The House and Senate only met one day this week due to a blizzard, and only voted on one highly technical hereditary trusts bill, so this report instead contains several newly introduced bills of interest, including ones to ban “bridge cards” for college students, limit government employee health benefits, repeal the state “prevailing wage” law and more.
House Bill 4165 (Ban bridge cards for middle class college students)
Introduced by Rep. Joseph Haveman (R), to ban food stamps (a “bridge card”) to
a college student who is claimed as a dependent on his or her parents’ income
tax. Referred to committee, no further action at this time.
House Bill 4166 (Expand unemployment benefits)
Introduced by Rep. Jim Ananich (D), to extend unemployment benefit payments to
certain individuals who have collected benefits for the maximum allowable time
period but are in certain job training programs; and allow an individual whose
former employment was mostly part time to collect unemployment benefits even if
he or she is only seeking part time work, or has refused full time employment.
Referred to committee, no further action at this time.
House Bill 4172 (Mandate 20 percent government employee health benefit
contribution)
Introduced by Rep. Jeff Farrington (R), to require government employees to
contribute at least 20 percent toward the cost of individual health care
insurance benefits provided by their employer, or 25 percent if the benefit is
a family plan. The mandate would only kick in after an existing collective
bargaining agreement granting richer benefits expired. Referred to committee,
no further action at this time.
House Bill 4176 (Add new restrictions to school emergency financial
managers)
Introduced by Rep. David Nathan (D), to require the emergency financial
managers appointed to failing school districts like Detroit’s to include in a
required financial plan a “district improvement plan” developed by the school
board with the school employee union (Detroit Federation of Teachers or
Michigan Education Association). Referred to committee, no further action at
this time.
House Bill 4164 (Add additional “bad driver tax” penalties)
Introduced by Rep. Stacy Erwin Oakes (D), to authorize the imposition of
“community service” labor for an individual whose income is below 200 percent
of the poverty level and who is subject to the “driver responsibility fees”
(“bad driver tax”) that are assessed for various violations. An individual below
the income limit could satisfy the penalty by working for no wage at a
non-profit organization, with $25 taken off the amount owed for every hour
worked, up to a maximum of $500 over two years. These very expensive fees were
originally adopted in 2003 to raise revenue, so as avoid spending cuts in that
year’s and subsequent state government budgets.
Senate Bill 94 and House Bill 4181 (Establish firefighters’ cancer
presumption)
Introduced by Sen. Tory Rocca (R) and Rep. Lisa Brown (D), respectively, to establish
a presumption that cases of certain types of cancer contracted by non-volunteer
firefighters arose out of and in the course of employment for purposes of
granting workers compensation benefits, unless there is evidence to the
contrary, and unless the person is a consistent cigarette smoker. Referred to
committee, no further action at this time.
Senate Bill 100 (Let local governments ban Sunday liquor sales)
Introduced by Sen. Rick Jones (R), to give local governments the power to ban
alcohol sales on Sunday, as allowed by a 2008 law. Referred to committee, no
further action at this time.
Senate Bill 95
(Repeal “prevailing wage” law)
Introduced by Sen. Arlan Meekhof (R), to repeal the state “prevailing wage”
law, which prohibits awarding government contracts to contractors who submit
the lowest bid unless the contractor pays "prevailing wages," which
are based on union pay scales in a particular part of a geographic region.
These wage rates may be above the market rate in other parts of the region.
Referred to committee, no further action at this time.
SOURCE: MichiganVotes.org, a free, nonpartisan website created by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, providing concise, nonpartisan, plain-English descriptions of every bill and vote in the Michigan House and Senate. Please visit MichiganVotes.org.
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