The Other 49

Action on the ERA
In January Indiana became the 35th state to ratify the ERA, and Virginia turned the amendment down. Georgia has sent it back to committee. Three more states must approve by March 1979. The states to watch this year are: Florida, Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, Nevada and Oklahoma.

Gary Gilmore gets his wish
Gary Mark Gilmore, the convicted killer who asked the state of Utah to execute him, was put to death by firing squad January 17. Courts on nearly every level of the state and federal systems had become involved in his case, as opponents of capital punishment sought to block his execution, which ended a 10-year suspension of the death penalty in the United States.

Alabama okays bond for Tenn-Tom
Alabama voters approved a $25 million bond issue for Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway development, an Army Corps of Engineers navigation channel that will open a route between the Port of Mobile and inland ports of mid-America. The Alabama bond will fund bridge relocation. The project, which is mostly federally funded, could be delayed by a suit filed against it by a railroad and an environmental group.

Executives are sober in Iowa
Iowa department heads have been warned by Gov. Robert D. Ray that it is improper for them to drink during lunch hours or while on state business.

North Carolina budget a joint venture
North Carolina Gov. James E. Holshouser, Jr., a Republican, invited Gov.-elect James B. Hunt, Jr., a Democrat, to work with him on a proposed 1977 state budget. The spending package, which was presented to the advisory budget commission, represents the viewpoints of both men.

California strikes down death penalty
In a unanimous decision the California Supreme Court ruled that the state's death penalty law is unconstitutional because it does not allow for consideration of mitigating circumstances as required in guidelines laid down by the U.S. Supreme Court last July. The state court ruled that a requirement of the law that mitigating circumstances cannot be considered by a jury if a crime involves special enumerated circumstances violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. This is the second time in five years that California's capital punishment statute has been struck down by the state high court.

Wyoming wins state's rights
Wyoming dropped its lawsuit against the U.S. Department of the Interior after winning federal recognition of the state's right to enforce its own environmental protection laws regarding reclamation of lands, including federally owned coal deposits.

South Dakota disagrees on car search
In a rare occurrence, the South Dakota Supreme Court declined to follow the lead of the U.S. Supreme Court in a criminal case. The federal court ruled in 1974 that the search of car towed for illegal parking in which marijuana was subsequently found was legal, but the State Supreme Court on a petition for rehearing said the search is illegal under the South Dakota Constitution.

Help for Penn crime victims
Legislation providing compensation for crime victims was signed into law by Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp. At least 15 states including Illinois now have such laws.

Equal rights to beer in Oklahoma
An Oklahoma law that allowed 18-year-old females to buy 3.2 per cent beer but required that males be 21 was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.

New Jersey and Pennsylvania trade taxes
A reciprocal tax agreement between the governors of New Jersey and Pennsylvania requires residents of each state who work in the other to pay only their home state's income tax. Effective in 1978, the new system should make it easier for most affected workers to fill out their income tax forms.

Wisconsin voids 'negative school aid' law
Wisconsin can no longer require wealthy school districts to send their tax money to the state for redistribution to poorer school districts. The state Supreme Court ruled the 1973 "negative school aid" law unconstitutional because it required local taxing authorities of one district to levy and collect taxes for other school districts.

Hawaii makes loans for jobs
Hawaii and its state banks have teamed up on a special loan program to businesses to foster new employment. The state is offering loans of $10,000 per person hired and up to $100,000 for each qualified business that agrees to hire and train unemployed persons on a permanent basis.

Penn legislature controls federal funds
The Pennsylvania General Assembly has the constitutional power to control all federal funds spent as augmentations to the state budget. This ruling by the commonwealth court upheld 1976 laws prohibiting the expenditure of federal grant monies in the state until they are approved by the legislature. The decision may be appealed to the State Supreme Court.

Statute didn't raise utility costs
Michigan's liberal consumer protection laws have not raised utility costs according to a Public Service Commission study. The study of six companies found that the utility firms had no more trouble collecting bills under the new laws, which prohibit deposits for gas and electric service and ban fees for late bill payment, than under the former rules./ M.S.K.

March 1977 / Illinois Issues / 21


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