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THREE FILE COURT
PAPERS AGAINST THE PAY RAISE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 31, 2006 Contact: Russ Diamond, Eric Epstein or Tim Potts Three central Pennsylvania government reform advocates today filed court papers supporting lawsuits that seek to have the July 2005 pay raise and unvouchered expenses declared unconstitutional. The lawsuits were filed last year by another midstate activist, Gene Stilp. Russ
Diamond, chair of PA Clean Sweep; Eric Epstein, coordinator of Rock The
Capital; and Tim Potts, a Carlisle activist, argue that lawmakers violated
several provisions of the state Constitution. “…[T]he
secret drafting of major legislation
behind closed doors and the ‘unveiling’ of such legislation at the last
possible moment prevents legislators from even reading what they are voting on,
let alone deliberating in the fashion contemplated by the drafters of the
Constitution,” the three argue. “Further,
such a practice deprives citizens of their inherent right of participation in
the lawmaking process that affects every aspect of their lives,” they said. “It
is simply inconceivable that this debacle could have or would have occurred had
the public been given adequate notice of what became Act 44 and adequate
opportunity to weigh in on its merits or demerits.” Diamond,
Epstein and Potts contend that the pay raise violated four parts of the
Constitution by: ·
Changing the subject of the original bill. The original
proposal limited salaries in the executive branch while the final law increased
pay for all three branches of state government. ·
Failing to have the proposal considered by a committee.
Although the final bill emerged from a conference committee, it received no
hearings in the appropriate standing committees of the House and Senate. ·
Including more than one subject. The law put pay raises
for all three branches of government in the same proposal instead of dealing
with each branch of government separately. ·
Failing to give the proposal three days of consideration
in each chamber. The conference committee removed all of the language of the
original bill and substituted language that had received no consideration in
either the House or the Senate before being brought up for final passage. “These are some of the
most fundamental building blocks of good legislation, no matter what the
issue,” said Diamond. “The failure
to uphold these Constitutional protections will
only give the people more bad legislation. The pay raise is
only the most infamous example,” he added. The
brief filed today also asks the court to reverse previous rulings and declare
unconstitutional the practice of giving lawmakers “unvouchered expenses.”
Lawmakers have used the device to collect additional compensation prior to
elections, despite a constitutional provision that appears to prohibit it. The
state Supreme Court upheld the practice in a 1986 ruling by then-Chief Justice
Nix following another pay raise. The three activists join Stilp in asking the
court to overturn the 1986 ruling as “an obvious circumvention of the Pennsylvania
Constitution….” “We’re
simply asking the legislators to be true to what they put on paper. You cannot
simultaneously uphold and break the law,” stated Eric Epstein, coordinator of
RocktheCapital.org. A ruling
of unconstitutionality also would end the lawsuit by some state judges seeking
to have their own pay raises reinstated. Following
the defeat of state Supreme Court Justice Russell Nigro for another 10-year
term on the court, the legislature repealed the pay raise. However, some judges
have filed their own lawsuit claiming that the repeal resulted in cutting
judges’ salaries, which violates another provision in the Constitution. The
brief filed today argues that by ruling the pay raise was unconstitutional, the
court can avoid the judges’ lawsuit since they would not have been entitled to
the higher salaries in the first place. “I hope the events of 2005 convince the
Supreme Court that its previous rulings have allowed the legislature to go too
far in distorting the intent and the plain language of our Constitution,” Potts
said. “To
uphold the way the pay raise was passed will put the Supreme Court at odds with
the Court of Common Sense and undermine public confidence in the entire
judiciary for years to come,” he added. ### PACleanSweep is a non-partisan effort dedicated to defeating incumbent elected officials in Pennsylvania and replacing them with true public servants. For more information, please visit www.PACleanSweep.com. |