Nine laws passed by the Hawai‘i Legislature during the 2008 legislative session and signed into law by Gov. Linda Lingle this year will take effect on Thursday, the first day of 2009, according to a statement from the governor’s office.
Nine laws passed by the Hawai‘i Legislature during the 2008 legislative session and signed into law by Gov. Linda Lingle this year will take effect on Thursday, the first day of 2009, according to a statement from the governor’s office.
“Among the new laws are measures designed to protect children from Internet predators, compel parents to pay child support, and prohibit alcohol consumption in common areas of public housing projects,” Lingle said in the release.
• Act 80, signed into law on May 16, is designed to protect Hawai‘i’s children from Internet predators and other sex offenders. The provision of the law that goes into effect Thursday makes online registry of convicted sex offenders more useful to law enforcement agencies and the public.
• Act 157, signed into law on June 9, makes failure to pay child support, medical support or other remedial care a civil contempt of court after it is proven that the parent was present in court or was served with orders to pay and did not do so. If such a civil contempt of court order is issued, the new law requires that it clearly state that the failure to comply with the order may subject the parent to a penalty that may include imprisonment.
• Act 34, signed into law on April 24, prohibits the consumption of alcohol on any public sidewalk or common area within a public housing project. Common areas include roofs, halls, corridors, lobbies, stairs, stairways, fire escapes, entrances and exists of the building or buildings, basements, yards, gardens, recreational facilities, parking areas, storage spaces, and other common use areas as designated by the Hawai‘i Public Housing Authority.
• Act 142 updates the Insurance Code to allow insurers more flexibility in their investments in keeping with standards set by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, without significantly lessening the protection to insurance policyholders.
• Act 174 requires charitable trusts and nonprofits to register and file annual financial reports with and be reviewed for potential violations by the state attorney general. The law also authorizes the attorney general to conduct investigations on possible violations.
• Act 175 strengthens penalties against notaries public who have not verified the signer of an official document or who misuse their notary powers.
• Act 194 transfers procurement training responsibilities from the Department of Human Resources Development to the State Procurement Office and requires State procurement officers to attend mandatory training.
• Act 195 requires criminal background checks on money transmitters, allows sharing of data with other states and federal agencies where a money transmitter is doing business, and increases fees charged to money transmitters to regulate their industry.
• Act 203 allows the State Procurement Officer to impose daily fines on all procurement officers when they do not comply with his determinations, including those in the Legislative and Judicial branches.