Legislature(2023 - 2024)DAVIS 106

04/27/2023 03:00 PM House HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 80 INCOMPETENCY; CIVIL COMMITMENT TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 80(HSS) Out of Committee
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
              HB 80-INCOMPETENCY; CIVIL COMMITMENT                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
[Contains discussion of SB 53.]                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:07:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX  announced that  the only order  of business  would be                                                               
HOUSE  BILL NO.  80,  "An  Act relating  to  competency to  stand                                                               
trial;   relating   to  commitment   based   on   a  finding   of                                                               
incompetency;   relating   to  administration   of   psychotropic                                                               
medication; and relating to victims'  rights during certain civil                                                               
commitment proceedings."                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX noted that this is  the bill's second hearing and that                                                               
a committee substitute (CS) has been prepared.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:09:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RILEY  NYE,   Staff,  Representative  Mike  Prax,   Alaska  State                                                               
Legislature,  presented the  proposed  committee substitute  (CS)                                                               
for HB  80, labeled 33-LS0224\S, Marx/Dunmire,  4/25/23, (Version                                                               
S).   He explained  that Version  S was drafted  by using  SB 53,                                                               
Version P, as  the basis and then adding crimes  to nine sections                                                               
[and subsections].   He  stated that  the added  crimes are:   AS                                                               
11.41, all  crimes against a  person, including  misdemeanors; AS                                                               
11.46.400-11.46.427,  arson  crimes,  matching  Senator  Claman's                                                               
bill; AS 11.61.140, cruelty  to animals; and 11.61.190-11.61.210,                                                               
misconduct  involving  weapons.    He  further  stated  that  the                                                               
sections in which the statutes  are added within Senator Claman's                                                               
bill,  SB  53, Version  P,  are:    Section 3(j),  Section  4(b),                                                               
Section 5(g),  Section 6(a), Section 6(d),  Section 8(g), Section                                                               
9(b)(2), Section 9(b)(3), and Section 11(c).                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:11:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  ANDY  JOSEPHSON,  Alaska  State  Legislature,  as                                                               
prime sponsor of HB 80, spoke to  the proposed CS, Version S.  He                                                               
explained that  Version S pays  homage to the Senate  version, SB
53, by entirely  embedding SB 53 into HB 80.   The difference, he                                                               
continued, is  that Version S  adds two additional  felonies (out                                                               
of over  100 felonies in  the code)  that he believes  the Alaska                                                               
Court  System and  later the  Alaska Psychiatric  Institute (API)                                                               
need to  look at and  have somewhat  less discretion.   The court                                                               
would  still have  discretion  at  day 90  after  the charge,  he                                                               
added,  but  at   a  couple  stage  gates  in   the  process  the                                                               
prosecutors   shall,  under   Version  S,   file  petitions   for                                                               
involuntary commitment  which would begin with  an evaluation for                                                               
those crimes, although  the timing is a bit different  than in SB
53.   He  allowed  that both  SB  53 and  Version  S will  impact                                                               
resources,  but  offered  his  belief that  in  the  category  of                                                               
assault  in  the fourth-degree  special  attention  is needed  if                                                               
there  are  questions  of  competency   because  the  act  is  so                                                               
irrational.    Representative  Josephson   said  the  reason  for                                                               
embedding this  in the bill  is the  case of Corey  Ahkivgak, who                                                               
physically  assaulted  several victims  over  a  period of  years                                                               
before stabbing  another victim, Ms.  Harris.  He  advocated that                                                               
the  system  needs  to  look  at the  mentally  ill  person,  the                                                               
criminal  defendant, when  that person  is presenting  facts that                                                               
they could escalate, and this is embedded in the proposed CS.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:15:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER inquired  about  the  section of  statute                                                               
regarding assault in the fourth degree ("Assault 4").                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  replied that an  Assault 4 is  the most                                                               
benign form of assault.  If two  people get into a fight who know                                                               
one  another  and  the  behavior  is  criminal  and  uncivil  but                                                               
explainable based on  the nature of the event  or intoxication or                                                               
the context,  the issue of  competency doesn't arise.   There are                                                               
three ways to  commit the crime of assault in  the fourth degree:                                                               
1) a person recklessly causes  physical injury to another person,                                                               
with physical injury  defined as any amount of pain;  2) a person                                                               
causes physical injury to another  person by means of a dangerous                                                               
instrument; and 3) by words  or other conduct a person recklessly                                                               
places another person in fear of physical injury.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER inquired  about the  specific section  of                                                               
statute that lists assaults in the fourth degree.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON responded that it is AS 11.41.230.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:43:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX noted  that Assault 4 is the lowest  level of assault.                                                               
He  offered his  understanding that  [Version S]  would not  deal                                                               
with  all cases  of  assault  4, only  those  where  there is  an                                                               
incompetence  plea,  and  the  case   is  dismissed  because  the                                                               
defendant is found to be incompetent.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON confirmed  that  that is  correct.   He                                                               
related that as  written Version S would require  that within the                                                               
first 90  days following  the event the  court look  at restoring                                                               
the person  if the facts suggest  the act was so  irrational that                                                               
competency was at  issue, but at day 90 the  court begins to have                                                               
discretion to  say, "We're  not going  to do  this anymore."   He                                                               
pointed out that misdemeanors are  limited to a one-year sentence                                                               
that is  inviolable, it cannot be  one year and a  day, and there                                                               
is  an understanding  that  for public  safety  pivoting a  civil                                                               
system must  start to  be considered  because if  an incompetency                                                               
cannot be  restored then  the case  would be  dismissed.   So, he                                                               
continued, [under  the bill] the  system would intervene  at that                                                               
stage by  moving to a  three-day evaluation upon a  petition, and                                                               
during that juncture the criminal  case would remain pending, but                                                               
the  parties  would  know  there  would  be  an  almost  imminent                                                               
dismissal  of the  case if  the individual  couldn't be  restored                                                               
with competency.  There is no  perfect way to be safe in society,                                                               
he stressed,  but the  bill as  written would  give the  victim a                                                               
better  chance   of  not  having  interaction,   which  is  again                                                               
imperfect because the  standards must be looked at.   He said the                                                               
question would  be how long would  the courts try to  restore Mr.                                                               
Ahkivgak and  if a  civil commitment effort  were made,  how long                                                               
would Mr. Ahkivgak  be committed?  He allowed that  it may not be                                                               
as long  as required  to keep  the public  safe and  advised that                                                               
this is going  to remain imperfect but feels he  is duty bound to                                                               
try to do something.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:43:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON further  related that  [the bill]  adds                                                               
the  felonies  of cruelty  to  animals  and misconduct  involving                                                               
weapons.  He explained that  this is because committing a forgery                                                               
is  a  felony  but  typically the  person  committing  a  forgery                                                               
wouldn't be  incompetent in  doing that  and while  forgery could                                                               
damage someone's property interests and  be disruptive, no one is                                                               
going to  die from a forgery.   So, he continued,  the bill tries                                                               
to  capture  the  crimes  that  matter and  that  need  a  longer                                                               
sustained look  on the  issue of restoration  to competency.   He                                                               
noted  that terroristic  threatening    making  phone calls  that                                                               
frighten communities    is the kind of thing  that an incompetent                                                               
person might do and suggested that  the committee could look at a                                                               
crime  like that.   There  is criminal  mischief, he  added.   He                                                               
cited a shooting at the  [Trans-Alaska] pipeline that occurred on                                                               
the haul  road and said  he thinks that  was done by  someone who                                                               
was competent,  so that  would probably  be criminal  mischief in                                                               
the first  degree, which speaks specifically  about oil property.                                                               
He  stated  he  can  offer  recommendations  about  other  crimes                                                               
besides the two crimes he has offered the committee.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:23:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  inquired about how many  of Mr. Ahkivgak's                                                               
incidents were misdemeanors.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON answered that all were misdemeanors.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:43:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX  asked whether  it is  exceptional that  someone would                                                               
commit a  significant number  of misdemeanor  cases that  lead to                                                               
more serious offenses.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  replied that  when he was  a prosecutor                                                               
he saw people with 30  or more misdemeanors, sometimes along with                                                               
a couple felonies  as well, and that is not  atypical.  He stated                                                               
that  in  the  cases  of  Mr. [Clayton]  Charlie  who  killed  an                                                               
Anchorage Zoo [groundskeeper in  November 2018] and Mr. Ahkivgak,                                                               
sirens should  have gone off.   To the  credit of the  system, he                                                               
continued,  sirens   did  sound  but  the   system  either  lacks                                                               
resources or needs toughening up so  that there is another set of                                                               
eyes  and ears  looking at  a potentially  dangerous person.   He                                                               
said  he  believes  the  system does  lack  resources,  but  that                                                               
problem won't be solved this spring.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:26:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took a brief at-ease.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:26:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SUMNER  moved  to adopt  the  proposed  committee                                                               
substitute  (CS) for  HB 80,  labeled 33-LS0224\S,  Marx/Dunmire,                                                               
4/25/23,  as the  working document.   There  being no  objection,                                                               
Version S was before the committee.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:27:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. NYE provided  a sectional analysis of Version  S [included in                                                               
the committee  packet], titled "HB  80 CS Explanation  of Changes                                                               
Version  B to  S," which  read as  follows [original  punctuation                                                               
provided with some formatting changes]:                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Section 1   Page 1, Line 5  12.47.070(a)  is amended to                                                                
     read                                                                                                                     
     Replaced section  1 of HB  80 version B with  section 1                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.                                                                                                        
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     No changes were made to section 1 of SB 53 version P.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Section 2   Page 2, Line 8  12.47.100(b)  is amended to                                                                
     read                                                                                                                     
     Replaced section  1 of HB  80 version B with  section 1                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.                                                                                                        
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     No changes were made to section 1 of SB 53 version P.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Section 3   Page 2,  Line 26   12.47.100 is  amended by                                                                
     adding new subsections                                                                                                   
     Replaced section  3 of HB  80 version B with  section 3                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.  The following crimes were added to                                                                    
     subsection (j): AS 11.41 (all  crimes against a person,                                                                    
     including  misdemeanors), AS  11.46.400-11.46.27 (arson                                                                    
     crimes,  just  felonies),   AS  11.61.140  (cruelty  to                                                                    
     animals),   and   AS  11.61.190-11.61.210   (misconduct                                                                    
     involving weapons)                                                                                                         
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     SB 53  version P limits  offenses of concern  to felony                                                                    
     offenses against a person (AS  11.41) and felony arson.                                                                    
     The additional  offenses that were added  in subsection                                                                    
     (j) broadens  the offenses of concern  that a defendant                                                                    
     may  be evaluated  for in  order to  determine if  they                                                                    
     meet the standards for involuntary commitment.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Section 4  Page 3, Line  16  AS 12.47.110(a) is amended                                                                
     to read                                                                                                                  
     Replaced section  4 of HB  80 version B with  section 3                                                                    
     of that same version B.                                                                                                    
     Delete "crime listed in (f)  of this section" refers to                                                                    
     "(f)" in HB 80 version B                                                                                                   
     Insert "crime listed in (h)  of this section" refers to                                                                    
     "(h)" in HB 80 CS version S                                                                                                
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     The changes made  here narrow the scope  of crimes that                                                                    
     are listed. Crimes listed in  (f) of version B that are                                                                    
     not listed  in (h) of  version S are the  following: AS                                                                    
     11.46.430 (criminally  negligent burning in  the second                                                                    
     degree), AS 11.51.100, AS 11.61.118, and AS 11.61.22                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Section  5   Page  3,  Line 28    AS  12.47.110 (b)  is                                                                
     amended to read                                                                                                          
     Replaced section  5 of HB  80 version B with  section 4                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.  Felonies against a person under AS                                                                    
     11.41  and   felony  arsony  were  already   listed  in                                                                    
     subsection  (b). We  added the  crimes  AS 11.46.400  -                                                                    
     11.46.427, AS 11.61.140(h), or 11.61.190  11.61.200                                                                        
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     For the  crimes that  we added  to subsection  (b), the                                                                    
     court  may   extend  the   period  of   commitment  for                                                                    
     additional 18 months.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Section 6  Page 4, Line  22  AS 12.47.110 is amended by                                                                
     adding new subsections                                                                                                   
     Section 6 of  HB 80 version B is  replaced with section                                                                    
     5 of SB  53 version P. Felonies against  a person under                                                                    
     AS  11.41  and felony  arsony  were  already listed  in                                                                    
     subsection  (g). We  added the  crimes  AS 11.46.400  -                                                                    
     11.46.427, AS 11.61.140, or 11.61.190  11.61.210                                                                           
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     By adding  these crimes to this  subsection, it ensures                                                                    
     that a defendant charged with  one of these crimes will                                                                    
     be subject to the  process detailed in this subsection.                                                                    
     Meaning  that   if  they  remain  incompetent   at  the                                                                    
     expiration  of the  additional  18  month period,  they                                                                    
     will  remain   subject  to  the   next  steps   in  the                                                                    
     prosecutorial process.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Section 7   Page  5, Line  23  AS  47.30 is  amended by                                                                
     adding new section 47.30.706                                                                                             
     Section 7 of  HB 80 version B is  replaced with section                                                                    
     6 of SB  53 version P. Felonies against  a person under                                                                    
     AS  11.41  and felony  arsony  were  already listed  in                                                                    
     subsection (a)  and (d). To both  of those subsections,                                                                    
     we  added  the  crimes  AS 11.46.400  -  11.46.427,  AS                                                                    
     11.61.140, or 11.61.190  11.61.210                                                                                         
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     If a person charged with  an offense under the statutes                                                                    
     we added  has been  found incompetent to  proceed under                                                                    
     AS 12.47, subsection (a) ensures  that an attorney with                                                                    
     the department  of law file  a petition with  the court                                                                    
     to  have  delivered  to the  nearest  facility  for  an                                                                    
     evaluation under AS 47.30.710.                                                                                             
     Adding  these  statutes  to   subsection  (d)  has  the                                                                    
     [effect]  that  a  defendant charged  with  an  offense                                                                    
     under them  is rebuttably presumed mentally  ill and to                                                                    
     present serious  harm to  self or  others. And  it says                                                                    
     the court may consider  as recent behavior "the conduct                                                                    
     with which the. defendant was originally charged.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Section 8  Page 6, Line  23  AS 47.30.710(a) is amended                                                                
     to read                                                                                                                  
     Replace section 8 of HB 80  version B with section 7 of                                                                    
     SB  53  version  P.  No  other  changes  made  to  this                                                                    
     section.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Section 9  Page 6, Line  29  AS 47.30.725 is amended by                                                                
     adding new subsections                                                                                                   
     Section 9 of  HB 80 version B is  replaced with section                                                                    
     8 of SB  53 version P. Felonies against  a person under                                                                    
     AS  11.41  and felony  arsony  were  already listed  in                                                                    
     subsection  (g).  To  that  subsection,  we  added  the                                                                    
     crimes  AS  11.46.400  - 11.46.427,  AS  11.61.140,  or                                                                    
     11.61.190  11.61.210                                                                                                       
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     This section details that a  victim of a crime shall be                                                                    
     notified  when the  criminal  case  is dismissed.  That                                                                    
     statutes  we added  in this  section  ensures that  the                                                                    
     victims of these additional crimes  will be notified as                                                                    
     well.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Section 10   Page 7,  Line 10   AS 47.30 is  amended by                                                                
     adding a new section                                                                                                     
     Replaces section 10  of HB 80 version B  with section 9                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.  Felonies against a person under AS                                                                    
     11.41  and   felony  arsony  were  already   listed  in                                                                    
     subsection   (b)(2)   and    (b)(3).   To   those   two                                                                    
     subsections,  we  added  the   crimes  AS  11.46.400  -                                                                    
     11.46.427, AS 11.61.140, or 11.61.190  11.61.210                                                                           
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     (b)(2) and  (b)(3) broadens the scope  of offenses that                                                                    
     may be considered when determining  a 5 year commitment                                                                    
     period.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Section 11  Page 8 Line  17  AS 47.30.780(a) is amended                                                                
     to read                                                                                                                  
     Replaced section 11 of HB  80 version B with section 10                                                                    
     of SB 53 version P.  No additional changes were made to                                                                    
     this section.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Section 12   Page 8, Line  23  AS 47.30.780  is amended                                                                
     by adding subsections                                                                                                    
     We  took section  11 of  SB 53  version P  and made  it                                                                    
     Section 12 in this CS.  Felonies against a person under                                                                    
     AS  11.41  and felony  arsony  were  already listed  in                                                                    
     subsection (c). To subsection (c),  we added the crimes                                                                    
     AS 11.46.400 - 11.46.427,  AS 11.61.140, or 11.61.190                                                                      
     11.61.210                                                                                                                  
     Impact of Change                                                                                                         
     By adding  these offenses listed  in these  statutes to                                                                    
     subsection  (a),   we  have  broadened  the   scope  of                                                                    
     offenses so that the professional  person in charge may                                                                    
     not  discharge these  additional respondents  under (a)                                                                    
     of this section unless  the court officially terminates                                                                    
     the involuntary commitment.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Section  13   Page  9,  Line 13,    AS 47.30.805(a)  is                                                                
     amended to read                                                                                                          
     We  took section  12 of  SB 53  version P  and made  it                                                                    
     section 13  of this CS.  We didn't make  any additional                                                                    
     changes to this section.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:47:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX  requested Ms. Baldwin-Johnson to  provide her invited                                                               
testimony.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:48:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KATIE  BALDWIN-JOHNSON, Chief  Operating  Officer, Alaska  Mental                                                               
Health  Trust Authority,  provided  invited testimony  on HB  80.                                                               
She  stated  that  the  Alaska   Mental  Health  Trust  Authority                                                               
("Trust") is glad  for the dialogue that has  occurred around the                                                               
need  to balance  public and  community safety  with due  process                                                               
rights,  given  the  potential  for a  Trust  beneficiary  to  be                                                               
institutionalized for  up to five  years without  being convicted                                                               
of a crime.   The Trust recognizes the severity  of recent events                                                               
and  incidents, she  said, but  most  individuals who  experience                                                               
mental  illness are  no more  likely  to be  violent than  anyone                                                               
else.   She  advised  that mental  illness  and other  behavioral                                                               
health challenges, are  best treated in a  community setting when                                                               
possible versus  in an institution.   Ms. Baldwin-Johnson further                                                               
advised that  investing resources to stabilize  behavioral health                                                               
services in  communities is a  critical approach to  better serve                                                               
individuals,    ensure    the    availability    of    treatment,                                                               
interventions, and supports,  and establish greater opportunities                                                               
to  address  the   needs  of  the  individual   with  chronic  or                                                               
exacerbated  mental health  conditions.    Greater investment  in                                                               
services,  she continued,  increases community  safety by  better                                                               
meeting the needs of individuals  who require more support paired                                                               
with  the  right  treatment  and,  in  some  circumstances,  more                                                               
structured support and supervision.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. BALDWIN-JOHNSON  related that disability justice  has been an                                                               
established  focus area  for the  Trust since  2005.   She stated                                                               
that Trust  beneficiaries are at  increased risk  and involvement                                                               
with the  criminal justice system  as victims and  as defendants.                                                               
She  said this  can  be  due to  the  person's disability  and/or                                                               
behavior health conditions and because  there are deficiencies in                                                               
treatment and  support systems at  all levels.  The  Trust's work                                                               
in this area, she specified,  includes diversion programs such as                                                               
crisis   stabilization   and    therapeutic   courts,   providing                                                               
behavioral  health services  for  incarcerated persons,  re-entry                                                               
services for returning citizens,  and supporting organizations to                                                               
expand and build out needed services in communities.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:44:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. BALDWIN-JOHNSON  requested that  the committee  consider some                                                               
of her thoughts  as it moves forward:  Is  enough known about the                                                               
broader impacts  on the system?   What will be the  impact on the                                                               
API's ability  to serve the entire  state, as well as  impacts to                                                               
Alaskan  communities if  beds at  API are  occupied for  extended                                                               
periods  of time,  potentially  years?   What  is  the impact  on                                                               
Alaskans  experiencing  an  acute  mental health  crisis  if  the                                                               
ability  to  access  needed  care   is  further  reduced  because                                                               
individuals  are institutionalized  for longer  periods of  time?                                                               
She pointed out  that there are already access  challenges due to                                                               
hospital  capacity and  individuals can  be boarded  in hospitals                                                               
for extended  periods because  there is not  an available  bed at                                                               
API to admit them.  She  noted that API has been operating almost                                                               
at full capacity for many months now.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. BALDWIN-JOHNSON,  in conclusion, encouraged the  committee to                                                               
consider  limited restoration  capacity  currently  at API,  long                                                               
wait  lists,  and  what efforts  have  been  implemented  towards                                                               
expanding  capacity.    She maintained  that  moving  legislation                                                               
forward  would create  increased  demand  without addressing  the                                                               
additional  capacity needed.   She  said addressing  the system's                                                               
needs upstream  will help improve both  community and beneficiary                                                               
safety.   She  urged  that the  legislature work  collaboratively                                                               
with  the department  to  ensure  that a  plan  is  in place  for                                                               
addressing  infrastructure  and  capacity limitations  in  Alaska                                                               
prior to enacting legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:53:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX opened public testimony on HB 80.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:56:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOHN  SKIDMORE,  Deputy   Attorney  General,  Criminal  Division,                                                               
Central  Office, Department  of Law,  noted that  [Version S]  is                                                               
attempting to  address gaps in  Alaska's laws.  He  further noted                                                               
that [Version S]  is also attempting to address  the aspect that,                                                               
currently,  individuals  charged  with  a crime  and  then  found                                                               
incompetent  are not  automatically  referred  or have  petitions                                                               
filed even  in cases where it  may be appropriate for  them to be                                                               
evaluated  for a  civil commitment.   Several  different concepts                                                               
have  been discussed  about how  that could  be accomplished,  he                                                               
added.  As well, he stated,  [Version S] is attempting to address                                                               
civil commitments,  which the Criminal Division  does not handle.                                                               
Therefore, he  continued, he cannot answer  questions about that,                                                               
but he can answer questions  about criminal incompetence or about                                                               
what happens during that process.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:57:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RUFFRIDGE  surmised the current process  of having                                                               
two qualified  [psychiatrists or psychologists] ensures  that one                                                               
person is  not granted authority  over another without  a backup.                                                               
He  asked  whether   this  process  has  been   working  well  in                                                               
determining incompetence in criminal cases.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE replied  that the requirement of  two individuals is                                                               
a  challenge  because  regularly  only  one  individual  is  seen                                                               
conducting evaluations.   He pointed out that  the requirement of                                                               
certification by a particular board  within the country is also a                                                               
challenge since  Alaska currently  does not  have any  folks with                                                               
that  certification and  hasn't for  several years.   He  related                                                               
that  for  several  years,   various  reports  have  consistently                                                               
recommended that only one individual  be required to provide that                                                               
opinion and  that certification  by that  board not  be required.                                                               
Mr.  Skidmore further  advised that  if either  the state  or the                                                               
defense has  concerns about the  opinion that is  offered, either                                                               
party is  at liberty to  hire their  own expert to  conduct their                                                               
own evaluation to provide further information.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:59:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RUFFRIDGE offered his  understanding that there is                                                               
no one  employed by the State  of Alaska or within  the state who                                                               
is certified by the [American Board of Forensic Psychology].                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE  responded that there  are individuals in  the state                                                               
who  practice in  that  area and  do so  effectively,  but he  is                                                               
unsure that  they have received certification  from the [American                                                               
Board of Forensic Psychology].   In his experience, Department of                                                               
Law prosecutors have routinely not  been able to find individuals                                                               
with those certifications in the state.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:00:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RUFFRIDGE read  aloud  from page  3, lines  8-12,                                                               
Version S,  which state:   "If the  defendant is charged  with an                                                               
offense under AS 11.41, AS  11.46.400-11.46.427, AS 11.61.140, or                                                               
11.61.190-11.61.210,  a  qualified psychiatrist  or  psychologist                                                               
conducting an examination  under (b) of this section  may, at the                                                               
same  time,  evaluate  the defendant  to  determine  whether  the                                                               
defendant meets  the standards  for involuntary  commitment under                                                               
AS  47.30.700 -  47.30.915."   He inquired  about the  reason why                                                               
they would be given the option to do that.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE answered that when  an individual is first evaluated                                                               
for competency, the system allows  for the attempt to restore the                                                               
individual if he or she  is found incompetent.  That restoration,                                                               
he said, is broken into three phases    90 days, 90 days, and six                                                               
months    none  of which  are required;  those are  discretionary                                                               
times.   What the law requires,  he explained, is that  the court                                                               
find  that  there is  a  possibility  that  the person  could  be                                                               
restored.   If  restoration is  not  likely in  that period,  the                                                               
"may"  in  this  provision  would allow  a  medical  professional                                                               
evaluating the  person for  competency to  also evaluate,  if the                                                               
professional  thinks  it   appropriate,  whether  the  individual                                                               
should be  civilly committed.   He stressed  that the use  of the                                                               
word "may" means it is at  the discretion of the medical provider                                                               
conducting  the  initial evaluation  for  incompetency.   It's  a                                                               
separate evaluation to determine if  the person should be civilly                                                               
committed, he added.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:02:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  asked  whether  there  is  any  risk  or                                                               
downtick to  having parallel evaluations for  competency to stand                                                               
trial and potentially for involuntary  commitment.  He noted that                                                               
other  provisions   in  the  bill   would  allow   the  examining                                                               
psychologist or  psychiatrist to use previous  evaluations, which                                                               
it appears that the law does not now allow.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE  replied that having  parallel evaluations is  not a                                                               
problem legally.   Conducting both  evaluations is  more resource                                                               
intensive,  he  stated, and  that  could  be problematic  from  a                                                               
logistics perspective  given that resources are  limited to begin                                                               
with.   Regarding the value  of a civil commitment  evaluation at                                                               
the time that a competency  evaluation is done, he explained that                                                               
if restoration is  attempted and it's for 90 days,  or another 90                                                               
days, or  the final  180 days,  the period  of elapsed  time from                                                               
when  the  first  evaluation  was   done  until  the  case  would                                                               
ultimately  be  at the  point  of  being dismissed  assuming  the                                                               
person is still incompetent, may  have made that civil commitment                                                               
evaluation  stale,   requiring  yet   another  evaluation.     He                                                               
reiterated that the term "may" makes  it at the discretion of the                                                               
medical  provider to  determine if  that would  be effective  and                                                               
helpful at  that time and whether  they have the resources  to do                                                               
it.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:04:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  inquired about  the statistics  under the                                                               
current system  for how often  those found to be  incompetent are                                                               
restored.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE responded that he  doesn't have a percentage off the                                                               
top of  his head for  how frequently it  occurs.  He  deferred to                                                               
Dr. Becker  to provide that answer.   He related that  during his                                                               
25 years as  a prosecutor he has handled cases  in which a person                                                               
was  deemed  incompetent,  was   restored,  and  the  prosecution                                                               
proceeded, as  well as cases  where somebody  was not able  to be                                                               
restored and the case had to be dismissed.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:05:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER asked  whether the  bill would  impose an                                                               
excessive burden on the Department of Law's Criminal Division.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE  confirmed the  bill would have  some impact  on the                                                               
Criminal Division but  stated he doesn't know  whether the impact                                                               
on the  Criminal Division is the  same that it might  be on, say,                                                               
API or the Civil Division of the  Department of Law.  He said one                                                               
additional  responsibility  imposed  upon the  Criminal  Division                                                               
would be  to file  petitions when  somebody is  found incompetent                                                               
under the  types of crimes  described in  the bill, so  not every                                                               
time   a   person   is  found   incompetent.      An   additional                                                               
responsibility that would be imposed  upon the Criminal Division,                                                               
he  continued, would  be  the requirement  to  notify victims  in                                                               
crimes  where the  person  has been  found  incompetent and  then                                                               
potentially  ends up  in civil  proceedings to  determine whether                                                               
there should  be a  civil commitment and,  if committed,  what is                                                               
happening throughout that course.   He said the Criminal Division                                                               
has submitted a  fiscal note given additional  resources would be                                                               
needed  for the  division  to  be able  to  accomplish those  two                                                               
things, but he doesn't consider the burden great.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:07:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMOR,  responding to  Representative Mina,  confirmed that                                                               
the requirement  to notify the  victim is included in  Version S,                                                               
Section 9, pages  6-7.  He explained that it  is a new subsection                                                               
that is  added, with  the three  different types  of notification                                                               
found on page 7.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:08:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RUFFRIDGE  observed that page 6,  line 16, Version                                                               
S,  states:   "In evaluating  whether  a defendant  is likely  to                                                               
cause serious  harm, the  court may  consider as  recent behavior                                                               
the  conduct with  which the  defendant was  originally charged."                                                               
Given that  a person  is innocent until  proven guilty,  he asked                                                               
whether it is a problem  legally if someone is originally charged                                                               
with something  and those charges  are dismissed, and  then those                                                               
alleged behaviors are used as reason to civilly commit someone.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. SKIDMORE answered that he  doesn't believe it poses a problem                                                               
but allowed that  others may disagree with him.   His reason why,                                                               
he explained, is that the  initial probable cause statement which                                                               
is filed in  criminal charges is reviewed by the  court, and that                                                               
probable cause statement would not  be moving forward without the                                                               
court's agreement  that there is  probable cause to  believe that                                                               
the  individual committed  those  crimes.   When evaluating  this                                                               
initial  portion,  he  stated,  what is  being  talked  about  is                                                               
whether  there  should  be  a  petition  for  the  person  to  be                                                               
evaluated and whether  the court is able to  consider the conduct                                                               
that occurred.   Without that  language, he continued,  there can                                                               
be up to a year's time from the  date of the incident or the date                                                               
of the  charging until restoration  is attempted to  be completed                                                               
and then civil commitment is  being evaluated.  What is typically                                                               
looked for in civil commitments,  he said, is conduct that causes                                                               
folks to believe  that the individual is a danger  now.  He noted                                                               
that sometimes  it is heard  that that  conduct is now  stale and                                                               
why is it thought  that what the person did a  year ago makes him                                                               
a  danger now?   This  [language],  Mr. Skidmore  advised, is  an                                                               
attempt to  direct the court  and others to evaluate  the conduct                                                               
the individual  engaged in  to begin with,  the conduct  found in                                                               
the probable cause  statement, to evaluate whether  the person is                                                               
a danger.  It's not that  the person is convicted, it's not proof                                                               
beyond  a  reasonable doubt,  it's  a  lower standard  for  these                                                               
evaluations,  it's a  preponderance  of the  evidence, and  being                                                               
able  to  consider  the  information  there  is  appropriate,  he                                                               
further advised.   That does not mean that it  is considered in a                                                               
vacuum, other information can be  provided, he added, and that is                                                               
why that language is written the way in which it is.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:11:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KRISTY   BECKER,  PhD,   Chief  of   Clinical  Services,   Alaska                                                               
Psychiatric Institute,  stated she is a  forensic psychologist by                                                               
training, so  a criminal  psychologist.  She  said she  is before                                                               
the  committee to  talk about  the needs  of the  institution and                                                               
some of  the potential implications that  HB 80 may have  on API.                                                               
She  agreed with  Ms. Baldwin-Johnson  that  there are  potential                                                               
capacity issues  that this bill  could cause for the  facility in                                                               
terms of  who fills its  beds, what  nature of patients  fill its                                                               
beds,  and where  those patients  are  from, potentially  filling                                                               
more  beds  with  individuals  who have  a  history  of  criminal                                                               
behavior  or  who  have recently  engaged  in  criminal  behavior                                                               
rather than vulnerable community members who need API's care.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER related that API is  revising a fiscal note for HB 80.                                                               
She  advised  that  with  the  two-year  commitment  period,  the                                                               
additional evaluative  process, and the three-day  holds included                                                               
in  HB 80,  there will  be a  burden on  the hospital  to conduct                                                               
evaluations  and  to house  patients  in  a  way that  API  isn't                                                               
currently doing.  She reminded  committee members that Alaska has                                                               
10  beds  dedicated for  competency  restoration  for the  entire                                                               
population of  Alaska.   Those 10 beds  represent the  lowest per                                                               
capita number of beds for  competency restoration of any state in                                                               
the nation, she  continued, so API is currently  operating at far                                                               
below what  would be ideal bed  space for its patients,  not just                                                               
for this purpose but for all purposes.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:14:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  offered  his  opinion  that  API's  under                                                               
capacity is  a separate issue  than the need  for this bill.   He                                                               
stated that API's  under capacity has posed a  public safety risk                                                               
to Anchorage and throughout the state  for a long time.  He asked                                                               
whether  Dr.  Becker would  agree  that  trying to  expand  API's                                                               
capacity should be done regardless of whether HB 80 is passed.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER replied  that there  is clear  cause, both  civil and                                                               
criminal  through Title  47 and  Title 12,  to indicate  that API                                                               
does need expansion and that  the expansion of community services                                                               
and transitional care environments,  upstream and downstream, are                                                               
deeply needed by the state of Alaska.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:15:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SUMNER inquired about the  number of new beds that                                                               
would  be needed  to go  from the  lowest per  capita fence  to a                                                               
fence in the middle of the pack.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER responded  that she  doesn't have  that number.   She                                                               
related that  API has 30-35  individuals, on average,  sitting on                                                               
its waitlist in jail settings  awaiting a bed in API's competency                                                               
restoration unit.   She further  related that it  currently takes                                                               
between  120 and  130  days for  an individual  to  get from  the                                                               
competency order issued by the court  to a bed at API.  Regarding                                                               
the  restoration  periods  of  90  days, 90  days,  and  then  an                                                               
additional 180 days, she pointed  out that everyone is already in                                                               
their second commitment period when they arrive at API's door.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:16:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  asked  about the  effectiveness  of  the                                                               
entire  process of  trying  to restore  somebody  charged with  a                                                               
crime to competency to stand trial.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER answered that it is  a complicated and nuanced area of                                                               
the law  and of  psychological practice.   She  said, nationwide,                                                               
about  60  percent of  defendants  referred  for restoration  are                                                               
successfully  restored, but  in the  state of  Alaska, competency                                                               
restoration is  much less effective.   She stated that  there are                                                               
significant  problems   in  Alaska   with  getting   people  into                                                               
restoration  services in  a timely  manner  as well  as with  the                                                               
ability  to access  and provide  involuntary medication  to these                                                               
patients once they are in services.   She explained that if API's                                                               
patients  don't  wish  to  take  medication  in  the  process  of                                                               
competency  restoration, a  separate  procedure  is necessary  to                                                               
involuntarily provide  those medications to API's  patients.  The                                                               
procedure is  a very high legal  standard that is hard  to reach,                                                               
she continued,  and because it  isn't codified in  Alaska statute                                                               
API relies on federal statute to  attempt to do this.  Dr. Becker                                                               
said that leaves API to  the whims of different jurisdictions and                                                               
judges' interpretations  of this  federal guideline  to determine                                                               
who  it can  or cannot  provide involuntary  medication to.   The                                                               
shortened period of time that API  is given access to the patient                                                               
and  able to  provide  the services,  along  with the  incredible                                                               
limitations on API's ability to  provide medication against those                                                               
patients'  will,  prevents  API's  ability to  restore  them  and                                                               
restoration rates are far below the national average.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:19:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  asked  whether Alaska  has  more  people                                                               
committing  crimes who  are  possibly  mentally incompetent  than                                                               
other states.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER replied,  "Not to my knowledge."  She  said Alaska has                                                               
higher  rates of  certain types  of crimes  and certain  types of                                                               
behavior than  other states,  and the rate  of sexual  assault in                                                               
Alaska is  above national averages.   Nationwide,  she specified,                                                               
competency  restoration and  the pressure  to manage  incompetent                                                               
defendants  through state  hospital  systems  is problematic  and                                                               
there is an  exponential growth rate of the  referrals and number                                                               
of people who are referred  for competency restoration orders for                                                               
competency evaluation  and thereby hospitalized.   She noted that                                                               
information  is  available  about  how other  states  are  either                                                               
managing  it well  or  are  failing to  manage  or struggling  to                                                               
manage it.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:20:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  inquired about the reasons  for why there                                                               
are this many people being incompetent and committing crimes.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER responded  that  from a  data  driven perspective  it                                                               
would  be  difficult  for  her  to fully  answer  that,  but  she                                                               
believes there  is a  historical timeline  that can  be followed.                                                               
She stated  that since  the occurrence  of deinstitutionalization                                                               
during and shortly prior to  Ronald Reagan's administration, many                                                               
individuals  who   had  spent  their  lives   inside  psychiatric                                                               
hospitals  were  released into  communities  with  the intent  to                                                               
provide  community  services  for  them and  have  them  live  in                                                               
communities and  be supported.   From a  clinician's perspective,                                                               
she said, the  nation did not provide  those community resources,                                                               
nor were these  folks shored up in communities in  a way that was                                                               
safe.   An  insurgence  of nuisance  crimes  was seen,  behaviors                                                               
related to mental health, she continued.   A person with a mental                                                               
illness, Dr. Becker continued, is  much more likely to have legal                                                               
exposure  than an  average  individual.   She  said  it holds  to                                                               
reason  that part  of the  exponential increase  in the  concerns                                                               
about  competency and  the number  of orders  for evaluation  and                                                               
thereby  restoration  is related  to  these  folks being  out  in                                                               
communities more.   Through the  course of time, she  added, this                                                               
has exacerbated and  grown along with the problem  with folks who                                                               
are unhoused and the general  inability of communities nationwide                                                               
to manage these populations effectively.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:22:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RUFFRIDGE  inquired about  the number  of forensic                                                               
psychologists at API in addition to Dr. Becker.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER  answered that  besides  herself,  there is  a  chief                                                               
forensic psychologist who manages the  10-bed unit in question, a                                                               
forensic  psychologist who  recently joined  API from  Washington                                                               
state,  and  another  forensic  psychologist  whom  she  recently                                                               
hired.   She  said API  also currently  has four  contractors who                                                               
support  the   hospital  through  telehealth  and   conduct  some                                                               
competency evaluations via telehealth  mechanisms like Zoom where                                                               
they can  interface with  the defendants and  provide API  with a                                                               
report for competency.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RUFFRIDGE  noted that Alaska doesn't  have a place                                                               
to train forensic  psychologists.  He asked where  Dr. Becker was                                                               
trained and how long she has been doing this.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER  replied that she  has worked in criminal  justice and                                                               
mental health since she was 18  years old, starting her career as                                                               
a psychiatric technician at Western  State Hospital.  She went on                                                               
to  work in  a maximum-security  prison, she  said, then  went to                                                               
undergraduate school  in Idaho and  received her  master's degree                                                               
at  Teachers College  at Columbia  University in  New York.   She                                                               
went to  Sam Houston  State University  in Texas,  she continued,                                                               
one  of the  top  five  brick and  mortar  colleges that  produce                                                               
forensic   psychologists.      There  are   not   many   forensic                                                               
psychologists  in  Alaska,  she  noted.   She  explained  that  a                                                               
forensic  psychologist  has  the  same  training  as  a  clinical                                                               
psychologist,  and that  psychiatrists  are  medical doctors  who                                                               
give  medications, while  psychologists are  not medical  doctors                                                               
and   don't  give   medications  but   do  reports   and  conduct                                                               
evaluations.    She  related  that  she came  to  Alaska  on  her                                                               
internship to  work at API  for one year  and she chose  to stay.                                                               
She  noted that  API can  train a  clinical psychologist  to have                                                               
forensic skills, but  it takes time and  practice with oversight,                                                               
so  it isn't  something  that someone  straight  out of  graduate                                                               
school can just start doing.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RUFFRIDGE  inquired  about the  number  of  other                                                               
states Dr.  Becker has been in.   He further asked  whether other                                                               
states have this same problem,  whether they have solved it, and,                                                               
if so, whether the approach was the same [as proposed in HB 80].                                                                
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER confirmed  other  states have  this  problem and  she                                                               
would say resoundingly  that they have not solved  it.  Different                                                               
approaches  have  been  taken  by other  states,  she  said.  For                                                               
example, she continued, Washington,  Oregon, and Colorado are all                                                               
under some  sort of  consent decree or  legal action  where suits                                                               
have  been brought  forward indicating  that  civil liberties  of                                                               
defendants  are being  violated because  they are  being held  in                                                               
jail for far  too long prior to  receiving competency restoration                                                               
services.   Those  consent decrees,  she explained,  have created                                                               
edicts  in which  there  are certain  timelines  that revoke  the                                                               
evaluative process and the amount  of time that is allowed before                                                               
a defendant  can be  admitted to  the hospital.   She  noted that                                                               
they've  also  created quite  short  timelines  of 7-14  days  on                                                               
average for the  defendant to be hospitalized after  a finding of                                                               
incompetence so the  restoration process can begin  quickly.  She                                                               
specified that  those states, however,  are generally  not always                                                               
able  to  comply  with  those consent  decrees,  and  often  find                                                               
themselves being fined because of their inability to comply.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER continued her response.   She related that states have                                                               
also  attempted  to  address this  problem  by  using  outpatient                                                               
competency  restoration  and jail-based  competency  restoration.                                                               
She advised that she has made  efforts to institute both of those                                                               
programs in Alaska, with the  support of her administration.  She                                                               
said  API  has  had  consultants  evaluate  Alaska's  ability  to                                                               
initiate an outpatient competency  restoration pilot and API will                                                               
try  to do  that  starting August  2023 with  10  people who  are                                                               
misdemeanants that  have no crimes  of force involving  a person.                                                               
Jail-based  programs, she  continued,  function in  a variety  of                                                               
ways  in which  restoration services  can be  provided while  the                                                               
defendants  are still  in custody  prior  to being  hospitalized.                                                               
How this might look in Alaska,  she said, is that the very lowest                                                               
level criminal defendants might be  able to bailed out, placed on                                                               
bail conditions,  and then  restored in  the community;  the mid-                                                               
level  defendants with  a variety  of illnesses  who are  able to                                                               
cooperate  with medication  provision in  a custodial  setting in                                                               
jail could receive services in jail;  and the most acute and most                                                               
severely ill  individuals could be  placed in API's  10-bed unit.                                                               
That could  reduce the  pressure, she advised,  but even  if both                                                               
those programs  were opened  today [API] would  have a  wait list                                                               
with five or six people on it.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:27:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RUFFRIDGE,  should  the  bill be  passed  in  its                                                               
current form, asked  whether the state would be at  the same risk                                                               
of liability for those same issues  of holding people in jail for                                                               
too long because the state doesn't have this expanded capacity.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER deferred  to an  attorney or  someone better  able to                                                               
answer that question.   However, she suggested,  it is reasonable                                                               
to  say that,  given the  current  wait lists,  there is  already                                                               
potential jeopardy  for that  outcome and  probably has  been for                                                               
some time.   So, she  continued, additional  pressure, additional                                                               
capacity issues,  and an inability  to move people  off waitlists                                                               
is  likely to  exacerbate that  problem along  with the  capacity                                                               
issues that API is currently facing.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:28:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MINA surmised that HB  80 would result in a higher                                                               
number  of  civil  commitments  for  people  with  a  history  of                                                               
violence.   She inquired about  the current safety  standards for                                                               
nonviolent patients also housed at API.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER answered  that those populations are  already mixed to                                                               
some extent.   She explained that because of  the commonality and                                                               
frequency of criminal exposure or  legal exposure for individuals                                                               
with mental illness,  and the current state of  the nation, there                                                               
are  a  lot  of  defendants  or patients  who  move  between  the                                                               
competency  restoration unit  and  the civil  unit  on a  routine                                                               
basis.  She  posed a hypothetical scenario where  Mr. Smith comes                                                               
into API  because he is gravely  disabled and unable to  care for                                                               
himself in  the community, he is  placed on meds and  returned to                                                               
the community,  he steals a car,  he comes to API  for competency                                                               
restoration,  API isn't  able  to restore  him,  he leaves  again                                                               
after  some   time  with  medication,   then  he  behaves   in  a                                                               
threatening  way  at  a  local  grocery store,  is  found  to  be                                                               
dangerous to  others, and is returned  to the civil side  of API.                                                               
Dr. Becker said  it's uncommon that API has an  individual who is                                                               
just a competency defendant or  just a civilly committed patient,                                                               
rather it  is more  common that there  is mobility  between those                                                               
two states and those two legal states.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER  continued her response  to Representative Mina.   She                                                               
said API's  safety precautions designed  in the  hospital address                                                               
the  awareness of  individuals residing  on  API's regular  civil                                                               
adult units who  then may also reside on the  forensic unit.  The                                                               
safety  precautions   in  place,  she  explained,   are  adequate                                                               
staffing, patient  monitoring, and a minimum  of 15-minute checks                                                               
on every  patient.  She noted  that if there is  any incidence of                                                               
threat,  violence, or  sexual impropriety  between patients,  API                                                               
will  investigate,  appropriately   separate  the  patients,  and                                                               
report to the ombudsman and  other related agencies such as adult                                                               
protective services.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:31:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MINA asked whether,  for patient and staff safety,                                                               
there should be more focus  on improving the safety components of                                                               
adequate  staffing  and patient  monitoring  should  there be  an                                                               
increase in people who have a history of violence.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER replied yes, [API]  must be conscientious about how it                                                               
staffs patients  who are exhibiting  dangerousness to  others and                                                               
whether it increases the need  for higher staffing ratios and for                                                               
one-to-one  staffing to  ensure safety  of all  patients at  API.                                                               
She  advised  that  if  API  does move  toward  a  more  forensic                                                               
population  where the  hospital has  more individuals  with legal                                                               
involvement and criminal histories, it  will rub up against API's                                                               
ability  to maintain  accreditation.   It can  be difficult,  Dr.                                                               
Becker explained,  because of the  nature of management  of large                                                               
groups of individuals  with criminal histories and  the rules and                                                               
guidelines necessary  to maintain  a safe environment  that meets                                                               
guidelines for the  regulatory bodies.  So,  she continued, there                                                               
will be  many questions  drawn about safety  and other  issues if                                                               
the hospital does become more forensic in nature.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:33:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MINA asked  if there  would  be workforce  issues                                                               
with hiring for more positions and expanding that capacity.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
DR. BECKER confirmed  that there would be workforce  issues.  She                                                               
advised that  API currently has significant  workforce issues and                                                               
difficultly hiring and is staffing  many of its nursing positions                                                               
with traveling nurses.   She acknowledged that  the committee has                                                               
heard from  a variety of  people about the difficulties  that API                                                               
experiences  in  finding  both  nursing  staff  and  higher-level                                                               
professional staff, including  psychologists and psychiatrists at                                                               
the API facility.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:34:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX noted  that only a small part of  the total population                                                               
of people  with mental illnesses  find themselves before  a court                                                               
for committing  some sort of crime.   He asked whether  the right                                                               
strategy is being  chosen, or whether there is  a better strategy                                                               
that would intercept in a positive way more people.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
DR.  BECKER   acknowledged  that  the  incident   prompting  this                                                               
attention  is a  tragedy  and allowed  that  there are  community                                                               
safety  concerns  brought  about  by some  individuals  whom  she                                                               
treats.    She offered  her  appreciation  for  use of  the  word                                                               
"intercept"  because  when  looking  at  models  within  criminal                                                               
justice and mental health care,  the talk is about intercepts and                                                               
when  intervention  can occur.    There  are multiple  points  of                                                               
intervention, she  explained, and the interventions  being talked                                                               
about today  are interventions after  everything has in  some way                                                               
failed  and  an  individual  is   in  a  circumstance  of  having                                                               
inflicted harm  upon another person  and is now in  legal trouble                                                               
and  facing   the  consequence  of  incarceration   or  long-term                                                               
hospitalization  because of  their inability  to be  safe in  the                                                               
community.  Dr. Becker stated  that her preference as a clinician                                                               
and a practitioner  is to create intercepts as  early as possible                                                               
because  the earlier  the intervention  from  when an  individual                                                               
first develops a mental illness, the  better the outcome.  If the                                                               
outcome is better, she said,  an individual may be prevented from                                                               
becoming  dangerous.  Treatment,  safe and  secure  housing,  and                                                               
compliance with  long term  outpatient care  reduces the  risk of                                                               
the  patient  harming  others,  she added.    It's  an  imperfect                                                               
system,  she advised,  and predicting  risk  is very  challenging                                                               
even  for people  trained to  do it  and oftentimes  those people                                                               
will be wrong.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:37:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NANCY  MEADE,   General  Counsel,  Alaska  Court   System,  first                                                               
qualified that  the court is neutral  on HB 80.   She stated that                                                               
the issue of  capacity is something for the committee  to bear in                                                               
mind.  She further pointed  out four things for committee members                                                               
to  think about  with HB  80 in  terms of  policy:   1) How  long                                                               
should  the  restoration  period  be  in  a  criminal  case  when                                                               
somebody is found  incompetent and HB 80 changes that?  2) When a                                                               
case is  dismissed because  the person is  not competent  in that                                                               
criminal case, what groups of  cases must be segued directly into                                                               
the  civil commitment  process? 3)  Should there  be a  long-term                                                               
civil  commitment process  for those  individuals who  are segued                                                               
after being  found incompetent  to stand trial?  4) How  long can                                                               
that hold  be?   Ms. Meade  related that  Version S  of HB  80 is                                                               
workable from  the court's  point of view,  but she  is uncertain                                                               
whether it's practically workable  and will accomplish everything                                                               
the committee wants  it to accomplish.  However,  she advised, it                                                               
is a step forward for  doing something with the individuals whose                                                               
cases get  dismissed and  there is  a sense  that they  have some                                                               
threat to public safety and  therefore something else needs to be                                                               
done with them other than letting them go.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:39:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX  inquired about the  number of cases in  the Anchorage                                                               
courts.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. MEADE answered that statewide  data isn't complete because it                                                               
isn't the court system's role  to collect that data and determine                                                               
what is  going on, but there  is decent data for  Anchorage.  She                                                               
said she will therefore stick  with the criminal cases, Title 47,                                                               
where a  person is found  incompetent to stand trial.   Statewide                                                               
[in 2022], she  related, there were 404  requests for evaluations                                                               
for competency  in a criminal case.   About 240 of  those were in                                                               
Anchorage where  the court found that  examination was justified.                                                               
Out  of those  240 cases,  she  continued, about  140 had  felony                                                               
charges  and  in  78  of  those cases  the  defendant  was  found                                                               
competent after evaluation.   The Alaska Court  System, Ms. Meade                                                               
advised, does not perceive that  the capacity issues at API would                                                               
affect these evaluations that are  ordered because they happen in                                                               
a fairly  timely manner of  two-three weeks,  or a bit  longer if                                                               
the defendant is not in jail and  must be located.  So, she said,                                                               
out of  240 orders,  a third were  found competent,  meaning that                                                               
two-thirds of  the people, about  160, were found  incompetent by                                                               
API.  Most  of those cases, she specified,  get dismissed because                                                               
API's wait list to get in  for restoration is 120-150 days and if                                                               
the person  is facing less time  than that in jail,  for example,                                                               
or  if there  is no  substantial  likelihood that  the person  is                                                               
going to be  restored, the court or the  prosecutor dismisses the                                                               
case.  Out of all those,  she continued, 12 people ended up going                                                               
to  API  for  restoration  and   six  of  them  got  restored  to                                                               
competency  and  six  were found  non-restorable.    While  these                                                               
numbers are  for just one year,  Ms. Meade stated, it  would mean                                                               
that under this bill the  six cases of those found non-restorable                                                               
plus the cases that were dismissed  would be segued by a petition                                                               
into a civil evaluation, which  takes three days, to determine if                                                               
full mental commitment proceedings  should be filed and continued                                                               
from there, and then it is in Title 47.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:43:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX calculated that roughly 120  of these cases a year are                                                               
found  incompetent to  stand trial  but should  be evaluated  for                                                               
civil commitment.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. MEADE  replied that it's more  like a couple hundred  for the                                                               
whole state, not  just the numbers for Anchorage.   She qualified                                                               
that she  doesn't have  exact data with  what those  persons were                                                               
charged with  but said most of  them will have been  charged with                                                               
an AS 11.41  crime against a person.  If  someone is charged with                                                               
a  lesser crime  the case  is  often dismissed  earlier than  the                                                               
finding of incompetency and the first  90 days passes.  This bill                                                               
would move only the people with  the finding of incompetency.  It                                                               
is generally the  cases of crimes against a person  that are held                                                               
onto a bit longer to see if the  person can be restored or to get                                                               
the person into the civil commitment.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:45:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARK  REGAN, Legal  Director, Disability  Law  Center of  Alaska,                                                               
relative to  Dr. Becker's  testimony about  the pressures  on the                                                               
system and on API, stated  that inadequate competency restoration                                                               
and  inadequate capacity  for competency  restoration is  a long-                                                               
standing  problem in  Alaska.   He  referenced a  2019 study  and                                                               
noted  that in  Alaska the  lengths of  waiting lists  and people                                                               
being held in jail awaiting  competency restoration are about the                                                               
same now as they  were in 2019.  He further  noted that there are                                                               
different ways to  do competency restoration, but  the 2019 study                                                               
recommended that 25  more beds be added to the  10 beds currently                                                               
in  API's   unit  for  competency  restoration.     Despite  much                                                               
discussion, he added, nothing has  been agreed upon and the state                                                               
has not committed to providing  those additional 25 beds and that                                                               
additional capacity.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  REGAN addressed  alternatives  mentioned by  Dr. Becker  and                                                               
others, such  as the  possibility for some  people to  go through                                                               
competency  restoration as  outpatients.   Expanding capacity  by                                                               
allowing  for  more outpatient  commitment  is  a good  idea,  he                                                               
counseled, but  neither Version S  nor any of the  amendments [in                                                               
the committee  packet] adopts the Senate  bill's encouragement of                                                               
outpatient commitment  processes and  bail conditions  that would                                                               
steer people into the outpatient  commitment opportunity.  In the                                                               
other direction,  he said, are jail-based  competency restoration                                                               
programs  that respond  to the  unfortunate  situation that  when                                                               
there is  a waiting  list and  a delay of  120-150 days  or more,                                                               
people are going  to be sitting in jail not  getting help and not                                                               
getting restoration.  So, Mr.  Regan advised, even though this is                                                               
the  wrong setting  for  people to  be  going through  competency                                                               
restoration,  it may  be a  better  setting than  the person  not                                                               
getting services  at all.   He stated that regardless  of whether                                                               
the  committee does  or doesn't  take the  opportunity to  expand                                                               
jail  based and  outpatient  competency restoration,  legislation                                                               
like HB  80 will put  many more people in  competency restoration                                                               
which will lead  to somewhat more people going  through the civil                                                               
commitment process on competency restoration at API.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. REGAN  asserted it  is wrong  for people to  sit in  jail for                                                               
half a year  waiting to get into API  for competency restoration.                                                               
As was  pointed out,  he recounted, there  have been  lawsuits in                                                               
Washington state, in particular  the Trueblood case which imposed                                                               
very tight time limits on how soon  a person can get into a state                                                               
hospital once found incompetent.   The problem there, he advised,                                                               
is that  if these  time limits get  enforced, they  are typically                                                               
enforced by fines, rather than  by people getting out, getting no                                                               
restoration, getting  no help.   The fines  have not gone  to the                                                               
benefit  of the  lawyers or  clients who  brought the  cases, Mr.                                                               
Regan further  advised, the fines  have typically gone  back into                                                               
the system, so  lawyers have not been taking  resources away from                                                               
competency  restoration by  bringing those  lawsuits.   He stated                                                               
that  Dr. Becker  is precisely  right, the  lawsuits have  led to                                                               
orders that  are unenforceable as  a practical matter, and  so he                                                               
is not  sure the  legal exposure  of the  state and  lawsuits are                                                               
going to do much good.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  REGAN suggested  that having  more  resources available  for                                                               
competency restoration would  be good.  He said a  study could be                                                               
done to  look at whether a  practical way would be,  for example,                                                               
to have  a separate facility  or to have  an expansion at  API so                                                               
more beds could be devoted  to competency restoration.  He stated                                                               
that it  would be  good if the  legislation before  the committee                                                               
leads  to an  expansion of  capacity that  helps people,  reduces                                                               
waiting  times, and  keeps  people  out of  jail  and  in a  more                                                               
therapeutic setting.   He expressed  his concern that  two things                                                               
are going on   one is  putting more people through the competency                                                               
restoration  system and  the other  is finding  the resources  to                                                               
treat them.   He urged  the committee to  not put more  people in                                                               
the  system  without  immediately  supplying  the  resources  for                                                               
treating them as that would make the existing problem worse.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:53:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  PRAX inquired  about what  way, in  Mr. Regan's  view, the                                                               
problem would be made worse.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. REGAN responded  that the problem, as he has  tried to define                                                               
it, is  too many  people waiting for  competency restoration.   A                                                               
typical place for  someone to wait for  competency restoration is                                                               
in jail, he  pointed out.  He  related that in a  case decided by                                                               
the  Court of  Appeals in  2020  [or thereabout],  a person  with                                                               
severe mental  illness was charged  with a misdemeanor  and spent                                                               
eight months in jail waiting  for competency restoration services                                                               
because  there were  no open  beds.   The  person's lawyer  filed                                                               
suit, he  said, and  the Court of  Appeals dismissed  the charges                                                               
because someone with a misdemeanor  cannot serve more than a year                                                               
and this person was  close to that amount of time.   The Court of                                                               
Appeals, he  continued, said  it was a  due process  violation to                                                               
hold this person  for 300 or 330 days  without treatment, without                                                               
competency restoration.   It's going  to make the  problem worse,                                                               
he said,  if there are  more people with misdemeanors  waiting in                                                               
jail for extended competency restoration.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  REGAN  discussed civil  commitments.    He stated  that  the                                                               
Senate bill  which has  been merged into  Version S  provides for                                                               
extended civil commitment periods of  up to five years.  However,                                                               
there are several  problems with the technical way  this is done,                                                               
he advised, one being that no  standards are included in the bill                                                               
for a  judge to  use for  figuring out whether  it is  18 months,                                                               
three years, five  years.  Another is related to  things that are                                                               
necessary to protect  the public, he said.  Based  on what people                                                               
have told him,  not personal observation, there are  eight to ten                                                               
people in the  more general population at API who  are there on a                                                               
series of  180-day commitments, he  stated.  They're  not getting                                                               
better  necessarily, he  conveyed, they  are there  because their                                                               
cases  come  up  every  180 days  and  commitments  are  renewed.                                                               
That's the  alternative to this five-year  commitment process, he                                                               
stated.  His organization's position,  Mr. Regan related, is that                                                               
the five-year  commitment process has constitutional  problems as                                                               
a  matter of  equal  protection, as  a  matter of  discrimination                                                               
against  people with  disabilities.   But, he  continued, if  the                                                               
180-day renewable process  is sufficient, then extending  it to a                                                               
five-year  system isn't  needed because  the people  currently in                                                               
API going through these repeated  civil commitment processes show                                                               
that that works.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:57:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  REGAN addressed  the  case of  Ms. Harris  and  the man  who                                                               
assaulted her  [Mr. Ahkivgak].  He  said he doesn't know  why Mr.                                                               
Ahkivgak didn't get into the  civil commitment process as someone                                                               
who  was  dangerous  and  a  danger  to  others.    Had  somebody                                                               
initiated  the  civil  commitment  process at  the  time  of  Mr.                                                               
Ahkivgak's last  criminal involvement before the  stabbing at the                                                               
Loussac  [Library],  Mr.  Regan continued,  then  presumably  Mr.                                                               
Ahkivgak would  have been  committed, presumably  his commitments                                                               
would  have gone  up through  the  180-day period,  and he  would                                                               
probably be there  today and not have committed the  crime.  What                                                               
went badly wrong  with the existing system, he  advised, was that                                                               
nobody filed for  civil commitment.  This bill and  all the bills                                                               
pending in the  legislature, he said, would require  that a civil                                                               
commitment petition  be filed,  and once  that's done  the person                                                               
would be in  a system that is renewable, and  which would protect                                                               
the  public.   The  problem is  not that  a  five-year system  is                                                               
needed, he  stated, the problem is  that the system needs  to get                                                               
on with its process of  holding people and providing treatment to                                                               
them for  up to a 180-day  period.  People can  be protected with                                                               
the 180-day  system if only  it would get started,  he continued,                                                               
so that's why  the Disability Law Center of Alaska  thinks that a                                                               
five-year civil commitment is not needed.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:59:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS stated  that he introduced a  bill a couple                                                               
years ago to  force expansion of API, but in  the last 30 minutes                                                               
it seems two  problems have been identified     one is  a lack of                                                               
capacity at API and the other  is the problem addressed in HB 80.                                                               
He said he  doesn't want the fact that there  are two problems to                                                               
delay or prevent the committee  from addressing the problem being                                                               
dealt with  in HB 80.   He requested that the  committee consider                                                               
amendments and pass the bill as expeditiously as possible.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
5:00:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MINA, regarding  the five  years and  the renewal                                                               
period of 180  days, offered her understanding that  Section 4 of                                                               
the original  version of  HB 80 had  the 180-day  renewal period.                                                               
She  asked  whether  that  previous 180-day  window  could  be  a                                                               
potential way to change Version S.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. REGAN  answered that  he believes there  is an  amendment [in                                                               
the committee packet] which would  remove the five-year idea.  He                                                               
advised that  if the up  to five years commitment  was dispensed,                                                               
it would  still be necessary for  there to be a  civil commitment                                                               
petition  filed  when  certain  charges  are  dismissed  or  when                                                               
competency cannot be restored, as  he is sure the bill proponents                                                               
would not want that taken out.   He stated that the original bill                                                               
version  didn't  have the  five-year  system,  but the  committee                                                               
could  revert  to  the  original   bill  and  take  some  of  the                                                               
improvements from SB 53 and get to the same result.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
5:02:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took a brief at-ease.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
5:02:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON stated  that to  the extent  he doesn't                                                               
respond to  some of  Mr. Regan's  concerns, [members]  could take                                                               
something suggested from  that.  He clarified that  Section 3 and                                                               
Section 6  of [Version  S] do talk  about outpatient  clinics and                                                               
that  Version  S really  is  Senator  Claman's  bill plus  a  few                                                               
things.   Regarding Mr. Regan's  concern with  housing improperly                                                               
the wrong people, Representative  Josephson stated that currently                                                               
under law, attempts to restore  a misdemeanant can last 12 months                                                               
and he  thinks that that is  on all misdemeanors.   Version S, he                                                               
continued,  would  reduce  all misdemeanor  restoration  attempts                                                               
other than  the assault fours  that he talked about  and includes                                                               
all the AS 11.41 offenses against  people.  The bill reduces that                                                               
12-month period down  to six, he added, but  efforts at restoring                                                               
misdemeanants would be reduced under Version S.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
5:04:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ALEXANDER  SCHROEDER,   Staff,  Representative   Andy  Josephson,                                                               
Alaska  State  Legislature,  spoke on  behalf  of  Representative                                                               
Josephson, prime sponsor  of HB 80.  He  explained that currently                                                               
a misdemeanor charge can put a  person into restoration for up to                                                               
12 months  if the person  meets the  criteria of crime  against a                                                               
person.   Under  [Version S],  he pointed  out, it's  only felony                                                               
charges in  AS 11.41 -  felony arson, felony cruelty  to animals,                                                               
and felony misconduct  involving weapons.  The  maximum amount of                                                               
time  that  a  misdemeanant  could  spend  in  restoration  under                                                               
[Version S] is six months, he stated.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON  confirmed that  it is  six months.   He                                                               
said the  misdemeanor assaults about  which he spoke would  get a                                                               
continuing look  through the civil  commitment process;  it's six                                                               
months.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
5:05:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at-ease from 5:05 p.m. to 5:06 p.m.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
5:06:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR PRAX inquired about the committee's will regarding HB 80.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS suggested moving the bill now in the                                                                      
interest of getting the bill passed this year.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
5:07:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at-ease from 5:07 p.m. to 5:09 p.m.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
5:09:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RUFFRIDGE moved  to report  CSHB 80,  labeled 33-                                                               
LS0224\S,   Marx/Dunmire,   4/25/23,   out  of   committee   with                                                               
individual  recommendations and  the  accompanying fiscal  notes.                                                               
There being  no objection, CSHB  80(HSS) was reported out  of the                                                               
House Health & Social Services Standing Committee.                                                                              

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 80 CS Version S.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.1.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.3.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.4.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.5.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.6.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.12.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.12.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Amendment S.14.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 Potential Committee Substitute Changes.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 version B to S Explanation of Changes.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
Disability Law Center House HSS comments on HB 80 and proposed CSHB 80 4 27 23.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
HB 80 SB 53 Research Forensic Psychiatric Hospital Feasibility Study Draft Phase 1.pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80
SB 53
HB 80 JK v State(1).pdf HHSS 4/27/2023 3:00:00 PM
HB 80