2006 Legislative Session At-a-Glance Highlights
-- SB 2604 to phase in full
funding of the Mississippi Adequate Education Program, the main funding vehicle
for the state's K-12 public school districts, over a 4-year period.
-- Provided for a pay
increase for about 31,000 state employees of at least $1,500 annually.
-- Provided a 5 percent pay
increase for university and community college personnel.
-- HB 1406 to require certain
counties to enforce new building code standards and created a council to revise
the codes for use by other counties as desired.
-- HB 1324 to provide a study
of Hurricane Katrina's emergency first responders.
--HB 565 continuing the
homestead exemption for property on Coast even if destroyed by Katrina.
-- HB 1323 to allow the reconstruction
of residential structures destroyed by Katrina on original site regardless of
lot size.
-- HB 1316 toughens the
penalties connected to the crime of home repair fraud to help prevent it from
occurring to Katrina victims.
-- HB 409 to make the non-use
of seat belts in automobiles a primary rather than secondary offense.
-- HB 1215 to allow slightly
darker post-factory tinting of automobile windows.
-- HB 210 to provide full
funding of the state's seven mental health crisis centers.
-- HB 229 to provide
temporary transportation to group of end-stage kidney disease dialysis
patients.
-- HB 191 to fund the 8th
round of Rural Fire Truck Acquisition Program.
-- HB 1034 to create a panel
to establish a strategic economic development plan for the Mississippi Delta
region.
-- Provided $15 million for a
coal plant in Natchez, producing 1,500 construction jobs and 200 permanent
high-paying jobs.
-- HB 562 to authorize bonds
for the purchase of about 1,800 new voting machines to be used across the state.
-- HB 199 to provide for a
more efficient and humane juvenile justice detention system, ensuing offenders
of educational opportunities and health-care coverage.
-- HB 733 establishes a statewide system to
automatically notify a crime victim when an offender housed within the
Department of Corrections is released, assigned to another facility or released
on temporary leave.
-- HB 123 to create the state's Clean
Indoor Act by banning the smoking in any public building or university or
college building.
-- HB 1121 establishes some
"home rule" provisions for high-level school districts and exempts
them from certain requirements of the State Board of Education, including the
setting and closing of school year dates and holidays and development of parts
of the curriculum as the local school board deems proper.
-- HB 1634 to provide bonds
to fund a host of improvements and economic development projects, including the
Rentech plant in Natchez that will bring more than 1,000 construction jobs and
about 200 new high-paying permanent jobs.
-- HB 1250 to create a new
sales tax incentive program for tourist-oriented enterprises.
-- HB 929 authorizes a
wildlife enforcement officer to request the taking of a blood alcohol test from
hunters who kill or cause bodily harm. If the BAC is .08 percent or higher,
hunting privileges can be revoked for two years. If the hunter refuses the
test, hunting privileges can be revoked for four years and the test refusal is
admissible in court in any action arising from the incident.
-- HB 1141 to allow employees
to keep a firearm in their vehicles as long as the area where they park is not
gated or protected by security guards. It also provides immunity from civil
lawsuits to companies or government buildings where a shooting occurs.
-- HB 1549 to allow an income
tax credit against expenses for adopting a child.
-- Gave motorcyclists and
trailer owners a tax break on their vehicle tags.
-- Cracked down on cell phone
usage by state employees and directed state agencies to better manage their
fleet of vehicles and to use alternative fuels when available, such as ethanol
and biodiesel products.
-- SB 2021 to allow a
property tax break on motorcycles and most trailers.
-- SB 2943 to create the
Mississippi Gulf Coast Region Utility Board to coordinate water, wastewater and
storm sewer issues to assist in the redevelopment of the area in the wake of
Katrina.
-- SB 2947 to allow state,
county, municipal and airport authorities located in the six southernmost
counties to renegotiate certain loans for up to two years to help in
redevelopment of the region.
-- SB 2718 to establish a
commission to create a curriculum on civil rights and human rights education to
be taught in the K-12 system.
-- SB 3086 to put $20 million
into the local bridge replacement fund to provide safe travel for school kids
and the public at large.
-- SB 2472 won't allow for
the expiration of a professional licensed issued by the state to any member of
the Mississippi National Guard or U.S. Armed Forces Reserve while the member is
on federal active duty. The license must be extended for up to 90 days after
the member's return from active duty.
-- SB 2865 and SB 2527 to
strengthen the registration requirements of persons convicted as a sexual
offender. It also creates a study of the use of electronic monitoring devices.
-- SB 2426 to create a
presumption of the right to use defensive force and immunity from civil
liability when a person feels threatened by an intruder to a home, place of
business or employment or occupied vehicle.
-- SB 2942to study the
potential use of biodiesel.
-- Passed $382.8 million in
general obligation bond issues for various state facility improvement projects
and measures that will boost the economic development of the state. Included
are $10 million for the Economic Development Highway Act, $5 million for the
Rural Impact Act, $5 million for the Small Cities and Counties Fund, $25
million for construction and repairs for the State Public Health Lab, $56
million for the Northrop Grumman Shipyard, $14.2 million for repairs to the Old
Capitol Building, $28 million for Department of Public Safety improvements, $30
million for the Department of Marine Resources to help with Katrina damage, $20
million for the Local Bridge Replacement Program, $2 million for the B.B. King
Museum, $35 million for university and community college projects, $18 million
for the Sillers State Office Building, $51 million for FEMA match, $4 million
for the Arts and Entertainment Center in Meridian, $6 million for the Stennis
Space Center's Infinity Science and Tourism Project, $9 million for the NASA
Shared Services Project, $15 million for the Rentech coal project in Meridian,
$2 million for state arts projects and $4 million for the Community Heritage Grant
Fund.
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