I am posting this passage for Jim Bowden who encountered technical difficulties and could not add it himself. — Jim Bacon
My state senator, Marty Williams (R), has another op ed in the Daily Press ( โBall is in Houseโs court now,โ May 2, 2006). Apparently, according to Marty, the ball is a โregional planโ for Hampton Roads passed by the Senate last week.
Marty concludes with his conditions for a Transportation Plan:
โProvide meaningful support for transportation needs for the foreseeable future.
Do not raid the general fund ensuring that roads do not compete with schools, public safety or health care.
Do not pay for road construction by saddling other parts of the budget with additional debt that will have to be paid back later with interest.
Weโve heard enough criticism from House Republicans. What Virginians deserve from them now are constructive contributions. That means taking action on the Hampton Roads regional plan now.โ
I agree. The House should reject the regional plan if includes another unelected government with taxing authority. Marty pushed this before and the voters in his own district have decisively beaten it – twice – at the polls.
Marty never gives us a number on how much money is needed each year for meaningful support. We need a number, not an adjective.
Marty was happy to raid the Transportation Trust Fund to move money to the General Fund. Either he has a principled reason to raid funds one way only โ from Transportation โ or he is just being a politician.
Marty was thrilled to support saddling Virginians with huge debts a few years ago. Again, has he has discovered, recently, a principle that forever more he will fight bond issues, or he is just being a politician?
Marty never tells us how much the professional staff will cost for this unelected regional government. How many persons will be hired for what jobs? How much will they be paid?
Marty never explains why VDOT canโt manage the tolls across the James River โ and maybe on I-64.
Marty has failed to offer a plan to fund the first priority for Hampton Roads since he was elected in 1995. Eleven years without any leadership, except to demand a new, unelected government with taxing authority and no oversight, means the ball really is in the House. Clearly, the Virginia Senate, especially the ruling majority of Republican senators, isnโt up to setting priorities, making decisions and providing leadership.
What is the url for this Senate plan for unelected regional government for Hampton Roads?