BILL ANALYSIS AB 1519 Page 1 CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS AB 1519 (Ma) As Amended August 11, 2008 Majority vote ----------------------------------------------------------------- |ASSEMBLY: |51-5 |(January 24, |SENATE: |24-10|(August 13, | | | |2008) | | |2008) | ----------------------------------------------------------------- Original Committee Reference: A.,E.,S.,T.&I.M. SUMMARY : Requires that each exhibitor of a commercial display of human remains must post signage at the entrance to the exhibit site and ticket sales office, and make declarations in all advertising, as specified, until January 1, 2010. Provides, that beginning January 1, 2010, any commercial display of human remains is prohibited unless the exhibitor files a specified form with the Department of Justice (DOJ), and requires the exhibitor to maintain two catalogs of consent forms, as specified, for each body or specimen listed on the form The Senate Amendments : 1)Require that each exhibitor of a commercial display of human remains shall conspicuously post clearly legible signs, in at least 96-point boldface type, at the entrance and ticket office to the exhibitor's commercial display, with specified contents, stating whether or not the exhibitor has consent to include the body in the exhibit. (See Comment 1, below for contents of disclosure.) a) Require that each exhibitor of a commercial display of human remains shall also include the specified disclosure statement in all advertisements of the commercial display; b) Provide civil penalties for failure to post the signage or make the disclosure, or make any false statement or misrepresentation in any disclosure, of $50,000 per violation. Further provides that each day of non-compliance is a separate violation; c) Allow for enforcement actions to be brought by an individual, a city attorney, a district attorney, or the AG; AB 1519 Page 2 d) Declare that violation of the signage and declaration provisions is not a crime; and, e) Provide that signage and disclosure provisions sunset on January 1, 2010. 2)Prohibit any commercial display of human remains, unless the exhibitor files a specified form with the DOJ, attesting that the bodies were donated with full informed consent and for the express purpose of public exhibition. (See Comment 2 below, for contents of form.) a) Allow DOJ to charge a reasonable fee in order to cover costs of filing and maintaining the filed forms; b) Require the exhibitor to maintain two catalogs of consent forms for each body or specimen listed on the form; one, which shall be available to the public, shall list the bodies or specimens only by their identification number, and another, which shall be available to a city attorney, a district attorney, or the AG, which shall contain the unredacted consent forms and corresponding death certificates for each specimen listed; c) Provide civil penalties for failure to file the form, or make any false statement or misrepresentation on the form, or failure to maintain either one or both of the catalogs, of $50,000 per violation. Further provide that each day of non-compliance is a separate violation; d) Allow for enforcement actions to be brought by an individual, a city attorney, a district attorney, or the AG; and, e) Provide a delayed implementation date for the form disclosure and catalog provisions of January 1, 2010. AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY , this bill prohibited any person from displaying human remains to the public for commercial purposes without first obtaining a permit from the county. Specifically, in relevant part, this bill : 1)Prohibited display of human remains to the public for commercial purposes without first obtaining a permit issued by AB 1519 Page 3 the county where the human remains will be displayed. 2)Provided that a county may issue a permit to any person only upon a determination by the county public health official, or his/her designee, that the person has provided valid written authorization to display human remains for consideration from specified individuals. 3)Provided a civil penalty for each violation of up to $10,000. FISCAL EFFECT : According to the Senate Appropriations Committee, pursuant to Senate Rule 28.8, negligible state costs. COMMENTS : 1)Text of signage and disclosure statement : Senate amendments require that, until January 1, 2012, each exhibitor of a commercial display of human remains shall conspicuously post clearly legible signs which contain one of the following disclosure statements: "This exhibition contains human remains, including full body cadavers, body parts, and organs, which were donated by the decedent or by a person authorized to make anatomical gifts under Section 7150.15 or 7150.40 of the Health and Safety Code. Each body and specimen in the exhibit was donated with full informed consent for the express purpose of public exhibition." "This exhibition contains human remains, including full body cadavers, body parts, and organs, which were not donated by the decedent or by a person authorized to make anatomical gifts under Section 7150.15 or 7150.40 of the Health and Safety Code. The exhibitor cannot independently verify whether the human remains in this exhibit are not those of persons who were incarcerated, tortured, executed, or otherwise the victim of a human rights violation." 2)Statutory form contents : Senate amendments require that, on and after January 1, 2010, each exhibitor of a commercial display of human remains shall complete and file a form with the DOJ, which contains the exhibitor's name, place and dates of exhibition, and description of each body and specimen in the exhibition, by identifying number. AB 1519 Page 4 The form contains a provision wherein the exhibitor must attest that all listed bodies were donated by either the decedent or person authorized to make an anatomical gift, with full and informed consent and for the express purpose of public exhibition. The amendments further provide that the exhibitor must maintain two catalogs of consent forms for each body or specimen listed on the form; one, which shall be available to the public, shall list the bodies or specimens only by their identification number; and, another, which shall be available to a city attorney, a district attorney, or the AG, which shall contain the unredacted consent forms and corresponding death certificates for each specimen listed. 3)Catalogs and privacy concerns : The most recent amendments to the bill came in response to privacy concerns raised by making organ donation consent forms available to the public. The fear being that such publicity might chill organ and body donations. In response to these concerns, the author further amended to bill to require body exhibitors to maintain two sets of catalogs, one which would be made available to the public, with personal identifying contents removed. The other catalog would contain the consent forms and corresponding death certificates for each specimen listed on the form described in Comment 2, above. In addition, the author has included language which will further protect the privacy of donors, which could be exposed by enforcement actions of the bill's provisions. Typically, court records become public documents. In any action brought to enforce the bill, the unredacted consent catalog could be used as evidence. In these cases, prosecutors are directed to take reasonable steps to protect a donor's identity. Further, the court may permit disclosure of a donor's identity only when the public interest in disclosure outweighs the privacy interests of a donor and his or her immediate family in maintaining the confidentiality of a donor's identity. Analysis Prepared by : Dana Mitchell / A.,E.,S.,T. & I.M. / (916) 319-3450 FN: 0006862 AB 1519 Page 5