Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Latest rumor...

With the usual caveats about rumors (double strength caveats prescribed during the waning days of a lege session like this one)...

Anyway, talk in the Capitol quad was that after dinner, both chambers were going to vote on the budget bills, minus the referral of the sales tax hike, and send them to the Governor.

Stay tuned to see what ever-more creative ways that the Republicans can find to knock over their own tea cart this week...

At Last, Our Long Nightmare Is Over...

...Coleman conceded; Al Franken is now the junior U.S. Senator from Minnesota.

What? You thought that maybe a budget deal had been reached, or maybe the Republican caucus admitted to itself that it is utterly unqualified to govern and resigned en masse? :))

We should be so lucky...

Short House Rules Meeting

The meeting lasted less than two minutes. It was held to propel SB1157, Arizona Department of Environment Quality continuation, and SB1161, having to do with public safety personnel, retirement, and reemployment.

It was blissfully absent of both surprises and testiness, two things that are evidently in great supply at 1700 West Washington in Phoenix.

Maybe we should start a mail-order/internet business on those to help relieve the budget shortfall. :))


I'll hang here until 8 or so, but if it doesn't look like much progress is going to happen, I'll take off and watch this stuff from home.

Until I go to sleep, which should be around 10 minutes after I start watching it.

Ableser gives up a bill to get it passed

A more complete explanation of what happened at the end of the House floor session, courtesy a press release from the House Dems -

Rep. Ed Ableser, D-Tempe (District 17), has signed on his support today for a bill sponsored by Sen. Jim Waring, R-Phoenix, to allow deployed military members to cancel or suspend their gym memberships, a bill identical to Ableser’s original bill.

Both Ableser and Waring's bills allow active duty members of the military to cancel or suspend a health club contract within 90 days after receiving notice they were being deployed outside of Arizona . Ableser introduced similar legislation the previous two years.

“It’s not about who sponsored what and when at a time when our troops are protecting our freedom,” Ableser said. “We have a sacred duty to support our best and bravest in these times of sacrifice.”

Nearly 600,000 veterans live in Arizona and Ableser originally drafted the bill after one of them, a former House page and constituent, was deployed to Iraq and realized her health club was going to continue to charge her monthly until her contract with the club expired. (See story)

In order to get one of the bills passed before the June 30 deadline, the decision was made to substitute Waring’s Senate Bill 1407 for Ableser’s House Bill 2290 because there was not enough time for both the bills to travel through the House and Senate.

“Our Arizona military servicemen and women risk their lives and pay the ultimate price,” Ableser said. “The least we could do is make sure they aren’t paying even more at home while they are out fighting for us.”


Now the House is in recess, and taking dinner at 6. Don't know when this session is going to get done.

House in session...live blogging

4:51 - HB2290 referred to engrossing. House Rules to meet. House recessing.

4:49 - HB2290 is Ed Ableser's bill to give relief to deployed military members from long-term health club contracts. Bill amended. COW ends.

4:48 - Into COW to amend HB2290.

4;46 - SCR1026, Anti-EFCA resolution, House passes 35 - 24, party line vote.

4:43 - SB1466, under reconsideration. Council on efficient government (aka "the outsource everything" bill), Bill fails again. Yea!

4:42 - SB1459, Cold Case register, victim report, House passes unanimously.

4:37 - SB1320, ADOT omnibus, House passes, Lesko, Burges, Chad Campbell, Murphy, Boone, Sinema, Hendrix, Biggs, Patterson, Farley, Antenori, Stevens, Montenegro, Ash, Crump, Deschene and Seel opposing. Interesting combo there. (I missed a couple of names, check the record of the vote once it is posted online for a complete list.)

4:34 - SB1262, Workers Comp omnibus, House passes unanimously.

4:31 - SB1113, Jack Harper's and Russell Pearce's (and the NRA's) guns in restaurants and bars, House passes 40 - 19, Ugh.

4:30 - HB2603, Amendments, Clean Elections, needs 2/3 to enact emergency clause, House passes, Patterson sole opposition.

4:27 - HB2199, Corporations and LLC omnibus, House passes unanimously.

4:26 - HB2118, ASRS, LTD amendments, House passes unanimously.

4:23 - HB2031, relating to schools: contractors, fingerprint clearance, House passes unanimously. Not budget related.

4:22 - Gavelled in, but nothing happening as Adams confers with some folks...

4:19 - Gavelled into order, lots of teachers in the gallery.

Well, something's happening in the House...

Not sure if it is budget-related, though.

Both parties just held brief caucus meetings (so brief that most observers couldn't get to them before the meetings were finished).

In addition, a number of Representatives are making their way back to the House floor, and the 10 minute bell just sounded.


BTW - I had a truly brilliant* idea while my mind was wandering, waiting for the lege to get its act together -

I think that if the lege doesn't pass a budget, all state flags should be lowered to half-mast until the budget is done. In addition, the AZ flag flying over the Capitol should be flown upside down. An upside down flag used to be nearly-universally used to signal that a ship was in distress, and people from all across the political spectrum agree that the ship of state in Arizona is foundering badly.

*brilliant = "sounded like a wonderfully wiseass idea to me." :)

Holding pattern

Had a dentist's appointment today, and rushed down to the lege afterward.

Turns out, there was no need to rush.

Nothing is happening right now.

Over in the Senate earlier today, Senate Rules heard all of the bills that were railroaded through Senate Education last night, and passed all of them.

Except for the one referring a hike in the sales tax to the voters.

Oopsie.

According to one source, the Governor is in the Speaker's office with the Senate President and together they are calling in the Democrats one-by-one to try to browbeat them into supporting the budget.

That approach doesn't seem to be working too well.

The Senate floor session is in recess, as is the House. Members of the House are milling about on the floor while the backroom deal-making/arm-twisting continues.

There are a number of lobbyists and Capitol watchers in the House gallery, and a while ago, they were doing the wave.

It was actually pretty funny, and easily the most entertaining thing I've seen down here.

Anyway, I plan on hanging here for a while, and checking in with a few of the folks that I know.

More updates when there is something to update.

8 1/2 hours to a shutdown...

Monday, June 29, 2009

A day-long civics lesson...

This is going to be a short post, because I need to decompress. And unlike the people who work at the lege tonight, I get to do just that.

In spite of the vast quantity of nothing effective that seemed to dominate today's activities, today was a learning experience.

During one of the lulls in the inaction today, I met and had the opportunity to speak with Tim Schmaltz, CEO of PAFCO. PAFCO, Protecting Arizona's Family Coalition, is a "non-partisan alliance of social services, health, community service agencies, advocacy groups, citizen advocacy, and faith-based associations."

He has a vast knowledge of the accomplishing things at the AZ lege, and in legislative/political bodies in general. He made the point that in practical politics, someone like a committee chair or the leadership of a body should never bring a bill forward unless they know exactly what the vote will be. He was stunned at the fact that Russell Pearce brought the budget bills forward without knowing that they would pass.

I wondered if in fact Pearce knew *exactly* how the vote was going to turn out before bringing the meeting to order.

Apparently, cynicism is contagious, because that made him wonder too.

I've criticized Russell Pearce many times in the past, and have made it clear that I don't think he is particularly intelligent. However, he is a skilled tactician when it comes to practical politics. He knows how and when to throw an elbow, and I believe that's exactly what he did today.

There are still more chapters to come to pass in this story.

The Governor's office has extended some backchannel feelers to some Democratic senators, but they aren't actually willing to make concessions, or even negotiate with the Democrats. If they don't get at least 6 Dems on board, nothing that resembles this budget is going to pass the Senate. There just aren't enough Republicans on board.

I reminded the person who told me of that of the *deal* a couple of years ago that Pete Rios and another Democratic representative made with then-speaker Jim Weiers. It was the sort of deal where they sold their souls to the devil (Weiers) but where the devil didn't pay the freight (the concessions they got came at the cost of programs that Weiers wanted to cut anyway.)

In other words, any deals made with the Governor had better be *good* deals, not just creating a different sort of bad.

Tomorrow, I have an appointment at the dentist. I may go down to the lege to see how things are going, but maybe not. Depends on developments and how I feel.

Either way, I recommend viewing the proceedings on AZ Capitol Television or on the lege's website. This stuff will affect our home for years, if not generations.

Live blogging Senate Education

7:57 - SB1475 passes on a party line vote. And I am out of here. Good night everyone.

7:56 - Lopez reminds Huppenthal that almost no Democratic bills have moved.

7:51 - SB1475, criminal justice. Includes sale of prisons to private operators.

7:46 - SB1474. Landrum Taylor calls this year's budget process "extremely disappointing." Lopez actually votes "aye" on this one. Huppenthal criticizes Dems for "stabbing him in the back" on another bill. Bill passes.

Things are getting testy, in a "the kids are getting tired" sort of way.

7:43 - SB1473 passes. Party line vote again.

Aboud criticizes Reps for short notice on the budget.

Huppenthal criticizes the Dems for not signing on to the Republican budget.

7:41 - still talking about the details of SB1473

7:38 - SB1473, among other things, affecting development fees.

7:35 - SB1471 vote. Bill passes on a party line vote. Pattern set. Expect the rest of these bills to go the same way.

7:33 - Aboud amendment moved. It would modify some definitions and grandfather in already enrolled domestic partners in state employee insurance coverage. Trying to fix Matt Heinz' mistake in House Approps on Saturday. Amendment fails on a voice vote.

7:30 - SB1471 continuing. Childcare providers worried about new fee provisions in the bill.

7:25 - SB1471, health and welfare.

7:21 - SB1470, feeder bill, up for a vote. Gray is here. Bill passes on a party line vote. Gray, Huppenthal, Paton, Allen - Yes; Landrum Taylor, Lopez, Aboud - No.

Huppenthal started talking about protecting small business. Yes folks, he's running statewide next year.

7:16 - Aboud is here.

7:15 - Gray's "stuff" here, but no Gray, yet.

7:13 - Meeting starts. Linda Gray and Paula Aboud not present. No Gray could make passage of the Rep budget "compromise" problematical.

6:57 - The Committee is not going to start right at 7, but it looks like it will be commencing soon enough for me to stay.

Clarifications while waiting for Senate Education meeting to start

In case I didn't make it clear previously (and I didn't, hence the need for this post), the activity during the Senate floor session was final passage, and the activity during the House floor session was only Committee-of-the-Whole, not final passage.

BTW - I will stay for the Ed committee hearing, unless it doesn't start on time. If this is another exercise in "there's real world time, and then there's Senate time," I'm out of here.

They've had over five months to get this stuff worked out.

Enough already.

Live blogging the Senate floor session #2

6:09 - It looks like Education will be meeting tonight at 7 p.m. And the House will be coming back after dinner, so this looks like a day where I should have brought a cot with me.

6:07 - Burns assigns budget bills to Education Committee.

6:05 - Landrum Taylor talks about constituent concerns about the effects of the looming shutdown. Also laments lack of bipartisanship, and calls this one of the "stranger sessions" that she has ever seen.

6:04 - Waring urges "no more bills until the budget is passed."

6:02 - Leff blames Napolitano, but calls on Rep caucus to support Brewer.

6:02 - Jack Harper calls Napolitano's promotion to a Presidential cabinet post a "miracle." Urges Governor to sign current budget.

6:01 - Aboud's turn. Calls out Republicans for their failed leadership and focus on assessing blame for last year instead of dealing with this year.

6:00 - Rios brings up the fact that the Reps have controlled the lege for decades, and that the Reps are still looking to reduce revenues with tax breaks for Big Business. Gould walks away for a minute. Returns.

5:58 - Meg Burton Cahill rebuts Gould by bringing up the Republican mantra of "tax cuts for special interests."

5:55 - Gould stands up to blame Democrats and Janet Napolitano for the budget mess.

5:53 - Aboud criticizing Reps for not forwarding previously approved budget bills. Also notes that the bills of the compromise are now assigned to Education Committee.

5:47 - SB1395, common school districts, grade nine. Fails again.

5:47 - Gorman moved to reconsider SB1395.

5:46 - Gorman moved to reconsider SB1022, political signs, tampering.

5:44 - Rios criticizing the Reps for pushing the budget to the last possible moment and for not including Democrats in this, and that the Democrats could have taken care of this weeks ago.

5:43 - Vote to reconsider passes.

5:40 - This is a cluster***k. They are now reconsidering the vote on SB1464.

5:38 - McCune-Davis raises point of order about Burns' failure to order that passed bills be transmitted to the Governor. Burns says that the rules don't require that phrasing.

5:32 - SB1464, state budget reports, financial condition. Passes, apparently, though Burns is holding the vote open. Even though there is absolutely no opposition to it, so he isn't trying to gather votes for/against it. Not sure what is going on.

5:28 - SB1395, common school districts, grade nine. Fails.

5:27 - SB1386 - Charter school renewal periods. Passes.

5:26 - SB1289, Vehicle accident reports. Needs 2/3 to enact emergency clause. Gets it.

5:25 - SB1246, CPS information. Passes unanimously.

5:23 - SB1196, education omnibus. Aboud wonders why the budget isn't under consideration. Bill passes.

5:20 - SB1168, guns in parked cars. Passes. Ugh.

5:16 - SB1146, expenditure limitation, penalty waiver, Pima (as in "town of"). Passes 16-11

5:14 - SB1104, assisted living managers; nursing. Passes, wingers opposing.

5:13 - SB1022, relating to political signs and tampering, fails, bipartisan opposition.

Live blogging the House floor session

Not sure when it is scheduled to start, but a number of reps are trickling into the chamber. And the 5 (or 10, I'm not sure which) bell just sounded.

Other updates:

House Approps will *not* meet today. This has been confirmed by a member of the committee.

A couple of heavy hitters from the Governor's office were spotted over in the Senate building heading upstairs to a destination unknown. That doesn't seem to have helped - the same source that confirmed the delay in the House Approps meeting also stated that his best guess was that they were going to need a continuing resolution, probably passed tomorrow, to avoid a government shutdown over the 4th of July holiday weekend.
__________________________________________________________________

5:03 - Update from a loyal (and active!) reader - the Senate is about to go back into session. Heading over there....

5:01 - SB1459, passes

5:01 SB1449, passes

5:00 SB1326, passes

4:59 - SB1282, passes.

4:58 - SB1281, passes.

4:58 - SB1254, passes. this is going too fast.

4:58 - SB1253, Felony murder, drive by shooting. Passes.

4:57 - SB1243, Defensive display of firearm. Passes.

4:57 - SB1103, Nursing education. Passes.

4:56 - SB1100 - continuation of the Biomedical Research Commission. Passes.

4:55 - SB1047, child safety. Biggs opposes. Passes anyway.

4:50 - COW bills assigned to committees. Enter 2nd COW session. Rep. Boone takes chair.

4:49 - SB1175, performance of abortion, non-physician. Passes. End of COW.

4:48 - SB1123 passes.

4:42 - Lopes still excoriating Antenori's amendment. It still passes.

4:37 - Lopes still grilling Antenori.

4:33 - SB1123, nonpartisan elections in Tucson. Antenori wants to amend it to make sure people understand that this is targeted statewide, not at Tucson. Phil Lopes is calling him out on that. Lopes has a point - the only city affected by this bill, notwithstanding Antenori's amendment, is Tucson.

4:33 - SB1115, animal fighting. Passes.

4:30 - SB1113, Guns in bars and restaurants. Passes. Ugh.

4:29 - SB1106, Domestic violence, child custody. Passes.

4:25 - SB1091, more election laws stuff and BRB stuff. Amended by Tobin on the floor. Seel opposes bill because it requires petition signers to fill out too much info, and that will discourage voters from signing multiple petitions. Passes.

4:25 - SB1088, relating to domestic violence and dating relationships. Passes.

4:24 - SB1074, Amendments to election law passes.

4:22 - SB1059, relating to organized retail theft. Passes COW.

4:22 - SB1015, dispersing unlawful assemblies. Passes.

4:20 - SB1011, relating to sex offenders and probation monitoring. Passes.

4:18 - Gavelled into session. Going into COW session. Warde Nichols taking the chair.

4:16 - Floor session still hasn't started, but security seems to be ramped up a little from the what I have seen during visits earlier in the year.

Notes from the meeting of the Senate Democratic Caucus...

...They're concerned that some very bad bills are going to slip through in the mad crush that is coming.

...As of 10 minutes ago (roughly 2:40 p.m.), nobody, including the Rep leadership in the Senate, had any clue as to when any part of the budget would move forward.

...A number of senators brought up some of the preparations that various state agencies are making for a shut down (warning campers that they might have to evacuate state parks if a budget doesn't pass and the parks have to close down for the 4th of July weekend, CPS letting folks know that a call to CPS may not be an option in the event of a situation and to be ready to call the police. Apparently, under the Republicans' emergency plan, Child Protective Services isn't a necessary function.

...They (the Dems) are planning for a long couple of days. As should we all. I probably won't be here tomorrow due to a dentist's appointment, and given today's activities ( and lack thereof), I'm thinking that will be a better use of my time.

Heading over to the House...

...right after the meeting of the Senate Democratic Caucus...

Live blogging the Senate floor session...

1:48 - Gould demands a roll call vote on the last. Moved that the COW record show that HB2572 failed. Carolyn Allen actually supports this because of lack of support for tax for education. Failed 8 - 17. HB2572 still proceeding.

1:44 - Still HB2572. Pearce opposing. He objects to helping Tucson. Calls it a "plunder" of the taxpayers, giving money to sports teams. Apparently, he likes giving taxpayer money only to non-sports corporations. Passes 18 - 7. COW session ends.

1:41 - HB2572, sports authority districts (aka - spring training in Tucson bill). Gould opposing, objects to even sending this to the voters. Jorge Luis Garcia supporting, because it *is* a referral to the voters.

1:39 - After 1st read and assignment of bills to committee (all to Rules), going into COW to amend bills; Waring is the chair of the COW session.

1:30 - Harper calls for standing firm on the original budget. Again (he did it twice during Senate Appropriations).

1:29 - A Democrat, Landrum-Taylor, introduced a teacher.

1:28 - Other Republican senators shamelessly doing the same.

1:27 - Gorman introducing some of the teachers that she wants to put out of work.

1:25 - Gould is ranting about socialized medicine in Canada.

1:21 - session gavelled into order, prayer and pledge of allegiance. Taking attendance. 26 present, 2 absent, 2 excused.

1:14 - Senators gathering, but no meeting yet. Press gaggle around Pearce on the floor. Gould and Sylvia Allen talking in the middle of the floor, as are Burns and Leff. Huppenthal on the phone.

1:00 The session was supposed to start at 1, but it hasn't. Not shocking that, as "Senate time" means "the scheduled time, give or take four hours." However, there is some pre-session setup activity going on, so it should be 15 minutes or so.