Arizona 2024 2024 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2621 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/02/2024

                      	HB 2621 
Initials AG/MT 	Page 1 	Health & Human Services 
 
ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-sixth Legislature 
Second Regular Session 
 
 
HB 2621: sovereign authority; border; health crisis 
Sponsor: Representative Montenegro, LD 29 
Committee on Health & Human Services 
Overview 
Deems that the trafficking of fentanyl across Arizona's border is a public health crisis and 
directs the Arizona Department of Health Services (DHS) to do everything within its power 
to address the crisis. 
History 
DHS aims to promote, protect and improve the health and wellness of individuals and 
communities in Arizona. The agency strives to set the standard for personal and community 
health through direct care, science, public policy and leadership. DHS operates programs 
from the following areas: 1) disease prevention and control; 2) health promotion; 3) 
community public health; 4) environmental health; 5) maternal and child health; 6) 
emergency preparedness; and 7) regulation of healthcare intuitions and facilities. 
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) describes fentanyl as a synthetic opioid that is 50 to 
100 times stronger than morphine. The number of overdose deaths involving synthetic 
opioids in 2020 was more than 18 times the number in 2013 with more than 56,000 people 
dying from synthetic opioid overdoses in 2020. Fentanyl is listed as a narcotic drug in statute 
(A.R.S. § 13-3401).  
Article I, Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution states that no state can, without the consent of 
Congress, lay any Duty of Tonnage, keep troops or ships of war in times of peace, enter into 
any agreement or compact with another state or with a foreign power or engage in war, unless 
actually invaded or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay.  
Article IV, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution states that the U.S. must guarantee to every 
state a Republican form of government and protect each of them against invasion and on 
application of the Legislature or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) 
against domestic violence.  
Article II, Section 3 of Arizona's Constitution permits the state to protect the people's freedom 
and preserve the checks and balances of the U.S. Constitution by exercising its sovereign 
authority to restrict the actions of its personnel and use of its financial resources to purposes 
consistent with the U.S. Constitution by passing an initiative or referendum, a bill or any 
other available legal remedy. 
Provisions 
1. Declares it is the public policy of Arizona to protect the state from drug cartels that 
threaten the public safety, health or general welfare of its people. (Sec. 1)  
2. Deems that the federal government's failure to secure Arizona's border to protect it from 
an unlawful invasion is dangerous and unprecedented. (Sec. 1)     	HB 2621 
Initials AG/MT 	Page 2 	Health & Human Services 
3. Requires Arizona laws to be interpreted and construed to protect its sovereign authority 
against any unlawful invasion at its border with Mexico. (Sec. 1)  
4. Declares the trafficking of fentanyl across Arizona's border as a public health crisis and 
that overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids are primarily driven by illicitly 
manufactured fentanyl. (Sec. 2)  
5. Asserts that DHS must do everything within its authority to address the crisis. (Sec. 2)  
6. Defines the terms drug cartel and unlawful invasion. (Sec. 1)  
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note