07 May 2009

Manchin Vetoes Increased Payments for Behavioral Centers

Gov. Joe Manchin has vetoed legislation that aimed to increase funding for behavioral health care centers, bucking a well-funded publicity campaign urging him to sign the measure, The Associated Press and others report.

But the governor also "promised to spend roughly $12 million on reducing crowding in psychiatric hospitals and improving community-based care," the AP article said.

Others reporting the veto include Public Broadcasting, MetroNews and The Charleston Gazette. Manchin also issued a statement.

White House Continues to Court Capito

U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-2nd, is among a dozen or so GOP House members meeting at the White House with Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel today, The National Journal's Hotline On Call reports.

The visit is but the latest for Capito as the administration reaches out to Republicans in Congress. The item notes that this batch of GOP members belong to The Tuesday Group, which The Hill earlier reported "takes its name from a group of Republican centrists who meet weekly in the basement of the Capitol to discuss their policy priorities."

The group also has a political action committee, which according to the Center for Responsive Politics included Capito among two dozen House Republicans to whom it contributed $10,000 apiece during the most recent election cycle.

06 May 2009

W.Va. State Hiring Drops

At a time when West Virginia agencies hire around 200 full-time workers, the state has added just 43 permanent jobs to its payroll in the last month, MetroNews reports.

MetroNews cites Gov. Joe Manchin's directive to cabinet secretaries early that month that "hiring would be restricted for the last three months of the fiscal year."

"The full-time hires made since the restrictions were announced were mainly for state-run health care facilities, prisons and jails," MetroNews reports. "The state did hire 224 temporary employees since the announcement and most of them, 182, were for seasonal jobs through the Division of Natural Resources."

W.Va. Considers Adding Toll Roads

While residents who rely on the West Virginia Turnpike seek to abolish its tolls, and are fighting a push to hike its rates, state and county officials are eyeing tolls for other stretches of road, the Bluefield Daily Telegraph reports.

Transportation Secretary Paul Mattox said his department may add tolls to the four miles of the Mon-Fayette expressway under construction in Monongalia County and slated to open in late 2010. Putnam and Mason county commissioners, meanwhile, seek tolls for a 14-mile section of U.S Route 35.

"
Mattox said U.S. Route 522 in Morgan County also is being considered as a future toll corridor, but the proposal would require the support of the Morgan County Commission," the article said.

Obama Ed Chief Visits West Virginia

The Associated Press was among those with coverage of this week's stop at an Eastern Panhandle school by Obama Education Secretary Arne Duncan.

"Duncan asked teachers, parents and students Tuesday how they would improve No Child Left Behind," the article said. "Duncan visited West Virginia, the first stop on a 15-state tour as the Obama administration prepares to try to overhaul the program."

MetroNews also has a report, along with audio of Duncan.

The Journal of Martinsburg has both an article from Duncan's visit to Eagle School Intermediary and an interview with one of its teachers, who took part in a round-table discussion with Duncan.

Manchin to Meet again with Obama EPA

Gov. Joe Manchin continues to lobby for West Virginia's coal industry with the Obama administration's Environmental Protection Agency, this time "heading to Philadelphia to discuss how a proposed mountaintop removal mine could result in a new highway for southern West Virginia," The Associated Press reports.

Public Broadcasting (audio here) also has coverage of the governor's planned Wednesday trip, as does MetroNews and the Bluefield Daily Telegraph.

"To build the highway, state officials are allowing coal companies to use mountaintop removal to prepare the roadbed. In this case, Consol Energy is applying for a permit to open a mountaintop removal mine on Buffalo Mountain," Public Broadcasting explains. "But there’s reason to believe the permit may not be approved. On the day President Obama was inaugurated, the EPA sent a letter raising concerns about the permit to the Army Corps of Engineers."

01 May 2009

Quote of the Day

“You can’t take it personal. That’s just the way Washington works."

-- U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-2nd, talking to Newsweek about the repeated entreaties from the Obama administration while the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee works to unseat her.

They Voted For You: Banking

U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., helped defeat "a plan to spare hundreds of thousands of homeowners from foreclosure through bankruptcy, a proposal that President Barack Obama embraced but did little to see through," The Associated Press reports.

Byrd was among a dozen Democrat who joined with Senate Republicans to scuttle the measure in the 45-51 vote. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., did not vote.

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois had championed and negotiated the proposed amendment, "which Obama had said was important to saving the economy and promised to push through Congress," AP reports. "But facing stiff opposition from banks, Obama did little to pressure lawmakers who worried it would encourage bankruptcy filings and spike interest rates."

W.Va. Teacher Groups Continue Fight over PEIA Seat

Groups representing teachers are jockeying for a seat on the influential finance board of the Public Employees Insurance Agency, The Charleston Gazette reports.

With the seat reserved for the union with the most members, the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia and the West Virginia School Service Personnel Association cite their partnership agreement to claim that status.

The seat has been held by Perry Bryant, who has represented the rival West Virginia Education Association. Bryant withdrew his nomination for re-appointment to the board last month, the newspaper reports.

Bryant "will continue to serve on the PEIA Finance Board until Gov. Joe Manchin appoints somebody else," the article said.

WVEA President Dale Lee told The Gazette that "the governor's office asked for Bryant's withdraw, and proposed that both Bryant and an AFT representative could sit on the finance board," but that the Senate later pulled the necessary legislation.

They Voted For You: Federal Spending

U.S. Reps. Alan Mollohan, D-1st, and Nick Rahall, D-3rd, helped President Obama mark his 100th day this week "by advancing "a $3.4 trillion federal budget for next year - a third of it borrowed - that prevents Republicans from blocking his proposed trillion-dollar expansion of government-provided health care over the next decade," The Associated Press reports.

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-2nd, voted along with every other House GOP member against the budget bill. The 233-193 roll call also include 17 Democrats opposing the measure.

U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., also voted against the bill, in a 53-43 roll call that again saw no Republican member support the legislation. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., did not vote.

"Wednesday's House and Senate votes to adopt the nonbinding budget blueprint were only a first step toward Obama's goal of providing health care coverage for all Americans," AP reports. "The budget plan for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 sets the parameters for subsequent tax and spending bills expected to boost clean energy programs and student aid and extend many of former President George W. Bush's tax cuts."

W.Va. Medicaid "Redesign" Takes Another Hit

Another study has come away critical of West Virginia's effort revamp its Medicaid program, The Associated Press reports.

"Mountain Health Choices makes some benefits contingent upon signing contracts that pledge recipients will regularly visit their doctor and take their medication as directed, among other things," AP's Tom Breen explains. "Recipients who don't sign those contracts are enrolled in a health plan with fewer benefits than they had received under traditional Medicaid."

"The Institute for Health Policy Research at West Virginia University conducted interviews with state officials, health-care providers, patient advocates and other groups in 2008 and 2009 to evaluate the program," the article said.

Among other conclusions, the report found that "tens of thousands of West Virginians on Medicaid are getting less medical care than they used to," Breen writes.

They Voted For You: Credit Cards

All three of West Virginia's U.S. House members voted for "a bill to restrict credit card practices and eliminate sudden increases in interest rates and late fees that have entangled millions of consumers," The Associated Press reports.

U.S. Reps. Alan Mollohan, D-1st; Shelley Moore Capito, R-2nd; and Nick Rahall, D-3rd, helped pass the Credit Card Holders' Bill of Rights Act of 2009 in a 357-70 vote.

"The measure would prohibit so-called double-cycle billing and retroactive rate hikes and would prevent companies from giving credit cards to anyone under 18," AP report, but adds that "if they become law, the new provisions won't take effect for a year, except for a requirement that customers get 45 days' notice before their interest rates are increased. That would take effect in 90 days."

W.Va. Budget Update: April Revenues Top Estimate

West Virginia lawmakers and Gov. Joe Manchin wanted to wait until after April's tax collections came in before proceeding with a new state budget. The Associated Press reports that "the month's general tax revenues should exceed estimates by $15 million to $20 million."

"That would put state government back on track to end the current budget year June 30 balanced or with a minor surplus," the article said. "A key month for annual tax collections, April's numbers suggest the Legislature won't have to cut spending in the next budget beyond the $200 million Gov. Joe Manchin has already announced."

The House and Senate finished that 60-day session on April 11, and plan to complete a new state budget between May 26 and June 6, AP notes.

AP also reports that at least one other state, Mississippi, has delayed completing its next budget because of the troubled economy. "West Virginia is among at least 42 states that have projected gaps in their upcoming budgets," the article said. "These threatened deficits totaled $121 million at one point, though the latest tally shows states have since reduced them to a combined $67.4 million."

The Charleston Daily Mail also reports on April's figures, while The Intelligencer of Wheeling checks in with local lawmakers regarding the upcoming session work.

Berger Possible Obama Pick for Federal Bench

Citing "courthouse sources," the Charleston Daily Mail reports that federal officials have been interviewing colleagues of Kanawha Circuit Judge Irene Berger, "a sign she will be officially appointed to the U.S. District bench in the near future."

"Berger, a circuit judge for 14 years, is expected to replace Southern District Judge David A. Faber, who assumed senior status on Dec. 31," the newspaper reports.

The article also lists several "rumored candidates" for Berger's replacement: "House of Delegates Judiciary Committee Chairwoman Carrie Webster, D-Kanawha; Joanna Tabit, a lawyer with Steptoe & Johnson and former deputy attorney general; Fran Hughes, deputy attorney general; and John Hackney, a judge on the West Virginia Court of Claims."

Update: U.S. Sens. Robert C. Byrd and Jay Rockefeller, both D-W.Va., had earlier recommended Berger, and did the same for veteran lawyer and Democratic politico Ned Rose for a opening on the state's northern federal court district.