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Student demonstrators in the rainy weather protesting outside of Coffman Memorial Union on Tuesday.
Photos from April 23 protests
Published April 23, 2024

GOP announces legislative committee leadership

Rep. Bud Nornes and Sen. Michelle Fischbach will chair the state higher education committees.

Sen. Michelle Fischbach and Rep. Bud Nornes will head the legislative higher education committees for the 2011-2012 biennium. They are two of 40 committee chairs the state GOP caucuses announced Wednesday.

Nornes is returning to the chairmanship, which he gave up after the 2006 DFL legislative takeover. Fischbach, the incoming Senate President, hasnâÄôt served on a higher education committee in her six terms.

Nornes will focus on procuring higher education funding and providing state grants, he said. If thereâÄôs a bonding bill this session, he would only support funding for upkeep and not new construction.

âÄúI try to be kind of calm and cool,âÄù Nornes said. âÄúWe have a tough job to do and weâÄôll get it done and I guess IâÄôm up to the challenge.âÄù

The DFL minority can expect more collaboration in the committee, he said, which will begin session by introducing new members to the different higher education systems in the state.

Rep. Tom Rukavina, the outgoing committee chairman, said he has confidence in NornesâÄô leadership.

âÄúMy only hope is that higher education isnâÄôt hit terribly hard because itâÄôs very important for economic development in the whole state,âÄù he said. âÄúI donâÄôt want to see the students at the University of Minnesota or the MnSCU system get hammered more than they already have.âÄù

Rukavina, DFL-Virginia, said heâÄôs unsure about his status as a committee member.

Senate Majority Leader-designate Amy Koch said the Republican caucuses took seniority into account when determining leadership positions, but also focused on candidates with experience to best fill certain roles.

Sen. Geoff Michel, the new Jobs and Economic Growth Committee chair, said RepublicansâÄô main goals are to curb spending, reform government and create jobs.

âÄúWe didnâÄôt start this exercise with, âÄòokay, everybody gets a chairmanship, which one do you want?âÄôâÄù he said. âÄúI think thatâÄôs the way the Minnesota Senate was run for the last three decades.âÄù

A group of volunteers in each body submitted a list of suggested chairs to the caucus leadership, which made the final decision.

Some members, like Claire Robling, the current ranking GOP member of the Senate Higher Education Committee, were suited for more than one position.

âÄúSheâÄôs kind of like our Michael Cuddyer,âÄù Michel said. âÄúYou can put her in a number of spots. We put her in a tough spot: the Finance Committee.âÄù

The House and Senate Republican caucuses rolled back the committee structure on Tuesday.

They chopped the number of legislative committees by about 35 percent, from 61 to 40. Many committees previously separated into budget and policy divisions were merged.

Incoming House Speaker Kurt Zellers called the makeover âÄúdecades in coming.âÄù

The House saw the largest reductions âÄì from 36 to 24 ­âÄì while Senate committees were chopped from 25 to 16.

GOP leaders said their goal when restructuring the Legislature was to clarify the lawmaking process and eliminate redundancy.

The move will save the state a projected $750,000 per biennium âÄìâÄì roughly $250,000 from the SenateâÄôs budget and $500,000 from the HouseâÄôs, according to Republican estimates.

âÄúI applaud their efforts to streamline things,âÄù outgoing Senate Majority Leader Larry Pogemiller, DFL-Minneapolis, said.

Staff reductions will come with the changes. Koch estimated the Senate would lose roughly four positions, while Zellers said the House would cut âÄúsignificant numbersâÄù of staff âÄìâÄì perhaps in the double-digits.

The Republicans used a striking visual image to prove their point at the Tuesday press event. On one side, a diagram of the current committee structure looked like a mess of red and blue pick-up-sticks connecting dozens of committees. This is the âÄúplate of spaghettiâÄù that is committee structure right now, Zellers said.

The new organization appeared clean and direct.

Business owners and lobbyists will have an easier time weighing in on legislation in the future because of the changes, he said. Sibling committees in each body wonâÄôt meet at the same time to allow interested parties to attend both sessions.

But, Pogemiller raised concerns about how combining committees related to health and human services could affect the amount of input a specific issue would receive. Meetings will likely be much longer to compensate.

Pogemiller reduced the number of committees while in charge. The number has peaked and plateaued over the years, typically following the trend of seniority.

After liberals took over the Senate in 1972 with a slim majority, there were only 13 committees during the next session âÄìâÄì equal to the number of senior members.

Republicans fielded questions about the necessity of keeping two Legislative bodies with so many similarities.

Zellers said the incoming class of freshman legislators will shake things up and could provide a fresh take on legislation.

The two bodies are likely to agree on overarching issues and argue over the details, Koch said.

“If you’ve ever been around here, you know we have 201 Type-A personalities,” Zellers said. “Not everyone here is willing to say, ‘Oh sure, I will defer.’ There’s going to be a difference just in personalities.”

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