HOUSE RECORD First Year of the 166th General Court

State of Calendar and Journal of the 2019 Session New Hampshire Web Site Address: www.gencourt.state.nh.us

Vol. 41 Concord, N.H. Thursday, June 13, 2019 No. 19X

HOUSE JOURNAL NO. 18 (Cont’d) Thursday, June 6, 2019 Rep. Ley moved that the House adjourn. Motion adopted. HOUSE JOURNAL NO. 19 Thursday, June 13, 2019 The House assembled at 10:00 a.m., the hour to which it stood adjourned, and was called to order by the Speaker. Prayer was offered by House Chaplain, Reverend Kate Atkinson, Rector of St. Paul’s Church in Concord. A Prayer for our Country based on the prayer of that name from the Book of Common Prayer of the Episcopal Church. Almighty God, who has given us this good land for our heritage: may we always prove ourselves to be mind- ful of Your favor and glad to do Your will. Bless our land with honorable industry, sound learning, and pure manners. Save us from violence, discord, and confusion; from pride and arrogance, and from every evil way. Defend our liberties, and bring into unity the multitudes, of many cultures and languages, gathered together in this good land. Endue with the spirit of wisdom those to whom we entrust the authority of government, that there may be justice and peace at home, and among the nations of the earth. In times of prosperity, fill our hearts with thankfulness, and in times of trouble, strengthen our trust in You, for You are our Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer, now and forever. Amen. Representative Amanda Bouldin, member from Manchester, led the Pledge of Allegiance. The National Anthem was sung by Sophia Biondolillo, daughter of Representatives Amanda and .

UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Hinch requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding the return of Rep. Baldasaro and addressed the House. Without objection, the Speaker ordered the remarks printed in the Permanent Journal.

REMARKS Rep. Hinch: Thank you, Mister Speaker. Mister Speaker I would like to acknowledge that we have the return of Representative . We are all so happy that he had a successful surgery and has recovered. We are hoping he doesn’t overdo it today and we welcome him back.

LEAVES OF ABSENCE Reps. Belanger, Cote, Crawford, Dolan, Gidge, Klose, Oxenham and Wall, the day, illness. Reps. Abbas, Buco, Cahill, Cohen, Elliott, Frost, Hall, Leishman, McKinney, Opderbecke, William Pearson, Read, Schamberg, Timothy Smith, Southworth, St. Clair, Sullivan, Tatro, Yvonne Thomas, Torosian and Vann, the day, important business. Reps. Katsakiores, L’Heureux, Marzullo, Petrigno and Rooney, the day, illness in the family.

INTRODUCTION OF GUESTS Kalah, Alisia and Mikaela Garcia, Annika Saarinen and Linda Bouldin, guests of Reps. Amanda and Andrew Bouldin. Matthew Oberstaedt, guest of Rep. Meuse. George, Jill, Evelyn and Alex Seaworth, father, mother, 2 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD daughter and son of Rep. Seaworth. Cheyenne Kearns, Gaby and Michael Engel, Tobias, Aylin and Simon Schroeder, guests of Rep. Pearl. Phyllis and Jim Burt, wife and brother of Rep. Burt. Pauline Angwin and Nancy Penney, guests of Rep. Freitas. Aprillin, Gabriella and Olivia Merlino, wife and daughters of Rep. Merlino. SENATE MESSAGES REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS HB 359, relative to warning labels on prescription drugs containing opiates. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Butler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 560-FN, relative to required reporting on waste reduction. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Gourgue moved that the House nonconcur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. SENATE MESSAGE NONCONCURS WITH AMENDMENTS REQUESTS COMMITTEE OF CONFERENCE SB 190-FN, relative to apportionment of sales under the business profits tax and the apportionment of divi- dends under the business enterprise tax. The President appointed Sens. D’Allesandro, Dietsch and Birdsell. Rep. Almy moved that the House accede. Motion adopted. The Speaker appointed Reps. Malloy, Griffith, Major and Abrami. SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 656, establishing a committee to study the impact of financial initiatives for commercially insured mem- bers by drug manufacturers on prescription drug prices and health insurance premiums. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Butler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 664-FN, relative to vehicle repair standards. (Amendment printed SJ 6/6/19) Rep. Butler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 109-FN, requiring background checks for commercial firearms sales. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Rep. Burt spoke against. Rep. Baldasaro requested a roll call; sufficiently seconded. CLERK’S NOTE Due to voting machine issues, the roll call vote on HB 109-FN is taken later in this Journal. SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 349, relative to a second opinion on health care matters for state and county prisoners. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 399-FN, relative to annulment of arrests or convictions for possession of a certain quantity of marijuana. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 605-FN, relative to criminal penalties for possession, transfer, or manufacture of animal fighting para- phernalia with the intent to be present at, aiding in, or contributing to such fighting. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 637-FN, relative to criminal history background checks by employers and public agencies. (Amendments printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 3

On a standing division vote, with 211 members having voted in the affirmative, and 131 in the negative, the motion was adopted. HB 175, relative to the requirements for school building aid grants. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Myler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 226, relative to the renomination of teachers. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Myler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 258, establishing a commission to study teacher preparation and education programs. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Myler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 435, relative to certain terminology in the rulemaking authority of the department of education. (Amend- ment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Myler moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 429, establishing a committee to study ways to improve civic engagement in New Hampshire. (Amend- ment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Moynihan moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 531, relative to the delivery of absentee ballots cast by elderly or disabled citizens. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Moynihan moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 593, relative to updating official voter checklists and expanding the voter information exemption under the right to know law. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Moynihan moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 651, allowing the use of campaign funds for child care expenses. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Moynihan moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 706-FN-A, establishing an independent redistricting commission. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Moynihan moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. On a standing division vote, with 208 members having voted in the affirmative, and 137 in the negative, the motion was adopted. HB 617, establishing a committee to study recycling streams and solid waste management in New Hampshire. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Gourgue moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 110-FN-A, relative to the cost of fiscal analysis of legislation relating to the retirement system and rela- tive to the reclassification of jobs in the retirement system. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Reps. Goley and Wallner moved that the House concur. Rep. Goley spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 112, relative to the mechanical licensing board. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 115, relative to the regulation of private investigators, security guards, and bail recovery agents. (Amend- ment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 224-FN, making emergency medical technicians and rescue squad members eligible for a death benefit if killed in the line of duty. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Reps. Goley and Wallner moved that the House concur. Rep. Goley spoke in favor. Motion adopted. 4 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

HB 271, relative to apprentice electricians and third party electrical inspections. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 468-FN-L, relative to the inclusion of attendance stipends and certain additional pay for instructional activities as earnable compensation in the retirement system. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 562, relative to the state building code. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 627, relative to exceptions from certain pharmacy requirements for veterinarians. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 710-FN, relative to adoption of state building code and fire code amendments. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Goley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. The House recessed at 11:10 a.m. RECESS The House reconvened at 11:20 a.m.

(Speaker Shurtleff in the Chair) SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 127, relative to the board of medicine and the medical review subcommittee and relative to health care workforce survey data. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. On a division vote, with 251 members having voted in the affirmative, and 94 in the negative, the motion was adopted.

SENATE MESSAGE REFUSES TO ACCEDE TO REQUEST FOR COMMITTEE OF CONFERENCE HB 277, relative to mental health parity under the insurance laws.

SENATE MESSAGE The Senate has voted to sustain the Governor’s veto on the following bill: SB 5-FN-A, making an appropriation to the department of health and human services for Medicaid provider rates for mental health and substance use disorder and emergency shelter and stabilization services.

CLERK’S NOTE With the voting machine repaired, the following action on HB 109-FN, requiring background checks for com- mercial firearms sales, continues and is also referenced earlier in this Journal.

SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 109-FN, requiring background checks for commercial firearms sales. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Rep. Burt spoke against. Motion adopted. Rep. Baldasaro requested a roll call; sufficiently seconded. YEAS 196 - NAYS 161 YEAS - 196 BELKNAP Huot, David 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 5

CARROLL Burroughs, Anita Butler, Edward DesMarais, Edith Kanzler, Harrison Knirk, Jerry Ticehurst, Susan Woodcock, Stephen

CHESHIRE Abbott, Michael Ames, Richard Berch, Paul Bordenet, John Eaton, Daniel Faulkner, Barry Fenton, Donovan Gomarlo, Jennie Harvey, Cathryn Ley, Douglas Mann, John Meader, , David Parkhurst, Henry Schapiro, Joe Swinburne, Sandy Thompson, Craig Von Plinsky, Sparky Weber, Lucy

COOS Hatch, William Laflamme, Larry Moynihan, Wayne Noel, Henry Tucker, Edith

GRAFTON Abel, Richard Almy, Susan Campion, Polly Diggs, Francesca Dontonville, Roger Egan, Timothy Fellows, Sallie Ford, Susan French, Elaine Josephson, Timothy Maes, Kevin Mulligan, Mary Jane Nordgren, Sharon Osborne, Richard Stavis, Laurel Smith, Suzanne Sykes, George Weston, Joyce

HILLSBOROUGH Bouldin, Amanda Bouldin, Andrew Backus, Robert Balch, Chris Beaulieu, Jane Bergeron, Paul Bernet, Jennifer Bordy, William Bosman, James Bouchard, Donald Cleaver, Skip Connors, Erika Cornell, Patricia Dargie, Paul Desjardin, Kathy DiSilvestro, Linda Dutzy, Sherry Espitia, Manny Davis, Fred Freitas, Mary Griffith, Willis Hamer, Heidi Harriott-Gathright, Linda Heath, Mary Herbert, Christopher Indruk, Greg Schmidt, Janice Jeudy, Jean Klee, Patricia Klein-Knight, Nicole Komi, Richard Langley, Diane Long, Patrick Murray, Megan Mangipudi, Latha Martin, Joelle McGhee, Kat Mombourquette, Donna Mullen, Sue Murphy, Nancy Nutter-Upham, Frances Nutting-Wong, Allison O’Brien, Michael Pedersen, Michael Pickering, Daniel Piedra, Israel Porter, Marjorie Query, Joshua Newman, Ray Radhakrishnan, Julie Riel, Cole Rung, Rosemarie Newman, Sue Snow, Kendall Sofikitis, Catherine St. John, Michelle Stack, Kathryn Stevens, Deb Telerski, Laura Toomey, Dan Vail, Suzanne Van Houten, Constance Thomas, Wendy Wilhelm, Matthew Williams, Kermit Woodbury, David

MERRIMACK Bartlett, Christy Buchanan, Ryan Carson, Clyde Doherty, David Ebel, Karen Ellison, Arthur Fox, Samantha Fulweiler, Joyce Karrick, David Lane, Connie Luneau, David MacKay, James McWilliams, Rebecca Moffett, Howard Myler, Mel Pimentel, Roderick Richards, , Beth Rogers, Katherine Saunderson, George Schuett, Dianne Schultz, Kristina Soucy, Timothy Wallner, Mary Jane Walz, Mary Beth Wazir, Safiya Wells, Kenneth Woods, Gary

ROCKINGHAM Altschiller, Debra Berrien, Skip Bunker, Lisa Bushway, Patricia Cali-Pitts, Jacqueline Coursin, David Cushing, Robert Renny DiLorenzo, Charlotte Edgar, Michael Eisner, Mary Gilman, Julie Grossman, Gaby Grote, Jaci Murray, Kate Le, Tamara Loughman, Tom Lovejoy, Patricia Maggiore, Jim Malloy, Dennis McBeath, Rebecca McConnell, Liz Meuse, David Pantelakos, Laura Somssich, Peter Ward, Gerald Warner, Anne STRAFFORD Bixby, Peter Cannon, Gerri Chase, Wendy Conley, Casey Ellis, Donna Fargo, Kristina Gourgue, Amanda Grassie, Chuck Higgins, Peg Horrigan, Timothy Keans, Sandra Kenney, Cam Levesque, Cassandra Smith, Marjorie Schmidt, Peter Rich, Cecilia Salloway, Jeffrey Sandler, Catt Spang, Judith Towne, Matthew Treleaven, Susan Vincent, Kenneth

SULLIVAN Cloutier, John Merchant, Gary O’Hearne, Andrew Tanner, Linda 6 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

NAYS - 161 BELKNAP Aldrich, Glen Bean, Harry Comtois, Barbara Feeney, George Fields, Dennis Howard, Raymond Jurius, Deanna Lang, Timothy Mackie, Jonathan Plumer, John Beaudoin, Richard Spanos, Peter Sylvia, Michael Tilton, Franklin Varney, Peter Viens, Harry CARROLL Avellani, Lino Comeau, Ed Cordelli, Glenn MacDonald, John Marsh, William Nelson, Bill CHESHIRE Hunt, John O’Day, John COOS Craig, Kevin Fothergill, John Furbush, Michael Merner, Troy GRAFTON Adjutant, Joshua Gordon, Edward Hennessey, Erin Ladd, Rick Massimilla, Linda Migliore, Vincent Paul Ruprecht, Dennis Stringham, Jerry HILLSBOROUGH Lekas, Alicia Alexander, Joe Griffin, Barbara Baroody, Benjamin Barry, Richard Boehm, Ralph Burns, Charles Burt, John Camarota, Linda Danielson, David Erf, Keith Fedolfi, Jim Flanagan, Jack Gagne, Larry Goley, Jeffrey Gould, Linda Graham, John Greene, Bob Gunski, Michael Hinch, Richard Hopper, Gary Jack, Martin King, Mark Ober, Lynne Lascelles, Richard McLean, Mark Merlino, Timothy Notter, Jeanine Nunez, Hershel Panasiti, Reed Plett, Fred Proulx, Mark Prout, Andrew Ober, Russell Renzullo, Andrew Rice, Kimberly Sanborn, Laurie Shaw, Barbara Somero, Paul Lekas, Tony Ulery, Jordan Warden, Mark Whittemore, James MERRIMACK Allard, James Hill, Gregory Horn, Werner Kotowski, Frank Marple, Richard McGuire, Carol Pearl, Howard Seaworth, Brian Testerman, Dave Turcotte, Alan Walsh, Thomas Wolf, Dan Yakubovich, Michael ROCKINGHAM Abrami, Patrick Abramson, Max Acton, Dennis Baldasaro, Al Barnes, Arthur Bershtein, Alan Chirichiello, Brian Costable, Michael Davis, Dan Thomas, Douglas DeClercq, Edward Desilets, Joel DeSimone, Debra Doucette, Fred Edwards, Jess Gay, Betty Green, Dennis Guthrie, Joseph Harb, Robert Hobson, Deborah Hoelzel, Kathleen Osborne, Jason Janigian, John Khan, Aboul Kolodziej, Walter Love, David Lundgren, David Griffin, Mary Pearson, Mark Major, Norman McBride, Everett McMahon, Charles Melvin, Charles Milz, David O’Connor, John Owens, Becky Packard, Sherman Piemonte, Tony Potucek, John Pratt, Kevin Prudhomme-O’Brien, Katherine Roy, Terry Pearson, Stephen Spillane, James Sytek, John True, Chris Vallone, Mark Verville, Kevin Wallace, Scott Webb, James Welch, David Weyler, Kenneth Yokela, Josh STRAFFORD Fontneau, Timothy Harrington, Michael Hayward, Peter Horgan, James Kittredge, Mac McNally, Jody Perreault, Mona Pitre, Joseph Beaudoin, Steven Wuelper, Kurt SULLIVAN Aron, Judy Laware, Thomas Lucas, Gates Rollins, Skip Stapleton, Walter Smith, Steven and the motion was adopted. HB 514-FN, imposing a waiting period between the purchase and delivery of a firearm. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Cushing moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Rep. Notter requested a roll call; sufficiently seconded. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 7

YEAS 197 - NAYS 160 YEAS - 197 BELKNAP Huot, David CARROLL Burroughs, Anita Butler, Edward DesMarais, Edith Kanzler, Harrison Knirk, Jerry Ticehurst, Susan Woodcock, Stephen CHESHIRE Abbott, Michael Ames, Richard Berch, Paul Bordenet, John Eaton, Daniel Faulkner, Barry Fenton, Donovan Gomarlo, Jennie Harvey, Cathryn Ley, Douglas Mann, John Meader, David Morrill, David Parkhurst, Henry Schapiro, Joe Swinburne, Sandy Thompson, Craig Von Plinsky, Sparky Weber, Lucy COOS Hatch, William Laflamme, Larry Moynihan, Wayne Noel, Henry GRAFTON Abel, Richard Almy, Susan Campion, Polly Diggs, Francesca Dontonville, Roger Egan, Timothy Fellows, Sallie Ford, Susan French, Elaine Josephson, Timothy Maes, Kevin Massimilla, Linda Mulligan, Mary Jane Nordgren, Sharon Osborne, Richard Stavis, Laurel Stringham, Jerry Smith, Suzanne Sykes, George Weston, Joyce HILLSBOROUGH Bouldin, Amanda Bouldin, Andrew Backus, Robert Baroody, Benjamin Beaulieu, Jane Bergeron, Paul Bernet, Jennifer Bordy, William Bosman, James Bouchard, Donald Cleaver, Skip Connors, Erika Cornell, Patricia Dargie, Paul Desjardin, Kathy DiSilvestro, Linda Dutzy, Sherry Espitia, Manny Davis, Fred Freitas, Mary Griffith, Willis Hamer, Heidi Harriott-Gathright, Linda Heath, Mary Herbert, Christopher Indruk, Greg Schmidt, Janice Jeudy, Jean Klee, Patricia Klein-Knight, Nicole Komi, Richard Langley, Diane Long, Patrick Murray, Megan Mangipudi, Latha Martin, Joelle McGhee, Kat Mombourquette, Donna Mullen, Sue Murphy, Nancy Nutter-Upham, Frances Nutting-Wong, Allison O’Brien, Michael Pedersen, Michael Pickering, Daniel Piedra, Israel Porter, Marjorie Query, Joshua Newman, Ray Radhakrishnan, Julie Riel, Cole Rung, Rosemarie Newman, Sue Snow, Kendall Sofikitis, Catherine St. John, Michelle Stack, Kathryn Stevens, Deb Telerski, Laura Vail, Suzanne Van Houten, Constance Thomas, Wendy Wilhelm, Matthew Williams, Kermit Woodbury, David MERRIMACK Bartlett, Christy Buchanan, Ryan Carson, Clyde Doherty, David Ebel, Karen Ellison, Arthur Fox, Samantha Fulweiler, Joyce Karrick, David Lane, Connie Luneau, David MacKay, James McWilliams, Rebecca Moffett, Howard Myler, Mel Pimentel, Roderick Richards, Beth Rodd, Beth Rogers, Katherine Saunderson, George Schuett, Dianne Schultz, Kristina Soucy, Timothy Wallner, Mary Jane Walz, Mary Beth Wazir, Safiya Wells, Kenneth Woods, Gary ROCKINGHAM Altschiller, Debra Berrien, Skip Bunker, Lisa Bushway, Patricia Cali-Pitts, Jacqueline Coursin, David Cushing, Robert Renny DiLorenzo, Charlotte Edgar, Michael Eisner, Mary Gilman, Julie Grossman, Gaby Grote, Jaci Murray, Kate Le, Tamara Loughman, Tom Lovejoy, Patricia Maggiore, Jim Malloy, Dennis McBeath, Rebecca McConnell, Liz Meuse, David Pantelakos, Laura Somssich, Peter Ward, Gerald Warner, Anne STRAFFORD Bixby, Peter Cannon, Gerri Chase, Wendy Conley, Casey Ellis, Donna Fargo, Kristina Fontneau, Timothy Gourgue, Amanda Grassie, Chuck Higgins, Peg Horrigan, Timothy Keans, Sandra Kenney, Cam Levesque, Cassandra Smith, Marjorie Schmidt, Peter Rich, Cecilia Salloway, Jeffrey Sandler, Catt Spang, Judith Towne, Matthew Treleaven, Susan Vincent, Kenneth 8 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

SULLIVAN Cloutier, John Merchant, Gary O’Hearne, Andrew Tanner, Linda NAYS - 160 BELKNAP Aldrich, Glen Bean, Harry Comtois, Barbara Feeney, George Fields, Dennis Howard, Raymond Jurius, Deanna Lang, Timothy Mackie, Jonathan Plumer, John Beaudoin, Richard Spanos, Peter Sylvia, Michael Tilton, Franklin Varney, Peter Viens, Harry CARROLL Avellani, Lino Comeau, Ed Cordelli, Glenn MacDonald, John Marsh, William Nelson, Bill CHESHIRE Hunt, John O’Day, John COOS Craig, Kevin Fothergill, John Furbush, Michael Merner, Troy Tucker, Edith GRAFTON Adjutant, Joshua Gordon, Edward Hennessey, Erin Ladd, Rick Migliore, Vincent Paul Ruprecht, Dennis HILLSBOROUGH Lekas, Alicia Alexander, Joe Griffin, Barbara Balch, Chris Barry, Richard Boehm, Ralph Burns, Charles Burt, John Camarota, Linda Danielson, David Erf, Keith Fedolfi, Jim Flanagan, Jack Gagne, Larry Goley, Jeffrey Gould, Linda Graham, John Greene, Bob Gunski, Michael Hinch, Richard Hopper, Gary Jack, Martin King, Mark Ober, Lynne Lascelles, Richard McLean, Mark Merlino, Timothy Notter, Jeanine Nunez, Hershel Panasiti, Reed Plett, Fred Proulx, Mark Prout, Andrew Ober, Russell Renzullo, Andrew Rice, Kimberly Sanborn, Laurie Shaw, Barbara Somero, Paul Lekas, Tony Toomey, Dan Ulery, Jordan Warden, Mark Whittemore, James MERRIMACK Allard, James Hill, Gregory Horn, Werner Kotowski, Frank Marple, Richard McGuire, Carol Pearl, Howard Seaworth, Brian Testerman, Dave Turcotte, Alan Walsh, Thomas Wolf, Dan Yakubovich, Michael ROCKINGHAM Abrami, Patrick Abramson, Max Acton, Dennis Baldasaro, Al Barnes, Arthur Bershtein, Alan Chirichiello, Brian Costable, Michael Davis, Dan Thomas, Douglas DeClercq, Edward Desilets, Joel DeSimone, Debra Doucette, Fred Edwards, Jess Gay, Betty Green, Dennis Guthrie, Joseph Harb, Robert Hobson, Deborah Hoelzel, Kathleen Osborne, Jason Janigian, John Khan, Aboul Kolodziej, Walter Love, David Lundgren, David Griffin, Mary Pearson, Mark Major, Norman McBride, Everett McMahon, Charles Melvin, Charles Milz, David O’Connor, John Owens, Becky Packard, Sherman Piemonte, Tony Potucek, John Pratt, Kevin Prudhomme-O’Brien, Katherine Roy, Terry Pearson, Stephen Spillane, James Sytek, John True, Chris Vallone, Mark Verville, Kevin Wallace, Scott Webb, James Welch, David Weyler, Kenneth Yokela, Josh STRAFFORD Harrington, Michael Hayward, Peter Horgan, James Kittredge, Mac McNally, Jody Perreault, Mona Pitre, Joseph Beaudoin, Steven Wuelper, Kurt SULLIVAN Aron, Judy Laware, Thomas Lucas, Gates Rollins, Skip Stapleton, Walter Smith, Steven and the motion was adopted. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 9

HB 239, relative to requirements for supervision for licensure of certain mental health and drug counselors. (Amendments printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 364, permitting qualifying patients and designated caregivers to cultivate cannabis for therapeutic use and permitting qualifying patients and designated caregivers to donate excess cannabis to other qualifying patients. (Amendments printed SJ 5/2/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 446, relative to initiating amendments and corrections to birth records. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 587, relative to organ donation on a driver’s license. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 631, establishing a deaf child’s bill of rights and an advisory council on the education of deaf children. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 692-FN, relative to dental care for Medicaid recipients. (Amendment printed SJ 5/2/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 736, reestablishing the commission to study environmentally-triggered chronic illness. (Amendment printed SJ 4/18/19) Rep. Weber moved that the House nonconcur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 291, establishing a committee to study certain findings regarding hospice and palliative care. (Amend- ments printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. moved that the House nonconcur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 410, allowing all state agencies and political subdivisions to have access to enhanced 911 information. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Marjorie Smith moved that the House nonconcur and spoke in favor. Rep. Mark Pearson spoke against. Motion adopted. SENATE MESSAGE NONCONCURS WITH AMENDMENTS REQUESTS COMMITTEE OF CONFERENCE SB 246-FN, relative to licensing of child daycare, residential care, and child-placing agencies. The President appointed Sens. Carson, Rosenwald and Chandley. Rep. Long moved that the House accede. Motion adopted. The Speaker appointed Reps. Long, Berrien, Rice and French. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Camarota requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding an apology and addressed the House. The House recessed at 12:00 p.m. RECESS The House reconvened at 1:30 p.m. (Rep. Ebel in the Chair) SENATE MESSAGE NONCONCURS WITH AMENDMENTS REQUESTS COMMITTEE OF CONFERENCE SB 31, adding a member to the New Hampshire community development advisory committee and exempting the community development finance authority from the administrative procedure act. 10 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

The President appointed Sens. Carson, Cavanaugh and Chandley. Rep. Carson moved that the House accede. Motion adopted. The Speaker appointed Reps. Josephson, Mombourquette, Maggiore and MacDonald. SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 552-FN, relative to transparency and standards for acquisition transactions in health care. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Marjorie Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. Rep. Marsh declared a conflict of interest and did not participate. MOTION TO PRINT DEBATE Rep. Luneau moved that the debate on the motion to concur with a senate amendment on HB 552-FN, relative to transparency and standards for acquisition transactions in health care, be printed in the Permanent Journal. Motion adopted. DEBATE ON HB 552-FN Rep. Marjorie Smith: It is of no surprise to anyone that across the country there are dramatic changes in how health care is delivered. New Hampshire has had a long and distinguished history of community-based care. Many of our outstanding hospitals were started with the vision and financial and volunteer support from our communities. We have watched many of those hospitals grow as the communities grew and the services grew more complex. The legislature, in its wisdom, created in the Department of Justice the Office of Charitable Trusts that, among myriad responsibilities, must guarantee that hospital mergers and acquisitions must be in the best interest of the charitable trust and the community that it serves. That language was written in a somewhat simpler time. The enormity of some of these mergers exceeds the biennial budget of the state. People of good faith have understood that implicit in existing law is that communities’ access to quality and affordable health care must be protected and health care today includes both physical and mental health care services. The House, in amending HB 552 acknowledged the size of some of these mergers, and specified that the state review should focus not only on the community where the hospitals are based, but also on the state. The senate chose to change that language and talk about community and communities, plural. The Judiciary Committee agrees with the senate change. The senate also extended the effective date, understanding that some mergers, including one enormous merger affecting my home community, are already underway. Those of you who were privileged to observe the supreme court argument held in the House Chamber this last week have heightened awareness that words matter. Therefore, rather than rely on implicit understanding, HB 522 makes explicit that when evaluating proposed changes in governance of the hospitals, the state must look at how the new entities would meet the physical and mental health of the communities that would be affected and that the Office of Charitable Trusts has the authority to work with the Departments of Health and Human Services and the Insurance in protecting the needs of today’s citizens and honoring the intentions of those who donated their time and their money to create the best possible health delivery systems. The Judiciary Committee asks you to support the motion of concurrence. Thank you, Madam Speaker. SENATE MESSAGE REQUESTS CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS CONT’D HB 608, expanding the law against discrimination based on gender identity to other areas of the law prohib- iting discrimination. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Marjorie Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 122, allowing for gifts, grants, and donations to legislative employees or officers for expenses associated with state and national legislative association events. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Ley moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 443, relative to municipal watering restrictions. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Carson moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 539-FN, establishing a committee to study the implementation of Accessible Ballots. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Carson moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 11

HB 618-L, relative to the definition of contracts relative to official ballot default budgets. (Amendment printed SJ 6/6/19) Rep. Carson moved that the House nonconcur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 25-A, making appropriations for capital improvements. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cloutier moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 243, relative to membership of the Pease development authority board of directors. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Cloutier moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 261, requiring the commissioner of the department of environmental services to revise rules relative to arsenic contamination in drinking water. (Amendments printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Suzanne Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 495, establishing a commission on drinking water. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Suzanne Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 591, amending the laws governing OHRVs and snowmobiles. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Suzanne Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 660-FN, relative to studying the economic and other impacts of OHRV use in New Hampshire. (Amend- ment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Suzanne Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 737, establishing a commission to investigate and analyze the environmental and public health impacts relating to releases of perfluorinated chemicals in the air, soil, and groundwater in Merrimack, Bedford and Litchfield. (Amendment printed SJ 6/6/19) Rep. Suzanne Smith moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 183, establishing a committee to study the applications of microgrids in New Hampshire and changes in law necessary to allow for microgrids in electrical supply, and relative to baseload renewable generation credits for biomass energy facilities. (Amendment printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Backus moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Rep. Harrington spoke against. Rep. Notter requested a roll call; sufficiently seconded. YEAS 222 - NAYS 123 YEAS - 222 BELKNAP Fields, Dennis Huot, David Viens, Harry CARROLL Burroughs, Anita Butler, Edward DesMarais, Edith Kanzler, Harrison Knirk, Jerry MacDonald, John Nelson, Bill Ticehurst, Susan Woodcock, Stephen CHESHIRE Abbott, Michael Ames, Richard Berch, Paul Bordenet, John Eaton, Daniel Faulkner, Barry Fenton, Donovan Gomarlo, Jennie Harvey, Cathryn Hunt, John Ley, Douglas Mann, John Meader, David Morrill, David Parkhurst, Henry Schapiro, Joe Swinburne, Sandy Thompson, Craig Weber, Lucy COOS Fothergill, John Hatch, William Laflamme, Larry Merner, Troy Noel, Henry Tucker, Edith GRAFTON Abel, Richard Adjutant, Joshua Almy, Susan Campion, Polly Diggs, Francesca Dontonville, Roger Egan, Timothy Fellows, Sallie 12 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

Ford, Susan French, Elaine Gordon, Edward Hennessey, Erin Josephson, Timothy Ladd, Rick Maes, Kevin Massimilla, Linda Migliore, Vincent Paul Mulligan, Mary Jane Nordgren, Sharon Osborne, Richard Ruprecht, Dennis Stavis, Laurel Stringham, Jerry Smith, Suzanne Sykes, George Weston, Joyce HILLSBOROUGH Bouldin, Amanda Bouldin, Andrew Backus, Robert Balch, Chris Baroody, Benjamin Beaulieu, Jane Bergeron, Paul Bernet, Jennifer Bordy, William Bosman, James Bouchard, Donald Burns, Charles Cleaver, Skip Connors, Erika Cornell, Patricia Dargie, Paul Desjardin, Kathy Dutzy, Sherry Espitia, Manny Davis, Fred Freitas, Mary Goley, Jeffrey Griffith, Willis Hamer, Heidi Harriott-Gathright, Linda Heath, Mary Herbert, Christopher Indruk, Greg Schmidt, Janice Jack, Martin Jeudy, Jean King, Mark Klee, Patricia Komi, Richard Langley, Diane Long, Patrick Murray, Megan Mangipudi, Latha Martin, Joelle McGhee, Kat Mombourquette, Donna Mullen, Sue Murphy, Nancy Nutting-Wong, Allison O’Brien, Michael Pedersen, Michael Pickering, Daniel Piedra, Israel Porter, Marjorie Query, Joshua Newman, Ray Radhakrishnan, Julie Riel, Cole Rung, Rosemarie Newman, Sue Shaw, Barbara Snow, Kendall Sofikitis, Catherine St. John, Michelle Stack, Kathryn Stevens, Deb Telerski, Laura Toomey, Dan Vail, Suzanne Van Houten, Constance Thomas, Wendy Wilhelm, Matthew Williams, Kermit Woodbury, David MERRIMACK Bartlett, Christy Buchanan, Ryan Carson, Clyde Doherty, David Ellison, Arthur Fox, Samantha Fulweiler, Joyce Horn, Werner Karrick, David Lane, Connie Luneau, David MacKay, James McWilliams, Rebecca Moffett, Howard Myler, Mel Pearl, Howard Pimentel, Roderick Rodd, Beth Rogers, Katherine Saunderson, George Schuett, Dianne Schultz, Kristina Shurtleff, Steve Soucy, Timothy Turcotte, Alan Wallner, Mary Jane Walz, Mary Beth Wazir, Safiya Wells, Kenneth Wolf, Dan Woods, Gary ROCKINGHAM Acton, Dennis Altschiller, Debra Berrien, Skip Bunker, Lisa Bushway, Patricia Cali-Pitts, Jacqueline Coursin, David Cushing, Robert Renny DiLorenzo, Charlotte Edgar, Michael Eisner, Mary Gilman, Julie Grossman, Gaby Grote, Jaci Murray, Kate Le, Tamara Loughman, Tom Lovejoy, Patricia Maggiore, Jim Malloy, Dennis McBeath, Rebecca McConnell, Liz Meuse, David Milz, David O’Connor, John Pantelakos, Laura Somssich, Peter Ward, Gerald Warner, Anne STRAFFORD Bixby, Peter Cannon, Gerri Conley, Casey Ellis, Donna Fargo, Kristina Fontneau, Timothy Gourgue, Amanda Grassie, Chuck Higgins, Peg Horrigan, Timothy Keans, Sandra Kenney, Cam Levesque, Cassandra Smith, Marjorie Schmidt, Peter Rich, Cecilia Salloway, Jeffrey Sandler, Catt Spang, Judith Towne, Matthew Treleaven, Susan Vincent, Kenneth Wall, Janet SULLIVAN Cloutier, John Merchant, Gary O’Hearne, Andrew Rollins, Skip Stapleton, Walter Smith, Steven Tanner, Linda NAYS - 123 BELKNAP Aldrich, Glen Bean, Harry Comtois, Barbara Feeney, George Howard, Raymond Jurius, Deanna Lang, Timothy Mackie, Jonathan Plumer, John Beaudoin, Richard Spanos, Peter Sylvia, Michael Tilton, Franklin Varney, Peter CARROLL Avellani, Lino Comeau, Ed Cordelli, Glenn Marsh, William CHESHIRE O’Day, John 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 13

COOS Craig, Kevin Furbush, Michael HILLSBOROUGH Lekas, Alicia Alexander, Joe Barry, Richard Boehm, Ralph Burt, John Camarota, Linda Danielson, David Erf, Keith Fedolfi, Jim Flanagan, Jack Gagne, Larry Gould, Linda Graham, John Greene, Bob Gunski, Michael Hinch, Richard Hopper, Gary Lascelles, Richard McLean, Mark Merlino, Timothy Notter, Jeanine Nunez, Hershel Nutter-Upham, Frances Panasiti, Reed Plett, Fred Proulx, Mark Prout, , Andrew Rice, Kimberly Somero, Paul Lekas, Tony Ulery, Jordan Warden, Mark Whittemore, James MERRIMACK Allard, James Hill, Gregory Kotowski, Frank Marple, Richard McGuire, Carol Seaworth, Brian Testerman, Dave Walsh, Thomas Yakubovich, Michael ROCKINGHAM Abbas, Daryl Abrami, Patrick Abramson, Max Baldasaro, Al Barnes, Arthur Bershtein, Alan Chirichiello, Brian Costable, Michael Davis, Dan Thomas, Douglas DeClercq, Edward Desilets, Joel DeSimone, Debra Doucette, Fred Edwards, Jess Gay, Betty Green, Dennis Guthrie, Joseph Harb, Robert Hobson, Deborah Hoelzel, Kathleen Osborne, Jason Janigian, John Kolodziej, Walter Love, David Lundgren, David Griffin, Mary Pearson, Mark Major, Norman McBride, Everett McMahon, Charles Melvin, Charles Packard, Sherman Piemonte, Tony Potucek, John Pratt, Kevin Prudhomme-O’Brien, Katherine Roy, Terry Pearson, Stephen Sytek, John True, Chris Verville, Kevin Wallace, Scott Webb, James Welch, David Weyler, Kenneth Yokela, Josh STRAFFORD Harrington, Michael Hayward, Peter Horgan, James Kittredge, Mac McNally, Jody Perreault, Mona Pitre, Joseph Beaudoin, Steven Wuelper, Kurt SULLIVAN Aron, Judy Laware, Thomas Lucas, Gates and the motion was adopted. HB 614-FN, increasing penalties and fines for air pollution and water pollution. (Amendment printed SJ 5/15/19) Rep. Backus moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 198-FN, clarifying the prohibition against the use of mobile electronic devices while driving. (Amendment printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Sykes moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 368-FN, relative to medically recognized disorders identified on drivers’ licenses. (Amendments printed SJ 5/23/19) Rep. Sykes moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. HB 480-FN, relative to sports betting. (Amendments printed SJ 5/30/19) Rep. Almy moved that the House concur and spoke in favor. Motion adopted. ADJOURN FROM THE EARLY SESSION Rep. Ley offered the following: RESOLVED, that the House now adjourn from the early session, that the business of the late session be in order at the present time and when the House adjourns today it be to meet Thursday, June 27, 2019. Motion adopted. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Packard requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding a motorcycle memorial ride and ad- dressed the House. 14 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

MOTION TO PRINT REMARKS Reps. Shurtleff and Hinch moved that the remarks made by Rep. Packard during Unanimous Consent be printed in the Permanent Journal. Without objection, the Speaker ordered. REMARKS Rep. Packard: Thank you, Madam Speaker. I came before you about three weeks ago and I told you about a memorial ride, a run that I was having for my wife and many of you thought it was an actual run, but this is a motorcycle ride. Currently, it is going to be on the 22nd, rain or shine, and I hope all of you will pray for a nice, sunny, beautiful day. Currently, we have raised over $7,000. I still have some checks to pick up so hopefully we will be approaching $8,000 when we are done. I just want to take a minute if you will give me a minute to tell you where the money is going to go. It’s going to the Sunshine Soup Kitchen in Derry and that feeds people from Derry and the surrounding communities five days a week. She served on the board for over 10 years. It’s going to the Salvation Army for the Toys for Tots campaign that they distribute toys at Christmas time to needy families. It’s going to the Liberty House on the suggestion from my friend Al to veterans. The reason is, even though I am not a veteran, her father was a World War II veteran that served in the Pacific for 4 years and his younger brother who was at D-Day. It’s going to the Londonderry Lions, where we provide $6,000 a year in scholarships and also do a lot of local eye care. It’s also going to an organization her and I started back in 1975, the New Hampshire Motorcyclists Rights Organization that for 37 years has had a toy run collecting toys for the Salvation Army and we collect about a quarter of the toys each year that they put in their toy room for needy people. And, also, we just formed a relationship with the Department of Safety and the New Hampshire Automobile Dealers Association to put together a ride smart program that we are all working on together to try to make motorcycling as safe as possible. Thank you all for those who have donated. From the bottom of my heart I thank you for what you have done. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Somssich requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding the human cost of war and addressed the House. MOMENT OF SILENCE A moment of silence was observed in honor and in memory of those that have lost their lives from War. MOTION TO PRINT REMARKS Rep. Treleaven moved that the remarks made by Rep. Somssich during Unanimous Consent be printed in the Permanent Journal. Without objection, the Speaker ordered. REMARKS Rep. Somssich: Thank you, Madam Speaker. Honorable Members of the House, I thank you for this oppor- tunity to make a few comments about the human price of war. First, I am not a friend of the current or the previous Russian governments. However, people, regardless of their country of origin, are much the same everywhere. My family came to this country as refugees from Hungary in 1956 escaping a brutal communist government controlled by the Soviet Union at that time. Since I was born in Budapest and have spent 23 years of my life in Europe, I am well aware of the horrendous toll that wars have taken on the lives of the inhabitants of Europe in the 20th century. My relationships with my friends and numerous families, includ- ing my own, gave me a deep sense of sympathy for the grave abuses and losses that such families personally suffered in addition to the rubble that was left behind from wars inflicted on their countries. We Americans have not suffered such serious loss of life and destruction on American soil since the Civil War. That is why we focus on the casualties of our military men and women, while tending to ignore the consequences on a civilian population and the destruction of someone’s homeland. Recently, in this chamber we appropriately remembered the sacrifices and loss of lives that our American military personnel suffered on the beaches of Normandy. We also tangentially acknowledged the serious sacrifices suffered by some of our allies, but what did those nations, both allies and enemies, suffer as the result of World War II? Here are some sober- ing statistics. Deaths, both military and civilian for the allies: United States 417,000 military deaths ,and 1,700 civilian deaths; United Kingdom 384,000 military deaths and 70,000 civilians; France 218,000 military deaths and 320,000 civilian deaths; Soviet Union 8-10 million military deaths and 14 million civilian deaths. On the enemy side: Germany 5 million military deaths and 3 million civilian deaths and that’s not including the victims of the Holocaust; Japan 2.1 million military deaths and 1 million civilian deaths; Italy 300,000 military deaths and 160,000 civilian deaths. In total, historians report that 60 million people lost their lives as the result of WW II, which was at the time to 2.5% of the world population. These huge losses of human life should be a reminder to all of us that we are not the only country that suffered as the result of World War II. It should also remind us of the great value of both our NATO alliance and the European Union, which 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 15 have significantly contributed to keeping the peace in Europe for the last 70 years. By contrast, the two World Wars in addition to the third potential world war in 1905, all occurred within the first 50 years of the 20th century. Madam Speaker, in recognition of this worldwide toll in our 20th century as far as war casualties and civilians, I would like to request a moment of silence. Thank You. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Reps. Butler and Cannon requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding the Stonewall riots and Pride Month and addressed the House. MOTION TO PRINT REMARKS Rep. Alexander moved that the remarks made by Reps. Butler and Cannon during Unanimous Consent be printed in the Permanent Journal. Without objection, the Speaker ordered. REMARKS Rep. Butler: Thank you, Madam Speaker. Would the members of the caucus want to join us down front? Colleagues, June is LGBTQ Pride Month and this year we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, those clashes with the forces that had been harassing gay community members for just being who we were, different from the majority of heterosexual citizens but no longer willing to be told that we were not equal to that majority. As a gay man and a proud member of the New Hampshire House LGBTQ Caucus, I am proud to tell you today why Pride Month is important and to acknowledge some of the heroes, heroines and non-binary greats that have made this day possible. We can stand here today, proud and comfortable in our identity, because of the work, confrontations, demonstrations, challenges to authority and pride in identity of many before us. There were those wonderful drag queens and trans-people, gay men and lesbians who, in June of 1969 said ‘No More’ in the Stonewall Riots. But there have been many courageous men, women and gender-fluid people who before and after them worked to change the perception of who we are and who brought us out into the mainstream of everyday life. I’d like to mention just a few: James Baldwin, one of the great American writers. Baldwin who illuminated the experience of being both gay and black in America through books like Giovanni’s Room. Harry Hay, founded the Mattachine Society in 1950, one of the modern world’s first organizations for gay men. Later he established the LA chapter of the Gay Liberation Front and a group called the Radical Faeries! Harvey Milk, the gay San Francisco City Councilor who, in 1978, was assassinated by one of the other city councilors. Milk is famous for making it clear that the best way for the GLBT community to be integrated into our communities was for all of us to come out to our families, our friends and our neighbors. Barbara Gittings, a strong, proud advocate for women’s and lesbian rights, Gittings established the New York chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis, one of the earliest lesbian social and political organizations. Christine Jorgensen, do you remember her? I do! One of the first transgender women who be- came a public figure. She brought a likable, relatable, kind face and voice, not to mention elegance and style, to the previously hidden reality that gender is anything but a binary issue. Leonard Matlovich, Matlovich wasn’t one of the first gay men to serve in the military, but he may have been the first, in 1975, to come out on such a public platform. His gravestone says, “When I was in the military they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one.” Jennifer Finney Boylan, read her book She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders. This smart, wonderful transwoman, English professor at Colby College has helped thousands of us understand the transgender experience through her memoirs and public persona. Barney Frank, there have been several powerful gay and lesbian politicians on the national stage, none more colorful, opinionated and recognizable than our next-door neighbor, Congressman Frank. Edie Windsor, married in Canada in 2007, her marriage wasn’t recognized at home in the USA. Her partner died and she was saddled with estate taxes that wouldn’t have been as onerous had their marriage been recognized here in the US. She sued and, in 2013, the Supreme Court gave us marriage equality across the nation! What a hodgepodge of important people who have brought the LGBTQ community closer to our goal, to be just one of the many kinds of expressions of identity in this multi-faceted world. These people, and so many more, have lived out and proud and fought to make Pride Month possible. And, of course, we have our own heroes and heroines in the struggles to achieve equality here in NH! I’m sure I don’t know and won’t remember everyone but to name a few: Jim Splaine, Mo Baxley, Ray Buckley, Dana Hilliard, Ruth Smith and Beth McGuinn, Brian Rater and Brendan Denehy, Steve Vaillancourt, Jim MacKay, David Pierce, Tara Mahady, , and my other colleagues here and so many allies who worked hard to help us fight back bigotry and secure equality. But we still have a ways to go. It’s okay to not understand what makes us who we are. I’m sure not all of us understand how it is possible to be a Democrat or a Republican! But you must respect us for who we are, just another face of a wonderful, complex and colorful world. Happy LGBTQ Pride Month. Thank you for your support. Rep. Cannon: So, we have heard a bit of history about Pride, so why do we celebrate Pride? As I look out at all of you, I have to believe that you are proud of the work that you do here for our state and for our resi- dents. We felt the pride of drafting and sponsoring bills and moving them through committees and having 16 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD people tell you how proud they are of you for doing a great job. Yes, you are doing a great job, but even more important is the pride we have in our families. The birth of our children. Watching them grow and learn who they are. Watching them graduate from high school and college. Celebrating with them when they find their dream job or when they find the love of their life. However, pride for many people is hard to find, especially for the LGBTQ community. Our social upbringing tells us that we shouldn’t be the way we are, yet we are who we are. Getting to the point where we can admit this to ourselves, is a life and death effort. Perhaps this is why the LGBTQ community experiences one of the highest rates of suicide for adults and children than the general public. I know this to be true. I’ve helped other transgendered individuals overcome their depression and suicidal thoughts. I have also been there and sought help so I am glad that I am here speak- ing with you. Pride for me was to be proud of who I am. I am a proud politician. I meant a transgendered woman. I’m a proud politician too, you guys are great. Pride events are events where LGBTQ people, their families and allies are able to express their pride in themselves and others. It’s a celebration of our lives and a way for people who are hidden from the public to be out with others like themselves. Over the years, there have been many small pride events throughout the State of New Hampshire. Four years ago, a large event was organized in Portsmouth by Seacoast Outright, a support group for LGBTQ youth. This year seven pride events will be held in our state. Concord Pride was held in front of the State House on June 1st. Pride events are planned for Manchester and Claremont this coming Saturday. Portsmouth Pride will be held on the 22nd. Nashua and North Conway Pride events are planned for the 29th. Rochester will hold their Pride event on August 24th. Rochester is different. There will also be many other smaller events held throughout the state. Pride events in New Hampshire are family oriented and open to everyone. They are celebrations of our lives, our diversity and our commonality. They are celebrations of freedom. I encourage you to attend at least one of these events. If you feel awkward attending Pride, guess what? That is the same awkwardness LGBTQ people feel when they start to come out to others. Let me let you in on another reason you should attend. The people attending are your constituents and most of them are a younger generation of voters. I encourage you to attend a Pride event. Learn about your LGBTQ constituents and their allies and be proud of them for being bold enough to share their pride with you. Thank you. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Baldasaro requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding a thank you for flowers and well wishes and addressed the House. MOTION TO PRINT REMARKS Rep. Shurtleff moved that the remarks made by Rep. Baldasaro during Unanimous Consent be printed in the Permanent Journal. Without objection, the Speaker ordered. REMARKS Rep. Baldasaro: Thank you, Madam Speaker. I’m going to be real quick. I know it’s time to get out of here a long time ago. But, anyways, first I want to thank the Speaker and the Republican leadership along with my committee chair and others for the flowers and many things that I have received. I went in the hospital for two days which turned into ten and half days of nightmare. With the many prayers, and I believe with God on my side, really made a big turnaround because I had found by accident eight months ago a tumor on my kidney which was cancerous. The reason they found out about it, and I think everyone needs to be, keep an eye on this here, was I was going in for a cardiology appointment and my primary doctor says you haven’t seen one in a while, let’s get an MRI and that’s when I did the MRI when they found the spot, 5 cm, well it was 4 cm and it grew to 5 cm by the time they cut it out on my kidney. So, the issues I was having was my kidney. They had to move my colon and everything out of the way to cut out, the robotic surgery, to cut out 10%. But, I honestly believe that because of the prayer amongst my friends here and around the country made a difference because I went from thinking it was the end of the world, I’ll never take another hill to I’m going to take the hill, tomorrow is just another day. I think I owe it to everybody here and people with the prayers that came out and about and made a big difference. Who knew you would go in for a two- day operation, get in and get out, no big deal, and then suffer pneumonia and I still end up with a hernia. I have to fight that battle now in a few months here that came out of this also, but I at least want to come up here and thank you all. Thank you. UNANIMOUS CONSENT Rep. Schuett requested Unanimous Consent of the House regarding Flag Day and addressed the House. MOTION TO PRINT REMARKS Rep. Notter moved that the remarks made by Rep. Schuett during Unanimous Consent be printed in the Permanent Journal. Without objection, the Speaker ordered. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 17

REMARKS Rep. Schuett: Thank you, Madam Speaker. I offer this poem, an adaptation from the original by MSgt. Don S. Miller, USAF (Ret.) in honor of flag day tomorrow

OLD GLORY I am the flag of the United States of America; My name is “Old Glory.” I fly atop the world’s tallest buildings, I stand watch in America’s halls of justice, I fly majestically over great institutions of learning, I stand guard with the greatest military power in the world. Look up! And see me. I stand for peace, honor, truth and justice. I stand for freedom. I am confident I am arrogant. I am proud. When I am flown with my fellow banners, My head is a little higher, My colors a little truer. I bow to no one! I am recognized all over the world, I am saluted - I am respected - I am revered, I am loved and I am feared. I have fought in every battle of every war for more than 200 years. Gettysburg, Shiloh, Appomattox, San Juan Hill, the trenches of France, the Argonne forest, Anzio, Rome, the beaches of Normandy, Guam, Okinawa, Tarawa, Korea, Vietnam, the Persian Gulf and scores of places long forgotten by all except by those who were there with me. I was there. I led my soldiers, sailors and marines. I followed them. I watched over them. They loved me! I was on a small hill on Iwo Jima, I was dirty, battle worn and tired, but my warriors cheered me! And I was proud! I was at ground zero in New York City on September 11th as cowardly fanatics attacked America. I was raised from the ashes of once proud buildings by brave firefighters. Heroes, who risked their lives to save others, showing all that America, although bloodied, will never be beaten. Those who would destroy me cannot win for I am the symbol of freedom. I have been soiled, burned, torn and trampled in the streets of my own country. And when it is by those whom I have served with in battle - it hurts. But I shall overcome - for I am strong. I have slipped the surly bonds of earth and from my vantage point on the moon, I stand watch over the uncharted new frontiers of space. I have been a silent witness to all of America’s finest hours, But my finest hour comes when I am torn in strips, To be used as bandages for my wounded comrades on the field of battle When I fly half-mast to honor my soldiers, And when I lie in the trembling arms of a grieving mother, At the gravesite of her fallen son or daughter. I am proud! My name is “Old Glory” long may I wave. RECESS MOTION Rep. Ley moved that the House stand in recess for the purposes of the introduction of bills, receiving Senate messages, enrolled bill amendments and enrolled bill reports. Motion adopted. The House recessed at 2:50 p.m. RECESS 18 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

(Rep. Weber in the Chair) ENROLLED BILLS REPORT The Committee on Enrolled Bills has examined and found correctly enrolled House Bills numbered 105, 156, 211, 287, 293, 335, 351, 394, 450, 476, 486, 491, 504, 524, 544, 549, 577, 620, 621 and 657 and Senate Bills numbered 4, 17, 18, 27, 49, 53, 64, 101, 104, 105, 119, 121, 125, 131, 149, 156, 178, 180, 193, 197, 218, 232, 233, 241, 252, 257, 272 and 307. Rep. Wall, Sen. Soucy for the Committee SENATE MESSAGE CONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS SB 2-FN, relative to funding for job training programs in the department of business and economic affairs. SB 12-FN-A, establishing the New Hampshire college graduate retention incentive partnership program and making an appropriation therefor. SB 22, relative to the construction property tax exemption. SB 26, relative to the New Hampshire health care quality assurance commission. SB 37, relative to the registration of motor vehicles. SB 39, relative to the repair of roads not maintained by a municipality. SB 43, establishing a commission to study barriers to increased land development in New Hampshire. SB 51, establishing a commission to study expanding mental health courts statewide. SB 56, establishing a committee to study motor vehicle registrations and drivers’ licenses of active duty military personnel. SB 58-FN, relative to payment for low-dose mammography coverage. SB 74-FN-A, relative to register of deeds fees used to support the land and community heritage investment program (LCHIP), and establishing a committee to study the economic impact of land conservation and to review the LCHIP surcharge. SB 80, relative to membership on the board of mental health practice, applications for licensure by mental health practitioners, and insurance credentialing of out-of-state mental health practitioners and psychologists. SB 85, reestablishing the commission to study environmentally-triggered chronic illness. SB 88-FN, relative to registry identification cards under the use of cannabis for therapeutic purposes law. SB 98, clarifying the New Hampshire trust code and establishing a committee to study the effects of past trust code legislation. SB 99-FN, relative to gainful employment and partial disability in workers’ compensation. SB 100, relative to discrimination in employment based on criminal background checks. SB 103-L, authorizing municipalities to engage in multi-town bonding projects. SB 110, relative to the investigations by the state fire marshal. SB 115, establishing a commission to study the business environment for mental health providers in New Hampshire. SB 120, relative to the controlled drug prescription health and safety program. SB 127, relative to the Hampton judicial district and establishing the Hampton district court as a site for judicial branch family division cases SB 128, relative to the court accreditation commission. SB 134-FN, relative to the administration of the meals and rooms tax. SB 141, establishing a committee to study violence in schools. SB 142-L, requiring menstrual hygiene products in school restrooms. SB 148, relative to notification to public employees regarding their right to join or not join a union. SB 154, establishing a committee to study tax incentives for promoting development of dense workforce hous- ing in community centers, and authorizing the sale of certain property by the town of Milton. SB 163, relative to permits for operation of solid waste management facilities. SB 164, establishing a committee to study unprotected drinking water sources. SB 165, relative to net energy metering by low-moderate income community solar projects. SB 168, relative to class 2 obligations under the electric renewable portfolio standards. SB 176, establishing a committee to study mental health and human service business process alignment and information system interoperability. SB 177, relative to the use of physical restraints on persons who are involuntarily committed. SB 185-FN-A, relative to development of the New Hampshire state rail trails plan by the department of transportation and making an appropriation therefor. SB 192, relative to self-service storage facility liens. SB 196, relative to non-academic surveys administered by a public school to its students. SB 200, relative to wildlife corridors. SB 205, relative to energy efficiency programs funded from the systems benefits charge and the duties and members of the energy efficiency and sustainable energy board. 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 19

SB 206, excluding the cost of lobbying and political activity from the rates of public utilities. SB 207, relative to rules adopted by the department of environmental services pursuant to the 2014 report of the coastal risks and hazards commission. SB 210, relative to emergency medical and trauma services. SB 212, relative to limited driving privilege after revocation or suspension. SB 214, relative to transportation projects. SB 215, relative to learning to drive and commercial motor vehicles designed to transport passengers. SB 224-FN, relative to insurance coverage for pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders. SB 225-FN, adding physician assistants to certain New Hampshire laws. SB 238-FN, relative to the registration of motor vehicles owned by veterans. SB 240-FN, relative to reciprocal toll collection. SB 242-FN, providing for protection of private customer information and rights of New Hampshire remote sellers in connection with certain foreign sales and use taxes. SB 245-FN, relative to fees for simulcast racing. SB 250-FN, relative to forgery of a certificate of insurance. SB 251, relative to the life and health insurance guaranty association and relative to an unfair insurance practice regarding certain prescriptions. SB 258, relative to telemedicine and telehealth services. SB 263, relative to anti-discrimination protection for students in public schools. SB 270-FN, establishing a tax credit against the business profits tax for donations to career and technical education centers. SB 273-FN, relative to the board of nursing and establishing a committee to study the regulation of nursing assistants by the board of nursing and criminal history record checks for nurses. SB 274, relative to the newborn home visiting program. SB 276-FN-A, relative to career readiness credentials for high school students. SB 282-FN, relative to suicide prevention education in schools. SB 284-FN, establishing a statewide, multi-use online energy data platform. SB 285-FN, establishing a coastal resilience and economic development program. SB 286-FN-L, relative to aggregation of electric customers by municipalities and counties. SB 289-FN, relative to health and human services. SB 292-FN, relative to implementation of the new mental health 10-year plan. SB 296-FN, relative to live medical testimony in courts. NONCONCURRENCE WITH AMENDMENTS SB 169, relative to recovery of expenditures from the drinking water and groundwater trust fund. RECESS (Rep. McGhee in the Chair) ENROLLED BILL AMENDMENT HB 635-L, enabling a payment in lieu of taxes for a combined heat and power agricultural facility. Amendment 2019-2454EBA Amend the bill by replacing all after section 4 with the following: 5 Appraisal of Taxable Property; Reference Added; Contingent Version. Amend RSA 75:1 is repealed and reenacted to read as follows: 75:1 How Appraised. The selectmen shall appraise open space land pursuant to RSA 79-A:5, open space land with conservation restrictions pursuant to RSA 79-B:3, land with discretionary easements pursuant to RSA 79-C:7, residences on commercial or industrial zoned land pursuant to RSA 75:11, earth and excava- tions pursuant to RSA 72-B, land classified as land under qualifying farm structures pursuant to RSA 79-F, buildings and land appraised under RSA 79-G as qualifying historic buildings, qualifying chartered public school property appraised under RSA 79-H, residential rental property subject to a housing covenant under the low-income housing tax credit program pursuant to RSA 75:1-a, renewable generation facility property subject to a voluntary payment in lieu of taxes agreement under RSA 72:74 as determined under said agree- ment, combined heat and power agricultural facility property subject to a voluntary payment in lieu of taxes agreement under RSA 72:74-a as determined under said agreement, telecommunications poles and conduits pursuant to RSA 72:8-c, electric, gas, and water utility company distribution assets pursuant to RSA 72:8-d, and all other taxable property at its market value. Market value means the property’s full and true value as the same would be appraised in payment of a just debt due from a solvent debtor. The selectmen shall receive and consider all evidence that may be submitted to them relative to the value of property, the value of which cannot be determined by personal examination. 20 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD

6 Contingency. If HB 700 of the 2019 regular legislative session becomes law, section 5 of this act shall take effect at 12:01 a.m. on the effective date of HB 700 and section 4 of this act shall not take effect. If HB 700 does not become law, then section 5 of this act shall not take effect. 7 Effective Date. I. Sections 4 and 5 of this act shall take effect as provided in section 6 of this act. II. The remainder of this act shall take effect April 1, 2019. Motion adopted.

CONFEREE CHANGE HB 393, establishing a committee to study child care in New Hampshire, relative to tuition waivers for children in state foster care or guardianship, relative to penalties for violations related to obtaining public assistance, relative to designated receiving facilities, relative to the membership of the commission to study the environmental and health effects of evolving 5G technology, and relative to the moratorium on health facility licensure. Rep. Camarota replaced Rep. Jurius.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 279-FN, relative to access to fertility care. Rep. McBeath replaced Rep. Bartlett.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 30, relative to the advisory board on services for children, youth, and families. Rep. Fowler replaced Rep. Jurius.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 216-FN, establishing an autonomous vehicle advisory commission, establishing an autonomous vehicle testing pilot program, and providing requirements for automated vehicle deployment. Rep. O’Brien replaced Rep. Telerski.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 31, adding a member to the New Hampshire community development advisory committee and exempting the community development finance authority from the administrative procedure act. Rep. Porter replaced Rep. Maggiore.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 118, establishing a child fatality review committee. Rep. Camarota replaced Rep. Jurius.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 82-FN, relative to school food and nutrition programs. Rep. Cornell replaced Rep. Myler.

CONFEREE CHANGE HB 511-FN, relative to vaping. Rep. Weber replaced Rep. Freitas.

CONFEREE CHANGE SB 228-FN, relative to multiple-employer welfare arrangements. Rep. Abel replaced Rep. Muscatel.

CONFEREE CHANGE HB 315, relative to the Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program and the accuracy and efficiency of voter registration systems. Rep. Cote replaced Rep. Prudhomme-O’Brien.

CONFEREE CHANGE HB 131, establishing a commission on mental health education and behavioral health and wellness programs and conferring degree granting authority to Signum university. Rep. Myler replaced Rep. Luneau.

RECESS 13 JUNE 2019 HOUSE RECORD 21

(Rep. Packard in the Chair) ENROLLED BILL AMENDMENTS SB 111, relative to the collection of health care data. (Amendment printed SJ 6/13/19) Motion adopted. SB 242-FN, providing for protection of private customer information and rights of New Hampshire remote sellers in connection with certain foreign sales and use taxes. (Amendment printed SJ 6/13/19) Motion adopted.

RECESS (Speaker Shurtleff in the Chair) ENROLLED BILL AMENDMENT HB 25-A, making appropriations for capital improvements. Amendment 2019-2637EBA Amend section 14, paragraph I of the bill by replacing 2017, 288:22 with 2017, 228:22 in the following sub- paragraphs: (a), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l), (o), and (p). Amend section 20, paragraph 98 of the bill by replacing line 3 with the following: amended by 2018, 163:4, for APS repair/renovations-roof, windows and curtain wall, door Motion adopted.

RECESS