Carlyle reaching out before legislative session

Representative Reuven Carlyle is entering his second year as a 36th District Representative to the state legislature. Before the session starts next week, Carlyle is reaching out to find out what’s important to you and give you an idea of what he’s planning for the session.

The following is written by Rep. Carlyle:

The bang of the gavel opens the 2010 session of the Legislature on January 11, and the depth of the challenges we face in the 60-day sprint reflect the seriousness that people are feeling in their daily lives.

Before I put my life as a husband, father and entrepreneur on hold to serve in Olympia as your citizen legislator, I wanted to reach out and connect about the pressing issues facing our state as we enter the legislative session.

What are the policy issues that inspire you to act, and what can state government do to be more responsive to your values and interests? Please make suggestions in the thread, spend some time on my active blog at www.reuvencarlyle36.com or email me anytime at carlyle.reuven@leg.wa.gov. Friend me on Facebook and follow me on Twitter where I’m working to keep you informed from inside your government. My goal is to be the first ‘paperless’ legislative office.

This year, given the difficult economic times in which we live, there is little besides the budget on the table. But how we handle the budget is a moral question not just a financial one. The state’s $32 billion two-year budget (driven by consumer-purchasing related taxes) is staggering under the weight of the economic downturn. This year’s projected $2.6 billion budget deficit–following a projected $9 billion gap last year that we balanced–has forced the most substantive reassessment of our public priorities in generations.

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Reader questions sentencing recommendation

MyBallard reader Marc wondered how the King County Prosecutor’s Office had come to the decision to ask the judge for a 23-year sentence for 17-year-old Elijah Hall, the teen who pleaded guilt of murdering Manish Melwani at the Quick Stop market on July 26, 2009, so he sent an email with these questions.

(1) Why, on the Offender Scoring Sheet, were there no scores marked under Mr. Hall’s Juvenile History? I see that on his Criminal History he indeed has two felony counts against him.
(2) Why was there no adjustment (weapons enhancement) sought for this crime pursuant to RCW 9.94.A.533(3)(a)?

Marc says, “I’m by no means a lawyer, but the press has been lax on providing information on the decision making process as to why the prosecutor’s office is suggesting 280 months, where it would seem like a range of 286-379 would appear to the layman to have been more appropriate, i.e., offender score of 4 + the weapons enhancement.”

Ian Goodhew from the Prosecutor’s office sent this response:

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