HOUSE BILL REPORT
HB 3057
As Passed House:
February 11, 2006
Title: An act relating to modifying the provisions of the address confidentiality program.
Brief Description: Modifying address confidentiality program provisions.
Sponsors: By Representatives Green, Nixon, Hunt, Sump, Miloscia, Haigh, Schual-Berke and Morrell; by request of Secretary of State.
Brief History:
State Government Operations & Accountability: 1/24/06, 2/1/06 [DP].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 2/11/06, 96-0.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON STATE GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS & ACCOUNTABILITY
Majority Report: Do pass. Signed by 9 members: Representatives Haigh, Chair; Green, Vice Chair; Nixon, Ranking Minority Member; Clements, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Hunt, McDermott, Miloscia, Schindler and Sump.
Staff: Kathryn Leathers (786-7114).
Background:
The Address Confidentiality Program (ACP) allows victims of domestic violence, sexual
assault, or stalking to have an alternative address designated as his or her substitute mailing
address. The ACP also allows state and local agencies to comply with requests for public
records without disclosing the confidential location of a victim.
In order to become a participant in the ACP, a person must submit an application to the
Secretary of State (Secretary). The Secretary must approve any application that includes: (1)
a sworn statement from the applicant that he or she is a victim of domestic violence, sexual
assault, or stalking, and fears for his or her safety or the person's children's safety; (2) a
designation of the Secretary as the applicant's agent for purposes of service of process and
receipt of mail; (3) the mailing address and phone number where the applicant can be
contacted by the Secretary; (4) the address that the applicant requests be kept confidential;
and (5) the applicant's signature. Applicants are certified as program participants for four
years, subject to renewal, withdrawal, or invalidation.
A program participant who is qualified to vote may apply to receive ongoing absentee ballots
for all elections in the jurisdiction for which that participant resides. The county auditor
(auditor) is required to send absentee ballots to the participant at the address designated by
the participant in his or her absentee ballot application. The auditor may not release the
participant's address pursuant to a public records request except when the request is by a law
enforcement agency or pursuant to court order. The name and address of a program
participant is excluded from any list of registered voters available to the public. Other than
the alternate address designated by the Secretary, information in the participant's file is not
subject to disclosure except in the following circumstances: the request is made by a law
enforcement agency or directed by court order, or for purposes of verifying that a person is a
participant in the ACP.
The Secretary may cancel a person's participation in the ACP if the participant's residential
address changes and he or she fails to give the Secretary at least seven days notice of the
address change, or if mail forwarded by the Secretary to the participant is returned as
non-deliverable. The Secretary must cancel a person's participation in the ACP if the
participant changes his or her name or if the participant provides false information in the
application.
Summary of Bill:
A definition for "stalking" is added to the Address Confidentiality Program (ACP) statute.
"Stalking" is defined to have the same meaning as used in the criminal statutes on
harassment, and also includes the threat of being stalked, regardless of whether the acts or
threats of stalking have been reported to law enforcement officers.
A person who applies to participate in the ACP must include an address, instead of a mailing
address, where the applicant can be contacted by the Secretary.
The Secretary may cancel a person's participation in the ACP if there is a change in the
person's residential address but he or she fails to notify the Secretary, in writing, within at
least two days of the address change. A participant in the ACP loses certification as a
participant if he or she obtains a legal change of identity.
Except for the address designated by the Secretary, a participant's records may only be
released by the Secretary and pursuant to court order.
Obsolete references to "service voter" are replaced with current "absentee voter"
designations.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: (In support) The changes in this bill will be very helpful to the Address
Confidentiality Program (Program) participants. There are approximately 2,707 participants
currently in the Program, and about 65 percent of them are children. If a person in the
Program gets married or divorced, that person can remain in the Program; but if a person
changes his or her Social Security number and obtains a confidential identity change, that
person is no longer in need of the Program's services. The reason for the notice change from
seven to two days is to put participants in compliance with current law. The voter section
removes obsolete terms. There is no specific policy reason for referencing the criminal
statutes in the section defining "stalking." Although there have been allegations that people
have falsely claimed to be a domestic violence or stalking victim in order to get into the
Program, there has been no proof of that. A participant cannot hide from legal process
because the Program is their legal agent. The Program is able to verify whether a person is in
the Program, and any documents served on the Program would be forwarded to the
participant.
(With concerns) There is a concern about voter registration lists and ballots sent in via the
Program. Inserting a "marker" in the statewide voter registration database that shows there is
someone in the Program would address this concern. The name of the participant would not
be released to the public. The purpose of this is to allow persons conducting vote tallies to be
able to rectify the number of ballots cast with the number of votes cast. It is important to
account for every vote.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative Green, prime sponsor; and Shane Hamlin
and Missy Deinlien, Office of the Secretary of State.
(With concerns) Rowland Thompson, Allied Daily Newspapers.