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Senate Judiciary reviews H937, a broad miscellaneous judiciary bill

Senate Judiciary · April 17, 2026

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Summary

The Senate Judiciary considered H937, a miscellaneous judiciary bill that bundles technical corrections and policy changes — including remote access to criminal records, family-division judgment renewal rules, expansion of rapid accountability dockets, stalking-law clarifications and other housekeeping measures — and deferred several items for further work.

The Senate Judiciary on April 17 examined H937, a miscellaneous judiciary bill that combines technical fixes and substantive policy changes ranging from electronic access to criminal case records to a planned pilot expansion of rapid accountability dockets.

Legislative counsel Michelle told the committee that the package includes two of her measures — changes to public dissemination of electronic criminal records and adjustments in family‑division judgment renewal — and a set of other provisions authored or requested by stakeholders. “There are, 2 that I’ll just mention, right off. 1 having to to do with dissemination public dissemination of electronic past criminal records,” she said while summarizing the bill as passed in the House.

Key provisions in the bill include: - Electronic case records: Section 4 removes a statutory prohibition on making criminal case records electronically available to the public and directs the court to adopt rules governing Internet access. - Judgment renewal in family division: Section 5 clarifies an eight‑year statute of limitations for judgments and permits a family‑division motion to enforce property or money orders to serve as renewal for the statute’s purpose, avoiding separate civil filings for litigants in family court. - Rapid accountability dockets: Sections 31–40 establish a framework for counties to adopt time-limited rapid accountability dockets modeled on an existing Chittenden County pilot, with deployment guidance, designated judicial and administrative resources, a 90‑day operating period (with discretion to end earlier if goals are met), and required data collection and reporting; the provisions include a two‑year sunset (repeal effective 07/01/2028). - Multiple technical and substantive clarifications: the bill relocates a “profits from crime” subchapter to the Attorney General’s statutes (per stakeholder request), updates victim‑compensation board composition, harmonizes juvenile‑jurisdiction language, clarifies stalking definitions, adjusts record‑retention for diversion records, and changes several cross‑references.

Legislators pressed counsel on practicalities, including how fees and access will be handled for remote records and whether the family‑division renewal change could create new administrative work or confusion for pro se litigants. Counsel said the court will adopt procedures and any fee structure through rulemaking and that specific implementation details will be addressed in court rules and stakeholder follow up.

Several items will return for additional drafting and harmonization. Committee members asked the judiciary counsel to check for inconsistencies where similar provisions appear in other bills (for example, tobacco‑possession provisions and some juvenile penalties), and the committee agreed to revisit several fire‑arms and juvenile sections next week.

The committee took public testimony in favor of removing the remote‑access prohibition for criminal records and flagged follow‑up work on deployment, data collection, and whether savings from rapid dockets can be quantified and reinvested. The committee did not take any final votes on H937 during the session and plans further markup and potential floor amendments before final action.