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Sen. Raymond Finney fudges report cardSubmitted by R. Neal on Mon, 2006/08/14 - 1:24pm.
You may recall that I gave Sen. Raymond Finney, Republican state senator representing the 8th district from Blount and Sevier counties, high marks for his communications with constituents through his websites and other venues. Then I had to take some of it back. A couple of days ago, we got a fancy mailing from Sen. Finney with his legislative scorecard, listing votes on issues of interest and status of legislation he introduced. His report card reminded me why I had to take some of it back. Read more after the jump... His legislative scorecard fails to mention a private act he introduced and got passed. This legislation exempted portions of the Pellissippi Parkway from Scenic Highway designation restrictions. As it turns out, this was clearly aimed at moving the Alcoa "R&D" park project along. Before I knew about any of that, I had e-mailed him asking what his bill was all about. I got a non-answer in the form of a high school civics lesson on private acts, with no mention of any Alcoa "R&D" park project. His scorecard also blames the last minute death of the minimum wage bill on the excuse that "more committee work [is] needed." He fails to mention that the bill was kicking around for months, and that the Senate killed it at the last minute by loading it down with so much garbage that nobody knew what they were voting on. When I e-mailed him about it earlier, he gave me the same song and dance, blaming it all on parliamentary procedure and whatnot. He has never said where he stands on the issue. What I would like to see is a straight up or down vote on a minimum wage increase, without all the exemptions, exclusions, and distractions loaded on by the GOP. I'd like to see where our state legislators, including Sen. Finney, stand on it. Sen. Finney seems like a sincere guy. Judging from the issues he talks about, he's a certifiable wingnut. But at least he's a sincere certifiable wingnut. And as a wingnut, I suppose he represents his constituency. But he ought to be careful bragging about being "open" and "transparent" if he's going to be disingenuous when he's called upon to account for his votes. ( categories: )
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"... straight up or down vote on a minimum wage increase"
This a laudable fantasy.
Because of corporate investment in the political process, a minimum wage hike is bitter political pill to swallow. It will never pass without some juicy cover and pork. And as no one wants to be held accountable for voting against a hike, "It needs more work in committee" is actually politically candid.
Not that I'm happy about it. This is an issue relating directly to our quality of life! Hold their feet to the fire for their dissembling and maneuvering this fall! Demand that up and down vote!
But recognize when you do that you have left the reality based politcal world. You have entered the realm of theatre, with its own weird through-the-looking-glass rules.
Spin is not going to go away. Its time we get good at it.
Frothy
Wow! Thanks for taking the time to provide that detailed response.
Re: I challenge Mr. Neal to find any other legislator who works as hard as I do to communicate with and represent all constituents.
I give credit where credit is due:
Link...
"Inflation" doesn't wash as an excuse not to raise the minimum wage.
The minimum wage doesn't even keep up with inflation.
How much has the minimum wage eroded in value in the nine years since it has been raised? It's not indexed to inflation, so the $5.15 that a worker would have earned today is only worth $4.05 in 1997 dollars (the last time the wage was raised).
Fact of the matter is that the longer that our lawmakers diddle around and obfuscate and make poor excuses, the burden of inflation accumulates and makes life even harder on minimum wage earners.
This is especially true since (a) gas prices are heavily inflated now, driving much of the bloat in the CPI, and (b) the state of Tennessee imposes an egregious and especially *regressive* form of tax -- the sales tax -- on everyone. I commend your efforts to provide some measure of relief, but it's simply not enough for someone earning a low hourly wage.
If the minimum wage was indexed to inflation annually, that would at least be a start.
____________________________
Forget patriotism. Instapundit.com is the last refuge of scoundrels.
He does however forget to put on there the Education Bill which was left off through this month, which would show that he voted YES to giving $8 million that Sevier County should have received and $4 million that schools in Blount County should have received and sent to Nashville, Knoxville, and Memphis. Why not show us how you don't support funding the schools in the district that you represent, Ray Finney? Put that up on your "website."
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