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 ::
> Olympia Meola

:: verbatim ::

"What really upsets us is that [the bill's backers] are looking to such a vulnerable group as nonprofits as a revenue mechanism."

- Wendy Gradison, director of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services. She was referring to legislators' plans to change the sales tax exemption program for nonprofit groups.


:: on deck ::

The House Rules Committee meets a half hour after the floor session lets out, in the Conference Room on the sixth floor of the General Assembly Building.

The House Appropriations Committee meets in the Appropriations Room on the ninth floor of the GAB at the same time.


:: bookmark this! ::

> CapitolWire.com

offers a slew of information on many state legislatures, including Virginia.

The site employs a full-time staff to report on issues in each state's legislature. This gives you an opportunity to compare how different states are handling similar issues.

CapitolWire also has a service that will automatically give you updates on issues you designate as most important to you, whether they are in local or national news.

This nifty service carries a price tag, but you can sign up for a free two-week subscription - and that may be just what you need to get through the veto session!


:: recess ::

> Bored.com

What word does your phone number spell?

For anyone who has ever had a cubicle-based office job, this site is for you. Play games, learn jokes, scramble names … they have it all.


:: 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.

Monday, Feb. 19, 2001

Senate passes 24-hour waiting period for abortions

The Virginia Senate on Friday passed a bill that would require women to wait 24 hours to have an abortion. Gov. Jim Gilmore said he intends to sign the bill into law, making an abortion a multiday process effective July 1.

The bill passed on a 24-15 vote. It requires a woman seeking an abortion to be given information about her options, wait 24 hours and then have the procedure. [Story by Tara Stubblefield]


Legislation would encourage telecommuting

It sounds too good to be true: an employment system that would help rural areas attract a larger work force and urban areas reduce traffic congestion.

But that's the goal of a telecommuting bill approved by the House Committee on Science and Technology. It would encourage state agencies to allow eligible employees to work from satellite locations - creating a model for the private sector. [Story by Olympia Meola]


Internet filtering, human cloning and contraception

During a session that lasted more than three hours, the Senate Committee on Education and Health endorsed legislation that would filter the Internet in public schools, prohibit human cloning and increase access to emergency contraception. [Story by Jay-Anne Casuga]


Schools would get to see students' criminal records

Young criminals may no longer be able to keep their secrets from school officials.

Juveniles suspected in arson, bomb or weapon-related crimes would have to share their criminal record with school officials under a bill that passed the House of Delegates by an 86-12 vote. [Story by Olympia Meola]


The budget debate, with an eye toward higher office

How does a politician, running for statewide office this year, balance campaign strategy and the legislative budget battle over the car tax cut?

Vote for both the House and Senate's plans.

Delegate Alan A. Diamonstein, D-Newport News, a lieutenant governor hopeful, voted for both the House of Delegates and Senate version of the budget. He said that there were good points in both, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

He was one of a few legislators who may have campaign on the brain and voted for both budgets, citing different reasons.

No one said anything negative about the car tax, but the difference in teacher's raises in one plan from the other made a couple of legislators switch their votes. Without the statewide nomination, all hopefuls will most likely run for their same seat again.


Senate committee, on 9-6 vote, kills feticide bill

The Senate Courts of Justice Committee killed a bill that would allow prosecutors to sue someone who killed a woman's unborn fetus while injuring the mother.

The feticide bill, rejected by a 9-6 vote in committee, was too vague for many legislators, and they questioned what constituted reasonable causes of death, reported The Washington Post.

For example, Sen. Richard L. Saslaw, D-Fairfax, raised this hypothetical situation: If a pregnant woman, addicted to crack, bought drugs from someone and the fetus died, would the drug dealer be sued for second-degree murder?

The bill's opponents thought the bill would be difficult to enforce.


Nonprofits upset with new sales tax exemption

A sales tax exemption program slated to end July 1, 2002, would be extended under a bill moving through the General Assembly. But other changes in the law have dismayed nonprofit organizations.

Currently, nonprofit organizations show a certificate at the time of any purchase and are exempt from the sales tax, according to The Washington Post.

Under the bill sponsored by Sen. Kevin G. Miller, R-Harrisonburg, the organization would pay the usual 4.5 percent tax and apply for a refund at the end of the year. The state would subtract 3 percent of the reimbursement to pay for vendors' costs.

Miller said his bill would introduce accountability into the system and eliminate abuse of the exemption. Nonprofits argue that the state plans to make money off them.

Due to disagreement between the House and Senate, a conference committee will configure the language of the new method of reimbursement.

 

:: 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