Bill
Bill > HF756
IA HF756
IA HF756A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the department of management, making appropriations, and including applicability provisions.(Formerly HSB 72; See HF 1028.)
summary
Introduced
03/05/2025
03/05/2025
In Committee
03/05/2025
03/05/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill relates to matters under the purview of the department of management (DOM). Under current law, the governor’s budget recommendation is considered confidential by the legislative services agency until it is made public by the governor. The bill states that information transmitted by state entities to DOM for developing the budget as required by law, and documents based on the transmittals, are confidential until the governor transmits the budget to the general assembly. The bill strikes current law providing for the use of moneys in the technology reinvestment fund for certain technology projects and instead appropriates moneys in the fund to DOM for technology projects using factors set forth in the bill. The bill requires DOM to provide a prioritized list of proposed projects to the governor, who must use the list to develop a budgetary recommendation to the general assembly, and to report completed and ongoing projects to the general assembly annually. The bill increases the frequency at which a person performing work for DOM or an individual on the information technology staff of a supported entity may be subject to a national criminal history check through the federal bureau of investigation from at least once every 10 years to every 5 years. The bill prohibits the inclusion of certain provisions in information technology contracts and declares those provisions void if present in such contracts. The bill also provides that such contracts are deemed to include provisions requiring the contract to be governed by Iowa law and litigation related to the contract to be brought and maintained in an appropriate state or federal court sitting in Iowa. The bill authorizes the director of DOM to include limitations of vendor liability in information technology goods and services contracts, but sets forth prohibited terms in such limitations of liability. The bill makes all communication concerning cybersecurity between the chief information security officer and other entities confidential and allows the communications to be released only for specific purposes. Under current law, the department of health and human services serves as the Iowa statistical analysis center and maintains an integrated information system for data sharing among federal, state, and local governments. The bill transfers these powers and duties to DOM and grants DOM access to criminal justice information other than intelligence data and peace officer investigative reports maintained by the department of public safety. DOM is authorized to provide data analysis and reporting on issues that may affect the state’s correctional population and various subgroups of the population, to maintain a multiagency information system to track the progress of juveniles and adults charged with a criminal offense through state and local agencies and programs, and to count and track decision points for individuals in the juvenile justice system, child welfare system, and court system. If DOM lacks sufficient moneys to perform the authorized tasks of the Iowa statistical analysis center, the bill allows DOM to determine which, if any, to implement. The bill states that DOM is not the lawful custodian under Code chapter 22 (open records) for records DOM maintains in DOM’s information technology capacity for other state entities as an automated data processing unit of government or when held by DOM solely for storage for another department or establishment. The bill requires DOM to deny requests for information for which DOM is not the lawful custodian, to provide assistance to the lawful custodian to comply with production obligations, and to cooperate in any efforts to resist associated subpoenas.
AI Summary
This bill makes several significant changes to state management and technology processes. It establishes new provisions for the Department of Management's technology reinvestment fund, including a comprehensive set of criteria for prioritizing and funding technology projects that enhance state infrastructure and services. The bill introduces new requirements for state contracts, prohibiting certain terms that could potentially expose the state to unnecessary financial or legal risks, such as provisions requiring automatic renewals, waiving jury trial rights, or imposing confidentiality on payment terms. The legislation also creates new confidentiality protections for communications related to cybersecurity and data sharing, particularly for the chief information security officer and criminal justice information systems. Additionally, the bill modifies background check requirements for information technology staff, reducing the interval between national criminal history checks from ten to five years. The bill transfers certain statistical analysis and criminal justice planning responsibilities from one department to another and repeals some existing sections of law. Notably, the technology reinvestment fund will now receive an annual appropriation of $17.5 million and will have more structured guidelines for project selection and funding.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
State Government (House)
Last Action
Withdrawn. H.J. 1073. (on 04/28/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HF756 |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/HF756.html |
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