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HB 25-1195

signed

First Responder Voter Registration Record Confidentiality

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

House Bill 25-1195, also known as the First Responder Voter Registration Record Confidentiality Act, allows peace officers, firefighters, emergency medical service providers, and other first responders to keep their home addresses confidential when registering to vote or filing financial disclosures. This means that these individuals can request that their voter registration records be kept private from public view, protecting them from potential threats or harassment. The bill is now signed into law, meaning that first responders who qualify can start requesting address confidentiality for their voting and financial records without any processing fees.

Official Summary

In addition to individuals who may already request that their address included in certain records be kept confidential (address confidentiality) under certain circumstances, the act allows an individual or the spouse of an individual who is or has been a peace officer, firefighter, volunteer firefighter, emergency medical service provider, or emergency communications specialist (first responder) to also request address confidentiality for voter registration records that are in the custody of a county clerk and recorder or in the centralized statewide registration system maintained by the secretary of state (secretary) and financial disclosures that certain public officials are required to file with the secretary. A first responder may request address confidentiality with the county clerk and recorder of the county where the first responder who is making the request for address confidentiality resides. The secretary is required to approve the application form for a request for address confidentiality. Each county clerk and recorder is required to make the address confidentiality request application forms available in their office, provide the address confidentiality request application forms to interested persons by United States mail, email delivery, or facsimile transmission, and to process applications for address confidentiality without imposing a processing fee or any other charge. The custodian of any records specified in the act that concern a first responder who has requested address confidentiality is required to deny, with limited exceptions, the right of inspection of the first responder's address contained in the records on the ground that disclosure would be contrary to the public interest. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2025-06-02
Latest action
2025-02-10
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to State, Civic, Military, & Veterans Affairs
OpenStates
View source ↗

Sponsors

Votes

CONCUR
2025-05-01 · House · passYes: 63 · No: 0 · Other:
REPASS
2025-05-01 · House · passYes: 55 · No: 8 · Other:
BILL
2025-04-28 · Senate · passYes: 33 · No: 1 · Other:
BILL
2025-04-11 · House · passYes: 57 · No: 5 · Other: