ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, March 17, 1995                   TAG: 9503170052
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-3   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: MARGARET EDDS STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


DEMOCRATS TOUT `POSITIVE VISION'

Launching their half of what's shaping up as an eight-month battle for control of the Virginia legislature, leading Democrats on Thursday cast themselves as the defenders of a public education system imperiled by a Republican budget ax.

At news conferences in Richmond, Alexandria and Norfolk, a fly-around party led by Lt. Gov. Don Beyer, House Majority Leader Richard Cranwell of Roanoke County and state Sen. L. Louise Lucas of Norfolk touted the Democrats' recent role in restoring funds for state colleges and earmarking millions for public schools.

``Our vision is a very positive vision as opposed to Governor [George] Allen's impaired vision,'' said Del. Linda Puller, D-Mount Vernon, who introduced the trio.

Later in the day, Allen also cited a philosophical divide between Republicans and Democrats, who hold slim majorities in both houses of the state legislature. All 140 members are up for re-election this fall, and Allen this month began campaigning to tip the balance to the GOP.

At stake, he told members of the Richmond Bar Association, ``are two different visions ... one that trusts the people and one that trusts the government.''

On his side of the ledger, Allen put tough law enforcement, no-nonsense education, jobs and standing up against the ``federales.''

While concentrating on differences over tax and spending policies, the two sides also engaged in a bit of the sniping that characterized relations during the recent General Assembly session.

Puller said she's not surprised that Allen has ``impaired vision,'' because ``he is not truly a Virginian. He's from California, and he has surrounded himself with people from Washington, D.C.; and once he got elected, he tried to emulate the government of New Jersey.''

Allen, a former congressman and state delegate, moved to Virginia in his late teens.

Puller neglected to mention that Beyer was born in Trieste, Italy; Cranwell in West Virginia; and Puller in Iowa. Of the featured Democrats, only Lucas is a native Virginian.

Allen called the remark ``foolish and petty.'' The Democrats must be ``frightened or desperate,'' he said.

Cranwell said his ``faith in the legislative process was regenerated'' by a session in which Democrats stood up to Allen's plan to cut Virginia's $32 billion biennial state budget by $403 million, including a $149 million tax cut.

The proposed cuts came in a state that in 1992 was 49th in the nation in state and local government spending per $1,000 of personal income, Cranwell noted. The state ranked 44th in per capita state spending.

Allen countered that Virginia has a higher combined state and local tax burden than any other Southern state when figured on a per capita basis. It ranks 35th.

Democrats also took credit for the Virginia Omnibus Education Act of 1995, which earmarks lottery proceeds for education, allots money to reduce class sizes and work with 4-year-olds in poor school districts, and allows parents who don't cooperate in disciplining their children to be fined.

Cranwell called the bill the most important piece of education legislation to be approved in almost a quarter of a century. Allen termed that assessment ``hyperbole.'

Keywords:
POLITICS



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