Chamber Connections BLOG
Chamber Connections BLOG
This Week At the State House
Tuesday, June 4th A new bill was introduced May 29th and is scheduled for hearing Tuesday in the House Judiciary Committee. While the bill is directed at the Washington Bridge, it gives rise to concerns about retroactive changes to law. H.8318, An Act Relating to Courts and Civil Procedure – Causes of Action retroactively changes the statute of repose for the Washington Bridge. What does that mean? Under current law, any person, firm, corporation or legal entity that is involved in the design, construction, repair, modification, etc. to real property can be sued for damages or injuries within ten years of the “substantial completion” of a construction project. This was litigated in 1985 and upheld by the Rhode Island Supreme Court and it is similar to laws in 46 other states. H.8318 changes the law as it pertains to the Washington bridge by extending the statute of limitations to ten years from the “date of discovery” or by December 1, 2033, whichever is later, unless the case would be time barred as of the date this legislation becomes law. So, if the bill were to pass into law July 1, 2024, any entity involved in the Washington bridge where “substantial completion” did not occur before July 1, 2014, would be reachable to sue for liability. In some instances, this extends the window of liability to close to 20 years. The reason for setting a time limit to sue in most cases relates to ability to find eye witnesses with memories that are accurate, loss of potential evidence, the influence of other factors that are hard to quantify or qualify over the years. Insurance companies rely on statutes of limitations and statutes of repose to assess risk in setting premiums or deciding to insure entities. (See new file bills below for the actual language) The Senate Committee on Environment and Agriculture is voting Tuesday on S.2952, An Act Relating to Health and Safety – Building Decarbonization Act. The bill bans municipalities from issuing a permit for the construction or alteration of any commercial, residential, or mixed-use buildings if the initial application is submitted after December 31, 2024 and if the building is not made “electric ready.” Electric ready means the building is designed with sufficient capacity for a future retrofit of a mixed-use building to an all-electric building, including space, drainage, electrical conductors, etc. The bill gives municipalities the authority to go further and require these buildings to be all-electric, instead of “electric ready” unless it is deemed technically infeasible. No permits can be issued after December 31, 2026, unless the building is all-electric with the option to install a back up system to operate when the electric grid goes down. https://webserver.rilegislature.gov/BillText/BillText24/SenateText24/S2952.pdf The Senate Labor Committee is scheduled to vote on S.2120, An Act Relating to Businesses and Professions. This is the Senate companion for H.7015 SubA that was featured in last week’s edition. If you are in the real estate business, are in the market to buy or sell a house, or if you are a house inspector, contact your legislator quickly. The bill bans anyone, other than a licensed electrician, from testing wires, conduits and apparatus which includes fixtures, lighting, etc. What this means, is that a potential buyer’s house inspector would no longer be able to inspect switches, lights, or look at a panel to alert the buyer to potential problems. Buyers, should they wish to have the dwelling’s electrical system included in an inspection would need to hire a licensed electrician to perform the inspection – within the customary ten-day inspection period. Under current law, a house inspector is permitted to look at these items and recommend the buyer seek advice from a licensed electrician if something appears amiss. If passed into law, the bill would take effect January 30, 2025. https://webserver.rilegislature.gov/BillText/BillText24/SenateText24/S2120.pdf Wednesday, June 5th The Senate Health and Human Services Committee will be voting on S.2084, An Act Relating to Health and Safety Catastrophic Illness in Children Relief Fund. S.2084 places a $1.50 per employee tax on businesses to financially fund a new state program entitled the “Catastrophic Illness in Children Relief Fund.” This fund is meant to aid families of children with serious illnesses. https://webserver.rilegislature.gov/BillText/BillText24/SenateText24/S2084.pdf Friday June 6th The House members will be debating and voting on the State’s budget Friday late afternoon into the evening. As passed by the House Finance Committee last Friday night, the budget contains 14 Articles. Below are some highlights:
The following new bill was filed last week: House Bill No. 8318 Dawson, Boylan, AN ACT RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE -- PROCEDURE GENERALLY -- CAUSES OF ACTION (Clarifies the statute of limitations for all causes of action not otherwise time barred that seek damages arising out of or related to the design/construction/supervision/or inspection of the Washington Bridge No. 700, located in East Prov. RI.) http://webserver.rilin.state.ri.us/BillText/BillText24/HouseText24/H8318.pdf Senate Bill No. 3107 Britto, Tikoian, Burke, Cano, Murray, Gu, Lawson, AN ACT RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW--GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS -- DIGITAL ELECTRONICS RIGHT TO REPAIR ACT (Establishes a digital electronics right to repair, which would allow for digital electronic equipment and parts that are sold in this state on or after January 1, 2025, to be repaired at an independent repair provider.) http://webserver.rilin.state.ri.us/BillText/BillText24/SenateText24/S3107.pdf Senate Bill No. 3111 Bissaillon, Euer, Mack, AN ACT RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- LEAD HAZARD MITIGATION (Requires renovation projects of pre-1978 buildings to comply with provisions of chapter 24.6 of title 23 and chapter 21 of title 28, and require presence of lead inspector and supervisor and require lead training. DLT would ensure compliance.) http://webserver.rilin.state.ri.us/BillText/BillText24/SenateText24/S3111.pdf
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