ARIZONA STATE SENATE RESEARCH STAFF TO: MEMBERS OF THE SENATE TRANSPORTATION, TECHNOLOGY & MISSING CHILDREN COMMITTEE DATE: February 13, 2024 SUBJECT: Strike everything amendment to S.B. 1216, relating to online use Purpose Establishes a state preemption on the regulation of, and prohibits monitoring, the online use or speech of a state employee. Background An employee is an officer or employee of Arizona or any of its departments, commissions, agencies or boards and includes employees and officers of community college districts, school districts and counties of the state and law enforcement officers of a city or town but does not include officers or employees of a municipal corporation established for the purpose of reclamation and distribution of water and the generation of electricity (A.R.S. § 38-531). Except to the extent required in conjunction with an agency-approved research project or other agency-approved undertaking, an employee of an agency must not knowingly use agency-owned or agency-leased computer equipment to access, download, print or store any information infrastructure files or services that depict nudity, sexual activity, sexual excitement or ultimate sexual acts. Agency approvals must be administered, in writing, by the agency head and are available for public inspection. An employee who violates the prohibition may be subject to discipline or dismissal. An agency is all offices, agencies, departments, boards, councils or commissions of the state, state universities, community college districts, legislative agencies and all departments or agencies of the Arizona Supreme Court or the court of appeals. Information infrastructure is telecommunications, cable and computer networks and includes the internet, the world wide web, UseNet, bulletin board systems, on-line systems and telephone networks (A.R.S. § 38-448). There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation. Provisions 1. Prohibits the state, a city, town or county or a political subdivision of the state from monitoring the online use or speech of an employee. 2. Establishes a state preemption on the regulation of the online use or speech of an employee of the state, a city, town or county or a political subdivision of the state. 3. Becomes effective on the general effective date. KIYAHNA J. ARAZA LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH ANALYST TRANSPORTATION, TECHNOLOGY & MISSING CHILDREN COMMITTEE Telephone: (602) 926-3171