Chapter 040
2019 -- S 0171 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 06/28/2019

A N   A C T
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- APPROPRIATE DISABILITY LANGUAGE

Introduced By: Senators DiPalma, Sosnowski, Seveney, Coyne, and Valverde
Date Introduced: January 24, 2019

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Section 22-11-3.4 of the General Laws in Chapter 22-11 entitled "Joint
Committee on Legislative Services" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     22-11-3.4. Duties of the law revision director.
     (a) In addition to other duties assigned to the law revision director, he or she shall
rearrange, rephrase, and consolidate the public laws and acts and resolves of the general assembly
so that redundancies may be avoided, obsolete enactments eliminated, contradictions reconciled,
omissions supplied, and imperfections cured. The law revision director has no authority either to
change the law or to alter the substance of the statutes but shall alert the general assembly
annually to specific changes, which may be required. In addition, a report shall be filed annually
with the general assembly which shall indicate which sections of the general laws at the previous
session had more than one amendment and displaying a copy of the final version of the statute on
the first legislative day of the next subsequent session of the general assembly.
     (b) The law revision director shall, by February 1, 2020, file a report with the general
assembly, proposing amendments to those sections of the general laws that do not use appropriate
disability language as required by § 43-3-7.1. The report shall also include a list of those statutes
for which amendments are not being proposed pursuant to § 43-3-7.1 because the director had
determined that such amendments could alter the intent of the statute. The report shall be
prepared after consultation with the governor's commission on disabilities.
     SECTION 2. Section 36-3-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 36-3 entitled "Division of
Personnel Administration" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     36-3-5. Powers and duties of the administrator.
     In addition to the duties imposed upon the personnel administrator elsewhere in the law
and the personnel rules, it shall be the duty of the personnel administrator:
     (1) As executive head of the division of personnel administration, to direct, supervise,
develop, and authorize all personnel-related administrative and technical activities including
personnel administration and personnel management.
     (2) To prepare and recommend to the director of administration such rules as are deemed
necessary to carry out the provisions of the law.
     (3) To supervise the operation of the classification plan and to recommend to the director
amendments and additions thereto.
     (4) To supervise the operation of the pay plan and to recommend to the director
amendments and additions thereto.
     (5) To establish and supervise the maintenance of employment lists, promotion lists, and
reemployment lists; to develop recruitment procedures, monitor agency recruitment processes for
compliance with the statutes and policies, and make available to state agencies qualified
candidates as vacancies occur; direct and supervise equal opportunity programs; manage
employee benefit plans, including the coordination of health insurance, prescription/vision care,
group life insurance, dental care, prepaid legal services, deferred compensation and cancer
programs, and any other programs established by the legislature related to employee benefits; and
to manage career awards programs and state and local enforcement firefighters incentive training
programs.
     (6) To perform any other lawful act which he or she may consider necessary or desirable
to carry out the purposes and provisions of this chapter, and chapter 4 of this title, and the rules
and to conduct innovative demonstration projects to improve state personnel management.
     (7) The personnel administrator is authorized and empowered to revise state job
descriptions to ensure the use of appropriate disability language, as required by § 43-3-7.1.
     SECTION 3. Section 43-3-7.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 43-3 entitled
"Construction and Effect of Statutes" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     43-3-7.1. Use of appropriate disability language.
     (a) Whenever the terms "the handicapped,", "handicap person,", or "handicapped person"
are used in the general laws, they shall the law revision director shall, unless they the director
determine determines it could alter the intent of the statute, recommend that they be replaced
with the words "persons with disabilities" or "person with a disability," inclusive, and whenever
the term "handicap" is used in the general laws, it shall the law revision director shall, unless they
the director determine determines it could alter the intent of the statute, recommend that it be
replaced with the word "disability"; provided that this section shall not be applied retroactively
but shall only be applied prospectively.
     (b) Whenever the term terms "developmental disability" or "developmental disabilities"
or "mentally retarded" or "retarded" are used in the general laws, the law revision director shall,
unless they the director determines it could alter the intent of the statute, recommend that they be
replaced with the words "intellectual and developmental disability" or "person with an intellectual
and developmental disability", if the context so requires.
     (c) Whenever the term terms "substance abuse" or "addict" are used in the general laws,
the law revision director shall, unless they the director determines it could alter the intent of the
statute, recommend that they be replaced with the words "substance use disorder" or "person with
a substance use disorder", if the context so requires.
     (b)(d) Whenever an act, resolution, statute, regulation, guideline, directive, or other
document of a governmental entity refers to people with disabilities, terms that stigmatize, like
"the handicapped", "the disabled", "the blind", "the deaf", "the hearing impaired", "cerebral
palsied", "paralytic", "epileptic", "confined to a wheelchair", "wheelchair bound", "lunatic",
"idiot", "defective", "deformed", "victim", "suffers from", "mentally retarded", "retarded",
"addict", "substance abuser", etc., shall not be used. Language that puts the "person first", rather
than the impairment or assistive device, such as "person with a disability", "child who has mental
illness", "worker who is deaf", "voter who uses a wheelchair", "person who is hard-of-hearing",
shall be used.
     SECTION 4. Chapter 42-64.13 of the General Laws entitled "Rhode Island Regulatory
Reform Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section:
     42-64.13-13. Revision of regulations - appropriate disability language.
     The office of regulatory reform is authorized and empowered to ensure all regulations use
appropriate disability language, as required by § 43-3-7.1.
     SECTION 5. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2020.
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LC000299/SUB A
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