John --
Welcome back to our weekly updates from the capitol! Every Tuesday
morning I will provide an update on what I’m seeing and hearing during
our legislative session.
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As you know, I was re-elected last November, and I was sworn in for
my third term last week. This was my fifth opening day, and this one
certainly felt different. Normally, we have family members, friends,
colleagues, and other members of our community there to see us begin
the session, especially for odd-numbered years where we are officially
sworn in for our two-year term. That obviously didn’t happen this year
because of the COVID-19 pandemic; security around the capitol was very
tight, and we were only allowed two approved guests per senator.
I still enjoyed it, however, and relished the opportunity to be
sworn in for another term representing the community that I grew up
in. It is a humbling honor and privilege, and I try to remind myself
daily about the responsibility I carry with me going forward.
As is usual for Opening Day, not much happened legislatively, but
things are moving quickly, as I have dozens of bills I am working on
as we dive into Week 2 of session (more on those bills a little
later).
Which committees do I serve on for 2021-2022? The same committees I
have served on the last two years: Senate Appropriations, Senate
Finance, and Senate Commerce. I am once again the ranking member of
the Senate Finance committee, which means I am the highest ranking
Democrat and maintain a good working relationship with the chairman
and vice chairman of the committee and advocate for our caucus with
the both of them.
Senate Finance and Senate Commerce both met last week, but
Appropriations did not. Committee hearings look different this year
too, because of the pandemic; only up to five members are allowed in
the hearing room at once, with the rest of the members in their
offices. In-person committee testimony is also largely not allowed,
meaning folks have to testify over Zoom and having to request
permission at least 24 hours ahead of time. It’s a learning curve, and
we are all trying to adjust as we get set to conduct our regular
legislative business.
We still have some time before we will get to floor debate and
floor votes on legislation. Only a few committees met last week, and
because of the holiday yesterday, the Rules committee is not meeting
this week, meaning that the soonest a bill could get to the floor for
a vote would be late next week (a bill has to clear the Rules
committee before it can be considered before the entire Senate).
Bills! I have spent the last several weeks putting the final
touches on nearly two dozen bills, which is a bit higher than the
number I normally introduce every year. Some of these bills are ones I
have run before, and others are brand new. Many of them have to do
with issues I’ve fought for for years, including additional mental
health resources for our K-12 students, investment in our P-20
education system, greater protections for our LGBTQ community, and
criminal justice reform.
We still have quite a few bills that are still being worked on and
that are *almost* ready for prime time, but here are the bills that I
have formally dropped, and that are available for viewing online:
SB 1004 - state finance review; task force - this is a bill I run
every year that would create a task force set up to look at state
revenues, tax credits and expenditures, and see how Arizona compares
to other states, and then make recommendations on policy changes
moving forward.
SB 1040 - tax credit; earned income - this is a new bill that would
create a state version of the federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC).
29 states have their own state version of the EITC, and it would
provide a tax credit to working families on the lower end of the
income scale.
SB 1097 - pupils; excused absences; mental health - this is a bill
that came VERY close to passing last year. It passed the Senate
unanimously and only needed a final floor vote in the House. For K-12
students, it would clarify that an absence due to mental or behavioral
health would count as an excused absence, just like an absence for
physical illness would. I am happy to report that this bill is being
heard in the Senate Education committee later this afternoon at
2pm.
SB 1098 - administrative costs; limit; STOs - this is a bill I have
run before, and it would cap administrative expenses for Student
Tuition Organization (STO’s) at five percent, a reduction from the
current ten percent cap.
SB 1099 - teachers academy; counselors; social workers - another
good bill that I have run in the past, this one would expand the
current Arizona Teachers Academy from just including teachers to also
including school counselors and school social workers. This would
allow students studying to be a school counselor or social worker to
benefit from reduced tuition at our three state universities.
SB 1100 - school counselors; grants - this bill would require that
our state fund more school counselors to reduce our ratio of teachers
to school counselors. It would appropriate tens of millions of dollars
each year over the next five years for schools to hire more
counselors.
SB 1173 - family leave - this bill is one I ran for the first time
last year that would require employers to offer paid family leave for
their employees of twelve weeks per employee after the birth of a
child.
SB 1174 - appropriation; STEM internships - this bill would
appropriate $2 million from our state general fund to fund STEM
internships for young people throughout the state.
I still have about a dozen or so bills that will drop later this
week or early next week, including several having to do with greater
mental health support. Stay tuned to this space for more details when
I have them!
Finally, I have received a lot of questions through email and text
messages over the last week about security at the capitol, and whether
we feel safe as we try to do our work. Since Opening Day, as I
mentioned above, there has been heightened security at the entire
capitol complex, with only authorized visitors allowed in.
In fact, one day last week, I arrived at the capitol around 7am (as
I normally do), and I arrived too early because the security policing
our members parking lot didn’t start until 7:30am. There is fencing
around our parking lot, which meant I couldn’t enter for another half
hour!
We expect additional security measures to be in place both today
and tomorrow, which is Inauguration Day in Washington, DC for
President-elect Biden. I have two committee hearings today, and two
more tomorrow, so I will be at the capitol, working either from my
office or the committee rooms. I trust our security professionals at
the capitol to help keep us safe.
I will continue to be careful, and I appreciate the words of
support and concern.
I hope you enjoyed this week’s update - stay tuned every Tuesday
morning for more updates on our work at the state capitol.
Thank you,
Sean
http://www.seanbowieforaz.com/
Paid for by Sean Bowie for State Senate. Authorized by Sean
Bowie.
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