House GOP Meets Agenda Goals, Paves Way For Long-term Road Funding
By HOUSE SPEAKER BRIAN C. BOSMA
As the Speaker of the Indiana House, I announced some lofty goals for this year’s short legislative session on Organization Day last November. Tackling road and bridge funding issues, protecting and promoting Indiana’s teachers and students, curbing our state’s illegal drug epidemic and replacing the ISTEP test all topped the list. And I made one more pledge — in this season of endless political sniping, the Indiana House would conduct itself in a civil, inclusive and bipartisan fashion. I am pleased to state that Hoosiers are winners on virtually each of these counts.
“Crossroads of America” isn’t just a slogan in Indiana. Our economy depends on goods traveling on our roads and bridges … our roads serve more than 80 percent of Hoosier communities. Sound infrastructure investments aren’t an “expense;” they are a key economic growth investment.
While House Republicans proposed a comprehensive, responsible and sustainable road funding plan, legislators ultimately struck a compromise to address state road needs over the next two years, while approving part of our proposed long-term local funding tools. The final plan gives local governments some additional options to address their needs and begins the process of redirecting all sales tax on gasoline to dedicated road funding …
House Enrolled Act 1001 creates a good starting point. We direct $186 million upfront to a newly created local road and bridge matching grant account. We will also redirect 1.5 cents of the 7 cents of sales tax on gasoline to the matching account as a source of ongoing local funding and made permanent an additional penny of that sales tax dedicated to the Motor Vehicle Highway fund. In addition, Senate Enrolled Act 67 returns to local units $505 million in local income tax reserves currently held by the state with $330 million now dedicated to roads…
On the education front, we acted quickly with the Senate, Gov. Mike Pence and Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz to protect schools and teachers from unfair penalties as the state transitions to new, more rigorous standards. We also acted to repeal ISTEP and are working to assemble a team of experts to assist policymakers in identifying the best replacement. We can no longer tolerate long days of testing students without getting results in the hands of parents and teachers for more than half a year …
We also established the “Next Generation Hoosier Educators Scholarship” designed to attract Indiana’s best and brightest high school graduates to the teaching profession. As the author of HEA 1002, I firmly believe the single most important indicator of student success is a great teacher in the classroom. This scholarship will provide top students who commit to teaching in our schools for at least five years, with up to $7,500 per year to cover tuition.
As the top meth-producing state in the nation, Indiana needed to take action this session to restrict the ingredients used to manufacture methamphetamine…
Rep. Ben Smaltz of Auburn worked closely with our Senate colleagues and other stakeholders to enact legislation allowing law abiding Hoosiers to continue to access medications containing pseudoephedrine… Under SEA 80, if a purchaser has an existing relationship with a pharmacy they can obtain PSE as they do today. If a pharmacist doesn’t know them and cannot confirm their need, they may purchase an extraction-resistant product or a smaller package of PSE. If the purchaser refuses the alternative options, a prescription is required.
We also toughened penalties for the worst drug traffickers, assuring those dealing meth or heroin with a prior drug felony conviction would serve at least 10 years behind bars, and provided grants to counties to implement evidence-based mental health and addiction forensic treatment services.
On our last goal, Hoosiers should be pleased that the vast majority of the matters addressed by your General Assembly this session were supported on a bipartisan basis, with the great majority of bills receiving nearly unanimous support in both chambers. Legislators worked hard to find common ground, and on most issues, were successful…