State Report: GOP Unveils New Program, Term Limits + Lobbyists

Anthony Faccenda, GoLocalProv News Contributor

State Report: GOP Unveils New Program, Term Limits + Lobbyists

The Rhode Island General Assembly reconvened Monday in what would prove to be the beginning of a busy week for lawmakers. Not only did the Rhode Island GOP unveil the foundation of its 2014 legislative session, numerous lawmakers also introduced bills addressing many topics—including legislative term limits, budget surpluses, hit-and-runs, lobbyists, and pension funds. Aside from new legislation, this week’s State Report will also look at new grants designed to help the South County.

GOP Unveils ‘Getting to 25’ Plan

On Thursday, House Republicans unveiled a legislative program for 2014 aimed at getting Rhode Island “back into the mainstream,” according to House Minority Leader Brian C. Newberry (R-Burrillville, No. Smithfield).

“ ’Getting to 25’ is the broad theme of the GOP agenda, and it speaks to moving Rhode Island up toward 25th place among states rather than settling for 49th or 50th,” said Newberry.

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Primary goals

In development since summer, the planned legislative package focuses on improving taxpayer protection, stimulating job growth and economic development, and putting in place smarter approaches to state spending.

A fourth goal, characterized as ‘Stop Digging,’ aims to reform government practices that work against job growth and deprive the state of needed infrastructure investment.

Behind the eight ball

“Among all 50 states, Rhode Island is an “outlier,” said Newberry.

“We lag behind most of the country not on just one or two measures, but across the board. We’re upside down: on the list of good things, we rank at the bottom, and on the list of bad things, we rank at the top.

“It’s far more comfortable to look at the bright side, but we have been whistling past the cemetery for years. The fact is we have the nation’s worst unemployment, the 49th-ranked business environment, the 46th worst tax climate, and the 42nd worst per capita tax burden. The list goes on. It is getting harder and harder to deny the deep hole Rhode Island is in, and we need to take aggressive steps to get ourselves out,” said Newberry.

Getting to the middle of the pack

According to Newberry, it would be overly ambitious to set out to be #1 in the country, but reaching the middle of the pack is a reasonable goal.

“If we were 25th in unemployment, unemployment would be 6.5 percent instead of 9 percent.

“If our business environment were ranked 25, we’d be in the mix with New Hampshire and South Carolina instead of ranked with high-cost states such as California and Hawaii.

“If our tax climate ranked 25th, we’d be more like Massachusetts and less like Connecticut.

“If our per capita tax burden had us ranked 25 instead of 42nd, that tax hit would drop by nearly $1,000 for every man, woman and child in Rhode Island.

“We believe using ‘Getting to 25’ as a goal would serve us well both as an objective as well as a test of the relevance of new legislation. It would force us to ask, ‘Will this move us nearer the rest of the country?’ And it would allow us to measure the success of our legislative efforts,” said Newberry.

Proposal details

One of the initiatives is a requirement that every bill receive a fiscal evaluation before it can be heard by committee, better insuring that legislators know the real cost of the legislation they are acting on.

Another proposal would exempt social security income from RI state income tax, making Rhode Island more tax-friendly for our seniors and keeping them here rather than migrating to more tax-friendly states

Newberry said the minority caucus will be releasing details on the 16 separate initiatives as they are ready, with the first expected the week of January 20 as the legislature picks up speed.

“These proposals will be coming out as the legislative session progresses, and we expect to see broad public support. Rhode Islanders can expect to see a program built around ideas, not politics, and quality rather than quantity.

“Strong action is way overdue here. Nearly 60% of Rhode Islanders now believe that the state is headed in the wrong direction. We think they’re right, and our central goal is to get it turned around,” Newberry said.

Check out more news from the past week in the slideshow below. 


RI State Report: More News of the Week - 1/11/14

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