Study committee creation advances to examine assistive technology for Arizonans with disabilities

Committee on Appropriations (Arizona State Senate) · March 24, 2026

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Summary

The committee gave House Bill 2700 a due‑pass recommendation to create a 15‑member Technology First Study Committee to examine assistive technologies and policy changes for people with disabilities; advocates emphasized potential independence and cost savings from remote supports and assistive devices.

The Senate Appropriations Committee advanced House Bill 2,700 by a due‑pass recommendation after testimony from disability advocates and assistive‑technology providers.

Sponsor (speaker 7) said the bill would create a 15‑member study committee appointed by legislative leaders to analyze assistive‑technology needs and recommend statutory or administrative changes. An amendment from Senator Epstein adds appointments by minority leaders to increase bipartisan representation.

Advocates, including Sam Shepherd (speaker 26) and representatives from Centers for Habilitation, described examples such as augmentative and alternative communication devices, remote supports and AI tools that could increase independence, reduce staffing burdens and deliver long‑term cost savings. Witnesses urged the committee to prioritize rural access and cross‑agency collaboration.

The committee voted 9–0 (1 not voting) to give HB 2700 a due‑pass recommendation; members recommended cooperation with stakeholder groups as the study is designed and implemented.