Legislature(2001 - 2002)
04/10/2002 01:40 PM Senate JUD
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
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= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
SB 295-LICENSING: DISCLOSURE OF MINORS' RECORDS
MR. DAVID MITCHELL, staff to Senator Pete Kelly, sponsor of SB
295, made the following statement.
Both state and federal laws currently require all child
and adult care licensing authorities to review criminal
histories of every individual aged 16 or older who is
seeking either a care license, employment with a care
provider, or residing in the home with a care provider.
Criminal history information for persons under 18 is
not accessible through the Alaska Public Safety
Information Network but is available through the
Division of Juvenile Justice. Due to the language in
the current statute, the division may release certain
information for specific situations to only a few of
the licensing agencies. The fact that an applicant may
have a son living in the home who is a convicted child
molester could be kept from the licensing agency
because of limitations on the division's authority to
release that information. This bill would give the
Department of Health and Social Services clear
authority to provide all child and adult care licensing
agencies access to appropriate licensing information.
This bill will help facilitate the licensing of
suitable individuals, as well as help ensure that
quality of care and safety concerns are met for every
client receiving services in a care facility or
program.
MR. MITCHELL offered to answer questions.
There being no questions, CHAIRMAN TAYLOR took further testimony.
MR. ROBERT BUTTCANE, Division of Juvenile Justice, Department of
Health and Social Services, stated support for SB 295 as it will
take care of an omission in the division's statutes. SB 295 will
allow the division to work with licensing agencies to make sure
they have access to delinquency information to ensure they are
licensing people who will preserve the safety of people being
cared for in elderly and child care facilities.
MR. BUTTCANE said the recent spate of laws that passed at the
federal and state levels regarding licensing for care facilities
mandate that licensing agencies have access to records of persons
16 and older. Alaska's current delinquency records
confidentiality statute is written in such a way that it doesn't
include all conditions that arise in licensing situations. SB 295
will provide explicit authority to the division to provide
information for those purposes.
There being no further testimony or questions, SENATOR COWDERY
moved SB 295 from committee with its accompanying fiscal notes
and individual recommendations.
CHAIRMAN TAYLOR announced that without objection, the motion
carried.
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