Bills decriminalizing HIV transmission, requiring media literacy
education pass Senate
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[May 26, 2021]
By SARAH MANSUR & JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — The Illinois Senate on
Tuesday passed measures decriminalizing the transmission of HIV and
requiring public high schools to teach media literacy.
Both measures have already passed the House and will need only a
signature from Gov. JB Pritzker to become law.
House Bill 1063 would eliminate existing criminal statutes that penalize
HIV transmission as a Class 2 felony. If Pritzker signs the bill,
Illinois would join 11 other states that do not have laws criminalizing
the transmission of HIV, including Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.
HB 1063 also would repeal existing laws allowing law enforcement or
state’s attorneys to access a person’s HIV status. Under current
criminal law, a person who transmits HIV to another person can be
charged with “criminal transmission of HIV.”
Current law prohibits the forced disclosure of a person’s HIV status but
provides exceptions for law enforcement officials or state’s attorneys
to subpoena or petition for the HIV status of criminal defendants.
The Illinois HIV Action Alliance, which lobbied for the bill, praised
its passage.
“The truth is HIV criminalization never improved safety or public health
in Illinois – in instead, it has only caused suffering to people living
with HIV, their families, and their communities. It has promoted stigma
and discrimination, and it has discouraged testing, treatment, and
disclosure for decades,” the group wrote in a written statement Tuesday.
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State Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, is pictured in a
file photo at a virtual committee hearing earlier this year. He is
the Senate sponsor of a bill decriminalizing the transmission of
HIV, which passed the Senate Tuesday. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Sen. Robert Peters, a Chicago Democrat, sponsored the
bill in the Senate, and Rep. Carol Ammons, an Urbana Democrat, was
lead sponsor in the House.
It passed out of the Senate by a vote of 37-17 on Tuesday, and
passed from the House last month by a vote of 99-9. It will head to
the governor for his signature.
The Senate also joined the House in passing House Bill 234, which
would require public high schools in the state to offer instruction
in how to understand and evaluate news and social media as part of
their computer literacy courses.
Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, sponsored the bill in the Senate.
The requirement would begin in the 2022-2023 school year and would
include instruction on accessing information across various
platforms; analyzing and evaluating media messages; creating their
own media messages; and social responsibility and civics.
There was no debate on the measure Tuesday as it passed 42-15. It
passed the House on April 20 on a 68-44 vote.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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