Legislator
State Representative
Jennifer Mazzocco
(D) - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania House District 042
In Office
contact info
Capitol Office
East Wing
P.O. Box 202042
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2042
P.O. Box 202042
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2042
Phone: 717-783-1850
Mt. Lebanon Office
650 Washington Road
Suite 102
Mt. Lebanon, PA 15228-2714
Suite 102
Mt. Lebanon, PA 15228-2714
Phone: 412-343-3870
Fax: 412-343-2050
Vote Record By Category
| Category | Vote Index | Total Score |
|---|---|---|
| Open Government | 100 |
1
|
| Voting Rights/Elections | 100 |
1
|
| TLGBQ+ Equality | 100 |
1
|
| Criminal Justice | 50 |
0
|
| All Bills | 71 |
3
|
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 | Yea |
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.
|
| HB1042 | PA Public Safety and Rehabilitation Act | House Floor: PN2884, FINAL PASSAGE | 03/23/2026 | 1 | Yea |
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
|
| 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 | Yea |
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.
|
| HB1944 | Expanding medical amnesty protections | House Floor: PN3615, FINAL PASSAGE | 06/17/2026 | 1 | Yea |
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.
|
| 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.
|
| 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
|
Rated Sponored Bills
| Bill | Bill Name | Rating | Comments |
|---|