establishing a beverage container redemption program.
The bill expands who can modify or revoke an anatomical gift after incapacity or death and adds annual reporting requirements for organ procurement organizations.
The bill expands who can modify or revoke an anatomical gift after incapacity or death and adds annual reporting requirements for organ procurement organizations.
Note on document inconsistencies
- The provided materials include mixed/duplicative items (an initial bill title about an income‑tax credit, an Illinois HB1679 text, and the Arkansas bill text and amendments). The substantive Arkansas text and amendments (H1, S1, S2) clearly concern changes to the Arkansas Revised Anatomical Gift Act (organ/tissue donation) and reporting by organ procurement organizations. This summary focuses on that Arkansas legislation.
Purpose and intent
- To (1) expand and clarify who may modify, amend, or revoke a person’s prior anatomical gift (organ/tissue donation) when the donor is incapacitated or deceased, and (2) impose annual reporting and oversight requirements on organ procurement organizations (OPOs), with enforcement mechanisms for non‑reporting.
Key provisions (principal changes)
1. Modification/revocation rights and order of priority
- Before death: a donor’s agent under a durable power of attorney for health care may modify/amend/revoke the donor’s anatomical gift unless prohibited by the power.
- After death (following irreversible cessation of circulatory/respiratory functions; timing clarified by amendments — two hours after pronouncement in a medical facility or immediately if pronounced outside a facility): the right to modify/amend/revoke passes in this order (if ≥18 and of sound mind):
1. Spouse
2. Sole child or majority of surviving children
3. Parent(s) (if one absent, the remaining parent after reasonable efforts)
4. Siblings (or majority)
5. Grandparents (or majority)
6. Grandchildren (or majority)
7. Guardian at time of death (if appointed)
8. Next degree of kin under descent/distribution laws
- Within a class (children, siblings, grandparents, grandchildren), a less‑than‑majority may act if they used reasonable efforts to notify others and are not aware of opposition by more than half of that class.
Forfeiture and disqualification rules
Form and liability
Reporting and oversight of organ procurement organizations (OPOs)
Other statutory edits
Who is affected
- Donors and their families/next of kin: changes the practical ability of family members or agents to rescind or alter organ/tissue donations.
- Agents under durable powers of attorney for health care.
- Hospitals, clinicians, funeral homes and OPOs: affected by decision/communication rules, liability protections, and new reporting duties.
- Legislative Council and Secretary of State: receive reports and may enforce reporting compliance.
Procedural/timeline aspects & status notes
- The text provided includes multiple floor and committee amendment versions (H1, S1, S2); key substantive amendments clarified timing for post‑death action and set the annual reporting deadline to January 31.
- The user-supplied “Status: Died In Committee” conflicts with included legislative action logs that show extensive committee and floor action. Confirm current status with the official Arkansas legislative records for final disposition.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.