Some bills pushed by Democrats fail to pass in final session days
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[June 03, 2021]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — In the final days of the
legislative session, lawmakers passed bills to allow for college sports
betting, to phase out isolation and seclusion practices at school, and
to create more affordable housing units.
Despite the hectic rush to move important legislation by the May 31
deadline, some consequential bills did not come up for a final vote.
A bill to repeal the parental notification requirement for young girls
seeking an abortion didn’t come up for a vote. Bills to license
professional midwives and decriminalize small amounts of drugs passed in
the House but not the Senate.
While these bills appeared to be stalled this spring session, they could
still be taken up for a vote if lawmakers return to session later this
summer to address energy legislation.
Repeal law requiring abortion parental notification for minors
House and Senate Democrats filed bills (House Bill 1797 and Senate Bill
2091) to repeal a 1995 abortion law that requires girls under the age of
18 who are seeking an abortion to notify their parents at least 48 hours
before the procedure, with some exceptions.
Under the current law, the notice requirement doesn’t apply if a minor
is accompanied by an adult family member, such as a parent, grandparent,
stepparent or legal guardian, or if an adult family member waives the
notice in writing.
There are additional exceptions to the 48-hour notice requirement,
including for minors who are victims of physical or sexual abuse or
neglect by an adult family member.
Another exception in the law, referred to as “judicial bypass,” allows
for minors to obtain a court waiver, if the minor can show she is mature
and well-informed enough to make the decision to obtain an abortion, or
that it is not in their best interest to notify an adult family member.
Both bills are stalled in committees, and neither received a vote by the
full House or Senate.
Creation of state licensing for professional midwives
House Bill 3401 would allow certified professional midwives to obtain
official state licensing.
Currently, certified professional midwives are not eligible for
licensing through the state, unlike certified nurse midwives, which are
a separate occupation that requires a nursing degree.
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The Illinois Capitol dome is pictured in Springfield.
(Capitol News Illinois file photo)
CPMs are licensed in 35 states and Washington, D.C.
The bill would create the Licensed Certified Professional Midwife
Practice Act to license individuals who perform out-of-hospital
births and have earned the credentials associated with being a
professional midwife through the North American Registry of
Midwives.
HB 3401 defines the practice of midwifery as the “means of providing
the necessary supervision, care, and advice to a client during a
low-risk pregnancy, labor and the post-partum period, including the
intended low-risk delivery of a child, and providing normal newborn
care.”
The bill passed with bipartisan support in the House, by a vote of
105-2, but was never taken up for a vote by the full Senate.
Reclassfying small amounts of drugs from felonies to misdemeanors
House Bill 3447 would reclassify small amounts of drug possession,
including heroin and cocaine, from a low-level felony to a
misdemeanor.
Under the bill, a person who possesses less than three grams of
heroin would be charged with a Class A misdemeanor. Currently, that
offense would be charged as a Class 4 felony, which carries a one-
to four-year prison sentence.
Misdemeanors under the bill would also include possession of less
than five grams of cocaine, less than five pills of most schedule
III substances such as Xanax and Valium, and less than 40 pills of
oxycodone and similar painkillers. Class A misdemeanors are
punishable by a jail sentence of less than one year.
It would also reclassify some low-level drug dealing offenses as a
Class 4 felony, from a Class 3 felony.
HB 3447 passed narrowly out of the House, by a 61-49 vote, with just
one vote more than needed. The Senate did not take up the bill for a
full vote.
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Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |