KET's Renee Shaw interviewed a number of professionals that play a role in Kentucky's justice system at all levels, including...
Viewing entries in
Committees
KET's Renee Shaw interviewed a number of professionals that play a role in Kentucky's justice system at all levels, including...
Rep. John Tilley (D, Hopkinsville) and I have been hard at work preparing legislation to bring about great changes to Kentucky's Juvenile Justice system. Please take a couple minutes to read our joint op-ed that has gone live across Kentucky explaining why. You can also read it at both the Lexington Herald-Leader and Louisville's Courier-Journal.
The work of the General Assembly is never done. Even though the regular session has adjourned legislators gather each week for joint committee meetings during the "interim" period running from June through November.
FRANKFORT – The Senate wrapped up the first week back passing several pieces of strong legislation that illustrate our priorities. And as next week unrolls, you will see an entire package of fiscally conservative, pro-family bills pass the chamber. Many of you have heard about the huge unfunded liability in our public pension employee system. Senate Bill 2 is step one in addressing one of the greatest public policy challenges facing our state. First, please understand that the bill makes no changes to teachers’ retirement, does not impact those currently employed or retired, and does not create a new tax on pension income of either private or public employees. What it does do is create a sustainable retirement benefit for state employees by creating a new hybrid cash-balance plan for future employees. The legislation provides the guarantee of at least 4% return of the money put in by the worker. Further, the employee can take any funds accrued with them if they change jobs. It recommends the full funding of the actuarially-required contribution to the retirement system which will occur next year when legislators work on the state’s biennial budget. This issue must be addressed now because every dollar needed to pay for pension benefits is a dollar unavailable for another worthy purpose. SB 2 will stop the bleeding.
Everyone who knows me knows how much I am invested spiritually and intellectually in the pro-life cause. It was entirely appropriate for me and others in the Senate that we marked this, our first week back, with the passage of Senate Bills 4 and 5. Thursday was Right to Life Day in the Capital where hundreds of people of all ages came out to listen to inspiring speeches and talk to legislators about their core values. That same day, we passed legislation to provide as much information as possible to the woman considering an abortion. Senate Bill 4 requires a face-to-face meeting between a woman contemplating an abortion and her doctor 24 hours before the procedure. It is shocking to me that this type of counseling is often done through a recorded message on the phone. Senate Bill 5 directs the provider to offer the ultrasound image of the baby to a woman prior to an abortion. The viewing is not mandatory but it is informational. Ultrasounds are standard before these procedures anyway. These are commonsense bills that protect women’s health and well-being while recognizing the sanctity of life.
Finally, we heard mid-week from the Governor on his legislative priorities. I am concerned that he indicated a desire for more revenue, which in government-speak means higher taxes. I am open to hearing the different points of view but I am opposed to increasing taxes, particularly to fund the pension system when taxpayers aren't the reason the funds are in such bad shape to begin with. We need a tax code that will create jobs, not fund bureaucracies. More importantly, Frankfort must prove it can be a good steward of the resources is already has before demanding more revenue.
Next week, I’m looking forward to the passage of SB 10 which places a ceiling on the state’s debt. There is also a planned vote on SB 6, a bill that passed through my committee this week, which will stiffen penalties for heroin dealers. Finally, this week I filed SB 104 and SB 105 which eliminates project labor agreements and the prevailing wage, and would save state and local governments many millions of dollars that can be best directed toward meeting critical needs, education, cost of living adjustments, pension contributions and other services. You can always contact me, or any legislator, toll-free at 1-800-372-7181, email me here, or follow the progress of the General Assembly by bookmarking this site, or by checking out the Legislature's site at www.lrc.ky.gov .
FRANKFORT— In anticipation of continuing the Regular Session next week, I spent several productive days reviewing legislation and preparing for the issues that lie ahead. During this three week break, I have held several meetings across the district and in Frankfort with a wide range of people from advocates against domestic violence to the Chief Justice of the Kentucky Supreme Court, John D. Minton, Jr. The highlight this week was my first Interim Joint Judiciary Committee meeting, alongside my friend and colleague, Rep. John Tilley. The meeting was productive, as we heard testimony from Budget and Justice officials on the criminal justice reforms approved by Kentucky lawmakers in 2011 with HB 463, with a particular focus on whether those reforms are having the intended results: Is the Commonwealth saving money from skyrocketing correctional costs? Are criminal actions being adjudicated properly? According to the speakers, the early numbers seem to indicate positive results, with savings in the neighborhood of $35 million or more since the legislation took effect in 2011, and with recidivism rates dropping with successful monitored court release.
All provisions found in HB 463 are projected by the Office of the State Budget Director to save the state $422 million over 10 years. Other savings are projected to come from reduced recidivism such as, use of citations rather than arrests for low-level misdemeanor offenders, and increased use of substance abuse treatment paid for by reinvestment of savings from reduced incarceration costs, among other things, according to reports on the legislation. While these early reports seem positive, I will be following the numbers closely over this calendar year to confirm the progress continues, and to be sure that we are still providing for the security of the citizens of the Commonwealth.
I have also starting setting up the agendas for the Senate Judiciary meetings over the next month, where I expect to discuss SB 23, Sen. John Schickel’s post-conviction DNA bill, which will allow certain convicted felons to apply for DNA testing to establish innocence, and at little to no cost to the taxpayer; SB 27, by Sen. Tom Buford, which reduces the period of real property redemption from 1 year to 6 months, helping the sale of real estate in Kentucky, and SB 47, my first bill, allowing for DNA samples to be taken upon a felony arrest. SB 47 mirrors a bill filed in the House by Rep. Marzian, and is inspired by the tragic death of Katie Sepich, a young woman from New Mexico who was killed in 2003, but whose killer was convicted through the use of DNA evidence.
I have a bill ready to file before next week’s filing deadline to repeal the prevailing wage in Kentucky, which would free up millions of dollars for use to remedy the state’s pension debt or give teachers and many other state employees a long-overdue cost of living salary adjustment.
I look forward to next week when we will be confronting these difficult challenges on the Senate floor and hearing from the Governor during his State of the Commonwealth address. Please feel free to call me toll-free at 800-372-7181, or email me here, with any questions, concerns, or comments. Bookmark this site or visit the General Assembly's site at www.lrc.ky.gov, to see regular updates about the work underway in Frankfort.