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Capitolized is a twice-weekly digest that keeps an eye on the representatives you voted for (or against) with expert reporting, analysis and insight from the editors and reporters of Montana Free Press. Want to see Capitolized in your inbox every Tuesday and Friday? Sign up here.
March 3, 2023
Today, March 3, the 45th legislative day of the 68th Montana Legislature, marks this session’s halfway point and the transmittal deadline for general bills. Any bill that isn’t a resolution, doesn’t pertain to the budget or propose a ballot issue — that is to say, most of them — had to receive an affirmative floor vote in its chamber of origin by this deadline. In other words, bills proposed in the Senate needed to pass out of the Senate and to the House, and vice versa. Those proposals that don’t pass or don’t meet the deadline are presumed dead.
Lawmakers were in a rush this week to pass their legislation before the deadline, leading to a bill bottleneck. Between Wednesday and Thursday, a total of 319 bills were debated on the House and Senate floors. The first half of the session concluded on Friday morning, marking the end of legislative business.
Today’s edition will showcase an extended bill report, acknowledging the significance of this significant legislative milestone. It will highlight important votes on major legislation from the past three days.
Lawmakers will be on hiatus until Thursday, March 9, while Capitolized is also set to go on a short vacation. Please note that there will be no Tuesday edition next week, but we will resume on Friday, March 10.
—Arren Kimbel-Sannit
Remapping the Public Service Commission
On Thursday evening, the Montana Senate approved a revised version of the state’s Public Service Commission districts. If put into effect, this new map would replace the one that was drawn last year as per court orders.
Senate Bill 109 would divide the commission’s five districts based on the reapportionment of Montana’s 100 state House seats that the state’s independent redistricting committee finalized earlier this year. Each PSC district would comprise 20 House districts and heavily favor Republican candidates for the commission, which regulates monopoly utilities in the state. Unlike legislative and U.S. House districts, which the Montana Districting and Apportionment Commission draws every 10 years, the shape and population of PSC districts are the purview of the Legislature.
However, the arrangement quickly became problematic as lawmakers failed to update the PSC map for 18 years, leading to significant population disparities between districts. The southwestern district had surpassed the Hi-Line district by over 50,000 people by the 2021 session due to Montana’s unevenly distributed population growth. Consequently, in late 2021, a group of Montana residents, including the former Republican Secretary of State Bob Brown, challenged the map on the grounds of the 14th Amendment, claiming that the population discrepancies violated the fundamental principle of one person, one vote.
A panel of federal judges eventually concurred, ordering the adoption of a new map that brought the maximum population deviance between counties to a presumptively constitutional 5.5%. The court acknowledged it did so reluctantly, and made clear that the Legislature had the authority to draw a new map the next time it met.
Kalispell Republican Sen. Keith Regier’s SB 109 began its life this session with two aims: endorsing the court-approved plan and adding language to statute mandating that the Legislature review and adjust PSC districts after each decennial census for compliance with the U.S. Constitution.
However, everything altered on the evening of Feb. 28, just a few days prior to the Legislature’s bill transmittal cutoff. The Senate Energy and Telecommunications Committee, despite facing resistance from committee Democrats, authorized an amendment presented by Regier that redesigned the five districts.
Instead of adhering to county boundaries, Regier’s amendment assigns 20 state House districts to each PSC district. This plan divides various cities in Montana, many of which lean towards the Democratic party, across different districts. Additionally, it extends the southwestern third district into central Montana, reaching as far as Winnett and beyond. To achieve equal populations, Regier’s plan includes unconventional appendages that protrude from several districts. The maximum population deviation in Regier’s proposal would be 1.5%.
On the court-approved map, western Montana’s district four and the southwestern district three would both lean Republican by a couple of points. All current commissioners are members of the GOP. Under the Regier plan, both districts would become significantly more Republican.
During the committee meeting, Regier mentioned that he was holding off on introducing the new PSC plan until Montana’s secretary of state approved the state House districts, a milestone that was accomplished in February. Furthermore, he emphasized that he did not consult any political data while creating the maps.
He stated that if the population were to become as balanced as the redistricting commission intended, the likelihood of districts being over or underpopulated in the next decade would be minimal.
However, Democrats expressed their dissatisfaction regarding the quantity of urban divisions.
“I know you know that there are a lot of ways these districts could have been grouped,” Sen. Janet Ellis, D-Helena, told Regier on the floor Thursday. “One of the concerns I have, as you know, is this splits 14 counties, and almost all major cities in the state. It seems like there were other goals besides population equity.”
Democrats argue that the Constitution requires legislative districts to be both compact and contiguous, while also having an equal population. Throughout the legislative redistricting process, Republicans consistently voiced their concerns about the final map, specifically regarding oddly-shaped districts and the division of communities with shared interests. However, it appears that these concerns have now vanished.
“Many in this body asked the Districting and Apportionment Commission … to avoid splitting cities and towns, and to create the most compact map possible,” Sen. Andrea Olsen, D-Missoula, said Thursday.
However, Regier argued that the constitutional provisions do not pertain to PSC districts. The only stipulation is that they are as evenly populated as possible. Despite previous complaints from Republicans about cities being divided among legislative districts, Regier asserted that it is advantageous for cities to be divided among PSC districts.
He explained that they were discussing PSC districts, which are considerably larger than small House districts. Having two commissioners accountable to a city is a beneficial advantage.
There is a possible complication: Don Kaltschmidt, the Chair of the Montana GOP, has issued a threat to take legal action against the new legislative districts. If this lawsuit proceeds and achieves success, Regier would have relied on legislative districts that could be deemed illegal, a position he had previously opposed.
On Thursday, Regier’s revised SB 109 was passed on the Senate floor by a vote of 30-20. However, it still requires the endorsement of both the state House and the governor.
—Arren Kimbel-Sannit
By the Numbers
![](https://usa-news-online.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/btn-capitolized-2023-03-03-1.png)
The number of bills that were deliberated by legislators on both the House and Senate floors during Wednesday and Thursday.
Bill Report
- Senate Bill 419, which passed the Montana Senate Thursday, would ban TikTok from operating its social media platform in the state. Supporters argued the Chinese-owned platform encourages dangerous stunt challenges and jeopardizes national security by letting the Chinese government collect data on Montanans. The bill passed with support from 28 Republicans and two Democrats and now advances to the Montana House.
- House Bill 288 passed a House floor vote and was referred to the House Appropriations Committee Wednesday. The bill would update the state’s American Indian tuition waiver requirements to allow descendants of tribal members in Montana to apply. Bill sponsor Rep. Jonathan Windy Boy, D-Box Elder, amended the bill after it was tabled early in February. In the original version, Windy Boy wanted to open the waiver to any Native student who could claim tribal descendancy from any of the 574 federally recognized tribes in the U.S.
- House Bill 649 passed second reading in the House by a broad margin, 65-35. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Mary Caferro, D-Helena, would fund Medicaid provider rates at the standards identified by a 2022 state-commissioned study conducted by the consulting firm Guidehouse and account for annual inflation. In her remarks on the House floor, Caferro framed the bill as an investment in the state’s largest industry, rural and urban communities, and an essential workforce caring for some of Montana’s most vulnerable citizens. Recent nursing home and behavioral health care closures loomed over the Thursday night floor debate. “We don’t have time to work on this. I guarantee you that there are nursing homes all over the state that are watching what we do here, literally, today,” said Rep. James Bergstrom, R-Buffalo. “And they’re going to make decisions on whether they’re going to get out of the business or stay based on what we do here.” The bill has been referred to the House Appropriations Committee.
- Senate Bill 337, sponsored by Sen. Theresa Manzella, R-Hamilton, was rejected by the Senate on its final vote Thursday. The bill proposed to add a specified list of nearly a dozen parental rights to Montana law, including guaranteed access to all of a child’s academic, medical and counseling records. SB 337 cleared its first vote in the Senate Thursday 28-22, but failed a second motion hours later when three Republicans — Sens. Chris Friedel of Billings, Bruce Gillespie of Ethridge and Jason Small of Busby — changed their votes to join the opposition, resulting in a 25-25 deadlock.
- A trio of bills crafted by the Legislature’s Joint Select Committee on Election Security all cleared the Senate Thursday with bipartisan support. Senate Bill 481, sponsored by select committee chair Sen. Carl Glimm, R-Kila, would require counties to collect and retain vote tabulating machine files called “cast vote records” that have been the subject of considerable scrutiny among election skeptics. Senate Bill 482, also carried by Glimm, would mandate that counties conduct tests designed to detect potential manipulation of voting machines before and after every election. The former passed with only one opposing vote, from Sen. Wendy McKamey, R-Great Falls, while the latter was approved by 33 Senate Republicans and five Democrats. The committee’s third bill — Senate Bill 498, sponsored by Sen. Shane Morigeau, D-Missoula — seeks to implement regular maintenance of county absentee voter lists through the use of mail notifications. It passed the Senate unanimously.
- Senate Bill 465, legislation sponsored by Sen. Jeremy Trebas, R-Great Falls, that would impose work requirements for some people on the state’s expanded Medicaid program, died in dramatic fashion on the Senate floor Thursday evening following a 24-26 vote. States were permitted to attach such conditions to their Medicaid programs under waivers approved during the Trump administration. But court decisions and a Democrat in the White House led to those waivers being rescinded. In other words, opponents warned, imposing work requirements could jeopardize Montana’s participation in Medicaid expansion, possibly leaving the state on the hook for the entire cost of the program. Along with all Democrats, 10 Republicans — including some, like Sen. Greg Hertz, R-Polson, who initially opposed Medicaid expansion in Montana — voted against the bill.
- The defeat of Great Falls GOP Rep. Scot Kerns’ House Bill 595 on the floor Thursday marks a significant blow to legislative Republicans’ judicial agenda this session. Lawmakers proposed a series of bills this session that either mandated or allowed candidates for the judiciary (and in some cases, other nonpartisan positions) to run with party labels, a response to the politics of the 2022 race for Montana Supreme Court. Each bill died, either in committee or on the floor. Kerns’ proposal was the last to go up for a vote, but some Republicans teamed up with Democrats to kill the bill 46-54. As the legislative saying goes, though, no idea is truly dead until sine die, and several other Republican judiciary bills did make it through the first half of the process.
- About 20 Republicans sided with most Democrats in voting down a trio of bills by Rep. Paul Fielder, R-Thompson Falls, that sought to give the Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission explicit guidance as to when and where wolf trapping and hunting black bears with hounds can happen. The representatives who opposed House Bill 627, House Bill 628 and House Bill 630 said they feared the measures would throw a wrench in Gov. Greg Gianforte’s efforts to return grizzly bears — which are currently federally protected — to state management.
Heard in the Halls
“Today, I am filled with pride as I declare my support for educational freedom and my commitment to advocating for parental rights. I firmly believe that financial literacy should be the responsibility of families.”
Rep. Derek Harvey, D-Butte, jokingly mimicking Republican arguments for parental rights in education during his opposition Thursday to House Bill 535, a proposal that would define in state law how public schools teach financial literacy. House lawmakers ultimately passed the measure largely along party lines despite bipartisan concern that educational content standards are typically defined through agency rulemaking, not through state law.
Transmittal Tactics
One of the most sweeping and lengthy bills to surface in the week before the transmittal deadline — perhaps in the history of the Legislature — was Senate Bill 458, a more than 60-page proposal that would affect a protracted list of state agencies, local and county governments, schools, prisons, political party committees, anti-discrimination laws, cemetery interments, marriage licenses, drivers licenses, vital records, and probably many more areas that Capitolized, unfortunately, doesn’t have space to list.
In a nutshell, SB 458, sponsored by Sen. Carl Glimm, R-Kila, and largely conceived by conservative policy architect and Montana Family Foundation President Jeff Laszloffy, would define “sex” in Montana state law based on a person’s reproductive characteristics.
During Laszloffy’s testimony to a Senate committee this week, it was stated that the clear intention behind the gamete-based definitions of male and female was to eliminate any ambiguity surrounding sex, gender, and the identification of males and females. However, considering the extensive discussions that followed, covering various topics such as avocado trees, endocrine systems, and chromosomes, it seems evident that the bill has not successfully resolved all the confusion.
One probable outcome of SB 458, if it becomes law, would be the erasure of accurate legal categorizations for intersex, transgender, nonbinary and two-spirit Montanans. And, after a packed and intense hearing Monday night, the proposal could have made for one of the most interesting policy debates on the Senate floor this week.
However, SB 458 did not appear on any of the Senate boards for Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Instead, it was redirected to the Senate Finance and Claims Committee. This move suggests that the bill may have significant financial implications, given the number of affected agencies. By placing SB 458 in a budget committee, it prolongs its existence, potentially benefiting either the supporters or opponents of the bill. It is possible that this tactic was employed by whichever group believed they lacked the necessary votes to either pass or defeat the bill on the Senate floor.
—Mara Silvers
Vote Viz
![](https://usa-news-online.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/vote-viz-2023-03-03-942x1024-2.png)
Democrats and a coalition of Republicans teamed up to kill Senate Bill 465, legislation that would impose work requirements for some people on Montana’s expanded Medicaid program despite the Biden administration withdrawing waivers that allowed for such restrictions. The legislation’s enactment could have resulted in the federal government pulling its share of the state’s Medicaid costs, opponents warned.
—Arren Kimbel-Sannit
On Background
Federal judges order new map for 2022 utility board election: For background on the legal challenges dogging PSC districts, check out this story from last year. (MTFP)
Bill creates strict definition for ‘sex,’ legally sidelining intersex and transgender people: To better understand the Legislature’s expansive sex definition bill, see this story about the proposal’s emotional hearing. (MTFP)
Legislature reaches its 2023 midpoint: Confused about what transmittal means? We explained the why, how, and how many in a story this morning. (MTFP)