Legislative Update Volume 21, No
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2008 Legislative Primary Election Results Page 1 of 9
2008 Legislative Primary Election Results Page 1 of 9 District & County Candidate Name Political Party Affiliation & # of Votes House District 01 Eileen Carney (D) Susan Ague (R) Gerald Bennett (R) Ginny Emerson (R) Albert Purviance (R) Lincoln 886 173 1060 88 61 Grand Total 886 173 1060 88 61 House District 02 Timothy Linehan (D) Chas Vincent (R) * Lincoln 802 1168 Grand Total 802 1168 House District 03 Michael Holm (D) Dee Brown (R) Flathead 979 1019 Grand Total 979 1019 House District 04 Mike Jopek (D) * John Fuller (R) Flathead 1517 858 Grand Total 1517 858 House District 05 Jake Pannell (D) Keith Regier (R) Harm Toren (R) Flathead 854 1103 556 Grand Total 854 1103 556 House District 06 Scott Wheeler (D) Bill Beck (R) * Flathead 1203 1346 Grand Total 1203 1346 House District 07 Shannon Hanson (D) Jon Sonju (R) * Flathead 814 1112 Grand Total 814 1112 House District 08 John de Neeve (D) Cheryl Steenson (D) Craig Witte (R) * Flathead 369 696 722 Grand Total 369 696 722 House District 09 Edd Blackler (D) David Carlson (R) Roger Daley (R) Bob Keenan (R) Scott Reichner (R) Flathead 741 101 53 354 814 Lake 489 56 25 310 68 Grand Total 1230 157 78 664 882 House District 10 Carla Augustad (D) Mark Blasdel (R) * Flathead 1027 1589 Grand Total 1027 1589 House District 11 M Patrick Estenson (D) Janna Taylor (R) * Flathead 134 265 Lake 1272 1046 Grand Total 1406 1311 House District 12 John Fleming (D) Carol Cummings (R) Josh King (R) Ronald Marquardt (R) Lake 1452 218 204 595 Grand Total 1452 218 204 595 House District 13 Jim Elliott (D) Pat -
Voting Record
Voting Record Northern Plains members fight for clean energy and family ag; defeat corporate welfare espite anti-conservation majorities in both the House prepare for the coming energy transition. and the Senate, Northern Plains members advanced This scorecard provides a brief overview of Northern Plains’ work our mission to protect the environment, family farms D during the 2019 session, how representatives and senators voted, and ranches, and our unique Montana quality of life in the 2019 and which Northern Plains priority bills the Governor vetoed and Legislature. signed. Although our top-priority proactive bills to restore a Montana A few very bad bills were passed and then vetoed. Montana will country-of-origin labeling program (COOL) and create a have a new governor in 2021, and we can see how important it is to commercial property-assessed clean energy program (C-PACE) have that check on irresponsible bills that are passed by legislators. failed to pass, your visits to Helena, calls and messages to legislators, and all your other support elevated both issues in ways that will We carefully selected the votes recorded here in order to pick the continue to build toward positive change. most representative actions (without overwhelming you). Just as important, you helped hold the line against threats to our Take a look and see how your representative and senator voted. If land and water and attempts to saddle Montanans with energy you’re proud of their scores, thank them. If you’re discouraged by company debt and Colstrip cleanup costs. And, you helped pass a their scores, let them know! few good bills to promote family agriculture and help facilitate and Some improvements on family agriculture but still no “COOL” he 66th session of the Montana Legislature adjourned Responding to consumer demand, US cattle prices improved on April 25. -
2007 Montana Legislative Scorecard
MONTANA LEGISLATIVE 2007 SCORECARD Support Conservation Politics With Your Gift Montana Conservation Voters’ mission is to elect conservation candidates, hold elected officials accountable and educate and activate voters on a wide range of conservation and environmental issues. This scorecard is central to that mission. By providing concrete information on how your legislator voted on conservation bills, MCV helps you choose whom to sup- port in upcoming elections and whom to hold accountable. MCV is a grassroots organization – which means we need you! Please consider becoming a member of Montana Con- servation Voters or increasing your contribution amount to help support the publication and distribution of this scorecard. Membership in MCV brings many benefits – check them out at www.mtvoters.org. Please read this scorecard and then take action. Talk to your neighbors, friends and family about how the legislature af- fects Montana’s quality of life – our clean air and water, open spaces, wildlife and public health. Become a member of MCV and ask them to do the same. Make your voice heard and your vote count! PO Box 63 NON-PROFIT Billings, MT 59103 US POSTAGE PAID [email protected] BILLINGS, MT www.mtvoters.org PERMIT #63 www.mtvoters.org [email protected] (SNAPSHOT CONT.) Though citizens don’t often sue over agency MEPA decisions (lawsuits under MEPA have been filed only 39 times out of over 39,000 state actions that have been reviewed under MEPA in 36 years), Lange still erupted with an- gry rhetoric at the close of a hearing on his bill. “I’m sick and tired of people that are paid to stand up here and go to court and obstruct facilities just because they don’t like it,” he said. -
MINUTES MONTANA HOUSE of REPRESENTATIVES 63Rd
MINUTES MONTANA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 63rd LEGISLATURE - REGULAR SESSION COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY Call to Order: Chair Krayton Kerns, on March 27, 2013 at 8:00 A.M., in Room 137 Capitol ROLL CALL Members Present: Rep. Krayton Kerns, Chair (R) Rep. Gerald (Jerry) Bennett, Vice Chair (R) Rep. Margaret (Margie) MacDonald, Vice Chair (D) Rep. Virginia Court (D) Rep. Alan Doane (R) Rep. Jenifer Gursky (D) Rep. Ellie Boldman Hill (D) Rep. Sarah Laszloffy (R) Rep. Dennis R. Lenz (R) Rep. Carolyn Pease-Lopez (D) Rep. Keith Regier (R) Rep. Bridget Smith (D) Rep. Kirk Wagoner (R) Rep. Wendy Warburton (R) Members Excused: Rep. Mark Blasdel (R) Rep. Jennifer Eck (D) Rep. Clayton Fiscus (R) Rep. David Halvorson (R) Rep. Ryan Lynch (D) Rep. Jerry O'Neil (R) Members Absent: None Staff Present: Karen Armstrong, Committee Secretary Helen Thigpen, Legislative Branch Audio Committees: These minutes are in outline form only. They provide a list of participants and a record of official action taken by the committee. The link to the audio recording of the meeting is available on the Legislative Branch website. Committee Business Summary: Hearing & Date Posted: HB 629, 3/25/2013 Executive Action: HB 603, HB 612, SB 160, SB 196, SB 198 130327JUH.Hm1 HOUSE COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY March 27, 2013 PAGE 2 of 13 00:13:44 Chairman Kerns EXECUTIVE ACTION ON HB 612 00:15:15 Motion: Rep. G. Bennett moved that HB 612 DO PASS. Discussion: 00:15:42 Rep. MacDonald 00:16:29 Rep. Smith 00:16:53 Rep. Regier 00:17:10 Rep. -
Maco LEGISLATIVE UPDATE VOLUME 26, NO
MACo LEGISLATIVE UPDATE VOLUME 26, NO. 13 APRIL 5, 2021 MACO & THE MONTANA LEGISLATURE The Montana Association of The Montana Association of Counties’ website has a section dedicated to helping Counties (MACo) publishes this weekly bulletin containing members keep track of the happenings during the Montana’s Legislative Session: click summary descriptions of bills of here to go to our policy pages. In this area of the website, you’ll find MACo’s resolutions, interest to local government links to pertinent bills, the current and past issues of our weekly Legislative Update, officials. Each issue’s hearing schedule lists only the bills that hearing calendars, committee listings, and more. have been introduced during the week. 2021 PROJECTED SESSION CALENDAR Previous issues of the MACo AMENDED BY LEADERSHIP MARCH 12, 2021 Legislative Update can be found on Note: Legislative leadership holds the authority to further revise the schedule, including the our website’s policy section or click days the Legislature meets and proposed breaks. here for direct access to the In accordance with 5-2-103, MCA, each regular session of the Legislature convenes on the first archive. Monday in January of each odd-numbered year or, if January 1st is a Monday, on the first CONTACTING LEGISLATORS Wednesday. Introduction deadlines: Generally, bills and resolutions must be introduced within 2 legislative LEGISLATIVE INFO DESK (406) 444-4800 days after delivery. JR 40-50, H40-10. “General bills” is used to denote all bills, except appropriation or revenue bills, and all joint resolutions. SENATORS Notes: Deadline dates are determined according to legislative days. -
2019 Montana History and Final Status
MONTANA HISTORY AND FINAL STATUS of Bills and Resolutions of the SENATE and HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES of the State of Montana SIXTY-SIXTH LEGISLATURE REGULAR SESSION January 7, 2019, through April 25, 2019 SCOTT SALES GREG HERTZ President of the Senate Speaker of the House MARILYN MILLER LINDSEY VROEGINDEWEY Secretary of the Senate Chief Clerk of the House DEBRA POLHEMUS CAROLYN TSCHIDA Deputy Secretary of the Senate Deputy Chief Clerk of the House RICK BERGER TERRY MYHRE Senate Rostrum House Rostrum Status Input Clerk Status Input Clerk Published and Distributed by Montana Legislative Services Division Capitol Bldg Rm 110 — 1301 E 6th Ave PO Box 201706 Helena MT 59620-1706 Telephone (406) 444-3064 Fax (406) 444-3036 Internet leg.mt.gov Legislative Services Division Susan Byorth Fox, Executive Director Programmer/Analyst Thomas Castona Jonny Santy Jim Gordon Alysa Semans Layout & Distribution Molly A. Petersen Proofreading Kip Rusek, Senior Proofreader Indexing Services provided by LexisNexis Matthew Bender & Company, Inc. 701 East Water Street Charlottesville VA 22902-5389 Printed and Bound by West, a Thomson Reuters business 610 Opperman Drive Eagan MN 55123 MONTANA HISTORY AND FINAL STATUS TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Officers and Members of the Montana Senate ......................................................................... 5 Officers and Members of the Montana House of Representatives .......................................... 7 Totals and Tallies of Bills and Resolutions ............................................................................. -
Oral History Interview with Ron Erickson, July 25, 2020
Archives and Special Collections Mansfield Library, University of Montana Missoula MT 59812-9936 Email: [email protected] Telephone: (406) 243-2053 This transcript represents the nearly verbatim record of an unrehearsed interview. Please bear in mind that you are reading the spoken word rather than the written word. Oral History Number: 476-005 Interviewee: Ron Erickson Interviewer: Clara McRae Date of Interview: July 25, 2020 Project: G.A.S.P and the History of Missoula’s Environmental Movement Oral History Project Clara McRae: All right, so can you please state your full name, date of birth, and where you were born. Ron Erickson: My name is Ron Erickson. I was born on [edited for restriction] 1933 in Peoria, Illinois. CM: How long have you lived in Missoula, and why did you move here? RE: We moved here in 1965. I was already teaching. I came as an associate professor of chemistry at that time. The university was about to begin its PhD program in chemistry. The family wanted to move out of Buffalo, New York. I'd been teaching for four years at Canisius College, which is...it was a very nice college. Jesuit. All male. It had a really decent chemistry department. Before that I had done post-doctoral work for three years, so when I came, they knew that I would do research. I'd been doing research and that I would continue to do so. CM: Can you tell me a bit about your family...both before and after you moved to Missoula? RE: Sure. My wife Nancy I met while I was a teaching assistant at the University of Iowa. -
Maco LEGISLATIVE UPDATE VOLUME 26, NO
MACo LEGISLATIVE UPDATE VOLUME 26, NO. 5 JANUARY 31, 2021 MACO & THE MONTANA LEGISLATURE The Montana Association of The Montana Association of Counties’ website has a section dedicated to helping Counties (MACo) publishes this weekly bulletin containing members keep track of the happenings during the Montana’s Legislative Session: click summary descriptions of bills of here to go to our policy pages. In this area of the website, you’ll find MACo’s resolutions, interest to local government links to pertinent bills, the current and past issues of our weekly Legislative Update, officials. Each issue’s hearing schedule lists only the bills that hearing calendars, committee listings, and more. have been introduced during the week. 2021 PROJECTED SESSION CALENDAR Previous issues of the MACo AMENDED BY LEADERSHIP JANUARY 20, 2021 Legislative Update can be found on Note: Legislative leadership holds the authority to further revise the schedule, including the our website’s policy section or click days the Legislature meets and proposed breaks. here for direct access to the In accordance with 5-2-103, MCA, each regular session of the Legislature convenes on the first archive. Monday in January of each odd-numbered year or, if January 1st is a Monday, on the first CONTACTING LEGISLATORS Wednesday. Introduction deadlines: Generally, bills and resolutions must be introduced within 2 legislative LEGISLATIVE INFO DESK (406) 444-4800 days after delivery. JR 40-50, H40-10. “General bills” is used to denote all bills, except appropriation or revenue bills, and all joint resolutions. SENATORS Notes: Deadline dates are determined according to legislative days. -
Legislative Bulletin 2021
No. 67 Jan. 29 Issue 2 Legislative Bulletin 2021 Where’s the action in the 67th legislative session? Every legislative session has its own distinct personality. year. We appreciate all of the support and solidarity that Certain issues rise to the fore and others are left behind. Northern Plains members are extending to allies targeted by Some of you may be waiting on Action Alerts or phone tree some of this legislation. Meanwhile, we’re keeping an eye on calls that haven’t yet come. the big picture and watching for what might be just around the corner. You haven’t gotten these alerts because, thus far, our core issues of conservation and family agriculture have not taken Things can change fast in Helena, and we’re ready to shift gears center stage this session. Instead, the dominant concerns have at any moment. Some key bills we’re excited to support were surrounded bills that would harm marginalized Montanans, recently introduced or will be next week. We’ll be reaching make participating in our democracy harder, and continue out soon with more ways to take action on those. Until then, to divide us -- rather than helping Montanans get back on you can read below to learn more about our strategy to get their feet economically and otherwise after a challenging C-PACE passed this session! Getting on PACE for success in today’s legislative climate This week, we introduced our Commercial Property Assessed property upgrades that help them save on their utility bills. Capital Enhancements (C-PACE) bill (SB 147)! Many of The program is voluntary and the financing is repaid as an you may know this is the third consecutive legislative session assessment on the property’s annual tax bill. -
Montana Legislature
4/29/2021 LAWS Bill Search Results Page Montana Legislature 2021 January Bill Search Results Regular Session Log Off Pref Acct The 67th Regular Session of the Montana Legislature will convene on January 4th, 2021 Introduced Bills Matching the Search Criteria Current Logon ID - KIRKJAMES Preference List - SAM Followed Bills | Go to Unintroduced Bill List | * after status indicates the bill is probably dead Total number of Introduced Bills - 190 Total number of Introduced and Unintroduced Bills - 364 Print Friendly Email this Page READ ME Bill Type - LC Status Primary Sponsor Status Short Title Note Number Number Date HB 2 LC0456 Llew Jones (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/29/2021 General 7 RT. Monitor (R) HD 18 Appropriations Act HB 3 LC0457 David Bedey Chapter Number 02/18/2021 Supplemental 7 RT. Monitor (R) HD 86 Assigned Appropriations Bill HB 4 LC0458 Dan Bartel (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/27/2021 Appropriations by 7 RT. Monitor (R) HD 29 Budget Amendment HB 5 LC0459 Llew Jones (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/29/2021 Long-Range Building 5 IT. Monitor. (R) HD 18 Appropriations MSDB projects HB 10 LC0464 Kenneth L Holmlund (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/27/2021 Long-Range 5 IT. Support (R) HD 38 Information Technology Appropriations HB 11 LC0465 Wendy McKamey (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/27/2021 Treasure State 7 RT. Monitor (R) HD 19 Endowment Program HB 13 LC0466 Julie Dooling Chapter Number 04/14/2021 State Employee Pay 9 SP. Monitor (R) HD 70 Assigned Plan HB 14 LC0468 Mike Hopkins (H) Sent to Enrolling 04/27/2021 Long-Range Building 5 IT. -
110309TRH.Hm1 MINUTES MONTANA HOUSE OF
MINUTES MONTANA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 62nd LEGISLATURE - REGULAR SESSION COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION Call to Order: Chair Gordon Vance, on March 9, 2011 at 3:00 PM, in Room 455 Capitol ROLL CALL Members Present: Rep. Gordon Vance, Chairman (R) Rep. Carolyn Squires, Vice Chairman (D) Rep. Elsie Arntzen (R) Rep. Tom Berry (R) Rep. Edward Greef (R) Rep. Krayton Kerns (R) Rep. Steve Lavin (R) Rep. Jerry O'Neil (R) Rep. Diane Sands (D) Rep. Frank Smith (D) Members Excused: Rep. Lee Randall, Vice Chairman (R) Rep. Matthew M. Rosendale Sr (R) Rep. Kathy Swanson (D) Members Absent: None Staff Present: Lisa Adams, Committee Secretary Megan Moore, Legislative Branch Audio Committees: These minutes are in outline form only. They provide a list of participants and a record of official action taken by the committee. The link to the audio recording of the meeting is available on the Legislative Branch website. Committee Business Summary: Hearing & Date Posted: HB 599, 3/4/2011; SB 179, 3/4/2011; SB 192, 3/4/2011 110309TRH.Hm1 HOUSE COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION March 9, 2011 PAGE 2 of 5 HEARING ON SB 192 Opening Statement by Sponsor: 00:00:58 Sen. Ron Erickson (D), SD 47, opened the hearing on SB 192, Revise motor carrier laws related to motor carrier classes. 00:00:58 Rep. Squires left. 00:01:46 Rep. Berry left. Proponents' Testimony: 00:03:12 John Vincent, Commissioner, Public Service Commission (PSC) EXHIBIT(trh53a01) 00:03:15 Rep. Berry arrived. 00:05:33 Jerry Perkins, Karst Stage, Bozeman, Montana 00:05:50 Rep. -
C a P I T O L Monitor
CAPITOL MONITOR THE LEGISLATIVE BULLETIN OF THE MONTANA ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION CENTER Volume 20, Number 1 — January 7, 2013 Your “insider’s guide” to the 2013 Legislature elcome to the first issue of MEIC’s Let the games begin Capitol Monitor for the 2013 hen the Legislature convenes legislative session. As usual, you W on Monday, January 7th, we can expect to receive high-quality and expect to hit the ground up-to-date information on the Montana W running. Most seasoned observers Legislative Session. of the legislative process predict it We expect this session will be one of will be similar to the craziness of the the most challenging in MEIC’s 40-year 2011 Legislative Session. If the bill history. We hope that by communicating draft requests already submitted by promptly and frequently with you—our legislators are any indication, many of members—you will be able to participate our environmental laws, public health more effectively in our lobbying efforts. safeguards, and public participation And—no kidding—we need your help. rights will be on the chopping block. Our lobbyists cannot do it alone. Protecting Last session the governor vetoed many of the worst bills. We expect all of those the environment this session will require vetoed bills to be re-introduced. everyone’s efforts. So please use the Capitol Given the attacks, part of MEIC’s Monitor and our website (www.meic.org) response will be providing our members with up-to-the-minute information to get involved. Let’s protect the things that about what’s going on at the Capitol.