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By Emily Huigens
Traditionally in years when state lawmakers face
re-election, they prefer to stay away from controversy and tough issues.
This year’s legislative session, which begins Monday, is expected to be
an exception, and lawmakers are bracing for a continuation of the
budgetary struggles and partisan power struggles that dominated the 2003
session.
While the revenue shortfall in 2003 called for drastic measures,
legislators say balancing this year’s budget would require real
bloodletting.
"The budget is going to be a big thing this time," Rep. Ben Bridges,
R-Cleveland, said. "There’s no spare money. It’s going to take all the
money we’ve got or can get to keep state government operating on the
present level.
"We tried last year to cut back on the departments and try to keep the
departments more efficient with less money, and that works some," he said.
"But you’ve got to have the kind of time (the governor used) since he took
over last year to find out where we could cut without being drastic."
Rep. Amos Amerson, R-Dahlonega, whose district includes a corner of
Habersham County, said that while Gov. Sonny Perdue made across-the-board
cuts last year, the next few rounds of cuts he demands could be more
targeted and could be painful for lawmakers.
"The governor’s going to tell us we’ve got to cut 2.5 percent out of
the budget — out of the budget under which we are living right now, so it
will be a balanced budget by the end of the year. And I imagine FY05, the
year that starts first of July, those are going to be some real
heart-wrenching kinds of cuts."
Decisions over what should be cut will continue to take place in front
of a very different backdrop than Republicans and Democrats had been used
to before 2003.
The change to a Republican-controlled Senate and governor’s office was
good for members of the GOP, but their power in two corners of the Capitol
didn’t stop the Democrat-dominated House of Representatives from stalling
the governor’s initiatives, lawmakers said.
Rep. Bridges said he literally saw a side of the Capitol that had been
hidden to him under Democrat Gov. Roy Barnes.
"For the first time I found the conference room in the governor’s
office,’’ he said. "I got invited to meet with the governor in a
conference I had never been invited into. It’s a tremendous change when
you’ve got a governor that will listen to and work with conservative
ideas.’’
Being a Republican was no longer tantamount to a sentence to the
periphery of the lawmaking process, he said. Sen. Ralph Hudgens, R-Comer, said he couldn’t think of anything
significant that lawmakers accomplished in 2003 given the inter-party
power plays.
While some legislators hope this year will bring with it a spirit of
compromise, others were skeptical.
"(Democrats) have come to realize that just being obstructionist is not
beneficial for anyone," Sen. Hudgens said. "There was kind of a mindset
last year, ‘We’re gonna show you new guys — the Republican leaders in
Senate — how this game is played, and anything you send us is dead on
arrival.’ I think the people of state of Georgia have let their voice be
heard and that’s not what they want."
Legislators had only a few specific ideas of what bills might survive
debate and make it to the law books.
The entire state, but in particular northeast Georgia residents, should
expect and watch for the state’s Comprehensive Water Bill to pass through
the statehouse, lawmakers said.
Last year’s efforts stalled over the idea of so-called water permit
trading that legislators have for the most part abandoned, and both
Republican and Democrat lawmakers said they expect to see the bill pass
this year with a prohibition on water permit trading.
"Everyone’s pretty much in agreement it’ll go through pretty quickly,"
Sen. Ralph Hudgens, R-Comer said.
Republicans and Democrats predicted that tort reform, driven by
increasing attention on the high cost of medical malpractice insurance,
would make it to debate, but what kind of reform bill might make it to the
governor’s desk is hard to call, they said.
Democratic Rep. Alan Powell of Hartwell said he doesn’t buy the
argument that lawsuits are to blame for high insurance costs and medical
costs.
"Insurance companies take great pleasure in trying to blame the
lawyers," he said. "It hasn’t been proved it’s because of lawyers; a lot
of it is insurance. The way they operate, one of ways they make money, is
through investments, and we all know those investments have not been doing
well the last two or three years."
Both Rep. Bridges, whose district includes most of Habersham County,
and his colleague Sen. Amerson said they are concerned with illegal and
recent immigrants using public services, particularly hospital services
that they believe are driving up medical costs.
"We have so many foreigners from Mexico and other places hurting our
hospitals by using the Emergency Room without paying," Rep. Bridges said.
"We might ought to keep a record to find out how much it is and send
Mexico a bill for it."
Sen. Amerson said he would like to make it legal for hospitals and
schools to verify whether a student or patient is a U.S. citizen so they
could reserve the right to refuse services to illegal residents.
Emily Huigens can be reached at (800) 859-6397, Ext. 326 or by
e-mail at huigensee@IndependentMail.com.
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