Legislator
State Representative
Joe Hohenstein
(D) - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania House District 177
In Office
contact info
Capitol Office
Irvis Office Building
P.O. Box 202177
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2177
P.O. Box 202177
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2177
Phone: 717-783-4087
Philadelphia Office (Torresdale Ave.)
7104 Torresdale Ave.
Philadelphia, PA 19135-1313
Philadelphia, PA 19135-1313
Vote Record By Category
| Category | Vote Index | Total Score |
|---|---|---|
| Criminal Justice | 79 |
20
|
| Privacy | 100 |
8
|
| Due Process | 62 |
3
|
| Police Practices | 100 |
3
|
| Immigrants' Rights | 100 |
2
|
| Reproductive Freedom | 100 |
2
|
| Voting Rights | 75 |
2
|
| Religious Liberty | 100 |
1
|
| Open Government | 50 |
0
|
| All Bills | 82 |
31
|
Rated Bill Votes
| Bill | Bill Name | Motion | Vote Date | Rating | Vote | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HB256 | Penalty enhancement for assault against corrections staff | House Floor: HB 256 PN 2919, FP | 12/18/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 256 would enhance the grading of simple assault from a misdemeanor to a felony and increases an aggravated assault against corrections staff from a second-degree to first-degree felony, punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 256
|
| HB256 | Penalty enhancement for assault against corrections staff | House Floor: HB 256 PN 4054, CONCUR | 07/07/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 256 would enhance the grading of simple assault from a misdemeanor to a felony and increases an aggravated assault against corrections staff from a second-degree to first-degree felony, punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 256
|
| HB257 | Mandatory consecutive sentences for incarcerated people | House Floor: HB 257 PN 3053, FP | 12/18/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 257 would add 11 new offenses, including misdemeanors, to the list of offenses that impose mandatory consecutive sentences if those offenses are committed against prison staff by a resident.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 257
|
| HB276 | Marsy's Law — Victim's rights constitutional amendment | House Floor: HB 276 PN 284, 2019 A111, DAWKINS | 03/11/2019 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to align the definition of "victim" in HB 276 with the current statutory definition under the Crime Victims Act of 1998.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | Marsy's Law
|
| HB276 | Marsy's Law — Victim's rights constitutional amendment | House Floor: HB 276 PN 284, 2019 A113, DAWKINS | 03/11/2019 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to prohibit a victim's right "to refuse an interview, deposition, or discovery request" if the request was a lawfully issued subpoena or court order.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | Marsy's Law
|
| HB276 | Marsy's Law — Victim's rights constitutional amendment | House Floor: HB 276 PN 284, 2019 A107, D. MILLER | 03/11/2019 | 1 | Yea |
Gut-and-replace amendment to expand certain victim services while removing provisions that conflicted with or limited due process rights of the accused.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | Marsy's Law
|
| HB276 | Marsy's Law — Victim's rights constitutional amendment | House Floor: HB 276 PN 284, FP | 04/08/2019 | -1 | Yea |
Marsy's Law proposed a crime victims "bill of rights" amendment to the PA Constitution. But the protections it offered victims needlessly and dangerously limited well-established, constitutional due process rights of the accused.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | Marsy's Law
|
| HB321 | Abortion ban following fetal diagnosis | House Floor: HB 321 PN 1404, FP | 05/14/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 321 would unconstitutionally prohibit terminating a pregnancy following a fetal diagnosis of Down syndrome. Any person violating this provision could be charged with a third-degree felony.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 321
|
| HB365 | Eviction without due process | House Floor: HB 365 PN 2490, FP | 09/18/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 365 is intended to prevent illegal trespassing (“squatting”), but would allow police to evict people from residential properties based solely on probable cause, thereby permitting legitimate owners and occupants to be evicted from their residences without basic due process rights.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 365
|
| HB440 | Record expungement, sealing, and Clean Slate expansion | House Floor: HB 440 PN 3054, FP | 12/18/2019 | 1 | Yea |
For people who have been pardoned, HB 440 would require that their criminal charges be automatically sealed. For those who have been fully acquitted, those charges would be automatically expunged from their criminal record. The bill would also expand PA’s Clean Slate law by removing the obligation to pay outstanding court fines and costs (except restitution) before eligible cases can be sealed.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 440
|
| HB440 | Record expungement, sealing, and Clean Slate expansion | House Floor: HB 440 PN 4546, CONCUR | 10/21/2020 | 1 | Yea |
For people who have been pardoned, HB 440 would require that their criminal charges be automatically sealed. For those who have been fully acquitted, those charges would be automatically expunged from their criminal record. The bill would also expand PA’s Clean Slate law by removing the obligation to pay outstanding court fines and costs (except restitution) before eligible cases can be sealed.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 440
|
| HB503 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: HB 503 PN 491, 2019 A112, D. MILLER | 03/11/2019 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to narrow / clarify the definition of medical or therapeutic support personnel permitted to submit hearsay testimony related to the person with an intellectual disability or autism.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 503 + HB 505
|
| HB503 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: HB 503 PN 862, FP | 04/09/2019 | -1 | Yea |
HB 503 would create a new hearsay exception to allow out-of-court statements from victims or witnesses — of any age — diagnosed with an intellectual disability or autism to be admissible as evidence in criminal or civil trials. The Tender Years Hearsay Act currently permits hearsay to be admitted only for those 12 years and younger.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 503 + HB 505
|
| HB505 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: HB 505 PN 493, FP | 04/09/2019 | -1 | Yea |
Pennsylvania's Tender Years Hearsay Act allows out-of-court statements made by individuals 12 years of age or younger to be entered into evidence under specific conditions. HB 505 would significantly expand the list of offenses for which hearsay statements may be admitted, further eroding due process rights of the accused.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 503 + HB 505
|
| HB726 | Mandatory minimum sentence for offenses committed with firearms | House Floor: HB 726 PN 762, FP | 01/13/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 726 would require five-year mandatory minimum sentences for those who possess a firearm or a replica of a firearm while committing a “crime of violence” and would require that these sentences run consecutively (back-to-back) with any other sentence the court imposes.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 726
|
| HB916 | DUI penalty enhancements and electronic monitoring (Deana's Law) | House Floor: HB 916 PN 2582, FP | 01/13/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 916 would mandate electronic surveillance of people before they have been convicted of a crime, would punish people who are too poor to pay monitoring costs, would impose mandatory consecutive sentences, and would further expand excessive penalties for DUI-related offenses.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 916
|
| HB916 | DUI penalty enhancements and electronic monitoring (Deana's Law) | House Floor: HB 916 PN 4618, CONCUR | 11/20/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 916 would mandate electronic surveillance of people before they have been convicted of a crime, would punish people who are too poor to pay monitoring costs, would impose mandatory consecutive sentences, and would further expand excessive penalties for DUI-related offenses.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 916
|
| HB1170 | E-Verify for construction industry | House Floor: HB 1170 PN 2009, 2019 A1881, D. MILLER | 06/12/2019 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to exempt those on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipient list from the definition of "unauthorized employee."
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1170
|
| HB1170 | E-Verify for construction industry | House Floor: HB 1170 PN 2129, FP | 06/17/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 1170 would expand mandatory E-Verify to the construction industry in Pennsylvania. It would impose unnecessary burdens on construction workers and businesses and would contribute to a massive government database of workers’ information that could be used to facilitate additional forms of data surveillance.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1170
|
| HB1477 | Occupational licensure reform | House Floor: HB 1477 PN 3057, FP | 12/18/2019 | 1 | Yea |
HB 1477 would ensure that individuals with a criminal record are not automatically excluded from earning an occupational license simply because of their criminal history.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 637 + HB 1477
|
| HB1538 | Delay of parole hearings | House Floor: HB 1538 PN 1955, FP | 06/19/2019 | -1 | Yea |
Under current law, people are entitled to parole consideration once a year, except in very limited cases. HB 1538 would add 13 new offenses to this statute, which would require people convicted of those offenses to wait three years (instead of one year) to reapply for parole if parole was previously denied.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1538
|
| HB1538 | Delay of parole hearings | House Floor: HB 1538 PN 3666, CONCUR | 11/18/2020 | -1 | Nay |
Under current law, people are entitled to parole consideration once a year, except in very limited cases. HB 1538 would add 13 new offenses to this statute, which would require people convicted of those offenses to wait three years (instead of one year) to reapply for parole if parole was previously denied.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1538
|
| HB1780 | Exempts volunteer EMS and fire companies from right to know requests | House Floor: HB 1780 PN 2370, FP | 10/22/2019 | -1 | Yea |
HB 1780 would exempt the records of a volunteer fire, EMS, or rescue company from access under the Right to Know Law.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1780
|
| HB1827 | Penalty enhancements for aiding or causing suicide (Shawn's Law) | House Floor: HB 1827 PN 3696, 2019 A5454, D. MILLER | 05/19/2020 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to require that the defendant knew or should have known that the person who died by suicide was under 18 years of age or had an intellectual disability.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1827
|
| HB1827 | Penalty enhancements for aiding or causing suicide (Shawn's Law) | House Floor: HB 1827 PN 3807, FP | 05/20/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 1827 would enhance the penalty for causing or aiding suicide when the person who died by suicide is under 18 years old or has an intellectual disability from a second-degree to first-degree felony, which is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Causing or aiding suicide is already heavily penalized under current law and there is nothing in the bill that requires a person to know that the person is under 18 years old or has an intellectual disability.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1827
|
| HB1841 | Police disciplinary database | House Floor: HB 1841 PN 4011, FP | 06/24/2020 | 1 | Yea |
HB 1841 would mandate background reporting and investigations for prospective law enforcement applicants and requires that those records are maintained in an electronic database. The database is accessible to law enforcement agencies to screen potential officers before hiring, which may help reduce the number of problematic and abusive police officers moving easily from one jurisdiction to another.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1841
|
| HB1855 | Mandatory parole postponement (Markie's Law) | House Floor: HB 1855 PN 3055, FP | 12/18/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 1855 would keep people needlessly incarcerated by delaying consideration of parole by adding a mandatory 12-24 months to a person's minimum date of release, depending on the offense.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1855
|
| HB1890 | Disposition of fetal remains | House Floor: HB 1890 PN 2623, FP | 11/18/2019 | -1 | Nay |
HB 1890 would mandate hospitals or clinics to arrange for ritual disposal (via burial or cremation) of all medical tissue from a miscarriage or abortion, no matter how early in the pregnancy. Current law already requires the bill's procedures for pregnancies that end after 16 weeks. By requiring ritual disposal before 16 weeks gestation, HB 1890 dangerously expands the definition of a fetus, violates a woman's privacy, and imposes undue burdens on women, their doctors, and medical facilities.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1890
|
| HB1910 | Police training and PTSD screening | House Floor: HB 1910 PN 4012, FP | 06/24/2020 | 1 | Yea |
HB 1910 would provide training to officers on interacting with individuals of diverse racial, ethnic and economic backgrounds; implicit bias training; recognizing and reporting child abuse; and annual training on the use of appropriate force. In addition, the bill would require police officers to be tested for post-traumatic stress disorder every two years and within 30 days of any lethal use-of-force incident.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 1910
|
| HB2056 | Aggravated assault against people with disabilities (Cody's Law) | House Floor: HB 2056 PN 2969, 2019 A5430, D. MILLER | 05/19/2020 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to require that the defendant knew or should have known that the person had a physical disability, an intellectual disability or an autism spectrum disorder.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2056
|
| HB2056 | Aggravated assault against people with disabilities (Cody's Law) | House Floor: HB 2056 PN 3800, FP | 05/20/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 2056 would eliminate the requirement to cause or attempt to cause “serious bodily injury” and allow prosecutors to charge an assault as aggravated whenever a simple assault is committed against a person with a physical or intellectual disability. In other words, it treats a simple assault as aggravated, increasing the penalties from up to 2 years in prison for a second-degree misdemeanor to up to 10 years for a second-degree felony.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2056
|
| HB2342 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: HB 2342 PN 3447, FP | 06/23/2020 | -1 | Nay |
Pennsylvania's Tender Years Hearsay Act is a hearsay exception that allows out-of-court statements made by individuals 12 years of age or younger to be entered into evidence under specific conditions. HB 2342 would uniformly expand the Tender Years Hearsay Act to allow the introduction of hearsay statements made by people 16 years of age or younger, further eroding the due process right to confront one's accuser.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2342
|
| HB2463 | Right to Know access during disaster declarations | House Floor: HB 2463 PN 3713, FP | 05/05/2020 | 1 | Yea |
HB 2463 would ensure that the Right to Know Law remains in effect during disaster declarations. The bill would require commonwealth agencies to continue to follow procedures established by the Office of Open Records, even if they are otherwise closed due to the emergency declaration.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2463
|
| HB2530 | Religious restrictions during disaster declarations | House Floor: HB 2530 PN 3782, FP | 09/15/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 2530 would amend Pennsylvania’s Religious Freedom Protection Act to prevent any order under a disaster declaration from restricting religious assembly. While the ACLU-PA would not normally oppose a protection of religious exercise, this bill attempts to establish religious assembly as an absolute right, which would likely violate both the U.S. and Pennsylvania constitutions.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2530
|
| HB2626 | Election administration | House Floor: HB 2626 PN 4335, FP | 09/02/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HB 2626 would include some beneficial updates to the recent election reforms under Act 77 of 2019. But it would also implement last minute changes before the 2020 general election, including eliminating ballot drop boxes, allowing out-of-county PA electors to serve as poll watchers, and moving the deadline to request an absentee or mail ballot a week earlier, creating needless confusion and potential disenfranchisement of voters.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HB 2626
|
| HR1032 | House Select Committee on Election Integrity | House State Government: Report Bill As Committed | 09/30/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HR 1032 would create a House select committee with subpoena power, charged with investigating, reviewing and making recommendations concerning the regulation and conduct of the 2020 general election. The powers delegated to this select committee were broad and its provisions poorly defined, creating a dangerous mechanism for legislative election interference.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HR 1032
|
| HR1100 | Legislative audit of 2020 general election | House Floor: HR 1100 PN 4611 | 11/19/2020 | -1 | Nay |
HR 1100 would direct the Legislative Budget and Finance Committee to coordinate an audit of ballots canvassed in the 2020 general election. While the ACLU-PA strongly supports measures that ensure greater transparency and accuracy in election tallies, this rushed resolution would not only duplicate elements of existing audits, but its parameters appear to be constructed to "prove" a pre-determined outcome.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | HR 1100
|
| SB351 | Expansion of protected employment under aggravated assault statute | House Floor: SB 351 PN 341, FP | 06/23/2020 | -1 | Nay |
SB 351 would add ''health practitioner or technician'' to the list of 38 officers or employees to Pennsylvania's aggravated assault statute, which grades a simple assault as aggravated. Ceaselessly expanding this list would all but render the offense of simple assault meaningless. It metes out greater punishment based not on the intent or severity of the assault, but rather on the employment status of the victim.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 351
|
| SB421 | Comprehensive voting reform | House Floor: SB 421 PN 1330, FP | 10/29/2019 | 1 | Nay |
SB 421 would make the most significant (and badly needed) reforms to Pennsylvania's election code in decades. Some of the bill's most important changes include: providing more time for people to register to vote and to request a mail ballot before each election; expanding ballot access by permitting vote-by-mail; and allocating $90 million to ensure each county uses voting machines with a voter-verified paper trail.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 421
|
| SB469 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: SB 469 PN 476, FP | 06/19/2019 | -1 | Nay |
SB 469 would create a new hearsay exception to allow out-of-court statements from victims or witnesses — of any age — diagnosed with an intellectual disability or autism to be admissible as evidence in criminal or civil trials. The Tender Years Hearsay Act currently permits hearsay to be admitted only for those 12 years and younger.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 469
|
| SB479 | Expansion of "tender years" hearsay exception | House Floor: SB 479 PN 498, FP | 06/19/2019 | -1 | Yea |
Pennsylvania's Tender Years Hearsay Act allows out-of-court statements made by individuals 12 years of age or younger to be entered into evidence under specific conditions. SB 479 would significantly expand the list of offenses for which hearsay statements may be admitted, further eroding due process rights of the accused.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 479
|
| SB500 | Justice Reinvestment Initiative II — County Adult Probation and Parole | House Floor: SB 500 PN 1433, FP | 12/17/2019 | 1 | Yea |
One of three JRI II bills, SB 500 would establish the County Adult Probation and Parole Advisory Committee within the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency. The Committee is tasked with funding and overseeing improvements to county probation. The bill also provides a funding mechanism to support the Justice Reinvestment Fund and county adult probation and parole departments.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 500
|
| SB501 | Justice Reinvestment Initiative II | House Floor: SB 501 PN 1423, 2019 A4206, KAUFFMAN | 12/16/2019 | -1 | Yea |
Amendment permitting courts to revoke probation for vague threats to public safety.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 501
|
| SB501 | Justice Reinvestment Initiative II | House Floor: SB 501 PN 1434, FP | 12/17/2019 | -1 | Yea |
One of three JRI II bills, SB 501 would impose: mandatory minimum sentences; a mandatory period of parole; an unconstitutional procedure to revoke probation and incarcerate someone without requisite due process protections; the use of a problematic risk assessment instrument; would excessively garnish residents' wage and commissary accounts; and would permit courts to revoke probation for vague threats to public safety.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 501
|
| SB637 | Occupational license reform | House Floor: SB 637 PN 1815, FP | 06/24/2020 | 1 | Yea |
SB 637 would ensure that individuals with a criminal record are not automatically excluded from earning an occupational license simply because of their criminal history.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 637 + HB 1477
|
| SB773 | DUI penalty enhancements and electronic monitoring (Deana's Law) | House Floor: SB 773 PN 1771, 2019 A7729, CARROLL | 10/20/2020 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to make recent reforms to driver's license suspensions retroactive.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 773
|
| SB773 | DUI penalty enhancements and electronic monitoring (Deana's Law) | House Floor: SB 773 PN 1771, 2019 A6317, WHEATLEY | 10/20/2020 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to include provisions from HB 80, providing a Driver’s License Amnesty Program.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 773
|
| SB773 | DUI penalty enhancements and electronic monitoring (Deana's Law) | House Floor: SB 773 PN 1771, 2019 A6303, CARROLL | 10/20/2020 | 1 | Yea |
Amendment to exempt medical marijuana from the definition of controlled substance.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 773
|
| SB1110 | Release of protected health information to first responders | House Floor: SB 1110 PN 2107, FP | 10/21/2020 | 1 | Yea |
SB 1110 aims to assist public safety personnel by sharing the address of anyone who tests positive for a communicable disease that is the subject of a disaster declaration. Health departments would share addresses with a confirmed positive case to 911 centers. This means that dispatch centers are the only entities that receive this data and it is only shared with public safety personnel when they are responding to a call at that address.
ACLU-PA Bill Page | SB 1110
|
Rated Sponored Bills
| Bill | Bill Name | Rating | Comments |
|---|