Legislator
State Representative
Charity Grimm Krupa
(R) - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania House District 051
In Office
contact info
Capitol Office
Irvis Office Building
P.O. Box 202051
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2051
P.O. Box 202051
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2051
Phone: 717-783-5173
Smithfield Office
3089 Morgantown Road
Smithfield, PA 15458
Smithfield, PA 15458
Phone: 724-438-6100
Phone 2: 833-933-3674
Vote Record By Category
| Category | Vote Index | Total Score |
|---|---|---|
| Racial Equality | 100 |
1
|
| Privacy | 50 |
0
|
| TLGBQ+ Equality | 0 |
-1
|
| Student & Youth Rights | 0 |
-1
|
| Open Government | 33 |
-1
|
| Police Practices | 0 |
-1
|
| Constitutional Amendment | 0 |
-1
|
| Due Process | 0 |
-2
|
| First Amendment Rights | 0 |
-2
|
| Reproductive Freedom | 0 |
-2
|
| Voting Rights/Elections | 0 |
-2
|
| Criminal Justice | 24 |
-11
|
| All Bills | 24 |
-17
|
Rated Bill Votes
| Bill | Bill Name | Motion | Vote Date | Rating | Vote | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HB37 | Permitting pre-canvassing of ballots | House Floor: PN3191, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/09/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 37 PN 3191 would allow counties to begin pre-canvassing mail ballots up to seven days before Election Day, helping election officials process ballots more efficiently and deliver faster unofficial results while preserving existing safeguards that prohibit the release of vote totals before polls close.
|
| HB99 | Repealing the death penalty in PA | House Judiciary: PN2448, Report Bill As Committed | 04/27/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: Repealing the death penalty would eliminate the most extreme power the government can exercise—the power to take a life—and it has been applied in ways that depend on race, wealth, and geography, not just the facts of a case. A punishment so irreversible, administered so unevenly, cannot be reconciled with a system premised on equal justice under the law and only serves to undermine confidence in the fairness and legitimacy of our criminal legal system.
|
| HB102 | Increased penalties for harassment of sports officials | House Floor: PN2380, FINAL PASSAGE | 10/01/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: Under current law, penalties for harassment are determined by the alleged actions of the defendant. However, HB 102 would depart from this legal framework by enhancing the penalty from a summary offense to a third-degree misdemeanor based on who the victim is, instead of punishing people based on the extent, content, duration, or severity of harassment, regardless of the target.
ACLU-PA Opposition to HB 102
|
| HB131 | Strengthening the law enforcement misconduct database | House Judiciary: PN3563, Report Bill As Committed | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 131 PN 3563 would strengthen the requirements of PA's police misconduct database to close a loophole in the 2020 Act that prevented problematic police officers from being passed from department to department, with no way for those agencies to access—or even know about—an officer's previous history of misconduct before being hired. HB 131 would provide PA communities with the kind of transparency, accountability, and compliance they deserve from law enforcement.
|
| HB150 | Medical release | House Floor: PN2066, FINAL PASSAGE | 12/17/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 150 would allow incarcerated people to petition for medical release when they have a substantially diminished ability to function in a correctional facility due to a terminal illness, a chronic and debilitating physical or medical condition or disease, a serious functional or cognitive impairment or deteriorating physical or mental health due to the aging process.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 150
|
| HB238 | Providing alternative verification options for REAL ID | House Floor: HB 238 PN 190, FINAL PASSAGE | 04/24/2025 | 1 | Yea |
SUPPORT: PennDOT currently requires an applicant for REAL ID to provide an original Social Security card, but does not provide any other document options to verify a person's Social Security number. Pennsylvania is the only state that does not provide residents with alternative SSN verification options. HB 238 would require PennDOT to accept additional documentation permitted under the federal REAL ID Act of 2005 to verify an applicant’s Social Security number when applying for REAL ID.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 238
|
| HB282 | Providing medical assistance upon reentry | House Floor: HB 282 PN 1800, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/03/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 282 would authorize the PA Department of Corrections to establish a medical assistance reentry program for incarcerated individuals who are scheduled to be released and returning to their community. This would ensure a continuity of care, so that access to medication, substance use disorder treatment, and case management services are not disrupted.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 282
|
| HB439 | CROWN Act | House Floor: HB 439 PN 996, FINAL PASSAGE | 03/17/2025 | 1 | Yea |
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
|
| HB458 | Post-conviction review for veterans with PTSD or TBI | House Floor: PN0440, FINAL PASSAGE | 12/16/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 458 would allow incarcerated veterans diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or traumatic brain injury (TBI) after imprisonment to apply to the court for post-conviction relief, enabling them to present their diagnosis of a mental health disability sustained during or as a result of active duty or training for active duty as a mitigating factor in the crime for which they were charged.
|
| HB490 | Expanded protections for journalists | House Floor: PN0479, FINAL PASSAGE | 02/04/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: Currently, PA state law protects journalists from having to reveal the identity of any confidential sources, but there are other pieces of information that journalists use in their jobs that deserve such protections. HB 490 would extend Pennsylvania’s media shield law to cover all records, information, and documents created or acquired by journalists in their professional duties.
|
| HB733 | Modernizing PA’s marriage ceremony law | House Judiciary: PN0757, Report Bill As Amended | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: PA’s outdated marriage ceremony laws often hinder couples from pursuing their ideal ceremonies. In some cases, Pennsylvania county clerks' offices have questioned the validity of marriages based on the religious affiliation of the wedding officiant, including those who are ordained online. HB 733 PN 757 would allow any individual associated with a religious organization, who is authorized according to the rules of that religion, to officiate a wedding ceremony legally.
|
| HB888 | Repealing the death penalty in PA | House Judiciary: PN0960, Report Bill As Committed | 04/27/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: Repealing the death penalty would eliminate the most extreme power the government can exercise—the power to take a life—and it has been applied in ways that depend on race, wealth, and geography, not just the facts of a case. A punishment so irreversible, administered so unevenly, cannot be reconciled with a system premised on equal justice under the law and only serves to undermine confidence in the fairness and legitimacy of our criminal legal system.
|
| HB910 | Increasing penalties for informal adoptions | House Judiciary: PN0951, Report Bill As Committed | 05/04/2026 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: Although touted as a way to penalize infant trafficking, HB 910 would amend Title 18 § 4305, which was intentionally designed as a narrow offense to address the commercialization of infants—such as informal, transactional transfers outside the lawful adoption system—not the coercive, exploitative conduct that defines human trafficking. Elevating this offense to a felony blurs that distinction and risks collapsing two separate legal frameworks that were meant to address different harms.
ACLU-PA Opposition to HB 910
|
| HB956 | Automatic felony enhancement for simple assault against municipal workers | House Floor: HB 956 PN 1975, FINAL PASSAGE | 07/01/2025 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: HB 956 would add municipal workers as the fortieth category to the list of officers or employees against whom simple assault would automatically be charged as a second-degree felony aggravated assault. HB 956 would mete out greater punishment based not on the intent or severity of the assault, but rather on the employment status of the victim.
ACLU-PA Opposition to HB 956
|
| HB1042 | PA Public Safety and Rehabilitation Act | House Floor: PN2884, FINAL PASSAGE | 03/23/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1042 would establish the Earned Vocational Training and Education Credit to allow people incarcerated in state facilities to earn vocational and educational credits against their minimum sentence. These credits would count towards reducing their sentence—10-180 days, depending on the program—making them eligible for parole or short sentence parole earlier than they would otherwise be.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 1042
|
| HB1140 | Contraceptive Coverage for All Act | House Floor: HB 1140 PN 1449, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/03/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1140 would require insurance companies to cover all contraceptive drugs, devices, and other products and services at no cost to the consumer, ensuring that no one loses access to contraception because of their income—and guarantees it for those who need, want, and deserve it.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 1140
|
| HB1247 | Prohibiting deceptive interrogation tactics for people with intellectual disabilities or autism | House Judiciary: PN1396, Report Bill As Committed | 04/09/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1247 would take an important step toward preventing wrongful convictions by prohibiting law enforcement from using deception during custodial interrogations of people with intellectual disabilities or autism, and by creating a presumption against the admissibility of confessions obtained under those circumstances. Individuals with these disabilities are particularly vulnerable to coercion and suggestion, making them more likely to provide false or unreliable statements.
|
| HB1381 | Raising the minimum age of when juveniles can be tried in court | House Judiciary: PN2029, Report Bill As Committed | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1381 PN 2029 would raise the minimum age for when a youth can be tried in juvenile court from 10 to 13. Prosecuting very young children often does more harm than good. Incarceration at this age is associated with a higher likelihood of reoffending. By raising the minimum age of prosecution, HB 1381 promotes a juvenile justice system that prioritizes rehabilitation, supports healthy development, and improves long-term public safety outcomes.
|
| HB1396 | Omnibus election reform | House Floor: HB 1396 PN 1688, FINAL PASSAGE | 05/13/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1396 is an omnibus reform bill that would (1) expand voting access (e.g., machine-based early voting, standardized ballot drop box requirements, pre-registration for 16- and 17-year olds); (2) modernize and secure our elections (e.g., electronic poll books, recount reform); and (3) address administrative challenges through practical improvements to mail ballot procedures.
ACLU-PA Support for HB 1396
|
| HB1616 | Increasing penalties for informal adoptions | House Floor: PN3333, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/16/2026 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: The intent behind HB 1616 PN 3333 is to protect victims of child trafficking. However, it does so by increasing penalties for an existing statute that was originally designed as a narrow backstop against informal adoptions, not trafficking. Expanding this narrow statute to a first-degree felony risks over-penalizing non-trafficking conduct without a clear connection to improved safety or better outcomes for children.
|
| HB1800 | Marriage equality | House Floor: PN2214, FINAL PASSAGE | 03/25/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1800 would update the definition of "marriage" to reflect the ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges that recognized the right of same-sex couples to marry. Specifically, the bill removes gendered references to man and woman in the definition of "marriage" in PA statute.
|
| HB1909 | Enhanced penalties for offenses involving an active protection from abuse order | House Floor: PN2595, FINAL PASSAGE | 02/02/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: HB 1909 would replace nuanced, individualized sentencing with a one-size-fits-all penalty enhancement. It introduces mandatory minimum-style consequences under the guise of grading enhancements and would disrupt established sentencing conventions, threaten to swell the incarcerated population, place added strain on the public defense system, and inject constitutional and practical problems where none currently exist.
ACLU-PA Opposition to HB 1909
|
| HB1913 | Permitting additional information for jurors in judicial proceedings | House Judiciary: PN2394, Report Bill As Committed | 06/08/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1913 PN 2394 would allow attorneys to suggest a specific dollar amount for noneconomic damages during closing arguments. In civil rights and civil liberties cases, damages are often primarily noneconomic, making it difficult for jurors to assess fair compensation without guidance. Providing jurors with a framework for valuing these harms can lead to more consistent and equitable outcomes.
|
| HB1934 | Right to access state agency records | House Floor: PN2433, FINAL PASSAGE | 11/19/2025 | -1 | Yea |
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.
|
| HB1935 | Sentencing enhancement for terroristic threats | House Floor: PN2434, FINAL PASSAGE | 02/03/2026 | -1 | Nay |
OPPOSE: HB 1935 would create a sentencing enhancement for individuals convicted of making terroristic threats against a school or institution of higher education. Current law already classifies such conduct as a felony of the third degree when it causes an evacuation, lockdown, or disruption from normal operations. This bill is unnecessary and counterproductive. Adding a new sentencing enhancement will only increase incarceration rates without adding deterrent value or improving public safety.
|
| HB1944 | Expanding medical amnesty protections | House Floor: PN3615, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1944 would amend PA's underage drinking medical amnesty policy to prohibit a person from being charged or prosecuted for recklessly endangering another person so long as they call for help, believe someone is in need of immediate medical attention, comply and cooperate with first responders, and stay with the person in crisis until first responders arrive.
|
| HB1945 | Expanding Good Samaritan protections | House Judiciary: PN2454, Report Bill As Committed | 04/27/2026 | 1 | Yea |
SUPPORT: HB 1945 would amend PA's controlled substance medical amnesty policy to prohibit a person from being charged or prosecuted for recklessly endangering another person so long as they call for help, believe someone is in need of immediate medical attention, comply and cooperate with first responders, and stay with the person in crisis until first responders arrive.
|
| HB1957 | Protecting reproductive freedom in PA (constitutional amendment) | House Floor: PN2711, FINAL PASSAGE | 12/17/2025 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 1957 is a proposed PA constitutional amendment that would affirm and protect every Pennsylvanian’s right to privacy with respect to personal, sexual, and reproductive healthcare decisions, including the right to choose or refuse an abortion, the right to choose or refuse contraceptives, and the right to choose or refuse fertility care, all without discrimination on the basis of race, sex, religion, or relationship status.
|
| HB2028 | Ending the criminalization of homelessness | House Judiciary: PN2586, Report Bill As Amended | 04/27/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 2028 would permit individuals experiencing homelessness to conduct life-sustaining activity in public spaces when no reasonable, alternative options for housing are offered or available.
|
| HB2146 | Clarifying the Sunshine Act's 24-hour public meeting notice requirement | House Floor: PN2882, FINAL PASSAGE | 07/01/2026 | 1 | Yea |
SUPPORT: HB 2146 clarifies Pennsylvania’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.
|
| HB2281 | Permitting people with prior convictions to serve on juries | House Judiciary: PN2987, Report Bill As Amended | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 2281 PN 2987 would modernize PA's jury qualification laws by ending the lifetime exclusion of many people with past convictions from jury service. It expands opportunities for civic participation, promotes more representative juries, and removes a permanent collateral consequence that is not supported by evidence showing these individuals are unable to serve fairly or effectively.
|
| HB2299 | Permitting county probation officers to wear body cameras | House Floor: PN3019, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/17/2026 | -1 | Yea |
OPPOSE: HB 2299 PN 3019 would allow probation officers to wear body cameras, including when meeting with children as young as 10 years old. The supervisory relationship between probation officers and their adult or juvenile clients are, by definition, interpersonal, and more often than not, occur in private settings—treatment centers, home visits, and work visits. As such, the use of body cameras in those settings raises significant privacy concerns for clients and third-parties alike.
ACLU-PA Opposition to HB 2299
|
| HB2356 | Lowering the age of expungement for reformed individuals | House Judiciary: PN3129, Report Bill As Committed | 04/09/2026 | 1 | Nay |
SUPPORT: HB 2356 would take a meaningful step toward fairness and second changes for older individuals who have remained arrest-free for a decade and deserve the opportunity to move forward in their lives without unnecessary barriers to employment, housing and stability—the very things that ensure economic and social stability. This commonsense change supports both dignity and community well-being without compromising public safety.
|
Rated Sponored Bills
| Bill | Bill Name | Rating | Comments |
|---|