Calhoun Times

Kemp issues four vetoes, hints at special session

- By Dave Williams

Capitol Beat News Service

Gov. Brian Kemp Wednesday vetoed four bills the General Assembly passed during the 2020 session, signed a fifth bill reluctantl­y and hinted he will call a special session of the legislatur­e later this year.

The most significan­t of the vetoed bills called for the creation of an oversight committee to review the performanc­e and conduct of all contractor­s and subcontrac­tors working for the insurance plan that covers Georgia teachers and state employees.

In a veto message issued late Wednesday, Kemp argued the committee would violate the separation of powers provision of the Georgia Constituti­on.

“Two-thirds of the proposed committee’s members would be members of the General Assembly,” the governor wrote. “Further, the powers prescribed to the proposed committee largely supplant the planning, policy making, and oversight powers exercised by the (state) Board of Public Health.

“Since such boards are considered creatures of the executive branch of state government, it is possible that service by members of the General Assembly on the Healthcare Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity Oversight Committee could violate the separation of powers.”

Kemp also vetoed legislatio­n calling for a nonbinding referendum asking voters in Glynn County whether the local police department should be abolished and its functions transferre­d to the Glynn County Sheriff. He pointed out that the General Assembly also passed legislatio­n this year providing a binding referendum on that issue, and there can’t be two laws on the books on the same subject.

A third vetoed bill would have authorized Georgia to enter into a compact with other states to regulate the audiology and speech-language pathology profession­s. Kemp wrote the measure was not put before a state council that reviews occupation­al regulation­s.

Finally, Kemp nixed a local bill for Gwinnett County at the request of its sponsor, Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula, that would have added senior judges to the county Recorder’s Court.

Kemp also issued a statement explaining that he signed House Bill 105 only because it will provide a critical income tax exemption for Georgia farmers who received state and/or federal disaster relief to help offset losses from Hurricane Michael, which ripped through South Georgia in October 2018.

The governor pointed to a technicali­ty in a late amendment to the bill unrelated to the tax exemption that could render the entire measure open to a legal challenge.

“If the bill is ever challenged, the measure may not withstand judicial scrutiny, resulting in the unraveling of the tax structures it created,” Kemp wrote. “Our farmers, especially, cannot afford further economic hardship.”

 ?? Hyosub Shin/Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on via AP ?? Gov. Brian Kemp (center) signs HB 426, hate-crimes legislatio­n, into law on the last day of the legislativ­e session at Georgia State Capitol, on June 26.
Hyosub Shin/Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on via AP Gov. Brian Kemp (center) signs HB 426, hate-crimes legislatio­n, into law on the last day of the legislativ­e session at Georgia State Capitol, on June 26.

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