Last week we saw a flurry of activity during this eighth week of the legislative session which ended with our comprehensive tort reform bill on life support. See the highlights of this bill and others below.
S.244, Tort Reform, on Life Support
Despite a midweek press conference with over 500 supporters from the business community, including many CAGC members, it was not enough to convince some in the Senate that the businesses back home are calling for a change in the state’s tort laws. There is a lot to unpack from last week, so settle in for some insight into what really happened inside the State House.
After setting S.244 for special order the week before, giving it priority debate status, the Senate began debating our comprehensive tort reform bill last Tuesday. This included close to five hours of back and forth between the lawyer legislators in the Senate. Just when the conversation was dragging on, there was an exchange between Sen. Michael Johnson (R-York) who chaired the subcommittee and had been explaining the bill and Sen. Tom Fernandez (R-Summerville). Fernandez, as you can see here, alleged he had been offered, by the “trial lawyer lobby,” money in exchange for his vote. This allegation caused quite a reaction from inside and outside of the Senate chamber and the Senate immediately paused the debate. When the senate returned to session several minutes later, the debate continued and not long after Fernandez published a written statement clarifying what he said on the Senate floor. Interestingly, the two are not quite the same. Whether this will call for an ethics investigation is yet to be determined. The Senate adjourned that day taking no votes.
On Wednesday, our members were among over 500 business representatives who supported Gov. Henry McMaster, Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey, and Senate President Thomas Alexander as they called for an end to the confusing and decisive rhetoric around the tort debate and pushed for the passage of fair and balanced reform bill. CAGC Member Richard Jackson stood alongside McMaster and the Senate leaders as the business industry representative and urged passage of the bill. Jackson said, “Right now, one party in civil litigation involving multiple parties, no matter how small a fraction of fault they have been found responsible for, could face footing the bill for 100 percent of the damages in a case. And it could cost a family business, like mine, everything. That is not fair. And it is not the South Carolina way. I believe parties who have suffered deserve the chance to seek justice.” Once back in session Wednesday afternoon, Senators debated the bill into the night, again, adjourning without taking a vote.
And that brings us to last Thursday afternoon. A couple of hours into the debate, the plaintiff lawyer legislators offered an amendment. They shopped it inside the Senate Chamber calling it an amendment that “has something for everyone,” but Massey said it “gutted the bill” and called it “an amendment from trial lawyers for the trial lawyers.” Massey went on to say that the best thing to do is continue the bill (which would kill it) and just go on living with the status quo. But instead, there was a motion to table the amendment, which is what we wanted. The tabling motion failed 25-19 and below are the votes:
Adams
Devine
Fernandez
Gambrell
Garrett
Graham
Goldfinch
Hutto
Jackson
Johnson
Kennedy
Kimbrell
Leber
Matthews
Peeler
Rankin
Saab
Sutton
Tedder
Walker
Young
Zell
Allen
Stubbs
Elliott
|
Alexander
Bennett
Blackmon
Cash
Chaplin
Climer
Corbin
Cromer
Davis
Grooms
Hembree
Massey
Nutt
Ott
Reichenbach
Rice
Turner
|
Immediately after the vote, the Senate adjourned with S.244 remaining in interrupted debate status for more discussion this week.
Only a couple of Senators who should have been or previously shared they were with us were willing to explain their “no” vote, some calling it personal and others being convinced it was an amendment that had something for everyone. They might be willing to explain their vote to their constituents. Contact information for all Senators can be found here. In the meantime, please call and thank the 19 who stood with us.
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House Passes Liquor Liability Bill
The day after our press conference, the SC House waived the 24-hour rule for a bill to be on the House calendar and quickly pushed through H.3947, the Liquor Liability Bill. This bill is one of the House Republican Caucus’ agenda items and it passed by a 109-0 vote. As approved it ends joint and several liability (but ONLY for bars and restaurants), expands insurance options and implements safety measures in hopes of lower premium costs, and requires server training. Kudos to the House for addressing this issue for the thousands of businesses that have already closed because of their increased insurance rates. We are hopeful the House is willing to consider similar legislation for the other businesses across the state, including contractors, which are also seeing similar increases and are just one lawsuit away from going out of business.
AG Buildings Bill
Last week the Business & Commerce Subcommittee of the House Labor, Commerce and Industry Committee considered H.3946, also known as the Agricultural Buildings bill. This bill amends the exemptions section of the Contractors’ Licensing law. Currently there is an exemption in the law that allows farm buildings with less than five thousand square feet of floor space and used only for livestock or storage to be built without a contractor’s license. H. 3946, as drafted, would increase the square footage from 5,000 to 50,000 and would also amend it to include poultry among the qualifying use purposes. There were concerns among the subcommittee members about such a large square footage increase along with life, health, and safety concerns for anyone who might work in such a building that was built by an unlicensed contractor. The committee voted to continue the bill which kills it.
SC House Passes Small Business Regulatory Freedom Act
Last week the House passed H.3021, the Small Business Regulatory Freedom Act, a bill that should reduce red tape and improve government accountability. The bill, as drafted, would cut unnecessary and outdated mandates and hold state agencies more accountable by requiring a 25 percent reduction in regulations. It would also stop agencies from creating new rules unless state law specifically allows it. Under the bill, an agency could not impose a new rule unless it first repealed two existing ones. New and renewed rules would go through detailed reviews and expire automatically unless they are amended. The bill passed 111-0 and has been referred to the Senate for consideration.
DEI Heard in E&PW Committee
The House Education and Public Works (E&PW) Committee spent two hours taking testimony on H.3927 last week. Officially titled the Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity Act, the bill aims to restrict diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives within state government, its political subdivisions, and institutions of higher education. No action was taken, and the committee is expected to reconvene in the coming weeks.
State of the SCDOT
Among all the other meetings last week, the Senate Transportation Committee held its annual state of the SCDOT meeting to hear from Secretary of Transportation Justin Powell. Secretary Powell’s message was simple: to modernize the system, we must modernize our policies. The more tools in the toolbox, the better, including revenue sources. Powell addressed continued growth of the system, loss of buying power, electric vehicles, transportation planning, and the need for bridge funding. Included is a link to the full presentation as well as a recording of the conversation between Powell and the Committee.