On Friday, January 21, the 10th day of Session, Governor O’Malley introduced the Budget Bill for fiscal 2012. The constitution requires the Governor to present a budget that is balanced. Some of the highlights of Governor O’Malley’s budget proposal are:
■No proposed furloughs for the State’s 79,000 workers. State government will still close for five days, but employees will be paid for those days. This will provide an energy cost savings for those buildings.
■A plan to shore up the pension system by increasing employee contributions
■Raises the retirement age for new hires
■A 5% across-the-board cut to education is NOT being proposed. Keeping education dollars at current levels would save nearly $100 million.
■Does NOT shift the cost of the teacher pension system to the counties
■Cuts about $250 million in state Medicaid payments to hospitals
■Cuts $60 million from state aid to counties
■Save $40 million through buyouts of 1,000+ state workers. The buyouts have nearly 14,000 applicants.
■A savings of $100 million through an overhaul of the pension system for public employees
The Governor has already dealt with about $250 million of the shortfall by making some midyear spending cuts. Other areas of reduced spending or transfer of funds would be: About $60 million that was to be used for the proposed light rail lines in Baltimore and the suburbs of Washington D.C. will be taken from the Transportation Trust Fund. Some Democratic legislators and county executives are pushing an increase in the state’s 23.5 cents per gallon tax to replenish the Transportation Trust Fund which has been continually raided by Governors (past and present) to balance the General Budget. Approximately $20 million would be moved from the Chesapeake Bay Trust Fund.
A new union contract calls for a $750 bonus for state workers on July 1, 2011, and wage increases the next two years. Employees however would pay more for prescription drugs.
Items of Interest to District 37 Contained in the Governor’s Capital Budget
COUNTY PROJECT AMOUNT
Caroline Denton Wastewater Treatment Plant $5,031 M
Hobbs Road Landfill Closure $3,538 M
Dorchester Cambridge Wastewater Treatment Plant $9,339 M
Talbot Hyde Park Sewer Extension $2,046 M
Community Center Sewer Extension $1,993 M
Talbot Trailer Park Sewer Extension $1,483 M
Tilghman Wastewater Treatment
Renewable Energy Project $600 K
Wicomico Brewington Branch Stormwater
Management Improvements $233 K
Fruitland Wastewater Treatment
Plant Improvements $1,767 M
Salisbury Waverly Drive Stormwater
Management Project $968 K
Sharptown Wastewater Treatment
Plant New Pump Station $555 K”
I have recently introduced several bills – some of which will be heard next week:
On Thursday, February 3, at 1:00, the Senate Education, Health, and Environmental Affairs Committee will hear Senate Bill 20 (Health Occupations – Facilities for Dental Radiology). This bill would authorize a licensed dentist to own and operate a facility for dental radiology.
I have several bond bills that will be introduced next week:
Senate Bill 153 (Reorganization of State Government – Consolidating the Department of the Environment into the Department of Natural Resources) would restructure State government by consolidating the Department of the Environment into the Department of Natural Resources where it originated. It would abolish the Department of the Environment by June 30, 2010, and it would thereby, abolish the positions of Secretary of the Environment and Deputy Secretary of the Environment by July 1, 2012, and transfer all of the functions, powers, duties, equipment, assets, and liabilities of the Department of the Environment to the Department of Natural Resources. I am putting in an amendment which would rename the department, the Department of Environmental Resources.
Senate Bill 154 is a bill that I am sponsoring and it is being co-sponsored by Senator Glassman (R. Harford Co.), (Health Insurance – Ambulance Service Providers – Assignment of Benefits) would require health insurers, nonprofit health service plans, and health maintenance organizations to reimburse an ambulance service provider directly for services. It also provides that an insured, a subscriber, or an enrollee of specified health insurance carriers may not be liable to certain ambulance service providers for certain services under certain circumstances.
Senate Bill 155(Legislative Districting –Resident Delegates by County) this is a bill that I am sponsoring and it is being co-sponsored by Senator E.J. Pipkin (R. Upper Shore). If passed by the Maryland General Assembly and approved by Maryland voters, this bill would amend the Maryland Constitution to provide that legislative districting shall, to the greatest extend practical, result in a resident delegate from every county. It would require that every 10 years when legislative districts are redrawn following a U.S. Census, lines are drawn in such a way as to ensure that each of the state’s 23 counties has a least one resident delegate. This bill was also heard last Session and several Caroline County commissioners testified on the bill saying that a local delegate would be able to stay on top of issues that directly affect the county, and that current elected delegates are stretched too thin.
Senate Bill 156 (Legislative Districting – Resident Delegate for Each County) would require an advisory committee established by the Governor after a decennial census to formulate a legislative districting plan for the election of members of the General Assembly that to the greatest extent practicable draws the lines for the districts so that each county in the State has at least one resident delegate.
Senate Bill 157 – is a bill that I am sponsoring and is being co-sponsored by Senator Pipkin (R. Upper Shore), (Code Home Rule Counties – Development Excise Tax for School Construction – Applicability) This bill would clarify that the development excise tax that a code home rule county is authorized to impose applies to new residential units including apartments and condominiums. The development excise tax is imposed on a multifamily residential project when the building permit is issued for the residential units. This bill would codify the original intent of the Caroline County Excise Tax law.
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