INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Category: Legislation

  • Synopsis of the For The People Act

    The For the People Act is a comprehensive and appropriately aggressive set of reforms that would revitalize and improve our democracy.

    Voting Rights The FTPA aims to expand and protect this most fundamental right and bring voting into the 21st century:

    • Modernize Voter Registration – move to electronic systems pen & paper.
    • Automatic Voter Registration – every eligible citizen who interacts with designated government agencies, such as the Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”), a public university, or a social service agency, is automatically registered to vote, unless they decline registration.
    • Same-Day and Online Registration – boost voter participation by establishing same- day and online registration.
    • Protect Against Flawed Purges – creates strong protections against improper purges/puts new guardrails on the use of interstate databases; prohibits election officials from relying on a citizen’s failure to vote in an election as reason to remove them from the rolls; requires election officials to provide timely notice to removed voters, as well as an opportunity to remedy their registration before an election.
    • Restore the Voting Rights Act -The FTPA contains an express commitment to restore the full protections of the Voting Rights Act.
    • Restore Voting Rights to People with Prior Convictions – The FTPA adopts a simple and fair rule: if you are out of prison and living in the community, you get to vote in federal elections; also requires states to provide written notice to individuals with criminal convictions when their voting rights are restored.
    • Strengthen Mail Voting Systems The FTPA would also create a baseline standard for access to mail voting in federal elections.
    • Institute Nationwide Early Voting – alleviate problems of long lines & inability to get to polls by guaranteeing a minimum two-week period for early voting in federal elections.
    • Protect Against Deceptive Practices – The FTPA increases criminal penalties for false or misleading statements, as well as intimidation, aimed at impeding or preventing a person from voting or registering to Second, it empowers citizens to go to court to stop voter deception. Third, it blunts the effect of deceptive information by requiring designated government officials to disseminate accurate, corrective information to voters.

    Campaign Finance We need to overhaul the role of money in politics. We should pass reforms to counteract the worst effects of Citizens United and amplify the voices of everyday Americans in our campaigns.

    • Small Donor Public Financing – To truly counteract the worst effects of Citizens United, we need to create a small-donor public financing system for federal This reform will give candidates a viable option to fund their campaigns without relying on wealthy campaign donors and enable working Americans to increase the financial support they can provide to candidates who champion their policy preferences. The FTPA addresses these problems head-on by amplifying the voices of the everyday voters, primarily through small donor matching. In addition to small donor matching, the FTPA also creates a pilot program to provide eligible donors with $25 in “My Voice Vouchers” to give to congressional candidates of their choice in increments of $5.
    • The FTPA revamps the presidential public financing system which currently provides matching funds to primary candidates and block grants to general election nominees. The FTPA addresses this problem by increasing the primary match to a six-to- one ratio, providing matching funds to party nominees in the general election and repealing burdensome limits on how much participating candidates can spend.
    • Shoring Up Other Critical Campaign Finance Rules – We must also fortify other critical campaign finance rules to curb dark money, counter foreign interference in S. elections, and make it harder to sidestep campaign contribution limits. The FTPA takes several key steps to deal with these problems:
      1. It closes legal loopholes that have allowed dark money to proliferate by requiring all groups that spend significant sums on campaigns to disclose the donors who pay for that spending.
      2. It expands transparency requirements to apply to online campaign ads on the same terms as those run on more traditional It also strengthens the “paid for” disclaimers that are required to be included in such ads.
      3. It requires the largest online platforms, with over 50 million unique visitors per month, to establish a public file of requests to purchase political ads akin to the file broadcasters have long been required to maintain.
      4. It tightens restrictions on coordination between candidates and all outside groups that can raise unlimited funds.
    • Overhaul the FEC – A third important priority is to overhaul the dysfunctional Federal Election Commission, which has failed to meaningfully enforce existing rules and would almost certainly struggle to implement other ambitious The FTPA addresses the main flaws of the FEC through several targeted changes:
      1. Curtails gridlock by reducing the number of commissioners from six to five, with no more than two affiliated with any party — effectively requiring one commissioner to be a tie-breaking independent.
      2. Provides the commission with a real, presidentially appointed chairperson to serve as its chief administrative officer.
      3. Ends the practice of allowing commissioners to remain in office indefinitely past the expiration of their terms, which has given Congress and the president an excuse to avoid appointing new members, likely contributing to the agency’s recent loss of its quorum.
      4. Streamlines the commission’s enforcement process by giving its nonpartisan staff authority to investigate alleged campaign finance violations and dismiss frivolous complaints.

    Redistricting Reform – Extreme partisan gerrymandering is another threat to our democracy’s long-term health. We should require independent citizen commissions for congressional redistricting; outlaw partisan gerrymandering and establish other clear criteria for drawing lines; and make the redistricting process more transparent and participatory. The need for redistricting reform is urgent. Extreme gerrymandering has reached levels unseen in the last 50 years. The FTPA offers bold and comprehensive solutions to the problem of gerrymandering:

    1. Requires states to use independent redistricting commissions to draw congressional maps.
    2. Imposes a uniform set of rules for how districts should be drawn, expressly outlawing partisan gerrymandering.
    3. Prioritizes criteria like keeping geographically concentrated communities with shared interests together.
    4. Commissions would contain equal numbers of Republican, Democratic, and unaffiliated and third party commissioners, with voting rules that ensure that no one group would be able to dominate the redistricting process.
    5. All potential commissioners would be screened for conflicts of interest to ensure that they do not have a personal stake in the outcome.
    6. Commission business would be conducted in open public meetings and subject to oversight.
    7. Data would be made available and all official communications would be subject to disclosure.
    8. Community groups and members would get a say through testimony and other feedback mechanisms.
    9. Each commission would be required to show its work and ensure fairness by issuing a detailed report before taking a final vote on a plan.

    Election Security – We must also take critical steps to improve the security and reliability of our election infrastructure. The FTPA significantly bolsters the security and resilience of our nation’s election administration infrastructure. Among the most critical reforms, it:

    1. Requires states to replace insecure paperless voting systems – mandates the replacement of all paperless electronic voting machines with machines that require an individual paper record of each vote.
    2. Promotes robust audits of electronic election results – provides funds for states to implement robust audits of election results using statistical models to ensure that a sufficient number of paper ballots are checked to corroborate the electronic vote tallies.
    3. Imposes new requirements for private election system vendors – Among other things, any vendors who receive grants under the act would be required to:
      1. Certify that the infrastructure they sell to local election jurisdictions is developed and maintained in accordance with cybersecurity best practices;
      2. Verify that their own information technology is maintained in accordance with cybersecurity best practices;
      3. Promptly report any suspected cybersecurity incident directed against the goods and services they provide under these grants.

    Ethics – Finally, we must establish stronger ethics rules for all three branches of government. These provisions would be an essential first step towards shoring up eroding constraints on self- dealing at the highest levels of government. The For the People Act addresses this challenge. Among the most important changes, it:

    • Requires the president and vice president to adhere to the same broad ethical standards as the millions of government employees who work under them, consistent with voluntary practices to which every president going back to the 1960s adhered until President Trump took office;
    • Requires the president, vice president, and candidates for those offices to disclose their tax returns, also consistent with longstanding voluntary norms;
    • Strengthens the Office of Government Ethics, which oversees ethical compliance in the executive branch;
    • Strengthens safeguards against congressional conflicts of interest;
    • Strengthens constraints on the “revolving door” between government and industry that prevent former officials from unduly profiting off their time in public service; and
    • Requires a code of ethics for the United States Supreme

    Summarized from The Brennan Center for Justice: Why Congress Must Pass the ‘For the People Act’ by Wendy Weiser, Daniel I. Weiner, and Dominique Erney:  https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/2021- 02/2021_01_Case%20for%20HR1_update_V4.pdf

    Summarized by Indivisible Lambertville/New Hope 6/13/21

  • From the NJ Statehouse: The Good, the Bad, the Missed, and What to Watch for Next

    From the NJ Statehouse: The Good, the Bad, the Missed, and What to Watch for Next

    Contributed by Amara Willey and Liz Glynn.

    Big win in NJ legislative session for ACA protection

    For residents of NJ, there’s good news coming out of Trenton for a change that should have progressives cheering. There’s always a but, however, and other legislation didn’t make the cut and some that did isn’t quite what we hoped. So here’s the good, the bad and missed, plus be sure to check out what’s coming up in this next session.

    The governor signed 80 percent of the bills that had passed both houses. These included a bill banning flavored vaping to reduce its appeal to children, a requirement that health insurance companies provide a choice that limits prescription drug costs to insureds, and the creation of a telephone hotline for state employees to confidentially report incidents of workplace harassment or discrimination. The 33 unsigned, or pocket-vetoed, bills included tightened regulations for tobacco and vaping sales, allowing preserved farms to hold 14 special events a year and requiring the installation of automatic fire sprinkler systems in new townhouses.

    The Good

    Happily, the majority of the ACA Protection Bills passed this session – paving the way to protect NJ patients from the GOP sabotage on the federal level. In addition, important policies have passed to advance racial justice and support working people, including driver’s licenses for all, voting rights restoration, expungement of marijuana offenses, and ending prison gerrymandering.

    The ACA Protection Bills are a set of critical bills that create the safety net we need and protects NJ patients from the potential loss of guaranteed coverage for essential health benefits such as preventative care, treatment for substance use and mental health, and reproductive health services, and loss of protections for pre-existing conditions. Here’s a list of actual ACA Protection bills that have passed: 

    S562/A5248 – Preserves certain requirements that health insurance plans cover essential health benefits
    S626/ A1733 – Prohibits pre-existing condition exclusions
    S3802/A5501 – Requires continuation of dependent coverage until age 26
    S3803/A5507 – Requires health benefits coverage for certain preventative services
    S3804/A5508 – Revises the law requiring health benefits coverage of contraceptives
    S3806/A5503 – Establishes open enrollment period under the Individual Health Coverage Program
    S3808/A5506 – Repeals NJ’s Basic & Essential health benefits plans to conform to ACA
    S3809/A5500 – Expands rate review process for individual and small group plans
    S3812/A5504 – Applies 85% Medical loss ratio requirement to large group plans

    Other:

    • Online Voter Registration A422 modernizes our outdated process and allows easy online access for voter registration to increase participation in our democracy and improve accuracy.
    • Ending Prison Gerrymandering A1987 stops the outdated process of counting incarcerated people as residents of their prisons for the purpose of redistricting and will now count them as residents of the communities from which they have come to restore the voices and resources of their communities.
    • Maternal Health Bill A4934/S3374 extends and expands Medicaid coverage of postpartum women at a medically complex time to ensure the support and health of mothers and their children.
    • Voting Rights Restoration A5823/S4260 restores the right to vote to people on parole and probation and will increase participation in democracy and reinvigorate civic participation.
    • Driver’s Licenses for All A4743/S3229 ensures road safety and access to driver’s license for immigrants to thrive in our communities and take care of their families. 
    • Marijuana Expungement bill A5981/S4154 clears past criminal convictions of marijuana offenses and allows people with a record the opportunity for a clean slate to improve their lives.
    • Marijuana Ballot Question passed with more than three-fifths voting yes, and is now on the ballot for the November 2020 election. (https://apnews.com/372117448cd3dfbb415b1a67204a71b3)

    The Bad

    • S3770 passed which creates a Path to Progress Committee in the legislature. This bill establishes a 12-member “New Jersey Economic and Fiscal Policy Review Commission” in the Legislative Branch of State government. This legislation implements a proposal in the New Jersey Economic & Fiscal Policy Workgroup’s “Path to Progress” report. The commission will be composed of six members of the Legislature (three from the Senate, three from the Assembly) and six public members. Senator Sweeney will be able to pick the Senators and influence the selection of the other appointees. 
    • S3813/A5510, which would have expanded the “Law Against Discrimination” to apply to health programs and activities, and to prohibit discrimination based on association with individuals in protected classes. It passed in the Senate, but strangely, didn’t get voted on in the Assembly.  To date, and we haven’t received a reasonable answer as to why.  
    • A3783 Railcar Safety would have required trains to have discharge response, cleanup, and contingency plans to transport certain hazardous materials, including fracked oil, by rail. Passed in the Senate but didn’t get voted on in the Assembly.

    Missed Opportunities:

    • Bag Ban
    • Redistricting Constitutional Amendment
    • Green Amendment – constitutional amendment
    • Corporate Tax Credit Reform
    • Marijuana Decriminalization
    • Environmental Justice – S1700/A5094 Giving NJDEP authority to just say no to new pollution in already overburdened communities
    • ACA Protection Bills:
      • S3811/A5502 – Revises definition of small employer under New Jersey Small Employer Health Benefits Program.
      • S3813/A5510 – Expands “Law Against Discrimination” to apply to health programs and activities, and to prohibit discrimination based on association with individuals in protected classes
      • S3810/A5505 – Revises certain permissible rating factors for premiums charged for individual and small employer health benefits plans. 

    Bills to Watch In this Next session:

    • Fair Work Week
    • Lowering Prescription Drug Prices
    • Coverage for All Kids
    • Annual Budget process – push for raising revenue with the package of proposals that Gov Murphy included in his budget but was rejected in legislature includes millionaire’s tax plus estate tax, sales tax, gun permit fees, opioid manufacturers tax, etc.

    Sources:

    New Jersey Citizen Action Newsletter (Liz Glynn)

    https://whyy.org/articles/gov-murphy-signs-151-new-bills/

    https://www.nj.com/marijuana/2019/12/new-laws-will-clear-nj-criminal-records-for-weed-and-allow-people-on-parole-to-vote.html

  • What to Watch for in the NJ Lame Duck Session

    What to Watch for in the NJ Lame Duck Session

    Contributed by Liz Glynn

    The lame duck session is here in the NJ legislature! This is the last legislative session before the new legislators are sworn in on the second Tuesday of January. It is a hard and fast scramble to get legislation passed – especially legislation already in the works. Any legislation that doesn’t cross the finish line by the end of the lame duck session has to start all over again in the next session. The legislature has also been known to try to sneak through bad bills while everyone is busy with the holidays. It’s time to watch the legislature and be ready to respond!

    What to look for in the lame duck session:

      • Reforming Corporate Tax Credits to ensure greater monitoring and oversight, higher labor standards for reward recipients, local hiring, smart investments with greater community benefits, and hard annual caps. The NJ Comptroller’s report, the Governor’s Task Force, and investigative journalists revealed a bevy of scandals, fraudulent activity and otherwise questionable policy. Time to fix our corporate tax subsidy programs! 
      • Driver’s Licenses for All to allow immigrants the opportunity to access driver’s license. This would allow our immigrant families to drive to work, drive their kids, and would make our roads safer for everyone. Sign up for alerts at letsdrivenj.org. You can also contact your legislators and show up in Trenton for upcoming days of action.
      • Redistricting Reform to create a more democratic process to draw our district lines. The Fair Districts reform proposal includes citizen commissioners, public participation, more transparency and bans legislators from being able to determine their own district lines. Learn more at fairdistrictsnj.org
      • Voting Rights Restoration for people on parole, probation and in prison. Advocates are pushing for full restoration and to become the third state to do so. You can contact your legislator to let them know you support full restoration with this online action: LetUsVoteNJ.org
      • Marijuana reform is up for negotiation. There are various bills that could advance that include expungement of marijuana-related offenses, decriminalization and possibly legalization of recreational use.
      • ACA protections are also in the pipeline to ensure we protect New Jersey residents from Trump’s sabotage. Bills include prohibiting pre-existing conditions exclusions, requiring dependent coverage to age 26, requiring coverage of essential health benefits, requiring coverage of preventative services, and requiring contraceptive coverage. 

      There will be plenty of opportunities to attend committee meetings, submit public testimony, meet with legislators, and see live voting on the Senate and Assembly floor. If you would like to visit Trenton and see democracy in action you can contact Liz Glynn, Director of Organizing with NJ Citizen Action at liz@njcitizenaction.org 

  • Civics 101 – The Federal Budget Process – Courtesy of the National Priorities Project

    Contributed by Deb Kline.

    Who Decides the Federal Budget?

    The vision of democracy is that the federal budget – and all activities of the federal government – reflects the values of a majority of Americans. Yet many people feel that the federal budget does not reflect their values and that the budgeting process is too difficult to understand, or that they can’t make a difference.  Many forces shape the federal budget. Some of them are forces written into law – like the president’s role in drafting the budget – while other forces stem from the realities of our political system. And, while the federal budget may not currently reflect the values of a majority of Americans, the ultimate power over the U.S. government lies with the people. We have a right and responsibility to choose our elected officials by voting, and to hold them accountable for representing our priorities. The first step is to understand what’s going on.

    An Evolving Process

    The U.S. Constitution designates the “power of the purse” as a function of Congress.1 That includes the authority to create and collect taxes and to borrow money when needed. The Constitution does not, however, specify how Congress should exercise these powers or how the federal budget process should work. It doesn’t specify a role for the president in managing the nation’s finances, either.

    As a result, the budget process has evolved over time. Over the course of the twentieth century, Congress passed key laws that shaped the budgeting process into what it is today, and formed the federal agencies – including the Office of Management and Budget, the Government Accountability Office, and the Congressional Budget Office – that provide oversight and research crucial to creating the budget.

    Before the Budget

    Congress creates a new budget for our country every year. This annual congressional budget process is also called the appropriations process. Appropriations bills specify how much money will go to different government agencies and programs. In addition to these funding bills, Congress must pass legislation that provides the federal government with the legal authority to actually spend the money.3 These laws are called authorization bills, or authorizations. Authorizations often cover multiple years, so authorizing legislation does not need to pass Congress every year the way appropriations bills do. When a multi-year authorization expires, Congress often passes a reauthorization to continue the programs in question.

    Authorizations also serve another purpose. There are some types of spending that are not subject to the appropriations process. Such spending is called direct or mandatory spending, and authorizations provide the legal authority for this mandatory spending.4 Federal spending for Social Security and Medicare benefits is part of mandatory spending, because according to the authorization, the government must by law pay out benefits to all eligible recipients.

    How Does the Federal Government Create a Budget?

    1. The President submits a budget request to Congress – The president sends a budget request to Congress each February for the coming fiscal year, which begins on Oct. 1.
    2. The House and Senate pass budget resolutions – After the president submits his or her budget request, the House Committee on the Budget and the Senate Committee on the Budget each write and vote on their own budget resolutions.
    3. House and Senate Appropriations subcommittees “markup” appropriations bills – The Appropriations Committees in both the House and the Senate are responsible for determining the precise levels of budget authority, or allowed spending, for all discretionary programs.
    4. The House and Senate vote on appropriations bills and reconcile differences – The full House and Senate then debate and vote on appropriations bills from each of the 12 subcommittees.
    5. The President signs each appropriations bill and the budget becomes law – The president must sign each appropriations bill after it has passed Congress for the bill to become law. When the president has signed all 12 appropriations bills, the budget process is complete. Rarely, however, is work finished on all 12 bills by Oct. 1, the start of the new fiscal year.

    This chart shows how all of these pieces fit together to make the annual federal budget process.

    Continuing Resolutions and Omnibus Bills

    When the budget process is not complete by Oct. 1, Congress may pass a continuing resolution so that agencies continue to receive funding until the full budget is in place. A continuing resolution provides temporary funding for federal agencies until new appropriations bills become law. When Congress does not pass a continuing resolution by October 1, it can result in a government shutdown, such as the longest one in history which was conducted under the Trump administration.

    When Congress can’t agree on 12 separate appropriations bills, it will often resort to an omnibus bill – a single funding bill that encompasses all 12 funding areas. The fiscal year 2015 budget was the result of a combined omnibus and continuing resolution enacted by Congress in December of 2014.

    Supplemental Appropriations

    From time to time the government has to respond to unanticipated situations for which there is no funding, such as natural disasters. In these cases the government has to allocate additional resources and do so in a timely manner. This type of funding is allocated through legislation known as supplemental appropriations.

    It’s Even Messier than It Sounds

    So that’s how the budgeting process is supposed to go. And while that sounds pretty complicated, in practice, it’s even more so. Other factors that include the state of the economy, party politics, differing economic philosophies, and the impact of lobbying and campaign contributions also have a considerable impact on the federal budget process.

    About the National Priorities Project: National Priorities Project is the only nonprofit, non-partisan federal budget research organization in the nation with the mission to make the federal budget accessible to the American public. The organization works to inspire individuals and movements to take action so federal resources prioritize peace, shared prosperity, and economic security for all. In 2014, NPP was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of our pioneering work to track federal spending on the military and promote a U.S. federal budget that represents Americans’ priorities, including funding for people’s issues such as inequality, unemployment, education, health and the need to build a green economy.

  • Your State Legislature and Judiciary

    New Jersey

    The NJ Legislative branch is comprised of the Senate and General Assembly. The Senate has 40 members, and the General Assembly has 80 members. One senator and two assembly members are elected from each of the 40 districts of New Jersey. The Senate and General Assembly meet for about 40 sessions a year on Mondays and Thursdays.

    Senators face election every four years, with the next election coming in Nov. 2021. Democrats currently control the NJ Senate, led by Senate President Stephen Sweeney. Loretta Weinberg is the Majority Leader; Thomas Kean Jr. is the Minority Leader. Assembly members face election every two years. In November 2019, the entire NJ Assembly is up for election. Democrats also control the Assembly, led by Craig Coughlin; Louis Greenwald is the Majority Leader, and Jon M. Branmick is the Minority Leader.  Senators and Assembly members are paid $49,000/yr for their work in the legislature.

    Committees from each party draft and review proposed legislation, along with several other bipartisan and non-partisan entities. (Learn more about the role of committees and the process of making a law in “How a Bill Becomes a Law”. In addition, the Office of Legislative Services (OLS), a non-partisan agency, provides legal advice and research support to both houses. OLS staff also drafts the bills and resolutions. For a map of NJ’s state legislative districts, please go here.

    In NJ, Congressional and state legislative district boundaries are drawn by two distinct politician commissions. The congressional redistricting commission comprises the following 13 members:

    • The majority and minority leaders of each chamber of the New Jersey State Legislature appoint two commissioners a piece (for a total of eight members).
    • The chairs of the state’s two major political parties each appoint two members to the commission (for a total of four members). Commissioners appointed by the political parties cannot be members of Congress or congressional employees.
    • The first 12 commissioners appoint the last member. This member cannot have held public office in the state within the previous five-year period. If the first 12 commissioners cannot agree on an appointment, they must submit two names to the New Jersey Supreme Court. The court must then appoint the final commissioner.

    If the congressional redistricting commission fails to reach an agreement about a redistricting plan, it must submit two plans to the state Supreme Court, which must in turn select from those two plans a final map.

    The state legislative redistricting commission comprises 10 members. The chairs of the state’s two major political parties each appoint five members to the commission. In the event that this commission is unable to reach an agreement about a redistricting plan, the state Supreme Court may appoint a tie-breaking member.

    The NJ Judiciary decides how state laws should be applied. Judges are appointed and serve seven-year terms, but after they have been re-appointed once, they can serve until they are 70.

    The highest court in the Judiciary branch is the state Supreme Court, which consists of a chief justice and six associate justices, who hear cases related to the NJ Constitution and other major issues. The state Superior Court is where most trials take place and is divided into the Appellate, Law, and Chancery divisions. The Appellate Division hears appeals of decisions from lower courts and state agencies. Law hears cases in its Criminal Division and Civil Division. Chancery consists of a General Equity Division and Family Division. General Equity cases involve matters such as contracts. The Family Division deals with family and children’s legal matters.

    Pennsylvania

    The Pennsylvania Legislative branch includes the Senate with 50 members and the House of Representatives with 203 members. The President of the Senate is the Lieutenant Governor, currently Jon Fetterman (D), who only votes in the case of a tie. Pennsylvania state senators serve staggered, four-year terms and half of the Senate is up for election every two years. In 2018, 25 PA Senators were elected, with Republicans maintaining majority control of the Senate, but losing some seats to Democrats. Jake Corman is Senate Majority Leader; Jay Costa is Senate Minority Leader.

    The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is up for election every two years, with 2020 as the next election year for the House. In 2018, the chamber’s Republican majority decreased from 120-79 (with four vacancies) to 110-93. House Speaker is Mike Turzai, Majority Leader is Bryan Cutler, and Minority Leader is Frank Dermody.

    In Pennsylvania, the statutory authority to draw congressional district boundaries is vested with the Pennsylvania General Assembly. These lines are subject to gubernatorial veto.[34]

    State legislative district lines are drawn by a politician commission. Established in 1968, the commission comprises five members: The Majority and Minority Leaders of both Houses each appoint one member, and the four appointees then appoint a fifth member to serve as the commission’s chair.

    Pennsylvania has 60 Judicial districts,  most of which (except Philadelphia) have Magisterial District Judges, who preside mainly over minor criminal offenses and small civil claims. Magisterial District Judges also preside over preliminary hearings in all misdemeanor and felony criminal cases. Most criminal and civil cases originate in the Courts of Common Pleas, which also serve as appellate courts to the district judges and for local agency decisions.

    The Superior Court hears all appeals from the Courts of Common Pleas not expressly designated to the Commonwealth Court or Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. The Commonwealth Court is limited to appeals from final orders of certain state agencies and certain designated cases from the Courts of Common Pleas. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is the final appellate court. All judges in Pennsylvania are elected; the chief justice is determined by seniority.

    In total, 439 judges preside over the Court of Common Pleas, 9 judges preside over the Commonwealth Court, 15 judges preside over the Superior Court, and 7 justices preside over the Supreme Court. Elected judges run in 10 year terms, at which point they are required to run in a non-partisan retention election if they wish to continue to serve.