ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Monday, February 3, 1997               TAG: 9702030097
SECTION: EDITORIAL                PAGE: A-4  EDITION: METRO 


THE POOP FROM RICHMOND

LET'S SEE, have we got this straight?

The House of Delegates didn't have enough time last Wednesday to debate a measure that would ban lawmakers from soliciting campaign gifts from lobbyists during General Assembly sessions. Democratic delegates, you see, had to hurry off to a fund-raising event. They put the finger on lobbyists to pay up to $1,000 a ticket to attend.

The follies hardly end there.

*A bill would make it a crime for someone to carry matches or a lighter if that person intends to commit arson. Police, presumably, would determine the person's intentions by asking him or her.

*Buried, probably for good, was a proposal to identify state candidates on the ballot by party affiliation. Right. Wouldn't want voters to imagine politics might figure into an election.

*Give credit at least to House Majority Leader Richard Cranwell of Vinton for keeping a sense of humor about some of the assembly goings-on. Of a proposal making it a crime to come between a fisherman and his catch, he said: ``We don't want people interfering with people's constitutional right to fish."

*Speaking of questionable constitutional rights: A Senate committee advanced a bill to ban handguns from Richmond's public parks. A good idea for Richmond, but not for Roanoke?


LENGTH: Short :   34 lines
KEYWORDS: GENERAL ASSEMBLY 1997






























by CNB