honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, February 19, 2006

Some bills missed the cut in important deadline Friday

By Derrick DePledge and Treena Shapiro
Advertiser Staff Writers

The state Senate and House of Representatives held sessions on Friday afternoon to position bills in committees before an important procedural deadline known as first lateral.

Bills are referred to one or more committees that have jurisdiction over their subject matter or financial impact. The bills have to reach the final committee they were assigned to by the deadline, which can mean life or death for some bills, especially those referred to several committees.

While the bills that lawmakers have made priorities for the session are still alive, others missed the cut, such as one that would add a 50 percent surcharge to traffic fines and another that would ban extreme fighting tournaments.

ISSUE WATCH

Education: House lawmakers have advanced a bill that would create a working group to help develop an early-learning system available to all 4-year-olds statewide. The idea grew out of a task force assigned by the Legislature last session to study how to expand access and improve quality at preschools. The bill moves to the House Finance Committee.

Affordable housing: Senate lawmakers pushed forward with a bill that would provide money for homeless and transitional housing programs and offer a low-income housing tax credit for the construction or rehabilitation of affordable housing. Money would also be used to repair vacant public housing units. The bill moves to the Senate Ways and Means Committee.

Tax relief: Several lawmakers believe an increase in the standard income tax deduction may be the most popular of the tax relief proposals being floated in light of the state's budget surplus. Raising the standard deduction has the support of Gov. Linda Lingle, Senate President Robert Bunda, D-22nd (North Shore, Wahiawa), and, in the past, Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman Brian Taniguchi, D-10th (Manoa, McCully).

Alternative energy: The House seems ready to suspend the state's cap on wholesale gasoline prices but two key lawmakers in the Senate, Sen. Ron Menor, D-17th (Mililani, Waipi'o), and Sen. J. Kalani English, D-6th (E. Maui, Moloka'i, Lana'i), say they are not interested in suspending or repealing the cap.

Lawmakers and the Lingle administration are collaborating on a series of initiatives to reduce the state's dependence on fossil fuel through conservation and renewable energy.

OVERHEARD

"We're worried about huge, huge liability hanging over us."

— Rep. Jon Riki Karamatsu, D-41st (Waipahu, Village Park, Waikele), chairman of the House Economic Development and Business Concerns Committee, on the stalled Hokuli'a luxury home project on the Big Island

LINKS

  • Check out what some of the opponents of Hokuli'a have to say about the project at www.protectkeopukaohana.org.

  • Read what the developers have to say at www.hokuliaupdate.com.

    COMING UP

  • Tomorrow is Presidents Day, a state holiday.

  • The House will hold an informational briefing at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Room 308 on developments surrounding the new Naniloa Volcanoes Resort on the Big Island. The Hilo resort, which has been a landmark hotel, is under renovation. About 120 union workers were laid off after the state lease was won at public auction by Hawai'i Outdoor Tours Inc. last year.

    Have a tip for the Capitol Bureau? Call 525-8070 or e-mail ddepledge@honoluluadvertiser.com

    Reach Derrick DePledge at ddepledge@honoluluadvertiser.com and Treena Shapiro at tshapiro@honoluluadvertiser.com.