Friday, May 3, 2013

Good House bills deserve floor votes as session's end draws near

There's very little time left for bills in the Texas House of Representatives to receive votes on the House floor before deadlines next week close off their chances to become law. There are several bills presently sitting in the Calendars Committee that I'm especially hopeful may make it onto the list to receive votes before the bell tolls on hundreds of House bills next week:
  • HB 1608 by Hughes requiring government to obtain a warrant to obtain personal cell phone data,
  • HB 1096 by Canales requiring law enforcement to record custodial interrogations for the most serious offenses, and 
  • HB 104 by Gonzales abolishing the Driver Responsibility Surcharge for two years while the Legislature and stakeholders look for alternative trauma hospital funding.
Hughes' bill has broad bipartisan support from 108 House members, including eleven members of the Calendars Committee; if that level of support can't secure a floor vote I don't know what it will take. Canales' legislation is a key priority of my employers at the Innocence Project of Texas and one of the last few recommendations of the Timothy Cole Advisory Panel on Wrongful Convictions that the Legislature has yet to implement. And Gonzales' bill is a bipartisan effort to correct what's arguably the worst public-policy error by the Texas Legislature in the 21st century (which is saying something) - repealing a statute which even the original bill authors agree was a mistake that needs to be eliminated. (See more on HB 104 from Paul Kennedy.)

All of these bills deserve a place on one of the final calendars of the session when the House can approve House bills.

Relatedly, Grits had earlier recommended several additional bills for House floor votes and I'm pleased to see one of them, HB 990 by Thompson, which would authorize creation of a state sentencing commission, was placed on Saturday's calendar. (There are also a number of prefiled amendments aimed at the TDCJ Sunset bill which will be heard that day.) A pair of drug-reform bills Grits favors, though, CSHB 184 and HB 2914, continue to linger in the Calendars Committee and deserve floor votes. And I'd like to see the House vote on HB 1790 by Longoria which would provide positive incentives for probationers to succeed in addition to merely threatening revocation for failure. There's still time left to pass substantive criminal-justice reform legislation this session, but not much.

UPDATE (5/4): HB 1790 has been posted for a vote on Tuesday's House floor calendar, as has HB 912, known universally as "the drone bill." There are two more calendars yet to be published on which the other bills could still be added.

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