2021 Bill Tracker
KFTC SupportsVoting RightsHouse Bill 232 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. Jason Nemes, Pamela Stevenson, William Lawrence and others |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 232 is similar to legislation passed by a House committee last year that received no further consideration when the pandemic curtailed the 2020 session. It had bipartisan sponsorship and support. |
KFTC SupportsBreonna's LawHouse Bill 21 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Attica Scott & other Democrats |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 21 was introduced in the House on January 5, and after much delay assigned to the Judiciary Committee. The committee however passed over HB 21 and instead approved Senate Bill 4, a weaker bill that addresses the issuance and execution of police warrants but does not ban no-knock warrants. SB 4, which had passed the Senate 33-0 on February 25, was amended and approved by the House, 92-5, on March 30. The Senate concurred, 34-0, with House amendments. SB 4 was signed into law by the governor on April 9. |
KFTC SupportsDeath Penalty Limit / AbolitionHouse Bill 148 Senate Bill 60 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Chad McCoy, Sen, Stephen Meredith and other Republicans and Democrats |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 148 was approved by the House Judiciary Committee on February 24. It passed the full House, 75-16, on March 1. See how House members voted. |
KFTC SupportsHealthy Democracy: RedistrictingHouse Bill 23 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. Buddy Wheatley, Kelly Flood & Attica Scott |
Summary
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Additional Information
The majority party often has used redistricting to shape districts in ways that weaken the votes of minority populations, pit sitting legislators against each other and skew the district to favor their party’s candidates. The goal of this legislation was to remove that partisanship from the process. The Kentucky League of Women Voters has been particularly active in developing HB 23. HB 23 was not assigned to a committee and ignored by legislative leaders. |
KFTC SupportsHealthy Democracy: Voting HoursHouse Bill 51 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Buddy Wheatley & others |
Summary
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Additional Information
Kentucky has one of the earliest poll closing times in the nation at 6 p.m. This would have added one hour in the evening. HB 51 was not assigned to a committee and ignored by legislative leaders. |
KFTC SupportsHealthy Democracy: Expanded Absentee VotingHouse Bill 72 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Rachel Roberts & others |
Summary
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Additional Information
"No excuse" absentee voting absentee (also referred to as mail-in voting) was widely used in the 2020 elections, but done so only under emergency orders for voters concerned about voting safely. HB 72 would have made this a part of Kentucky law. HB 72 was not assigned to a committee. No excuse absentee (mail-in) voting was specifically excluded from the voting bill that did pass (see entry below for HB 574). |
KFTC SupportsHealthy Democracy: Expanded voter registrationHouse Bill 182 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Josie Raymond |
Summary
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Additional Information
A person not previously registered could do so at the precinct of their residence on the day of an election, provided they met all qualifications to be a voter (age, residency, etc.). A person registered through their driver's license application or renewal would be required to decline if they did not meet all qualification. HB 182 was not assigned to a committee or given a hearing or vote. |
KFTC SupportsRedistrictingBill Sponsor(s): Reps. Buddy Wheatley, Attica Scott, Lisa Willner |
Summary
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Additional Information
HCR 61 was not assigned to a committee and was ignored by legislative leaders. |
KFTC SupportsBan Conversion TherapyHouse Bill 19 Senate Bill 30 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Lisa Willner / Sen. Alice Forgy Kerr with bipartisan cosponsors |
Summary
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Additional Information
Both bills had bipartisan sponsorship. Despite this, neither bill was assigned to a committee and received no consideration during the session. |
KFTC SupportsMaternal Health BillHouse Bill 27 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Attica Scott and others |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 27 and most of the other maternal health-related bills were not assigned to committees and were ignored by legislative leaders. However, House Bill 212 did move. It requires a child and maternal fatality annual demographic analysis by race, income and geography. HB 212 was approved unanimously by the House Health & Family Services Committee on February 4 and then, after a delay, by the full House, 92-3, on March 3. It received approval by the Senate, 36-0, on March 16, and was signed into law by Gov. Beshear on March 25. |
KFTC SupportsRe-entering KentuckiansHouse Bill 497 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Kimberly Moser |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 497 was passed by the House, 95-0, on March 5. In the Senate it was amended and approved by the Judiciary Committee on March 15 and the full Senate on March 16, 35-0. The House concurred with Senate changes, 91-0, on March 29. The bill was signed into law by Gov. Beshear on April 5. |
KFTC SupportsCivil rights protectionHouse Bill 132 Bill Sponsor(s): Nima Kulkarni, Jason Nemes |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 132 was not assigned to a committee and denied a hearing or vote by legislative leaders. |
KFTC OpposesPublic funding for private schools IIHouse Bill 563 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. C. McCoy, S. Santoro |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 563, as amended with school voucher language, passed the House, 51-45, on March 11. |
KFTC OpposesPublic funding for private schoolsHouse Bill 149 Senate Bill 25 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Chad McCoy / Sen. Ralph Alvarado and other Republicans |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 149 was assigned to the House Appropriations & Revenue Committee. The bill was not moving so the bill language was added to House Bill 563, which passed the House, 51-45, on March 11. See the entry above for action on HB 563. A companion bill, Senate Bill 25, was assigned to the Senate Appropriations & Revenue Committee but did not receive a hearing or vote with HB 563 moving. |
KFTC OpposesPenalties on water customersHouse Bill 272 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Josh Bray and other Republicans |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 272 was amended and approved by the House Local Government Committee on Feb. 11. It was passed by the full House, 70-25, on March 1. |
KFTC OpposesRenter EvictionsSenate Bill 264 Bill Sponsor(s): Sen. Stephen West and Republicans; Rep. David Meade |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 264 was assigned to the Senate Economic Development, Tourism & Labor Committee. Though initially fast tracked by Senate leaders, SB 264 did not receive approval by the Senate committee. HB 570 was not assigned to a committee. |
KFTC OpposesMedical care refusalSenate Bill 83 Bill Sponsor(s): Sens. Stephen Meredith, Robby Mills |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 83 was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 11. It was not given a vote before the full Senate and died in that chamber. |
KFTC OpposesGo to jail for not being niceSenate Bill 211 Bill Sponsor(s): Sens. Danny Carroll, Michael Nemes |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 211 was approoved by the Senate Veterans, Military Affairs and Public Protection Committee on March 4, and by the full Senate, 22-11, on March 11. It was not given a heraring or vote in the House. |
KFTC OpposesChild food securitySenate Bill 65 Bill Sponsor(s): Sens. Steven West, Ralph Alvarado |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 65 was approved by the Senate State & Local Government Committee on February 10 and the full Senate, 30-6, on February 23. In the House, SB 65 was approved by the Licensing & Occupations Committee on March 11. It passed the full House on March 16, 68-23. |
KFTC OpposesCriminalizing rental damageSenate Bill 11 Bill Sponsor(s): Sen. John Schickel & other Republicans |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 11 was approved by the Senate Licensing & Occupations Committee and the full Senate, 28-8, on February 4. In the House, SB 11 was approved by the Licensing & Occupations Committee and the full House, 75-17, on March 5. On March 11, the Senate, on a 26-6 vote, concurred with House changes. |
KFTC OpposesLegalized pari-mutuel gamblingSenate Bill 120 Bill Sponsor(s): Sen. John Schickel and others |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 120 was approved by the Senate Licensing & Occupations Committee and by the full Senate, 22-15, on February 9. |
KFTC OpposesU.S. Senate vacanciesSenate Bill 228 Bill Sponsor(s): Sens. Robert Stivers, Tom Buford |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 228 was approved by the Senate State & Local Government Committee on March 1, and since it had been fast-tracked by Senate leaders received a floor vote the next day, passing 28-8. |
KFTC OpposesConstitutional ConventionBill Sponsor(s): Sen. Robby Mills and other Republicans |
Summary
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Additional Information
HJR 56 was assigned to a committee. |
KFTC OpposesTurn out anti-abortion votersHouse Bill 91 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Joe Fischer and others |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 91 was approved by House Elections & Const. Amendments Committee on February 11, and passed the full House, 76-20, on February 25. In the Senate it was approved by State & Local Govt Committee on March 15, and the full Senate, 32-6, on March 30. As a proposed constitutional amendment, the governor cannot veto this legislation. |
KFTC OpposesReproductive JusticeSenate Bill 9 Bill Sponsor(s): Sen. Whitney Westerfield |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 9 was fast-tracked by Republicans and passed by the Senate 32-4 and the House 76-18 in the first week of January. It became law without Gov. Andy Beshear's signature. Because it has an emergency clause, it went into effect immedicately. |
Executive Branch BudgetHouse Bill 192 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. J. Petrie, B. Reed, R. Dotson |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 192 was amended quickly and passed both the House and Senate in early January, with each chamber then going through a process of not agreeing with the other chamber's changes so that the budget could be created in conference committee, without public hearings. Read about the what legislators did here: "Legislature To Pass Austere Budget, Prevent Governor From Using New Federal Aid Without Authorization." |
Comprehensive Tax ReformHouse Bill 356 |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 356 was not assigned to a committee or given consideration by legislative leaders. |
Omnibus voting changesHouse Bill 574 Bill Sponsor(s): Rep. Jennifer Decker |
Summary
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Additional Information
A 144-page committee substitute for the original 138-page HB 574 was approved by the House Elections, Constitutional Amendments & Intergovernmental Affairs Committee on February 25. It was approved by the full House, 93-4, on February 26, after they defeated a provision to expand no-excuse in-person early voting and added a provision to help people who are homeless register and vote. |
Open RecordsHouse Bill 312 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. B. Rowland, C. Massey, B. Wesley |
Summary
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Additional Information
HB 312 was approved by the House, 71-26, on February 26. The Senate amended the bill and approved it, 22-11, on March 11. The House concurred with the Senate changes on March 12, by a 70-26 vote. |
Statewide FairnessHouse Bill 116 Senate Bill 269 Bill Sponsor(s): Reps. Minter and Willner, Sen. McGarvey and Democrat and Republican cosponsors |
Summary
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Additional Information
None of the bills have been assigned to a committee by legislative leaders. |
Commission on Race and OpportuntitySenate Bill 10 Bill Sponsor(s): Sen. Givens and other Republicans and Democrats |
Summary
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Additional Information
SB 10 passed the Senate, 35-1, on February 24. It was amended in the House and passed, 65-24, on March 11. The Senate concurreed with House changes, 27-9 on March 15. SB 10 became law without the governor's signature. |
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