ROANOKE TIMES

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

DATE: THURSDAY, November 23, 1995                   TAG: 9511240044
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C-10   EDITION: HOLIDAY 
SOURCE: DAVID M. POOLE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


DEMOCRATS SEE PROGRESS FOR COOPERATION WITH ALLEN

Senior Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday asked Republican Gov. George Allen to lift a ``gag order'' on state employees as a goodwill gesture toward bipartisan cooperation.

Emerging from a 90-minute meeting with Allen, Democrats said they were encouraged that the Republican chief executive had taken the first step toward opening communications.

``If he stays the course and takes a sincere initiative to take a bipartisan approach, the legislature will work with him,'' said state Sen. Stanley Walker, D-Norfolk, who is expected to become chairman of the Senate committee that handles the state budget.

Democrats told Allen that a concrete sign of his sincerity would be the revision or repeal of an executive order requiring that state agency workers get clearance before speaking with lawmakers.

Allen approved the order shortly after he came into office in January 1994, in an effort to impose discipline on state agencies that had been under 12 straight years of Democratic control.

Democratic lawmakers chafed at the policy, saying it amounted to a gag order that silenced dissent and made it difficult for the General Assembly to get timely information.

``A lot of times, we were operating in the dark,'' said House Speaker Thomas Moss, D-Norfolk.

Allen spokesman Ken Stroupe said the administration would take another look at the policy.

``Insomuch as this needs further clarification, we would be willing to take a look at it,'' Stroupe said.

Allen called the Thanksgiving Eve meeting to provide senior Democrats early revenue forecasts for the 1996-98 state budget. Both sides declined to provide details of the discussion. But the details appeared less important than the fact that the session took place at all.

Allen snubbed senior Democrats for the better part of the year, hoping he could render them superfluous with a GOP sweep in General Assembly elections this month. Having fallen short of his goal, however, Allen may have no choice but to reach out to Democrats in the final two years of his term.

``It was a cordial meeting,'' Stroupe said. ``The governor would expect that this is the first of many meetings.''

Democrats said it was too early to predict whether the assembly session that begins in January will be more harmonious than last winter's partisan bloodletting.

``To be effective, he has to work with us better than he did in the past,'' Moss said. ``I think he's trying. I'll give him credit.''

Turning away, Moss added, ``But we'll see.''



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