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HB318 • 2025

Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Larry Brewster
Last action
2025-05-05
Official status
Chapter Number Assigned
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

What This Bill Does

  • Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

COMMITTEE

Plain English: Amendment - 1st Reading/2nd House-blue - Requested by: (S) Local Government - 2025 69th Legislature 2025 Drafter: Maddie Krezowski, HB0318.001.003 - 1 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318 1 HOUSE BILL NO.

  • Amendment - 1st Reading/2nd House-blue - Requested by: (S) Local Government - 2025 69th Legislature 2025 Drafter: Maddie Krezowski, HB0318.001.003 - 1 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318 1 HOUSE BILL NO.
  • 318 2 INTRODUCED BY L.
  • BREWSTER, 3 4 A BILL FOR AN ACT ENTITLED: “AN ACT REQUIRING AN APPEAL PROCESS TO THE LOCAL 5 GOVERNING BODY FROM CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS ADDED TO A SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM 6 AFTER THE ISSUANCE OF A PERMIT TO CONSTRUCT; AND AMENDING SECTION 50-2-116, MCA.” 7 8 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MONTANA: 9 10Section 1.
  • Section 50-2-116, MCA, is amended to read: 11 "50-2-116.
COMMITTEE

Plain English: COMMITTEE 2

  • The official amendment file could not be read automatically during the last sync, so only the official amendment metadata is shown right now.
COMMITTEE

Plain English: COMMITTEE 3

  • The official amendment file could not be read automatically during the last sync, so only the official amendment metadata is shown right now.
COMMITTEE

Plain English: COMMITTEE 4

  • The official amendment file could not be read automatically during the last sync, so only the official amendment metadata is shown right now.

Bill History

  1. 2025-05-05 HOUSE

    Chapter Number Assigned

  2. 2025-05-01 HOUSE

    (H) Signed by Governor

  3. 2025-04-22 SENATE

    (S) Signed by President

  4. 2025-04-22 HOUSE

    (H) Transmitted to Governor

  5. 2025-04-18 HOUSE

    (H) Signed by Speaker

  6. 2025-04-15 HOUSE

    (H) Scheduled for 3rd Reading

  7. 2025-04-15 HOUSE

    (H) 3rd Reading Passed as Amended by Senate

  8. 2025-04-15 HOUSE

    (H) Sent to Enrolling

  9. 2025-04-15 HOUSE

    (H) Returned from Enrolling

  10. 2025-04-14 HOUSE

    (H) Scheduled for 2nd Reading

  11. 2025-04-14 HOUSE

    (H) 2nd Reading Senate Amendments Concurred

  12. 2025-04-07 SENATE

    (S) Scheduled for 3rd Reading

  13. 2025-04-07 SENATE

    (S) 3rd Reading Concurred

  14. 2025-04-07 SENATE

    (S) Returned to House with Amendments

  15. 2025-04-05 SENATE

    (S) Scheduled for 2nd Reading

  16. 2025-04-05 SENATE

    (S) 2nd Reading Concurred

  17. 2025-04-03 SENATE

    (S) Committee Report--Bill Concurred as Amended

  18. 2025-03-31 SENATE

    (S) Committee Executive Action--Bill Concurred as Amended

  19. 2025-03-05 SENATE

    (S) Hearing

  20. 2025-02-21 SENATE

    (S) Referred to Committee

  21. 2025-02-15 SENATE

    (S) First Reading

  22. 2025-02-14 HOUSE

    (H) 3rd Reading Passed

  23. 2025-02-14 HOUSE

    (H) Transmitted to Senate

  24. 2025-02-13 HOUSE

    (H) 2nd Reading Passed

  25. 2025-02-07 HOUSE

    (H) Committee Report--Bill Passed

  26. 2025-02-06 HOUSE

    (H) Committee Executive Action--Bill Passed

  27. 2025-02-06 HOUSE

    (H) Committee Executive Action--Bill Passed

  28. 2025-01-27 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft Delivered to Requester

  29. 2025-01-27 HOUSE

    (H) Introduced

  30. 2025-01-27 HOUSE

    (H) Referred to Committee

  31. 2025-01-27 HOUSE

    (H) First Reading

  32. 2025-01-27 HOUSE

    (H) Hearing

  33. 2025-01-25 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft Ready for Delivery

  34. 2025-01-22 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft in Final Drafter Review

  35. 2025-01-22 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft in Assembly

  36. 2025-01-21 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft in Input/Proofing

  37. 2025-01-20 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft in Legal Review

  38. 2025-01-20 HOUSE

    (LC) Draft in Edit

  39. 2024-11-16 HOUSE

    (LC) Drafter Assigned

Official Summary Text

Require appeal process for certain local government health requirements

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 1 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
AN ACT REQUIRING AN APPEAL PROCESS FROM CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS FOR A SEWAGE
DISPOSAL SYSTEM; AND AMENDING SECTION 50-2-116, MCA.”
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MONTANA:
Section 1. Section 50-2-116, MCA, is amended to read:
"50-2-116. Powers and duties of local boards of health. (1) Except as provided in subsection (5),
in order to carry out the purposes of the public health system, in collaboration with federal, state, and local
partners, each local board of health shall:
(a) recommend to the governing body the appointment of a local health officer who is:
(i) a physician;
(ii) a person with a master's degree in public health; or
(iii) a person with equivalent education and experience, as determined by the department;
(b) elect a presiding officer and other necessary officers;
(c) adopt bylaws to govern meetings;
(d) hold regular meetings at least quarterly and hold special meetings as necessary;
(e) identify, assess, prevent, and ameliorate conditions of public health importance through:
(i) epidemiological tracking and investigation;
(ii) screening and testing;
(iii) isolation and quarantine measures;
(iv) diagnosis, treatment, and case management;
(v) abatement of public health nuisances;
(vi) inspections;
(vii) collecting and maintaining health information;
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 2 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
(viii) education and training of health professionals; or
(ix) other public health measures as allowed by law;
(f) protect the public from the introduction and spread of communicable disease or other
conditions of public health importance, including through actions to ensure the removal of filth or other
contaminants that might cause disease or adversely affect public health;
(g) supervise or make inspections for conditions of public health importance and issue written
orders for compliance or for correction, destruction, or removal of the conditions;
(h) bring and pursue actions and issue orders necessary to abate, restrain, or prosecute the
violation of public health laws, rules, and local regulations;
(i) identify to the department an administrative liaison for public health. The liaison must be the
local health officer in jurisdictions that employ a full-time local health officer. In jurisdictions that do not employ a
full-time local health officer, the liaison must be the highest ranking public health professional employed by the
jurisdiction.
(j) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130, propose for adoption by the local governing body
necessary regulations that are not less stringent than state standards for the control and disposal of sewage
from private and public buildings and facilities that are not regulated by Title 75, chapter 6, or Title 76, chapter
4. The regulations must describe standards for granting variances from the minimum requirements that are
identical to standards promulgated by the department of environmental quality and must provide for appeal of
variance decisions to the department of environmental quality as required by 75-5-305. The regulations must
provide for an appeal to challenge whether permit requirements are more stringent than the state standards or
local standards adopted in compliance with 50-2-130. Until an appeals process is included in the regulations,
the applicant or property owner may appeal to the local governing body. If the local board of health regulates or
permits water well drilling, the regulations must prohibit the drilling of a well if the well isolation zone, as defined
in 76-4-102, encroaches onto adjacent private property without the authorization of the private property owner.
(2) Local boards of health may:
(a) accept and spend funds received from a federal agency, the state, a school district, or other
persons or entities;
(b) propose for adoption by the local governing body necessary fees to administer regulations for
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 3 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
the control and disposal of sewage from private and public buildings and facilities;
(c) propose for adoption by the local governing body regulations that do not conflict with 50-50-126
or rules adopted by the department:
(i) for the control of communicable diseases;
(ii) for the removal of filth that might cause disease or adversely affect public health;
(iii) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130, for sanitation in public and private buildings and facilities
that affects public health and for the maintenance of sewage treatment systems that do not discharge effluent
directly into state water and that are not required to have an operating permit as required by rules adopted
under 75-5-401;
(iv) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130 and Title 50, chapter 48, for tattooing and body-piercing
establishments and that are not less stringent than state standards for tattooing and body-piercing
establishments;
(v) for the establishment of institutional controls that have been selected or approved by the:
(A) United States environmental protection agency as part of a remedy for a facility under the
federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980, 42 U.S.C. 9601, et
seq.; or
(B) department of environmental quality as part of a remedy for a facility under the Montana
Comprehensive Environmental Cleanup and Responsibility Act, Title 75, chapter 10, part 7; and
(vi) to implement the public health laws;
(d) adopt rules necessary to implement and enforce regulations adopted by the local governing
body; and
(e) promote cooperation and formal collaborative agreements between the local board of health
and tribes, tribal organizations, and the Indian health service regarding public health planning, priority setting,
information and data sharing, reporting, resource allocation, service delivery, jurisdiction, and other matters
addressed in this title.
(3) A local board of health may provide, implement, facilitate, or encourage other public health
services and functions as considered reasonable and necessary.
(4) A directive, mandate, or order issued by a local board of health in response to a declaration of
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 4 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
emergency or disaster by the governor as allowed in 10-3-303 or by the principal executive officer of a political
subdivision as allowed in 10-3-402 and 10-3-403:
(a) remains in effect only during the declared state of emergency or disaster or until the governing
body holds a public meeting and allows public comment and the majority of the governing body moves to
amend, rescind, or otherwise change the directive, mandate, or order; and
(b) may not interfere with or otherwise limit, modify, or abridge a person's physical attendance at or
operation of a religious facility, church, synagogue, or other place of worship.
(5) A regulation allowed in subsection (2)(c)(i), (2)(c)(ii), or (2)(c)(vi) adopted or a directive,
mandate, or order implemented to carry out the provisions of this part that applies to the entire jurisdictional
area of a town, city, or county under the jurisdiction of the local health board may not:
(a) compel a private business to deny a customer of the private business access to the premises
or access to goods or services;
(b) deny a customer of a private business the ability to access goods or services provided by the
private business; or
(c) include any of the following actions for noncompliance of actions described in subsections
(5)(a) and (5)(b):
(i) require the assessment of a fee or fine;
(ii) require the revocation of a license required for the operation of a private business;
(iii) find a private business owner guilty of a misdemeanor; or
(iv) bring any other retributive action against a private business owner, including but not limited to
an action allowed under 50-2-123, a penalty allowed under 50-2-124, or any other criminal charge.
(6) The prohibition provided for in subsection (5)(b) does not apply to persons confirmed to have a
communicable disease and who are currently under a public isolation order.
(7) The prohibitions provided for in subsection (5) do not restrict a local board of health from
exercising its authority under this section to enforce and ensure compliance by private businesses with all
lawfully adopted regulations, directives, and orders.
(8) As used in this section, "private business" means an individual or entity that is not principally a
part of or associated with a government unit. The term includes but is not limited to a nonprofit or for-profit
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 5 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
entity, a corporation, a sole proprietorship, or a limited liability company."
Section 2. Coordination instruction. If both House Bill No. 180 and [this act] are passed and
approved and if both contain a section that amends 50-2-116, then the sections amending 50-2-116 are void
and 50-2-116 must be amended as follows:
"50-2-116. Powers and duties of local boards of health. (1) Except as provided in subsection (5),
in order to carry out the purposes of the public health system, in collaboration with federal, state, and local
partners, each local board of health shall:
(a) recommend to the governing body the appointment of a local health officer who is:
(i) a physician;
(ii) a person with a master's degree in public health; or
(iii) a person with equivalent education and experience, as determined by the department;
(b) elect a presiding officer and other necessary officers;
(c) adopt bylaws to govern meetings;
(d) hold regular meetings at least quarterly and hold special meetings as necessary;
(e) identify, assess, prevent, and ameliorate conditions of public health importance through:
(i) epidemiological tracking and investigation;
(ii) screening and testing;
(iii) isolation and quarantine measures;
(iv) diagnosis, treatment, and case management;
(v) abatement of public health nuisances;
(vi) inspections;
(vii) collecting and maintaining health information;
(viii) education and training of health professionals; or
(ix) other public health measures as allowed by law;
(f) protect the public from the introduction and spread of communicable disease or other
conditions of public health importance, including through actions to ensure the removal of filth or other
contaminants that might cause disease or adversely affect public health;
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 6 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
(g) supervise or make inspections for conditions of public health importance and issue written
orders for compliance or for correction, destruction, or removal of the conditions;
(h) bring and pursue actions and issue orders necessary to abate, restrain, or prosecute the
violation of public health laws, rules, and local regulations;
(i) identify to the department an administrative liaison for public health. The liaison must be the
local health officer in jurisdictions that employ a full-time local health officer. In jurisdictions that do not employ a
full-time local health officer, the liaison must be the highest ranking public health professional employed by the
jurisdiction.
(j) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130, propose for adoption by the local governing body
necessary regulations that are not less stringent than state standards for the control and disposal of sewage
from private and public buildings and facilities that are not regulated by Title 75, chapter 6, or Title 76, chapter
4. The regulations must:
(i) describe standards for granting variances from the minimum requirements that are identical to
standards promulgated by the department of environmental quality and must provide for appeal of variance
decisions to the department of environmental quality as required by 75-5-305;
(ii) provide for an appeal to challenge whether permit requirements are more stringent than the
state standards or local standards adopted in compliance with 50-2-130. Until an appeals process is included in
the regulations, the applicant or property owner may appeal to the local governing body.
(iii) for parcels created after March 30, 2011, prohibit the construction of a subsurface wastewater
treatment system if the associated mixing zone would encroach onto adjacent property, except as allowed in
76-4-104(7)(i); and
(iv) If if the local board of health regulates or permits water well drilling, the regulations must
prohibit the drilling of a well if the well isolation zone, as defined in 76-4-102, encroaches onto adjacent private
property without the authorization of the private property owner.
(2) Local boards of health may:
(a) accept and spend funds received from a federal agency, the state, a school district, or other
persons or entities;
(b) propose for adoption by the local governing body necessary fees to administer regulations for
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 7 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
the control and disposal of sewage from private and public buildings and facilities;
(c) propose for adoption by the local governing body regulations that do not conflict with 50-50-126
or rules adopted by the department:
(i) for the control of communicable diseases;
(ii) for the removal of filth that might cause disease or adversely affect public health;
(iii) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130, for sanitation in public and private buildings and facilities
that affects public health and for the maintenance of sewage treatment systems that do not discharge effluent
directly into state water and that are not required to have an operating permit as required by rules adopted
under 75-5-401;
(iv) subject to the provisions of 50-2-130 and Title 50, chapter 48, for tattooing and body-piercing
establishments and that are not less stringent than state standards for tattooing and body-piercing
establishments;
(v) for the establishment of institutional controls that have been selected or approved by the:
(A) United States environmental protection agency as part of a remedy for a facility under the
federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980, 42 U.S.C. 9601, et
seq.; or
(B) department of environmental quality as part of a remedy for a facility under the Montana
Comprehensive Environmental Cleanup and Responsibility Act, Title 75, chapter 10, part 7; and
(vi) to implement the public health laws;
(d) adopt rules necessary to implement and enforce regulations adopted by the local governing
body; and
(e) promote cooperation and formal collaborative agreements between the local board of health
and tribes, tribal organizations, and the Indian health service regarding public health planning, priority setting,
information and data sharing, reporting, resource allocation, service delivery, jurisdiction, and other matters
addressed in this title.
(3) A local board of health may provide, implement, facilitate, or encourage other public health
services and functions as considered reasonable and necessary.
(4) A directive, mandate, or order issued by a local board of health in response to a declaration of
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 8 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
emergency or disaster by the governor as allowed in 10-3-303 or by the principal executive officer of a political
subdivision as allowed in 10-3-402 and 10-3-403:
(a) remains in effect only during the declared state of emergency or disaster or until the governing
body holds a public meeting and allows public comment and the majority of the governing body moves to
amend, rescind, or otherwise change the directive, mandate, or order; and
(b) may not interfere with or otherwise limit, modify, or abridge a person's physical attendance at or
operation of a religious facility, church, synagogue, or other place of worship.
(5) A regulation allowed in subsection (2)(c)(i), (2)(c)(ii), or (2)(c)(vi) adopted or a directive,
mandate, or order implemented to carry out the provisions of this part that applies to the entire jurisdictional
area of a town, city, or county under the jurisdiction of the local health board may not:
(a) compel a private business to deny a customer of the private business access to the premises
or access to goods or services;
(b) deny a customer of a private business the ability to access goods or services provided by the
private business; or
(c) include any of the following actions for noncompliance of actions described in subsections
(5)(a) and (5)(b):
(i) require the assessment of a fee or fine;
(ii) require the revocation of a license required for the operation of a private business;
(iii) find a private business owner guilty of a misdemeanor; or
(iv) bring any other retributive action against a private business owner, including but not limited to
an action allowed under 50-2-123, a penalty allowed under 50-2-124, or any other criminal charge.
(6) The prohibition provided for in subsection (5)(b) does not apply to persons confirmed to have a
communicable disease and who are currently under a public isolation order.
(7) The prohibitions provided for in subsection (5) do not restrict a local board of health from
exercising its authority under this section to enforce and ensure compliance by private businesses with all
lawfully adopted regulations, directives, and orders.
(8) As used in this section, "private business" means an individual or entity that is not principally a
part of or associated with a government unit. The term includes but is not limited to a nonprofit or for-profit
- 2025
69th Legislature 2025 HB 318
- 9 - Authorized Print Version – HB 318
ENROLLED BILL
entity, a corporation, a sole proprietorship, or a limited liability company."
Section 3. Coordination instruction. If both House Bill No. 658 and [this act] are passed and
approved and if House Bill No. 658 contains a section amending 50-2-130, then the reference to "or local
standards adopted in compliance with 50-2-130" in [subsection (1)(j) of section 1 or 2 of this act], amending 50-
2-116, must be removed.
- END -
I hereby certify that the within bill,
HB 318, originated in the House.
___________________________________________
Chief Clerk of the House
___________________________________________
Speaker of the House
Signed this _______________________________day
of____________________________________, 2025.
___________________________________________
President of the Senate
Signed this _______________________________day
of____________________________________, 2025.
HOUSE BILL NO. 318
INTRODUCED BY L. BREWSTER,
AN ACT REQUIRING AN APPEAL PROCESS FROM CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS FOR A SEWAGE DISPOSAL
SYSTEM; AND AMENDING SECTION 50-2-116, MCA.