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Virginia finally matters
Jessica Sabbath
February 07, 2008 9:15 AM
 

Virginians aren’t used to this much attention.

We tend to be ignored in the presidential elections.

In the general election, we’ve been seen as reliably red. In the presidential primaries, Virginians usually vote long after the nominee has been decided.

That’s all changed this year.

With no clear Democratic front-runner after Super Tuesday, Virginia has grasped the attention of campaigns.

Democratic nominees Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are both planning to speak at the state party’s annual Jefferson-Jackson Dinner on Saturday evening.

It also means candidates — both Democratic and Republican — are finally spending money in Virginia to put ads on TV.

Virginia can bask in this attention for only five more days. We’ll never be an Iowa or New Hampshire.

But fear not. With recent Democratic gubernatorial and senatorial wins, the parties may see a need to campaign here throughout the general election.

Maybe we won’t feel so ignored anymore.

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Taking the politics out of redistricting
Jessica Sabbath
February 05, 2008 8:12 AM
 

A bill to prevent gerrymandering has passed the Virginia Senate and been sent to the House of Delegates.

The bill, supported by a wide range of lobbying groups and Virginia officials, would help prevent the majority party in the state legislature from drawing voting districts to protect their majority status. The bill would likely create better representation for Virginians, but may hurt some of the most conservative or liberal incumbents, some of whom have been able to keep their seats because of gerrymandered districts.

The will would create a bipartisan commission to draw redistricting lines for the General Assembly and congressional races.

The process tries to remove politics through a number of steps. It would require the Supreme Court to nominate 24 retired judges to a pool. No more than 12 judges with the same party affiliation could be named to the pool. Then the majority and minority leaders in both chambers would select a commissioner each. Those four commissioners would then select a fifth judge from the pool to serve as chairman.

Similar legislation failed in the House last year after passing the Senate. Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine and Republican Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling have both voiced support for the bill.

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Economist knocks ‘homestead exemption’
Jessica Sabbath
January 31, 2008 9:38 AM
 

It’s not just the business lobby questioning the practicality of the General Assembly’s proposed “homestead exemption” act.

A senior economist at U.Va.’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service has said the provision could cash-strap localities and fails to help renters, who often represent the state’s low income residents.

In his study, professor John Knapp outlines problems with the proposed constitutional amendment.

Knapp points out that when Gov. Tim Kaine first proposed the exemption during his 2005 gubernatorial campaign, assessments were skyrocketing. Now, cash-strapped localities might be unlikely to lower the tax rate to provide real relief to homeowners.

He also questions whether local governments would ask the General Assembly for another taxation avenue, such as a local income tax. Knapp also highlights how the tax could harm the state’s “tax friendliness” system as the local tax burden shifted to industrial and commercial properties.

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Where do we go from here?
Jessica Sabbath
January 30, 2008 10:08 AM
 

With federal funding for the 23-mile Metrorail extension in danger, is the project essentially dead?

The Washington Post reported today that Gov. Tim Kaine said burdensome toll increases on the Dulles Toll Road might be needed to make up for the funding shortfall if the Federal Transit Administration doesn’t provide its share of the project. Kaine says he would be unlikely to support such a toll increase.

Federal transportation officials told Virginia leaders last week that is unlikely to agree to the $900 million federal share of the $5 billion project.

The state still has some time to revise the project.  But if federal funding is in doubt, rail to Dulles may never become more than a pipe dream.

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Delegates concerned about political future
Jessica Sabbath
January 25, 2008 11:28 AM
 

Virginia delegates seem to be working harder for their political futures than they are for the future of Virginians.

The partisan explosion in the House of Delegates yesterday was just the latest episode of the chamber’s partisan procedural partisan bickering this session. Much of the fighting has been about avoiding or forcing potentially poisonous political votes. Thus, delegates are already thinking about saving their own jobs when they face re-election in two years.

Virginia’s politicians should keep this in mind: Virginians care more issues such as education, taxes and health care than they do about their current delegates keeping their jobs.

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