Committee Passes Two Good Bills to Clarify State Laws Regarding Paid Petition Canvassers, Deceptive Ballot Measures

On Wednesday the House State Agencies Committee passed two good bills that would help clarify state law concerning paid petition canvassers and deceptive ballot measures.

The Arkansas Constitution lets canvassers circulate petitions to place measures on a general election ballot. Its original intent was to give citizens a way to function as a “legislative body.” Unfortunately, powerful special interests have used the initiative process to put flawedmisleading, and deceptive measures on the ballot in Arkansas.

Two good bills passed in committee on Wednesday would help address this problem.

H.B. 1713 by Rep. Ryan Rose (R — Van Buren) and Sen. Mark Johnson (R — Little Rock) requires ballot initiative titles to be written at or below an eighth grade reading level.

A ballot title is supposed to accurately summarize a measure so voters can decide if they support or oppose it.

H.B. 1713 is similar to legislation enacted in other states to help make sure ballot titles are easy for voters to read and understand. This will help address deceptive or misleading ballot initiatives in Arkansas.

H.B. 1714 by Rep. Ryan Rose (R — Van Buren) and Sen. Kim Hammer (R — Benton) clarifies the definition of a “paid canvasser” in state law.

Current law says that anyone who receives anything of value in return for soliciting signatures on a petition is a paid canvasser. Paid canvassers are subject to certain laws that do not apply to volunteer canvassers.

H.B. 1714 further clarifies that receiving anything of value includes receiving payment for items like food, lodging, travel, bonuses, fees, gift cards, and other payments associated with obtaining signatures on a petition. This will help bring better clarity to state law.

Arkansas’ ballot initiative process has become the opposite of what it was intended to be, and if lawmakers do not act soon, the problem is simply going to get worse.

H.B. 1713 and H.B. 1714 are two good bills that will help improve Arkansas’ ballot initiative process.

Below is part of Family Council President Jerry Cox’s testimony in support of H.B. 1713.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Bill Filed to Strengthen Conscience Protections for Healthcare Workers

New legislation filed on Wednesday would strengthen conscience protections for healthcare workers.

In 2021 Arkansas passed Act 462 to protects healthcare workers’ rights of conscience.

Prior to Act 462, Arkansas’ conscience protections were narrowly focused on abortion, abortifacients, and end of life decisions, and they protected only a limited number of people. Act 462 helped broaden these protections for healthcare workers.

S.B. 444 by Sen. Kim Hammer (R — Benton) and Rep. Lee Johnson (R — Greenwood) would improve on Act 462’s conscience protections.

The bill would add whistleblower protections for healthcare workers to Arkansas’ conscience protection laws.

It also would protect healthcare workers from being penalized for engaging in free speech protected by the First Amendment, and it would clarify that medical researchers and other workers in the medical field have conscientious protections.

Arkansas has some of the best laws in the country when it comes to protecting healthcare workers’ rights of conscience. S.B. 444 would help make these good laws even better.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Bills Filed to Clarify State Laws Regarding Paid Petition Canvassers, Deceptive Ballot Measures

Two bills filed at the Arkansas Legislature on Monday would help clarify state law concerning paid petition canvassers and deceptive ballot measures.

The Arkansas Constitution lets canvassers circulate petitions to place measures on a general election ballot. Its original intent was to give citizens a way to function as a “legislative body.” Unfortunately, powerful special interests have used the initiative process to put flawed, misleading, and deceptive measures on the ballot in Arkansas.

Two good bills at the state legislature would help address this problem.

H.B. 1713 by Rep. Ryan Rose (R — Van Buren) and Sen. Mark Johnson (R — Little Rock) requires ballot initiative titles to be written at or below an eighth grade reading level. A ballot title is supposed to summarize the measure so voters can decide if they support or oppose the measure.

H.B. 1713 is similar to legislation enacted in other states to help make sure ballot measures are easy for voters to read and understand. This will help address deceptive or misleading ballot initiatives in Arkansas.

H.B. 1714 by Rep. Ryan Rose (R — Van Buren) and Sen. Kim Hammer (R — Benton) clarifies the definition of a “paid canvasser” in state law.

Current law says that anyone who receives anything of value in return for soliciting signatures on a petition is a paid canvasser. Paid canvassers are subject to certain laws that do not apply to volunteer canvassers.

H.B. 1714 further clarifies that receiving anything of value includes receiving payment for items like food, lodging, travel, bonuses, fees, gift cards, and other payments associated with obtaining signatures on a petition. This will help bring better clarity to state law.

Arkansas’ ballot initiative process has become the opposite of what it was intended to be, and if lawmakers do not act soon, the problem is simply going to get worse.

You can read H.B. 1713 here, and you can read H.B. 1714 here.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.