There's been a continuous upgrade since the bombing of the Murrah building.

It scares the heck out of me. It carves out an unprecedented exemption for agriculture. It seems like a radical departure from the way we have governed for a couple hundred years in this country.

I'm real pleased that we're going to get money, at least some small amount of money, to help these kids.

We have 99 [different types] of vitamin C. That can be overwhelming to anybody.

But they want that information presented in a simple way.

They allow for freer access while increasing security.

Nobody can say with a straight face that tuition-tax credits are actually a response to the court's orders in Flores. That's somebody else's political agenda. It's not going to help these kids. I'm not aware of any private school that has English-language learner programs in place anyway.

We've got fines accumulating at $1 million a day. The pressure is on to resolve this problem.

This is a reprieve for English language learners. The question now is whether we can get a productive solution to the problem. This is exactly what we need to happen, have the threat of these fines hanging over the Legislature's head so we can come up with a reasonable solution.