State Senate
Though he was assigned to several, the only committee Copeland specifically requested upon entering the state legislature was the Education Committee, believing that the roots of most of Delaware’s chronic and long-term problems could be best confronted in the way that Delawarean children were educated. During his time on the Education Committee, he advocated parental choice in education and stood as a firm proponent of charter schools. In addition, Copeland pushed for higher standards and more efficient administration for public schools.
Upon entering the State Senate in 2002, Copeland worked with Democrat State Senator Karen Peterson in opposition to the “desk drawer veto”, the practice by which a Committee Chairperson can single-handedly prevent a piece of legislation from receiving a public hearing and debate. To date, this practice persists.
In April 2008, Copeland achieved the posting of senate roll call votes on the General Assembly website whereby the public could access voting records of their state senators. Commenting on the success in his caucus’s press release of 4/8/08, he identified the measure as a “one small common-sense step toward transparency in government.”
Copeland has stated his hopes for similar accountability measures were he elected Lieutenant Governor in the belief that public oversight would demand greater discipline from state government. The most prominent of these measures would have been the posting of government contracts online so that members of the public could have seen where exactly the state spends its money.
Read more about this topic: Charles L. Copeland
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