Laid-off textile workers
could get help
The House yesterday approved
an altered form of a bill it killed last week that would increase
unemployment benefits for thousands of laid-off textile workers in
Southside Virginia, the Richmond
Times-Dispatch reported.
The original bill by Delegate
Ward L. Armstrong, D-Henry County, was to help 3,000 workers in Martinsville
and Henry County who lost their jobs after several textile plants
closed.
The House voted 53-43 on
the new version, which would apply to almost 30 localities. Under
the bill, localities must have an unemployment rate at least twice
the state average of 2.6 percent. Laid-off workers in those areas
would be eligible for up to $100 more a month in unemployment benefits.
The bill now moves to
the Senate. A similar bill died last week in a Senate committee.
Legislature must choose
among 3 transportation plans
Halfway into the session,
the General Assembly has three transportation plans with committee
approval to consider, the Virginia Associated Press reported.
Legislators pass historic
Internet measure
Both legislative chambers
approved a measure today that would make legally binding the restrictions
companies impose on how to use their software can be used, The
Washington Post reported.
Opponents of the Uniform
Computer Information Transactions Act say the legislation would help
the technology industry at the consumer’s expense. Gov. Jim Gilmore
reportedly plans to sign the measure.
The legislation would allow
software companies to send legally binding notices about their restrictions
via e-mail, without having to prove that the message reached the intended
recipient. It also would permit companies to enter a customer's computer
and disable a product if the purchaser falls behind on payments.
Senate deregulates medical
facilities
The Senate voted yesterday
to deregulate medical facilities, with the exception of nursing homes,
the Richmond Times-Dispatch
reported. Under the bill passed 27-12, starting and expanding medical
facilities would no longer need state approval.
While Republicans in both
chambers remained divided on the deregulation, the GOP in recent years
pushed toward deregulation. The Legislature’s Joint Commission on
Health Care recommended to maintain the state regulation, known as
the Certificate of Public Need program.
Supporters of deregulation
say the program is burdensome, expensive and politicized, and that
the free market should take over. Opponents, such as the Virginia
Hospital and Healthcare Association, argue that deregulation would
allow doctors to choose the more profitable services, leaving other
hospitals in a financial crunch to provide emergency care to all patients.
The bill passed by the
Senate satisfies the hospital association and the Medical Society
of Virginia because it marks deregulation to start in mid-2001 after
the Joint Commission on Health Care draws a plan for the change.