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April 8, 2005
Winston-Salem Journal "Lottery is not a sure bet,
state senators say"
Freshman Sen. Janet Cowell,
D-Wake, said she campaigned against a lottery last year and would
have trouble supporting one now.
"I don't like the lottery,
and I just can't see myself voting for a standalone lottery," Cowell
said. "I just don't think the lottery is a good revenue stream -
it's not the silver bullet for education that people think it is."
She said she might consider
a lottery, however, if it becomes part of a balanced revenue package
that might include closing corporate-tax loopholes, increasing cigarette
taxes significantly and modernizing the state's antiquated tax structure.
But as Cowell scrolled
through the e-mail she received yesterday in her Senate office,
she estimated that 95 percent was against the lottery.
"I've probably gotten
100 e-mails today asking me to vote against it," she said.
April 8, 2005 WTVD
"Lottery Foes Prepare to Fight Bill"
State Sen. Janet Cowell,
a Wake County Democrat, says the state needs a fair, stable tax
structure -- not a lottery -- to fund education. "I really don't
think it's the silver bullet some people think it is," she said.
"Studies have shown that states that have a lottery really don't
spend more on education than states that don't have it."
March 24, 2005
N&O "Bill would increase Wake judges to 17"
RALEIGH -- Two state
senators from Raleigh have filed legislation this week to increase
the number of district court judges in Wake County from 15 to 17.
State Sens. Vernon Malone
and Janet Cowell, Democrats from Raleigh, have requested more than
$213,000 in 2005-06 to create the positions. The bill asks for $251,824
for the following year. The change would give the Wake district
the same number of judges as Mecklenburg County and make the two
the largest districts in the state. The 30 district courts in North
Carolina range from two to 17 judges.
"The workload among the
district court judges in Wake County is astronomical," Malone said.
"Wake is a metro county, it's a growing county ... I'm not even
sure the two judges will be enough." Cowell said figures supplied
by Wake Chief District Court Judge Joyce A. Hamilton show one judge
for every 46,378 residents. Mecklenburg has one per 44,256, Guilford
has one for every 36,149, and the district covering New Hanover
and Pender counties has one for every 26,441 residents.
January 22, 2005
N&O
"Farewells Take the City By Storm"
Raleigh Mayor Charles
Meeker joked that he knew the city would fall apart when at-large
council members Janet Cowell and Neal Hunt resigned their seats
Wednesday, the day when about an inch of snow knocked out the city
and Wake County. "But I thought it would take longer,"
Meeker quipped at a reception Thursday honoring the two, who are
headed to the state Senate next week."
Cowell came with gifts, including a spirit stick from Zimbabwe for
council member James West; binoculars for Hunt so he can get a good
view of the action on the Senate floor as a back-bencher; and a
copy of Yes magazine for Mike Regan, who is known as the lone naysayer
in council votes.
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