THE HOUSE AND SENATE: There were no roll calls in the House or Senate last week. This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call reviews five of the key votes from the 2021-2022 session dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.
COVID-19 EMERGENCY SICK LEAVE AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE CHANGES (H 3771) โ House 157-0, Senate 40-0, approved a bill that would provide qualified workers with up to five days of paid leave for COVID-19-related emergencies including workers who are sick with the virus, under a quarantine order, recovering from receiving a vaccine or caring for a family member ill with the virus.
The measure is also designed to relieve employers from expensive unexpected unemployment system costs. Many businesses were shocked when they saw their first-quarter unemployment contribution bills and found the solvency assessment rate had jumped from 0.58% in 2020 to 9.23% in 2021, raising costs in many cases by hundreds or thousands of dollars.
Under the proposal, the state would shift all COVID-related unemployment claims from the solvency fund into a new COVID claims fund and the solvency fund would revert to its original function. Employers, who fund the stateโs jobless aid system, will still be on the hook in the long term, and a COVID-related assessment on businesses will kick into effect for 2021 and 2022.
โIn order for us to fully recover from the pandemic, all Massachusetts workers need access to emergency paid sick time if they are sick with COVID-19, quarantined or need to care for a sick family member,โ said Deb Fastino, executive director of the Coalition for Social Justice. โMany essential frontline workers need paid sick time so they can recover from the side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine.โ
โMassachusetts workers and businesses share the same goal of restoring jobs lost during the COVID pandemic and getting back to work,โ said Steve Tolman, president of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO. โBy spreading this yearโs solvency assessment over the next two decades using already authorized borrowing, the House took the necessary step at this time to enable that continued economic recovery.โ
(A โYesโ vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Donald Berthiaume, Yes; Rep. Natalie Blais, Yes; Rep. Daniel Carey, Yes; Rep. Mindy Domb, Yes; Rep. Jacob Oliveira, Yes; Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, Yes; Rep. Susannah Whipps, Present; Sen. Joanne Comerford, Yes; Sen. Eric Lesser, Yes
EARLY RELEASE OF PRISONERS (H 4002) โ House 132-27, Senate 37-3, overrode Gov. Bakerโs veto of a section that authorizes the commissioner of corrections, if it can be done safely, to release, transition to home confinement or furlough prisoners with prioritization given to populations most vulnerable to serious medical outcomes from COVID-19. The section also maximizes the awarding of โgood timeโ by eliminating mandates for participation in programming for those close to their release dates and awarding credits toward reduce sentences for time served during the pandemic.
Another provision authorizes the Disability Law Center to monitor the continuity of care for Bridgewater state hospital patients who are discharged to county correctional facilities or department of mental health facilities.
In his veto message, the governor said that he struck the section because it is not consistent with his original budget proposal.
Override supporters said the veto would eliminate important measures to ensure the stateโs correctional facilities remain safe and healthy environments for all prisoners and staff.
(A โYesโ vote is for the section authorizing the release and furlough of prisoners and allowing the Disability Law Center to monitor the care of prisoners transferred from Bridgewater. A โNoโ vote is against the section.)
Rep. Donald Berthiaume, No; Rep. Natalie Blais, Yes; Rep. Daniel Carey, Yes; Rep. Mindy Domb, Yes; Rep. Jacob Oliveira, Yes; Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, Yes; Rep. Susannah Whipps, Yes; Sen. Joanne Comerford, Yes; Sen. Eric Lesser, Yes
EXCLUDE MUNICIPAL WORKERS (H 3771) โ House 0-158, Senate on a voice vote without a roll call, rejected Gov. Bakerโs amendment that would exclude municipal employees from the emergency COVID-19 paid leave program.
The Baker administration has defended the exclusion of municipal workers arguing that they already have strong leave protections in place and that many municipalities can access federal funds to implement their own leave programs that could align with state and federal leave guarantees.
Rep. Josh Cutler, (D-Pembroke), House chair of the Committee on Labor and Workforce Development disagreed with Baker. โAs the speaker has made clear, the House stands firm in supporting COVID emergency paid leave for all Massachusetts workers,โ said Cutler. โThat includes our municipal employees, the teachers, police officers, firefighters, health agents, janitors, veteransโ agents and many others who have been essential to our stateโs COVID-19 response. Further, our actions today to address unemployment solvency account rates will help stem rising costs for employers and small businesses.โ
House GOP Minority Leader Brad Jones (R-North Reading) also disagreed with Baker, a fellow Republican. โHaving access to emergency paid sick leave is essential to workers who are recovering from the coronavirus, caring for a family member or trying to schedule their vaccination,โ Jones said. โMunicipal employees โ including essential frontline workers like police and firefighters โ have also faced numerous challenges created by the COVID-19 global pandemic, and the Houseโs vote will ensure that they are also entitled to the same paid sick leave benefits as other non-municipal workers.โ
(A โNoโ vote is against the amendment and favors including municipal employees.)
Rep. Donald Berthiaume, No; Rep. Natalie Blais, No; Rep. Daniel Carey, No; Rep. Mindy Domb, No; Rep. Jacob Oliveira, No; Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, No; Rep. Susannah Whipps; Present
COVID-19 POLICY EXTENSIONS (S 2475) โ House 150-10, (Senate on a voice vote without a roll call) approved legislation that would extend many of the measures instituted in Massachusetts during the COVID-19 state of emergency that expired when the original emergency declaration ended.
Provisions include allowing public bodies subject to the open meeting law to continue to hold remote meetings; allowing cities and towns to approve and extend permits for outdoor dining; allowing restaurants to offer alcoholic beverages, including mixed drinks, for off-site consumption with the purchase of food; and extending several protections that have been granted to tenants who have difficulty paying rent.
Other provisions include reinstating the remote option for representative town meetings and meetings of nonprofits and public corporations; notary services; reverse-mortgage loan counseling; and flexibility for assisted living residences.
Supporters said that these provisions have been helpful to businesses, municipalities, health care providers, residents and communities during this extraordinary time.
Opponents said the measure limits homeownersโ rights to eject a nonpaying renter and puts many in a terrible financial bind as they still have to pay taxes, insurance, mortgage and upkeep of the building. They said they do not believe it is fair or constitutional that the government has the ability to seize private property โ which is basically what is happening.
(A โYesโ vote is for the bill. A โNoโ vote is against it.)
Rep. Donald Berthiaume, No; Rep. Natalie Blais, Yes; Rep. Daniel Carey, Yes; Rep. Mindy Domb, Yes; Rep. Jacob Oliveira, Yes; Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, Yes; Rep. Susannah Whipps, Yes
$1.6 BILLION SPENDING PACKAGE (H 4532) โ House 156-0, Senate on a voice vote without a roll call, approved a $1.6 billion supplemental budget that contains $700 million for COVID-19 related expenses including $432 million for COVID-19 testing, $72 million for treatments, $45 million for expanded vaccination access and $25 million for personal protective equipment.
Other provisions include $140 million for grants to special education schools to address the impacts of COVID-19 and subsequent variants; $100 million for cities and towns for roads; $100 million for rental assistance for needy families; and extending eviction protections for tenants who have active assistance applications.
The package also extends from April 1, 2022 to April 1, 2023 outdoor dining at restaurants and from May 1, 2022 to April 1, 2023 the law allowing restaurants to sell beer, wine and cocktails with takeout orders.
Supporters said the package is a fiscally responsible one that will fund important programs, benefit many residents and help Massachusetts prepare for the future.
(A โYesโ vote is for the $1.6 billion package).
Rep. Donald Berthiaume, Yes; Rep. Natalie Blais, Yes; Rep. Daniel Carey, Yes; Rep. Mindy Domb, Yes; Rep. Jacob Oliveira, Yes; Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, Yes; Rep. Susannah Whipps, Yes
GALVIN CERTIFIES CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT HIKING TAXES ON MILLIONAIRES โ Secretary of State Bill Galvin signed the final certification of the new constitutional amendment, approved by voters as Question 1 in November. The amendment would allow a graduated income tax in Massachusetts and impose an additional 4% income tax, in addition to the current flat 5% one, on taxpayersโ earnings of more than $1 million annually. Language in the change requires that โsubject to appropriation, the revenue will go to fund quality public education, affordable public colleges and universities, and for the repair and maintenance of roads, bridges and public transportation.โ
GALVIN CERTIFIES LAW REGULATING DENTAL INSURANCE RATES โ Galvin also certified Question 2 which voters handily approved on the November ballot. The new law regulates dental insurance rates, requiring companies to spend at least 83% of premiums on member dental expenses and quality improvements, instead of administrative expenses.
HONOR MERCY OTIS WARREN (H 4281) โ The House gave initial approval to a bill that would call for renowned Cape Cod artist and sculptor David Lewis to construct, at no expense to the state, a memorial display in the likeness of Mercy Otis Warren, an important and underrepresented historical woman of the American Revolution from Barnstable. The bust would be displayed in the Massachusetts Statehouse.
โMercy Otis Warren was a leading writer and patriot in colonial Massachusetts,โ said co-sponsor Rep. Kip Diggs (D-Barnstable). โYet, she remains a little-known figure to the public. I sponsored this legislation because what better way to educate the public about this Cape Cod woman and her remarkable influence on Massachusetts and American history than to place a memorial of her, created pro bono by an artist from her hometown, within the Statehouse for visitors to see and learn about? I am very glad to see the House agree by advancing this legislation to honor the contributions of Mercy Otis Warren.โ
HISTORIC FIRST SPORTS BETTING LICENSE GOES TO ENCORE BOSTON HARBOR โ The Massachusetts Gaming Commission voted unanimously to award Everettโs casino, Encore Boston Harbor, the first sports wagering operator license in the stateโs history. โNext on the agenda is that the Everett casino now must obtain a certificate of operations and meet additional conditions before bets can actually be accepted.
โI think that this is great for the commonwealth,โ said Gaming Commissioner Jordan Maynard. Earlier this week the commission deferred its vote on the applications from Plainridge Park Casino in Plainville and Springfieldโs MGM.
Gov. Charlie Baker had signed the law after a four-year effort by proponents to legalize sports betting on professional and college sports for Massachusetts residents over 21 years old at the stateโs casinos, slots parlors, simulcast centers and through mobile platforms. Betting on Massachusetts colleges and universities would not be allowed unless the school is playing in a tournament like March Madness.
DEMOCRAT CHALLENGER WINS BY ONE VOTE โ Following a recount in the 2nd Essex Representative District, challenger Democrat Kristin now leads 10-year Republican incumbent Rep. Lenny Mirra (R-Georgetown) by a single vote. Mirra originally had led Krassner by 10 votes out of more than 23,000 cast in the Nov. 8 election. Mirra has indicated he will challenge the outcome in court.
QUOTABLE QUOTES
โMy wife is really looking forward to having me around a little more, so I donโt think Iโll be a candidate in โ24 for anything. I will certainly try to be involved in a positive way.โ
Gov. Charlie Baker when asked if he plans to run for president in 2024.
โAs a former student athlete and coach, I know that sports can be a powerful unifier. Today, we brought together coaches, athletic directors and educators who are committed to ensuring that young people can participate in school sports in a safe and inclusive environment.โ
Governor-elect Maura Healey at a conference of Education Leaders and Boston Sports Teams at TD Garden on preventing and addressing hate in school sports.
โOur first responders are the heart of our communities. They help keep residents and communities safe, and we owe them a debt of gratitude. These grants are an investment in public safety.โ
Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito announcing $4.8 million in funding to support municipal police and fire staffing in several communities.
โOver the last decade, our approach as a commonwealth toward addressing the needs of children and families has evolved. A growing body of research has helped us better understand the negative impact that court involvement and out-of-home placement of any kind can have on youth, and our state has increasingly focused on building our system of school and community-based supports for children and families.โ
Maria Mossaides, Director of the Office of the Child Advocate, on a major policy report with recommendations for improving the way the state provides support to families who are struggling with their childโs behaviors, such as truancy or repeatedly running away from home.
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
