Showing posts with label bills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bills. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Bills, bills, bills: Who carried the most? The least?


From left: Brueggeman, Cohenour, Hollandsworth and Regier

ALISON SMITH and MOLLY PRIDDY
Community News Service
UM School of Journalism

Getting a bill from concept to the governor’s desk isn't easy.

That’s why most legislators avoid sponsoring too many each legislative session. More than 1,300 bills were introduced this session, but the average lawmaker carried only nine.

But then there are the champions. This session two lawmakers led the pack, each sponsoring 31 bills, most of which died somewhere along the way.

Sen. John Brueggeman, R-Polson, and Rep. Jill Cohenour, D-Helena, were easily the session’s most prolific lawmakers. Both agreed it was hard work, but as experienced lawmakers, said they felt that it was important to touch on the issues they care about.

"It's a lot of plates to keep spinning at once, to say the least," said Brueggeman, who has one Senate session to serve under the state's term limits law. It takes so much work that Brueggeman employed an intern to help him keep everything in line.

Cohenour, who is in her final House term, said she's hoping to accomplish as much as she can. Experience with the process helps, she added.

"After you've been here for a long period of time you get pretty good at tracking what goes where,” she said.

On the other end of spectrum are Rep. Roy Hollandsworth, R-Brady, and Rep. Keith Regier, R-Kalispell, both House freshman. Neither sponsored a single bill this session.

Hollandsworth said he wasn’t asked to sponsor any bills because most requests for sponsors often go to more experienced legislators. He does hopes to carry his own bills in future sessions.

“Part of me feels like I missed out on something,” he said.

Regier attributed his record - or lack of one - to ideology and the fact that other legislators were already carrying the bills he cares about.

"There's enough laws on the book," he said. "If we need any more, it doesn't need to be 30 apiece for legislators."

Regier said his first legislative session taught him that most bills deserve to die.

"It should be a long, onerous process to get a bill passed,” he said.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Renters seek help with deposits, leases and heat

By MOLLY PRIDDY
Community News Service
UM School of Journalism

HELENA – Montana renters are asking lawmakers for help against landlords who unfairly withhold security deposits, fail to provide copies of leases and don't turn up the heat.

Such complaints moved Rep. Deborah Kottel, D-Great Falls (pictured), to introduce two bills, House bills 188 and 189, which came before the House Business and Labor Committee Thursday.

House Bill 188, would grant greater damages to renters who successfully sue landlords who wrongfully withhold security deposits. The bill would allow damages of three times the amount of the deposit. Current law limits damages to legal costs and the amount of the deposit. -MORE-