Public Comments for 01/28/2022 Courts of Justice
HB17 - Military honor guards and veterans service organizations; paramilitary activities, exception.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB135 - Emergency custody and temporary detention; transportation of person when transfer of custody.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB265 - Multi-jurisdiction grand jury; investigation of elder abuse crimes.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB350 - Threats and harassment of certain officials and property; venue.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB370 - Uniform Fiduciary Income and Principal Act; replaces prior Act.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
In reviewing your proposed legislation to modify the Uniform Fiduciary Act, it prompted me to write to you to request including language requiring financial institutions to make available a "temporary signature proxy" for approval by the account holder in the event that he/she is likely to become incapacitated without the authority to transfer to other accounts. It would expire at the death of the individual and all remaining funds would remain the asset property of the deceased. It is quite unfortunate when well intentions go awry at the death of one who has entrusted their well being to the ruthless greed of others. Recently, I have witnessed two situations where an individual became unable to write checks for their bills, place a "trusted person" on their bank accounts to handle the bill paying for them, then passed away. According to VA Banking Laws, these funds now belong to that joint person on the account. In one situation, the person was given the authority to write checks for the bills because Rheumatoid Arthritis had severely deformed the decedent's hands and they could no longer write and they were bed ridden with a lung disease. The 26 year old walked away with the decedent's entire life's savings of $63,447 and refused to even buy flowers for the decedent's funeral. In another situation, while the decedent was in ICU with little expected life left, the so-called trusted friend transferred every dime of his money to her personal account. She transferred $48,000 to her sole personal account with no effort or question by the bank because he could no longer speak for himself or write. He died and the family became aware that his bills were in default and his vehicle was in repossession status. I am pleading with you to consider these situations because as much as I loved these individuals, there was no law that prevented them from doing any of this. It is my hope that you are able to improve our legal system to prevent this from happening to so many of our elderly and disabled in the future. Thank you for your time.
HB409 - Statute of limitations; promises not to plead.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
I am the chairman of the Boyd-Graves study committee on the subject to which the proposed legislation relates. I wanted to be present to explain the purpose of the proposed amendment and answer any question the Subcommittee may have.
Discussion of intended purpose of legislation as proposed by the Boyd-Graves Conference.
HB449 - Personal property; distrained or levied on property, auctioneers or auction firms outside county.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB515 - Malicious prosecution; creates civil cause of action, self-defense.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
VCDL STRONGLY SUPPORTS HB 515.
As the courts should not be used as a way to punish people for protecting themselves, this bill is very much needed.
HB609 - People can then sue for 2nd amendment rights violations for not being able to bring firearms where they could before. People could sue because the city didn't fix a pothole or missed one (simply on accident) and they drove over it and the car needed to be realigned. Way too broad and the working public has to pay for it. Egregious items I can see, but this goes way too far, especially given who decides what is a "right" or "privilege". HB515 - Very much needed. When one acts in self defense and gun rights people work to go after those defending themselves, rather than being stopped from wasting the taxpayers' funds and the drama created in the papers and the ruination of peoples' lives, its time to stop folks using their offices to prosecute their political ideologues enemies.
HB569 - Hospices, home care organizations, private providers, etc; immunity from liability.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association is opposed to this legislation. VHHA previously joined other provider groups and the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association to request the issuance of an executive order to address liability protections for “health care providers” as set forth in Virginia Code Sections 8.01-225.01 and 8.01-225.02. The applicability of the immunities in these statutes are limited to “health care providers” as defined in the Medical Malpractice Act (8.01-581.1), which does not expressly include hospices, home care organizations, private providers, assisted living facilities, and adult day care centers. Then in the 2020 Special Session I, VHHA supported HB5059 and SB5082 creating § 8.01-225.03. We believe that these provisions are necessary and appropriate to provide limited immunity protection for these additional provider types assisting in the COVID-19 response that is equivalent to that afforded to other health care providers. This is especially true in the midst of this most recent surge of hospitalizations and infections that has reached levels not seen in previous surges.
The Virginia Association for Home Care and Hospice Opposes House Bill 569. This bill places licensed home care and hospice organizations at great risk. Home care and Hospice organizations have worked diligently through what has been an overwhelming public health care crisis. Many of our patients that were discharged to Home Care and Hospice organizations by Hospitals and Nursing Facilities were COVID positive. In Home Care our role was to rehabilitate. In Hospice, it was End-of-Life care. Our staff worked diligently when many other members of the community stayed at home. Again, this bill is harmful to Home Care and Hospice organizations and serves no public good. On behalf of the Home Care and Hospice industry we respectfully as you to vote no!
HB622 - Custodial interrogation of a child; advisement of rights.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Not only is it minorities but also whites who seek justice for themselves as well as minorities. Originally from NC I moved to VA to finish a master degree at Regent University. Because of substance abuse and drug addiction off and on over the past 20 yrs, I have experience in both the criminal justice system and in areas of poor minority housing areas. What better way to show society I have been rehabilitated than stay sober and finish a master's degree I started in 2013. I also got involved with local African American pastors to try n change lives through love n hope. Not so fast . Instead only months after getting that masters degree and getting my NC k-12 teaching license reactivatd I was charged with 8 felonies for supposedly forging to checks from an elderly lady whom I was hired to give her dog diabetic shots twice a day everyday. I voluntary went to the investigating detective and gave an honest statement. A statement she supposedly " forgot to hit the record button on" . Add 8000 in attorneys fees and wat did I get. He's just a junkie who took advantage of an old lady. No showing my reformation. Instead 8 felonies with 5 years each felony all ran consecutive. 40 yrs 39 suspended. First felonies ever. No more school teacher possibilities or being a church worker+ masters in theology. All because I had a passionate voice for justice in a white privilege society while I myself lived in Newport news. And now I n my daughter ( who just got a BSN in nursing worries daily dad will have to do 39 yrs if he misses a po appt or has a relapse and gets a negative drug screen. (Especially in lieu he was victim of sexual assault by a retired naval officer which no one ever believe) The commonwealth is most oppressing state I have ever been in and having played div. one baseball in the early nineties I have been around the country. I gave since gotten more involved SO PLEASE DONT STOP THE MOMENTUM THAT THE COMMONWEALTH HAS MADE THE OAST 4 YEARS. VY PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND TO THE REALITY IF SOME LAWS N POLICE BEHAVIOR. ALL BECAUSE THEY ABD THIER FAMILIES GREW UP PRIVILEGED. I AM UNIQUE IN THAT I AM EDUCATED BUT ALSO A ADDICT WHO GAS LUVED IN THAT WIRKD. A WORLD WGEN RECENT THE COMMONWEALTH JUST SAW MY OAST RECORD, REFUSED TO SEE MY SIVRYN ACCOMPLISHED THE LAST 5 YEARS AND DIDN'T EVEN CONSIDER REHAB ( THAT BASED ON THIER ARGUMENT IFME BEING AN ADDICT. NO KETS JUST THROW HIM IN A 6 × 9 FIR ONE YEAR N HE WILL THINK TWICE BEFORE HE USES AGAIN. HIW F ARCHAIC IS THAT THOUGHT PROCESS. WE AS FIRMER ADDICTS AND CRIMINALS ( 99% DUE TO DRUG USE) ARE WILLING TO ADMIT OUR MISTAKES REPAY SOCIETY N MOVE FORWARD BUT UNFORTUNATELY THIS REVERSAL IN LEGISLATION WILL ONLY ADD TO TGE ONCE ANE POSSIBLE SOON TO BE OPPRESSIVE COMMONWEALTH FOR THE POOR UNEDUCATED N THISE WHI STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION. IN CLOSING I LIVE IN A CONSERVATIVE COUNT N CITY NOW BUT THEY SEEM TO GET UT. NOT LIKE SOME OF THE OTHER PRODOMIATELY WHITE COMMUNITY. I AM ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCES W ADDICTION N THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM KEEP TGE MOMENTUM GOING FOR CGANGE HOPE N REHABILITATION. NOT INCARCERATION. SOMETHING WE WOULD NOT EVEN DO TO STRAY ANIMALS
HB662 - Multi-jurisdiction grand jury; investigation of elder abuse crimes.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB671 - Permanent protective orders; Hope Card Program created.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB678 - Person under a disability; parties unknown.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB719 - Physical evidence recovery kits; victim's right to notification, storage.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Not only is it minorities but also whites who seek justice for themselves as well as minorities. Originally from NC I moved to VA to finish a master degree at Regent University. Because of substance abuse and drug addiction off and on over the past 20 yrs, I have experience in both the criminal justice system and in areas of poor minority housing areas. What better way to show society I have been rehabilitated than stay sober and finish a master's degree I started in 2013. I also got involved with local African American pastors to try n change lives through love n hope. Not so fast . Instead only months after getting that masters degree and getting my NC k-12 teaching license reactivatd I was charged with 8 felonies for supposedly forging to checks from an elderly lady whom I was hired to give her dog diabetic shots twice a day everyday. I voluntary went to the investigating detective and gave an honest statement. A statement she supposedly " forgot to hit the record button on" . Add 8000 in attorneys fees and wat did I get. He's just a junkie who took advantage of an old lady. No showing my reformation. Instead 8 felonies with 5 years each felony all ran consecutive. 40 yrs 39 suspended. First felonies ever. No more school teacher possibilities or being a church worker+ masters in theology. All because I had a passionate voice for justice in a white privilege society while I myself lived in Newport news. And now I n my daughter ( who just got a BSN in nursing worries daily dad will have to do 39 yrs if he misses a po appt or has a relapse and gets a negative drug screen. (Especially in lieu he was victim of sexual assault by a retired naval officer which no one ever believe) The commonwealth is most oppressing state I have ever been in and having played div. one baseball in the early nineties I have been around the country. I gave since gotten more involved SO PLEASE DONT STOP THE MOMENTUM THAT THE COMMONWEALTH HAS MADE THE OAST 4 YEARS. VY PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND TO THE REALITY IF SOME LAWS N POLICE BEHAVIOR. ALL BECAUSE THEY ABD THIER FAMILIES GREW UP PRIVILEGED. I AM UNIQUE IN THAT I AM EDUCATED BUT ALSO A ADDICT WHO GAS LUVED IN THAT WIRKD. A WORLD WGEN RECENT THE COMMONWEALTH JUST SAW MY OAST RECORD, REFUSED TO SEE MY SIVRYN ACCOMPLISHED THE LAST 5 YEARS AND DIDN'T EVEN CONSIDER REHAB ( THAT BASED ON THIER ARGUMENT IFME BEING AN ADDICT. NO KETS JUST THROW HIM IN A 6 × 9 FIR ONE YEAR N HE WILL THINK TWICE BEFORE HE USES AGAIN. HIW F ARCHAIC IS THAT THOUGHT PROCESS. WE AS FIRMER ADDICTS AND CRIMINALS ( 99% DUE TO DRUG USE) ARE WILLING TO ADMIT OUR MISTAKES REPAY SOCIETY N MOVE FORWARD BUT UNFORTUNATELY THIS REVERSAL IN LEGISLATION WILL ONLY ADD TO TGE ONCE ANE POSSIBLE SOON TO BE OPPRESSIVE COMMONWEALTH FOR THE POOR UNEDUCATED N THISE WHI STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION. IN CLOSING I LIVE IN A CONSERVATIVE COUNT N CITY NOW BUT THEY SEEM TO GET UT. NOT LIKE SOME OF THE OTHER PRODOMIATELY WHITE COMMUNITY. I AM ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCES W ADDICTION N THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM KEEP TGE MOMENTUM GOING FOR CGANGE HOPE N REHABILITATION. NOT INCARCERATION. SOMETHING WE WOULD NOT EVEN DO TO STRAY ANIMALS
HB733 - Juvenile records; identification of children receiving coordinated services.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Not only is it minorities but also whites who seek justice for themselves as well as minorities. Originally from NC I moved to VA to finish a master degree at Regent University. Because of substance abuse and drug addiction off and on over the past 20 yrs, I have experience in both the criminal justice system and in areas of poor minority housing areas. What better way to show society I have been rehabilitated than stay sober and finish a master's degree I started in 2013. I also got involved with local African American pastors to try n change lives through love n hope. Not so fast . Instead only months after getting that masters degree and getting my NC k-12 teaching license reactivatd I was charged with 8 felonies for supposedly forging to checks from an elderly lady whom I was hired to give her dog diabetic shots twice a day everyday. I voluntary went to the investigating detective and gave an honest statement. A statement she supposedly " forgot to hit the record button on" . Add 8000 in attorneys fees and wat did I get. He's just a junkie who took advantage of an old lady. No showing my reformation. Instead 8 felonies with 5 years each felony all ran consecutive. 40 yrs 39 suspended. First felonies ever. No more school teacher possibilities or being a church worker+ masters in theology. All because I had a passionate voice for justice in a white privilege society while I myself lived in Newport news. And now I n my daughter ( who just got a BSN in nursing worries daily dad will have to do 39 yrs if he misses a po appt or has a relapse and gets a negative drug screen. (Especially in lieu he was victim of sexual assault by a retired naval officer which no one ever believe) The commonwealth is most oppressing state I have ever been in and having played div. one baseball in the early nineties I have been around the country. I gave since gotten more involved SO PLEASE DONT STOP THE MOMENTUM THAT THE COMMONWEALTH HAS MADE THE OAST 4 YEARS. VY PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND TO THE REALITY IF SOME LAWS N POLICE BEHAVIOR. ALL BECAUSE THEY ABD THIER FAMILIES GREW UP PRIVILEGED. I AM UNIQUE IN THAT I AM EDUCATED BUT ALSO A ADDICT WHO GAS LUVED IN THAT WIRKD. A WORLD WGEN RECENT THE COMMONWEALTH JUST SAW MY OAST RECORD, REFUSED TO SEE MY SIVRYN ACCOMPLISHED THE LAST 5 YEARS AND DIDN'T EVEN CONSIDER REHAB ( THAT BASED ON THIER ARGUMENT IFME BEING AN ADDICT. NO KETS JUST THROW HIM IN A 6 × 9 FIR ONE YEAR N HE WILL THINK TWICE BEFORE HE USES AGAIN. HIW F ARCHAIC IS THAT THOUGHT PROCESS. WE AS FIRMER ADDICTS AND CRIMINALS ( 99% DUE TO DRUG USE) ARE WILLING TO ADMIT OUR MISTAKES REPAY SOCIETY N MOVE FORWARD BUT UNFORTUNATELY THIS REVERSAL IN LEGISLATION WILL ONLY ADD TO TGE ONCE ANE POSSIBLE SOON TO BE OPPRESSIVE COMMONWEALTH FOR THE POOR UNEDUCATED N THISE WHI STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION. IN CLOSING I LIVE IN A CONSERVATIVE COUNT N CITY NOW BUT THEY SEEM TO GET UT. NOT LIKE SOME OF THE OTHER PRODOMIATELY WHITE COMMUNITY. I AM ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCES W ADDICTION N THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM KEEP TGE MOMENTUM GOING FOR CGANGE HOPE N REHABILITATION. NOT INCARCERATION. SOMETHING WE WOULD NOT EVEN DO TO STRAY ANIMALS
HB738 - Competency to stand trial; order for evaluation or treatment.
DBHDS does not have an official position on this bill so there is no need for me to speak. However, I will be present if technical assistance from DBHDS is required.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB748 - DNA data bank sample tracking system; replaces certain references in Code.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Compensation Board staff is not available to be present for the meeting today in the event of any questions, however, the agency has no concerns and concurs with the Department of Forensic Science's request for this proposal. Staff has encouraged DFS staff to note Compensation Board staff concurrence at today's meeting.
HB749 - Virginia Sexual and Domestic Violence Victim Fund; purpose, guidelines.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
I'm a volunteer with Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, and I support this bill.
HB756 - Bail for a person accused of a crime that is an act of violence; notice to attorney.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB782 - Nonsuits; appeals from judgment of a general district court.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB887 - Transfer on death deed; conveyance of cooperative interest.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB898 - Hallucinogens or psychoactive substances; possession, civil penalty.
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
My name is Dr. Jon R. Frederick, MD. I am a veteran of the United States Navy, a board-certified physician in Emergency Medicine, and for the past two and a half years the owner and medical director of a ketamine infusion clinic. As a provider of ketamine infusions, I have administered approximately 1,750 treatments to those suffering from such treatment-resistant conditions as depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and many other concomitant physical and mental health maladies. For the overwhelming majority of my patients, no other therapy, medication, or intervention has been able to provide them with any meaningful relief and ketamine has been lifesaving. Ketamine is unique in that it is the only currently legal ‘psychedelic’ in the United States. Initially FDA approved in 1970 for the purpose of anesthesia, it was discovered to have potent antidepressant effects in the early 2000s. It has been the subject of thousands of research papers, consistently validating it as the most effective treatment option for many conditions. In addition, it has an unparalleled safety profile with little to no drug interactions and no documented long-term sequelae of use when used in a clinically supervised manner. The increased use and acceptance of ketamine as a rapidly effective treatment is creating a pathway to other psychedelic medications. We are entering into a renaissance of mental health treatment as many psychedelic drugs and their derivatives are being studied. Currently, there are hundreds of clinical trials going on evaluating these medicines for applications ranging from mental health diagnoses to substance use disorders to neurodegenerative conditions. Last year, a seminal study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine comparing psilocybin (the compound responsible for the psychedelic properties of some mushrooms) to a traditional antidepressant. They concluded just two doses of psilocybin were as good as weeks of continued use of the antidepressant for treating depression. In many ways, psilocybin was actually superior to the antidepressant, but due to methodological limitations they could not generalize that data. In another groundbreaking area of study, MDMA for PTSD recently concluded phase 3 clinical trials. The preliminary data they have released demonstrated that 67% of the participants had essentially been cured of their PTSD, no longer meeting diagnostic criteria. An additional 21% had a clinically meaningful reduction of their PTSD symptoms. The expectation is this medicine will become FDA approved next year. The undeniable truth of the matter is these compounds are showing great promise in areas of medicine where we have very little to offer. Another truth is they are demonstrably safe and pose very little potential for dependence or abuse. Among a ranking of all potential drugs of abuse, psychedelics rank last in propensity to cause harm to users and others. We are existing in an era of unprecedented uncertainty, isolation, and disconnection. As a society, we are struggling with crises of addiction, burn out, and overall mental health. We are in dire need of alternative treatments, because the status quo is not working. It is within this context that I believe it is safe and appropriate to decriminalize these compounds.
TESTIMONY REGARDING HOUSE BILL 898 My name is Victoria Chentsova and I am a graduate student and active community member residing in Williamsburg, Virginia. I am writing this testimony in favor of House Bill No. 898 to decriminalize naturally occurring hallucinogens or psychoactive substances. This Bill No.898 proposes amendments that have a multitude of implications benefiting the community at large, two of which I would like to focus on today. First, Bill No.898 represents an important step in addressing the needs, safety, and prosperity of Virginia residents as it would reverse the historical practice of unfair penalization of individuals possessing this substance. The criminalization of possession of these substances, substances that are naturally derived and therefore could easily be found in nature, is an act against nature itself. That an individual could go foraging and be sentenced with a felony for possession a plant they unknowingly picked up is cruel and unfair. Further the possession and use of many of these substances in the United States has historical roots in indigenous medicines and spiritual practices promoting well-being. Criminalizing possession of these goods when they are naturally derived, have proven health benefits, and little to no identified negative externalities puts many stand up and model citizens in a position where they could just as well be charged with a felony for practices that keep them connected to their culture or in good mental health. This mental health piece leads to the next point. Second, this Bill No.898 provides an opportunity for advancements in psychological science research and mental health care in the state of Virginia. More recently, Psychedelics research has gained exponential traction in the last five years as psychological and medical research demonstrates its practical application. Research out of reputable institutions in the US such as Johns Hopkins University or Virginia's own Virginia Commonwealth University, along with top research institutions abroad, has demonstrated that these substances can aid addiction therapies, support PTSD treatments, and serve as a naturally-derived support for symptoms of clinical depression and anxiety. With demonstrated low addictive potential, and many proven health benefits, amongst many more potential benefits under trial, these substance demonstrate high promise in supporting well-being. Though the above is just a scratch in the surface of how this bill could improve the lives of Virginians and further set a standard that could motivate other states to do the same, these reasons alone should be beyond sufficient to see why this bill needs to be passed. I am confident in the counsel and the state to make the right decision on this and enable Virginias to reconnect with in the power this bill holds and encourage you importance of this bill being passed and when I say that I am not alone this bill is going to change the lives of many people for the beetI am writing this testimony in favor of House Bill No. 898 to decriminalize naturally occurring hallucinogens or psychoactive substances. Thank you for your continuous hard work to create a better Virginia.
I want to contribute my feelings and thoughts as it relates to HB898 and HB262 with the hopes of the VA Legislature to seriously consider passing these Bills and while also becoming aware of ALL the health and mental BENEFITS that plant-based medicines, specifically Psilocybin, have on the human mental and physical body. I am a Veteran, spent 3 years serving with 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment in Ft. Benning, GA. I have not, nor am I currently, experiencing any type of depression or trauma. However, after three years of becoming familiar with Psilocybin, and using it in a controlled, ceremonial setting, I have experienced numerous positive changes in my life! Changes that I really wasn't even aware I had to make. These changes included areas of my life such as parenting, marriage, work, personal, and religious - I lost 43 pounds and am in tremendous shape at age 53 and my health has NEVER been better because I WANTED to make changes to improve my overall health and well-being. The changes I made in my life were decisions I made from my HEART. Psilocybin has a way of transforming people into what our Higher Power had intended us to be and live...Strong, loving, caring humans that express love and compassion for others through our HEART! In my experience, and many others I associate with, have had profound POSITIVE changes in our lives due to having just ONE Psilocybin experience. PLEASE do NOT let this opportunity to bring peace, healing, and comfort to so MANY people here in our great State of Virginia, that truly are suffering and have found that traditional medicines just do not work. Pass HB898 and HB262 quickly and PLEASE let the results and case studies speak for themselves. Thank you for listening! Dave B. recondecon7@gmail.com
I work for the largest PR firm in America that represents both Cannabis and Psychedelic companies. I truly believe in the power of plant medicine to heal because of my own experiences with cannabis, mushrooms and Ayahuasca. These plants have helped me heal my childhood trauma, forgive myself and those who have hurt me in the past, and live a more peaceful life. I think these plants have been decriminalized unfairly and can help more than most psychiatric medicines that are prescribed to Americans everyday. Many psychicatric drugs are just pain killers. They can help in a pinch and over the short term, but they don't provide long-lasting relief and true healing. They don't because they're not designed to. Plant medicine helps patients address the root causes of mental illness and trauma, and I believe they should be legalized and studied more, so that more Americans can live a life of peace and prosperity.
Hello, I am writing in support of HB898. Truly, I would rather constituents be able to grow, consume, and disperse amongst themselves hallucinogens or psychoactive substances without ANY persecution. However, I feel HB 898 is a step in the right direction to desensitize while enlightening the Commonwealth of the immense healing potential of these naturally occurring medicines. The “research”I present is my own personal experience with psilocybin. I am diagnosed with PTSD as well mixed anxiety and depressive disorder due to 12 years of sexual trauma experienced daily in my adult life. I’ve only been free from this sexual torture for five years, and the mental illnesses accrued from those experiences are almost as severe as the acts themselves. Mental illness turned me into a completely different person. Nightmares every. single. night. I was always looking over my shoulder, getting frightened at the slightest noise. I began to engage in self harm, lost interest in every aspect of my life, withdrew from family and friends, had unusual bursts of anger, manic attitude episodes, began to literally HATE everything and everyone, and my short term memory suffered greatly. I had been taking the highest dose of Zoloft, 200mg, for over 10 years to cope, and each year, symptoms of PTSD, anxiety/depression only seemed to strengthen. 2020 proved to be the most difficult year after losing my mother, I had become such a miserable person and loathed my very existence and felt trapped in my mind. It’s difficult to explain it I felt like I was drowning in my brain and it FELT like it needed rewiring. No one wanted to be around me, especially me. Imagine getting so sick of YOU but you cannot escape yourself. After reaching out to expensive drs that didn’t care and just wanted to put me on another pill, finding expensive ketamine treatment that shows promise but insurance won’t cover it, expensive, uncaring psychiatrists that were too booked up to take on anyone else, I decided to find my own solution; One that can be obtained without insurance, or expensive hypocritical/misinformed doctors. It didn’t take long for me to find so much promising research on psilocybin. I began microdosing (0.1 g)with psilocybin twice a day and my quality of life has improved greatly. My nightmares are gone, my fear and anxiety, dare I say: gone! My overall ability to mentally function in a way I couldn’t before; it’s just given me my life back, but even better than it was before. It’s unexplainable; you can FEEL the healing change. I was on the verge of losing it all just because of mental illness and there is no help out there, and if you do find it, it comes with a price tag you cannot afford. (When a patient uses nature to medicate, they can grow their own!) It’s a CRIME against humanity that NATURE is illegal, especially when the HEALING substances of nature are the ones that are illegal, not the poisonous deadly ones. With mental illness being such a struggle for so many, and scarce access to any care, it makes no sense to not allow communities to heal themselves safely and naturally. The damages created by the increasing amount of untreated mental illnesses in Virginia, by far EXCEEDS whatever “damage” perceived by decriminalizing nature. Thank you C Shell
I tried to submit a testimony and it wouldnt accept it so now I have to have a shorter testimony. It said I had too many words, I may have written a bit harshly at the end. I appologize, I'm frustrated. I stay up day and night wondering how part of the world still believes these plants are evil. I'm a recovered Addict. I'm also an ex con. I grew up greatly affected by the system. My father was an alcoholic Vietnam vet who dedicated much of his life to work for the government. My mother I don't know much about, she was loving. She struggled with heroine addiction. I was an "addict" for 6 years. Most of my childhood was surrounded by trauma and drugs. I grew up eminating that behavior to cope with their death and the loss of my childhood. I felt so alone for so long. I come from a really poor family. Deeply embedded in trauma. Homeless. Isolated. Hungry. I'm currently 23, 3 years out of jail. Black belt in martial arts/combative training. Creating an adult program self defense program through the form that me and my team have created that's recognized on a professional level. I'm a leader of a community movement. I'm helping build two different organizations, and one of my own. I've dedicated my life to studying these plants and movement philosophy. What I will say is that with out these plants, I cannot say with certainty I would have had the guidance or complete will power to take the path I am now walking. The spirits within these plants have taught me that our existence with nature is deeply rooted and dependent upon the relationship with our enviroment and our community. Right before I became homeless when I was 19, I had an experience with DMT (dimethyltryptamine). It created this feeling, like I belonged. Like I was at home, no matter where I was at. No matter where I may travel, this Earth, this cosmos is my home. And I can always seek refuge in her. She told to not be afraid to let go. Let go of what once was, and what is to be. To rest assure in the now. In her all mighty power. At this point, I've consumed most of the "poisonous/toxic/deadly/demonized" plants that have been strategically put into the shadows to strip us of our roots. I know most of the information you find on these plants are lies that were fabricated for corporate/political interest. Lets not forget the indigenous people who were slaughtered protecting the rights to these plants and lands they come from. I'm a fully functional human being now who cares and gives back to the community. I haven't craved opioids for about the amount of time I've invested into studying these plants. We're tired of the deceit. Can we stop getting bread crumbs and just start getting these bills passed so we can all move on with our lives. Thank you.
I've been a professional in the healing arts for 31 years. A licensed massage therapist and registered yoga instructor, I've owned a holistic wellness center in Virginia Beach for 26 years. I know people, including military veterans, who spent years suffering from trauma related mental illnesses and addictions, and were unable to find any form of lasting relief from their symptoms until they experienced the healing power of plant medicines. I believe strongly that these plant medicines must be decriminalized. People who are suffering shouldn't be prevented from, or punished for, obtaining medicines that can help them recover from debilitating depression, anxiety, and other trauma related mental conditions.
Please decriminalize plants. God gave us nature and it's HEALS. There are no physical withdrawal symptoms, like pharmaceutical meds. Plant doses have the ability to be customized to each patient. A small micro dose(1/8tsp) has been shown to ease anxiety, depression, mental anguish, gives energy and helps with physical pain. If you haven't tried it, talk to someone who has. Someone who has used it with great success. Please and thank for you service.
In addition, I believe it would be extremely beneficial for these substances to be decriminalized. One should not have to hide or disclose trying to better themselves. These medicines have the power to save lives and should by no means be outlawed. I am lucky to have moved and be in a place of decriminalization, however, I will do anything I can to support my home state, Virginia, and it’s undergoing of decriminalization.
The impact of psilocybin mushrooms on mental health. Psilocybin mushrooms along with other psychoactive plant medicines have been used since ancient times for healing. Scientifically, we now have evidence of why these substances were so significant in the history of medicine. First off, psilocybin acts on the frontal cortex, increasing connections between neurons. This phenomena is what allows the mind to adapt and change, also know as plasticity. Increased plasticity in the brain is extremely helpful for therapeutic purposes, because you can more comfortably work through and change behavioral issues. It has been quite a breakthrough for those struggling with addiction. On top of this, psilocybin produces neurogenesis, the production of new brain cell growth. This amazing ability can help regrow and restore the brain. On a personal level, these medicines have helped me overcome a great deal of issues. Having a past addiction, it was exactly what I needed to overcome the chemical imbalance that was keeping me craving those harmful substances. Mental health was another factor, as I struggled with severe depression. The plant medicine changed my mind both physically and metaphysically. These entheogenic plants are the catalyst for peace of mind and well-being. If we have the freedom to safety partake in these substances, we can become whole and more equipped for life, thus becoming better members to our society.
Someone I know and care about quite a bit has struggled with mental health for as long as they can remember. They have been diagnosed with ADHD, anxiety, and treatment resistant depression. Pharmaceutical antidepressants simply do not work for them. For decades, they kept trying new ones, hoping that the newest prescription would bring relief. They did not realize that the nature of "treatment resistant depression" meant that it was extremely unlikely for a pharmaceutical antidepressant to ever work for them. While they were searching for relief, the side effects they experienced include worsening depression, weight gain, "brain fog", loss of libido, "brain zaps", insomnia, and others. They felt broken. They stumbled upon the idea of microdosing, and it gave them hope. Their significant other learned how to cultivate mushrooms, and grew some just for them. This was not a risk that their significant other undertook lightly. Their significant other’s career would most definitely be jeopardized if this were found out. Within a few weeks of beginning to microdose these mushrooms, they began to feel much better. Their significant other noticed that they started laughing and enjoying life more--even on the days when they didn't microdose. Their psychiatrist says that he cannot "officially" condone their use of psilocybin because it's against the law. However, "off the record" he fully supports them taking psilocybin. Aside from the fact that these mushrooms have lifted their depression without any bothersome side effects, one of the most beautiful things about their experience is that their significant other cultivated the medicine that has allowed them to feel joy again. They watched their significant other lovingly grow, dry, grind, and encapsulate a healing gift from nature. I want others who are suffering to be able to experience the healing that my loved one has, without the fear of criminal repercussions. I fully support the decriminalization of psilocybin and other “entheogenic” substances. Individuals should have the freedom to grow/gift/gather without government interference, and without lining the pockets of corporations. My hope is that Virginia will simply decriminalize psilocybin (as well as peyote, ibogaine, and psilocyn) and not make the same mistakes that Virginia has made with regard to cannabis. Healing from nature should once again be accessible to all.
HB1078 - Firearms; limitations on use or transfer.
Please move to report HB70, HB509, HB1078, HB1339. Thank you.
HB10: Please remove all State and local government fees for obtaining a CHP. Provided a person is eligible to possess and/or carry a gun, there should be NO cost burden imposed by government, if they require a background check to exercise the Right, especially if it is to determine the Right to carry concealed, where there is NO government approval required to openly carry. This additional cost to exercise a Right is wrong. Sometimes the cost burden is another impediment to some citizens who could more benefit from concealed carry than others who can more readily absorb the cost. Avoid this whole question by passing Constitutional Carry, preserving CHPs for the excepted venues and latitudes. HB11: Remove all penalties for carrying a concealed handgun, provided a person is not otherwise precluded from carrying a handgun. Pass Constitutional Carry. HB204: Change from five days to three. HB325: How a person determines something -- including a firearm -- is "lost" may not be anywhere near how the Commonwealth's Attorney decides it was "lost". If you look for it for two weeks, and then decide it's "lost", report it, and the prosecutor decides it was lost two weeks ago -- when one may have started the 'due-diligence' search -- and then criminalize the reporting citizen, this is counterproductive and victimizing. With that peril, why would one then report it? HB399: Criminalize crime, not possession. HB590: Stop prescribing and micromanaging how one -- or a family -- keeps firearms. Encourage responsible possession and storage, and have investigations of responsibility determine liability and penalties. HB 1078: Exempt Gift transfers, and offer NO-cost background check options for those. That way, if someone prefers that surety for a Gift, they retain a no-cost option. Thank you for receiving my comments, and for your service to Virginians.
I STRONGLY SUPPORT HB 10 I STRONGLY SUPPORT HB 11 I STRONGLY SUPPORT HB 204 I STRONGLY SUPPORT HB 325 I STRONGLY SUPPORT HB 399 I STRONGLY OPPOSE HB 590 I STRONGLY SUPPORT MODIFIED BILL HB 1078 I STRONGLY SUPPORT BILL IF IT IS FIXED AND COMPLIES WITH FEDERAL LAW OTHERWISE I STRONGLY OPPOSE HB 1306
Delegates, HB 10, Delegate Anderson, removes all fees for a person to get a concealed handgun permit (CHP). It’s bad enough that gun owners need a permit to exercise their right to self-defense using a concealed handgun, they certainly shouldn’t have to pay a fee to do so. The fee is similar to a “poll tax" and I think it should be eliminated. I support this bill. HB 11, Delegate Anderson, reduces the penalties for carrying a concealed handgun without a CHP. The first offense is up to a $100 civil penalty, which avoids criminalizing someone who is innocently carrying a concealed handgun and is unaware of the requirement for a CHP or is unaware the method of carry is considered “concealed.” The second offense is raised to a Class 2 misdemeanor, and subsequent offenses are a Class 1 misdemeanor. If a person acquires a valid CHP while awaiting trial, which the bill allows for, the judge may dismiss the charge. I support this bill. HB 204, Delegate Wachsmann, changes the number of days that the state can delay a firearm transfer from five days to three days, matching federal law. I support this bill. HB 325, Delegate Freitas, repeals the requirement that a person who has their gun stolen must report it within 48 hours after the person discovers the loss. This law is unenforceable, as how does the Commonwealth know when a person discovered their gun missing, if they realized it at all? HB 399, Delegate Simon, makes the possession, transfer, sale, or manufacture of a homemade gun a crime, unless at some point federal law requires a frame to be serialized and a federal firearms importer or a federal firearms manufacturer has serialized the frame. This bill would make existing homemade guns illegal and would make 80% receivers illegal, turning innocent citizens into criminals overnight, with no compensation for the loss of their previously legal gun or 80% frame. This bill is tinkering with extremely complicated gun laws. It is also unconstitutional. I strongly oppose this bill. HB 590, Delegate VanVaulkenburg, requires a gun owner in a house where there is a person under 18 to either have a firearm under their immediate control or to store the firearm unloaded in a locked container and the ammunition in a separate locked container. This would make it illegal for someone to have a loaded firearm in a locked container, such as a biometric safe, for use in case of emergency. Also, this is a one-size-fits-all, not recognizing the difference in maturity levels children can have. Children under the age of 18 have used firearms to stop violent home invasions or other serious crimes taking place in their home. I strongly oppose this bill. HB 929, Delegate Batten, exempts holders of a federal “curios and relics” license from a background check when purchasing a firearm. I support this bill. HB 1078, Delegate Cordoza, clarifies that a transfer, but not a sale, between family members does not require a background check. I believe this should be expanded to not punish any transfer of personal property. HB 1306, Delegate Simon, updates the current law to add possession or sale of a firearm which has had its serial number removed or obliterated a crime. As written I oppose this bill. There are some changes that could be made that would be acceptable.
HB10 - I strongly agree with this as getting rid of CHP fees rectifies a violation to our constitutional rights, a fee on carrying a firearm is equivalent to a poll tax and should be immediately removed HB11 - I strongly agree with this as someone should have the opportunity to at least complete their CHP while they have a charge and people should not be going to jail in general for carrying a firearm in otherwise permitted places as it puts a further strain to our prison system and makes bad people out of nonviolent or ignorant people HB325 - I strongly agree with this bill as this rectifies the issue of punishing the victim (aka the person who had their firearm stolen) by removing the civil penalty. Having a fine on top of having your property stolen is just not common sense HB399 - I strongly oppose this terrible bill, it is unconstitutional as creating your own firearm has been protected since the beginning of America's existence. This bill will created felons out of ordinary people overnight. This will also not stop the manufacturing of firearms as material like polymer is available everywhere and will become even more accessible with the availability of 3D printers HB590 - I oppose this bill as safe storage laws are just another impediment for defending your own residence. The proper solution is to leave the discretion up to parents and to educate children to proper firearm safety and to always assume a gun is loaded HB1078 - I support this bill as it gets rid of unenforceable language in Virginia law HB1130 - I oppose this bill on the principle that all citizens should be treated the same HB1306 - I strongly oppose this bill for the reason that it will make lawful citizens illegal overnight and will not be followed by criminals anyway
Dear Delegates, I support all bills that remove restrictions on firearms and oppose all bills that add restrictions to firearms. Anti-gun bills serve only to disarm innocent, law-abiding citizens. They make it easier for real criminals to do harm. Why is this so hard to see? It's obvious. I illustrate why we must protect the rights of gun owners in a song a wrote called Good Folks. You can listen to it and watch the music video here: https://carlahowell.com/product/good-folks/ Thank you for hearing my concerns. Respectfully yours, Carla Howell
I'm a volunteer with Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, and I oppose these bills.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB1118 - Earned sentence credits; credits may be earned by any person committed to the custody of the DOC.
Thank you for allowing us to speak. I believe these men and women deserve the chance to prove they can be better than their past and become grate individuals. Allowing them to earn 15 days for every 30 days served gives them hope that the system isn't completely against them. Having such an amazing opportunity for them will make them try harder, stay out of trouble, and will cause less issues for the facility itself. Obviously not every person incarcerated will take the initiative to be better for this however it gives those who want to do better and who learned from their mistakes an opportunity to prove themselves. Please do not allow this repeal to go through. Everyone deserves a chance. Thank you!
I do not support any bills that criminalize folks
I oppose multiple bills that have made it to the house the one bill regarding Emergency Sex Offenders is the most absurd bill I have ever heard in my life. No one is going to be worried about sexual offending in a State of Emergency number one. For example Dad is on a registry and he has three children who are accepted inside without supervision while dad is kept outside in the storm or natural catastrophe. When you pass bills like this your punishing innocent children and families. What about people who committed murder or child abusers are they treated the same? You Senators and delegates got this wrong and this is harmful to innocent families and children. Now let's talk about the 13,000 children on Sex Offender Registries in Virginia some as young as 7 years of age so Mom , Dad and entire family is allowed in but the child is made to stand outside during a castophre alone and sacred while his or her family are allowed inside these laws are based off fear and gives a false sense of security to the general public. Sex Offense is to broad, urination in public is a registable offense as a Violent Sex Offender, Reprorting a Sex Crime will land you on a Violent Sex Offender Registry such is my sistuation. Please reconsider the harm the harm of this bill
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB1147 - Temporary detention; alternative custody.
I oppose multiple bills that have made it to the house the one bill regarding Emergency Sex Offenders is the most absurd bill I have ever heard in my life. No one is going to be worried about sexual offending in a State of Emergency number one. For example Dad is on a registry and he has three children who are accepted inside without supervision while dad is kept outside in the storm or natural catastrophe. When you pass bills like this your punishing innocent children and families. What about people who committed murder or child abusers are they treated the same? You Senators and delegates got this wrong and this is harmful to innocent families and children. Now let's talk about the 13,000 children on Sex Offender Registries in Virginia some as young as 7 years of age so Mom , Dad and entire family is allowed in but the child is made to stand outside during a castophre alone and sacred while his or her family are allowed inside these laws are based off fear and gives a false sense of security to the general public. Sex Offense is to broad, urination in public is a registable offense as a Violent Sex Offender, Reprorting a Sex Crime will land you on a Violent Sex Offender Registry such is my sistuation. Please reconsider the harm the harm of this bill
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HB1242 - Probation violations; periods of probation and suspension, technical violations.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
HOW CAN PUBLIC COMMENT BE CLOSED??! I CHECKED THIS MORNING, Thurs, 27th Jan, AROUND MID-MORNING, AND IT HADN'T EVEN BEEN OPENED YET. PLEASE EXPLAIN. NORMAN M. ACHIN 540 429 9356
HB1318 - Probation violation guidelines; use of sentencing revocation report and discretionary sentencing.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Not only is it minorities but also whites who seek justice for themselves as well as minorities. Originally from NC I moved to VA to finish a master degree at Regent University. Because of substance abuse and drug addiction off and on over the past 20 yrs, I have experience in both the criminal justice system and in areas of poor minority housing areas. What better way to show society I have been rehabilitated than stay sober and finish a master's degree I started in 2013. I also got involved with local African American pastors to try n change lives through love n hope. Not so fast . Instead only months after getting that masters degree and getting my NC k-12 teaching license reactivatd I was charged with 8 felonies for supposedly forging to checks from an elderly lady whom I was hired to give her dog diabetic shots twice a day everyday. I voluntary went to the investigating detective and gave an honest statement. A statement she supposedly " forgot to hit the record button on" . Add 8000 in attorneys fees and wat did I get. He's just a junkie who took advantage of an old lady. No showing my reformation. Instead 8 felonies with 5 years each felony all ran consecutive. 40 yrs 39 suspended. First felonies ever. No more school teacher possibilities or being a church worker+ masters in theology. All because I had a passionate voice for justice in a white privilege society while I myself lived in Newport news. And now I n my daughter ( who just got a BSN in nursing worries daily dad will have to do 39 yrs if he misses a po appt or has a relapse and gets a negative drug screen. (Especially in lieu he was victim of sexual assault by a retired naval officer which no one ever believe) The commonwealth is most oppressing state I have ever been in and having played div. one baseball in the early nineties I have been around the country. I gave since gotten more involved SO PLEASE DONT STOP THE MOMENTUM THAT THE COMMONWEALTH HAS MADE THE OAST 4 YEARS. VY PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND TO THE REALITY IF SOME LAWS N POLICE BEHAVIOR. ALL BECAUSE THEY ABD THIER FAMILIES GREW UP PRIVILEGED. I AM UNIQUE IN THAT I AM EDUCATED BUT ALSO A ADDICT WHO GAS LUVED IN THAT WIRKD. A WORLD WGEN RECENT THE COMMONWEALTH JUST SAW MY OAST RECORD, REFUSED TO SEE MY SIVRYN ACCOMPLISHED THE LAST 5 YEARS AND DIDN'T EVEN CONSIDER REHAB ( THAT BASED ON THIER ARGUMENT IFME BEING AN ADDICT. NO KETS JUST THROW HIM IN A 6 × 9 FIR ONE YEAR N HE WILL THINK TWICE BEFORE HE USES AGAIN. HIW F ARCHAIC IS THAT THOUGHT PROCESS. WE AS FIRMER ADDICTS AND CRIMINALS ( 99% DUE TO DRUG USE) ARE WILLING TO ADMIT OUR MISTAKES REPAY SOCIETY N MOVE FORWARD BUT UNFORTUNATELY THIS REVERSAL IN LEGISLATION WILL ONLY ADD TO TGE ONCE ANE POSSIBLE SOON TO BE OPPRESSIVE COMMONWEALTH FOR THE POOR UNEDUCATED N THISE WHI STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION. IN CLOSING I LIVE IN A CONSERVATIVE COUNT N CITY NOW BUT THEY SEEM TO GET UT. NOT LIKE SOME OF THE OTHER PRODOMIATELY WHITE COMMUNITY. I AM ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCES W ADDICTION N THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM KEEP TGE MOMENTUM GOING FOR CGANGE HOPE N REHABILITATION. NOT INCARCERATION. SOMETHING WE WOULD NOT EVEN DO TO STRAY ANIMALS
HB1320 - Discretionary sentencing guidelines; midpoint for violent felony offenses, report, effective date.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
Not only is it minorities but also whites who seek justice for themselves as well as minorities. Originally from NC I moved to VA to finish a master degree at Regent University. Because of substance abuse and drug addiction off and on over the past 20 yrs, I have experience in both the criminal justice system and in areas of poor minority housing areas. What better way to show society I have been rehabilitated than stay sober and finish a master's degree I started in 2013. I also got involved with local African American pastors to try n change lives through love n hope. Not so fast . Instead only months after getting that masters degree and getting my NC k-12 teaching license reactivatd I was charged with 8 felonies for supposedly forging to checks from an elderly lady whom I was hired to give her dog diabetic shots twice a day everyday. I voluntary went to the investigating detective and gave an honest statement. A statement she supposedly " forgot to hit the record button on" . Add 8000 in attorneys fees and wat did I get. He's just a junkie who took advantage of an old lady. No showing my reformation. Instead 8 felonies with 5 years each felony all ran consecutive. 40 yrs 39 suspended. First felonies ever. No more school teacher possibilities or being a church worker+ masters in theology. All because I had a passionate voice for justice in a white privilege society while I myself lived in Newport news. And now I n my daughter ( who just got a BSN in nursing worries daily dad will have to do 39 yrs if he misses a po appt or has a relapse and gets a negative drug screen. (Especially in lieu he was victim of sexual assault by a retired naval officer which no one ever believe) The commonwealth is most oppressing state I have ever been in and having played div. one baseball in the early nineties I have been around the country. I gave since gotten more involved SO PLEASE DONT STOP THE MOMENTUM THAT THE COMMONWEALTH HAS MADE THE OAST 4 YEARS. VY PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND TO THE REALITY IF SOME LAWS N POLICE BEHAVIOR. ALL BECAUSE THEY ABD THIER FAMILIES GREW UP PRIVILEGED. I AM UNIQUE IN THAT I AM EDUCATED BUT ALSO A ADDICT WHO GAS LUVED IN THAT WIRKD. A WORLD WGEN RECENT THE COMMONWEALTH JUST SAW MY OAST RECORD, REFUSED TO SEE MY SIVRYN ACCOMPLISHED THE LAST 5 YEARS AND DIDN'T EVEN CONSIDER REHAB ( THAT BASED ON THIER ARGUMENT IFME BEING AN ADDICT. NO KETS JUST THROW HIM IN A 6 × 9 FIR ONE YEAR N HE WILL THINK TWICE BEFORE HE USES AGAIN. HIW F ARCHAIC IS THAT THOUGHT PROCESS. WE AS FIRMER ADDICTS AND CRIMINALS ( 99% DUE TO DRUG USE) ARE WILLING TO ADMIT OUR MISTAKES REPAY SOCIETY N MOVE FORWARD BUT UNFORTUNATELY THIS REVERSAL IN LEGISLATION WILL ONLY ADD TO TGE ONCE ANE POSSIBLE SOON TO BE OPPRESSIVE COMMONWEALTH FOR THE POOR UNEDUCATED N THISE WHI STRUGGLE WITH ADDICTION. IN CLOSING I LIVE IN A CONSERVATIVE COUNT N CITY NOW BUT THEY SEEM TO GET UT. NOT LIKE SOME OF THE OTHER PRODOMIATELY WHITE COMMUNITY. I AM ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO SHARE MY EXPERIENCES W ADDICTION N THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM KEEP TGE MOMENTUM GOING FOR CGANGE HOPE N REHABILITATION. NOT INCARCERATION. SOMETHING WE WOULD NOT EVEN DO TO STRAY ANIMALS
HB16 - Safe haven protections; newborn safety device at hospitals for reception of children.
Dear Delegate, Protect religious freedom, vote YES for HB 306! Our religious freedoms do not end just because government bureaucrats declare a public health emergency. Our First Amendment rights apply at all times. Thank you, Kellie M. Good
Correction: Please vote YES for house bill 306! No one should be punished for exercising their right to religious freedom!!!!!
Please vote YES for house bill 106! No one should be punished for exercising their right to religious freedom!!!!!
I am requesting you vote yes on HB 306. The State Health Commisioner has entirely too much power and this bill will protect our citizens from having to submit to unwanted therapies. Too much is being revealed about the Covid 19 vaccines and we can never, never let this happen again Thank you
Thank you, Chairman Orrock, and committee members. Thank you, patron, Delegate Fowler, for working to expand our state’s Safe Haven law. We are following the Safe Haven efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom to decide if she can parent her baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally (I speak from experience as a mom myself), and can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth. Parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days of age for relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and also approved funding for safe haven law awareness. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider state funding for this law’s promotion/awareness. For Safe Haven laws to be effective, education and awareness is crucial. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence, the process involved, and the resources available to them. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Delegate Fowler and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to express our support for HB 16.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, and committee members: Thank you for the opportunity to comment on HB 16 and thank you, Delegate Fowler, for your work updating our state’s Safe Haven law. We, Virginia is for Children (an advocacy group for the lives of vulnerable children in our state), are following the Safe Haven law efforts and are fully supportive of the extension to thirty days of age for infant relinquishment. This is a reasonable, standard amount of time for a mom/parent to conclude that they cannot parent their baby OR, change their mind and decide they can parent their baby. Such a significant, life-altering decision does not need to be rushed or hurried. We know that moms who have just given birth, especially those who are alone, need time to recover physically and emotionally. Moms can experience postpartum depression after the birth of child, this typically occurs within the first 1-3 weeks after birth, parents can be in desperate situations- experiencing homelessness, abuse, addiction and need time to get help. Twenty-one states are now at thirty days for age of relinquishment. Utah just extended their law to thirty days in February, 2020 and approved funding for safe haven law awareness. Extending this law can potentially save more infants from abuse, neglect, and abandonment and give parents the time they need to make important decisions. We hope the committee will approve the extension and consider providing state funding for safe haven law awareness and promotion of safe haven locations or “safe baby sites”. Not enough parents are informed about the law’s existence and the process involved. Our group is especially interested in a state funded, DSS promoted, 24-hour confidential, crisis hotline that would provide intervention and support for women in crisis pregnancies and struggling parents, so that they can get the help they need to parent their baby. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and committee members for your time and for the opportunity to voice our support of this bill. Sincerely, Leah Kipley VA is for Children
My name is Julia Szabuniewicz and I represent the Virginia Catholic Conference, and we support HB 16. This is a bill would further help mothers in crisis situations and provide only more resources for her and her newborn child. Many mothers-in-crisis are experiencing immense fear and uncertainty, and we believe providing a window of 30 days is a more flexible standard to provide these mothers. More infants will be saved by providing a larger window of time for women in these crisis situations and we hope the committee will support this expansion of our safe haven law. Ensuring the equipment that the baby has been placed fully ensures the child’s safety. We believe this is a positive improvement which expands the resources that mothers-in-crisis have while also ensuring the safety of the newborn child.