Pubdate: Fri, 24 Mar 2006 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2006 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Authors: Jonathan Roos, Tim Higgins, and Tony Leys, staff writers DRUG TRACKING BILL SURVIVES, OTHERS GET FRIED A system to detect abusers of prescription drugs makes the cut. Catfish and sex offenders had something in common Thursday in the Iowa Legislature -- bills on both went belly-up. In the House, lawmakers cast aside a resolution designating the channel catfish as the state fish of Iowa. They also threw overboard a proposed law setting minimum 25-year prison sentences for certain first-time child sex offenders. Supporters of the anti-crime bill, approved by the Senate despite criticism from county prosecutors, expect it to be revived in some form as lawmakers continue to work on sex offender issues. Legislation capping interest rates on car title loans also failed to clear a committee deadline for reducing the Legislature's workload going into the final weeks of the 2006 session. But a bill that had been left for dead this week regarding a computerized system to help detect abusers of prescription drugs was spared at the last minute. The Senate Human Resources Committee, in amending House File 722, voted to limit access to the proposed prescription drug database to pharmacists and doctors -- not law officers or medical boards, unless they obtained a court order. To remain eligible for debate, virtually all bills except those dealing with taxes or spending needed the support of the House or Senate and a committee in the opposite chamber by the end of Thursday. "This is a crazy week, and we're all at our wits' end," said Sen. Herman Quirmbach, an Ames Democrat. The biggest turnaround came on the bill directing Iowa pharmacies to report all prescriptions for narcotic painkillers and other addictive drugs to a central database. The prescription-drug monitoring program is aimed at curbing "doctor-shopping," whereby addicts get multiple doctors to write prescriptions for the same drugs. The House-passed bill had bogged down in the Senate because of privacy concerns and was declared dead on Wednesday. The legislation received a new lease on life when the Human Resources Committee approved a version Thursday that bans law officers from looking at the registry unless they obtain a court order to investigate a specific person. The same limit would be placed on state regulators who oversee doctors and pharmacists, said Sen. Jack Hatch, a Des Moines Democrat. Researchers would be banned from using the registry, even if information identifying patients were removed. Dale Woolery, a spokesman for the Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy, called the revised proposal "an attempt to prevent fishing expeditions." Woolery said the main intent of the tracking system always has been to help health-care experts identify patients who might have addiction problems. Police still could use the computerized system if they could convince a judge that they have a valid reason. "It doesn't change the standard by which law enforcement is supposed to be operating today," Woolery said. "We hope this will be a time saver, and maybe a lifesaver." The changes made the legislation more palatable to the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa. "Now it focuses on patient health care, which it should have all along," said lobbyist Marty Ryan. Twenty-one states have prescription monitoring programs. On the crime front, the Legislature has passed a number of laws cracking down on sex offenders since last year, when a 10-year-old Cedar Rapids girl was abducted, sexually assaulted and killed. The anti-crime push took a detour Thursday when the House Public Safety Committee didn't act on a Senate-passed bill setting mandatory minimum prison terms of 25 years for three sex crimes where the victims are children younger than 13. Senate File 2094 also would have let judges impose life terms without parole for offenders convicted of lascivious acts with a child, sexual exploitation of a minor or second-degree sex abuse. While the bill was allowed to die, Republican and Democratic leaders of the House committee said the issue will receive more debate. They said they want to address county prosecutors' objections to the proposed prison terms before moving ahead with sex offender legislation that also fixes problems with a law barring certain offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or child care center. "If the history of the Legislature has shown us anything, it is that once a tough sex offender bill begins to move through the process, it becomes very difficult to slow this process down so that meaningful dialogue can occur," Rep. Kevin McCarthy, a Des Moines Democrat, and Rep. Clel Baudler, a Republican from Greenfield, said in a joint statement. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin