Gut And Replace Resurfaces At Hawaii Legislature
The Senate Ways and Means Committee altered the contents of several bills with little public notice, including one that would raise taxes and another that affects Big Island disaster relief.
Less than two months after a Circuit Court judge ruled that the practice of gutting bills and replacing them with entirely new content is constitutional, three bills were amended in that fashion by a state Senate committee Thursday.
That leaves the public with less than 24 hours to respond to the bills, which are scheduled to be heard Friday in the Ways and Means Committee chaired by Sen. Donavan Dela Cruz聽.
The gut-and-replace tactic upsets Nancy Davlantes, president of the League of Women Voters of Honolulu, who is the plaintiff in the lawsuit.
鈥淚t is very concerning that the tactic continues apace in the current legislative session,鈥 Davlantes said Thursday. 鈥淭his ignores the constitution鈥檚 requirement that each bill receives three readings in each house on separate days.鈥
She added, 鈥淭hat we are only half-way through this session and are already seeing this does not bode well.鈥
Senate spokesman Richard Rapoza said Dela Cruz could not be reached for comment.
The bills were amended at the request of Dela Cruz during floor session Thursday. He was granted permission to suspend Senate rules so that the three bills could be sent to his committee the next day.
He鈥檚 replacing , which originally called for providing taxpayers who hire an elderly person a nonrefundable tax credit. A new draft of the bill would instead raise the vehicle surcharge tax from $3 to $5 per day.
Dela Cruz told his colleagues new language would address concerns the attorney general had over rental vehicles in the state.
was Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim’s $310 million request for disaster relief funds.
Dela Cruz will replace that with language, he said during the Senate session, to address 3,500 vacant positions in state government. The new bill will propose a recruitment modernization program to address competitive salaries, develop new recruitment methods and determine which state position classifications that are no longer needed.
Dela Cruz will also replace language in to instead repeal audit requirements over rail. He told the Senate that he is concerned with recent federal subpoenas of the rail project.
SB 656 initially called for amending the definition of “aircraft” to include helicopters.
Last-Minute Switch
All three measures were moving through the Legislature in advance of a Friday deadline to remain alive. The bills now essentially no longer exist, although the language of the measures could be resurrected in other legislation later in the session.
It is also possible that other bills may address the same issues.
, for instance, was approved by the House finance Committee on Feb. 21. It appropriates $60 million for disaster relief, recovery, mitigation and remediation for Hawaii County, a figure far less that what Kim requested.
It鈥檚 not clear how many more bills have been gutted and replaced this year. WAM will hear a fourth measure Friday, , which called for issuing general obligation bonds and funds for improvements to Hawaii Health Systems Corporation facilities.
鈥淚t is very concerning that the tactic continues apace in the current legislative session.” 鈥 Nancy Davlantes.
The new language mentions resolving the 鈥渃ompensation differential鈥 for some union members caused by the transfer to private control of Maui Memorial Memorial Center and two community hospitals in 2018.
Earlier this month, House Finance Committee Chair Sylvia Luke gutted and replaced to repeal the rail audit 鈥 a bill similar to the new version of Dela Cruz鈥檚 SB 656. It was Luke鈥檚 own bill, which in first draft required that the Senate president and House speaker be notified in writing when federal aid money comes to the state.
House and Senate leaders have strongly defended the gut-and-replace practice, arguing that it is a way to address legislative matters after deadlines for bills have passed. Judge Gary Chang ruled that the practice is constitutional because it follows the Legislature鈥檚 own written procedures.
But some senators and representatives have moved to end the practice.
鈥淕ut-and-replace may be useful at times, but basic democratic principles including public involvement and fair process are more important by far,鈥 Sen. Russell Ruderman told Civil Beat last month.
In the meantime, Davlantes and other members of good government groups say they won鈥檛 give up opposing gut and replace.
鈥淲e will continue to call attention to this practice, which deprives the public of any meaningful voice in the legislative process,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e just want legislators to know that we are watching.鈥
Common Cause and the League of Women Voters are appealing Chang鈥檚 ruling.
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About the Authors
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
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Blaze Lovell is a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blovell@civilbeat.org.