March 12, 2013
Gun bill will stay in Senate committee for now
Page 2 of 2
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The bill goes to the House floor, setting a precedent, since past primary offense seatbelt bills have not gotten past the House Roads and Transportation Committee.

 

  • After a lengthy discussion, House Judiciary members postponed action on the governor's bill to treat the offense of driving under the influence of drugs the same as drunk driving (HB2513).
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    The issue over expanding implied consent laws to cover drugged driving is that while blood alcohol levels can be measured with a Breathalyzer, testing to determine whether a driver is under the influence of drugs requires blood or urine tests. 

    Delegates questioned whether that could constitute a violation of Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches or seizures, and also whether individuals taking prescribed dosages of prescription drugs could face drugged driving charges.

     

  • Legislation to license tanning facilities, and prohibit children under age 18 from using tanning beds (SB464) is again moving in the Senate.
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    The bill, which advanced on a voice vote from the Senate Health and Human Resources Committee, would require tanning facilities to be licensed by local health departments, and those operators would be subject to fines and license suspensions or revocations for violations of the proposed law.

    A similar bill passed the Senate 30-4 last year, but died in the House Judiciary Committee at the end of the session.

     

  • A bill to continue to make public campaign financing available to state Supreme Court candidates advanced from House Judiciary (HB2805).
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    However, the Tomblin administration intends to move $1.5 million out of the public financing account to balance the 2013-14 budget, leaving only $1.5 million available for the 2016 elections - which potentially would not be sufficient funding, should more than one candidate qualify for public financing.

    Reach Phil Kabler at ph...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1220.

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