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Rep. Jim Moeller, serving the 49th District Serving Western Vancouver, as well as Hazel Dell and the surrounding communitites of southwestern Clark County. |
March 3, 2009
OLYMPIA – State Rep. Jim Moeller today (Tuesday, March 3) had an even
busier time – not to mention an even more multifaceted time – than he
usually does in the House of Representatives.
It seemed as if when
Moeller wasn’t presiding over the House floor as Deputy Speaker Pro Tempore,
he was passing his prime-sponsored legislation – a lot of his
prime-sponsored legislation. Four very diverse Moeller bills, to be exact,
captured unanimous House approval.
House Bill 1052, which involves firearm licenses for people from other
countries, won endorsement.
The bill repeals the current state law
regarding alien firearm licenses. Instead, Moeller’s bill sets up new
requirements and procedures governing the possession of firearms by
noncitizens.
“We’ve put many years of work into this legislation,”
said the Vancouver Democrat.
“The idea is to remove barriers that our
state’s existing alien firearms license has thrown up in front of
hunting-guide businesses that simply want to bring international hunters to
hunt here in Washington.
“Many hunters from other countries have been
turned away by this current law,” he explained. “Today’s tough economic
times mean that a good many hunting-guide businesses are barely surviving.
We should remove unnecessary barriers standing in the way of these folks –
and their money – coming to the Evergreen State.”
Representatives
from the Hunters’ Heritage Council, the National Rifle Association, the
Department of Licensing, and the Department of Fish & Wildlife testified for
the measure in committee hearings.
House Bill 1794, which involves the calculation of child-support
payments, also won House approval.
Moeller’s bill keeps the current
schedule of payments, with the exception that the child-support table
instead starts at $1,000 of combined monthly net income with a $50
presumptive minimum amount of basic support.
The measure also
expands the table to $12,000 of combined monthly net income, and allows
income from overtime and second jobs to be excluded from calculating the
gross monthly income (if certain conditions are met). Further, the
legislation allows a parent to deduct up to $5,000 of voluntary retirement
contributions (under certain circumstances).
The Clark County
lawmaker explained that a parent’s child-support schedule includes
standards, work sheets, and an economic table that establishes a presumptive
amount of child support based on the combined monthly net income of both
parents.
“In calculating net income,” he said, “parents must complete
work sheets that identify their sources of income and deductions from the
income. Once the combined monthly income is determined, the total monthly
support obligation is established.”
Ordinary health-care costs that
were included in the basic support amount would be removed, according to
other terms of the measure.
He said a child-support work group has
been meeting and studying the matter for several years.
“No, this
bill isn’t perfect. But it’s an attempt to implement consensus items reached
by the work group.”
House Bill 1844, which involves the issuance of enhanced driver’s
licenses and identicards, was also passed by the House today.
The
bill speaks to the issue of record checks on the possible criminal history
of Department of Licensing (DOL) employees who issue – or who might be
called upon to issue – these licenses and identicards.
Terms of
Moeller’s legislation would require the department to conduct
criminal-history-background checks of current and prospective employees
involved in the issuance of the enhanced driver’s licenses and identicards.
He said the background investigation would take the form of a check
through the Washington State Patrol and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The department would also need to reinvestigate these employees every five
years.
The federal Department of Homeland Security requires these
background checks of all DOL staff who are involved in this aspect of the
licensing process.
House Bill 1397, the fourth of Moeller’s measures that cleared the House
today, would officially authorize the delegation of authority to registered
nurses to administer medications, treatments, tests, and inoculations at the
direction of an optometrist.
“As it stands today,” Moeller said,
“registered nurses are very often ordered to perform these services. And yet
since they aren’t authorized to perform them, they’re faced with the
uncomfortable choice of either refusing to do them – or facing liability for
doing so.”
The four bills are now headed to the Senate for more
discussion.