2022 Legislative Watch List

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The 112th Tennessee General Assembly reconvenes on Tuesday, January 11, 2022. This year we are pursuing proactive initiatives to eliminate juvenile fines and fees, end bail garnishment, stop expulsions of students in grades pre-K – 2, and ensure police officers are not rehired despite disciplinary infractions. We also anticipate working to defeat dangerous legislation that undermines reproductive justice, harms immigrants and refugees, enables racial injustice, and discriminates against LGBTQ individuals and religious minorities. The list below includes initial highlights of legislation we are monitoring and lobbying so far in 2022. Please note that this list will continue to evolve as the session progresses and additional bills are filed. Actions you can take on pending bills will be posted in our Legislative Action Center.

Updated 01-7-22


Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 339/HB 735 Sentencing – As introduced, requires the commissioner of correction to award certain inmates up to eight months of public health emergency credits for time served during a state of emergency declared by the governor due to a public health emergency based on communicable disease. Current Status
Oppose SB 467/HB 35 Local Government, General – As introduced, prohibits governmental entities and officials from mandating or limiting the number of persons who may congregate in a residence, or in a church if the number of congregants complies with occupancy limits applicable to the church Current Status
Support SB 820/HB 919 Landlord and Tenant – As introduced, prohibits a landlord from refusing to enter into a rental agreement with a prospective tenant solely based upon the tenant being previously evicted during a public health emergency related to COVID-19. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 11/HB 1129 Jails, Local Lock-ups – As introduced, requires the department of correction to pay an additional $5.00 per day recidivism-reduction stipend for certain county jails housing convicted felons, in which the felons attend evidence-based programs to reduce recidivism rates upon release; authorizes community colleges and colleges of applied technology to assist county governments in development of such programs. Current Status
Support SB 18/HB 561 Election Laws – As introduced, changes the revocation of a person’s voting rights pursuant to a conviction for certain infamous crimes to a temporary suspension of voting rights for the period of confinement, probation, or parole; automatically restores a person’s voting rights upon release from confinement, probation, or parole. Current Status
Support SB 197/HB 387 Election Laws – As introduced, creates a polling place pilot program in Davidson County jails to provide eligible inmates the opportunity to vote; expires the program on December 31, 2022. Current Status
Support SB 260/HB 59 Forfeiture of Assets – As introduced, removes the requirement for a person to post a bond when filing a claim to seized property. Current Status
Support SB 265/HB 338 Probation and Parole – As introduced, provides that if a prisoner is granted parole based on the requirement that the prisoner complete a pre-release program, class, coursework, or other activity, and the program, class, coursework, or activity cannot be commenced at no fault of the prisoner within one month of parole, the board must immediately release the prisoner under GPS monitoring pending completion of an eligible community-based program based on a risk and needs assessment. Current Status
Support SB 289/HB 1518 Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, requires the clerk of each court with criminal jurisdiction to submit a monthly report to the administrative office of the courts including certain statistical information about arrests, release, bonds, and failures to appear; requires clerks who fail to submit the required information to pay an administrative fee. Current Status
Support SB 339/HB 735 Sentencing – As introduced, requires the commissioner of correction to award certain inmates up to eight months of public health emergency credits for time served during a state of emergency declared by the governor due to a public health emergency based on communicable disease. Current Status
Support SB 444/HB 352 Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, states that forfeiture of bail shall not become final in a court located within an area that has been declared by the governor to be in a state of emergency until 180 days after the expiration of the declaration. Current Status
Support SB 461/HB 969 Law Enforcement – As introduced, enacts the “Public Safety Through Hiring Act,” which prohibits law enforcement agencies from hiring a person as a police officer who was fired due to disciplinary infractions or while under investigation for misconduct in the line of duty, or who resigned or retired while under investigation for disciplinary infractions or misconduct in the line of duty. Current Status
Support SB 553/HB 450 Child Custody and Support – As introduced, removes authorization to revoke, deny, suspend, or restrict driver licenses and professional licenses of obligors who have been certified by the department of human services to be in noncompliance with an order of child support if the obligor has paid any portion of the obligation or is making one or more installment payments toward certain payment plans; requires licensing authorities to reinstate licenses previously revoked, denied, suspended, or restricted due to failure to comply with a child support obligation upon payment of a reasonable fee. Current Status
Support SB 649/HB 1213 Driver Licenses – As introduced, prohibits the suspension of a person’s driver license as a result of the person’s failure to timely pay litigation taxes, court costs, and fines assessed as a result of disposition of any criminal offense. Current Status
Support SB 811/HB 224 Juvenile Offenders – As introduced, requires youth development centers, jails, and the department of correction to provide free telephone calls between minors and their parent or guardian. Current Status
Support SB 827/HB 916 Prisons and Reformatory Institutions – As introduced, prohibits the use of solitary confinement for pregnant inmates and inmates who have given birth within the past eight weeks; prohibits transfer of a pregnant inmate from a jail to a state penitentiary or branch of a prison for safekeeping unless medically necessary. Current Status
Oppose SB 843/HB 513 Criminal Offenses – As introduced, increases the penalty for obstructing a highway from a Class B or C misdemeanor to a Class E felony and makes other related changes; creates the offense of throwing an object at another while participating in a riot; creates the offense of intimidating or harassing another while participating in a riot. Current Status
Support SB 966/HB 1008 Sentencing – As introduced, increases the maximum percentage of the sentence imposed by the court that can be reduced by sentence credits from 15 percent to 35 percent for certain offenses and makes other related changes. Current Status
Support SB 1045/HB 1568 Search & Seizure – As introduced, specifies that hemp and products derived from hemp, other than isolated THC, are not subject to seizure based solely on their composition; prohibits police searches based solely on the odor of cannabis. Current Status
Support SB 1418/HB 223 Juvenile Offenders – As introduced, enacts the “Juvenile Justice Stop Solitary Confinement Act.” Current Status
Support SB 1432/HB 993 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires law enforcement agencies to provide body cameras for each officer; requires reporting of incidents of use of force, officer resignations, stops by officers, and unannounced entries into residences; requires termination of employment of any officer convicted of or found civilly liable for certain acts; prohibits the use of chokeholds by officers. Current Status
Support SB 1434/HB 600 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires a law enforcement officer who conducts a search of a motor vehicle to report in person to a judge of the general sessions court within three days and provide certain statistical information; requires the clerk of the general sessions court to report the information to the administrative office of the courts; requires the administrative office of the courts to provide an annual report to the chairs of the appropriate committees of the general assembly. Current Status
Support SB 1435/HB 340 Children – As introduced, requires that an audiovisual recording be made of any interrogation of a child who has been taken into custody on suspicion that the child committed a delinquent act or unruly conduct; states that the requirement may not be waived. Current Status
Support SB 1439/HB 413 Criminal Offenses – As introduced, decriminalizes the possession and casual exchange of less than one ounce of marijuana; defines casual exchange and marijuana for purposes of decriminalization. Current Status
Support SB 1453/HB 1084 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, reduces the period of time, from five years to one year from the date of issuance, in which a process, warrant, precept, or summons for a misdemeanor offense must be served, returned, or quashed before it is automatically terminated and removed from the records. Current Status
Support SB 1474/HB 1288 Education – As introduced, enacts the “Keep Kids in School Act.” Current Status
Support SB 1475/HB 221 Controlled Substances – As introduced, requires a court to grant judicial diversion for possession of less than one ounce of marijuana, regardless of a defendant’s prior criminal convictions. Current Status
Support SB 1476/HB 972 Controlled Substances – As introduced, reduces, from a Class A misdemeanor to a Class C misdemeanor, the offenses of knowing possession, casual exchange, and distribution of small amounts of marijuana; establishes early release eligibility for nonviolent offenders convicted of Class A misdemeanor marijuana offenses. Current Status
Support SB 1477/HB 1587 Controlled Substances – As introduced, authorizes the retail sale of marijuana; levies a 12 percent tax on the retail sale of marijuana. Current Status
Support SB 1485/HB 863 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, prohibits a court from issuing or a law enforcement officer from serving a no knock search or arrest warrant; defines a no knock warrant as a warrant that specifically enables an officer to enter a structure without giving notice of the officer’s authority or the purpose of the officer’s presence. Current Status
Support SB 1487/HB 1574 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, establishes eligibility of person convicted of a Class E, D, or C felony to apply for and receive voter registration card upon receiving a pardon, being discharged from custody for service of the person’s maximum sentence, or being granted a certificate of final discharge from supervision by the board of parole. Current Status
Support SB 1488/HB 895 Sentencing – As introduced, directs TACIR to conduct a study comparing the length of sentences imposed on individuals currently incarcerated with current sentencing guidelines, and identify any disparities between sentences imposed for similar offenses; requires TACIR to submit a report to members of the general assembly by January 1, 2022. Current Status
Support SB 1496/HB 1316 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires law enforcement agencies to report findings of excessive use of force by a law enforcement officer to the district attorney general, to be reviewed for possible criminal prosecution; requires the district attorney general to review 10 percent of all allegations of excessive force in each previous calendar year. Current Status
Support SB 1499/HB 1308 Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, prohibits the application of a bail deposit made by or on behalf of a defendant to the payment of a judgment for fine, court costs, or restitution entered in the prosecution of a cause; excepts bail forfeitures. Current Status
Support SB 1502/HB 1552 Fines and Penalties – As introduced, allows a court to impose a payment plan for fines in equal installments or, at the request of the defendant, in graduated installments. Current Status
Support SB 1547/HB 808 Criminal Offenses – As introduced, changes from a Class E felony to a Class A misdemeanor, the criminal penalty for a person engaged in camping on state property knowing that the area is not specifically designated for use as a camping area by the department or agency responsible for such land; removes the enhanced penalties for certain criminal offenses involving obstruction of highways, streets, or other passageways Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 659/HB 1535 Teachers, Principals and School Personnel – As introduced, prohibits teachers from using supplemental materials that are not approved by the state board. Current Status
Oppose SB 1216/HB 800 Textbooks – As introduced, prohibits the state textbook and instructional materials quality commission from recommending or listing, the state board of education from approving for local adoption or from granting a waiver for, and LEAs and public charter schools from adopting or using textbooks and instructional materials or supplemental instructional materials that promote, normalize, support, or address lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, or transgender issues or lifestyles. Current Status
Support SB 1257/HB 44 Basic Education Program (BEP) – As introduced, funds social worker positions through the BEP at a ratio of one per 1,500 or fewer students. Current Status
Support SB 1457/HB 808 Students – As introduced, prohibits corporal punishment in public schools. Current Status
Support SB 1474/HB 1288 Education – As introduced, enacts the “Keep Kids in School Act.” Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 1328/HB 21 Immigration – As introduced, requires this state to refuse to consent to receive any refugees for purposes of resettlement; requires each local government within this state to refuse to consent to receive any refugees for purposes of resettlement unless resettlement within its jurisdiction is approved by a certain process. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose HJR 1 Memorials, Congress – Urges Congress to enact legislation to prohibit the desecration of the United States flag. Current Status
Oppose SB 193/HB 372 Public Employees – As introduced, prohibits a government entity from requiring an employee of the entity to attend or participate in a training, seminar, or continuing education which the employee objects to on the basis of the person’s morals, ethics, values, or religious beliefs. Current Status
Oppose SB 659/HB 1535 Teachers, Principals and School Personnel – As introduced, prohibits teachers from using supplemental materials that are not approved by the state board. Current Status
Oppose SB 843/HB 513 Criminal Offenses – As introduced, increases the penalty for obstructing a highway from a Class B or C misdemeanor to a Class E felony and makes other related changes; creates the offense of throwing an object at another while participating in a riot; creates the offense of intimidating or harassing another while participating in a riot. Current Status
Oppose SB 1216/HB 800 Textbooks – As introduced, prohibits the state textbook and instructional materials quality commission from recommending or listing, the state board of education from approving for local adoption or from granting a waiver for, and LEAs and public charter schools from adopting or using textbooks and instructional materials or supplemental instructional materials that promote, normalize, support, or address lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, or transgender issues or lifestyles. Current Status
Support SB 1547/HB 808 Criminal Offenses – As introduced, changes from a Class E felony to a Class A misdemeanor, the criminal penalty for a person engaged in camping on state property knowing that the area is not specifically designated for use as a camping area by the department or agency responsible for such land; removes the enhanced penalties for certain criminal offenses involving obstruction of highways, streets, or other passageways Current Status




Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 204/HB 724 Abortion – As introduced, enacts the “Rule of Law Life Act” Current Status
Oppose SB 494/HB 1079 As introduced, permits a person to petition a court for an injunction to prohibit a woman who is pregnant with the person’s unborn child from obtaining an abortion. Requires the petitioner to prove that they are the father of the unborn child and that there is a reasonable probability that the respondent will seek an abortion before the court issues the injunction. Requires the petitioner to execute a voluntary acknowledgement of paternity that is not subject to being rescinded or challenged. Establishes that if the respondent violates the injunction they can be held in civil or criminal contempt. Current Status
Support SB 827/HB 916 Prisons and Reformatory Institutions – As introduced, prohibits the use of solitary confinement for pregnant inmates and inmates who have given birth within the past eight weeks; prohibits transfer of a pregnant inmate from a jail to a state penitentiary or branch of a prison for safekeeping unless medically necessary. Current Status
Support SB 956/HB 642 Health, Dept. of – As introduced, requires the department to create an evidence-based implicit bias training program for healthcare professionals related to maternal and infant mortality; requires the department to collect certain data; and establishes a perinatal patient bill of rights. Current Status
Oppose SB 1222/HB 1425 Abortion – As introduced, enacts the “Every Mom Matters Act,” which requires a woman to complete a free resource access consultation with the department of health prior to having an abortion. Current Status




Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 193/HB 372 Public Employees – As introduced, prohibits a government entity from requiring an employee of the entity to attend or participate in a training, seminar, or continuing education which the employee objects to on the basis of the person’s morals, ethics, values, or religious beliefs. Current Status
Oppose SB 562/HB 233 Marriage – As introduced, deletes statutes on marriage licensing and ceremonies; limits the jurisdiction of circuit courts and chancery courts in cases involving the definition of common law marriage to the principles of common law marriage. Current Status
Oppose SB 657/HB 578 Children – As introduced, prohibits the provision of sexual identity change therapy to prepubescent minors; prohibits the provision of sexual identity change therapy to minors who have entered puberty unless a parent or guardian has written recommendations for the therapy from at least three physicians; punishes violations as child abuse; designates violations by healthcare professionals as professional misconduct. Current Status
Oppose SB 1216/HB 800 Textbooks – As introduced, prohibits the state textbook and instructional materials quality commission from recommending or listing, the state board of education from approving for local adoption or from granting a waiver for, and LEAs and public charter schools from adopting or using textbooks and instructional materials or supplemental instructional materials that promote, normalize, support, or address lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, or transgender issues or lifestyles. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 289/HB 1518 Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, requires the clerk of each court with criminal jurisdiction to submit a monthly report to the administrative office of the courts including certain statistical information about arrests, release, bonds, and failures to appear; requires clerks who fail to submit the required information to pay an administrative fee. Current Status
Support SB 1539/HB 1553 Public Records – As introduced, enacts the “Accountability and Engagement Through Transparency Act.” Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 193/HB 372 Public Employees – As introduced, prohibits a government entity from requiring an employee of the entity to attend or participate in a training, seminar, or continuing education which the employee objects to on the basis of the person’s morals, ethics, values, or religious beliefs. Current Status
Support SB 456/HB 43 Law Enforcement – As introduced, prohibits law enforcement from entering private property for the purpose of engaging in surveillance or setting up surveillance equipment to search for and collect evidence or obtain information or other data unless the officer has obtained a search warrant or a judicially recognized exception to the warrant requirement exists. Current Status
Support SB 461/HB 969 Law Enforcement – As introduced, enacts the “Public Safety Through Hiring Act,” which prohibits law enforcement agencies from hiring a person as a police officer who was fired due to disciplinary infractions or while under investigation for misconduct in the line of duty, or who resigned or retired while under investigation for disciplinary infractions or misconduct in the line of duty. Current Status
Support SB 1045/HB 1568 Search & Seizure – As introduced, specifies that hemp and products derived from hemp, other than isolated THC, are not subject to seizure based solely on their composition; prohibits police searches based solely on the odor of cannabis. Current Status
Support SB 1432/HB 993 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires law enforcement agencies to provide body cameras for each officer; requires reporting of incidents of use of force, officer resignations, stops by officers, and unannounced entries into residences; requires termination of employment of any officer convicted of or found civilly liable for certain acts; prohibits the use of chokeholds by officers. Current Status
Support SB 1434/HB 600 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires a law enforcement officer who conducts a search of a motor vehicle to report in person to a judge of the general sessions court within three days and provide certain statistical information; requires the clerk of the general sessions court to report the information to the administrative office of the courts; requires the administrative office of the courts to provide an annual report to the chairs of the appropriate committees of the general assembly. Current Status
Support SB 1453/HB 1084 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, reduces the period of time, from five years to one year from the date of issuance, in which a process, warrant, precept, or summons for a misdemeanor offense must be served, returned, or quashed before it is automatically terminated and removed from the records. Current Status
Support SB 1485/HB 863 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, prohibits a court from issuing or a law enforcement officer from serving a no knock search or arrest warrant; defines a no knock warrant as a warrant that specifically enables an officer to enter a structure without giving notice of the officer’s authority or the purpose of the officer’s presence. Current Status
Support SB 1496/HB 1316 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires law enforcement agencies to report findings of excessive use of force by a law enforcement officer to the district attorney general, to be reviewed for possible criminal prosecution; requires the district attorney general to review 10 percent of all allegations of excessive force in each previous calendar year. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 456/HB 43 Law Enforcement – As introduced, prohibits law enforcement from entering private property for the purpose of engaging in surveillance or setting up surveillance equipment to search for and collect evidence or obtain information or other data unless the officer has obtained a search warrant or a judicially recognized exception to the warrant requirement exists. Current Status
Oppose SB 1162/HB 1239 Election Laws – As introduced, authorizes the state election commission and each county election commission to utilize technology to identify the fingerprints of voters for purposes of conducting elections in this state in collaboration with state agencies that maintain a database of fingerprints in this state. Current Status
Support SB 1359/HB 1330 Employees, Employers – As introduced, prevents employers from taking adverse action against certain job applicants and employees with regard to drug tests indicating the use of marijuana. Current Status
Support SB 1432/HB 993 Law Enforcement – As introduced, requires law enforcement agencies to provide body cameras for each officer; requires reporting of incidents of use of force, officer resignations, stops by officers, and unannounced entries into residences; requires termination of employment of any officer convicted of or found civilly liable for certain acts; prohibits the use of chokeholds by officers. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 136/HB 204 Human Rights – As introduced, enacts the “CROWN Act: Create a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair” to define race and protective hairstyle for purposes of the Tennessee Human Rights Act. Current Status
Oppose SB 193/HB 372 Public Employees – As introduced, prohibits a government entity from requiring an employee of the entity to attend or participate in a training, seminar, or continuing education which the employee objects to on the basis of the person’s morals, ethics, values, or religious beliefs. Current Status
Support SB 308/HB 721 Health Care – As introduced, encourages department of human services to develop a partnership with minority and other community-based organizations to improve the health of racial and ethnic minorities and to extend public health legal services to minority and low-income individuals receiving social and medical services; requests department to utilize temporary assistance for needy families (TANF) funds to support such partnerships. Current Status
Support SB 956/HB 642 Health, Dept. of – As introduced, requires the department to create an evidence-based implicit bias training program for healthcare professionals related to maternal and infant mortality; requires the department to collect certain data; and establishes a perinatal patient bill of rights. Current Status
Support SB 1064/HB 1329 Banks and Financial Institutions – As introduced, prohibits a licensee engaged in the business of deferred presentment services from contracting for or receiving a fee or charge exceeding a 36 percent annual percentage rate on the unpaid balance of the amount financed. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 193/HB 372 Public Employees – As introduced, prohibits a government entity from requiring an employee of the entity to attend or participate in a training, seminar, or continuing education which the employee objects to on the basis of the person’s morals, ethics, values, or religious beliefs. Current Status
Oppose SB 467/HB 35 Local Government, General – As introduced, prohibits governmental entities and officials from mandating or limiting the number of persons who may congregate in a residence, or in a church if the number of congregants complies with occupancy limits applicable to the church Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Oppose SB 204/HB 724 Abortion – As introduced, enacts the “Rule of Law Life Act” Current Status
Oppose SB 494/HB 1079 As introduced, permits a person to petition a court for an injunction to prohibit a woman who is pregnant with the person’s unborn child from obtaining an abortion. Requires the petitioner to prove that they are the father of the unborn child and that there is a reasonable probability that the respondent will seek an abortion before the court issues the injunction. Requires the petitioner to execute a voluntary acknowledgement of paternity that is not subject to being rescinded or challenged. Establishes that if the respondent violates the injunction they can be held in civil or criminal contempt. Current Status
Support SB 956/HB 642 Health, Dept. of – As introduced, requires the department to create an evidence-based implicit bias training program for healthcare professionals related to maternal and infant mortality; requires the department to collect certain data; and establishes a perinatal patient bill of rights. Current Status
Oppose SB 1222/HB 1425 Abortion – As introduced, enacts the “Every Mom Matters Act,” which requires a woman to complete a free resource access consultation with the department of health prior to having an abortion. Current Status





Position Bill Number Description Status
Support SB 2/HB 1560 As introduced, alters the appointment and composition of the state and county election commissions; transfers duties from the secretary of state to the coordinator of elections. Current Status
Support SB 18/HB 561 Election Laws – As introduced, changes the revocation of a person’s voting rights pursuant to a conviction for certain infamous crimes to a temporary suspension of voting rights for the period of confinement, probation, or parole; automatically restores a person’s voting rights upon release from confinement, probation, or parole. Current Status
Support SB 23/HB 1283 Election Laws – As introduced, permits the use of a photo identification card issued by this state, the United States, or an accredited postsecondary institution of education in this state for purposes of verifying the identity of an eligible voter. Current Status
Support SB 105/HB 1157 Election Laws – As introduced, requires county election commissions that purchase or lease voting machines on and after July 1, 2021, to purchase or lease precinct-based optical scanners. Current Status
Support SB 197/HB 387 Election Laws – As introduced, creates a polling place pilot program in Davidson County jails to provide eligible inmates the opportunity to vote; expires the program on December 31, 2022. Current Status
Support SB 218/HB 95 Election Laws – As introduced, requires each county to use precinct-based optical scanners for elections beginning no later than January 1, 2022. Current Status
Support SB 684/HB 896 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, allows certain persons deprived of the right of suffrage to apply for a voter registration card and have the right of suffrage provisionally restored if the person enters into a payment plan to become current on all child support obligations Current Status
Support SB 687/HB 689 Election Laws – As introduced, requires a county purchasing direct recording electronic voting systems to ensure that the systems have the capability to create a voter-verifiable paper audit trail for each ballot cast. Current Status
Oppose SB 835/HB 1251 As introduced, prohibits a county election commission from transmitting an application to vote absentee to a voter unless the voter makes a request for the ballot in writing. Current Status
Support SB 957/HB 1557 Redistricting, Legislative – As introduced, enacts the “Tennessee Independent Redistricting Commission Act,” which establishes a nine-member independent redistricting commission beginning in 2021. Current Status
Oppose SB 1162/HB 1239 Election Laws – As introduced, authorizes the state election commission and each county election commission to utilize technology to identify the fingerprints of voters for purposes of conducting elections in this state in collaboration with state agencies that maintain a database of fingerprints in this state. Current Status
Oppose SB 1164/HB 1221 Election Laws – As introduced, requires the state and county election commissions to maintain on their respective websites the name of each voter who requests an application to vote by absentee ballot and a link to the voter’s digital or electronic signature on the application. Current Status
Support SB 1413/HB 805 Election Laws – As introduced, deletes a provision making it a Class A misdemeanor for a person who is not an employee of an election commission to give an unsolicited request for an application for an absentee ballot to any person; deletes a provision making it a Class E felony for a person who is not an employee of an election commission to give an application for an absentee ballot to any person. Current Status
Support SB 1487/HB 1574 Criminal Procedure – As introduced, establishes eligibility of person convicted of a Class E, D, or C felony to apply for and receive voter registration card upon receiving a pardon, being discharged from custody for service of the person’s maximum sentence, or being granted a certificate of final discharge from supervision by the board of parole. Current Status
Support SB 1541/HB 1429 Election Laws – As introduced, requires department of safety to automatically register a qualified person to vote from information on an application for a driver license or photo identification card unless the person opts out. Current Status



2022-01-10T17:20:59-06:00 January 7th, 2022|Categories: Take Action|