Chairman May presented a PCS to House Bill 38-32 intended to require photo identification for exotic entertainers and said the PCS "does not change the age" but requires a photo ID so enforcement can verify who is working in the establishment. May framed the change as a law-enforcement request meant to curb human trafficking, saying two constituent survivors were trafficked at age 12 by their parents and describing traffickers who "move all of those people at the same time to the next state."
Members asked whether the PCS had been filed and whether it retains the current age requirement; May said the PCS was intended to leave the age as is and focus on photo ID. Representative Provenzo and others asked whether the PCS simply requires ID rather than licensing; May said ABLE already regulates these establishments through alcohol enforcement and that legal staff are refining language. Members raised enforcement concerns, including straw owners and re-opening closed establishments; May said police and ABLE expect the IDs to help identify owners and traffickers during enforcement actions.
The committee voted to pass the PCS/bill after discussion. The transcript records multiple members’ questions and the sponsor’s description of law-enforcement needs and constituent survivor stories; the hearing record does not show the final statutory language or enforcement procedures beyond the sponsor’s explanation.