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Bill > SB96


NH SB96

NH SB96
Relative to establishing a body-worn and in-car camera fund and making an appropriation therefor; amending juvenile delinquency proceedings and transfers to superior court; and establishing committees to study the role and scope of authority of school resource officers and the collection of race and ethnicity data on state identification cards.


summary

Introduced
01/26/2021
In Committee
05/24/2021
Crossed Over
04/13/2021
Passed
07/23/2021
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
08/30/2021

Introduced Session

2021 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill: I. Amends the municipal retention schedule for certain police non-criminal internal affairs investigations. II. Requires the memorandum of understanding between a school district and a school resource officer to be made public and establishes a committee to study the role and scope of authority of school resource officers. III. Establishes a body-worn and in-car camera fund and makes an appropriation therefor. IV. Amends the juvenile delinquency statutes to exclude any child under 13 years of age unless he or she has committed a violent crime, and removes certain criminal offenses as the basis for transferring a delinquent child to superior court. V. Establishes a committee to study whether the state should collect race and ethnicity data to be included on state identification cards.

AI Summary

This bill: 1. Amends the municipal retention schedule for certain police non-criminal internal affairs investigations, requiring them to be retained for 20 years after the retirement or termination of the subject officer. 2. Requires the memorandum of understanding between a school district and a school resource officer to be made public and establishes a committee to study the role and scope of authority of school resource officers. 3. Establishes a body-worn and in-car camera fund within the Department of Safety, which will provide grants to local law enforcement agencies to cover up to one-half of the purchase and replacement costs of body-worn and in-car cameras. The bill appropriates $1 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2022 to this fund. 4. Amends the juvenile delinquency statutes to exclude any child under 13 years of age from proceedings under the chapter, unless the child has committed a violent crime. It also removes certain criminal offenses as the basis for transferring a delinquent child to superior court. 5. Establishes a committee to study whether the state should collect race and ethnicity data to be included on state identification cards.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (15)

Last Action

II. Remainder Effective 10/24/2021 (on 08/30/2021)

bill text


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