnerships: This would allow state contracts to be awarded through negotiation, rather than the required procurement/bid process that is currently in place. It would create more opportunity for the decision making process to be influenced outside of the bid process. This is still in committee this week, and will have a hard time making it to vote prior to midnight on Monday.

Death Penalty: The bill to repeal Maryland's Death Penalty didn't make it out of committee, essentially giving the death penalty repeal a death blow for 2012.

Health Enterprise Zones: HB439 creates Health Enterprize Zones. These are small areas with "measurable and documented disparities and poor health outcomes." The Department of Health and Mental Hygeine can designate an area as a HEZ. Practitioners who practice in one of these HEZs would be eligible for grants, funding, and access to state health programs. This passed the House, and is due to be heard on Tuesday in the Senate Finance committee.

Just because the Session is winding up, doesn't mean the Scoop is. We'll have video blog for you later this week, and some information on the odd calendar that they keep here in the General Assembly.

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