Senate passes anti-assisted suicide bill
The Idaho Senate has voted 31-2 in favor of SB 1070, which makes assisted suicide a felony in Idaho, revokes the licenses of doctors who violate the new law and allows people to get injunctions to block anyone they think might be planning an assisted suicide. Sen. Russ Fulcher, R-Meridian, the bill's sponsor, said several of Idaho's surrounding states are becoming tolerant of assisted suicide, and he doesn't think Idaho should go that way. "It is a slippery slope to say the least," he told the Senate. "To me, that kind of standard of care ... sends a message to our elderly people ... that some lives just aren't worth living, and that death is an acceptable alternative treatment."
The bill has been amended, and now includes clear provisions stating that doctors following a patient's wishes in the patient's living will or advance care directive regarding removing artificial life supports are not violating the bill's provisions, nor are doctors alleviating a dying patient's pain, even if the pain relief will hasten death, as long as it's not administered specifically to cause death.
Sen. Michelle Stennett, D-Ketchum, who lost her husband, father and father-in-law in the past year and opposed the bill in committee, said she's now supporting it. "I commend the good senator from 21 for taking legal and medical advice to make the decision to make this a better bill, and it is a better bill," she said. But she said, "We talk about not wanting government in our business, not wanting to be over-regulated. ... Yet we tell people how to conceive, how to live our last days and how to die." Stennett said, "As we continue to see bills determining people's life choices, senators, please, please come from a compassionate space."
Sen. Dan Schmidt, D-Moscow, a physician, said, "This is an intimate issue for me." He said he opposes physician-assisted suicide, but is concerned about the bill, because "it puts a large third person in the room when a difficult ... conversation needs to occur." Schmidt said, "Life, all of it, is a gift and should be cherished." But, he said, "People who ask for help dying are suffering, and physicians should address suffering, that's their job. My discomfort with this bill is that it doesn't in a clear way encourage the addressing of suffering."
Sen. Nicole LeFavour, D-Boise, said Idaho's current law walks a fine line between criminalizing conduct and recognizing patient needs, and said the bill isn't needed. Sen. Steve Vick, R-Dalton Gardens, said, "I think if you do support banning assisted suicide, you should support this bill ... for the reason that it is a specific law."
In the end, just LeFavour and Sen. Diane Bilyeu, D-Pocatello, voted against the bill; it now moves to the House side.