SHINING A LIGHT — Summer gridlock and a battle for more transparency stole the show on Beacon Hill last session. But after lawmakers continued to chip away at the lengthy to-do list they left unfinished on Aug. 1, Senate President Karen Spilka wants to adjust the spotlight — and proposed a slate of changes to the lawmaking process to do just that. “I really do believe that this two year session was one of the most historically productive legislative sessions, and that is not getting out,” Spilka told Playbook, pointing to the policy-packed economic development bill, the hospital oversight and pharmaceutical costs legislation that recently passed, and bills covering maternal health, long-term care, veterans services and climate and energy that landed on Gov. Maura Healey’s desk after the Legislature’s self-imposed end-of-July deadline for formal lawmaking. That deadline, however, could soon be a thing of the past. House Speaker Ron Mariano hinted at tweaks to the legislative calendar during his speech kicking off the new session Wednesday, saying his chamber would consider a “number of rules reforms, from potential changes to the legislative calendar, to reforms aimed at bolstering public confidence in the legislative process.” “July 31, it to some extent is an artificial deadline,” Spilka said. It’s not the only rule that could see adjustment. Spilka wants to move up the deadline for joint committees to determine the fate of the bevy of bills that end up before them from the second year of the session to the first, a move that could help avoid the last-minute crunch to push bills through with limited debate at sparsely attended sessions (though historically it’s been common for lawmakers to bypass that deadline too, by asking for extensions when they reach what’s known as Joint Rule 10 day). Spilka also called for votes and testimony before joint committees to be made public, pledged to post summaries of bills that emerge from the Senate Ways and Means Committee online, and urged conference committee negotiators to open up early meetings to the public. What exactly would those meetings look like? “I would let the senators sort of have flexibility as to what they felt comfortable with,” Spilka said. “But I certainly believe that, especially the first session, that there can be some discussion about what's before the conference committee. What are some of the issues, what are the topics, the subjects at hand?” One change she hedged on: opening up the Legislature to public records requests. “I would have to look at the language … and talk to my colleagues in the Senate,” she said, asked if she would support a bill to do so. The ideas already have some buy-in from those who have long pushed for more transparency on Beacon Hill, per GBH News . Still, Spilka’s proposed reforms haven’t convinced everyone — including in her own chamber. State Sen. John Keenan, the sole Democrat who didn't back another term for Spilka as Senate president, told reporters Wednesday he chose to vote present because he wants to see the chamber “do better in terms of transparency.” “I appreciate what she does as Senate president,” the Quincy Democrat said. “I just have a disagreement as to how as an institution, business should be conducted.” GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. The ballot question that will let state Auditor Diana DiZoglio audit the Legislature officially goes into effect today (per Secretary of State Bill Galvin’s office). Spilka sidestepped a question about whether her proposed reforms have anything to do with the question’s implementation, saying that the Senate “has led on transparency” in recent years. “We are evolving . … We're trying to listen to what we're hearing. And that's why I want to do a listening tour for the Senate as well, to hear from constituents from across the state,” she said. TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey has no public events. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll speaks at the unveiling of the new Framingham flag alongside state and local officials at noon at the State House. THIS WEEKEND — CommonWealth Beacon’s Gintautas Dumcius is on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Senate President Karen Spilka is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday.
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