It may take some time to catch on, but the ability to listen in on what lawmakers are deciding on the floor and in committees will enable residents to keep closer tabs on how their elected officials really feel about the issues under discussion.
Beginning with the 2010 legislative session in January, audio streaming will be available real-time while delegates are on the floor in session or inside committee rooms taking up various bills.
It will take some discipline to tune in to the proceedings. We’re all so accustomed to visual media. However, being able to hear what’s being said will enable us to better understand what our state lawmakers are up to.
Floor proceedings are predicted to be less interesting, but if you have a passionate concern about an issue debated in a committee, listening to the audio stream will provide you with a wealth of information. Hearing the actual discussions and knowing who said what could have a big impact on whether or not you help to re-elect one or more of those officials.
Now, more than ever before, we all need to be well informed about the issues that directly affect our daily lives. Every tax payer should be concerned about sessions that delve into tax structures, proposed changes in health care, consideration of costs and ways of raising money for transportation, education and economic development.
Whether it’s a discussion about more funding for building psychiatric care facilities or finding ways to offset the economic downturns in industry, we need to know what’s being decided for us.
What better way to squelch false information than to hear it “straight from the horse’s mouth?”
Back in the day — before we could access hundreds of TV channels — people listened to the radio. They kept up with what was going on in their state capitals as well as what happened on Capitol Hill.
Come January, as many of us as possible need to take advantage of new technology, technology that now makes it possible for us to keep a “live” ear on the issues and the views of our elected officials.
Editorials
Tune in
<b>Audio streaming will help public keep an ear on state lawmakers</b>
- Editorials
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Drug screening
When it comes to coal mine safety issues, representatives of the United Mine Workers often are leading the way.
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This is why
Operation of Fayette schools
won’t return to local control
until there is some consensus -
MSU
Mountain State University is at a critical crossroads and southern West Virginians need to step up and show their support for the school and its hundreds of students and employees.
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MSU
Community needs to show its support for our university
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If you don’t think so, you’d better think again
EPA regulations turning the screw on coal industry
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Airport projects crucial
Tom Cochran and others at the Raleigh County Memorial Airport can breathe a little easier, or at least take a deep breath and exhale, after word came from Sen. Jay Rockefeller’s office last week that a deal has been struck between the two chambers in Congress to authorize long-term funding, into 2015, for the Federal Aviation Administration.
- Thumbs — Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012
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It’s not a choice
Whether a bill to eliminate tolls on the West Virginia Turnpike when the current bonds expire some eight years from now is passed by the Legislature and signed into law or not, one thing is absolutely certain — the state Transportation Department has the responsibility to maintain that 88-mile stretch of Interstate highway.
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On the shelf
A Senate bill (SB168) offered by 13 of the upper chamber’s members that would have given counties the option to boost the pay of county commissioners, sheriffs, county and circuit clerks, assessors and prosecuting attorneys by at least $10,000 each has apparently been shelved and will do nothing but draw dust this legislative session.
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The time is now
Drug abuse.
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Drug screening






