16 good bills you may not know about
Arkansas Legislators have filed almost 200 bills. Here are some good ones.
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The first week of the 94th General Assembly is in the books, and bill filing has begun in earnest. With a new executive coming online and a bevy of new legislators in the Capitol, we can expect major legislation to be a bit slow in coming.
But there have been 196 bills filed as of the end of the first week (not including resolutions). Just under half (44%) of these were appropriation bills – just funding state agencies and programs. So we have slightly more than 100 bills that make or change laws that impact at least some Arkansans.
Of these 100+, there are far more good bills than bad.
Today, we want to focus on 16 of these good bills that we think make Arkansans’ lives better. Tomorrow, we’ll look at some bills we think could make Arkansans’ lives worse.
We have to add the caveat that none of these have been debated in committees yet. Information could emerge that changes our thoughts on these bills.
Good
HB 1003
Creates a tax credit for beginning farmers or land owners renting to beginning farmers with less than 10 years in farming. The credit will vary and the program will be first-come first-served. It’s capped at $10 million a year in credits awarded.
Pro: Economic Development
Sponsor: Rep. Julie Mayberry
Status: In House Revenue and Tax Committee
HB 1010
This bill requires Medicaid coverage for mothers for one year after birth. Arkansas currently offers Medicaid coverage to low-income mothers for up to 60 days after the baby is born. Yet nearly half (47%) of all pregnancy-related deaths in the state occurred between 43 days and one year after the birth. Arkansas has among the highest maternal mortality rates in the nation.
Pro: Healthier Arkansans
Sponsor: Rep. Aaron Pilkington
Status: In House Public Health Committee
HB 1027
This bill would require that county quorum courts passing an ordinance to enact a “hamburger” or hotel-motel tax must send the tax to the voters for approval.
Pro: Voters
Sponsor: Rep. David Ray
Status: In House Revenue and Tax Committee
HB 1028
This bill replaces references to “computer child pornography” with the term, “possession or use of child sexual abuse material.” It broadens the term to be more applicable to criminal activities.
Pro: Public safety
Sponsor: Rep. Charlene Fite
Status: In House Rules Committee
HB 1033
This bill allows kids from out-of-state to be eligible for in-state prices for hunting and fishing licenses if they are visiting a parent or legal guardian who is a resident of Arkansas.
Pro: Arkansas values
Sponsor: Rep. DeAnn Vaught
Status: In House Agriculture Committee
HB 1035
This bill requires that medical providers screen new mothers for depression at birth and that insurance plans cover the screening. Mothers are given the option to opt out of the screening.
Pro: Healthier Arkansans
Sponsor: Rep. Aaron Pilkington
Status: In House Public Health Committee
HB 1041
This bill would give local governments (cities and counties) the authority to pass an ordinance that would allow all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) to operate on designated public streets or highways.
Pro: Local government control
Sponsor: Rep. Justin Gonzales
Status: In House Public Transportation
HB 1098
This legislation allows volunteer fire departments to install newborn safety devices under certain circumstances, including monitoring and response time requirements.
Pro: Healthier Arkansans
Sponsor: Rep. Julie Mayberry
Status: In House Judiciary Committee
HB 1103
The bill requires the Health Department to create a program wherein a nurse visits a woman at home within 30 days of the birth of a child, an adoption, or a stillbirth and up to two additional times during an infant’s first 3 months of life. The department will be required to establish a resource guide for the program and establish insurance coverage criteria for the visits.
Pro: Healthier Arkansans
Sponsor: Rep. Julie Mayberry
Status: In House Public Health
HB 1129
This bill requires healthcare insurers to cover screening for behavior health conditions and services in a hospital outpatient clinic or doctor’s office.
Pro: Healthier Arkansans
Sponsor: Rep. Lee Johnson
Status: In House Public Health Committee
SB 40
This bill excludes disposal, single-use fentanyl test strips from being considered drug paraphernalia. Allows people to check for the presence of fentanyl without breaking law.
Pro: Public Safety
Sponsor: Sen. Justin Boyd
Status: In Senate Judiciary Committee
SB 47
This bill repeals the law that makes it illegal for people to leave a running vehicle unattended or even leaving the keys in the ignition. This would keep Arkansans from breaking the law if they start their cars to warm up in their driveways in the morning.
Pro: Common sense
Sponsor: Sen. Justin Boyd
Status: In Senate Transportation Committee
SB 48
This bill broadens the Good Samaritan law that exempts people from liability if they offer help to someone in distress. It adds people providing suicide prevention intervention and nonprofits that render assistance under the circumstances outlined in the law.
Pro: Arkansas values
Sponsor: Sen. Mark Johnson
Status: In Senate Judiciary Committee
SB 56
This bill keeps the state from creating rules, adopting laws, sharing information, or issuing guidelines that restrict the ability of a business to offer products or services to the fossil fuel industry, firearms manufacturers, or retailers selling firearms or ammunition.
Pro: Less government regulation
Sponsor: Sen. Ricky Hill
Status: In Senate State Agencies Committee
(* Note that this bill keeps the government from telling a business what it should do. There are other bills along this “social credit” vein that do the opposite – they tell businesses what to think or penalize them for a specific value system.)
SB 57
This bill caps the fees charged by the State Medical Board and allows them to lower fees in several areas.
Pro: Economic development
Sponsor: Sen. Missy Irvin
Status: In Senate Public Health Committee
SB 60
This bill specifies that it is not an acceptable defense to commit a crime against someone because you learned information about their sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender. It eliminates those elements from being used as a part of a “Panic Defense.”
Pro: Public safety
Sponsor: Sen. Linda Chesterfield
Status: Not yet assigned to a committee