Published April 09, 2006 12:34 am - The Minnesota Legislature so far has done well in the basic subjects, but has been faltering a bit when things get complex.
Our View — Legislature so far gets a B grade
The Minnesota Legislature so far has done well in the basic subjects, but has been faltering a bit when things get complex.
A bonding bill has been passed by both houses and they are not far apart. With any luck, there will be a low-acrimony, high productivity debate and swift passage to approve a bill that allocates a lot of necessary funding for repairs and maintenance of state-owned infrastructure. The bill also funds some necessary projects that have statewide impact such as the science and engineering building at Minnesota State University and some unnecessary projects such as the Duluth convention center.
Legislators or Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who has line item veto power, should trim the fat to keep the state’s credit rating reasonable with around $900 million in new borrowing.
Eminent domain
The eminent domain bill was a no brainer for the Legislature given the overwhelming media exposure that portrayed the U.S. Supreme Court decision last year in the Kelo case as oppressive government with its foot on the throat of the little guy. Most politicians are salivating on an issue like this. They all agree, there will be no opposition in the campaign on this issue and they can all claim to be for the little guy. Not surprisingly they passed a bill that makes it tougher for said oppressive government to take private land in eminent domain proceedings and give it to private real estate developers.
If they fumble the ball on this issue, they deserve to be “unelected.”
Stadiums? Gopher it
Finally, the Legislature acted on the Gopher stadium. The House overwhelmingly passed the Gopher-football-campus-again bill, correcting the errors of predecessors who put a college football team in a doomed, or domed, stadium off campus. Talk about multiple bad decisions.
The Senate and House also should look at a Twins stadium, but it would be nice to get the state or citizens as stockholders.
Then, help Zygi Wilf spend $1 billion. Give him something this year, with some contingency promise for the future. He’s a smart Jersey businessman; he’ll take what he can get and be thankful for a first year effort. Finish the deal next year.
More sales tax or less environment?
The Senate has approved a bill to increase the Minnesota sales tax to 6.875 from 6.5 percent to guarantee funding for environmental programs, conservation, the arts and even public radio.