Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 Source: Paintsville Herald, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Paintsville Herald Contact: http://www.paintsvilleherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2723 ATTENTION: ASSEMBLY CONSIDERING FUTURE LAWS The Editorial Board: The Kentucky General Assembly will sort through a mountain of prefiled bills over the next two months, while the elected officials we have chosen to represent us select the ones they deem appropriate for bringing about positive change. A motivating factor for one of these bills, BR 16, which relates to fetal homicide, was witnessed in neighboring Pike County in 2002 when an intoxicated driver struck a man and his pregnant wife while he was taking her to the hospital to deliver their child. The child and the mother died, but because the baby was not yet outside of the womb, the charge against the intoxicated driver was a mere one count of vehicular manslaughter. This bill, which did not pass in 2003, would ensure an incident such as the one mentioned would result in criminal homicide charges. Rising to the ongoing problem of drug abuse in Eastern Kentucky, representatives and senators have filed several bills to address that particular issue. BR 178 would allow family members of adults afflicted with alchohol and other drug abuse and mental illness to commit them to get the help they need. The Matthew Casey Wethington Act for Substance Abuse Intervention would allow parents, relatives, and/or friends to petition the court for involuntary treatment for their substance abuse impaired loved one who is 18 or older, as Kentucky law only allows intervention for minors at this time. The act is named after a 23-year-old man from Morning View, who died in 2002 from his third heroin overdose. His parents spoke out because they didn't have a right to force him to stay in treatment. Two bills aimed at drug control are BR 337 and BR 346. The first would require doctors and pharmacists to report data about controlled substances to the Cabinet for Health Services through the all-schedule prescription electronic reporting system, which would help law enforcement spot those receiving multiple prescriptions from various doctors and/or abusing Medicaid and Medicare. BR 346 would require the Board of Medical Licensure to establish a pain management committee to recommend policy guidelines for prescribing, administering, and dispensing controlled substances. Other bills address marriage laws, expanding gambling, the abolishment of the death penalty, eliminating unsolicited e-mail, and limiting the damages in malpractice suits. It might be in our best interest to keep a watchful eye on the progress of this legislation, as our elected officials need to know that we are indeed paying attention. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh