Thursday, September 11, 2014
State and Local Stories
Hampton businessman David J. Dietrich was removed from the Hampton City Council meeting Wednesday evening by a security guard, nonuniformed officer and Police Chief Terry Sult. Dietrich, a regular speaker at the city council's public comment period, has repeatedly asked the council to pass a resolution saying the city will not enforce the National Defense Authorization Act of 2012. He has regularly made the request for more than a year. Wednesday evening, Mayor George Wallace told Dietrich that the council will not consider his request. City staff then cut the volume to the speaker's microphone. Wednesday evening was the first meeting held by the city council under new rules where the public comment period was moved to the end of the meeting. It had been previously held prior to the council's business meetings. At least one speaker was not allowed to approach the podium because they did not sign up to speak prior to the 6:30 p.m. cutoff time.
Daily Press
Twenty years ago, Harold McClendon offered to help his son with a middle school homework assignment on his ancestors. Harold hasn’t really ever stopped. The 71-year-old federal retiree from Mount Vernon spends part of nearly every day at an archive or library, or on the computer, chasing down McClendons and Lewises (his mother’s maiden name); Morans and Apgars (his wife’s parents’ surnames).
Washington Post
The McDonnell trial is over, but gift-giving is still a gravy train for executive and legislative officials in Virginia, despite being at the core of one of the most scandalous episodes in the state’s political history. After the ex-governor and his wife were indicted earlier this year, lawmakers submitted dozens of bills aimed at reining things in. The one that survived – HB1211 – is 120 pages of definitions, fine points and exceptions. Boiled down: (old rules, new rules, gifts categorized)
Virginian-Pilot
Under the existing system, state legislators and numerous state and local officials are required to file annual disclosure forms listing details of their finances, including any gifts of $50 or more from lobbyists. Members of the General Assembly file their reports with the legislature’s Division of Legislative Services while other officials file with the Secretary of the Commonwealth. Lobbyists also must file similar disclosures. Anyone who wants to see what’s being reported must make the trip to Richmond and go to one of those offices and pull up each individual’s reports. There is no central, searchable database provided by state government. Only about half of the disclosure reports filed by officials are in an electronic format that can be loaded onto a computer, David Poole of the Virginian Public Access Project noted. The rest are on paper forms, requiring each number to be entered into the database by hand. To date, the group has been able to provide the gift figures only for the state’s top elected officials: the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and the 140 members of the state Senate and House of Delegates.
Chesterfield Observer
|