User:  Pass:        Forgot Password? Username?   |   Register
Banner
localcommentary
Kaye Kory's Richmond Report Print E-mail
By Kaye Kory   
Thursday, January 21 2010 01:00:00 AM

koryweb

Today I complete my first week as the Delegate from the 38th district to the Virginia House of Delegates. One of my highest priorities in this role is to inform and engage the citizens of the 38th in the sometimes opaque legislative processes that unfold in Richmond. One note of caution, though. I have heard it said that there and two things you don't want to see in the making: sausages and laws!

I very much appreciate News-Press editor Nick Benton's offer to continue to publish a regular column from Richmond that addresses the interests and concerns of the district.

As a freshman, I have a steep learning curve to climb; but, after 10 years as the Mason District Member on the Fairfax County School Board, I am very motivated by this new challenge. I have been assigned to two legislative committees: Counties, Cities and Towns and Science and Technology. I had hoped my School Board experience would qualify me for the Education Committee, as well. However, Committee assignments for all 100 Delegates-Democrats and Republicans-- are the exclusive prerogative of the Speaker of the House, currently Delegate William Howell (R-28th). Still, I intend to be very active in the discussions and debates on education policies and funding that are sure to arise in this very challenging fiscal environment.

During this first week, I have offered a number of pieces of legislation, including one to further restrict the possession of guns on public school property and one to provide public school funding sufficient for Virginia's teacher salaries to at least equal the national average (Virginia is currently in the bottom half of states in this regard).

Finally, I have given strong support to an omnibus bill to reform Virginia's conflict of interest statutes for the first time in 20 years. This legislation is long overdue. Integrity and transparency in government is fundamental, and one of my longstanding priorities.

House and Senate Democrats introduced this piece of legislation on Monday. The bill would create a single five-member Ethics Advisory Panel. Members of the panel would be appointed by the majority and minority leaders of the House and Senate and by the Governor. Currently, the House and Senate each have their own review panels to investigate inquiries about their members.

The new panel would be required to hold its proceedings in public and would continue its investigations even if a legislator resigned office.

The bills would also deem a legislator in violation if he or she knew or should have known actions were in violation of ethical standards, rather than requiring proof that the legislator knew beforehand.

Democratic lawmakers introduced the legislation in response to the ethical problems of former lawmaker and ranking Republican member of the House Appropriations Committee Phil Hamilton that were revealed last year.

House Minority Leader Ward Armstrong (D-Henry) is carrying the legislation in the House of Delegates (HB657).

Senator Ralph Northam (D-Norfolk) is carrying the accompanying bill in the Senate (SB186). He asked all members of the House and Senate, Democrats and Republicans, to join in tightening Virginia's conflict of interest laws.

There are few things more important in government than for citizens to know that they can have faith in the honesty and integrity of their representatives. I will also support other reform measures offered this year to promote transparency about legislators' financial interests.


Delegate Kory represents the 38th District in the Virginia House of Delegates. She may be emailed at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .


blog comments powered by Disqus
 

Follow the News-Press:

RSS feed-icon-14x14| Facebook facebook-icon| Twitter twitter-icon| E-Mail subscribe

Talk to Us!

envelopecolorThe Falls Church News-Press welcomes Letters to the Editor. Deadline for Letters is 5 p.m. Monday each week. Letters should be 350 words or less. All letters printed become property of the Falls Church News-Press and may be edited for clarity and length. Click here to send a Letter via our form or use one of the contact methods below.

Email

letters@fcnp.com

Mail or drop off

Letters to the Editor, c/o Falls Church News-Press, 450 West Broad St. #321, Falls Church, VA 22046

Please include full name, address and telephone number with your submission.
acacia
Trending FCNP
newscommentary

 


Our Man in Arlington

News image

Finally solved a music mystery from the wonder years of my Arlington bo...

Charlie Clark | Thursday, 2 February 2012

Guest Commentary: Planning for the F.C. Education Foundation Gala

Spring is nearly at our doorstep which means our community's non-profit organizations are busy planning their gala fundraising events. Among them is the Falls Church Education Foundation's 8th Annual Gala ...

Donna Englander | Thursday, 2 February 2012

Editorial: Richmond's Big Step Backward

This week marked the first serious blow in years to the prospects for continued economic growth in Northern Virginia. Reversing the policy of recent years, a key committee in the ...

| Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Nick Benton's Gay Science No. 69: 'The Effeminist': Gay Men

I have undertaken this project drawing on a number of aspects, the overarching being the integrity of my identity as ...

Nicholas F. Benton | Thursday, 2 February 2012

News image

Cynthia Nixon Did Not Choose to Be Gay

Cynthia Nixon, who played the role of Miranda Hobbes on HBO's Sex in the City, told the New York Times th...

Wayne Besen | Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Low Capital Gains Tax Rate Leads to Loss

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney finally released his tax returns last week, revealing that less than 14 percent in federal ...

Helen Thomas | Thursday, 2 February 2012