As reported in a previous edition of From the Well, Senator Mark Hunt of Kanawha County said, “This is quite a bill,” referring to Senate Bill 575.
The Senate Judiciary Committee, following more than an hour of discussion on Friday, voted to refer SB575 to a Judiciary subcommittee. The legislation involves assisted reproduction.
As explained by Committee Counsel, SB575 could serve as a comprehensive, although voluntary, guide to surrogacy, which committee members referred to as “guardrails” for those entering into those agreements.
Counsel noted 18 states have laws relating to surrogacy, although provisions vary.
Echoing Senator Hunt, Senate Judiciary member Mike Stuart of Kanawha County said the measure, although vetted by the Senate Health and Human Resources Committee, of which he is a member, was complicated in terms of legal considerations. Thus, the bill began a trek toward a subcommittee.
Senator Patricia Rucker of Jefferson County asked whether SB575 would make West Virginia a destination for surrogacy.
As lengthy discussion ensued, Chair Charles Trump of Morgan County moved to limit SB 575provisions to related to state residents.
Senator Tom Takubo of Kanawha County, however, asked whether West Virginia laws supersede in situations where the birth occurs in other states with the birth mother seeking to keep a child carrying DNA from a birth parent or parents – the genesis of the legislation, which provides guidance for parties involved in the surrogacy.
Senator Mike Caputo of Marion County, asking similar questions, made a motion for a legislative interim committee to study surrogacy – an idea Senator Stuart broached.
Senator Trump, however, objected to the study resolution, saying SB575’s vetting by Senate Health and Human Resources, followed by Counsel’s research and drafting based on input from Committee members, provides the Legislature’s architecture in terms of surrogacy, giving courts immediate guidance.
He also said the legislation could be perfected through future legislative or judicial deliberations.
Thus, Senator Trump said, the Judiciary Committee has time to resolve the matter, looking into questions posed in two successive Judiciary Committee meetings.
Following brief discussion, the Committee adopted a motion that the Judiciary Chairman appoint a subcommittee to study the measure.
That motion was adopted. Senator Takubo is to to lead the Committee.
Other members include Senators Rucker and Caputo.
As reported in From the Well, these are among bill definitions:
· “Genetic surrogate” means a woman who is not an intended parent and who agrees to become pregnant through assisted reproduction using her own gamete under a gestational surrogacy agreement as provided in the article.
· “Gestational surrogacy” means a woman who is not an intended parent and who agrees to become pregnant through assisted reproduction using gametes that are not her own under a gestational-surrogacy agreement as provided in the article.
· “Surrogacy agreement” means an agreement between one or more intended parents and a woman who is not an intended parent in which the woman agrees to become pregnant through assisted reproduction and which provides that each parent is a parent of a child conceived under the agreement. Unless otherwise specified, the term refers to both a gestational surrogacy agreement and a genetic surrogacy agreement. |