Slots Dies Again; Resurrection Possible
By MIKE TORRALBA
Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS (April 13, 2005) - Gov. Robert Ehrlich and the General
Assembly's top leaders on Tuesday put aside differences over
now-dead slots legislation, if only for a few minutes, to
celebrate the signing of an array of non-controversial bills
into law.
The 2005 General Assembly closed Monday night nowhere
close to an agreement on how many slot machines should be
allowed, where they should go, who should own them and how much
of the proceeds slots operators should get. It was the third
year that Ehrlich's signature slots proposal failed.
"It was a short night," Ehrlich said, laughing.
"And a long year," added House Speaker Michael Busch,
D-Anne Arundel.
Many of the bills signed Tuesday affect only specific
local jurisdictions. The governor signed a bill reducing the
amount the Baltimore Zoo must contribute to match state funds
for buying three new trams. Some new laws change alcohol
licensing fees in specific counties.
Others are more esoteric.
One extended the deadline for a report on the legibility
of written drug prescriptions. Another required hepatitis C
tests for boxers and kick-boxers before entering the ring.
But as soon as Tuesday's bill-signing ceremony -- the
first of an expected three -- was over, Senate President Thomas
V. Mike Miller Jr., D-Calvert, said the Republican governor
should reconvene the Legislature to pass a bill legalizing slot
machine gambling in Maryland.
"If I were the governor, I would say (to lawmakers),
'Listen, the House has passed a bill; the Senate's passed a
bill; you stay there until you get the job done right,'" Miller
told reporters.
The governor earlier said he was open to reconvening the
Legislature to work out a compromise on slots.
"Count me in, as long as the speaker (of the House of
Delegates) will negotiate in good faith," Ehrlich said at a
press conference Monday, less than one hour before the bill
officially died at the close of the General Assembly.
Even if a special session is called, there's no guarantee
a compromise could be reached.
Minutes after the session ended, Busch indicated he's not
willing to wrangle any more with Ehrlich and Miller over the
matter. He said slots legislation is not important enough to
bring lawmakers back to Annapolis.
"Special sessions are for times of crisis in the state of
Maryland. Certainly with a balanced budget (with) about a $400
million surplus, we are not in any type of crisis," said Busch,
who engineered the defeat of slots in each of the past three
years.
Part of Ehrlich's 2002 gubernatorial campaign was a pledge
to bring slots to Maryland. But on Monday he said he wasn't
worried the slots issue will hurt his chances at re-election.
"It's going to be an issue in the 2006 race, clearly,"
Ehrlich said. "And there will be some members (of the
Legislature) who will have a lot to answer for along the way."
This year, the governor tied his slots initiative to
public-school construction funding, saying legal slots would
bring in $100 million more for school projects.
Last fall, a task force led by state Treasurer Nancy Kopp
found that Maryland's school system was overcrowded and falling
into disrepair. The panel recommended the state give $250
million each year for the next eight years to fix the school
system.
Ehrlich's capital budget initially authorized $157 million
for school construction. But the two houses agreed to boost
funding to $250 million for the fiscal year by skimming from
various capital projects.
Under the Maryland Constitution, either the governor or a
majority of each house of the Legislature may call a special
session. It may deal only with a specific topic and may not last
more than 30 days.
The governor called a special session last winter to pass
an overhaul of the state's medical malpractice system. A special
session had not been held in Maryland since 1992, when it dealt
with a budget deficit.
Unhappy with the result, Ehrlich vetoed the bill. But the
Legislature overrode the veto to make the bill a law. |