Sunday, March 9, 2025

Montana Lawmakers Weigh Assisted Suicide Bills



Opponents and advocates say the issue isn't red or blue--it's emotional and personal. 

On Friday, a Montana bill that would have codified assisted suicide into state law died in a state House committee after gaining bipartisan support.

Two days before, the committee heard more than an hour of emotional testimony on the bill from members of the public. Rep. Tracy Sharp, a Republican, acknowledged that the bill raises questions about the sanctity of life.

“I’m anti-abortion,” he said ahead of a vote on the bill. “But I just can’t vote to deny all the people that we heard … something that I would want for myself.” Sharp said that voting no on the measure “would be too hypocritical. I would like to die with dignity.”

Assisted suicide in Montana has taken place in a legal gray area since 2009, when the state Supreme Court ruled that doctors can cite the consent of a patient as a defense to a charge of murder. Despite a longstanding Republican majority in the House and Senate, the topic has divided the state legislature for years. Montana has neither officially legalized the practice nor closed the court-created loophole. As legislators consider the issue again this year, lawmakers and lobbyists attribute the bipartisan support and opposition to assisted suicide to the personal nature and emotional complexity of the debate.

Sunday, March 2, 2025

Bill bolstering Montana Missing Indigenous Persons Task Force becomes Law

While Montana is one of only a few states to have a dedicated Missing Indigenous Persons Task Force, the inability of that organization to accept funding has hamstrung its efforts. [Pictured members listed below] *

That will soon change thanks to a new state law. 

Brought by Rep. Tyson Running Wolf, D-Browning, House Bill 83 establishes a state special revenue account, allowing the task force to receive donations, grants, gifts and other money for training, equipment and operational expenses. The bill also appropriates $1 in state funding to get the new account started. 

HB 83 sailed through the House and Senate and was signed into law Thursday by the governor. It takes effect July 1.