Produced
by VCU's
Legislative
Reporting
students

A daily roundup of media coverage of the Virginia General Assembly
Updated by noon each weekday by a student in Mass Comm 375 at Virginia Commonwealth University
:: today's editor ::
> George Templeton

:: verbatim ::

“It’s kind of like having to shoot your favorite horse when its leg is too broken to fix.”

- Republican Delegate Jay Katzen on withdrawing his tuition tax credit bill yesterday after the bill was changed fundamentally by amendments. (Source: Daily Press of Newport News)


:: on deck ::

Thirty minutes after the House of Delegates adjourns today, the House Appropriations Committee will meet in the Appopriations Room on the ninth floor of the General Assembly Building.

The Senate Finance Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in Senate Room A in the General Assembly Building.


:: bookmark this! ::

> MarkEarley.com

If you want to find more about Virginia’s attorney general who wants to be governor, then this is the Web site for you.

Just given a POLLIE award for best political website for a statewide candidate for the 1999-2000 cycle, this website provides a plethora of information and news about the supposed favorite for the Republican nomination for governor.

There is also a link Earley’s “virtual convention headquarters.” There you can find out how to become an Earley delegate to the Republican Convention in June.


:: recess ::

On the Web site of sports giant ESPN.com, Page 2 takes a stranger view of sports.

Hunter S. Thompson, the author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, contributes a column every Monday.

Other contributors include Nick Bakay, most recently Salem the Cat on the television show “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” and a writer on “King of Queens.” He offers up a tale of the tape on such subjects as the Super Bowl vs. "Survivor" or Kobe Bryant vs. Shaquille O’Neal.


:: feedback ::
> Suggestions, ideas,
tips for coverage? Tell us!

:: mega-donors ::

> During the 1999 elections, members of the General Assembly received more than half their money from 150 groups and individuals.

Here are the top donors, and how they fared during the 2000 legislative session.

Thursday, Feb. 1, 2001

Panel OKs bill to make SOLs one part of accreditation

Delegate Thomas M. Jackson Jr.’s bill that would make Standard of Learning tests one of several factors in school accreditation cleared the House Education Committee 15-5 yesterday, reports the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

“The purpose of this bill is to broaden the scope of how we deem an individual school to be successful or unsuccessful,” said Jackson., D-Carroll.

He wants other criteria like attendance and improvement added, instead of having a 70 percent passage rate on the SOLs as the only requirement. Under current policy, that will be the sole determinant in high school accreditation starting in 2006-07.

While Gov. Jim Gilmore did not say he was going to veto it, he strongly backs the SOLs.


Hager is staying in the race for governor

Lt. Gov. John Hager said in a Wednesday news conference that he will not drop out of the fight for the Republican nomination for governor, The Virginian-Pilot reported.

“We’re going to keep on trucking,” Hager said. “Virginia’s future is at stake.”

Earlier in the week, Gov. Jim Gilmore, a fellow Republican, admitted that he had been trying to broker a deal to end the chance of a tough battle for the GOP gubernatorial nomination between Hager and Attorney General Mark Earley.

The deadline for candidates to decide what office they will seek is 5 p.m. today. Hager predicted an upset, saying he has been underestimated his entire life.


Katzen puts tuition tax credit bill out of its misery

After his bill was loaded down with so many amendments that he could barely recognize it, Delegate Jay Katzen withdrew his tuition tax credit proposal, saying he couldn’t support it anymore, according to the Newport News Daily Press.

“I believe that this is an opportunity missed,” said Katzen, R-Fauquier, “but its time will hopefully come next year."

Katzen’s proposal would have allowed businesses’and individuals a $500 tax credit for donating at least that much to a nonprofit scholarship fund. Parents could draw up to $3,100 from the fund for private school tuition while home-schoolers could receive $550.

Among the amendments that Katzen didn’t want was one offered and added by the House Minority Leader Delegate C. Richard Cranwell, D-Vinton. His amendment would have required any private school that received scholarship money to administer and meet the state's standards on the Standards of Learning tests.

 

:: links ::

> Home page for MASC 375, the Legislative Reporting course
at Virginia Commonwealth University's School of Mass Communications

> Hotlist of newspapers covering the General Assembly

> Other online resources for legislative reporters