The House Human Services Committee this afternoon voted to approve
S.108, the bill that calls for the repeal of the “sunset provision” in
Act 39 (not to be confused with a wholesale repeal of Act 39). It is
expected that the bill will be debated on the House floor next week,
possibly Wednesday.
“Repealing the sunset” would mean that the law will retain the few so-called protections that were included in the original bill that was passed and became law in 2013. Without a repeal of the sunset, these minimal protections, which primarily relate to the procedure around obtaining a prescription, are scheduled to go away in July 2016. As Guy Page testified last week on behalf of the Vermont Alliance for Ethical Healthcare, “Without the sunset, Act 39 gets an ‘F’. With it, it rates an ‘F-minus’. A distinction without a difference.”
“Repealing the sunset” would mean that the law will retain the few so-called protections that were included in the original bill that was passed and became law in 2013. Without a repeal of the sunset, these minimal protections, which primarily relate to the procedure around obtaining a prescription, are scheduled to go away in July 2016. As Guy Page testified last week on behalf of the Vermont Alliance for Ethical Healthcare, “Without the sunset, Act 39 gets an ‘F’. With it, it rates an ‘F-minus’. A distinction without a difference.”