HB 180-DRUGS WHERE MINORS ARE PRESENT MR. CONOR SULLIVAN, staff to Representative Cowdery, read the following statement: House Bill 180, relating to drugs in the presence of a minor, prohibits an adult from knowingly "allowing, aiding, inducing, causing or encouraging" a minor to "enter or remain" in the "immediate physical presence of the use, manufacture, delivery or display" of drugs. This crime would be punishable as contributing to the delinquency of a minor, which is a class A misdemeanor. To explain further, House Bill 180 adds to the current law that forbids an adult to encourage or aid a child to break the law. The added prohibition forbids knowingly allowing a child to be in the physical presence of controlled substances. This merely tightens the expectations placed on adults and sends a clearer message that children and drugs don't mix. This bill also expands the area in which the co-presence of children and drugs is unallowable. By replacing the phrase in the same room in a building with the phrase in the immediate physical presence of children are protected in outdoor situations like a yard, campsite or a park bench. The other change is where the term sale is changed to manufacture, use, display or delivery, in order to encourage uniformity of application, and to expand the prohibitions from merely selling. House Bill 180 sends a strong message that penalty provisions for mixing children and drugs are getting stiffer. CHAIRMAN TAYLOR asked if this bill is an expansion or re-definition of the "drug free school zone." MR. SULLIVAN responded no. Number 1125 SENATOR HALFORD moved CSHB 180(FIN)am out of committee with individual recommendations. There being no objection, the motion carried.