Sen. Murray to chair Senate Health and Human Services Committee

 

STATE HOUSE – Sen. Melissa A. Murray has been named chairwoman of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee. Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio made the appointment today as the Senate convened the 2025 legislative session.

The Health and Human Services Committee handles all legislation and matters relative to public health and welfare; health care and human service access and quality; health and human service professional standards of practice, and facility standards of care.

“The work of the Health and Human Services Committee touches the life of every Rhode Islander, and it includes much of the legislation I’ve sponsored and enacted over the years. I’m so happy to be able to play a greater role in ensuring our state does its very best to protect the health and well-being of all Rhode Islanders,” said Senator Murray (D-Dist. 24, Woonsocket, North Smithfield). “I’m grateful to President Ruggerio for this opportunity, and I look forward to working alongside my colleagues on the committee and the many dedicated individuals and organizations who advocate before us. Together we will work to improve health and ensure that all Rhode Islanders’ human needs are met.”

Senator Murray, who was first elected to the Senate in 2018, has sponsored numerous successful bills to improve health and human services, including laws making HIV-prevention treatments free and accessible to qualifying patients; formalizing protections in state law against discrimination in health care; and capping the cost of insulin and diabetes testing supplies for Rhode Islanders with diabetes. For years, she has been a leader in efforts to increase benefits paid to children and families in the Rhode Island Works program, championing several increases and eligibility improvements.

In addition to chairing the Health and Human Services Committee, Senator Murray will serve as vice chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Education, which considers legislation pertaining to education, including student performance, governance, programming and teacher preparation and planning.

She will also serve as a member of the Housing and Municipal Government Committee, which considers matters relating to housing, municipal government and transportation.

Prior to her election to the Senate, Senator Murray served two terms on the Woonsocket City Council and was the city’s first openly LGBTQ+ elected official. Born and raised in northern Rhode Island, Senator Murray attended Woonsocket’s public schools. She has an A.A.S. in Criminal Justice with a focus in Forensic Science. A self-taught artist who travels locally, she also works at a family-owned business in Woonsocket.

Ukraine's president says it would be "very difficult" for his country to survive without U.S. military support. Zelensky told NBC's Meet the Press he doesn't want to think about it, but Ukraine would have a "low chance" of survival without the U.S. President Trump spoke with Zelensky and Russian President Putin this week as he pushes to end the nearly three-year-long Russia-Ukraine war.        President Trump is looking to end COVID-19 vaccine mandates in schools. He signed an executive order Friday that will bar schools that still have mandates from receiving federal funds. Trump had promised to withhold funding from schools that had vaccine or mask mandates during his campaign.        A federal judge is temporarily halting the mass firings at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The court order comes after several groups sued the agency and its acting director earlier this week. The judge said CFPB employees can't be terminated without cause.        Pope Francis is in the hospital. The 88-year-old Pontiff was admitted to a hospital in Rome this morning for what the Vatican said was treatment for bronchitis and diagnostic testing. Today's development is just the latest in a years-long string of concerns over the health of the leader of the world's one-point-three billion Catholics.        A Missouri man is taking a plea deal after shooting a Black teenager in the head when he mistakenly went to the wrong house. Ralph Yarl, who was 16 at the time, was picking up his brothers when he accidentally went to Andrew Lester's house in 2023. Lester was facing multiple charges and initially maintained his innocence, but on Friday he struck a deal and pled guilty to second-degree assault.        The jury in ASAP Rocky's assault trial will begin deliberations next week. The Los Angeles jury received the case late Friday. The rapper's been charged with two counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm in connection with a 2021 shooting.