Available Soon: Request your printed copies of the Idaho Freedom Index mailed to you!
Request Your Copies
Note to Dustin: This is currently only visible to logged in users for testing.
Click Me!
video could not be found

Senate Bill 1054 — Extreme peril, governor’s powers

Senate Bill 1054 — Extreme peril, governor’s powers

by
Parrish Miller
February 4, 2021

Bill Description: Senate Bill 1054 renames and redefines extreme emergencies and limits the governor's power during such times. 

Rating: +3

Analyst Note: Senate Bill 1054 is one of several pieces of legislation introduced during the 2021 session to change how emergency situations are handled and to shift power from the executive branch to the legislative branch during such times. Senate Bill 1054 is a replacement for Senate Bill 1003, with which it shares many similarities.

Does it violate the spirit or the letter of either the U.S. Constitution or the Idaho Constitution? Examples include restrictions on speech, public assembly, the press, privacy, private property, or firearms. Conversely, does it restore or uphold the protections guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution or the Idaho Constitution?

Senate Bill 1054 amends Section 46-601, Idaho Code, to make numerous changes, starting with renaming "extreme emergencies" to "extreme peril" and making several definitional changes to clarify that a "state of extreme peril" is caused by human action, not natural disasters. This change reduces the number of the circumstances under which an "extreme emergency" (now defined as a state of extreme peril) can be declared. 

(+1)

Senate Bill 1054 further amends Section 46-601, Idaho Code, to limit the reasons for which the governor may promulgate, issue, and enforce rules and orders during a state of extreme peril. Existing code allows the governor to do so for any reason "he considers necessary for the protection of life and property."

Senate Bill 1054 limits the promulgation, issuance, and enforcement to "written rules and orders necessary to support the national guard or militia and that are essential to protect life and property from violent destruction." 

The new language goes on to say, "Such rules and orders must be essential to protect life or property from the existence of conditions threatening the safety of persons and property within the state. Because all jobs are essential, such rules and orders must not restrict the right of Idahoans to work, provide for their families, and otherwise contribute to the economy of Idaho and must be narrowly tailored to their purposes and not restrict jobholders by job type or classification."

(+1)

Senate Bill 1054 further amends Section 46-601, Idaho Code, to limit the length of a "state of extreme peril" to no longer than 60 days and explicitly states, "The governor may not circumvent the sixty (60) day limitation by redeclaring successive states of extreme peril for the same conditions threatening the safety of persons and property within the state in the absence of an extension by the legislature."

(+1)

Unfortunately, the above provision is significantly neutered by new language that allows the governor to extend the state of extreme peril indefinitely "solely for the purpose of receiving federal funding, benefits, and resources as a result of the declared disaster emergency, in which case those provisions of the governor's proclamation necessary for receiving such funding, benefits, or resources shall continue in full force and effect."

One of the most damaging elements of a state of emergency (or extreme peril) is that it opens the door to debt-financed federal dollars and to the strings those dollars inevitably carry. Accepting federal money compromises the sovereignty and security of the state and subjects Idahoans to the demands and orders of the federal government. Idaho should seek to increase its independence by decreasing its dependence on Washington, D.C. Allowing the governor to unilaterally declare and indefinitely extend a state of emergency or extreme peril — even if only for the purpose of increasing the state's dependence on debt-financed federal dollars — represents an unacceptable threat to the independence of Idahoans. 

(-1)

An additional defect of this bill is its new language that grants the Legislature authority to "extend the state of extreme peril for any number of days." The exercise of this power is contingent on the Legislature being in a regular or extraordinary session.

The bill also says, "Any rules and orders issued by the governor under the authority of this subsection shall be considered administrative rules that may be rejected by concurrent resolution, in whole or in part, by the legislature. ..."

While shifting emergency power from the executive branch to the legislative branch may be a net positive, allowing a state of extreme peril to be extended for any number of days still represents a concerning open-ended grant of expanded state power over the lives and property of individuals. Amending this line to say "for up to 60 additional days" or even for a longer but still defined period would be a significant improvement. 

(0)

Senate Bill 1054 further amends Section 46-601, Idaho Code, to clarify that protections related to the right to keep and bear arms, which apply during a state of extreme peril, also apply to firearm and ammunition manufacturers. Additionally, it declares that a state of extreme peril cannot be used as a pretext to "limit or suspend any rights guaranteed by the United States constitution or the constitution of the state of Idaho, including but not limited to the right to peaceable assembly and free exercise of religion."

It also states, "During any state of extreme peril, the governor may not alter, adjust, or suspend any provision of the Idaho Code."

(+1)

Idaho Freedom Foundation
802 W. Bannock Street, Suite 405, Boise, Idaho 83702
p 208.258.2280 | e [email protected]
COPYRIGHT © 2024 Idaho freedom Foundation
magnifiercrossmenucross-circle linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram