Week of January 23 - Danger Ahead for Clean Cars
Monday, January 23rd, 2006Legislative Update
The
General Assembly returns to
and both the House and the Senate will be in session the next four weeks.
Typically, both chambers are in voting session on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
during these weeks. Today is a ânon-votingâ session day in the House. This
means that bills can be moved up on the House calendar by having them formally
âreadâ or âconsideredâ in the chamber in a pro
forma session. A bill must be read or considered on three different days in
order to be voted by the House or the Senate.
The
Senate Transportation Committee is expected to vote on Senate Bill 1025 this
Wednesday morning, January 25. Senate Bill 1025, which PennFuture strongly
opposes, would eliminate the ability of
adopt provisions of the Clean Vehicles Program that are stronger than federal
standards. If the committee passes Senate Bill 1025, and the bill receives
first consideration on the Senate floor that afternoon, it could come up for a
vote in the full Senate as early as Tuesday, January 31.
House
Bill 2141, which is similar to Senate Bill 1025, was removed from the floor of
the House and referred back to the House Environmental Resources and Energy
Committee in December. The committee will hold a hearing on the legislation on
Wednesday, February 8.
Full
implemention of the Pennsylvania Clean Vehicles Program is imperative. This
program will clean our air, protect public health, save consumers money over
the life of their vehicles due to better gas mileage and reduce greenhouse gas
emissions from vehicles by at least 25 percent when the program is fully
implemented.
Give
your state senator a call TODAY and urge her/him to keep
Clean Vehicles Program. For information about contacting your senator, click here
Budget Process to Start on February 7
Governor
Rendell will present his annual budget address to the General Assembly on
Tuesday, February 7. The speech will outline the Governorâs spending and policy
priorities for the stateâs fiscal year which begins on
ends on
A
detailed spending blueprint proposed by the governor will be submitted to the
General Assembly. In February and March, the Appropriations Committees in both the
House and Senate will hold hearings on the budget and its impact on various
state departments and agencies.
Long
nights, short tempers, and marathon negotiating sessions over taxes and
spending often mark the last of week of June. Last yearâs budget was not completed until the first week of July.
– Steve Stroman, PennFuture
Environment Meetups > The Philadelphia Environment Meetup Group










