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Committee chairs wield power in Legislature

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BY NANCY HICKS / Lincoln Journal Star

Wednesday, Jan 07, 2009 - 06:13:45 pm CST

Two of the state’s most powerful political leaders have names that sound alike — Gov. Dave Heineman and state Sen. Lavon Heidemann.

Heineman is the veteran governor, a man with political savvy and a keen intellectual grasp of the budget and most major issues. Because of legislative term limits, Heineman has more experience with state government than 48 of the 49 state senators.

Heidemann, 50, is chairman of the Appropriations Committee, the group responsible for putting together a $7 billion, two-year budget and selling it to the rest of the Legislature. 

Story Photo
Sen. Lavon Heidemann nominates himself for chair of the Appropriations Committee on Wednesday. (William Lauer)

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Committee chairs

The Legislature elected chairmen for its major committees Wednesday. They include:

Executive Board (deals with legislative staff and policy issues): Sen. John Wightman of Lexington; vice chairman is John Nelson of Omaha.
Agriculture: Tom Carlson of Holdrege
Appropriations: Lavon Heidemann of Elk Creek*
Banking, Commerce and Insurance: Rich Pahls of Omaha*
Business and Labor: Steve Lathrop of Omaha
Education: Greg Adams of York
General Affairs: Russ Karpisek of Wilber
Government, Military and Veterans Affairs: Bill Avery of Lincoln
Health and Human Services: Tim Gay of Papillion
Judiciary: Brad Ashford of Omaha*
Natural Resources: Chris Langemeier of Schuyler
Nebraska Retirement Systems: Dave Pankonin of Louisville
Revenue: Abbie Cornett of Bellevue (previously served as chair of Business and Labor)
Transportation and Telecommunications: Deb Fischer of Valentine*
Urban Affairs: Mike Friend of Omaha*
* second two-year term as chairman

Committee assignments


Tentative committee assignments were made Wednesday, the opening day of the 101st Legislature:
Agriculture: Tom Carlson (chair), Annette Dubas, Brenda Council, Cap Dierks, Russ Karpisek, Scott Price, Ken Schilz, Norm Wallman
Appropriations: Lavon Heidemann (chair), John Nelson, John Harms, Tony Fulton, Heath Mello; John Wightman, Danielle Nantkes, Jeremy Nordquist, Tom Hansen
Banking, Commerce and Insurance: Rich Pahls (chair), Mark Christensen, Chris Langemeier, Pete Pirsch, Mike Gloor, Dave Pankonin, Beau McCoy, Dennis Utter
Business and Labor: Steve Lathrop (chair), Tom Carlson, Norm Wallman, Tom White, Ken Schilz, Amanda McGill, Brenda Council
Education: Greg Adams (chair), Abbie Cornett, Robert Giese, Bill Avery, Gwen Howard, Kate Sullivan, Ken Haar, Brad Ashford
General Affairs: Russ Karpisek (chair), Tanya Cook, Cap Dierks, Annette Dubas, Scott Price, Kent Rogert, Colby Coash, Mike Friend
Government, Military and Veterans Affairs: Bill Avery (chair), Pete Pirsch, Kate Sullivan, Russ Karpisek, Scott Price, Robert Giese, Charlie Janssen, Rich Pahls
Health and Human Services: Tim Gay (chair), Mike Gloor, Arnie Stuthman, Gwen Howard, Kathy Campbell, Dave Pankonin, Norm Wallman
Judiciary: Brad Ashford (chair), Mark Christensen, Amanda McGill, Steve Lathrop, Kent Rogert, Colby Coash, Scott Lautenbaugh
Natural Resources: Chris Langemeier (chair), Tanya Cook, Tom Carlson, Annette Dubas, Ken Schilz, Deb Fischer, Ken Haar, Beau McCoy
Nebraska Retirement Systems: Dave Pankonin (chair), Jeremy Nordquist, LeRoy Louden, Russ Karpisek, Heath Mello, Lavon Heideman
Revenue: Abbie Cornett (chair), Cap Dierks, Greg Adams, Tom White, LeRoy Louden, Galen Hadley, Mike Friend, Dennis Utter
Transportation and Telecommunications: Deb Fischer (chair), Arnie Stuthman, Tim Gay, LeRoy Louden, Kathy Campbell, Scott Lautenbaugh, Galen Hadley, Charlie Janssen
Urban Affairs: Mike Friend (chair), Kent Rogert, Amanda McGill, Steve Lathrop, Tanya Cook, Colby Coash, Tom White
Executive Board: John Wightman (chair), John Nelson, Mark Christensen, Deb Fischer, Mike Flood, Russ Karpisek, Chris Langemeier, Rich Pahls, Tom White, Lavon Heidemann (nonvoting ex officio)

Under term limits, Heidemann of Elk Creek is also among the more experienced senators, with four years under his belt, all of them with the Appropriations Committee. This is his second two-year term as chair.

Several senators will also be key players this year by virtue of their skills — and their positions as chairs of key legislative committees.

Sen. Mike Flood of Norfolk was elected to his second two-year term as Speaker of the Legislature, the person who sets the agenda and decides how the Legislature will do its work during this 90-day, long session. 

Last year senators credited Flood, 33, who understands the political landscape, with being a fair and forceful leader, assuring that individual senators were able to get action on their favorite bills.

Abbie Cornett, 42, of Bellevue is among the power group by virtue of her election to chair of the Revenue Committee, which deals with tax legislation.

Brad Ashford of Omaha will head the Judiciary Committee, which handles the most bills and often deals with some of the most controversial issues, including the death penalty and most abortion-related bills. Ashford, 59, is serving his second two-year term as chair.

In other states, with partisan two-house legislatures, the dominant party holds the key positions. Generally, the party fills the key committee chairmanships, and the dominant party controls the legislative agenda.  

But in Nebraska, with its unique single house and nonpartisan legislative body, individuals gain power by virtue of their position as the chair of a committee, by seniority and knowledge of the system, and by their personal skills getting bills into law.

With term limits there are few senior members in the Nebraska Legislature. Thirty-six of the 49 senators have served two years or less. Just two senators have served more than eight years, Sens. Brad Ashford of Omaha and Cap Dierks of Ewing returned two years ago after an absence from the body.

So leadership at the beginning of the 2009 session lies with committee chairs, who have some control over what bills get to the full Legislature and in what form.

That committee chair list reflects the nonpartisan nature of the Unicameral and includes three Democrats and 13 Republicans, all elected by the 49 senators on Wednesday morning, in a secret ballot if more than one person was running for a chairmanship. The three Democrats elected from a total of 17 were Bill Avery of Lincoln, Russ Karpisek of Wilber and Steve Lathrop of Omaha.

The committee election process shows the grass-roots power structure of the Unicameral, said Larry Ruth, a retired lobbyist who teaches political science at Wesleyan University.

In most legislatures, committee chairs are selected by party caucuses, often in secret, he said.

But in Nebraska, the secret ballot for chairmanships by the entire body allows people to cross party lines to vote for leaders. 

“We typically see leadership positions going to both Democrats and Republicans, which is astounding to people in other states,” he said.

The legislative process in Nebraska relies heavily on committees, which hold public hearings on each bill, screen the bills, often rewriting them before they are considered by the full Legislature.

Committees work through the issues and bring bills to the floor that have as much consensus as possible, said former Sen. Don Wesely, who headed the Health and Human Services Committee. 

Because Nebraska doesn’t  have a partisan party structure, the Legislature needs to have strong committees, said Wesely, now a lobbyist. So the chairmanship of committees is key.

Reach Nancy Hicks at 473-7250 or nhicks@journalstar.com.


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Term Limits wrote on January 7, 2009 2:07 pm:
" All right, term limits supporters. Starting now is the test of your theories. We've lost a lot of institutional knowledge now, we'll see how effectively this new legislature works. Fortunately they kept Sen. Flood, a reasonable and fair legislator, as the Speaker. But, I guess more importantly, Sen. Chambers is now gone. You all got what you really wanted. A significant change in our state political structure, just to get rid of one man. Let's hope it doesn't come back to bite us all in the rear when bad legislation passes now in a way that Sen. Chambers would have changed or stopped. "

Terry wrote on January 7, 2009 3:57 pm:
" Now that we're rid of all that "institutional knowledge," there may be hope for the legislature, but I doubt it. The house needed to be cleaned out all at once, but there were enough of the "old timers" left the first time around to teach the newbies to "play the game." Anyone worried about "bad legislation" now that Chambers is gone has nothing to worry about. More "bad" than good came out of the legislature even with your hero Ernie. Doesn't matter if he's there or not! "

RAC wrote on January 7, 2009 4:06 pm:
" Well, Sen. Chambers didn't do anything to stop the stupid "Safe Haven" bill, did he? "

End of an Era wrote on January 7, 2009 4:10 pm:
" Call me traditional here but this is truly unfortunate. The all time greats are now gone but their mark most certainly not forgotten. Now that I have seen the effects of term limits, I wonder if we can amend the terms into two six year terms instead of the current law. I'm not totally against term limits but I perfer the Democratic way, which would to vote out the people who you didn't like. Those are true term limits to the Unicameral. I am saddened that all the prestige and knowledge have been all but evicerated by those who seek to destroy Nebraska's unique governmental structure. Now that I see that term limits are here to stay, we should revise them to reflect Nebraska's way of governing. "

Saline County wrote on January 7, 2009 7:50 pm:
" Russ Karpisek is a DINO.....Democrat In Name Only. "

western Nebraska salutes... wrote on January 7, 2009 9:29 pm:
" We will miss the unwavering Senator Erdman...He will be someone who lead by example and determination.
Congrads on the new position with Senator Johanns. "

Debe Soule wrote on January 7, 2009 9:45 pm:
" I believe that term limits should be amended to 2 six year periods or 3 four year periods. 12 years seems about right. The biggest problem is that we have such a ridiculously low salary for our Senators. Their Administrative Assistants earn 3x what the Senators do. THAT is an embarrassment to our state! They are about 20 years over due for a raise! That 38 year run of reverse racism, filibusters, t shirts, law suits against God and so much other non-sense is now over. I know these new Senators will take their oaths very seriously and not waste the taxpayers monies or trust in them. "

JJ wrote on January 8, 2009 8:56 am:
" I didn't think it was possible, but I think the Labor committee got worse. "

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