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January 24, 2008
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House votes to override Governor's vetoes
By REP. CHARLES JENKINS

Charles Jenkins
On the first day of the 2008 session of the Georgia General Assembly, the House of Representatives made history by voting overwhelmingly to override Gov. Sonny Perdue's vetoes of 12 bills adopted during the 2007 session.

All of the bills were approved unanimously or nearly so last year by both the House and Senate but were vetoed by the governor after the session. It takes a two-thirds majority to override a governor's veto (120 votes in the House), and all of the Jan. 14 override measures were supported by at least 147 members.

The vetoes overridden by the House involved the following bills:

•HB 549, related to occupational speech and physical therapy services for children with disabilities.

•HB 229, which would change the way lottery reserve funds are measured to protect book allowances for HOPE recipients.

•HB 451, which would authorize a state tax refund to provide an incentive for developing tourist attractions in Georgia.

•HB 218, which would modify the authority for security guards for the Georgia Ports Authority to exercise police powers.

•HB 69, which would eliminate the fee charged for access to online driver's records.

•HB 91, which would require the reporting of financial information by state agencies to the General Assembly.

•HB 529, which would correct references to the legislative budget office throughout state law to recognize the current status of the House Budget Office.

•HB 162, which would provide sales tax exemptions for the construction of performing arts centers and volunteer health clinics.

•HB 441, which would repeal a 2005 law regulating bank dividends.

•HB 559, which would authorize state health insurance benefits for public charter school teachers and employees.

•HB 807, local legislation for the city Auburn.

•HB 413, a sales tax exemption for the sale of property to expand the Chattahoochee Nature Center.

All of the motions were sent to the Senate, where a two-thirds majority is also required to override the

vetoes.

House members approved legislation Friday that would implement a new statewide water management plan. The plan, drafted by the Georgia Water Council, proposes to set up 11 water planning districts across the state. Among the activities under this plan are assessing how much water is available in the state's lakes, rivers and underground aquifers without harming downstream users, and how much treated sewage can be safely discharged. The legislation seeks to balance he needs of rural Georgia versus metropolitan Atlanta with regard to the water supply and lays the groundwork for the construction of reservoirs in north Georgia.

On Jan. 16, the governor delivered his State of the State address to a joint session of the House and Senate, announcing his proposal for a constitutional amendment that would eliminate the state portion of ad valorem taxes paid by home and automobile owners. He said the move would provide $94 million in annual tax relief, an average of $30 per household.

Gov. Perdue also outlined his annual state budget proposal for fiscal year 2009. His $21.4 billion spending plan is about $1 billion more than the current budget, and includes the following line items:

• $1.2 billion in state bonds to pay for construction of new highways and other state facilities.

• A $142 million tax cut for affluent senior citizens.

• $50 million for a revolving loan fund to assist local governments with completing road projects.

• $17 million to help small businesses provide health insurance coverage to their employees.

• $53 millions to upgrade the state's trauma care system.

• $120 million for water infrastructure and reservoirs.

• $14 million to launch a program aimed at reducing truancy in public schools.

The governor is recommending only a 2.5 percent pay raise for public school educators, which is woefully insufficient to offset inflation and rising costs of health insurance.

Hopefully legislative budget writers will keep our teachers from suffering a net loss in compensation before final approval of the plan.

The legislative session is in official recess until Jan. 28. Budget hearings will be held Jan. 22-25.

-Rep. Charles Jenkins (DBlairsville) represents the 8th District (Rabun, Towns, Union and White counties) in the Georgia House of Representatives. Contact him at 411 Coverdell Office Building, Atlanta, GA 30334; by phone at 404-656-0126 or by e-mail at charles.jenkins@house.ga.gov.


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