Ready for the next laws
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Alicia Robinson
Think of them as New Year’s resolutions that may soon have the force
of law.
Newport-Mesa’s elected representatives will be pushing various
pieces of legislation in 2004, and some of them won’t be entirely
new.
Ken Maddox, 68th District assemblyman, will be attacking an issue
that’s been dogging businesses throughout the state: worker’s
compensation.
“I plan on carrying at last one piece of legislation to deal with
worker’s compensation fraud,” he said. “A lot of the abuse in the
system is perfectly legal.”
He wants to close loopholes in the law. One example is by
preventing physicians from owning medical equipment companies, which
they can get their patients to buy from at inflated prices.
Another item on his agenda is something you don’t hear from
legislators too often: “I’ll probably be actually looking to
eliminate some laws,” he said.
He hopes to repeal one of various recent laws that he feels create
“onerous hurdles” to gun ownership and infringe on 2nd Amendment
rights.
Maddox said he also expects to continue to defend Sept. 11-related
funding, which legislators often try to raid to solve budget
problems, and he’ll work on water-quality legislation to clean up
Orange County’s watersheds.
In Washington, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher will promote his legislation
that would require hospitals to report illegal immigrants to U.S.
authorities, spokesman Aaron Lewis said.
The bill is a follow-up to recent Medicare legislation that offers
reimbursement to hospitals for treating illegal aliens.
“We figured if hospitals are checking who’s an illegal immigrant
so they can get reimbursed, they might as well pass it along to the
border patrol,” Lewis said. “The problem is that hospitals are
already overburdened right now. It might prevent people coming across
the border to get medical care.”
Rohrabacher has also introduced legislation that would modernize
long-standing space regulations, allowing development of a U.S. space
tourism industry. As chairman of the House Space and Aeronautics
Subcommittee, Rohrabacher has a particular interest in the field.
Finally, this year, Rohrabacher “will be working to make sure that
Orange County receives its fair share in tax dollars back from
Washington, D.C.,” Lewis said. The congressman will support
clean-water projects for the area and funding for additional lanes on
San Diego Freeway.
Cox wants to take the fear out of the color-coded alerts
Rep. Chris Cox is reportedly aiming to make the nation’s
color-coded alert system regional instead of national, allowing
smooth sailing for some areas while others are battening down the
hatches.
Cox discussed the alert system on “Fox News Sunday” over the
weekend, when he said terrorists can take advantage of the current
system with threats that may be idle but are costly to guard against.
He’s sponsoring legislation that would base alert levels on
terrorist threats to specific regions rather than using one
nationwide alert, according to congressional newspaper The Hill.
And Democrats are getting on board with his plan, according to the
paper. Among them: fellow Orange County representative Loretta
Sanchez.
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