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  • Powerless Proclamations Get Attention, Too

    POWERLESS PROCLAMATIONS GET ATTENTION, TOO
    By David Abrams, Staff Writer

    Annapolis Capital, MD
    April 5 2006

    Macedonia might be independent, but it's still Greek. The Lewis and
    Clark Trail should be expanded. And Maryland should have a Coretta
    Scott King Day.

    Such are the proclamations sought by lawmakers in Annapolis. With
    just five days remaining in this year's legislative session, the
    General Assembly is considering 26 joint resolutions that weigh in
    on all kinds of national and international topics spanning thousands
    of miles and several decades.

    Del. David Boschert, R-Crownsville, who withdrew a proposed resolution
    calling for docking the USS Forrestal CVA-59 World Super Aircraft
    Carrier in Dundalk as a museum, said the measures are a show of
    support - like writing a letter.

    "It kind of says, 'What we think you're trying to do is right, and
    we're behind you,'" Mr. Boschert said. He withdrew his measure while
    boosters of the carrier project look for a suitable site to keep the
    1,000-foot-plus vessel.

    Fully loaded, the carrier weighs about 80,000 tons, has a nearly
    4-acre flight deck and has three 45-ton rudders. City Dock in Annapolis
    would probably be a tight squeeze.

    All of these resolutions are a way for lawmakers to show they are in
    touch with things their constituents hold dear, said Dan

    Nataf, director of Anne Arundel Community College's Center for the
    Study of Local Issues.

    "They are kind of amusing," he said when read some of the
    resolutions. "Some things seem to be just pandering to a constituency,
    but they seem innocuous."

    House Speaker Michael E. Busch, D-Annapolis, said some resolutions
    are appropriate, but others are a bit questionable. For instance, he
    supports a resolution pending this year calling for federal funding
    of Chesapeake Bay cleanup, but remembers one in 2001 commemorating
    Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide that got a little bit
    out of control.

    "It was almost hand-to-hand combat at a hearing over a matter we had
    no bearing on," he said.

    "It was conducting foreign policy from the State House," remembered
    House Minority Whip Anthony J. O'Donnell, R-Calvert.

    Of course, the General Assembly hasn't cornered the market on issuing
    such edicts. City and county councils have been known to weigh in on
    matters of national security and war and peace.

    But the legislature does have to deal with very serious issues like
    Medicaid, taxes, electricity rates and abortion as well.

    "The only question is, would they be doing themselves a favor by
    concentrating on other things?" Mr. Nataf said.

    Senate Republicans withdrew a resolution calling on Congress to
    quickly confirm Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., because
    he was confirmed before the resolution made it out of committee.

    Lawmakers said the resolutions don't take up much time.

    Del. Ted Sophocleus, D-Linthicum, sponsored the resolution saying that
    Macedonians are still Greek. The "Republic of Macedonia" declared
    independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, and Greece protested its name
    because a word intrinsically Greek shouldn't be used for a foreign
    country.

    Unfortunately, the international dispute will have to remain
    unresolved in Annapolis. The bill died in the House Rules Committee,
    and Mr. Sophocleus, who is of Greek extraction, said he'll be back
    next year with the resolution.

    The bill making April 27 Coretta Scott King Day passed the Senate
    unanimously, and is in the House. It has to pass by Tuesday to go to
    the governor's desk. It honors the widow of the famous civil rights
    leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

    "In her own right, she's done a lot," said Sen. John C. Astle,
    D-Annapolis.

    The resolution supporting expansion of the Lewis and Clark Trail all
    the way to the East Coast has also passed the Senate.

    The 3,700-mile trail extends from the West Coast through 11 states,
    including Oregon, all the way to Hartford, Ill. There are only four
    more states to go for the trail to reach the Atlantic.

    There is a faint connection between Maryland and the trail. In 1803,
    Lewis started out from Washington, D.C. Clark later joined him
    in Indiana.

    Mr. Nataf was a little baffled by that resolution.

    "I don't even know where to find it," he said. "Maybe it's out in
    Oregon somewhere."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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