Legislator
State Senator
Katie Muth
(D) - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Senate District 44
In Office
contact info
Capitol Office
Main Capitol
Senate Box 203044
Harrisburg, PA 17120-3044
Senate Box 203044
Harrisburg, PA 17120-3044
Phone: 717-787-1398
Royersford Office
338 Main St.
Royersford, PA 19468
Royersford, PA 19468
Phone: 610-792-2137
Vote Record By Category
| Category | Vote Index | Total Score |
|---|---|---|
| Due Process | 100 |
4
|
| Voting Rights/Elections | 100 |
3
|
| TLGBQ+ Equality | 100 |
2
|
| Drug Policy | 100 |
2
|
| Immigrants' Rights | 100 |
2
|
| Open Government | 75 |
2
|
| Student & Youth Rights | 100 |
2
|
| Criminal Justice | 55 |
1
|
| First Amendment Rights | 100 |
1
|
| Racial Equality | 0 |
0
|
| Police Practices | 0 |
-1
|
| All Bills | 72 |
8
|
Rated Bill Votes
| Bill | Bill Name | Motion | Vote Date | Rating | Vote | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HB439 | CROWN Act | Senate Floor: PN0996, Final Passage | 11/19/2025 | 1 | Abstain |
SUPPORT: HB 439, known as the CROWN Act, would amend the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act to expand the definition of “race” to include traits associated with race, including hair texture and protective hairstyles. HB 439 would prohibit racial discrimination of hair texture and protective hairstyles historically associated with race without infringing on an employer's right to implement otherwise valid workplace health and safety rules or policies.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 439
|
| HB1934 | Right to access state agency records | Senate Floor: PN2433, Final Passage | 02/04/2026 | -1 | Abstain |
OPPOSE: HB 1934 would actually make it harder for people to obtain information in lawsuits against the Commonwealth. The proposed changes would create confusion, inconsistency, and more red tape. Each agency would have to develop its own procedures for handling discovery, leading to delays and inefficiencies that make it harder for Pennsylvanians to hold the government accountable.
|
| SB9 | Banning trans girls from school sports | Senate Floor: SB 9 PN 177, Final Passage | 05/06/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 9 PN 177 would ban transgender girls and women from participating on athletic teams or in sports from K-college. Trans youth have the right to participate in sports consistent with who they are and denying them that right is blatantly unconstitutional and discriminatory.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 9
|
| SB65 | Increased penalties for overtaking a school bus | Senate Floor: SB 65 PN 486, Final Passage | 09/10/2025 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: SB 65 would increase fines and enhance penalties for repeat violations related to school bus safety. While the intent to protect children is laudable, the evidence shows that increasing penalties will not improve compliance or safety. Current penalties are already severe, including substantial fines and mandatory license suspensions.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 65
|
| SB92 | Mandatory minimum sentences for drug delivery (Tyler's Law) | Senate Floor: SB 92 PN 472, Final Passage | 04/01/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 92 would impose a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years and a fine of $15,000 (or more) for any person convicted of drug delivery resulting in death if the person had two or more prior convictions, or any person who “received anything of value" in exchange for any controlled or counterfeit controlled substance. Not only would SB 92 result in the imprisonment of people suffering from substance use disorder, it would impose the ineffective blunt instrument of mandatory minimums.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 92
|
| SB96 | Increased penalties for threats against schools | Senate Floor: SB 96 PN 51, Final Passage | 04/01/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 96 would make *any threat* against a school or educational facility a third-degree felony, punishable by up to 7 years in prison and $15,000 in fines. But current law already punishes threats against a school as a third-degree felony if it resulted in people being "diverted from their normal operations." As such, SB 96 is both needlessly broad and likely redundant.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 96
|
| SB210 | Duplicating offenses against transit workers (Bernard Gribbin’s Law) | Senate Floor: SB 210 PN 150, Final Passage | 02/05/2025 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: SB 210 would create a new criminal offense, with five suboffenses, to punish harm or attempted harm to public transit operators. Each of these offenses are already criminalized under current law and as such, are duplicative and unnecessary.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 210
|
| SB306 | Constitutional amendment tracking | Senate State Government: PN0243, Reported as Committed | 05/06/2025 | 1 | Yea |
SUPPORT: SB 306 would establish a useful, transparent mechanism to publicly monitor the status of the procedural steps required for a proposed amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution during the critical time after the General Assembly passes the amendment in a second consecutive session and before it appears on the ballot for voters to approve or reject.
ACLU-PA Support for SB 306
|
| SB347 | Criminalizing overdose prevention sites | Senate Floor: SB 347 PN 284, Final Passage | 04/01/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 347 would charge any overdose prevention center with a felony, punishable by up to 20 years in prison and up to $500,000 in fines for an individual or up to $2,000,000 in fines for a clinic. These penalties EXCEED the statutory maximum penalties for a first-degree felony. In other words, the penalty for providing a safe space that can save people from deadly overdoses is *more severe than the punishment for murder.*
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 347
|
| SB471 | Requiring local prosecutors to assist ICE in federal immigration enforcement | Senate Floor: SB 471 PN 425, Final Passage | 03/31/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 471 would require state and county prosecutors to notify ICE if they become aware that a criminal defendant is not a citizen or is otherwise unlawfully in the U.S. ICE already has more than enough tools it needs to target people for immigration enforcement. Furthermore, entangling these two distinct systems by involving ICE during on-going criminal cases could have harmful ripple effects throughout the criminal legal system.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 471
|
| SB490 | Denying non-monetary bail for certain charges | Senate Floor: SB 490 PN 444, Final Passage | 03/31/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 490 would unconstitutionally prohibit judges from assigning non-monetary bail for defendants based only on their charges. SB 490 would violate (1) constitutional requirements for bail consideration, and (2) constitutional separation of powers, which gives the courts power to decide criminal legal procedures. In addition, if enacted, SB 490 would have little effect on current bail practices. It would, however, exacerbate economic and racial disparities in the criminal legal system.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 490
|
| SB599 | Eliminating satellite offices and dropboxes | Senate State Government: PN0605, Reported as Committed | 06/02/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 599 PN 605 would prohibit counties from providing dropboxes and satellite locations to voters. Instead, SB 599 would require voters to submit their ballot in person at the main county election office and give it to an employee at that primary office. The bill restricts access to voting without evidence that these methods undermine election integrity and risks reinforcing misinformation about secure election administration.
|
| SB686 | New felony for destruction of public records | Senate Floor: SB 686 PN 755, Final Passage | 06/04/2025 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: SB 686 would create a new, duplicative offense to punish the destruction of requested public records as a third-degree felony. Tampering with public records or information (18 § 4911) already covers the behavior described in SB 686. As such, SB 686 is unnecessary and clearly duplicative. In addition, the third-degree felony grading, even for a first offense, is excessively punitive.
|
| SB790 | Limiting right to know requests from repeat requesters | Senate State Government: PN0845, Reported as Committed | 06/03/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 790 would limit the number of right to know requests from repeat—or "vexatious"—requesters. Such a provision would violate requesters' constitutional right to petition the government and to due process. If enacted, SB 790 would permit agencies to pick and choose which Pennsylvanians are entitled to access to public records. If a record is public, then it should be available to all members of the public—without exception.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 790
|
| SB1150 | Clarifying the Sunshine Act's 24-hour public meeting notice requirement | Senate Floor: PN1399, Final Passage | 06/10/2026 | 1 | Yea |
SUPPORT: SB 1150 PN 1399 clarifies PA's Sunshine Act by limiting when public agencies can add items to meeting agendas without 24-hour notice, ensuring that last-minute changes are only allowed under narrow, defined exceptions. It restores the intent of the law by preventing agencies from broadly bypassing transparency requirements and ensuring the public has a meaningful opportunity to stay informed.
|
| SB1284 | Mandatory minimum sentence for attempted murder of a law enforcement officer | Senate Floor: PN1580, Final Passage | 05/04/2026 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: SB 1284 would impose a 20-year mandatory minimum sentence for attempt, conspiracy, or solicitation to commit murder of a law enforcement officer—the same sentence for an actual assault of an officer. This would mandate harsher penalties for attempted offenses than for comparable or more serious completed conduct, eliminate judicial discretion, and prevent courts from tailoring sentences to the specific facts and culpability of the individual before them.
|
| SB1286 | Increased penalties for causing unintentional death (Kyle Costrello and Glenn Compton Law) | Senate Floor: PN1681, Final Passage | 05/06/2026 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: SB 1286 fundamentally alters the purpose of the careless driving statute by attaching severe criminal penalties to conduct that, by definition, lacks intent. Careless driving is designed to address ordinary negligence, not to impose heightened criminal punishment based solely on a tragic outcome. Law enforcement already has a range of more serious charges available when the facts support a higher level of recklessness or intent, making this expansion unnecessary.
|
| SB1293 | Banning trans girls from school sports | Senate Floor: PN1598, Final Passage | 04/22/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 1293 PN 1598 would ban transgender girls and women from participating on athletic teams or in sports from K-college. Trans youth have the right to participate in sports consistent with who they are and denying them that right is blatantly unconstitutional and discriminatory.
ACLU-PA Opposition to SB 1293
|
| SB1295 | Requiring English proficiency for CDL licenses | Senate Floor: PN1599, Final Passage | 05/06/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: SB 1295 would require English proficiency in the licensing of commercial drivers. PA already has processes in place to verify legal status and ensure drivers meet federal safety and training standards. This bill would unfairly target immigrants and non-English speakers, undermine core civil rights protections without a clear connection to improved public safety, and invite discriminatory enforcement.
|
| SB1400 | Sentencing for second degree murder following Commonwealth v. Lee | Senate Floor: PN1836, Final Passage-Reconsidered | 06/25/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: PA’s mandatory life-without-parole sentences for second-degree murder was ruled unconstitutional because it imposes the harshest of punishment without individualized consideration. SB 1400 PN 1834 is so narrowly drawn that it leaves most impacted individuals without any realistic opportunity for parole. As such, the bill falls short of providing the meaningful relief necessary to address the unconstitutional harms caused by PAs mandatory sentencing scheme.
|
Rated Sponored Bills
| Bill | Bill Name | Rating | Comments |
|---|