Claudette Konola
 
The Senate stood up for women this morning, when they voted down the Blunt amendment to the transportation bill. What this amendment was doing in the transportation bill, in the first place, is confusing.

Maybe Washington should consider some of the Sunshine Laws that were passed by legislators in Colorado. At least in Colorado our legislators have to keep bills and amendments to one subject instead of attaching any old prized bit of ideology to an important bill, hoping to fly under the radar

This amendment would have made it possible for any employer to deny any employee any medical procedure that s/he didn’t like just because s/he didn’t like the procedure. So maybe it would be dialysis, or a hip replacement surgery, or needles and test strips for diabetics. It went way beyond trying to keep the government between a woman and her doctor, which is already several steps too far into totalitarianism.

The sad thing is that it didn’t fail by a huge margin. The final vote was 51 to 48. Even three misguided Democrats voted in favor of this boneheaded proposal: Ben Nelson of Nebraska (who, thankfully ,is not sitting for reelection, and hopefully will be replaced by John Kerrey); Robert Casey  of Pennsylvania; and Joe Manchin of West Virginia. Getting the bill over the line was the retiring Republican Senator, Olympia Snowe of Main.

Senator Michael Bennet, confused about the same thing that confuses me, asked “How is this conversation relevant to job creation or to infrastructure?"

Homework

LA Times Story About Senate Vote
 
 
The Bunning Circus that captivated our attention over the past week has finally ended. One man proved that the definition of a majority in the US Senate is nothing more than one arrogant, self-serving, Republican Senator with the ability to hold up an emergency spending bill with a vote of 1-99. Except if you watched the local news you might have thought that it was a Democratic plot to deprive local physicians of a living wage.

Government only works when the sun shines on the actions of legislators. Colorado has a sunshine law that says that any time two or more legislators or members of any government agency or policy making group meet; the meeting must be open to the public. Of course those open meetings only achieve their goal if a member of the public also attends the meeting, preferably a member of the press who is interested in reporting unbiased facts.

The federal government needs the same kind of regulation, and Senator Bennet is introducing a bill designed to disinfect some of the smoke filled rooms in Washington with a little sunshine, although the best we will get is partly cloudy. His proposed reforms are nowhere near as sweeping as Colorado’s laws, and have little probability of being passed as proposed. Kudos to Bennet--he is trying to end the arrogant, self-serving majority of one. He is even trying to make it illegal for a former legislator to become a lobbyist. Good luck on that one, but thank you for standing up and trying to do what is right.

Homework:

http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_14501882

http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_14502062

http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/open/00openmeet.htm