Bob Morris (Taxpayer Friendly)
Watchdog
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Address: 9010 Laurel Hurst Place,
Fort Wayne, IN 46835
Phone: (260) 438-4141
E-mail: H84@in.gov; gohealthkick@gmail.com
Website: http://www.in.gov/legislative/house_republicans/homepages/r84/
2012 General Assembly Voting Record
Voted YES on House
Bill 1003, which is Taxpayer Friendly because (1) public access to
government meetings and records is improved and (2) it is less likely that
public agencies will intentionally violate the Public Access Laws.
Voted YES on House
Bill 1005, which contains six Taxpayer Friendly local government Conflict Of
Interest provisions and sixteen Taxpayer Friendly local government Nepotism
provisions.
Voted YES on
House Bill 1376,
which is Taxpayer UNfriendly because (1) the automatic taxpayer refund excess
reserves trigger is increased from 10% to 12.5% and (2) Hoosier working families
will possibly receive an automatic taxpayer refund every even-numbered year
instead of every year.
2011 General Assembly Voting Record
Voted YES on House
Bill 1001, which includes among its 16 Taxpayer Friendly state budget
provisions no tax increases and an operating surplus in both the 2012 and 2013
fiscal years with a satisfactory reserve balance on June 30, 2013.
Voted YES on House
Bill 1002, which is Taxpayer Friendly because (1) charter schools have the
potential to help increase the academic growth of lower socioeconomic students,
(2) the number of Indiana nonprofit private colleges and universities authorized
to create charter schools is limited, (3) the Indianapolis mayor is the only
Indiana mayor who may authorize charter schools, (4) conversion from a public
school to a charter school is sufficiently stringent, and (5) property taxes are
NOT improperly used to support charter schools.
Voted YES on
House Bill
1003, which uses state K-12 tuition support money to fund scholarships for
nonpublic school students and is Taxpayer UNfriendly because (1) nonpublic
private and parochial schools are not equally open to all children, (2)
nonpublic school budgets are not approved by a directly elected public body, (3)
evidence-based research does not support greater school choice as a means to
achieve overall educational improvement, (4) it is very likely unconstitutional,
and (5) state tuition support dollars would go to nonpublic schools that are not
uniformly distributed throughout the state.
Voted NO on House
Bill 1022, which would have implemented a number of Taxpayer Friendly local
government provisions related to nepotism and officeholder conflict-of-interest.
Voted YES on House
Bill 1074, which provides that school board members selected by election
must be elected at November general elections and is Taxpayer Friendly because
the greater voter turnout in general elections will make it more difficult for
local vested interests to unduly influence school board elections.
Voted YES on House
Bill 1583, which passed as part of House
Bill 1004 and is Taxpayer Friendly because the 1% homeowner property tax cap
and ten homeowner property tax deductions are allowed in the year of a property
transfer if the property is determined to be exempt in the year following the
transfer year.
Watchdog Indiana Candidate Questions - November 2,
2010, General Election
1. QUESTION: Do you support or oppose the November 2, 2010, Constitutional
Amendment to (a) make the 1% - 2% - 3% property tax caps
permanent and (b) protect homestead property tax deductions from legal challenge?
ANSWER: DID NOT RESPOND.
2. QUESTION: How should the 2012-2013 state
budget be balanced? Please address such issues as Medicaid spending, K-12
education, the possibility of a statewide income tax increase, and whether
reserve funds should be replenished. ANSWER: DID NOT RESPOND. RECORD
(From journalgazette.net): Thank God that in the state of Indiana, it is in our
Constitution that the state cannot operate unless we have a balanced budget.
Sixty-five percent of our proposed state budget is focused on education, so we
really need to work with teachers, the school systems and with Superintendent
Tony Bennett to make sure we don’t forget the kids and they get the best
education they can. I propose offering students a scholarship if they want to
graduate early. We are going to take that money that the state funds these
students from the high school and basically reward them and say, here is your
money that the state would have spent over the next two or three or four years
and you can use that in your post-education, in college.
3. QUESTION: Do you pledge to maintain both the Homestead Standard
Deduction and the Homestead Supplemental Deduction without ANY change to help
homeowners control their property tax burden? ANSWER: DID NOT RESPOND.
4. QUESTION:
Do you support changing the Indiana Code so approval of the General Assembly is
required before I-69 becomes a toll road between I-64 and Martinsville? ANSWER:
DID NOT RESPOND.
5. QUESTION: Do you wish to make some additional comments about your
candidacy? ANSWER: DID NOT RESPOND.
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This page was last updated on 03/12/12.