SENATE BILL NO. 313 "An Act relating to sponsor certification of initiative petitions; relating to sponsor identification during petition circulation; relating to the violability of an initiated law; placing limitations on the compensation that may be paid to sponsors of initiative petitions; prohibiting payments to persons who sign or refrain from signing initiative petitions; and repealing procedures for filing a supplementary initiative petition." MARILYN WILSON, STAFF, SENATOR BERT SHARP, explained that SB 313 was an effort to bring the initiative process back to a more grassroots effort. SB 313 would require visual identification of name and a voter registration identification number of the petition circulators. The legislation would also prohibit payment per signature by the sponsor. Ms. Wilson continued, the legislation would prohibit paying a person to sign a petition. In addition, existing law grants a 30-day extension to a sponsor if they are unsuccessful in obtaining the required number of verified signatures within the allocated time frame. SB 313 would eliminate the 30-day extension. If the required number of signatures is not successfully obtained, the initiative simply does not appear on the ballot. She urged members to consider passage of the legislation. Representative Mulder MOVED to adopt Amendment #1. [Copy on File]. Representative Mulder explained that the amendment would create a new category of petition name collectors, from a contract employee to a regular employee, which would then require workman's compensation and other benefits. He acknowledged that he understood the intention of the sponsor was that these people are volunteers or receive a nominal fee for signature collection. The amendment would address the concern which keeps people on as contract employees. Representative Martin commented that the public should be informed if the ballot collector was being paid per signature. Representative Therriault responded that the bill does not require disclosure before promoting signatures. Representative J. Davies pointed out that in the Supreme Court case Myer versus Grant, a similar State ban was invalidated on payment to initiative gathers, referencing 1st Amendment grounds. He added that the Department of Law has stated that any strict limit on payment raises similar constitutional ground issues. Co-Chair Therriault questioned if that opinion had been drafted to the prohibition. Representative J. Davies replied that the case had been a ban on payment. Co-Chair Therriault inquired if previous Committee hearings had discussed the need for a ban. Ms. Wilson replied that no discussion pertaining to the ban had been heard in previous Committees of referral. Representative Grussendorf pointed out that paying people to collect signatures is counter to democracy. He noted his surprise that the issue had not been brought forward in the House Judiciary Committee. Co-Chair Therriault disagreed, stating that it should be allowed. Representative J. Davies remarked that a person paid by the hour would be less obtrusive than the person being paid by the signature. He thought that existing language would less likely be challenged. (Tape Change HFC 98- 162, Side 2). In response to Representative Mulder, Ms. Wilson noted that the bill would eliminate the 30-day extension. Representative Grussendorf asked if that would be for all petitions or only the ones, which there was a monetary wage assigned. Ms. Wilson stated that it would be for all. SB 313 was HELD in Committee for further consideration.