After substantial debate, the House approved a bill that shortens the process for people to expunge their records of certain criminal convictions.
The bill would make people eligible to seek expungement of many crimes three years after completion of the sentence, instead of 10. For more serious offenses, the period would be shortened from 20 years to five.
H.171 had passed out of the House Judiciary Committee with strong bipartisan support. Ten members voted in favor, and one member was absent. But the measure faced considerable resistance in the House.
Rep. Martin LaLonde, D-South Burlington, who reported the bill on the House floor, said the legislation fits in with a broader effort the committee is making to reduce incarceration and recidivism and to mitigate the โcollateral consequencesโ of a criminal conviction.
After completing a sentence and paying restitution for a conviction, a person still feels lingering impacts of a conviction, he said.
โThe person has a criminal record still and is still in some respects being punished even after having served those formal punishments,โ LaLonde said.
A conviction on someoneโs record can make it more difficult to get professional licenses, qualify for public housing or access funding for higher education, he said.
Through the expungement process, somebody with a conviction for a qualifying crime can petition the court to have that record cleared. Most convictions eligible for expungement are nonviolent misdemeanors, according to LaLonde.
Though the bill was broadly supported within the committee, many members of the House had reservations about supporting it.
When the bill came up for final approval in the House on Thursday, two amendments were offered by representatives who felt the legislation goes too far.
Reps. Barbara Murphy, I-Fairfax, and Anne Donahue, R-Northfield, offered an amendment that would have changed a section of the bill that would allow people to seek expungement again one year after a petition for expungement was denied. They sought to keep current law, which requires a wait of five years.
That measure was defeated.
After lengthy debate, the House also defeated an amendment offered by Rep. Cynthia Browning, D-Arlington.
Browning argued that the proposed change to the expungement law would hinder employersโ ability to know about potential employeesโ criminal history. She opposed the House Judiciary version of the bill โfor the safety of the community,โ she said.
Her version of the bill would have altered a judgeโs ability to seal information relating to certain types of criminal convictions.
