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Assembly Continues PBS Funding, Blocks Insurance Coverage for Some Abortions

RICHMOND – The state Senate has ensured that Virginians will still ask that age-old question: “Can you tell me how to get to Sesame Street?”

The Senate on Wednesday night overturned Gov. Bob McDonnell’s proposal to eliminate state funding for public broadcasting over the next two years.

Want to know more?

For details on all of the votes during the General Assembly’s reconvened session, visit the Legislative Information System’s website.

The Senate’s 27-13 vote doesn’t alter the 10 percent cut in funding for public broadcasting approved by the General Assembly during its regular session in February.

However, senators rebuffed McDonnell’s call to eliminate fully half of the money that public radio and television stations would receive during the coming fiscal year – and the remaining half the following year. The governor’s office said his plan would save taxpayers $4.2 million.

The House of Delegates upheld McDonnell’s budget amendment to phase out state funding for public broadcasting. However, the amendment dies if one chamber rejects it – as the Senate did.

The votes came during the General Assembly’s “reconvened session,” a one-day meeting to consider vetoes, changes to legislation and budget amendments made by the governor.

In all, the House and Senate upheld 66 of the governor’s 86 amendments to the budget. The other 20 were nixed. To overturn the governor’s veto, both houses must achieve a majority of two-thirds.

Abortion Rights
The General Assembly also voted on one of the most controversial amendments – a provision that would block insurance coverage for abortion, except in cases of rape, incest or life-threatening health concerns.

The Republican-controlled House easily passed McDonnell’s abortion-restricting measure on a 61-36 vote. But the issue was the subject of heated debate in the Senate, where Democrats hold a slim majority.

Two Democratic senators voted with the Republican minority in favor of the restriction. The result was a tie vote that was broken by Republican Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling, allowing the restriction to pass.

Bolling also cast a tie-breaking vote in favor of McDonnell’s amendment to allocate $380,000 for an abstinence education fund.

Environmental Fines
Two of the governor’s four vetoes this year dealt with the environment – and the General Assembly upheld both of them.

One bill would have allowed the state Department of Environmental Quality to impose civil penalties of up to $30,000. The other bill would have authorized the State Water Control Board to impose a civil penalty of up to $1,000 on people who fail to report certain water withdrawal information.

Since the General Assembly sustained the governor’s vetoes, both bills are dead.

Autism Insurance

Both houses approved four of the five amendments that McDonnell made to a bill requiring governments and large employers to include autism services in their employee health insurance plans.

Legislators upheld McDonnell’s proposals to create a licensing board for autism therapists and to require prior authorization for services.

Lawmakers rejected McDonnell’s amendment that would have gutted the entire law if part is “invalidated by state or federal law or a court of competent jurisdiction.” For more than a decade, parents of autistic children in Virginia pushed for a state law requiring insurers to cover autism services.

The legislation will require health insurers to pay for a set of therapies, known as applied behavior analysis, for children age 2 to 6 with autism.

The new law will apply to businesses with more than 50 employees; it also will cover public employees. The statute won’t apply to individual or small group insurance policies. Under the law, annual benefits will be limited at $35,000.

Physical Education
The Senate upheld McDonnell’s veto of a bill that would have required 150 minutes of physical education in elementary and middle schools.

The measure was widely criticized as an unfunded burden on local school systems.

In a letter to the governor, several educators and school board associations wrote that “Many elementary schools throughout the Commonwealth do not have gymnasiums or other facilities sufficient to meet the requirements of this bill.”

U.Va. Renovations
Both the House and Senate voted to give the University of Virginia almost $2.7 million in state bond funds to repair its landmark Rotunda. The House voted 98-1 in favor of the measure. The Senate voted 40-1.

Medical Malpractice

Both the chambers of the General Assembly shot down McDonnell’s veto of a bill to raise the amount that can be awarded in medical malpractice lawsuits. The bill will raise the existing $2 million cap by $50,000 a year – until it reaches $3 million in the year 2031.

Comments  

 
0 #7 Guest 2011-04-13 00:13
It's high time that politicians conduct government without religious input. The only reason abortion gets such attention, is the admonishment and judgmentalist church views of it!
Of course it's just another macho effort of men to insert their low regard for Women's ability to make responsible decisions regarding the size and time to have larger families. They'd rather see women die due to unsanitary illegal, botched abortions than provide safe ones.
Of course the cost of healthcare for treating those women after they become septic is much higher than aborting an unwanted fetus - nut who thinks of that when bending females to male will is so much fun.... Then of course the complications of pregnancy, increasingly frequent Caesarian sections (now 1:3) costs more than an abortion would, and supporting single mothers who are destitute due to the pregnancy is worth that money, too when" God's will" is all important.

And the emotional residue of being a child who is said to be an "accident" can result in lower achievement of potential, as well as considerably aberrant antisocial behavior. With today's stigma against treatment and high costs of it, children are unlikely to achieve good self images.

Then there's the alcohol syndrome babies and drug addicted ones whose lives become a living hell much worse than the embryo or
fetus's barely perceived(if it is at all experienced) when abortions are done in the first 3 months of pregnancy that makes some cringe for
them. It isn't a good way to live, when there is constant resentment of your presence by rejecting parent(s). Is that really what "right to life" supporters want to subject a baby to?

I've seen all that and more abuse heaped on unwanted children, as a Pediatric Registered Nurse, Public Health Nurse.
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0 #6 Guest 2011-04-12 06:58
While I can agree with your sentiment here, it turns out that the no new refinery argument is not as valid as I once thought. The Yorktown refinery closed due to a lack of sufficient demand for its product. This is a refinery that has ample area for expansion as well as targeted tax breaks, and a several layers of govt. eager for expansion. Valero closed a larger refinery in NJ for similar reasons, and is looking to close/sell their refinery in Aruba. Thus it is obvious that there is no need for new refineries. If there were, the existing refineries would not shut down.

" I feel that the environmental pendulum has swung from the direction of no regulation many years ago, to the case of over regulation today, as evidenced by no new oil refineries in the last forty years, and any exploration totally stopped. I, to, am for responsible use of our natural resources, but there is a balance that can be met to use the resources while respecting our environment.
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0 #5 Guest 2011-04-11 20:23
Perhaps I'm missing something here, but it seems that the party that wants to ease restrictions on businesses, alleviate paperwork and red tape for businesses - wants to mandate the way the insurance industry operate in the Commonwealth of Virginia? Sigh. And I doubt that the bill's proponents will ever recognize the irony.
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+2 #4 Guest 2011-04-11 09:58
in referenc to Mytwo cents comment, if i take the opposite side of your nasty comment i could say "if men were getting pregnant they would not abort their babies". Both are stupid comments. And, there were woman Republicans that voted for the bill.
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+1 #3 Guest 2011-04-11 09:21
I thought we were in a new age of enlightenment where partisan attacks and extremist language were seen for what they really are: just swipes and backlash with no substance meant to mask an issue with inflammatory words. Neither of these two prior comments offer anything constructive. Rather they are just emotional rants. The first is a moot point as men cannot get pregnant, so any discourse on this is mere conjecture. The truth is, abortion is done in this country mainly for convenience and is an elective procedure, no different than many other types of non-covered elective procedures. In the second comment, I do not feel that an entire party and large segment of our population hate the environment and are "money grubbing". Actually, "money grubbing" could be applied to large government in general, since government gets what it has, not by producing, but by taking by taxation. I feel that the environmental pendulum has swung from the direction of no regulation many years ago, to the case of over regulation today, as evidenced by no new oil refineries in the last forty years, and any exploration totally stopped. I, to, am for responsible use of our natural resources, but there is a balance that can be met to use the resources while respecting our environment.
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-1 #2 Guest 2011-04-11 08:24
It's official: The majestic and beautiful treasure that is the natural environment of Virginia is hated and is now under direct assault from the money-grubbing state GOP.
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-1 #1 Guest 2011-04-11 08:00
Once again a Republican government run by men punishes women by deciding when insurance will pay for an abortion. If men were the ones getting pregnant, the story would be different - abortions would be fully covered by insurance, no questions about rape or incest asked. Think about it.
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