THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
2916 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022 |
S.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO EMERGENCY POWERS.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Governor Ige's twenty-first proclamation relating to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) emergency included a suspension of the Uniform Information Practices Act to the extent that it contains any deadlines for agencies or the office of information practices, relating to requests for government records or complaints to the office of information practices, subject to minimum requirements. One such requirement is that the completion of the request must directly impair the agency's COVID-19 response effort. This requirement lets government agencies freely deny access to public information for an indefinite time period even as COVID-19 vaccination rates increase and the economy begins to reopen.
The purpose of this Act is to prevent future suspensions of the acquisition of critical public records.
SECTION 2. Chapter 127A, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§127A- Suspension
of certain record requests; prohibited. (a) The governor or a mayor
shall not, through any proclamation or declaration of emergency or any rule or order
adopted pursuant to this chapter, suspend agency response deadlines for requests
to:
(1) Public records pursuant
to part II of chapter 92F; or
(2) Vital records or
statistics pursuant to sections 338‑18 or 338-18.5.
SECTION 3. Section 127A-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§127A-13 Additional powers in an emergency period. (a) In
the event of a state of emergency declared by the governor pursuant to section
127A-14, the governor may exercise the following additional powers pertaining
to emergency management during the emergency period:
(1) Provide for and require the quarantine or segregation of
persons who are affected with or believed to have been exposed to any
infectious, communicable, or other disease that is, in the governor's opinion,
dangerous to the public health and safety, or persons who are the source of
other contamination, in any case where, in the governor's opinion, the existing
laws are not adequate to assure the public health and safety; provide for the
care and treatment of the persons; supplement the provisions of sections 325-32
to 325-38 concerning compulsory immunization programs; provide for the
isolation or closing of property which is a source of contamination or is in a
dangerous condition in any case where, in the governor's opinion, the existing
laws are not adequate to assure the public health and safety, and designate as
public nuisances acts, practices, conduct, or conditions that are dangerous to
the public health or safety or to property; authorize that public nuisances be
summarily abated and, if need be, that the property be destroyed, by any police
officer or authorized person, or provide for the cleansing or repair of property,
and if the cleansing or repair is to be at the expense of the owner, the procedure
therefor shall follow as nearly as may be the provisions of section 322-2,
which shall be applicable; and further, authorize without the permission of the
owners or occupants, entry on private premises for any such purposes;
(2) Relieve hardships and inequities, or obstructions to the
public health, safety, or welfare, found by the governor to exist in the laws
and to result from the operation of federal programs or measures taken under
this chapter, by suspending the laws, in whole or in part, or by alleviating
the provisions of laws on such terms and conditions as the governor may impose,
including licensing laws, quarantine laws, and laws relating to labels, grades,
and standards;
(3) [Suspend] Except as provided in section 175A- ,
suspend any law that impedes or tends to impede or be detrimental to the
expeditious and efficient execution of, or to conflict with, emergency
functions, including laws which by this chapter specifically are made
applicable to emergency personnel;
(4) Suspend
the provisions of any regulatory law prescribing the procedures for out-of-state
utilities to conduct business in the State including any licensing laws
applicable to out-of-state utilities or their respective employees, as well as
any order, rule, or regulation of any state agency, if strict compliance with
the provisions of any such law, order, rule, or regulation would in any way
prevent, hinder, or delay necessary action of a state utility in coping with
the emergency or disaster with assistance that may be provided under a mutual assistance
agreement;
(5) In the event of disaster or emergency beyond local control,
or an event which, in the opinion of the governor, is such as to make state
operational control necessary, or upon request of the local entity, assume
direct operational control over all or any part of the emergency management
functions within the affected area;
(6) Shut off water mains, gas mains, electric power connections,
or suspend other services, and, to the extent permitted by or under federal
law, suspend electronic media transmission;
(7) Direct and control the mandatory evacuation of the civilian
population;
(8) Exercise additional emergency functions to the extent
necessary to prevent hoarding, waste, or destruction of materials, supplies,
commodities, accommodations, facilities, and services, to effectuate equitable
distribution thereof, or to establish priorities therein as the public welfare
may require; to investigate; and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary,
to regulate or prohibit, by means of licensing, rationing, or otherwise, the
storage, transportation, use, possession, maintenance, furnishing, sale, or distribution
thereof, and any business or any transaction related thereto;
(9) Suspend section 8-1, relating to state holidays, except the
last paragraph relating to holidays declared by the president, which shall remain
unaffected, and in the event of the suspension, the governor may establish
state holidays by proclamation;
(10) Adjust the hours for voting to take into consideration the
working hours of the voters during the emergency period, and suspend those provisions
of section 11-131 that fix the hours for voting, and fix other hours by stating
the same in the election proclamation or notice, as the case may be;
(11) Assure the continuity of service by critical infrastructure
facilities, both publicly and privately owned, by regulating or, if necessary
to the continuation of the service thereof, by taking over and operating the
same; and
(12) Except as provided in section 134-7.2, whenever in the governor's opinion, the laws of the State do not adequately provide for the common defense, public health, safety, and welfare, investigate, regulate, or prohibit the storage, transportation, use, possession, maintenance, furnishing, sale, or distribution of, as well as any transaction related to, explosives, firearms, and ammunition, inflammable materials and other objects, implements, substances, businesses, or services of a hazardous or dangerous character, or particularly capable of misuse, or obstructive of or tending to obstruct law enforcement, emergency management, or military operations, including intoxicating liquor and the liquor business; and authorize the seizure and forfeiture of any such objects, implements, or substances unlawfully possessed, as provided in this chapter.
(b) In the event of a local state of emergency
declared by [the] a mayor pursuant to [[]section[]]
127A-14, the mayor may exercise the following additional powers pertaining to
emergency management during the emergency period:
(1) Relieve hardships and inequities, or obstructions to the
public health, safety, or welfare, found by the mayor to exist in the laws of
the county and to result from the operation of federal programs or measures
taken under this chapter, by suspending the county laws, in whole or in part,
or by alleviating the provisions of county laws on such terms and conditions as
the mayor may impose, including county licensing laws, and county laws relating
to labels, grades, and standards;
(2) [Suspend] Except as provide in section 127A- ,
suspend any county law that impedes or tends to impede or be detrimental to
the expeditious and efficient execution of, or to conflict with, emergency
functions, including laws which by this chapter specifically are made
applicable to emergency personnel;
(3) Shut off water mains, gas mains, electric power connections,
or suspend other services; and, to the extent permitted by or under federal
law, suspend electronic media transmission;
(4) Direct and control the mandatory evacuation of the civilian
population; and
(5) Exercise additional emergency functions, to the extent necessary to prevent hoarding, waste, or destruction of materials, supplies, commodities, accommodations, facilities, and services, to effectuate equitable distribution thereof, or to establish priorities therein as the public welfare may require; to investigate; and any other county law to the contrary notwithstanding, to regulate or prohibit, by means of licensing, rationing, or otherwise, the storage, transportation, use, possession, maintenance, furnishing, sale, or distribution thereof, and any business or any transaction related thereto."
SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
Report Title:
Public Records; Vital Statistics; Requests; Suspension Prohibited
Description:
Prohibits the governor or a mayor from suspending requests for public records or vital statistics during a declared state of emergency. Allows for a reasonable delay in an agency's response to a request as a result of extenuated circumstances. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.