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HB1869, introduced in Hawaii, aims to regulate government use of facial recognition technology. It sets limitations but allows for certain exceptions, such as law enforcement and health emergencies.
Key Provisions
Section -4(a): Restriction on government use of facial recognition.
Section -4(b): Exceptions for law enforcement, REAL ID compliance, and health emergencies.
Section -4(c): Information from facial recognition not constituting probable cause.
Latest Legislative Action
Referred to HET, JHA, FIN, referral sheet 2
Bill Sponsors (showing 5 of 26)
Name
Role
District
Aaron JohansonD
Sponsor
HD-031
Angus McKelveyD
Sponsor
HD-010
Cedric GatesD
Sponsor
HD-044
Daniel HoltD
Sponsor
HD-029
David TarnasD
Sponsor
HD-007
Daynette MorikawaD
Sponsor
HD-016
Della au BelattiD
Sponsor
HD-024
Ernesto GanadenD
Sponsor
HD-030
Gene WardR
Sponsor
HD-017
Greggor IlaganD
Sponsor
HD-004
Jeanne KapelaD
Sponsor
HD-005
John MizunoD
Sponsor
HD-028
Justin WoodsonD
Sponsor
HD-009
Linda IchiyamaD
Sponsor
HD-032
Lisa KitagawaD
Sponsor
HD-048
Lisa MartenD
Sponsor
HD-051
Mark NakashimaD
Sponsor
HD-001
Matthew LoprestiD
Sponsor
HD-041
Nadine NakamuraD
Sponsor
HD-014
Nicole LowenD
Sponsor
HD-006
Patrick BrancoD
Sponsor
HD-050
Richard OnishiD
Sponsor
HD-003
Scot MatayoshiD
Sponsor
HD-049
Sean QuinlanD
Sponsor
HD-047
Tina WildbergerD
Sponsor
HD-011
Troy HashimotoD
Sponsor
HD-008
Compliance Checklist
Review and adjust facial recognition practices Who: Government agencies using facial recognition Penalty: Potential penalties for non-compliance
HB1869 is a legislative proposal introduced in the Hawaii State Legislature to regulate the use of facial recognition systems by government entities. The bill establishes that it is generally unlawful for the government or any government official to obtain, retain, share, access, or use facial recognition systems or information derived from them, as outlined in Section -4(a). However, there are specified exceptions under Section -4(b), including use by trained law enforcement personnel for comparing surveillance images to arrest booking photos, use by agencies issuing driver's licenses to comply with the federal REAL ID Act, and use during health emergencies as determined by the director of health. Additionally, any information obtained must be destroyed within sixty minutes if used for health-related purposes. The bill clarifies that information from facial recognition systems cannot be used as probable cause for arrest.
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