Opinion editor's note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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Perhaps to show that they are ordinary humans, Minnesota legislators have put off hard talk about death and dying.
Legislation that would allow medical aid in dying (MAID) was introduced in the state House and Senate this year and then left to languish without a hearing. It is a disappointing exception to this year's burst of legislative action.
Rep. Mike Freiberg, DFL-Golden Valley, the bill's chief author in the House, told an editorial writer that he hopes for a better outcome next year. We share that hope — not necessarily that the legislation will pass, but that lawmakers and the citizens they represent will have the frank, difficult conversations that the topic demands.
Passing such legislation would put Minnesota in company with 10 other states and the District of Columbia that have enacted similar laws, beginning with Oregon's Death With Dignity Act in 1997. There is some variation among the state statutes, but they all have the same aim: to give people near death the ability to exert a measure of control over their last days. Patients suffering from a terminal illness can request a prescription that will allow them a peaceful and dignified end.
A valid concern is whether a MAID law would become a convenient solution for intractable problems — for example, vulnerable people might see it as a better alternative than living with poverty or a difficult family situation.
"There's never been any documented instance of abuse or coercion or anything like that," Freiberg said. "People want bodily autonomy."