03/02/2018 01:30 PM Senate JUDICIARY
| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SJR14 | |
| Confirmation Hearing(s): Select Committee on Legislative Ethics | |
| HB312 | |
| SB148 | |
| Adjourn |
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| + | TELECONFERENCED | ||
| *+ | SJR 14 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| + | HB 312 | TELECONFERENCED | |
| + | TELECONFERENCED | ||
| += | SB 148 | TELECONFERENCED | |
ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE
SENATE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE
March 2, 2018
1:33 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT
Senator John Coghill, Chair
Senator Mia Costello
Senator Pete Kelly
Senator Bill Wielechowski
MEMBERS ABSENT
Senator Click Bishop
COMMITTEE CALENDAR
CONFIRMATION HEARING(S)
Select Committee on Legislative Ethics
Dennis E. "Skip" Cook
- CONFIRMATION ADVANCED
SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 14
Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of
Alaska relating to notice and consent before termination of a
minor's pregnancy.
- HEARD & HELD
HOUSE BILL NO. 312
"An Act relating to arrest without a warrant for assault in the
fourth degree at a health care facility; and relating to an
aggravating factor at sentencing for a felony offense against a
medical professional at a health care facility."
- HEARD & HELD
SENATE BILL NO. 148
"An Act relating to powers of the Alaska Police Standards
Council; and relating to background checks for admission to
police training programs and certification as a police officer."
- MOVED SB 148 OUT OF COMMITTEE
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION
BILL: SJR 14
SHORT TITLE: CONST. AM: PARENTAL CONSENT TO ABORTION
SPONSOR(s): SENATOR(s) OLSON
02/19/18 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
02/19/18 (S) JUD, FIN
03/02/18 (S) JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
BILL: HB 312
SHORT TITLE: CRIMES AGAINST MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS
SPONSOR(s): REPRESENTATIVE(s) CLAMAN
01/26/18 (H) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
01/26/18 (H) JUD
02/05/18 (H) JUD AT 1:30 PM GRUENBERG 120
02/05/18 (H) Heard & Held
02/05/18 (H) MINUTE(JUD)
02/07/18 (H) JUD AT 1:00 PM GRUENBERG 120
02/07/18 (H) Moved HB 312 Out of Committee
02/07/18 (H) MINUTE(JUD)
02/09/18 (H) JUD RPT 4DP 3AM
02/09/18 (H) DP: KOPP, KREISS-TOMKINS, STUTES,
CLAMAN
02/09/18 (H) AM: EASTMAN, LEDOUX, REINBOLD
02/16/18 (H) TRANSMITTED TO (S)
02/16/18 (H) VERSION: HB 312
02/19/18 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
02/19/18 (S) JUD
03/02/18 (S) JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
BILL: SB 148
SHORT TITLE: BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR POLICE & TRAINING
SPONSOR(s): RULES BY REQUEST OF THE GOVERNOR
01/18/18 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
01/18/18 (S) STA, JUD
02/08/18 (S) STA AT 3:30 PM BUTROVICH 205
02/08/18 (S) Moved SB 148 Out of Committee
02/08/18 (S) MINUTE(STA)
02/09/18 (S) STA RPT 3DP 2NR
02/09/18 (S) DP: MEYER, GIESSEL, EGAN
02/09/18 (S) NR: WILSON, COGHILL
02/26/18 (S) JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
02/26/18 (S) Heard & Held
02/26/18 (S) MINUTE(JUD)
02/26/18 (S) JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
03/02/18 (S) JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)
WITNESS REGISTER
SENATOR DONNY OLSON
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Sponsor of SJR 14.
JIM PUCKETT, Staff
Senator Donny Olson
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided details related to SJR 14 on behalf
of the sponsor.
DENNIS E. "Skip" Cook, Appointee
Select Committee on Legislative Ethics
Fairbanks, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified as appointee to the Select
Committee on Legislative Ethics.
REPRESENTATIVE CHUCK KOPP
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Sponsor of HB 312.
REPRESENTATIVE MATT CLAMAN
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Sponsor of HB 312.
LIZZY KUBITZ, Staff
Representative Matt Claman
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided a sectional analysis for HB 312.
BECKY HULTBERG, President/CEO
Alaska State Hospital and Nursing Home Association
Anchorage, Alaska
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in strong support of HB 312.
ACTION NARRATIVE
1:33:09 PM
CHAIR JOHN COGHILL called the Senate Judiciary Standing
Committee meeting to order at 1:33 p.m. Present at the call to
order were Senators Costello, Wielechowski, Kelly, and Chair
Coghill.
SJR 14-CONST. AM: PARENTAL CONSENT TO ABORTION
1:35:34 PM
CHAIR COGHILL announced the consideration of SJR 14.
1:36:07 PM
SENATOR DONNY OLSON, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau, Alaska,
sponsor of SJR 14, provided a summary of the legislation
speaking to the following sponsor statement:
Parents alone have the sole duty and responsibility of
raising their children, providing for their education,
sustenance, and spiritual wellbeing. Any legal
provision, guideline, statute, or ordinance infringing
upon that fundamental principle and right of parents
should be changed.
Senate Joint Resolution 14 proposes an amendment to
the Alaska Constitution creating a new section
allowing the legislature OR the people through the
initiative process to have the option to require
notice to and the consent of the parent or the legal
guardian of a minor before the minor's pregnancy is
terminated.
It is a well-established principle that before
treating a patient, a physician or other healthcare
provider must obtain the consent of that patient. This
proposition becomes less clear when treating minors
and physicians are often faced with the question of
just who may consent to treatment and under what
circumstances? This resolution is a first step to
clarify this vital issue.
SENATOR OLSON advised that the resolution is the first step
toward putting the question of amending the Alaska Constitution
for this specific purpose before the voters. He cited Article I,
Section 2 as the authorizing authority. He noted that the
resolution is a response to the 2010 [Alaska Parental
Notification Initiative] that the Alaska Supreme Court struck
down. He emphasized that political power is inherent in the
people, not the five judges that everyone looks up to and
greatly respects.
1:43:37 PM
JIM PUCKETT, Staff, Senator Donny Olson, Alaska State
Legislature, Juneau, Alaska, stated that SJR 14 provides that
Article I, Constitution of the State of Alaska, would be amended
by adding a new Section 26 titled "Notice and Consent before
Termination of Minor's Pregnancy. This section could be
implemented by the legislature or by initiative. The amendment
proposed by the resolution would be placed before the voters at
the next general election.
1:44:53 PM
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked what happens in the circumstance of a
child who is a ward of the state.
MR. PUCKETT replied it could be handled the same way that the
state currently handles the situation of a pregnant foster
child, although he did not know what that was.
CHAIR COGHILL pointed out that the resolution provides that the
section would be implemented by law.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked how the resolution defines a minor.
MR. PUCKETT said the state defines a minor as a person age 18 or
younger.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked if a married 17-year-old would need
parental consent to obtain an abortion.
MR. PUCKETT replied that will be addressed should the amendment
be put in place.
SENATOR OLSON offered his understanding that a minor who is
married would be emancipated.
CHAIR COGHILL added that a 16-year-old can be emancipated.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI said he was trying to frame the extent that
a parent has rights over their minor child's body. He asked if a
parent could force their 15-year-old child to have an abortion.
MR. PUCKETT replied, "We're dealing with the consent, not the
parents forcing them to do something." He added that in school a
parent must consent to their child seeing the school nurse or
going on a field trip.
SENATOR COSTELLO recalled a proposition that said a child who
was pregnant and could not go to their parents could appear
before a judge. She asked if the legislature would need to work
out the details, should this pass.
1:49:09 PM
MR. PUCKETT said Ballot Measure 2 allowed the minor to go to
court to authorize an abortion without giving notice to the
parent or guardian. It also made it a felony for a doctor to
notify the parents of the minor's intent to have an abortion.
CHAIR COGHILL added that the issue of judicial bypass could
again be up for debate should this question get to the people of
Alaska.
SENATOR COSTELLO asked if the legislature would handle the
regulatory details if the constitution is changed.
SENATOR OLSON replied that is his understanding, but he would
prefer to delay any discussion of the details until after the
people have spoken about what they want in the constitution.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked the intent regarding the type of
notice and consent. Is the notice verbal or written and is the
consent from the parent to the child and the doctor?
MR. PUCKETT said those details would be worked out later, but it
seems reasonable that the consent would be written.
1:52:10 PM
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked if a doctor would be subject to
criminal penalties if he/she performed an abortion without
parental consent.
MR. PUCKETT replied that detail would be worked out in the
future.
1:52:35 PM
SENATOR KELLY pointed out that the resolution says the
legislature shall implement the section by law in a manner
consistent with the requirements of the U.S. Constitution. The
details are left to the legislature to work out.
MR. PUCKETT agreed and read the legislative oath of office. He
said legislators will take care of the details that arise as a
result in the change to the constitution.
SENATOR KELLY it's also important for the legislature to realize
that the constitutional amendment regarding privacy also says
that the legislature shall implement this by law and that has
mostly been ignored by the courts.
MR. PUCKETT said the sponsor's intent is for the people to have
an opportunity to make their will very clear.
1:54:59 PM
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI disagreed that all the details would be
decided by the legislature in the future. He said he interprets
the entire first sentence as a fundamental change in the state
constitution. Thus, the legislative history on what is notice,
what is consent, who is a legal guardian, and what is a minor is
very relevant and will override the second sentence. He said
things that are defined in this room are critical because that
legislative history will inform the court when these issues come
up in court cases, which they undoubtedly will.
He asked if a minor has constitutional rights to decide when and
if they want to start a family.
MR. PUCKETT replied, "I believe, in Alaska there is an age where
they can legally go get married on their own."
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked if a 15-year-old has parenting rights
over her child or if that minor's parents have parenting rights
over their grandchild.
CHAIR COGHILL suggested the sponsor respond.
1:57:44 PM
SENATOR OLSON said he didn't have answers to all the details. He
wants the people of Alaska to decide if they want parents to
consent to this surgical procedure.
CHAIR COGHILL said he wanted the sponsor to hear the first line
of questions so he could begin to think about the language and
how it might be challenged. The questions are appropriate
because the definitions are something that will need to be
fleshed out. He said he generally agrees that the people should
reinforce what the legislature is trying to define.
He asked Senator Wielechowski if he had anything more for the
committee and sponsor to consider.
1:59:39 PM
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI questioned whether this should just be
limited to the termination of pregnancy. If not, he asked if
Section I should say that notice and consent is required before
any medical procedure is done.
MR. PUCKETT replied, "It's already a reality that just about any
other type of medical procedure that needs to be done on a minor
needs consent from a parent."
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI replied that is false and directed
attention to AS 25.20.025.
MR. PUCKETT named abortion, treatment of sexually transmitted
disease and noted there is a third item.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI read paragraph (1) and part of paragraph
(2) of Sec. 25.20.025(a). He questioned saying a minor must get
consent to terminate a pregnancy, but not for anything else,
including major surgery.
MR. PUCKETT said he stands corrected; he didn't think about the
exceptions in current law. He asked Senator Wielechowski to
restate the original question.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked the reasoning for singling out this
one medical situation.
2:01:45 PM
SENATOR KELLY said the answer is that the courts have singled
out abortion as having special rights to the point that parents
do not have rights. In other situations, the courts have been
fairly reasonable about requiring the consent of the parent. The
resolution seeks to put abortion on that reasonable list of
things to which parents should give consent.
CHAIR COGHILL asked the sponsor to do a little research on the
areas where there is an exception to the parental consent rule
and the litigation that followed Roe v. Wade. The idea is to
understand the line of thinking that makes this resolution
necessary.
SENATOR OLSON said he understands that Roe v. Wade is the law of
the land and SJR 14 is not an attack on that. He continued to
say:
This is the idea that I as a parent who has children
that are younger girls but more importantly that I
as an Alaskan, whether I'm in the legislature or not
in the legislature, have got the ability to make sure
that if a majority of us have an idea and we want
something done, that there is a constitutional
protection that if we vote a certain way, we want this
done this way that the courts don't have the ability
to overturn it.
We've got a five-judge panel out there, many of whom
aren't even from the state of Alaska that are
overturning what people from the state of Alaska voted
on. And that's what I'm trying to do. That's the
bottom line of what I want to say. Is if we've got an
initiative that passes, I want that listened to and if
that's being overturned then a constitutional
amendment needs to be drawn up and that's why I've
drawn it.
SENATOR KELLY said most of the things like what is a parent,
what is a minor, and what are the circumstances under which a
parent has control are defined in statute and work quite well
until it comes to abortion. The courts treat that differently.
CHAIR COGHILL said he asked the sponsor for the information so
there would be a good record. Because "termination of pregnancy"
has been highly litigated through the years, it is important
that each word and the intent is clear going forward. He said
that's what Senator Wielechowski is getting to and he agrees
with that point.
CHAIR COGHILL thanked the sponsor and held SJR 14 in committee
for future consideration.
^Confirmation Hearing(s): Select Committee on Legislative Ethics
CONFIRMATION HEARING(S)
Select Committee on Legislative Ethics
2:06:59 PM
CHAIR COGHILL announced the confirmation hearing for Skip Cook
for reappointment to the Select Committee on Legislative Ethics.
He asked Mr. Cook to tell the committee about his interest in
being reappointed to the ethics committee.
2:07:47 PM
DENNIS E. "SKIP" COOK, Appointee, Select Committee on
Legislative Ethics, Fairbanks, Alaska, advised that he's served
on the ethics committee since 1997 and has found this important
work to be both challenging and interesting. He opined that it's
helpful to have some continuity. If confirmed he would like to
serve another term and provide that experience.
CHAIR COGHILL said he's enjoyed working with Mr. Cook on the
ethics committee. He brings a solid and reasonable voice as well
as an historical perspective. He found no questions or comments.
2:10:36 PM
CHAIR COGHILL stated that the Judiciary Committee reviewed the
following and recommends the following name be forwarded to the
Senate floor for ratification: Select Committee on Legislative
Ethics - Dennis E. "Skip" Cook. He reminded members that for
this committee the vote is on the individual.
HB 312-CRIMES AGAINST MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS
2:11:36 PM
CHAIR COGHILL announced the consideration of HB 312.
2:12:01 PM
REPRESENTATIVE CHUCK KOPP, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau,
Alaska, sponsor of HB 312, explained that he and Representative
Claman were each contacted by the Alaska Nurses Association, the
Alaska Hospital Nurses Association, and emergency room
physicians with requests for help with the rising tide of
violence in health care facilities. He and Representative Claman
each had legislation drafted and subsequently decided to work
together.
2:13:27 PM
REPRESENTATIVE MATT CLAMAN, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau,
Alaska, sponsor of HB 312, said he was in the Anchorage LIO and
would let Representative Kopp take the lead introducing HB 312.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said things have changed dramatically in
emergency rooms and health care facilities generally since the
opioid crisis hit. They have become trauma zones for staff. It's
not just from people presenting for treatment, but also visitors
and family accompanying them. Some of the violence is opioid
driven and some is behavioral health issues. Regardless of the
reason, health care staff are not combat medics trained to
survive in high-threat environments. They are health care
professionals who traditionally treat people in very safe and
secure environments. It's come to the point where the law needs
to address the situation.
House Bill 312 addresses the issue by allowing a warrantless
arrest for a fourth-degree misdemeanor assault in a health care
facility. The perpetrator can be removed from the facility if
they are stable for discharge. If probable cause is established
after interviewing witnesses, the responding officer can make a
misdemeanor arrest. The bill also adds an aggravator to the
felony assault statute when the assault is knowingly perpetrated
against a medical professional who is working. He noted that the
packets contain letters of endorsement from nearly every
hospital in the state.
2:21:01 PM
CHAIR COGHILL asked for confirmation that a health care worker
who witnesses an assault could be a party to a lawsuit that may
arise.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said that's correct; the probable cause
would be based on their witness statement so they would be a
party to any civil or criminal action.
CHAIR COGHILL said he brought it up because the assault occurs
within a health care facility and that becomes an issue.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said the health care facility is an
important issue because it is a sacred space for every worker
and patient.
2:23:33 PM
LIZZY KUBITZ, Staff, Representative Matt Claman, Alaska State
Legislature Juneau, Alaska, paraphrased the following sectional
analysis for HB 312:
Section 1
[Amends] AS 12.25.030(b) - Grounds for arrest by
private person or peace officer without a warrant.
Establishes that a peace officer may arrest a person
without a warrant when the peace officer has probable
cause for believing that the person has committed an
assault in the fourth degree at a health care facility
and the person was not seeking medical treatment at
the facility or was stable for discharge.
The term "stable for discharge" comes from the federal
Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, also known
as EMTALA. EMTALA requires anyone coming to an
emergency department be stabilized and treated,
regardless of their insurance status or ability to
pay. The federal government has published guidelines
that describes the responsibilities of hospitals in
emergency cases.
The guidelines provide: "a patient is considered
stable for discharge?when, within reasonable clinical
confidence, it is determined that the patient has
reached the point where his/her continued care,
including diagnostic work-up and/or treatment, could
be reasonably performed as an outpatient or later as
an inpatient, provided the patient is given a plan for
appropriate follow-up care with the discharge
instructions." In addition, "? 'Stable for discharge'
does not require the final resolution of the emergency
medical condition."
Section 2
[Amends] AS 12.25.030 - Grounds for arrest by private
person or peace officer without a warrant.
Establishes that the definition for "health care
facility" has the meaning given in AS 18.07.111.
Section 3
[Amends] AS 12.55.155(c) - Factors in aggravation and
mitigation.
Adds an aggravator to Alaska's felony assault statute
when a defendant committed the offense at a health
care facility and knowingly directed the conduct
constituting the offense at a medical professional
during or because of the medical professional's
exercise of professional duties.
Section 4
Uncodified law
This section contains applicability provisions.
CHAIR COGHILL asked for the definition of health care facility.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP read the definition in AS 18.07.111(8)(A)
and (B).
CHAIR COGHILL said he wanted that exact definition brought into
the open.
SENATOR COSTELLO asked if a warrantless arrest is
constitutional.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said the legislature has the authority to
place exceptions in the law. The arrest warrant requirement in
the Fourth Amendment is the law of the land but the courts have
given state legislatures the authority to implement that in a
reasonable manner. The current exceptions are crimes relating to
domestic violence.
CHAIR COGHILL advised that Title 47 holds are allowed in
circumstances of life and safety.
REPRESENTATIVE CLAMAN added that both the Alaska Supreme Court
and the U.S. Supreme Court have addressed the topic of
exceptions to the warrant requirement in the context of
misdemeanors. The courts have typically found that the
legislature has the authority to craft narrow exceptions when
there are good legislative findings. HB 312 was crafted with
that case law in mind; the exception is narrow.
2:31:34 PM
BECKY HULTBERG, President/CEO, Alaska State Hospital and Nursing
Home Association, Anchorage, Alaska, said she was testifying on
behalf of Alaska's hospitals and skilled nursing facilities to
express strong support for HB 312. It gives police and the
judicial system new tools to address violence in health care
facilities. She said hospitals are sacred places and they should
also be safe places. Unfortunately, as violence has increased in
some communities, it has spilled over into hospitals. In the
last year hospitals have reported an increase in workplace
violence and staff report feeling unsafe in the workplace.
Violence should not be an acceptable workplace hazard but for
many health care workers it has become normal. There are many
contributing factors to the increase in violence, including the
opioid crisis and a shortage of psychiatric and detox beds. As
employers, hospitals have an obligation to address workplace
violence and they are working to ensure that plans are in place
to prevent, identify, and de-escalate violence before the police
need to be involved. Because workplace violence is a complex
problem with many causes, it will require multiple solutions to
address. HB 312 is one of those tools.
MS. HULTBERG said hospitals clearly understand the need to
differentiate between an intentional and unintentional assault.
Reporting an assault by a patient is not something caregivers do
lightly. But hospitals do report that when health care workers
call the police to report an assault, the police sometimes leave
the individual at the hospital rather than arresting them. HB
312 gives police new tools to arrest for fourth degree assault
without a warrant. Hospitals address violence daily and
understand the needs of vulnerable populations. The intent of HB
312 is not to penalize those who need behavioral health or
substance abuse treatment. In fact, it is carefully designed not
to do that. It is intended to give police and the judicial
system additional tools in dealing with serious physical
violence when it is creating an unsafe environment for
caregivers and patients. The legislation is also clear that
patients that need medical treatment belong in the hospital.
Hospitals understand that obligation.
MS. HULTBERG stressed that hospitals cannot bear the burden of
community violence much longer. Caregivers need help and passing
HB 312 tells everyone that violence in health care facilities is
not acceptable. She encouraged the committee to act favorably on
the legislation.
CHAIR COGHILL asked which hospital departments are primarily
affected by workplace violence.
MS. HULTBERG said a significant amount of the violence takes
place in the emergency room, but labor and delivery and the
general medical floors can also be very volatile.
2:38:47 PM
CHAIR COGHILL found no questions. He asked if Pioneer and
Veteran Homes have been part of the discussion.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said those are primarily residential, not
health care facilities. They weren't intentionally excluded but
staff haven't reported problems in those facilities. Similarly,
private physician offices didn't seem to have the same level of
problem as in hospitals, but there wasn't an overt attempt to
exclude them.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI directed attention to the new language on
page 2, lines 16-17, regarding violating AS 11.41.230. He asked
if this includes the sidewalk and parking lot outside the
facility.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP said he would defer to the definition, but
his guess is it may apply to the campus, not just within any
four walls on the campus.
REPRESENTATIVE CLAMAN said he agrees with everything
Representative Kopp said.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI stated that he would interpret this to mean
within the four walls the health care facility plus the sidewalk
and the parking lot. "That's my intent in passing this
legislation."
CHAIR COGHILL said he didn't know that anyone on the committee
would disagree.
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP thanked the committee for hearing the bill.
2:43:10 PM
CHAIR COGHILL held HB 312 in committee for future consideration.
SB 148-BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR POLICE & TRAINING
2:43:28 PM
CHAIR COGHILL announced the consideration of SB 148. He
summarized the intent of the bill for Senator Wielechowski and
asked if he had any questions.
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI said he didn't have any questions and
wouldn't object to moving the bill.
2:44:22 PM
SENATOR COSTELLO moved to report SB 148, version A, from
committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal
note(s).
2:44:36 PM
CHAIR COGHILL announced that without objection, SB 148 moved
from the Senate Judiciary Standing Committee.
2:45:04 PM
There being no further business to come before the committee,
Chair Coghill adjourned the Senate Judiciary Standing Committee
meeting at 2:45 p.m.
| Document Name | Date/Time | Subjects |
|---|---|---|
| HB 312 - Sectional Summary (ver. O).pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| HB 312 - Letters of Support #1.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| HB 312 - Letters of Support #2.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| HB 312 - Sponsor Statement.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| HB 312 - Supporting Document - Stable for Discharge Definition.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| HB 312 - Letter of Opposition.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
HB 312 |
| SJR 14 - Sponsor Statement.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
SJR 14 |
| SJR 14 - Version A.PDF |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |
SJR 14 |
| Skip Cook Resume.pdf |
SJUD 3/2/2018 1:30:00 PM |