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Advocacy and Influence at the State Level Tips on Navigating the PA General Assembly Presented by Jamie Buchenauer, Office of Public Information, PHEAA. PA General Assembly: Basic Facts. Two Houses – Senate and House of Representatives 253 members – 203 House members, 50 Senators
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Advocacy and Influence at the State Level Tips on Navigating the PA General Assembly Presented by Jamie Buchenauer, Office of Public Information, PHEAA
PA General Assembly: Basic Facts • Two Houses – Senate and House of Representatives • 253 members – 203 House members, 50 Senators • 4 caucuses – House Republicans and Democrats, Senate Republicans and Democrats • Each of the General Assembly Caucuses operate independently.
Currently. . .until the election on November 6th • The Republicans control (have the majority) in the House of Representatives and the Senate. • House – 109 (R) and 91 (D) – 3 vacancies • Senate – 29 (R) and 20 (D) – 1 vacancy • House members are up for re-election every two years. • Senate members are up for re-election every 4 years – ½ the Senate members are up for election every two years.
November 6th Elections • 25 open seats in the House (due to retirement running for other offices etc.) • 4 open seats in the Senate. • 3 members of the House running for two offices: • Rep. John Maher (R-Allegheny), State House & Auditor General • Rep. Eugene DePasquale (D-York), State House & Auditor General • Rep. Matt Smith (D-Allegheny), State House & State Senate
Re-apportionment • Every 10 years the Congressional districts, House and Senate districts are re-drawn. • 1990, 2000, 2010 • 2010 reapportionment plan started -2012 – 2nd final plan adopted. • Party in control of the House and Senate control the drawing of the maps.
Legislative Sessions • Two years in length • Introduced bill has two years to be enacted (passed by each chamber, signed by the Governor). • At the end of the two years – session ends and all bills have to be re-introduced in the new session. • Sine die sessions.
Legislative Process • How a bill becomes a law. • Passed by committee, chamber and then sent to the other chamber, etc. • How a bill becomes a law in Harrisburg. • Amendment process very important. • Rules • Voting • Committees - (Rules and Appropriations) – instrumental to bills being enacted.
Committee Structure • Standing Committees • Senate has 22 standing committees • House has 28 standing committees. • First step in getting an issue heard. • Majority and minority chairman of each committee. • Most bills will then have to go to the Appropriations Committees or the Rules Committee.
Who to contact in the PA General Assembly. . . • Your Representative or Senator • Depending on the issue • Bill sponsor • Committee chairmen • Members of Leadership • Staff in the House or the Senate • Committee Staff • Leadership Staff
Senate Leadership Senate Republican Leadership:President Pro Tempore: Joe Scarnati (Jefferson)Leader: Dominic Pileggi (Delaware)Appropriations Chairman: Jake Corman (Centre)Whip: Pat Browne (Lehigh)Caucus Chair: Mike Waugh (York)Caucus Secretary: Bob Robbins (Mercer)Caucus Administrator: John Gordner (Columbia)Policy Chair: Edwin Erickson (Delaware) Senate Democratic Leadership:Leader: Jay Costa (Allegheny)Appropriations Chairman: Vince Hughes (Philadelphia)Whip: Anthony H. Williams (Philadelphia) Caucus Chair: Richard Kasunic (Fayette)Caucus Secretary: Christine Tartaglione (Philadelphia)Caucus Administrator: Wayne Fontana (Allegheny)Policy Chair: Lisa Boscola (Northampton)
House Leadership House Republican Leadership:Speaker: Sam Smith (R-Jefferson)Leader: Mike Turzai (R-Allegheny)Appropriations Chairman: Bill Adolph (R-Delaware)Whip: Stan Saylor (R-York)Caucus Chair: Sandra Major (R-Susquehanna)Caucus Secretary: Mike Vereb (R-Montgomery)Caucus Administrator: Dick Stevenson (R-Mercer)Policy Chair: Dave Reed (R-Indiana) House Democratic Leadership:Leader: Frank Dermody (Allegheny)Appropriations Chairman: Joe Markosek (Allegheny) Whip: Mike Hanna (Clinton)Caucus Chair: Dan Frankel (Allegheny) Caucus Secretary: Jennifer Mann (Lehigh) Caucus Administrator: Ron Buxton (Dauphin) Policy Chair: Mike Sturla (Lancaster)
How to make your voice heard on important issues. . . Visit members Write members Call members
Logistics – the State Capitol or the District? • Preferable – visit your members in their district offices. • Know you are a constituent. • While they will still be busy – they don’t have all the distractions of Harrisburg. • Tips for the visit – • Call ahead and make an appointment • Be prepared
Tips for a Visit to Harrisburg • Call ahead • Be flexible • Committee meetings and press conferences are for the public, feel free to attend. • The layout of the Capitol is not user friendly. The E floor contains offices in the 500. • Enjoy the building.
Where to find information about the General Assembly – www.legis.pa.state.us
Researching Bills, Regulations and Laws • General Assembly website has become user friendly in the past few years. • www.legis.state.pa.us • Listing of all bills from this legislative session and past legislative sessions. • Listing of all the Act (legislation) enacted into law by year. • Link to regulations, promulgated by Agencies.
Questions? Jamie Buchenauer 717-720-7670 jbuchena@pheaa.org