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House committee advances broad package of economic development and technology bills; key votes and next steps

House Committee on Economic Development & Technology · February 13, 2026

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Summary

The House economic development and technology committee heard testimony on more than a dozen bills on Feb. 13, 2026 — including tax transparency, workforce strategy, a statewide benefits portal and recognition/funding for school robotics — and voted to advance most measures with technical amendments or deferrals of effective dates for conference.

The House committee that handles economic development and technology met Feb. 13 in Room 423 and advanced a slate of bills covering taxation, workforce development, technology modernization and education programs.

Members voted to adopt the chair's recommendations on multiple measures, frequently adding technical amendments and deferring effective dates to a distant year ("year 3000") to allow the House to continue negotiations in conference. The committee's actions included passage with amendments on measures intended to increase tax transparency, expand apprenticeships, strengthen research tax credits and support small-business financing.

Testimony across the morning emphasized three recurring themes: protecting taxpayer privacy while increasing disclosure (HB2429); aligning state support for long-term workforce pipelines (HB1859); and expanding student access to STEM through recognition and funding for robotics programs (HB2534). Department and vendor witnesses also urged caution on technical and data-governance issues for a proposed Hawaii Benefits Hub (HB2114).

Votes at a glance (committee recommendations adopted unless noted): - HB1813 (taxation): pass with amendments (chair's recommendation adopted). - HB2429 (tax expenditure evaluation; disclosure rules): pass with amendments; committee directed technical amendments and guardrails for data release. - HB2423 (biodiesel blend): pass with amendments; DBEDT to report on implementation plan. - HB1996 (hearing aid sales tax exemption): pass as is. - HB1851 (apprenticeship tax credit): pass with amendments (cap and sunset language added). - HB2546 (research tax credit): pass with amendments; committee recommended pro rata distribution and retroactive application to 2025 tax year. - HB2583 (small-business financing): pass with amendments. - HB2490 (coastal resilience pilot for Montaukachi/Montaukuchi Bay): pass with amendments addressing historic-preservation concerns. - HB2114 (Hawaii Benefits Hub): pass as is. - HB1859 (workforce development strategy): pass as is. - HB2534 (robotics as interscholastic sport): pass as is. - HB2475 (labeling/Okolehao definition): pass with amendments.

What happens next: Bills that passed committee will move to subsequent floor scheduling and to conference as needed; several measures carry technical amendments that the House noted are intended to be resolved during later stages. For items that raised operational or privacy concerns (notably HB2429 and HB2114), committee members asked staff and agencies to supply clarifying language before final enactment.

The committee recessed and reconvened to finish the agenda, then adjourned at the end of the session.