Beyond the vetoes
You might think nothing happened during the last session of the
But, as Sununu pointed out, he also signed 333 bills this session and let another nine go into law without his signature. And while none of these laws might have as much of an impact as some of the vetoed bills - such as raising the minimum wage and net metering cap or starting a new family and medical leave program - about 100 of them are significant to business in one way or the other.
This session Sununu signed bills allowing sports betting, hemp farming and driverless cars. There is a new law allowing the establishment of municipal energy districts, regulating pharmacy benefit managers and banning noncompete agreements for low-wage workers.
Not all of this is going to happen at once. The state has yet to do much to implement the driverless car bill, for Instance, but there are excellent odds that you might be able place a bet on next year's
Wayfair ruling
Senate Bill 242 - the legislative response to the
The Wayfair decision requires
It isn't so much the actual money but the expense of compliance, said
Software that handles the task costs
SB 242 can't undo the decision, but it can throw up a couple of roadblocks.
Under the new law, jurisdictions that wish to collect the tax in
For Badger, who is already proactively trying to work with the states where he sells his product, the new law isn't much of a help, he said.
"We felt we really had to move forward before this new law became a law, so for us it's like closing the barn door after it was too late," he said. He said it would have been something of a gamble to ignore a tax-payment request in any case, because it "might have put us in an exposed position. There are very few situations that are not going to be a constitutional request."
So far, no state has contacted
Garland declined to comment on whether any of those businesses were reporting collection efforts, or whether they just had questions about the law. Garland emphasized that the AG can't give tax or legal advice.
"We don't want businesses to think we can defend them," he said. "We do have an enforcement mechanism and we will handle it on a case-by-case basis. We are taking this very seriously."
Sports betting
Unlike casino gambling, sports betting passed with little controversy.
Still, the bill does seem to encourage setting up sports betting at existing charitable gaming facilities, said
Either way, sports betting might reverse the migration of some gaming dollars, since
Prospective vendors were supposed to submit their technical proposals on
Healthcare
Sununu may have vetoed a lot of labor and energy bills, but his red pen didn't touch any of the healthcare-related bills that made their way through the legislative process. Indeed, he signed 20 of them, including SB 4, which enshrines the once controversial Affordable Care Act into state law, and SB 290, which loosens some work requirements for recipients of expanded Medicaid and suspends them if lots of people are losing coverage.
Those measures preserve the status quo, but others made changes, including SB 226, which for the first time would regulate pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). Although insurers use PBMs - the middle man between pharmaceutical manufacturers and pharmacies - to control costs, critics say they actually increase them.
"They are virtually unregulated," said Newman, who also represents the
"I expect you will see it grow in the state," said Dr.
SB 258 would allow Medicaid managed care to pay for telemedicine services and help standardize the definition for private insurers, greatly enhancing its use. Potter said he expects a big increase in telepsychiatry as well as drug counseling.
And SB 279 would require health insurers to reimburse fertility treatment clinics which had been closing up shop, but now are coming back. "I think this will help those seeking treatment from having to go out of state," Potter said.
Energy
Sununu vetoed a lot of renewable energy bills, but also signed a few.
SB 286 - the community power bill - makes it possible for municipalities and counties to create their own energy districts, allowing residents and businesses to opt out, as opposed to getting them to opt in.
"That's important to a lot of towns to leverage buying power," said
The city of
"This creates the possibility to totally scale up renewable energy," said
SB 165, the Low-income Community Solar Energy Act, requires that utilities set up renewable energy net metering projects with a favorable rate. Eversource was already setting one up (without the favorable rate) in response to a
"They were all mandated to do these pilots last December. Obviously, we are not there," said
The new law - for which the PUC has yet to set up rules - might delay things even more.
SB 165 could also be used for non-low-income net premium projects - even though they would not be eligible for the favorable rates - because it streamlines large group net metering, Weeks noted, which he said can be "clunky."
Finally, HB 464 allows towns to extend solar energy exemptions for electric energy storage systems. This will be helpful for owners of residences who are using storage mainly as backup generation, said Weeks. But storage is still not economical for commercial clients that want to use it to smooth out demand curves. Local storage tax breaks would only help in marginal cases until the price of storage comes down.
Other bills
The construction industry also got some of what it wanted. Homebuilders got an updated energy code, with only a modest tightening of energy standards, and a bill that would also set up a centralized, accessible list of local codes. And developers got a bill that would exempt sales of some low-income housing projects from the real estate transfer tax.
The governor also signed off on a bill that would require new commercial construction to include a larger universal changing station for the disabled in family restrooms.
But labor mainly got bills that were vetoed, with one exception: SB 197, would outlaw noncompete agreements for lower-wage workers. Labor advocates complain that such agreements - once used for executives and specialists - have been working their way down the pay scale to some retail and restaurant workers, restricting the free movement of labor and suppressing wages.
There were a few bills that focused on the labor shortage. SB 12 created the
Paragon Digital, a
But the bill doesn't provide any money to set up GRIP. It just instructs the
"I would expect that we will have the program ready to go live by the end of the year, if not earlier," said BEA Commissioner
But SB 276 would allocate



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