July 20, 2012 Weekly Roll Call Report

Y = Yes, N = No, X = Not Voting


Senate Bill 1040, Senate vote on House pension reform proposal: Failed 16 to 22 in the Senate
To not concur with a House-passed version of the school pension reform bill, which sends the bill to a House-Senate conference committee to work out the differences. The main dispute is over the Senate-passed provision to “close” the school pension system to new hires, and instead give them a 401(k) account (as has been done for new state employees hired since 1997). The House instead proposes keeping a somewhat less generous "defined benefit" pension system for new employees.

 Who Voted "Yes" and Who Voted "No"


House Bill 5015, Appropriate foreclosure lawsuit settlement money: Passed 31 to 6 in the Senate
To appropriate $88.8 million from a national mortgage foreclosure lawsuit settlement for various spending, including $25 million for urban “blight” reduction programs (of which $10 goes to Detroit), $20 million for home loan “debt counseling” and legal subsidies, $15 million for home loan subsidies, and more.

 Who Voted "Yes" and Who Voted "No"


House Bill 5566, Increase school and local “deficit spending” debt: Passed 27 to 10 in the Senate
To greatly increase the level of borrowing from the state that school districts and local governments can use to cover past and current deficit spending that exceeds annual revenues. Specifically, a $5 million annual cap on this state lending would increase to $85 million through 2018, and the maximum amount per loan would increase from $3 million to $20 million. Short term, this would primarily authorize state money for the Benton Harbor, Muskegon Heights, Highland Park and Pontiac school districts.

 Who Voted "Yes" and Who Voted "No"


House Bill 5015, Appropriate foreclosure lawsuit settlement money: Passed 100 to 3 in the House
To appropriate $88.8 million from a national mortgage foreclosure lawsuit settlement for various spending, including $25 million for urban “blight” reduction programs (of which $10 goes to Detroit), $20 million for home loan “debt counseling” and legal subsidies, $15 million for home loan subsidies, and more.

 Who Voted "Yes" and Who Voted "No"


Senate Bill 1130, Revise state “critical dunes” use restrictions: Passed 63 to 40 in the House
To revise a law restricting the use by property owners of land considered to be “critical dunes.” Among other things this would require state approval of local regulations more restrictive than state ones, and allow use permits to be denied only when it is “more likely than not that the actual harm to the environment will significantly damage the public interest” according to burden of proof criteria specified in the bill.

Who Voted "Yes" and Who Voted "No"


Interested in a cumulative list of all weekly Roll Call Report Votes for 2012?



Posted Jul 20 2012, 01:23 PM by admin5

Comments

Cayle wrote re: July 20, 2012 Weekly Roll Call Report
on 08-31-2012 6:33 PM

I bow down humbly in the presence of such geranetss.

Gordymova wrote re: July 20, 2012 Weekly Roll Call Report
on 09-03-2012 12:42 AM

Yup, you almost feel sorry for Ol' Boehner I think this shows evryoene again how good Pelosi was   and, I hate to give the devil his due, but Hoyer, too.I bet soon-to-be former Speaker Boehner wishes he had old d-CON, now con, Tom Delay getting them little dawgies in line with his cattle prod.The House is apparently going to try again today.  Maybe Reid will try to get his bill through the Senate today.Though it all looks like Kabuki to me.  The Senate probably won't pass the House's bill, and the House probably won't pass the Senate one.  Though desperation may make some strange bedfellows.  Both bills suck   but Boehners sucks worse.Well Wall Street, how it lookin' for ya now that it looks like the freaks you paid to see in the Freak Show are now the ringmasters in this 3-Ring Circus?If people think jumping off a high cliff and taking others with them won't hurt them, you can't stop them from jumping.  It's just too bad that at the bottom of the cliff, they can't be forced to clean up the mess that they created.Mr. President, we all know you want to be loved and admired for your bipartisanship,  but a bunch of stone-cold killers are holding America hostage and you have a bullet that may stop them   the 14th before the 2nd.I know you hope that cooler heads will prevail before then.  Ok, let's wait.But you'd better be prepared to use that bullet before 11:59pm on the 1st.  People won't think kindly of you if they think you may have had a way to stop the stone-cold killers, but decided to let them kill the hostages.

crork wrote re: July 20, 2012 Weekly Roll Call Report
on 11-09-2012 4:38 PM

MQZrK1 This is one awesome article.Really thank you!

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