House committee advances bill to standardize gubernatorial transitions, toughens penalties for misuse of records
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The State Affairs Committee reported HB 1063 favorably after adopting an amendment that requires governor-elects and designees to sign a cybersecurity and records memorandum of understanding and raises penalties for willful violations from a misdemeanor to a felony.
Representative Ogdorf presented House Bill 1063 as a framework to standardize gubernatorial transitions so governor-elects receive timely access to information and resources needed to govern on day one. Sponsor materials emphasized the risk of inconsistent agency preparation and gaps in institutional knowledge during transitions.
An amendment (barcode 890193) offered by Representative O'Dowdorf requires the governor-elect and designated staff to sign a memorandum of understanding before receiving state IT and related services, acknowledging compliance with state cybersecurity practices and the return of state equipment. "The amendment...prohibits the governor elect and designees from using confidential or exempt information for personal gain," the sponsor said, and raises the criminal penalty for willful violations of the records-related MOU "from a first degree misdemeanor to a third degree felony." The committee adopted the amendment by voice vote.
There was brief debate in support of the measure; Representative Rincon Rescamani called the bill "thoughtful" and urged its advancement. With no public testimony, the committee recessed for final roll call. On the recorded vote the committee reported the bill favorably, 22 yeas, 0 nays.
Next steps: HB 1063 was reported favorably by the State Affairs Committee and proceeds to further legislative consideration. The committee did not place additional implementation deadlines or reporting requirements in the amendment beyond the MOU and penalty change.
