Thursday, January 23, 2025
16.0°F

Little vetoes HB 340a, bill to give special exemption to unlicensed teen treatment program

Betsy Russell | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 9 months AGO
by Betsy Russell
| March 31, 2020 1:07 PM

Gov. Brad Little has issued his 6th veto of this year's legislative session, rejecting HB 340a, the bill that sought to allow North Idaho pastor and current state Rep. Tim Remington to run a youth residential drug treatment program without a state license. Remington ran such a program several years ago, but closed it after a complaint to the state Department of Health & Welfare; he maintains he doesn't want his faith-based program to be state-licensed. The bill would have allowed it as a "pilot program."

In his veto message, Little wrote, "My time as governor has been marked by reducing administrative red tape while protecting the health and safety of Idahoans. The safety and well being of Idaho's children is my highest priority. This legislation does not adequately ensure protections for one of our most vulnerable populations -- adolescents seeking treatment for substance use disorders. Additionally, I am troubled to implement a pilot program that has no sunset period in place for proper assessment."

Not mentioned in the veto message was Remington's open defiance of Little's statewide coronavirus stay-at-home order; Remington on Sunday held in-person services at his Coeur d'Alene church and sermonized against the governor's order. HB 340a, on which Remington abstained from debating or voting when it came up for a vote in the full House after declaring a conflict of interest, drew opposition from an array of juvenile treatment advocates who said it set a dangerous precedent for the state.

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Governor vetoes rehab license exemption
Coeur d'Alene Press | Updated 4 years, 9 months ago
Little mum on why he signed anti-transgender bills, as reactions pour in
Coeur d'Alene Press | Updated 4 years, 9 months ago

ARTICLES BY BETSY RUSSELL

March 30, 2020 6:54 p.m.

Governor signs both HB 500 and HB 509, the anti-transgender bills

Here's a report from the Associated Press:

March 4, 2020 10:27 a.m.

Little holds press conference on coronavirus; no cases in Idaho yet, but they're expected...

Gov. Brad Little is holding a press conference this morning on Idaho’s response to the coronavirus. Though no cases have yet been documented in Idaho, they are expected, said Dr. Christine Hahn, state epidemiologist. “We’re very fortunate that we don’t have what’s going on in Washington state, our neighbor, right now, Hahn said. “But we are watching it very closely. ... Our public health goal in Idaho and across the nation is to slow this virus down. We probably can’t stop it. … It’s too late to stop it.” She added, “This is a virus that none of us have immunity to.”

March 30, 2020 2:28 p.m.

Primary election won't be delayed, but will go all-absentee; link to my full story

Idaho Secretary of State Lawerence Denney said this afternoon that the governor won't be delaying the May 19 primary election, but it'll go all-absentee due to the risk from coronavirus. “He is not going to delay it,” Denney told the Idaho Press. Denney said he anticipates a formal announcement probably on Wednesday. “We still have some things to iron out about exactly what we will be trying to do,” Denney said, “and I can tell you we’re going to push very, very hard for as much absentee as we can, so that we don’t have people having to be in contact with each other.”