Here's
a copy of the letter to the editor Cheyenne’s Ken McCauley submitted to the WTE
yesterday. It concerns the mandatory drug-testing (aka “punish the poor”) bill
making its way through the Wyoming House:
Last
week several legislators introduced a bill to require drug testing of needy
families participating in the (Power Program). The bill was introduced by the
sponsor as a state budget concern.
Of the 47 legislators who voted to introduce this bill, 14 voted against
mandatory testing of DUI suspects last year. They are willing to force those
with extreme financial need to undergo drug testing, but oppose testing drivers
who exhibit behavior extreme enough to qualify as probable cause to a trained
law enforcement officer.
Rep. Frank Peasley, of Douglas, speaking against the DUI bill last year, called
it “a pretty intrusive concept … something right out of a good 'ol vampire
movie.” Rep. Bunky Loucks, of Casper, told a reporter, “What are you going to
do? Are you going to strap people down [to test them]? To me that’s a scary
visual.”
But apparently, mandating testing for the poor doesn’t bother these
representatives a bit.
The program targeted by the bill is the Personal Opportunities with Employment
Opportunities (POWER) program. The POWER program is a “work program” -- not a
handout. Recipients are assigned jobs within their community in order to learn
job skills that will make them self-sufficient. Many suffer from social
disabilities or lack basic work skills. Most are assigned a job for a full
40-hour week, but in return for their work they receive a maximum benefit of
just $577 per month (for a family of three).
Let's put that in perspective. A Wyoming legislator receives $150 per day in
salary from the state. Most receive an additional $109 per day for expenses.
That means they receive more in just 4 days than a struggling family of 3 will
receive in an entire month with this subsidy.
Rep. Miller says the bill is necessary to control state costs – but the program
does not receive any funding from state revenue. Unlike the legislature budget,
the POWER program is funded 100% by a federal block grant and does not impact
the state budget at all. The drug testing, however, would be paid for by the
state when the recipient passes the test.
If the legislature is seriously concerned about paying state resources to
someone who might be under the influence, I'd suggest morning and afternoon alcohol
testing of the members of the legislature. This bill and the supporting votes
clearly shows we have members who are impaired.
Thanks to Ken for doing the research on this bill -- and digging up the legislative quotes. Find out more about the "punish the poor" bill at http://legisweb.state.wy.us/2012/Introduced/HB0082.pdf
2 comments:
Have you seen this roster, Mr. Shay?
South Dakota's legislature is in session, too: scary shit....
Best wishes,
larry
Thanks Larry. I ran the Wyoming ALEC lists last August. Funny how the sponsors of the most extreme conservative bills are from this ALEC roster.
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