Controversy over two key state laws adopted in recent years serves as a reminder that the language in a given law is everything, regardless of the legislatures intent.
In the end, state legislators themselves are responsible for being precise in the language they place into the law.
Such precision is even more important when the bills are highly controversial or deeply affect many Hoosiers.
The recent controversies concern:
The voter ID law. When the Indiana Court of Appeals struck down the law last week, Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels was livid, and Republican state Rep. Brian Bosma – the House Republican leader – said the law was a model for the nation.
Debate in the legislature rightly concerned whether the law would harm certain voters – particularly poorer voters who might not easily be able to obtain their birth certificates. But, it is now clear, someone should have asked whether it was right to require voters going to polls to have IDs while those casting absentee ballots got a pass.
The Court of Appeals said, no, it isnt right. Or, more importantly, it isnt constitutional.
Knowing that this law was destined to end up in court, its Republican sponsors should have scrutinized every line of that bill. Now, unless cooler heads prevail and the unneeded ID requirement is tossed, it seems likely that its proponents will pass a new law, establishing ID requirements for absentee voters.
Property tax caps. Some Republicans were extremely upset when they learned that their generous homestead deductions and the property tax caps they adopted – which apply only to the homestead property – do not apply to pools, gazebos and other property add-ons.
State Rep. Jeff Espich, the Republicans chief budget expert in the House, blamed the Department of Local Government Finance, saying it acted casually and without regard to our intent. Its terrible.
In fact, the department – headed by a Daniels appointee – did exactly as the legislature directed in the words lawmakers placed into state law. If those words did not accomplish what the legislative advocates wanted, it is their own fault for overlooking the definition of a homestead – which, after all, the legislature defined.
Sometimes, government workers, constituents and lawmakers themselves discover technical problems in legislation that they can easily fix on Organization Day. But the voter ID and property tax issues are fundamental policy questions that were overlooked, and it isnt the first time. Much property tax legislation in recent years, for example, has addressed the unintended consequences of previous property tax legislation.
The recent controversies should prompt more lawmakers to more often contemplate not only whether the words they place into the law accomplish what they want but also what other possible consequences will arise.
Of course, that is easier said than done. Lawmakers cast votes on dozens and dozens of bills and amendments in a short time frame, and no one can read all the words. And, in many cases, it is staff members, not lawmakers, who actually write the bills.
But the sponsors of bills should take special responsibility in making sure all the is are dotted, and committee chairs should also ask big-picture questions.
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