TARTAGLIONE EXPLAINS TRANSIT
BILL ON FOX MORNING SHOW
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Tartaglione |
HARRISBURG, May 12 –
State Sen. Christine M. Tartaglione today
appeared on the morning television program
“Good Day Philadelphia” to explain her
effort to protect transit workers from
assault.
Tartaglione talked with Fox29’s John
Anderson about Senate Bill 1149, which
passed the Senate overwhelmingly and now
awaits action in the House.
The bill provides stiffer penalties intended
to stem the rising rate of violence on SEPTA
workers.
“This will send a loud and clear message
that any assault on a transit worker won’t
be tolerated,” she told Anderson.
On March 6, a 53-year-old SEPTA
driver was treated for cuts at a local
hospital after a bullet shattered his side
window.
Under Tartaglione’s bill,
assault on a
transit worker that results in bodily injury
becomes a second-degree felony. If the
injury is serious, the assailant can be
charged with a first-degree felony. The
maximum penalty for a first-degree felony is
20 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. The
maximum penalty for a second-degree felony
is 10 years in prison.
The bill passed the Senate 47-3
on May 5 and remains in the House Judiciary
Committee. A link to a video clip of the
broadcast can be found on Tartaglione’s Web
site
www.pasenate.com/tartaglione |