| Bill | Bill Title & Upcoming Hearings | Sponsor | Status | Priority/Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SB 138 | (second New Title) Relative to Record Requests By Health Care Providers. | *Sen. Tim McGough 11-RRep. David Nagel 06-R Rep. John Potucek 13-R Rep. Julie Miles 12-R Rep. Lilli Walsh 15-R Rep. Susan Porcelli 19-R Sen. Bill Gannon 23-R Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-D Sen. Daniel Innis 07-R Sen. Keith Murphy 16-R Sen. Regina Birdsell 19-R | Signed by the Governor on 07/15/2025; Chapter 0233; Effective 09/13/2025 (7/22) | |
| HB 2 | Relative to State Fees, Funds, Revenues, and Expenditures. | *Rep. Kenneth Weyler 14-RRep. Dan McGuire 14-R Rep. Jess Edwards 31-R Rep. Keith Erf 28-R | Signed by Governor Ayotte 06/27/2025; Chapter 141; 7/01/2025 (6/30) | |
| HB 72 | Extending The Commission to Study Telehealth Services. Edwards introduced the bill and noted this is the same bill as in previous years except for the adding language on line 8 and 14. Previous study commission was heavily influenced by Covid and the committee did not feel the study and data was skewed and limited due to the environment during the year of the study. There was some committee discussion about integrating this bill with other technology study committees. Edwards advised that this would be separate and more focused on access, cost and quality of care. NAMI provided testimony in support. No opposition. If passed committee would produce a report in 6/2026 HB 72, extending the commission to study telehealth services. OUGHT TO PASS. Rep. David Nagel for Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs. It is the majority opinion of the Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs Committee that one of the most important medical innovations to come of out of the recent COVID pandemic was the advent of telemedicine as a means of providing increased access for patients to medical care, especially for those with transportation challenges. The committee realizes this modality of care is evolving and being challenged by changes in federal policy. Therefore, it is critical the state remain in an adaptive mode. The Telemedicine Commission is critical for allowing the state to do this important work. Furthermore, the committee is pleased to see the legislation refers to synchronization with federal policy. The committee also appreciates the passion this commission brings to this important work and is pleased to encourage their endeavor by supporting this legislation. Vote 17-1. |
*Rep. Jess Edwards 31-RRep. Jennifer Mandelbaum 21-D Rep. William Palmer 02-D | Signed by Governor Ayotte 05/08/2025; Chapter 5; eff. I. Sec 3 eff 6/30/2026 II. Rem eff 5/8/2025 (5/8) | |
| HB 195 | Relative to The Expectation Of Privacy In The Collection and Use Of Personal Information. | *Rep. Bob Lynn 17-R Rep. Bill Bolton 08-D Rep. Keith Erf 28-R Rep. Marjorie Smith 10-D Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-D | Inexpedient to Legislate, MA, VV === BILL KILLED ===; 05/01/2025 (5/1) | |
| HB 455 | Relative to Reports By The Department Of Health and Human Services Regarding Medicaid Enhancement For Children and Pregnant Women. | *Rep. Jess Edwards 31-RRep. Mark Pearson 34-R | Signed by Governor Ayotte 05/29/2025; Chapter 53; eff.07/01/2025 (5/30) | |
| HB 560 | (new Title) Relative to Parental Access to A Minor Child's Medical Records, Relative to Refusal Of Consent to Testing to Determine Alcohol Concentration and Penalties For Aggravated Driving While Intoxicated, Defining Pre-sequestration Timber Tax Revenue, Establishing A Moratorium On Carbon Sequestration and Establishing A Commission to Study The Effects Of Carbon Sequestration In New Hampshire Forests Upon State and Local Tax Revenue, Effective Forest Management, and The Health Of New Hampshire's Logging Industry. | *Rep. Melissa Litchfield 32-R Rep. Charles McMahon 17-R Rep. Jim Kofalt 32-R Rep. Katherine Prudhomme-O'Brien 13-R Rep. Kelley Potenza 19-R Rep. Kenneth Weyler 14-R Rep. Kristine Perez 16-R Rep. Linda Franz 06-R Rep. Mary Murphy 27-R Rep. Sheila Seidel 29-R Sen. Bill Gannon 23-R | Conference Committee Report; Not Signed Off (6/19) | |
| HB 597 | Establishing A Designated Behavioral Health Access Point Within The Enhanced 911 System. | *Rep. Bill Boyd 12-RRep. Adam Presa 12-R Rep. Jennifer Rhodes 17-R Rep. Jonah Wheeler 33-D Rep. Julie Miles 12-R Rep. Nancy Murphy 12-D Rep. Peter Petrigno 43-D Sen. Kevin Avard 12-R Sen. Pat Long 20-D Sen. Regina Birdsell 19-R Sen. Suzanne Prentiss 05-D Sen. Tim McGough 11-R | Signed by Governor Ayotte 05/14/2025; Chapter 35; eff.07/13/2025 (5/21) | |
| HB 598 | Establishing A Committee to Study Data Sources Of All Entities Operated By All Branches Of Government That Are or Are Potentially Made Available to The Public, Identify The Data Formats Of Those Sources, and Recommend Legislation to Standardize Types and Formats Of Data Output From All or Select Governmental Entities. | *Rep. Travis Corcoran 28-R Rep. Jason Osborne 02-R Rep. Keith Erf 28-R Rep. Mark Warden 39-R | Inexpedient to Legislate, MA, VV === BILL KILLED ===; 05/15/2025 (5/15) | |
| HB 705 | Relative to Health Care Cost Transparency. | *Rep. Keith Ammon 42-RRep. Anita Burroughs 02-D Rep. John Hunt 14-R Rep. Julius Soti 35-R | Committee Report: Ought to Pass, 01/07/2026; Vote 5-0; CC (10/22) | |
| SB 119 | (new Title) Relative to Medicaid Pharmaceutical Services and Relative to Standing Orders For Ivermectin. Floor Amendment by Sen. Rosenwald 16-8 OTP Bill goes to Finance. Amendment: Directs pharmacists to dispense brand name drugs to Medicaid beneficiaries when the brand name drug is on the department of health and human services preferred drug list. II. Directs the department of health and human services to develop a standing order for certain Medicaid-covered, over-the-counter medications, medical supplies, and laboratory tests when deemed medically necessary and cost effective by the department. III. Repeals the requirement that expanded Medicaid, also known as the New Hampshire granite advantage health care program, be terminated if the federal match rate falls below 90 percent |
*Sen. James Gray 06-R | Sen. Rochefort Moved Nonconcur with the House Amendment, MA, VV; 06/12/2025 (6/12) | |
| SB 244 | (new Title) Relative to Expanding Access to Primary Health Care Services, Increasing The Size Of The Health Care Workforce, and Making Appropriations Therefor. | *Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-DRep. Laura Telerski 11-D Rep. Lucy Weber 05-D Rep. Mary Jane Wallner 19-D Sen. David Watters 04-D Sen. Debra Altschiller 24-D Sen. Donovan Fenton 10-D Sen. Pat Long 20-D Sen. Rebecca Perkins Kwoka 21-D Sen. Suzanne Prentiss 05-D Sen. Tara Reardon 15-D | Inexpedient to Legislate, Senate Rule 3-23, 10/31/2025 (11/3) | |
| HB 1117 | Relative to The Right Of Licensed Health Care Providers to Freely Communicate with Patients, Colleagues, and The Public About Medical Information, Emerging Therapies, and Treatment Options. | *Rep. Linda McGrath 40-R Rep. JD Bernardy 36-R Rep. Jonathan Morton 39-R Rep. Kristine Perez 16-R Rep. Matt Sabourin dit Choini?re 30-R Rep. Melissa Litchfield 32-R Rep. Paul Terry 07-R Rep. Robert Wherry 13-R Rep. Sayra DeVito 08-R Rep. Susan DeRoy 03-R | ||
| HB 1215 | Relative to Supporting The Preferred Method Of Communication Of An Individual with Developmental Disabilities. | *Rep. Jim Kofalt 32-R Rep. Bill Boyd 12-R Rep. Jodi Newell 04-D Rep. Katelyn Kuttab 17-R Rep. Wayne MacDonald 16-R Sen. Kevin Avard 12-R Sen. Regina Birdsell 19-R Sen. Sharon Carson 14-R | ||
| HB 1232 | Relative to Insurance Coverage For Telemedicine Services. | *Rep. Alicia Gregg 07-D Rep. Jared Sullivan 02-D Rep. Jodi Nelson 13-R Rep. Mark Pearson 34-R Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-D Sen. Donovan Fenton 10-D Sen. Pat Long 20-D | ||
| HB 1283 | Relative to The Use Of Face Recognition Technology. | *Rep. Buzz Scherr 26-D Rep. Dan McGuire 14-R | ||
| HB 1317 | Relative to Patient Privacy Protections. | *Rep. Heath Howard 04-DRep. Alice Wade 15-D Rep. Billie ButlerRep. Chris Muns 29-D Rep. Hope Damon 08-D Rep. Jessica LaMontagne 17-D Rep. Nicholas Germana 15-D Rep. Toni Weinstein 10-D Sen. David Watters 04-D | ||
| HB 1347 | Relative to Health Care Provider Networks and Referrals. | *Rep. Trinidad Tellez 40-D Rep. David Nagel 06-R | ||
| HB 1406 | Prohibiting Health Carriers From Using Artificial Intelligence to Change The Clinical Judgment Of A Provider.? | *Rep. Alicia Gregg 07-D Rep. David Nagel 06-R Rep. Gaby Grossman 11-D Rep. Jessica LaMontagne 17-D Rep. Mark Pearson 34-R Rep. Nancy Murphy 12-D Rep. Sanjeev Manohar 09-D Rep. Santosh Salvi 09-D Rep. Trinidad Tellez 40-D Sen. Pat Long 20-D Sen. Regina Birdsell 19-R Sen. Suzanne Prentiss 05-D | ||
| HB 1436 | Relative to The Classification and Protection Of Personal Digital Information and Cloud-stored Files. | *Rep. James Spillane 02-RRep. Brian Cole 26-R Rep. Daniel Popovici-Muller 17-R Rep. JD Bernardy 36-R Rep. Jeanine Notter 12-R Rep. Keith Ammon 42-R Rep. Michael Moffett 04-R Rep. Steven Kesselring 18-R Rep. Terry Roy 31-R Rep. Travis Corcoran 28-R | ||
| HB 1463 | Requiring The Insurance Department to Conduct An Analysis and Produce A Report Detailing Compliance with The State's Managed Care and Medical Utilization Review Laws. | *Rep. Trinidad Tellez 40-D Rep. David Nagel 06-R Rep. Jennifer Mandelbaum 21-D | ||
| LSR 696 | Relative to Work Requirements Under The State Medicaid Program. | *Rep. Daniel Popovici-Muller 17-R | ||
| LSR 2343 | Relative to The Parental Bill Of Rights. | *Rep. Kristin Noble 02-R Rep. Margaret Drye 07-R | ||
| LSR 2507 | Creating An Exception to The Restricted Uses Of Artificial Intelligence By State Agencies. | *Rep. Thomas Cormen 15-DRep. Chris Muns 29-D Rep. Dan McGuire 14-R Rep. David Preece 17-D Rep. Tanya Donnelly 25-R Rep. Travis Corcoran 28-R Sen. David Watters 04-D Sen. Suzanne Prentiss 05-D | ||
| LSR 2798 | Directing The Department Of Health and Human Services to Identify The Impact Of Medicaid Changes On New Hampshire Residents' Access to Health Care. | *Rep. Laura Telerski 11-DRep. Carrie Sorensen 28-D Rep. David Nagel 06-R Rep. Janet Lucas 07-D Rep. Jessica LaMontagne 17-D Rep. Lucy Weber 05-D Rep. Mary Jane Wallner 19-D Rep. Trinidad Tellez 40-D Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-D Sen. Rebecca Perkins Kwoka 21-D Sen. Suzanne Prentiss 05-D | ||
| LSR 2812 | Relative to The Regulation Of Artificial Intelligence Technologies. | *Rep. Patrick Long 26-D | ||
| LSR 2965 | Relative to The Inter-agency Data Sharing For The Purpose Of Distributing Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer (ebt) Benefits.? | *Rep. Mike Bordes 05-R | ||
| LSR 3066 | Relative to Emergency Medical Care Provided At Freestanding Hospital Emergency Facilities. | *Rep. Laura Telerski 11-DRep. Alicia Gregg 07-D Rep. Bill Ohm 10-R Rep. Daniel Veilleux 34-D Rep. Manoj Chourasia 11-D Rep. Megan Murray 37-D Rep. Suzanne Vail 06-D Rep. Tim Hartnett 41-D Rep. Vanessa Sheehan 43-R Sen. Cindy Rosenwald 13-D Sen. Kevin Avard 12-R | ||
| LSR 3121 | Relative to Establishing A Technology Commission to Study Making New Hampshire A Technology-first State. | *Rep. Heath Howard 04-D | ||
| LSR 3165 | Requiring Sufficient Cybersecurity Protections For Critical Infrastructure and Technology Projects. | *Rep. Donald McFarlane 18-RRep. Daniel Popovici-Muller 17-R Rep. Jonah Wheeler 33-D Rep. Jose Cambrils 04-R Rep. Matt Sabourin dit Choini?re 30-R Rep. Michael Vose 05-R Sen. Howard Pearl 17-R | ||
| LSR 3239 | Directing The Department Of Health and Human Services to Provide Notice Of Medical and Religious Exemptions From Immunization Requirements and Relative to The Form Of Such Exemption. | *Rep. Kelley Potenza 19-RRep. Erica Layon 13-R Rep. Jim Kofalt 32-R Rep. Lisa Mazur 44-R |