Saturday, May 25, 2019

NH Senate Session 23 May


Senate session, 23 May.  Knocked off 17 bills on the Fast Track (consent) calendar with one quick voice vote.  Tackled 33 bills on the regular calendar. Took until 5 PM, even though we finally kicked half a dozen unlucky bills forward to next week’s session.  I didn’t get home until 7 PM.  Long day. 
    The Democrats passed four gun control bills on roll call votes, 13-10.  Democrat Fuller Clarke was absent, accounting or only 13 Democratic votes instead of the usual 14.  HB 109 demands a “universal background check” for all gun sales.  The “universal” check is some how different from the Instant Background Check that is current law.  HB 514 requires a three day waiting period between purchase and delivery of a gun.  That ought to kill off gun shows in New Hampshire.  And HB 564 allows local school committees to set up gun free zones and what ever else strikes their fancy.  Finally HB 696 which allows a judge to order confiscation of a citizen’s guns and ammunition upon a single complaint from just about any body, including live in girl friends.  No hearing, no pleading, and the government is under no obligation to return the seized firearms, ever.   Lesson: Democrats are the party of gun control.  If you want to keep your gun, vote a straight Republican ticket.  Contact governor Sununu and ask him to veto all three of these.   
   Then Democrats pushed thru a Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) bill.  Retirees will get a 1.5% boost in their state pensions.  The $140 million cost will go onto local property taxes. 
    HB 628 will require some, a lot, they didn’t say, buildings to provide adult changing stations.  First I ever heard of that. Retro fit or new construction, didn’t say.  This “issue” should be dealt with by the state building code board. 
    HB 359 requires pharmacies to attach an orange sticker to all prescription bottles containing opioid.   The pharmacists are against the idea.  The prescribing doctor is supposed to inform his patients of opioid containing drugs.  Failure to do so is malpractice.  And the bright colored sticker will attract children looking for a high, thieves, and other problems.  Anyhow it passed on a roll call 21-1. 
   Bunch of other bills went thru, none of them very interesting. 
  And last of all we passed HB 706, the redistricting commission on a voice vote.  All ayes, no nays.  Like most voice votes.   This bill sets up a redistricting commission, even numbers of Democrats and Republicans, no elected officials, to draw new district maps after the 2020 census.   The commission is advisory, and the legislature can reject, redraw and otherwise do its own thing as the Constitution requires.  A lot of my constituents feel strongly about the Constitutional requirements.  In actual fact, the commission might do a better job that the Republicans did ten years ago up here.  Back then, they created a snake like district running from Franconia all the way to the Connecticut River, which was then held by a democrat, Rebecca Brown, for the next three elections.       

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