Site icon The Bottom Line

2015 session produces many successes along with some missed opportunities for business

The 2015 session of the General Assembly has received praise from many leaders across the state as a productive and successful session because of the passage of bills to address issues like the stabilization of the road fund, telecommunications reform, and the scourge of heroin in the state—legislation strongly supported by the Kentucky Chamber.

However, there were also many pro-business bills that fell short this year and have been pushed to the back burner once again.

The Kentucky Chamber was pushing business-friendly bills that would help the state create jobs and attract new business, including legislation to set up public-private partnerships (P3) to complete projects across the state, local option sales taxes (LIFT) to allow local communities to be put in charge of their futures, right to work measures which would let an employee choose whether or not they want to join a union, and much more.

Kentucky Chamber President and CEO Dave Adkisson wrote an op-ed that was sent to newspapers this week summarizing our thoughts on the 2015 General Assembly.

“Anyone working to advance Kentucky can expect to encounter some obstacles,” wrote Adkisson. “We continue to hope that, as Kentuckians with a shared goal of making progress for our state, we can take at least two steps forward for every one step backward.”

The Kentucky Chamber will issue its Results for Business in the next few weeks which will have a full rundown of what passed, what didn’t, missed opportunities of the session and how your legislator voted on these key business issues.

Kentucky Chamber-supported legislation that passed both chambers and was sent to the governor for his signature include:

Missed opportunities:

Anti-Business Bills Defeated:

Exit mobile version