Zombie Bill! [ March 11, 2010 – 8:38 pm] by Jeff Posted in » Legislation

This one just won’t die!

Last year, one of the first bills I took on head on here on this site was HB 614, the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program. I teamed up with Jason and others across the State – including Neal Boortz at one point! – to get this bill killed once it was brought to our attention, and it died in the Senate only to have a resuscitation attempt made in the House in the form of an amendment to another bill.

Now, it has been re-introduced in a new bill, SB 418, minus the “Prescription Drug Monitoring Program” title. 418 is largely the exact same thing as 614. Clearly, there are elements within the General Assembly that desperately want this measure to pass.
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[UPDATED] Hypothetical State Budget – Or Is It?[ March 11, 2010 – 8:14 am]by Jeff Posted in » State

I’ve been talking to several State lawmakers over the last few days trying to get a handle on the State budget – THE single issue that has come to dominate the 2010 Session.

Through these discussions, some hypothetical numbers have been thrown out there, and I think they merit a discussion here.

Let’s take the target as $1 Billion. This is the number everyone was working off of last week, and most still are.

Most special interest tax breaks expire after some number of years and have to be renewed to continue. It is thought that we can save $100 million in non-renewal of certain special interest tax breaks this year.

We could then try to convince people near retirement age to take an early retirement, and save another $100 million. ($200 million so far, $800 million to go)
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March 11th, 2010 | 2 Comments

You’re Being Played[ March 10, 2010 – 2:47 pm]by Jeff Posted in » Editorial

Over the last week and a half or so, much ado has been made about potential cuts to colleges (including cutting several degree programs at Albany State and other institutions) and the 4H program. Indeed, this is what motivated my first discussion on the budget last Friday.

Now, I keep hearing from legislators and some pundits that this isn’t the legislators’ fault – it is the Board of Regents’ and the Presidents of the colleges themselves. They claim it is a Constitutional issue, that the Georgia General Assembly can’t dictate to any school, or the Board of Regents as a whole, exactly how to spend its money.

Most people may see this as a cop-out, as the legislators trying to dodge a bullet.

But the legislators are correct.

Per Article VIII, Section IV, Paragraph 1(c) of the Constitution of the State of Georgia:

All appropriations made for the use of any or all institutions in the university system shall be paid to the board of regents in a lump sum, with the power and authority in said board to allocate and distribute the same among the institutions under its control in such way and manner and in such amounts as will further an efficient and economical administration of the university system.

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March 10th, 2010 | Leave a Comment

The State Budget[ March 5, 2010 – 8:14 am]by Jeff Posted in » State

Over the last few days, a fairly large group of people all across the State – including here in the Lee/Dougherty area – have gotten very upset over various proposed cuts in education, specifically over 4H.

The first point I want to make here is that this is political gamesmanship and nothing more. The General Assembly ordered cuts, and the Board of Regents responded with cutting programs that they knew would attract this mass public outcry in order to try to pressure the General Assembly to not force them to make these cuts. Apparently, at least some in the General Assembly are already caving.

Even before then, however, you had several lawmakers – including State Rep Austin Scott (R-Tifton, running for Governor) get pissed that the Board of Regents would consider eliminating the very popular 4H program completely as one concrete example of the gamesmanship described above. Scott took the bait hook, line, and sinker. He told the Tifton Gazette “We asked them to bring us their proposed potential budget cuts and instead, they say they want to raise tuition and eliminate 4-H.” Scott has been in the General Assembly for more than a decade, approaching a decade and a half. He has been a Chairman of a couple of different committees. He wants to be Governor. He should know better than to engage in this petty gamesmanship, and he should rise above it.

But those are side issues to me – political noise that doesn’t amount to anything substantive, and indeed hides the substantive issues that need to be discussed.
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March 5th, 2010 | 4 Comments

Announcing The Project[ December 23, 2009 – 6:21 am]by Jeff Posted in » Legislation

For the past month and a half or so, I’ve been mentioning this thing I called “The Project” on twitter and Facebook occassionally. I’ve told a few people what it is already, but I am ready now to officially unveil it.

The Project took quite a bit of work. First, I had to set everything up in a table which would eventually have nearly 121,000 individual data points. (120,944 to be exact). I manually entered the data for the first 26,000 data points. I found a way to automate the next 95,000, but even this was a time consuming process – just not anywhere near as time consuming as the first 26,000.

But why would I spend so much time entering data – on top of everything else I already do? Why did I deem it so important? What is The Project?
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December 23rd, 2009 | Leave a Comment

Are GA Leaders Costing Georgians Jobs?[ November 29, 2009 – 6:41 am]by Jeff Posted in » Legislation

Georgia leaders like to talk about how they are bringing jobs to Georgia, especially under this economic climate. DuBose Porter has one plan and Republicans in the General Assembly consistently talk about how proud they are of their own efforts this past session with the passage of the JOBS Act.

But I ran into a dirty little secret over the past few days, one which State Rep Jeff Mays was kind enough to point out to me was part of Georgia Law.

You see, I like to do most of my Christmas shopping online. Quite frankly, I’m not such a fan of the crowds on Black Friday or pretty much any day between Thanksgiving and Christmas, and most stores offer the same deals online as you get in the physical store. So I get the same price with nowhere NEAR the hassle. As an added bonus, if I shop online I don’t have to pay sales tax. But that is where the dirty little secret comes in.
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November 29th, 2009 | 1 Comment

Legislative Alert: HB 614 ‘The Prescription Drug Monitoring Act’[ March 30, 2009 – 3:34 am]by Jeff Posted in » State

The following is from my good friend and colleague Jason Pye via his blog, JasonPye.com: (Note here that ‘tomorrow’ refers to TODAY, Monday, March 30 2009, as this post was written last night.)

Tomorrow, the Georgia Senate Rules Committee, and possibly the entire Georgia Senate, will consider HB 614, the “Georgia Prescription Monitoring Program Act” which would establish a state surveillance system for the monitoring of prescribing and dispensing of certain medications (Schedules II, III, IV, or V). Included in the database would be most pain relievers, anxiety medications, sleep aids, anti-diarrheals, and anything containing Codeine such as Robitussin.

This bill is bad social and fiscal policy and it violates the privacy and due process rights of Georgia citizens enumerated in the Georgia Constitution.

This bill is bad social policy because it allows government intrusion and second-guessing of the doctor-patient relationship. It treats Georgia citizens not as civilized people but as children who need to be monitored and controlled.

Also, as noted by the American Cancer Society, several studies indicate that prescription monitoring programs have a “chilling effect” on healthcare professionals’ prescribing of needed medication to legitimate pain patients for fear of being investigated by law enforcement.

This law is also bad fiscal policy. Once the initial federal funding for this program has run out, Georgia citizens will be left to foot the bill, which the U.S. Dept. of Justice estimates to cost the state up to $1 million annually. In our current economic crisis, this is not only fiscally irresponsible, it is downright immoral. Moreover, this program will not withstand judicial scrutiny and a lawsuit in its defense will cost the taxpayers that much more money.

This bill also violates the privacy and due process rights of Georgia citizens. It gives the Georgia Drugs and Narcotics Agency access to the private medical records of Georgia citizens without probable cause.
Under Georgia law, no law enforcement official can lawfully obtain any part of a Georgia citizen’s medical record without first obtaining the patient’s consent or a court order, such as a search warrant or a subpoena. In Johnson v. State, the Georgia Court of Appeals held that “the State is not entitled to exercise indiscriminate subpoena power as an investigative substitute for procedural devices otherwise available to it in the criminal context, such as a search warrant.”

In King v. State, the Georgia Supreme Court reiterated that “In this state, privacy is considered a fundamental constitutional right and is ‘recognized as having a value so essential to individual liberty in our society that [its] infringement merits careful scrutiny by the courts.’” It also noted that “[p]ermitting the State unlimited access to medical records for the purposes of prosecuting the patient would have the highly oppressive effect of chilling the decision of any and all Georgians to seek medical treatment.”

There are alternative, much more reasonable methods of accomplishing the same ends of this legislation without the egregious constitutional violations of this bill’s means. Please stand up for our privacy and due process rights. Please do not pave the way for Orwell’s big-government 1984. Please vote “NO” on HB 614.

This is a very well written piece that says everything I would have thought to say and more. I’m going to add a ‘SWGA Politics feel’ to it with this, and I close:

Because of everything Jason just said, I must most strenuously OPPOSE this measure.

HB 614: OPPOSE

Call or email your Senator NOW.

March 30th, 2009 | 2 Comments

These Representatives Got Balls[ February 15, 2009 – 6:39 pm]by Jeff Posted in » State

I saw something while working on this post for Georgia Legislative Watch that caught my eye.

It was known as HR 280, and its title was “Claim sovereignty under Tenth Amendment of Constitution over certain powers; serve notice to federal government to cease and desist”.

Basically, this Resolution says that the 10th Amendment to the US Constitution declared that any power not specifically vested in the National government via the Constitution was reserved to the States. The National government was created to be an agent of the States, yet now treats the States as agents of the National government. Many National decisions are direct violations of the 10th Amendment, and SCOTUS ruled in 1992 that the US Congress can not simply override the legislative and regulatory processes of the States. Finally, there is a lot of stuff going on right now in Washington that if done as proposed would further violate the 10th Amendment.
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February 15th, 2009 | 2 Comments

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