
MEA-MFT 2007 Legislative Voting Record
How did your local legislators do in the wild and wooly 2007
regular and special legislative sessions? The MEA-MFT Voting
Record tells all. Read on, and check legislators' voting records.
HB = House Bill SB = Senate Bill
R = Right vote according to MEA-MFT position
W = Wrong vote according to MEA-MFT position
A = Absent (did not vote)
E = Excused absence
House Voting Record
Senate Voting Record
VOTING RECORD GUIDE
HB 2, Motion (Parker) Consideration of Governor's Budget.
Of all the mishaps of the 2007 regular session, none was
more significant than the demise of HB 2, the funding bill
for all state government services.
After 10 months of budget and policy review by the executive
branch, six weeks of legislative hearings, testimony from
over a thousand Montanans, and legislative subcommittee actions,
the House Appropriations Committee met in executive session
and tabled HB 2.
To take its place, Appropriations chair John Sinrud and Republican
committee members introduced a series of eight separate budgeting
bills that disregarded all the above and 30 years of state
budget policy and practice. Worst of all, the newly introduced
bills cut millions of dollars from essential state government
services.
After one of the most contentious fortnights in modern legislative
history, MEA-MFT member and House minority leader Rep. John
Parker moved to revive HB 2 and place it on the House agenda
for debate. His motion failed.
The failure to revive and pass HB 2 was the major factor
behind the legislature's inability to resolve the 2007 regular
session.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Vote: Motion, House Floor, 3/15/07.
Status: Motion failed, 50-50. HB 2 was never fully restored
and no budget bill ended up passing during the regular 07
session, leading to the call for a special session.
HB 13 (Sesso) State Pay Plan. HB 13 contains the pay
plan negotiated by MEA-MFT and other state employee unions
through extensive bargaining with the Schweitzer administration.
HB 13 provides average salary increases of 3% in the next
two years while also providing another .6% in each year for
additional salary enhancements. It also includes historic
levels of funding for the Montana University System, reversing
a decade of decline in the state's investment in university
system employees.
In the midst of the 2007 session, House Republican leaders
sought amendments to the pay plan that would have substantively
changed the negotiated agreement. MEA-MFT worked with Governor
Brian Schweitzer's administration to defeat hostile amendments
and win passage of the bill.
MEA-MFT Position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor 2/21/07; passed 79-15. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 3/14/07; passed 31-19.
Status: Passed into law.
HB 63 (Musgrove) Teachers' Retirement System Funding.
HB 63 provides additional state revenue to ensure the financial
solvency of the Montana Teachers' Retirement System (TRS).
HB 63 also clarifies provisions in TRS regulations to protect
the system from actuarial losses.
Without passage of this bill, TRS would have remained underfunded
and in violation of Montana's constitutional requirement that
public employee retirement systems be funded "on an actuarially
sound basis."
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor 3/29/07, passed 87-11. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 4/16/07, passed 44-6.
Status: Passed into law.
HB 95 (Olson) Funding for University System Faculty Retirement
Accounts. HB 95 is MEA-MFT's latest effort to address
the Montana University System's next-to-last-in-the-nation
status when it comes to retirement contributions for faculty.
Since 1993 (when the legislature mandated that all new faculty
join the TIAA-CREF defined contribution retirement program),
the state's contribution level has been stuck at a terribly
noncompetitive 4.96%.
Coupled with the low salary levels of Montana higher education
faculty relative to their peers across the country, retirement
security has become one of the university system's most significant
recruitment and retention issues.
HB 95 provides a state-funded 1% increase for all U-system
faculty members in TIAA-CREF. The positive effect of this
relatively small change will be felt for decades to come.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor, 3/28/07, passed 87-13. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor, 4/16/07, passed 38-12.
Status: Passed into law.
HB 164 (Koopman) Cheap and Easy "Solution" to
Montana's Teacher Shortage. HB 164 sought to amend Montana's
collective bargaining act to "make it easier" for
Montana teachers who might like to work for nothing and "provide
them a tax incentive" to do so. This is in spite of the
fact that Montana teachers can already work for free; and
should they choose to do so, they would already receive a
large tax incentive.
To make matters worse, the bill would have made licensure
and endorsement optional for volunteer teachers, along with
most provisions of any bargained employment contract. The
bill was a thinly veiled attempt to bust MEA-MFT and eliminate
contractual protections (not to mention teacher licensure)
that we exist, in part, to protect and enhance.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 2nd Reading House Floor, 2/27/07.
Status: Bill failed, 38-62. RIP.
HB 204 (Kasten) Taxpayer Bill of Rights Revisited. Frustrated
by their inability to prevail in court or at the ballot box
with their fraud-infested, out-of-state scheme to limit state
spending, backers of the failed CI-97 (TABOR) introduced HB
204 for legislative consideration.
Like CI-97, HB 204 would have placed an arbitrary cap on
state spending divorced from the realities of human concern
and effective public policy.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 3rd Reading House Floor 2/17/07.
Status: Passed the House on a party-line vote 51-49. Tabled
in Senate Finance and Claims.
HB 230 (Koopman) Anyone Can Teach - Cheap and Easy Part
II. As MEA-MFT member Rep. Holly Raser put it best, this
bill was "a slap in the face to the profession of teaching
in Montana." HB 230 would have allowed school districts
to employ and license to teach anybody with a college degree,
regardless of state licensure or endorsement.
Worse, it required the state to honor local "licenses"
issued by local school boards. HB 230 would have eliminated
statewide standards, licensure, and accountability from the
teaching profession.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 2nd Reading House Floor 2/10/07.
Status: Bill failed, 24-76.
HB 492 (Himmelberger) Less Than Minimum Wage. HB 492
would have established a tip-credit as a portion of Montana's
minimum wage law. It would have taken away the ability of
thousands of hard-working Montanans to earn at least a minimum
wage on an ongoing basis. The ability to receive tips from
customers is not a guarantee of income, and Montana does not
treat it as such. MEA-MFT was pleased to work with AFL-CIO
to defeat HB 492.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 3rd Reading House Floor 2/26/07.
Status: Passed the House 51-49. Tabled in Senate Taxation.
HB 609 (Hamilton) Stealing From Health Benefits Reserves
Not Allowed--Ever! MEA-MFT wrote HB 609 and got it introduced.
The legislation makes it illegal for school districts to dissolve
employee health benefit reserves and then use the money to
pay for general fund expenses completely unrelated to employee
health benefits.
School employees often forego salary increases to maintain
health benefit reserves. To simply redirect these dollars
when a reserve is dissolved is taking away a benefit that
has already been earned by the employees.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor 4/12/07, passed 92-8. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 4/5/07, passed 37-13.
Status: Passed into law.
HB 701 (Glaser) Tax Cuts to Improve School Funding? HB
701 claimed to provide over $200 million per year to Montana
schools. However, over $140 million of this funding came through
a property tax cut that provided no new money to schools.
The bill also sought to eliminate the quality educator payment
(QEP) that was achieved by MEA-MFT and education advocates
in the 2005 special session.
HB 701 would have replaced the QEP with a per-classroom calculation
that would have returned Montana to an even more enrollment-driven
funding formula. Passage of HB 701 would have devoured all
the ongoing revenue available to the 2007 Legislature while
reversing course in addressing Montana's requirement for adequately
funded schools.
HB 701 was unsustainable and designed to pit school groups
against one another.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Votes: 2nd Reading House Floor 3/19/07.
Status: Bill failed, 53-47.
SB 23 (Moss) Quality Educator Payment for All. SB
23 corrects a technical oversight of the 2005 special session.
In developing a definition of a quality educator for which
a QEP could be made, the state left out licensed school social
workers and psychologists.
SB 23 sought to address this and clarify that these important
specialists are crucial to quality education for all Montana's
children.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Vote: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 1/18/07.
Status: Passed the Senate, 38-11. Tabled in House Education,
but its language was incorporated into SB 2 of the special
session and thus became law.
SB 56 (Ryan) Retirement Funding for All. At the end
of the 2003 legislative session, Governor Judy Martz's administration
denied school districts access to their local county retirement
funds to make retirement contributions for employees who are
paid with federal dollars (predominantly Title I and special
education).
This meant the statewide loss of nearly $10 million per year
in state and local revenues for schools. Especially hurt are
districts serving a significant number of low-income and/or
special needs children. SB 56 would have reversed this policy,
directly aiding Montana's most impoverished and disabled students.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 2/14/07.
Status: SB 56 passed the Senate, 27-23. Tabled in House Education.
SB 96 (Williams) Initiative Reform. The result of
the fallout from the 2006 election, which saw a host of fraudulent
and deceptive practices by supporters of several radical right-wing
ballot measures, SB 96 assures that signature gatherers must
be Montana residents and that they cannot be paid on a per-signature
basis.
Along with other changes, including original jurisdiction
of the state Supreme Court in initiative-related challenges,
the bill should help ensure a fairer and more transparent
initiative process for Montanans.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor 4/26/07, passed 45-5. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 4/25/07, passed 86-14.
Status: Passed into law.
SB 123 (Williams) Full-Time Kindergarten. State funding
for full-time kindergarten was one of MEA-MFT's top priorities
for the 2007 Legislature. Full-time kindergarten passed the
Senate with strong bipartisan support before running into
the House Education Committee buzz-saw of Constitutionalist/Republicans
led by Chairman Rick Jore (C).
After SB 123 won final passage in the Senate on January 23,
Jore refused to allow the bill to be heard for two months!
After a cursory, limited hearing March 21, Chairman Jore then
delayed any action on the bill until April 3, a full two weeks
after the hearing.
At that point, the committee tabled the bill without discussion.
Despite all the delay, hostility, and opposition, most of
the language contained in SB 123 made its way into SB 2 of
the special session. State funding for full-time kindergarten
is now the law in Montana!
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 1/23/07, passed 35-15.
Status: Placed into SB 2 of the special session; passed into
law.
SB 152 (Ryan) Governor's School Funding Proposal. Governor
Schweitzer's initial education funding bill, SB 152, contained
inflationary increases for schools, funding for full-time
kindergarten, additional funding for the quality educator
payment, and a school facilities reserve to be set aside for
the 2011 biennium.
SB 152 would have continued the positive upward trend in
school funding that began during the 2005 regular and special
sessions. Under SB 152, schools would receive ongoing inflationary
increases in two consecutive sessions, the first such commitment
in over two decades.
MEA-MFT encouraged the governor's office to devote additional
resources to this bill, particularly in the quality educator
payment. However, as with every other school funding proposal
in the 2007 Legislature that sought to provide significant
dollars to schools, the Constitutionalist/Republican party
leadership in the House drastically rewrote SB 152, leading
to its demise. See further description below.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 1/24/07, passed 34-16.
Status: Bill was amended in House Education and sent to the
floor for action, where it failed to receive enough votes
to pass. See below.
SB 152 as amended in the House (Glaser, Lange, and Company)
Forget Kindergarten, Let's Do Early Childhood Education-Whatever
That Means
As amended in the House, the governor's
proposed school funding bill was rewritten to:
1) replace full-time kindergarten with ill-defined and unaccountable
funding for "early childhood education programs";
2) replace half-time kindergarten with ill-defined and unaccountable
funding for "early childhood education programs";
3) create a classroom unit funding component that would be
enrollment driven;
4) cut the proposed increase in the quality educator payment
to a miserable $100;
5) change the basic entitlement for school districts to be
enrollment driven; and
6) tie all the changes in the bill to passage of the Republican
Education Appropriations bill in order to force the Senate
to reject the governor's school funding proposal.
These changes were unacceptable and would have pushed Montana
schools backward rather than forward.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 2nd Reading House Floor 4/02/07.
Status: Bill failed, 47-53.
SB 254 (Wanzenried) Card Check Neutrality in State Contracts.
In recent years the State of Montana has increasingly turned
to private vendors to provide public services. Unfortunately,
many private vendors are openly hostile to attempts by their
employees to form a union.
SB 254 would have required potential contractors to sign
a neutrality agreement as a precondition for receiving a state
contract. The neutrality agreement would mandate that the
employer accept a unionized workforce if a sufficient number
of its employees signaled their desire to unionize by signing
an authorization card.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Vote: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 2/21/07.
Status: Passed the Senate, 27-23. Tabled in House Judiciary.
SB 355 (Wanzenried) Unemployment Insurance for Classified
School Employees. Unlike almost every other segment of
seasonal workers in Montana, classified employees of school
districts are ineligible to collect unemployment insurance
benefits during summer months. Many of these employees desperately
need these benefits to support themselves and their families.
Most troubling, in districts that have chosen to privatize
services that classified employees perform, the employees
of the private companies are eligible for unemployment benefits
in summer months, and many apply for and receive them.
All this leads to a terribly unfair situation: two publicly
funded employees can be doing exactly the same work, but the
one who works for a school district cannot receive an unemployment
benefit during summer, while the one who works for a private
firm can.
MEA-MFT has worked to address this inequity since 1992, when
a change in federal law authorized classified employees of
school districts to receive unemployment insurance benefits
during summer and holiday breaks.
However, Montana's state law must change to implement the
1992 provision. SB 355 would have done just that. While we
were again unsuccessful, MEA-MFT will not stop working to
remedy this long-standing inequity.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Vote: 2nd Reading Senate Floor 2/27/07.
Status: Bill failed on a 25-25 tie vote.
SB 390 (Juneau) Indian Education for All Funding Enhancement.
SB 390 would have increased state funding for local Indian
Education for All efforts to $50 per student over the 2009
biennium. Montana's Indian Education for All law has established
a national model now being replicated in other states. SB
390 would have expanded resources to help Montana school districts
deliver on the state's constitutional promise of Indian Education
for All.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Vote: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 2/26/07, passed 28-22.
Status: SB 390 was tabled in House Education. However, additional
one-time funds for Indian Education for All totaling over
$10 per student were approved in HB 2 during the special session.
SB 545 (Smith) Charter Prisons and Treatment Centers.
SB 545 would have retroactively approved the state's participation
in the construction and operation of a regional prison, as
long as it was built "by a local governmental entity."
Worse yet, in this case, construction of the prison was already
complete, with no direct input from the Department of Corrections.
Such "charter prisons and treatment centers" have
popped up all over Montana in recent years. They directly
compete with the state's own correctional programs for funding
and support. MEA-MFT has long opposed this costly trend in
corrections.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: 3rd Reading Senate Floor 2/28/07.
Status: Bill failed, 19-31.
Special Session HB 2 (Clark) State Budget Bill - Revived!
After four months of partisan deadlock over the state's budgeting
process and the introduction of 10 separate budget bills,
the legislature came back into special session and adopted
the special session's HB 2. Greatly resembling the first version
of the regular session, HB 2 proposed by the Schweitzer Administration
(see above for description), the bill provides essential funding
increases for education, higher education, corrections, health
and human services, and general government.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 2nd Reading House Floor 5/15/07, passed 58-41. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 5/15/07, passed 29-21.
Status: Passed into law.
Special Session SB 2 (Ryan) Governor's School Funding
Bill. Going back to the future, the special session took
most of the governor's original school funding proposal from
SB 152 of the regular session, added to it, and passed it.
See the description of SB 152 above.
In addition to the money originally contained in SB 152,
SB 2 of the special session added $10 million for full-time
kindergarten startup, $30 million for one-time facility payments,
and increased the quality educator component from the governor's
original proposal by over $240 per educator.
MEA-MFT position: Support.
Votes: 3rd Reading House Floor 5/11/07, passed 68-30. 3rd
Reading Senate Floor 5/11/07, passed 44-6.
Status: Passed into law.
Special Session SB 2, Amendment 1 (Jore) No Kindergarten,
Period. In a last-gasp effort to kill kindergarten, Constitutional
Party member and chair of the House Education Committee Rick
Jore introduced this amendment. The amendment sought to make
all kindergarten optional and would have stricken any reference
to kindergarten in statute.
MEA-MFT position: Oppose.
Vote: Do Concur House Floor 5/11/07.
Status: Amendment failed, 41-59.
House Voting Record
Senate
Voting Record
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