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Sen. Massey’s Town Hall Meeting covers broad range of topics
web
posted September 9, 2008
Below: Sen. Massey listens intently to a question from a resident
EDGEFIELD – State
Senator Shane Massey
held another of his popular Town Hall meetings Monday night at the
Edgefield County Council Chambers covering a broad range of topics and
questions from residents. Of all the problems the state faces there was
a single common threat to most facing funding and deficit problems,
irresponsible spending by the Legislature. Sen. Massey pointed out that
last year the state had a surplus of $1 billion, “and they spent it
all.” This year the state is facing a $238 million deficit that cut
funding “across the board” three per cent, another thing Sen. Massey
said he did not agree with.
Included in some of the line items listed in last year’s budget, that
was only cut because of pressure from media exposure, “was a $900,000
ear mark for a green bean museum in Lancaster,” Sen. Massey said. That
common threat ran through discussions on Education, Immigration, health
care, and the hotly debated increase in the cigarette tax.
Sen. Massey explained that he supported the increase in the per pack
cigarette tax, which would have raised the tax from 7 cents to 57
cents. “The cost of Medicaid has risen 50% in the last five years,”
Sen. Massey said, “that’s a big increase.” Yet the programs ultimately
earmarked for use of the revenues in the passage of the tax would have
given $80 million to expand Medicaid participation, growing the number
of those eligible to participate and thus increasing the cost
dramatically.
“We have a $7 billion budget in this sate. $1.1 billion of that is
Medicaid, or 1/7th of our budget,” Massey said. Increasing the number
of people drawing against the system and funding it with a tax that –
if its intended purpose to lower the number of people smoking – would
be a decreasing source of revenues. “You don’t have to be a math wiz to
figure out that is a bad thing.”
The Legislature passed the rise in the cigarette tax that was vetoed by
Governor Sanford and was upheld by the SC House. “I can assure you it
will be coming back up,” in the year Sen. Massey said.
Sen. Massey touched on some of the accomplishments of the past
legislative session saying reforms in immigration were addressed and it
was a good start towards dealing with the problem. Massey made it clear
that he felt immigration was a job for the Federal government to
handle, but since they have failed to enforce the borders or
immigration the state had to act.
The most important aspects of the immigration reform was that in order
to obtain government assistance a person must verify they are a legal
citizen, making “knowingly” housing or transporting illegal aliens a
felony, and employers will have to verify within ten days of employment
the citizenship or legal ability of a person working in the state.
Enforcement of the program will be handled by the Department of Labor,
Licensing, and Regulations (LLR).
All employers will be required to obtain a free state business license
and the LLR would do random checks to assure that employers are obeying
the law. If they do not they will face heavy fines and repeat offenders
will lose their license to do business in the state. Employers can use
two ways for verifying the employee, the E-Verify systems or a South
Carolina Driver’s License. An out of state license would be accepted if
the issuing state has similar standards for the issuing of the license.
Sen. Massey championed the toughening of DUI laws making a second
offence offender face mandatory jail time. “We had some of the weakest
DUI laws in the country,” Sen. Massey said that made getting a
conviction very difficult. South Carolina had two DUI laws that have
now been combined making the DUI blood alcohol content (BAC) a set
.08%. Those who test at that level will lose their drivers license and
face a standard fine. The higher the BAC, the higher the fine is on a
graduated scale.
The number of DUI convictions will be limited to a ten-year period. “If
you had a DUI in 1987 and you get one tomorrow, you will be charged
with a DUI first,” Sen. Massey said. The new law takes effect in
February of 2009.
Also discussed was the predatory Pay Day Lending legislation.
“Ultimately, nothing got done last year,” Sen. Massey said. Two bills
passed the Senate that addressed some of the major issues, but both
failed to pass the House. “The Pay Day Lending lobby is very strong in
South Carolina,” Sen. Massey said. Sen. Massey said he did not support
a ban on the businesses because low-income families sometimes need to
have access to short-term loans.
However, with a standard fee of $15 per $100, often times the person
would end up getting a loan to pay off the previous loan and again for
the third and the increased fees would trap the individual into
economic hardships. Under the Senate plan a person would only be able
to obtain one loan at a time and if your name was entered by a payday
lender into the database, the borrower could not get a second loan to
pay off the first, breaking the vicious cycle so many find themselves
faced with. The bill would have also limited how much a payday lender
could loan based on the person’s income and ability to pay the loan
back in the time allotted. Sen. Massey supported both Senate bills.
Education was also an area of reform in that the PACT testing has now
been replaced with a new test called the Palmetto Assessment of State
Standards (PASS) that will be given three times a year and will offer a
more comprehensive take on where a student stands in the educational
process. Under the PACT test, which was given at the end of the year
and the results were not returned until after the next school year
started, “It may show that little Johnny scored an 80 in math, but it
didn’t show that little Johnny scored high in addition and subtraction
but very low in multiplication and division,” Sen. Massey said.
The new tests will have a quicker result and break down what areas
individual students need help. Sen. Massey said he has spent a lot of
time talking to teachers and he takes their recommendations above those
of administrators. “The biggest problem in education is the money
doesn’t make it to the classroom”, because of the many layers of
administrations within the districts.
The meeting continued for two hours and the public peppered Sen. Massey
with a litany of questions, each of which he took the time to answer
and would expand if needed and also covered offshore drilling, energy,
and water needs.
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Copyright 2008
EdgefieldDaily.com All
original material is property of
EdgefieldDaily.com and cannot be reproduced, rewritten or redistributed
without the expressed written permission of Edgefield Daily.com
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