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Senator's Employer Scrapped From Metal-Reporting Bill

By Annapolis Notebook
Sunday, April 6, 2008

A Senate committee that Sen. Nathaniel Exum (D-Prince George's) serves on voted to exempt a class of scrap metal businesses that includes his employer from legislation that would require extensive new reporting to police.

Exum, the safety officer for Joseph Smith and Sons Inc., took an active role in crafting the bill while serving on a work group. Joseph Smith was one of two companies that participated in the group; the other was a Baltimore dealer regulated by the city.

The bill, which passed the full Senate unanimously last month, is intended to help police crack down on a growing problem of scrap metal theft from construction sites, cars and even highways, where thieves are ripping out guardrails and selling them. The thieves are capitalizing on high commodity prices for copper and other metals.

Police in several counties have urged lawmakers to help by requiring junkyards to send them daily reports of scrap purchases that disclose the price they paid and the identity of the seller.

Joseph Smith is one of the biggest scrap dealers in Maryland, with a brisk business processing metal as well as dismantling and recycling cars.

When the reporting bill was introduced by Sen. James E. DeGrange Sr. (D-Anne Arundel), Exum told Finance Committee Chairman Thomas M. Middleton (D-Charles) that he wanted to take the lead in preparing it. Middleton turned him down, saying that leading it would create the appearance of a conflict of interest.

It is not uncommon for lawmakers to vote on issues that involve their jobs outside the General Assembly. Exum disclosed to the state ethics commission that he might have a potential conflict in voting for the bill. However, the commission said state law did not require him to recuse himself from deliberations or voting, because the legislation affects other companies in addition to his.

He declined to comment on his role in preparing the legislation.

Exum and several Joseph Smith executives who participated in the work group resisted attempts by police to require more reporting. Joseph Smith officials said their clients' privacy could be invaded.

When it was time to vote on the bill, the Senate Finance Committee added an amendment that exempts auto dismantlers and recyclers from reporting. Lobbyists for those companies said their clients are already covered by a state law that requires limited reporting to police.

The amendment exempted Joseph Smith and other large companies that recycle cars as well as scrap. Exum did not mention that at the voting session, and several senators said later that they did not understand they had voted to exempt most companies the bill was designed to regulate.

Sen. John C. Astle (D-Anne Arundel), who led the work group, said he is not an expert on the scrap business. "We had to rely on people in the industry who were feeding us information piece by piece. It wasn't until after the fact that we realized we might have been spun."

A House of Delegates committee was expected to put the auto companies back in the bill.

Exum said he and his company have welcomed the effort at tighter regulation. "We don't have a problem with the bill if it includes everyone," he said.

-- Lisa Rein

Senator Scolded Over Panel Vote

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert) was not at all happy last week with Sen. Richard S. Madaleno Jr. (D-Montgomery) -- and not at all shy about sharing that fact.

Madaleno, a freshman senator with a coveted spot on the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee, was one of two Montgomery Democrats on the panel to vote against a plan to repeal the state's computer services tax and replace part of the lost revenue with a surcharge on the income of millionaires.

"I'm very disappointed in Senator Madaleno," Miller told a group of reporters outside the committee room. "He's pegged for leadership, and if you're going to lead, you've got to lead by example."

During the committee meeting, Madaleno offered an amendment to do away with the millionaires tax and make deeper cuts to transportation to make possible the repeal of the computer services tax.

Madaleno said he thought his colleagues would be understanding of his differences with the Senate president. "I don't think people here who have independent minds are seen as somehow less effective," he said.

-- John Wagner and Philip Rucker

Thank-and-Spank E-Mail Irks Lawmakers

Some lawmakers grumbled privately last week after Sen. Michael G. Lenett (D-Montgomery) sent an e-mail to his supporters about his bill to ban hand-held cellphones while driving, which was passed in the Senate, only to be killed in the House.

In a rare move, Lenett listed the 22 members of the House Environmental Matters Committee and marked whether each voted for or against the cellphone ban. "I encourage you to thank those who voted for the bill and to let those who opposed it hear your voice!" Lenett wrote.

Indeed, some of the 12 lawmakers who voted against Lenett's bill said privately that they received angry e-mails and phone calls from some of Lenett's constituents.

-- Philip Rucker

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