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Krekorian Genocide Bill Advances

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  • Krekorian Genocide Bill Advances

    KREKORIAN GENOCIDE BILL ADVANCES
    Jason Wells and Zain Shauk

    Glendale News Press
    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/20 09/04/24/politics/gnp-pollandscape24.txt
    April 24 2009
    CA

    A bill that would require California-based companies to certify
    that they do not "wrongfully hold" assets that belonged to victims
    of genocide advanced to the state Assembly's Judiciary Committee
    on Tuesday.

    AB 961, submitted by Assemblyman Paul Krekorian, would also prohibit
    companies from contracting with the state if they can't prove their
    compliance. The so-called Justice for Genocide Victims bill unanimously
    passed the Business and Professions Committee on Tuesday during the
    main week of genocide remembrance events throughout the world.

    Krekorian, in a statement released after the vote, cited a range of
    massacres -- from the Armenian Genocide that started in 1915, to the
    ongoing conflict in Darfur -- in calling for a continued legislative
    crackdown on "homicidal tyrannies."

    "This legislation will send an important message by ensuring that
    California will not do business with companies that have enriched
    themselves at the expense of genocide victims," he said.

    The bill is scheduled to go to the Judiciary Committee for review
    next week.

    School district bill clears Senate hurdle

    Legislation that would make permanent a 17-year-old law allowing
    parents to send their children to schools outside their home district
    unanimously passed the Senate on Monday.

    The bill, jointly written by Sen. Bob Huff, whose district includes
    portions of La Crescenta, would make the District of Choice program
    permanent before it is scheduled to sunset on July 1. Under the
    current rules, parents can send their children to outside districts
    participating in the program without first getting permission from
    their home district.

    Typically, families must receive permission to transfer their students
    to outside districts since federal and state funding allotments are
    based in large part on school attendance, but the current law was
    established to allow districts to participate in the transfer program
    if they chose.

    Huff has pushed the law as "a tool that rewards schools doing a great
    job, and motivates other schools to do a better job with our limited
    education dollars."

    The Assembly Education Committee is due to take up the bill in
    coming weeks.

    Dreier supports a Reagan statue in D.C.

    The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday unanimously passed
    a resolution to bring a statue of former President Ronald Reagan to
    the nation's capital this summer.

    Set up to promote the 40th president's legacy on the 20th anniversary
    of the end of his term, was hailed as an appropriate move considering
    the parallel economic circumstances now faced by the current president,
    Barack Obama.

    Speaking from the House floor, Rep. David Dreier said that at the
    time, "it was Reagan's belief in the power of free markets and free
    peoples that saw us through the crisis. Today, I remain hopeful that
    the Reagan example will be looked to as an inspiration for how to
    navigate difficult times."

    Dreier voted along mostly party lines against the federal budget this
    month, arguing it was too heavy on taxes and promoted out-of-control
    government spending.

    Antonovich calls for investigation into deaths

    Los Angeles County Sup. Michael Antonovich called for an investigation
    into the deaths of 14 children who were under the scrutiny of county
    child welfare officials last year.

    Antonovich's call came in light of a report in the Los Angeles Times
    that the children had died while foster care, even though complaints
    had been lodged against their families.

    The county Department of Child and Family Services told The Times
    that it had opened investigations into 10 of the 14 cases, and that
    the child welfare workers involved had been assigned to desk jobs.

    Congressional proposal targets truck safety

    Truckers, like the one who smashed through a La Cañada Flintridge
    bookstore and killed two on April 1, may have an incentive to add
    safety devices to their vehicles if a new congressional proposal
    gains approval.

    Republican Rep. David Dreier has cosponsored a resolution that would
    give trucking companies a tax credit for purchasing technologies that
    aim to improve safety in truck operations, he said in a statement.

    The plan would encourage companies to equip their trucks with brake
    stroke monitoring, lane departure warning, collision warning and
    vehicle stability systems.

    It will also push for more research for truck-specific satellite
    navigation systems that might help drivers find the best routes for
    their big rigs, Dreier said. Improved technology for trucks could
    prevent future accidents, he said.

    "The recent accidents in La Cañada Flintridge have brought to
    the forefront the gaps in the dissemination of information on road
    conditions and safe routes, especially for the trucking industry,"
    he said. "We must take steps to prevent these tragic circumstances
    from causing any more fatalities in Southern California or anywhere
    else in the country."

    If passed, the government would offer a 50% tax credit for truck
    safety purchases, worth up to $1,500 per individual system. The
    credits would be capped at $3,500 per truck and $350,000 per company.

    Navigation systems could be an important addition to the list of
    products that the incentives would apply to, but more study on the
    subject is needed, Dreier said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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