It’s that time of year – when
it’s time for our state representatives to file bills for 2018. At this larval stage,
they’re called LSRs, or Legislative Service Requests. A legislator has an idea
for a bill, and so they come up with a title and may begin drafting it, before
turning it over to Legislative Services where the intent and language will be
fleshed out. Some will be withdrawn by the sponsors. Some will make it all the
way to being on the House docket in 2018. Right now, the fledgling LSRs are
titles only, and available for viewing on the NH General Court website. There
are currently 685 LSRs proposed by House members. Sixteen have already been
withdrawn.
In preparation for this column, I took a quick, unscientific poll, asking people for their top 3-5 issues that badly need to be addressed in New Hampshire. The number one concern was health care (includes dental, mental health, and addiction), followed by a broad based tax (property tax relief), affordable housing, funding higher education/supporting public education, infrastructure, livable wages, and climate change/the environment. Other high ranking concerns: ending voter suppression, childcare, gerrymandering, legalizing marijuana, public transportation, and protecting water.
This was not a scientific
poll, but it’s likely that most voters in our state have some of the same
concerns. Worried about health care? Representatives Josh Moore and Jeanine
Notter are sponsoring a resolution to affirm the state’s religious heritage and
constitutional right to practice religion and fee speech. Desperate for
property tax relief? Jeanine Notter and
Victoria Sullivan are sponsoring an LSR, “relative to information regarding
abortion.” That’ll help you hang on to your house.
Concerned about the lack of
housing? This very newspaper has pages of help wanted ads and about a column
and a half of rentals. If affordable housing is one of your issues, you’ll be
glad to hear that Rep. Dave Testerman has an LSR that would include “sexual
reassignment” under the definition of child abuse. Worried about our failing
roads, bridges, sewer, and water systems? Rep. Dan Itse wants your driver’s
license or non-driver ID to include your citizenship status.
Is the cost of higher education and the loss of young people worrying you? Rep. Brian Stone would like to establish the University System of NH as a political subdivision of the state. Because putting the legislature, a place of science denial, where at least 40 representatives don’t know how to use email, in charge of the university system is a brilliant idea.
Worried about low wages and income inequality? Rep. Dan Itse is sponsoring a resolution calling for the pardon of Jerry DeLemus who was convicted for his role in the armed standoff at the Bundy Ranch, where he was “protecting” Cliven Bundy who owed the government over a million dollars in grazing fees.
You get the idea. The issues that are most concerning to NH residents are not reflected in the 2018 LSRs. Rather than deal with the real problems facing our state; the Republican majority is throwing a Tea Party. They know, of course, that this is may be their last chance to do the kind of social engineering that the basest of their base drools over. They have a Republican governor for the first time in decades, and Trump acolyte Chris Sununu is their best chance at passing some of this dreck.
Is the cost of higher education and the loss of young people worrying you? Rep. Brian Stone would like to establish the University System of NH as a political subdivision of the state. Because putting the legislature, a place of science denial, where at least 40 representatives don’t know how to use email, in charge of the university system is a brilliant idea.
Worried about low wages and income inequality? Rep. Dan Itse is sponsoring a resolution calling for the pardon of Jerry DeLemus who was convicted for his role in the armed standoff at the Bundy Ranch, where he was “protecting” Cliven Bundy who owed the government over a million dollars in grazing fees.
You get the idea. The issues that are most concerning to NH residents are not reflected in the 2018 LSRs. Rather than deal with the real problems facing our state; the Republican majority is throwing a Tea Party. They know, of course, that this is may be their last chance to do the kind of social engineering that the basest of their base drools over. They have a Republican governor for the first time in decades, and Trump acolyte Chris Sununu is their best chance at passing some of this dreck.
Abortion, gender reassignment
(three LSRs so far), eligibility for public assistance, coercive abortions,
voter ID, domicile (seriously – more of this?) …. none of these are issues that
even came up in my survey. There is an LSR proposed by Rep. Steve Smith to
eliminate the commission that studies the recommendations of the National
Transportation Safety Board. One can see why that would be a priority.
There are LSRs that do deal with pressing issues. Rep. Renny Cushing is sponsoring a bill to require the secure psychiatric unit at the state hospital to be accredited as a psychiatric hospital. As it is now, we put people who have committed no crimes behind bars at the state prison because we don’t have a secure psychiatric unit in a hospital anywhere, and we’re too cheap to build one.
There are LSRs that do deal with pressing issues. Rep. Renny Cushing is sponsoring a bill to require the secure psychiatric unit at the state hospital to be accredited as a psychiatric hospital. As it is now, we put people who have committed no crimes behind bars at the state prison because we don’t have a secure psychiatric unit in a hospital anywhere, and we’re too cheap to build one.
Rep. Mindi Messmer is
sponsoring an LSR aimed at protecting our water from PFOAS, and remediating the
Coakely Landfill in Greenland – a superfund waste site. Rep. Travis Bennett is
sponsoring an LSR establishing a committee to study the fiscal impacts of
repairing or replacing our water supply systems, aka our crumbling
infrastructure. None of these are likely to go anywhere in the coming session.
The entire point of our foolishly large, volunteer legislature is to provide real, accessible representation. Because they are unpaid, we get the rich, the retired, and the crazy.
They’re having a tea party at the legislature in 2018. Let’s hope it will be the last.
This was published as an op-ed in the September 29 edition of the Conway Daily Sun newspaper