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December 10, 2007
Pennsylvania Senate Republican News
Brief
"Getting
state government more deeply involved in health care does not seem the most
productive remedy for what ails our system, nor are the tax increases needed to
pay for it good for the economy. Disrupting a program designed to retain and
attract doctors is a very poor policy choice when we are deeply concerned about
health care access and quality."
--
Senate
Appropriations Committee Chairman Gib Armstrong (R-Lancaster)
on the Rendell Administration’s plan to raid the state’s Medical Care
Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) fund to pay for its universal
health insurance program.
Preview
ALTERNATIVE ENERGY
INVESTMENT, ANTI-SPYWARE MEASURES ON SENATE AGENDA
The Senate this week is
expected to consider
Special Session Senate Bill 1, sponsored by Sen. Tommy Tomlinson
(R-Bucks) and Sen. Mary Jo White (R-Venango). The legislation
would invest $650 million in consumer energy programs, energy conservation,
and the development of alternative and renewable energy.
Senate Bill 711, sponsored by Sen. John Gordner (R-Columbia) to protect
consumers from having "spyware" deceptively installed on their computers,
may also come up for vote.
The Senate hopes to be able
to send a strong Open Records bill,
Senate Bill 1, to the governor if the House of Representatives considers
the bill. The Senate passed the comprehensive reform measure on Nov. 28.
Review
SEN. DON WHITE: RAIDING THE
MCARE FUND IS NOT A “HEALTHY" ANSWER
Sen. Don White (R-Indiana),
chairman of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee, issued the following
statement in response to the governor’s plan to raid the state’s Medical
Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) fund to pay for his
universal health insurance proposal:
"It is very
disappointing the governor continues to push his payroll tax on employers.
It is an unacceptable and likely an unconstitutional tax. Even members of
his own party have made it clear that the payroll tax was a ‘non-starter’ in
the past and nothing presented today should change that.
"The MCARE surplus is the
product of imposing excess health care costs which have ultimately been
passed on to employers and individuals though increased health insurance
premium costs. That $400 million is the amount that Pennsylvania's health
care providers, our doctors and hospitals have been over assessed in paying
for their state-mandated medical malpractice insurance coverage. The
administration uses the term 'fair share' when talking about taxing
employers to pay for the universal health care plan, but the true measure of
fairness here would be to reduce the premium costs paid by the men, women
and institutions that are on the front lines in providing health care
services to all Pennsylvanians.
"Governor Rendell would do well to heed his
own advice: 'We should consider projects, plans and initiatives on their
own merits, not trade them off, you do this and we'll do this. That leads to bad
legislation. We should consider things on their merits'" (Gov. Ed Rendell, Capitolwire.com, Aug. 23, 2007)

 
SENATE ACTS TO PROHIBIT
GOVERNMENT INTRUSION INTO INTERNET TELEPHONE SERVICE
The Senate approved
legislation Dec. 3 sponsored by Senate Communications and Technology
Committee Chairman Rob Wonderling (R-Montgomery) preventing any state
government agency from regulating Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP).
VoIP allows telephone calls
to be made via a broadband internet connection instead of a regular phone
line. Use of VoIP services grew by more than 500 percent in the last two
years.
Senate Bill 1000 would prohibit only the regulation of VoIP services,
not landline services, but would continue, where applicable, payment of
E-911 fees, Telecommunications Relay Service (TRS) fees, and Universal
Service Fund fees by VoIP providers as well as the payment of any switched
network access rates for interconnected-VoIP calls. (For more on the
issue, please see
In the Spotlight,
below.)
SENATE APPROVES PRESCRIPTION
DRUG HELP FOR VETERANS IN LONG-TERM CARE
Efforts by Sen. Gib
Armstrong (R-Lancaster) to enable veterans residing in long-term care
facilities to receive prescription drugs at a lower cost was approved Dec. 4
by the Senate.
Senate Bill 778 seeks to restructure the system so that the veterans in
long-term care facilities are no longer denied the low-cost medications that
veterans elsewhere receive. The revamped system would have the facility
pharmacy – whether in-house or through an outside contract – receive bulk
prescription drugs in the patient's name directly from the Veteran’s
Administration, and then repackage the drugs so they can be dispensed in
unit doses. This keeps down the cost to the patient.
Sen. Armstrong’s bill seeks
to accomplish two things: clear away regulations that prevent the necessary
cooperation between the federal and state levels of government and the
private providers, and build in protection against errors in the
process. The senator said the idea for the legislation came from veterans
receiving care in his district.
Sen. Armstrong said: "The way it is set up currently is not fair to the affected veterans and is
not defensible public policy. We should be doing all we can to make sure
that our veterans receive the services to which they are entitled."
SENATE PASSES MEASURE TO
UPDATE ALTERNATIVE ENERGY PORTFOLIO STANDARDS
The Senate approved
legislation Dec. 5 that updates Pennsylvania’s alternative energy law to
include biomass and low-impact hydropower energy resources.
Special Session Senate Bill 25, sponsored by Sen. Mike Waugh (R-York),
was among eight energy bills recently passed by the Senate Special Session
Committee on Energy Policies, chaired by Sen. Mary Jo White (R-Venango).
The measure corrects the
exclusion of resources which were intended to be included with passage of
the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards Act of 2004. The resources were
inadvertently omitted or nullified by subsequent Department of Environmental
Protection and Public Utility Commission legal interpretations which failed
to reflect the legislative intent of the law.
Special Session Senate Bill
25 incorporates provisions found in
Special Session Senate Bill 31, sponsored by Sen. Don White
(R-Indiana). The bill also limits the resources clarified as part of
Tier 1 sources to only those generated in Pennsylvania. This provision is
very similar to the underlying provision of the entire AEPS law which limits
eligible resources within a defined geographic area and is similar to
limitations found in other states with renewable portfolio standards.
It also directs the PUC to
increase the existing Tier I percentages required under the AEPS law by an
amount equal to those credits generated under the bill. Therefore, there is
no negative impact on existing Tier 1 alternative energy resources.
Committee Chair White
worked directly with affected wind and other renewable energy companies to
find common ground on this important issue. The bill was sent to the House
of Representatives for consideration.
BILL TO PROHIBIT USING
NAMES, IMAGES OF FALLEN SOLDIERS FOR PROFIT APPROVED BY SENATE
Legislation sponsored by Sen. Jane
Orie (R-Allegheny) to protect the rights of families of soldiers who
have died in Iraq by prohibiting the use of the name or likeness of a
fallen soldier for commercial profit was approved by the Senate on Dec.
3.
Sen. Orie said the issue first came to
light when an Oklahoma family discovered various materials being
marketed on eBay bearing the image of their son who died in combat in
Iraq. A Flagstaff, Arizona, company that sells anti-war and anti-Bush
bumper stickers via the Internet was distributing the T-shirts, which
included the names and images of fallen soldiers, along with a
super-imposed political message.
Similar legislation was enacted last
year in Oklahoma and Louisiana to prohibit such conduct. Legislation is
also pending in numerous other states, as well as Congress.
Senate Bill 1125 would make it a misdemeanor to publish for
commercial purposes a fallen soldier's name or image without the
family's consent, and would preserve the family's right to file a civil
suit to protect their privacy and attach any proceeds. The bill was sent
to the House for consideration.
"Profiting from the very individuals
who died for our security and protection is shameful. This measure will
give military families recourse from this violation of privacy and
decency."
SENATE BOLSTERS RIGHTS
OF FOSTER PARENTS, OTHERS CARING FOR CHILDREN IN NEED
The Senate
approved legislation Dec. 3 that would bolster the rights of foster
parents and others seeking to care for children in need.
Senate Bill 1156, sponsored by Sen. Mike Folmer (R-Lebanon),
would give a foster parent, pre-adoptive parent or relative who is
providing care for a child the right, rather than just the opportunity,
to be heard at any hearing.
In the case of a
hearing to determine the permanent placement of a child, the court would
be required to consult with the child in a manner appropriate to the
child’s age and maturity, or a representative. Passage of Senate Bill
1156 would bring Pennsylvania into compliance with federal law. The
bill was sent to the House of Representatives.
MORTGAGE REFORM BILLS
APPROVED BY COMMITTEE
Four bills introduced by Sen. Pat
Browne (R-Lehigh) targeting predatory and other questionable
mortgage lending practices in Pennsylvania were approved by the Senate
Banking and Insurance Committee on Dec. 4.
Sen. Browne introduced the bills based
on the findings of a mortgage industry study mandated by House
Resolution 364, which was adopted in 2003. The resolution directed the
Department of Banking to study residential lending practices in
Pennsylvania, examine trends in foreclosures and document lending
practices that are harmful to consumers.
Sen. Browne said: "There
has been a tremendous amount of concern regarding the mortgage lending
industry and its problems over the last several years. It is incumbent
upon us to adjust our banking codes and other codes to try to better
protect consumers in one of their most important decisions and that is
taking on a mortgage to secure a primary residence."
(For a rundown of
the bills approved Tuesday, please see
Fast
Facts, below.)
In the Spotlight
By the end of 2007, roughly 25 percent of
the country will be VoIP-enabled with the VoIP market exceeding 10 million
subscribers. Of that, cable providers account for approximately 71 percent
of the market.
Increasingly, cable and telephone companies
are offering VoIP as part of a package of services, including broadband,
video, and telephone.
While the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) has barred states from imposing telecommunication regulations on
VoIP-to-VoIP (computer to computer) calls, a recent Federal Court decision
has left uncertain the authority of state regulatory agencies over calls
that use Voice over Internet Protocol, but have to ultimately go over
traditional telephone lines.
Sen. Wonderling said: "It is imperative
that we do not subject new technologies to burdensome government regulations
that stymie innovation and market-driven competition."
Fast Facts
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SEN. PAT BROWNE’S MORTGAGE
REFORM PACKAGE
Senate Bill 483 -- would amend the Loan Interest and Protection Law of
1974 to increase the monetary cap in the act from $50,000 to $200,000.
Senate Bill 484 -- would permit the Department of Banking to publicly
release information on pending enforcement actions and fines levied against
non-depository licensees.
Senate Bill 487 -- would create a new licensing category for individual
mortgage originators who deal directly with the consumer by soliciting,
accepting or offering to accept mortgage loan applications or negotiating
mortgage loan terms.
Senate Bill 488 -- would create a new licensing category for individual
mortgage originators who deal directly with the consumer by soliciting,
accepting or offering to accept secondary mortgage loans (home equity)
applications or negotiating secondary mortgage loan terms.
* Fiscal Year Begins July 1 |
Questions or Comments?
Contact the
Senate Republican
Communications Office or call 717-787-6725.
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