Mary Peck
Business - July 24 2017

Business In Massachusetts

The MASSACHUSETTS House and Senate agree on a bill that would impose significant changes in the voter-approved law legalizing recreational marijuana sales in the Bay State. Under the legislation, the maximum tax on retail marijuana sales would go from 12 percent to 20 percent, with oversight of both the retail and medical weed industries being placed under a five-person commission. The ballot measure called for a three-person panel. The bill moves now to Gov. Charlie Baker (R), who is expected to sign it into law (BOSTON GLOBE, STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE [BOSTON]).

Massachusetts Approves HB 3816

Also in MASSACHUSETTS, the House gives final approval to HB 3816, which requires employers to offer pregnant women reasonable accommodations, including “more frequent or longer paid or unpaid breaks, time off to recover from childbirth with or without pay, acquisition or modification of equipment, seating, temporary transfer to a less strenuous or hazardous position, job restructuring, light duty, break time and private non-bathroom space for expressing breast milk, assistance with manual labor, or modified work schedules.” The bill moves to Gov. Baker (STATE HOUSE NEWS ERVICE [BOSTON]).

Mary Peck
Republicans Consolidating Power In The States

 Late last year, after Republican Gov. Pat McCrory (R) became the only incumbent governor ever to lose a reelection bid in North Carolina, the state’s GOP-led General Assembly passed legislation restricting appointment powers of Democratic Gov.-elect Roy Cooper. But that wasn’t the only recent move by Republicans in the states - or in North Carolina specifically - to reduce the influence of the branches of government they don’t control while strengthening the power of those they do.

 

The legislative action last December in North Carolina capped off months of partisan wrangling that began in March with the abrupt passage - in the first special session called by the state’s General Assembly in 35 years - of HB 2, requiring transgender individuals to use the public restrooms that correspond to the gender of their birth and barring local governments from adopting anti-discrimination protections for LGBT individuals. The bill touched off a national backlash that contributed to McCrory’s historic election defeat. Exit polls showed that two-thirds of voters opposed the law and 64 percent of that group voted for Cooper, according to the Washington Post.

 

The race was still very close; just over 10,000 votes separated the two candidates out of over 4.7 million cast. And the hard-fought contest dragged on for nearly a month after Election Day, with Republicans and the McCrory campaign alleging voter fraud in several counties and obtaining a partial recount in one - though it did little to change the vote tally - before McCrory finally conceded on Dec. 6.

 

Two weeks later the General Assembly, which had adjourned its regular session in July, convened itself into special session again and passed SB 4, ending majority control over the state and county election boards by the governor’s party, and HB 17, requiring the governor to obtain Senate approval of his cabinet picks, stripping him of his power to appoint University of North Carolina trustees and slashing the number of positions he can fill at state departments and offices from 1,500 to 425. Both bills were promptly signed by McCrory, according to LexisNexis State Net’s legislative tracking system.

 

“This is an unprecedented, shameful and cowardly power grab from the Republicans,” said Jamal Little, a spokesman for the state’s Democratic Party, according to the New York Times. “After losing the governor’s office, the G.O.P.-controlled General Assembly is attempting to hold on to power that voters took away from them.”

 

But Republican legislative leaders maintained that the changes had long been needed to restore the balance of power in Raleigh that they say had shifted too far toward the executive branch.

 

“This was clearly a constitutional session,” said House Speaker Tim Moore (R), as the Washington Post reported. “It was fully compliant with the law.”

 

Cooper, however, has filed a lawsuit challenging both SB 4’s election board revamp and HB 14’s cabinet confirmation requirement, and those challenges have been seesawing back and forth in the courts. Both provisions were initially blocked by state judges, unblocked by appeals court panels and then in the case of the election board makeover, re-blocked by the state’s Supreme Court, pending a determination of whether they violate the North Carolina Constitution’s separation of powers clause. Which way the courts will ultimately rule isn’t clear, Michael Gerhardt, a law professor at the University of North Carolina, told the Post, although he noted that during his four years in office McCrory never told the Legislature: “I think I’m too powerful and you should look for ways to weaken my office.”

 

North Carolina Superior Court Judge Jesse B. Caldwell III, one of the three judges on the appeals panel that considered whether to block the Senate confirmation requirement for gubernatorial cabinet appointees, raised that very issue.

 

“If we have an executive branch that’s out of control, out of control, that needs to be reeled in...then why wasn’t this done before?” he asked the attorneys for Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger (R) and House Speaker Tim Moore (R), the defendants in the case, according to the Progressive Pulse, a blog about North Carolina public policy.

 

One of those lawyers, Noah Huffstetler III, reportedly replied that the change was overdue and that just because it hadn’t been done in the past didn’t mean it shouldn’t be done now.

 

“I think it’s just a good, sound public policy, he said.

 

While the state’s courts have been deliberating last year’s legislative actions, its General Assembly has been considering a series of new restrictions on the executive branch. HB 239, for example, would eliminate three of the 15 seats on the state’s Court of Appeals when they become vacant, denying the governor the opportunity to fill them. Two other bills, HB 240 and HB 241, would transfer the power to appoint district court judges and special superior court judges - who don’t have to reside in the district where they preside so they can be sent wherever they’re needed - respectively, from the governor to lawmakers. All three bills have cleared the House and are in the Senate, according to State Net’s legislation database.

 

Democrats say the bills are clearly politically motivated. As the Progressive Pulse reported, the Court of Appeals is currently dominated 11-4 by Republicans, but three of them are approaching mandatory retirement age, so HB 239 would prevent Cooper from appointing Democrats to fill those vacancies. House Democratic Leader Darren Jackson also noted that no formal study had been done to justify the reduction of the court’s size, according to the blog.

 

But as the Raleigh News & Observer reported, House Speaker Pro Tem Sarah Stevens (R) told the House Judiciary Committee before it approved HB 239 last month that the Court of Appeals’ workload has been diminishing by about 200 cases per year, so there was no longer a need for 15 judges. And Rep. Justin Burr (R), who sponsored all three of the judicial reform measures, told that same committee he’d “always advocated for pushing in this direction.”

 

“I pushed under [Gov. Pat] McCrory and wasn’t successful,” he said. “This is something I’ve looked at for several years.”

 

Nonetheless, if the bills pass, there will likely be more litigation, said Rep. Henry Michaux Jr. (D), according to the Progressive Pulse. And it seems unlikely the courts would be receptive to curbs on their power.

 

North Carolina is not the only state where Republicans - who have complete control of the legislative branch in 32 states and hold both the legislature and governor’s office in 24 - have sought to consolidate their power, however. In Kentucky, where the GOP added control of the House to its existing command of the Senate and governor’s office in November, the Legislature moved to block the state’s Democratic attorney general, Andy Beshear, from filing civil lawsuits, after he sued Gov. Matt Bevin (R) three times last year. In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey (R) and the state’s GOP-controlled Legislature passed a bill last year (HB 2537) adding two new justices to the state’s Supreme Court - which had recently upheld voter-approved ballot measures they opposed - and the governor has also eliminated several state boards and commissions, and transferred their powers to his office, as the Hill reported. Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature is considering HJR 1 and HJR 21, which would seek voter approval of ballot measures limiting Supreme Court justices and district court judges to 12-year terms, and allowing lawmakers to reverse court rulings striking down laws on constitutional grounds with a two-thirds vote, respectively. And Facing South, the online magazine of the progressive Institute for Southern Studies, said 30 bills have been introduced nationwide, mainly by conservative lawmakers, “that constrain the power of courts or heighten the level of political involvement by the legislative and executive branches.”

 

But experts say such actions are nothing new, and haven’t been taken just by Republicans.

 

“This is the oldest trick in the political book, writing the rules to win the game,” Thad Kousser, an associate professor of political science at the University of California San Diego, told the Hill.

 

Kousser cited Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt’s plan to pack the U.S. Supreme Court with justices amenable to his New Deal programs and the partisan gerrymandering routinely engaged in by both parties as just a couple of examples illustrating his point.

 

The Hill also reported that Democrat-controlled legislatures in Massachusetts and New Jersey recently changed rules governing U.S. Senate appointments to restrict the powers of Republican governors in those states, and Nevada Senate Democrats used their narrow majority to bar the state’s Republican lieutenant governor, Mark Hutchison, from casting tie-breaking votes in that chamber. And according to the Washington Post, in 1972, when North Carolina voters elected the state’s first Republican governor of the 20th century, Jim Holshouser, Democrats, who controlled the General Assembly at the time, expanded the powers of the state’s Democratic lieutenant governor. Ten years later, when voters elected the state’s first Republican lieutenant governor of the 20th century, the Democrats attempted to scale back the powers of that office.

 

Kousser said the cyclicality of politics ought to be a consideration for GOP majorities now.

 

“If the shoe’s on the other foot, if we lose power, are we going to face a backlash?” he said.

 

But he also said there generally isn’t much reward for long-term thinking in state legislatures.

 

“Careers are shorter in state legislatures overall, and careers have an end date baked into them in states with term limits,” he said.

Mary Peck
Governors in Brief - January 21 2019

DESANTIS WANTS MAJOR CHANGE TO FL MEDICAL WEED LAW

Saying he wants to see people “be able to have their suffering relieved,” FLORIDA Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) urged Sunshine State lawmakers to allow medical marijuana patients to smoke their weed if they so choose. If lawmakers do not go along by March, he said he would drop a state appeal filed by the administration of former Gov. Rick Scott (R) of a court decision that says banning it violates a constitutional amendment. (TAMPA BAY TIMES, ORLANDO WEEKLY)

 

CUOMO PITCHES NY PLASTIC BAG BAN

After legislation he proposed last year died without a vote, NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) inserted a ban on single-use plastic bags into his 2019 budget. Cuomo said he is also proposing an expansion of the Empire State’s so-called “Bottle Bill” – which encourages people to recycle used plastic bottles - by making most non-alcoholic drink containers eligible for the 5-cent redemption. (NEW YORK TIMES, ALBANY TIMES-UNION)

 

KS, OH GOVS EXPAND LGBTQ PROTECTIONS

KANSAS Gov. Laura Kelley (D) and OHIO Gov. Mike DeWine (R) each issued executive orders last week barring discrimination against LGBTQ people in state hiring and other areas. Kelley’s order also applies to companies that do business with the state. (LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD, DAYTON DAILY NEWS)

 

BAKER REFILES MA PUBLIC SAFETY BILL

Calling public safety “a fundamental responsibility of government,” MASSACHUSETTS Gov. Charlie Baker (R) re-filed legislation that would make it easier for Bay State judges to keep someone in jail on the grounds that they are dangerous. Baker filed a similar bill last year but did so after the formal session had ended for the year, and the measure died with lawmakers taking it up. (MASSLIVE.COM)

 

-- Compiled by RICH EHISEN

Mary Peck
States Rush to Fill Gaps Left by Federal Shutdown

As the partial closure of the federal government continues to drag on, states across the country are stepping up to assist the tens of thousands of their residents impacted by the longest federal shutdown in U.S. history.

 

Brand new Govs. Gavin Newsom in California, Michelle Lujan Grisham in New Mexico, and Tony Evers in Wisconsin, all Democrats, have each assured furloughed workers they will receive unemployment benefits. Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt (R) called for his state’s Banking Department to direct banks to restructure loans or extend payment deadlines for federal workers unable to make their mortgage payments during the shutdown. And Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont (D) has proposed a public-private partnership with a local bank to provide furloughed workers interest-free loans that would be guaranteed by the state.

 

But some expressed concern about the potential impact of such actions on state budgets with no end in sight to the shutdown.

 

“If this goes on another few weeks, it will be very significant for some state budgets,” said Scott Pattison, executive director of the National Governors Association. “There’s not extra money. So if they move funds into something the federal government isn’t covering, then something else is cut at the state level or they’re actually dipping into rainy day funds.” (HILL)

Mary Peck
Janus Ruling Not Hurting Union Membership

In June the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Janus v. AFSCME that unions could no longer require public workers who choose not to join a union to pay union fees even if they benefit from union efforts.

 

That ruling has adversely impacted union finances. For example, in Pennsylvania, unions had to refund about 15 percent of the $42.5 million in union fees they collected from nonmembers and executive branch members last year.

 

But the Janus ruling hasn’t led to the mass defections some had predicted. And in some unions, membership has actually increased since the verdict.

 

At the time of the ruling, 50,072 state executive branch employees in Pennsylvania were union members. Now 51,127 are members. New union memberships have outnumbered defections in Oregon’s Local 503 chapter of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) by a margin of three to two. And membership in the Chicago chapter of SEIU has increased from 23,800 members to 26,000 since August 2017.

 

“I think the right wing thought this would decimate public-sector unions, and they were clearly wrong,” said Kim Cook of the Cornell University Worker Institute, which supports union and worker rights.

 

One reason union membership hasn’t dropped is because unions stepped up their efforts to attract new members even before the Janus decision. Democratically controlled states have also recently taken actions to bolster union membership. For instance, New Jersey, limited the period of time during which public workers can leave their union. And New Jersey, California and Washington have prohibited public employers from discouraging union membership.

 

But Ken Girardin, an analyst for the fiscally conservative Empire Center for Public Policy in New York, said significant membership declines will be coming in the next few years.

 

“Based on what we’ve observed, you will likely see a multi-year drop in membership, driven chiefly by the fact that people aren’t going to join in the first place,” he said. “The next cohorts of employees won’t join at the same rate as the retirees they are replacing.” (GOVERNING)