The day after the legislative session ended May 9, most of the Capitol's top brass met with reporters to size up what had happened the previous four months. They had big-ticket compromises to brag about, for sure. Putting $3 billion into transportation counts. So does fixing a $32 billion shortfall in the state public employees' pension fund, as well as taking a bold stand on sexual harassment, expelling a member for the first time in more than a century and trying to kick out another. After none of the lawmakers nor Gov.