PA Senate Republican News

 

 

WEEKLY SESSION NOTES
Senate Republican Policy Committee
Sen. Jake Corman, Chairman

Executive Session

Monday, June 18, 2007 

Senate Bill 726 (Browne) would amend the Mechanics Lien Law of 1963 to allow the waiver of the right to file a lien on any residential property, regardless of the cost of the project.  Currently, a contractor or subcontractor may waive his or her right to file a claim against residential property when the total contract price is less than one million dollars.  The bill would also change the definition of “residential building” in the act to “residential property.”  Residential property would include property on which there is or will be constructed a building not more than three stories in height, not including the basement, regardless of whether a portion of the basement is at grade level.  The measure would also establish provisions to limit claims to the unpaid balance of the contract between the owner and the contractor.  Additional provisions are also included for limits on claims by subcontractors and other parties.  Passed:  50-0.

Senate Bill 810 (Musto) would authorize the Department of General Services to convey 0.51 acres and a one-story building in Pittston, Luzerne County to the Redevelopment Authority of the City of Pittston for fair market value as determined by an independent appraisal.  No portion of the conveyance could be used as a licensed gaming facility or it would revert to the Commonwealth.  In the event the conveyance is not executed within six months of the effective date of the act, DGS is authorized to dispose of the property in accordance with section 2406-A of the Administrative Code of 1929.  Passed:  50-0.

Senate Bill 929 (Armstrong) would make a number of appropriations to the Trustees of the Pennsylvania State University for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  These appropriations would include:  $263,499,000 for education and general expenses; $25,094,000 for the cost of agricultural research; $29,787,000 for the cost of agricultural extension services; $454,000 to enhance the recruitment and retention of disadvantaged students; $12,659,000 for the Pennsylvania College of Technology; and, $1,389,000 for debt service related to the former Williamsport Area Community College.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 931 (Armstrong) would make appropriations to the Trustees of Temple University for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  These appropriations would include $172,475,000 for education and general expenses and $442,000 to enhance the recruitment and retention of disadvantaged students.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 932 (Armstrong) would appropriate $13,786,000 to the Trustees of Lincoln University for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  The monies would be used for educational and general expenses.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 933 (Armstrong) would appropriate $7,002,000 to the Trustees of Drexel University in Philadelphia for instruction and student aid during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 934 (Armstrong) would make a number of appropriations to the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  These appropriations would include:  $1,088,000 for dental clinics; $4,057,000 for instruction in the Doctor of Medicine program; $39,450,000 for veterinary activities; $3,216,000 for the Center for Infectious Disease; and $1,609,000 for cardiovascular studies.  The sum of $231,000 would also be appropriated for the general maintenance of and purchase of equipment for the University of Pennsylvania Museum.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 935 (Armstrong) would appropriate $7,759,000 to the Philadelphia Health and Education Corporation for the College of Medicine for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year for instruction in the Doctor of Medicine program.  The bill would also appropriate $1,727,000 for the Colleges of Medicine, Public Health, Nursing and Health Professions; $307,000 for minority educational and recruitment programs; $712,000 for continued pediatric outpatient and inpatient treatment of severe physically disabling diseases; $149,000 for continued support of the handicapped children’s clinic; and $2,011,000 for operating expenses.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 936 (Armstrong) would appropriate $5,592,000 to the Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia for instruction in the Doctor of Medicine program during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  The bill would also appropriate $4,260,000 for the general maintenance of the university.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 937 (Armstrong) would appropriate $6,576,000 to the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine for instruction in the Doctor of Osteopathy program during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 938 (Armstrong) would appropriate $1,693,000 to the Pennsylvania College of Optometry in Philadelphia for instruction during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 939 (Armstrong) would appropriate $1,214,000 to the University of the Arts in Philadelphia for instruction and student aid during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 940 (Armstrong) would appropriate $1,504,000 to the Trustees of the Berean Training and Industrial School in Philadelphia for the operation and maintenance of the school during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  46-4.

Senate Bill 941 (Armstrong) would appropriate $194,000 to the Johnson Technical Institute of Scranton for the operation and maintenance of the school during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  46-4.

Senate Bill 942 (Armstrong) would appropriate $71,000 to the Williamson Free School of Mechanical Trades in Delaware County for the operation and maintenance of the school during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  46-4.

Senate Bill 943 (Armstrong) would appropriate $1,861,000 to the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Erie for instruction in the Doctor of Osteopathy program for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 944 (Armstrong) would appropriate $776,000 to the Fox Chase Institute for Cancer Research in Philadelphia for the operation and maintenance of the cancer research program during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 945 (Armstrong) would appropriate $214,000 to the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia for the operation and maintenance of the institute during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  The bill would also appropriate $92,000 to the institute for research on acquired immune deficiency syndrome.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 946 (Armstrong) would appropriate $130,000 to the Central Penn Oncology Group for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 947 (Armstrong) would appropriate $59,000 to the Lancaster Cleft Palate for outpatient-inpatient treatment during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 948 (Armstrong) would appropriate $418,000 to the Burn Foundation in Philadelphia for outpatient and inpatient treatment during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 950 (Armstrong) would appropriate $970,000 to The Children’s Institute in Pittsburgh for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year for the treatment and rehabilitation of children and young adults with disabling diseases.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 951 (Armstrong) would appropriate $451,000 to The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia for comprehensive patient care for children from birth through age 19 and for general maintenance and operation of the hospital during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 952 (Armstrong) would appropriate $105,000 to the Beacon Lodge Camp for services to the blind during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  48-2.

Senate Bill 953 (Armstrong) would appropriate $231,000 to the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh for the Carnegie Museum of Natural History for maintenance and the purchase of apparatus, supplies and equipment during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  The bill would also appropriate $231,000 for the Carnegie Science Center for the general operation of the planetarium and center.  Passed:  39-11.

Senate Bill 954 (Armstrong) would appropriate $699,000 to the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia for maintenance of the institute during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  None of the appropriation could be used in support of the institute’s research laboratories.  Passed:  39-11.

Senate Bill 955 (Armstrong) would appropriate $428,000 to the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia for the maintenance of the academy during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  39-11.

Senate Bill 956 (Armstrong) would appropriate $326,000 to the African-American Museum in Philadelphia for operating expenses, including maintenance and the purchase of apparatus, supplies, and equipment, during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  38-12.

Senate Bill 957 (Armstrong) would appropriate $42,000 to the Everhart Museum in Scranton for operating expenses, including maintenance and the purchase of apparatus, supplies, and equipment, during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  38-12.

Senate Bill 958 (Armstrong) would appropriate $178,000 to the Mercer Museum in Doylestown for operating expenses, including maintenance and the purchase of apparatus, supplies, and equipment, during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  38-12.

Senate Bill 959 (Armstrong) would appropriate $128,000 to the Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts in Harrisburg for operating expenses, including maintenance and the purchase of apparatus, supplies, and equipment, during the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  Passed:  38-12.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007 

Senate Bill 612 (Greenleaf) would amend the Landscape Architects’ Registration Law to increase the continuing education requirement from 10 hours of mandatory continuing education during each two-year license period to 24 hours.  The bill would also eliminate a grandfather provision permitting the State Board of Landscape Architects to grant a license to individuals without examination who have ten years of active experience and a degree from an approved institution or persons with 15 years of active experience and a degree from a non-approved institution.  This provision is no longer necessary because all persons subject to the grandfather clause are believed to be licensed.  Passed:  46-3.

Senate Bill 737 (Rafferty) would extend the provision added to the Crimes Code by Act 141 of 2002 which permits the use of underage enforcement officers in the Bureau of Liquor Control in the Pennsylvania State Police to attempt to purchase, transport or possess alcoholic or malt and brewed beverages for investigation purposes.  The provision would be extended by ten years until December 31, 2017.  Passed:  49-0.

Senate Bill 846 (Armstrong) would amend the General Appropriations Act of 2006 to provide supplemental General Fund and federal funds appropriations for Fiscal Year 2006-2007.  General Fund supplemental appropriations total $183,026,000.  Federal supplemental appropriations would augment the General Fund by $93,917,000; the Lottery Fund by $300,000 and the PACE fund by $10,500,000.  Passed:  42-7. 

Senate Bill 930 (Armstrong) would make a number of appropriations to the Trustees of the University of Pittsburgh for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  These appropriations would include:  $164,312,000 for educational and general expenses; $435,000 for student life initiatives; $442,000 to enhance the recruitment and retention of disadvantaged students; $523,000 for the teen suicide center at the Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic; and, $2,157,000 for rural education outreach.  Passed:  47-2.

Senate Resolution 137 (Brubaker) recognizes the importance of pollinators to ecosystem health and agriculture in the Commonwealth, as well as the need to increase awareness about protecting and sustaining pollinators by designating the week of June 24 through 30, 2007 as “Pennsylvania Pollinator Week.”  Adopted by Voice Vote.

Senate Resolution 138 (Pippy) designates June 19, 2007 as “Oval Race Track Day” in Pennsylvania.  Adopted by Voice Vote.

Executive Session 

Nominations to Various Boards and Commissions.  (See Attached)  Confirmed:  49-0. 

Wednesday, June 20, 2007 

Senate Bill 87 (Tomlinson) would amend Title 62 (Procurement) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes to provide for contracting with veteran-owned businesses.  Among other provisions, the bill would:

  • Require each state purchasing agency to have an annual goal of not less than five percent participation by veteran-owned businesses.
  • Impose a number of duties upon the Department of General Services designed to facilitate the five percent participation goal, including a duty to:
  • Provide staff to assist veteran-owned businesses in learning how to do business with Commonwealth agencies and develop training programs for veterans;
  • Provide publicity on procurement procedures and issue publications designed to assist veterans;
  • Compile and maintain a list of veteran-owned businesses;
  • Place veteran-owned businesses on solicitation mailing lists;
  • Assure that veteran-owned businesses are solicited on each procurement for which the businesses may be suited;
  • Develop training programs to assist veteran-owned businesses in learning how to do business with Commonwealth agencies; and,
  • Assure that participation by veteran-owned businesses is appropriately factored into the evaluation of proposals for supplies, services or construction when a purchasing agency uses the competitive sealed proposals method under Section 513.
  • Require the Department to certify businesses that have been identified as “veteran work force utilization businesses” defined as businesses which develop and implement special processes and procedures for recruiting, retaining, training or developing veteran employees and whose workforce is no less than 10 percent veterans.
  • Permit a purchasing agency to reduce bonding requirements and to make special provisions for progress payments to encourage procurement from veteran-owned businesses.
  • Authorize the Department to establish business assistance offices throughout the Commonwealth to assist and carry out the provisions of this bill.
  • Require each purchasing agency to report annually in writing to the Senate and House Veterans Affairs and Emergency Preparedness Committees concerning the awarding of contracts to veteran-owned businesses during the preceding fiscal year.  Passed:  50-0.

Senate Bill 399 (Musto) would amend the Public School Code to expand the eligible uses for Pennsylvania Accountability Grants.  The additional options include:

  • Foreign language instruction in early grades, either in immersion classrooms or as separate periods of instruction;
  • Programs to enhance educational technology, including the acquisition of laptop computers and other state-of-the-art resources;
  • Programs to strengthen high school curricula by creating rigorous college and career preparatory programs, increasing academic achievement, offering additional advanced placement courses and providing school based counseling and professional development; and,
  • Programs to provide intensive teacher training, professional development opportunities and teaching resources to elementary level science teachers.

The bill would require the Department of Education to notify school districts about the newly authorized programs.  School districts could amend their Accountability Grant Plans to take into consideration the newly expanded list of program options.  Passed:  50-0.

Senate Bill 648 (D. White) would authorize the Department of General Services (DGS) to make the following two conveyances with the approval of the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs and the Governor:

  • 2.86 acres and a building in Ligonier, Westmoreland County.  The Department could sell the property through an invitation for sealed bids or by public auction.  The proceeds from the sale would be deposited in the State Treasury Armory Fund; and,
  • The National Guard Armory, 108 West Washington Avenue, Connellsville, Fayette County to the City of Connellsville for $50,000.  The proceeds from the sale would be deposited in the State Treasury Armory Fund.  No portion of the property conveyed could be used as a licensed gaming facility or it would revert to the Commonwealth.  In the event the conveyance is not executed within six months of the effective date of the act, DGS is authorized to dispose of the property in accordance with section 2406-A of the Administrative Code of 1929.  Passed:  50-0.

Senate Bill 752 (Erickson) would amend the Regulatory Review Act to require agencies submitting proposed regulations to the Independent Regulatory Review Commission to provide a description of any data upon which the regulation is based with a detailed explanation of how the data was obtained and why the data is acceptable data.  “Acceptable data” is defined as empirical, replicable and testable data as evidenced in supporting documentation, statistics, reports, studies or research.  Agencies would be responsible for proving that data is acceptable.  The Commission, when reviewing regulations for a determination of whether a regulation is in the public interest, would be required to consider whether data used as the basis of the regulation is acceptable data.  Passed:  50-0. 

Senate Resolution 131 (Scarnati) honors Dan Michaels, Kimio Nelson, Keith Sorensen and John Zingone, deputy sheriffs in Warren County, Pennsylvania, for their prominent role in the September 8, 2006 apprehension of a New York State fugitive who later pled guilty to the fatal shooting of one New York State Trooper and the wounding of two other troopers.  Adopted by Voice Vote. 

House Bill 1286 (D. Evans) is the General Appropriation Act of 2007, which provides for the expenses of the Executive, Legislative and Judicial Departments of the Commonwealth, the public debt and for the public schools for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year.  The measure proposes approximately $26.2 billion in General Fund spending, and includes more than $15 billion in federal funds.  Total spending represents a modest 2.7 percent increase over last year’s budget.  The measure also makes state and federal appropriations for a variety of special funds and includes supplemental appropriations for the 2006-2007 Fiscal Year.  Among other highlights, the measure would: 

  • Increase basic education spending by $176 million, which is $10 million more than the amount requested by the Governor;
  • Increase funding for the Education Accountability Block Grants by $25 million; and,
  • Restore some funding for epilepsy support services, lupus treatment, trauma center certification, agricultural research, and self-employment assistance.  Passed:  49-1.

Executive Session 

Denise M. Shope – Board of Trustees of Danville State Hospital.  Confirmed:  50-0.


 

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