Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Eye On Boise archive for March 25, 2009

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2009

Members of the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee gather Wednesday afternoon to discuss another wrinkle in their budget-cutting efforts: Universities can't cut employee pay without declaring a "financial exigency," which then can be challenged in court. In the 1980s, the last time the U of I declared one, a faculty member challenged it and won reinstatement and back pay. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

Budget cuts bring another thorny problem...

JFAC members are wrestling with another thorny issue now: It turns out it's not so simple to apply the 3 percent across-the-board pay cut they've approved for all state employees to those at state colleges and universities. That's because for colleges or universities to cut…

Continue reading this post »


Rep. Phil Hart, R-Athol, pitches his bill regarding wolf attacks on humans to the House Resources Committee. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

Wolf attack bill to be amended

Rep. Phil Hart, R-Athol, won unanimous support from the House Resources Committee today to amend his bill regarding liability for attacks on humans by wolves or other dangerous animals. "What the bill attempts to do is to create a criminal and a civil liability if…

Continue reading this post »


Who voted which way

All but one of the House's 18 Democrats voted against HB 256, the measure to cut state reimbursements to school districts for student busing costs. The lone exception: Rep. Mary Lou Shepherd, D-Prichard, voted for the bill. All but three of the House's 52 Republicans…

Continue reading this post »


School busing cut bill passes House

The House has voted 50-20 in favor of HB 256, the measure to cut state reimbursements to school districts for student busing costs. Rep. Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, the bill's sponsor, said in his closing debate, "We've heard that this whole piece of legislation is…

Continue reading this post »


More debate in the House...

The debate is back on in the House. So far, a number of Democrats have spoken out against HB 256; a few Republicans have voiced doubts as well. "I just can't vote for a bill that singles out a single school district to take the…

Continue reading this post »


House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, talks to House Education Chairman Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, after Democrats forced the full reading in the House of Nonini's bill to cut school district reimbursements for school busing. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

Rusche: 'We'll use the tools we can'

House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, said his caucus will use the means it has to take a stand on education cuts. "We as a minority have limited procedural powers, and it's important when we have these issues that are really of monumental impact, like…

Continue reading this post »


House takes mid-debate break

In the midst of what was shaping up to be a hot debate on school funding, and already 10 minutes into the noon hour, House Majority Leader Mike Moyle, R-Star, stood and asked to recess the House until 1:30. House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston,…

Continue reading this post »



Rep. Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, opens debate in the House on his bill to cut state reimbursements to school districts for student busing costs. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

'Make districts be efficient'

Opening debate in the House on his bill, HB 256, House Education Chairman Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, said, "The purpose is to make districts be as efficient as possible." Transportation costs are "overhead," he said. "Each dollar spent on transportation is a dollar that doesn't…

Continue reading this post »


House Speaker Lawerence Denney, R-Midvale, talks on the phone while the House's chief clerk, Bonnie Alexander, is forced to read an entire bill - at great length - thanks to a parliamentary maneuver by House Democrats, who oppose the bill. The measure, HB 256 sponsored by Rep. Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, cuts state reimbursement to school districts for student busing costs. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

There was an objection...

When Rep. Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d'Alene, asked unanimous consent of the House to waive further reading of HB 256, the bill to cut state reimbursement to school districts for student busing costs, House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, objected. That forced the reading, out loud,…

Continue reading this post »


'From a practical standpoint, this is a disaster'

Rep. Marge Chadderdon's flag-manufacturing bill was sidelined to the House's amending order today, after several representatives objected to the bill's requirement that if any political subdivision of the state of Idaho purchases a state or U.S. flag that was manufactured outside the United States, it…

Continue reading this post »


Guv is 'satisfied' with $82 million GARVEE plan

Clete Edmunson, Gov. Butch Otter's transportation adviser, said, "The governor believes that $82 million still allows him to accomplish his goals, which is, we started these projects, we need to finish 'em." The $82 million GARVEE bonding plan that JFAC just approved this morning on…

Continue reading this post »



Sen. Jim Hammond, R-Post Falls, developed a compromise proposal on GARVEE bonding for big highway projects, midway between Rep. Frank Henderson's $50 million proposal and Sen. Shawn Keough's $125 million plan, which matches the governor's original proposal. Hammond set his figure at $82 million. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

Options on GARVEE bonds...

There are at least three ways JFAC could go this morning, as it considers GARVEE bonds, the special type of bonding that allows the state to borrow against its future federal highway allocations to fund big projects up-front, and that's funding several big projects across…

Continue reading this post »


Reps. Frank Henderson, R-Post Falls, center, and George Eskridge, R-Dover, right, mull budgets in the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee on Wednesday morning. (Betsy Russell / The Spokesman-Review)

Big morning in JFAC today

The Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee has big things on its plate this morning - running from the departments of Labor and Administration, through several complicated pieces of the Health & Welfare budget, to the Idaho Transportation Department and the fight over GARVEE bonding. Several lawmakers are…

Continue reading this post »

Eye On Boise

News, happenings and more from the Idaho Legislature and the state capital.