05-R
064
2005 -- S 160 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 02/16/05
S E N A T E R
E S O L U T I O N
ADOPTING THE RULES OF THE
SENATE
Introduced By: Senators
Connors, DaPonte, Lenihan, Ruggerio, and Bates
Date
Introduced: February 01, 2005
RESOLVED, That the following
rules be and the same are hereby adopted as the rules of
this senate for the years 2005
and 2006.
RULES
OF THE SENATE
SECTION 1
DEFINITIONS
As
used in these rules, the following terms are defined as follows:
1.1
"Bill' shall include any act, resolve, resolution or petition which
comes before the
senate for consideration.
1.2
"Day" as used in these rules is intended and shall be
construed to mean one full
legislative day of the same
session. In no event shall one (1) calendar day be construed as two (2)
legislative days.
1.3
"Public bill" shall include all bills except:
(i)
those which pertain to a particular city or town;
(ii)
those which relate to an individual's pension and retirement;
(iii)
those which pertain to restoration of corporation charters, and to amendments
to
authorized holdings by nonprofit
organizations of a charitable, civic, library or like nature;
(iv)
resolutions memorializing congress, or of congratulations, or expressing
sympathy or
condolences, and all resolutions
requesting the several departments of state government to grant
some privilege, consideration or
relief.
1.4
"Prime sponsor" shall be that senator whose signature first
appears upon the bill.
1.5
"President Pro Tempore" is the person elected to that position
under the provisions of
section 22-3-10 of the general
laws, who presides over the senate in the absence of the president
of the senate.
1.6
"Majority Deputy President Pro Tempore" is the person
appointed by the president of
the senate, who shall preside over
the senate in the absence of the president of the senate and the
president pro tempore. The
President shall appoint a majority deputy president pro tempore from
among the senators who are members
of the majority political party represented in the senate.
1.7
"Minority Deputy President Pro Tempore" is the person
appointed by the senate
minority leader, who shall preside
over the senate in the absence of the president of the senate,
president pro tempore, and the
majority deputy president pro tempore. The minority leader shall
appoint a minority deputy president
pro tempore from among the senators who are members of a
minority political party
represented in the senate.
1.8
"Reading Clerk" is the person elected to that position under
provisions of section 22-
3-2 of the general laws who shall,
at the direction of the presiding officer, read to the chamber
any communication to the senate,
resolution, bill or other document and who shall, at the
direction of the presiding officer,
except for section 4.4 hereof, date the bills and other documents
before the senate, date recording
thereon the action taken and/or the disposition thereof. The
reading clerk also shall, at the
direction of the senate, amend any bill and transmit any bill to the
house of representatives and
perform such other duties as may from time to time be prescribed by
the president of the senate.
1.9
"Secretary of the Senate" is the person elected to that
position under provisions of
section 22-3-2 of the general laws
who shall, at the direction of the presiding officer, record the
proceedings of the senate in a
journal, signing said journal as secretary of the senate, and who
shall, upon their referral, deliver
bills and other documents to their respective committees, hold
and maintain in good order any bill
assigned to the calendar or the consent calendar, and transmit
any bill or document to the
governor. The secretary of the senate also shall perform those duties
prescribed in other sections hereof
and those which may from time to time be prescribed by the
president of the senate.
1.10
“The rise of the senate” occurs upon the conclusion of senate floor
business and the
exact time varies by the amount of
business to be conducted on a particular legislative day.
SECTION 2
PRESIDING OFFICER
2.1 Presiding
Officer.
The
president of the senate shall, unless absent from the chamber, be the presiding
officer
of the sessions of the senate. In
the absence of the president from the chair, the president pro
tempore shall preside over the
senate. In the absence of both the president and the president pro
tempore, the majority deputy
president pro tempore shall preside over the senate. In the absence
of the president, the president pro
tempore, and the majority deputy president pro tempore, the
minority deputy president pro
tempore shall preside over the senate. In case of a vacancy in the
offices of president, president pro
tempore and both deputy presidents pro tempore, or in case all
said officers are absent at the
hour to which the senate stands adjourned, the reading clerk shall
call the senate to order, and shall
preside until a president pro tempore is elected, which election
shall be the first order of
business. In the absence of the president, president pro tempore, both
deputy presidents pro tempore and
the reading clerk, less than a quorum may elect a president pro
tempore, who shall declare a lack
of quorum and continue the session until the next day.
2.2 Duties
of the Presiding Officer.
The
presiding officer shall preserve order and decorum in and about the senate
chamber
during the senate session in order
to prevent interference with the senate's business and
deliberations. The presiding
officer may speak in preference to the senators, shall decide all
questions of order without debate
and shall declare all votes. The assignment of bills to
committee shall be at the
discretion of the president of the senate subject to rule 4.5; provided,
however, that the president of the
senate may delegate such authority to the majority leader of the
senate.
2.3 Appealing
the Ruling of Presiding Officer.
Any
senator may appeal the ruling of the presiding officer by rising as soon as the
ruling
is made, even though another has
the floor and, without waiting to be recognized by the chair,
stating, "I appeal the ruling
of the chair," and upon such appeal being seconded, the presiding
officer shall immediately and
without debate put the question, "Shall the ruling of the chair be
sustained?", which question
shall be decided by majority vote of the senators present and voting.
Once sustained, the ruling shall
not be subject to another appeal on the same point.
SECTION 3
ORDER OF BUSINESS ON THE SENATE FLOOR
3.1 Commencement
of Daily Session.
The
presiding officer shall take the chair each day at the hour to which the senate
shall
have adjourned, call the senators
to order, and record attendance by electronic roll call. Upon late
arrival, at any time prior to the
adjournment of the senate a senator may report his or her presence
to the secretary of the senate who
shall record the senator's attendance in the journal.
3.2 Reading
the Journal.
The
reading clerk of the senate shall, at the commencement of the session of each
day,
read the proceedings of the
previous day, unless such reading is dispensed with by a majority of
the senators present and voting.
3.3 Daily
Business.
After the reading of the proceedings of the previous day the order of business shall be as
follows:
(1) Introduction of guests
(2) Reports of committees
(3) Introduction and reference of new business
(4) Unfinished business
(5) Consideration of house transmittals
(6) Consent calendar
(7) Calendar
(8) Introduction of guests
(9) Personal privilege
(10) Unanimous consent
(11) Daily adjournment
3.4 Final
Adjournment.
The
last order of business of the senate shall be the vote in conformity with the
resolution
of final adjournment which must be
carried by a majority vote of the senators present and voting.
3.5 Time
for Sessions.
Unless
otherwise provided for by agreement of president of the senate, the majority
leader and minority leader,
sessions of the senate shall convene at 4:00 p.m. All sessions must
adjourn at or before 11:00 p.m.
SECTION 4
ACTS AND RESOLUTIONS
4.1 Form
of Bills.
Every
bill offered which is intended to amend any part or parts of an existing
statute or
section of the constitution or
rules of the senate, any part or parts intended to be stricken shall be
contained in the bill and by
appropriate mechanical mark, struck through. All new matter
contained in the bill shall be
underlined, underscored or printed in italics so that the new matter
shall be easily discerned. If the
bill contains all new matter constituting a totally new law or a
totally new section, and the bill
itself so indicates, no underlining, underscoring or italics shall be
required. Every bill containing a
commission to which appointments shall be made shall be
indicated in the title of such
bill.
No
bill without a body or substantive content shall be introduced at any time, nor
shall a
substitute bill be accepted which
is not consistent with the title and substance of the original bill.
All
bills introduced on behalf of any general officer, branch, department or
division of
state government shall be stamped
on the face sheet thereof with the title of the general officer or
the name of the branch, department
or division on whose behalf the bill is introduced.
Other than the prime sponsor of a bill, a senator may elect in writing to the
secretary of
the senate to have his/her name
disassociated from the bill and the secretary of the senate shall
immediately notify the committee
clerk to which the bill is assigned.
All
bills shall be processed through legislative council.
4.2 Explanation
of Bills.
There
shall be attached to each bill a brief explanation thereof and the explanation
of
such bill shall indicate the
proposed changes, and/or the statute or existing law which such bill
purports to amend.
4.3 Copies
of Bills.
Each
bill introduced shall be accompanied by not less than eight (8) copies thereof,
with
said copies delivered by the
secretary of the senate to the office of the president of the senate for
subsequent distribution as
determined by the president of the senate. Nothing in this section shall
prevent a senator from obtaining a
preliminary draft of legislation for his/her review prior to
introduction.
4.4 Prefiling.
A
bill may be filed by any senator or senator-elect by registered mail or in
person with
the secretary of the senate at any
time from November 15 to the day prior to the commencement
of the regular annual session. The
secretary of the senate shall immediately date and number such
bill, present the bill to the
president of the senate for the purposes of assigning it to committee,
order it printed, as required by
section 4.11 hereof, and make said bill available for first reading
on the second day of the succeeding
session.
4.5 Filing
with Secretary of the Senate.
All
senators desiring to introduce a bill shall file the bill with the secretary of
the senate
not later than the time at which
the presiding officer calls the senate to order. The secretary of the
senate shall transmit to the office
of the president of the senate all bills on the day of their
introduction. On the day of
introduction, the president shall, upon adjournment, assign bills to
committee. The secretary of the
senate shall cause all bills introduced to be published in the
senate journal for that day. Any
senator may object to the committee assignment of any bill on the
first or second legislative day
following the bill's introduction. Upon objection being made, the
presiding officer shall assign the
bill to the committee requested by the senator making the
objection; provided, however, that
if another senator objects to any assignment or proposed
assignment of the bill, then the
presiding officer shall call for a vote of the senate on any motion
for assignment which has been made
and seconded, such motion requiring a majority vote of
those Senators present and voting
for assignment to a particular committee. First reading of all
such bills and resolutions shall be
by acceptance of the bill and the committee assignment.
4.6 Deadline
for Introductions.
No
public bill shall be introduced in the senate after February 10, 2005 for the
year 2005
and February 9, 2006 for the year
2006, except by consent of a majority of the senators present
and voting. Except as otherwise
expressly directed by the president of the senate, all requests for
the preparation of public bills
shall be submitted to the offices of Legislative Council no later than
the close of business on the Friday
next preceding the bill-introduction deadline set forth herein.
4.7 Omnibus
Claims Against the State and Forfeitures of Charters.
(a)
Claims against the state in the amount of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less
shall
not be presented in bill or
resolution form, but shall be submitted to the clerk of the joint
committee on accounts and claims in
writing upon a form approved by the chairperson of the
joint committee on accounts and
claims. Any claims approved by the joint committee shall be
submitted in the form of an omnibus
bill which will be placed upon the consent calendar.
(b)
All acts seeking to vacate the forfeiture of a charter previously granted under
the laws
of this state shall be placed upon
the consent calendar.
4.8 Resolutions
of Congratulations and Condolences.
Notwithstanding
any other provisions of these rules, all resolutions of congratulations or
expressing sympathy or condolences
except with respect to former and present members of the
general assembly, general officers,
members of the judiciary and elected state or federal officials,
shall be in order for introduction
and consideration on the last legislative day of each week,
unless otherwise ordered by the
president of the senate. Said resolution of congratulations and
condolences shall not require
concurrent action; upon passage, shall be forthwith transmitted to
the secretary of state, and an
appropriate notice of the action of the senate thereon shall be
forwarded, as requested in the
resolution, by the secretary of state. One formal resolution may
include all the expressions of
sympathy or congratulations of the several senators.
4.9 Enactment
of Laws.
The
concurrence of the two houses in the same session shall be necessary for the
enactment of all bills except for
senate resolutions.
4.10 Printing
Requirements.
4.10-1
Public Bills.
No
public bill shall be considered upon its merits unless it has been
electronically
available to the members at least
two (2) days prior to its consideration on the merits, except any
public bill passed by the senate
and amended by the house, provided that the amended public bill
shall be electronically available
to the senators before consideration.
4.10-2
Committee Amendments.
No
public bill amended in a committee of the senate shall be considered upon the senate
floor unless it has been
electronically available to the senators.
4.10-3
Materially Altered Bills.
Whenever
a committee shall have determined to report a bill which has been materially
altered by the committee, the
committee chair shall forthwith provide for printing and electronic
reproduction of the same. In the
event that a bill is not deemed to have been materially altered,
which determination shall be made
by the committee chair, a bill shall be printed only upon the
request of the president of the
senate, the majority leader or the minority leader. Nothing in these
rules shall preclude the committee
chair, with a majority of the committee, to change an act to a
resolution or a resolution to an
act on a substitute bill.
4.11 Copies
of Bills and Voting Records.
The
secretary of the senate shall retain in the files of the senate as many copies
of each
bill as the secretary of the senate
deems necessary and the voting records on each question.
4.12
Requests for Funding of Community Service Objectives.
Requests for the funding of community service objectives grants shall not be
presented in
bill or resolution form, but shall
be submitted to the senate fiscal advisor in writing upon a form
approved by the chairperson of the
senate committee on finance.
SECTION 5
COMMITTEES
5.1 Standing
Committees.
The
senate shall have, from and after the adoption of these rules, the following
standing
committees:
5.1-1
Committee on Judiciary.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on judiciary to consider the appointments of
the
governor referred to it by the
senate which require the advice and consent of the senate and all
legislation and matters which
affect the penal code, judicial system, and election laws of the state,
and to consider such other matters
as may be referred to it by the senate. In the matters of judicial
appointments and those public
hearings designated by the committee chair, all testimony shall be
under oath and preserved by
stenographic record which shall be transcribed upon the order of the
chair.
5.1-2
Committee on Finance.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on finance to consider the appointments of
the
governor referred to it by the
senate which require the advice and consent of the senate and all
legislation and matters relative to
veterans affairs, revenue, appropriations and taxes, to inquire
into the state of the public debt,
to report from time to time its opinion thereon and such
propositions relative thereto as it
shall deem expedient, and to consider such other matters as may
be referred to it by the senate.
The chair of the committee shall be authorized to appoint as many
sub-committees as he or she deems
necessary, including, but not limited to, a sub-committee on
veterans affairs.
5.1-3
Committee on Commerce, Housing and Municipal Government.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on commerce, housing and municipal
government to
consider the appointments of the
governor referred to it by the senate which require the advice
and consent of the senate and all
legislation and matters affecting commerce, profit as well as not-
for-profit business corporations,
housing, municipal government and to consider such other
matters as may be referred to it by
the senate.
5.1-4
Committee on Labor.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on labor to consider the appointments of the
governor referred to it by the
senate which require the advice and consent of the senate and all
legislation and matters relating to
the workers' compensation and labor laws of the state and to
consider such other matters as may
be referred to it by the senate.
5.1-5
Committee on Constitutional and Gaming Issues.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on constitutional and gaming issues to
consider the
appointments of the governor
referred to it by the senate which require the advice and consent of
the senate and all legislation and
matters relating to constitutional amendments, liquor laws,
gaming issues, license plates,
domestic animals, commissions and resolutions, and to consider
such other matters as may be
referred to it by the senate.
5.1-6
Committee on Health and Human Services.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on health and human services to consider the
appointments of the governor
referred to it by the senate which require the advice and consent of
the senate and to consider all
reports of the departments of health, of human services, of mental
health, retardation and hospitals,
of children and their families, and of elderly affairs; to consider
all legislation and matters
expanding or defining further areas of responsibility of the foregoing
and to consider 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; and
to consider such other matters as may be referred to it by the
senate.
5.1-7
Committee on Education.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on education to consider the appointments of
the
governor referred to it by the
senate which require the advice and consent of the senate and all
legislation and matters relating to
student performance, governance, programming, teacher
preparation and planning, as well
as the work and operation of all state agencies regarding all
levels of education, make findings,
and recommend policy initiatives and other actions to the
general assembly. The commission
shall also exercise oversight in relation to the implementation
of all legislation and grants of
authority relating to all levels of public education in the state by all
agencies, state and local, charged
and empowered by the general assembly in relating to all levels
of public education and to consider
such other matters as may be referred to it by the senate.
5.1-8
Committee on Financial Services, Technology and Regulatory Issues.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on financial services, technology and
regulatory
issues to consider the appointments
of the governor referred to it by the senate which require the
advice and consent of the senate
and all legislation and matters relating to financial institutions,
business regulation, property and
casualty insurance, technology and telecommunications, and to
consider such other matters as may
be referred to it by the senate.
5.1-9
Committee on Environment and Agriculture.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on environment and agriculture to consider
the
appointments of the governor
referred to it by the senate which require the advice and consent of
the senate and all legislation and
matters relating to the conservation of the air, land, water, plant,
animal, mineral and other natural
resources of the state, and to adopt all means necessary and
proper by law to protect the
natural environment of the people of the state by providing adequate
resource planning for the control
and regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state and
for the preservation, regeneration,
and restoration of the natural environment of the state and to
consider such other matters as may
be referred to it by the senate.
5.1-10
Committee on Government Oversight.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on government oversight to consider the
appointments of the governor
referred to it by the senate which require the advice and consent of
the senate, and (1) to monitor and
evaluate past, current and prospective performance of public
bodies and statutory entities,
including quasi-public agencies that exercise executive
governmental functions (except
public bodies and statutory entities of the legislative and judiciary
branches of the state) and any
other public or private person, including any agencies,
partnerships, corporation or
business entity insofar as such person is acting on behalf of and/or in
place of any public agency; (2) to
consider all legislation and matters pertaining to past, current
and prospective performance of the
governmental functions of such public bodies, statutory
entities, including quasi-public
agencies, and public or private persons; (3) to consider the
organization, reorganization,
creation or termination of such public bodies, statutory entities,
including quasi-public agencies and
public or private persons; (4) to review and consider the
reports of the auditor general; (5)
to report its opinion and/or recommendation of legislation or
action regarding the foregoing
matters; (6) to consider legislation that is designed to ensure the
probity of public affairs,
including, but not limited to, ethics, open meetings and access to public
records; and (7) to consider such
other matters that are referred to it by the senate.
5.1-11
Committee on Senate Rules.
It
shall be the duty of the committee on senate rules to consider all matters
relating to the
rules of the senate.
5.2 Committee
Membership.
Each
of the standing committees of the senate shall consist of the president of the
senate
and the majority and minority
leaders of the senate, ex officio, with voting rights, and senators to
be appointed by the president of
the senate, each to serve until January 2, 2007. Provided,
however, that the president of the
senate may change the committee assignment of a member with
the member's consent; and provided,
further, however, that each senator other than the president
and the majority and minority
leaders, shall serve as a member of one of the following standing
committees: committee on commerce,
housing and municipal government; committee on
financial services, technology and
regulatory issues; committee on finance; committee on the
judiciary.
5.3 Vacancies
on Committees.
All
vacancies occurring in any committee of the senate shall be filled by the
president of
the senate.
5.4 Officers
of Committees.
The
president of the senate shall appoint from the membership of each committee a
chair,
vice chair and secretary and such
other committee officers as the president of the senate deems
appropriate.
5.5 Select
Committees.
The
senate may, from time to time, by resolution, provide for the establishment of
select
committees upon such subjects as it
may deem proper, and upon the adoption of such resolution,
the president of the senate shall
appoint the chair and members thereof, and shall provide for
minority party representation. Any
committee created pursuant to this rule shall be deemed a
standing committee for all purposes
of law, including the applicability of section 22-6-2.1 of the
general laws.
5.6 Referral
to Committee.
No
bill shall be considered or acted upon by the senate unless the same has been
considered by, reported, or
recalled from a committee thereof, or from a joint committee, except
as otherwise provided in these
rules. All acts seeking to vacate the forfeiture of a charter
previously granted under the laws
of this state shall not be referred to committee but rather
directly assigned to the calendar.
5.7 Committees
of Conference.
There
shall be appointed from time to time committees of conference to which are
referred matters of difference with
the house with respect to bills or resolutions. Such committees
shall be appointed by the speaker
and the president of the senate, and shall be comprised of five
(5) members from the house and five
(5) members from the senate. At least one (1) member in
each chamber shall be a member of
the minority party. When possible, one (1) member shall be
the prime sponsor of the bill or
resolution being considered before the committee of conference
and one (1) member shall be from
the committee that shall have considered the bill or resolution.
The committee may propose any
changes within the scope of the bill or resolution, but any action,
including changes, taken by
committee shall be by a majority vote of the members of each
chamber on the committee. The
committee report shall be made to both chambers at the same
time. Each chamber shall vote to
accept or reject the report. A vote by either chamber to accept
the report of the committee shall
be the final action by that chamber on the bill or resolution. If
both chambers vote to accept the
report of the committee, the bill is passed or the resolution
adopted as of the time the last
chamber votes to accept the report. If either chamber rejects the
report of the committee, the bill
or resolution is defeated and the second chamber shall not be
required to consider the committee
report. The report of the committee may be accepted or
rejected, but it may not be
amended. The committee report shall contain the following
information: the bill number and
title, the members of the committee, the action of the committee,
and the signature of the members of
the committee accepting or rejecting the report.
The
conferees shall confine themselves to the differences which exist within bills
or
resolutions between the house and
senate. The presentation of reports of committees of
conference shall be in order after
having been signed by a majority of the members of the
committee of each chamber.
Consideration of a report of a committee of conference by the
senate shall be in order when it
has been made electronically available to all members and listed
on the calendar for the required
period of time according to these rules.
SECTION
6
PROCEEDINGS IN COMMITTEE
6.1 Time
for Committee Meetings.
The
president of the senate, in consultation with the chairs, shall establish
regular days
and times for the meetings of all
standing committees. The committee chair may call such other
meetings as may be required to
conduct the business of the committee.
6.2 Committee
Agenda -- Posting.
At
least forty-eight (48) hours before any standing committee meeting, a committee
agenda containing the number, title
and a short explanation of the bill to be considered must be
placed on the bulletin boards
provided for such agenda. The rule shall not apply to bills
previously passed by the senate and
amended by the house. There shall be at least two (2) bulletin
boards for such posting, at least
one (1) of which shall be for the public's use and shall be under
the control of and situated at the
main entrance to the state library. There shall also be at least one
(1) bulletin board for the
exclusive use of the senators which shall be situated in a convenient
location.
6.3 Convening
of Meeting.
The
chair of the committee or, in the chair's absence, the vice chair, shall call
all regular
sessions of the committee, set
agenda and proceed with the order of business.
6.4 Public
Participation.
6.4-1
Open Meetings.
Every
standing committee meeting, except executive sessions, shall be open to the
public
during the consideration of all
matters coming before it. At such open meetings, persons other
than members of the committee may
testify at the discretion of the committee chair.
6.4-2
Executive Sessions.
Any
standing committee may be called into executive session by the chair or upon
motion of one of the committee
members if the matter under consideration is deemed by the chair
to comply with those provisions of
the "Open Meetings" law (chapter 42-46) which provides for
closed meetings; provided, however,
when the chair of any standing committee calls the
committee into executive session,
the majority of those members present in the executive session
may vote not to meet in executive
session after having heard the reasons for such executive
session but no other votes shall be
permitted in executive sessions. The chair of the committee
which may be called into executive
session shall provide a general description to the public of the
reason for calling such committee
into executive session.
6.4-3
Public Hearings.
In
the discretion of the chair, public hearings may be advertised in newspapers,
stenographic records kept and
hearings held at locations other than the state house. The purpose
of the public hearing shall be to
solicit the comments of the public on the matter being
considered. At the public hearing
all persons shall be permitted to testify; provided, however, the
committee chair may limit the
amount of time allotted to speakers except that the prime sponsor
shall not have a time limit to
speak and shall upon request be the first speaker at the hearing.
After the public hearing has been
held for a reasonable period and if there are still persons
wishing to speak, the committee
chair may continue the hearing until another date.
6.5 Hearing
and Consideration of Bills.
(a)
Upon a written request by the prime sponsor of any public bill received by the
secretary of the senate before the
closing of the next legislative day after the deadline for
introduction as specified in
section 4.6 that a committee hearing be held with respect to such bill,
the committee chair shall schedule
a committee hearing within eight (8) days of such request
unless a later date is agreed to by
the prime sponsor. "Received" as used herein shall mean receipt
in hand by the secretary of the
senate or his/her designee. The secretary shall note the date and
time of receipt on the request and
such notation shall be dispositive. The committee chair may
consider hearings on related
matters. The committee shall consider said bill not more than eight
(8) days after the committee
hearing, unless a later date is agreed to by the prime sponsor. If the
committee does not consider the
bill then the committee shall be discharged of its responsibility
to consider such bill and such bill
shall be placed on the senate calendar pursuant to section 7.6
hereof. Consideration by a
committee shall be interpreted to mean any one of the following
actions: recommendation of passage,
recommendation of passage as amended, transfer to another
committee, indefinite postponement,
hold for further study or defeat of the bill.
(b)
Provided further, the minority leader may request in writing within twenty-four
(24)
hours after the deadline for
introductions specified in section 4.6 a hearing on any senate bill in
committee.
(c)
In the event a request is made pursuant to this rule at a time less than
sixteen (16) days
before the deadline for committee
consideration set forth in section 6.9, then such request shall
not be proper and shall be automatically
denied.
6.6 Quorum.
A
committee shall not vote upon any bill in the absence of a quorum which shall
consist
of a majority of the committee's
membership; provided, however, that at the discretion of the
chair, less than a quorum may
conduct any hearing including public hearings.
6.7 Minority
Representation.
When
there is no minority member present and the committee is to consider a bill,
the
committee chair shall notify the
office of the minority leader that there is no senator from the
minority present. Unless waived by
the minority leader, the committee shall not conduct business
for a reasonable time or until a
senator from the minority is present.
6.8 Committee
Votes.
All
votes in committee on public bills shall be a recorded roll call vote. The vote
upon all
motions or bills not considered a
"public bill" shall, upon the request of any member of the
committee, be a recorded roll call
vote. Otherwise all votes shall be put by yeas and nays.
Committee chairs shall submit all
bills approved by committee to the floor forthwith, with a
record of the committee vote.
6.9 Deadline
for Consideration.
After
April 14, 2005 for the year 2005 and April 13, 2006 for the year 2006,
committees
shall consider only those public
bills which have been acted upon and transmitted to the senate by
the house of representatives;
provided, however, that the president of the senate may request a
senate committee to immediately
consider a senate bill then in committee and said bill shall be
considered by the committee.
6.10 Discharge
from Committee.
No
bill shall be taken or called from any such committee, or the committee
discharged
from the consideration thereof,
except:
(a)
By a two-thirds (2/3) recorded vote of all the members elected to the senate by
a
petition in writing signed by a
majority of all persons elected to the senate and distributed to each
senator before the vote, or
(b)
Any senator may present a petition, in writing, to discharge a committee from
further
consideration of a bill which has
been in the possession of the committee for sixteen (16) days
without having been considered, but
only one petition on a particular bill may be presented during
the course of a session. Prior to
presenting the petition, the senator must introduce a resolution of
intent to discharge such committee.
Such resolution of intent shall contain the bill number and the
committee to be discharged. The
presiding officer shall cause the resolution of intent to be printed
in the journal of the senate. The
petition shall be placed in the custody of the presiding officer
who shall arrange some convenient
place for the signatures of the senators to be placed thereon in
the presence of the reading clerk during
the hours in which the senate is in session. A signature
may be withdrawn by a senator at
any time before the petition shall become effective.
On
the first day of each week, there shall be printed in the journal of the senate
the
petitions pending under these
rules, together with the signatures thereto; provided, however, that
as soon as a majority of all the
senators elected to the senate shall have affixed their signatures to
any such petition to discharge a
committee under this rule, the presiding officer shall cause notice
thereof to be given to chair and
clerk of the committee to which such bill was referred, and such
notice shall, thereupon,
automatically discharge the committee from further consideration of the
bill and the bill shall be placed
upon the calendar in accordance with section 7.6 hereof.
(c)
Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to change the deadline for
consideration as specified in
section 6.9.
6.11 Compelling
Committee Action.
If a
committee to which a bill has been referred fails to consider such bill within
sixteen
(16) days of its introduction or
transmittal, the prime sponsor of such bill, or four (4) committee
members, may, in writing, request
the chair of the committee, through the presiding officer of the
senate, that such bill be
considered. The request shall be printed in the journal of the senate. The
committee shall consider such bill
at its first meeting held at least two (2) days after such request
is made. If the committee does not
consider the bill within eight (8) days of receipt of the request
then the committee shall be
discharged of its responsibility to consider such bill and such bill
shall be placed on the senate
calendar pursuant to section 7.6 hereof. Consideration by a
committee shall be interpreted to
mean any one of the following actions: recommendation of
passage, recommendation of passage
as amended, transfer to another committee, indefinite
postponement, hold for further
study or defeat of the bill. Nothing contained in this section shall
be construed to change the deadline
for consideration as specified in section 6.9.
6.12 Defeat
of a Bill.
Once
a bill is defeated in committee, the same shall not be acted upon or considered
again during the same legislative
year.
6.13 Indefinite
Postponement.
Whenever
any bill is postponed indefinitely in committee, the same shall not be acted
upon or considered again during the
same legislative year.
6.14 Transfer
of Bills.
In the
event the chair of any standing committee determines that any bill then pending
before the committee would more
properly be pending before another standing committee of the
senate, the chair shall transfer
such bill to such other standing committee as is deemed appropriate
during the reports of committees.
6.15 Committee
Records.
All
recorded votes of committees, all written testimony submitted to a committee,
and the
transcripts of any recorded
testimony shall be retained by the clerk of each committee, shall
constitute public records, and
shall be available for inspection to any senator and to any person
upon request. All committee votes,
transcripts and testimony shall be transmitted to the secretary
of state pursuant to state law and senate
policy following final adjournment in even numbered
years.
6.16 Attribution
of Bills.
Upon
presentation of testimony before a committee, the prime sponsor of the bill
shall
provide to the committee the name
of any individual, group or organization responsible for the
substantive basis or text of the
bill.
SECTION
7
PROCEEDINGS ON THE SENATE FLOOR
7.1 Right
to the Floor.
No
senator shall address another except through the presiding officer. A senator
shall rise
to put a question, may state it or
read a paper sitting. When any senator wishes to speak or to
deliver any matter to the senate,
the senator shall press his or her recognition control and the
presiding officer shall recognize
the senator who so requests recognition and the order of
recognition shall be determined by
the presiding officer. The senator so recognized shall not be
interrupted while speaking except
by a call to order or a motion to suspend section 3.5. The
senator shall then immediately be
seated unless permitted by the senate to proceed, which shall be
determined upon motion without
debate. No senator shall speak more than twice on the same
question without leave of the
senate which shall be determined without debate, nor more than
once until the other senators who
have not spoken shall speak if they so desire, provided, however
that a senator may yield his or her
right to the floor to another senator.
7.2 Personal
Privilege.
Only
at the time provided for in section 3.3, a senator may claim the floor to
address the
senate on personal privilege.
Personal privilege shall include the right to reply to criticism, or to
discuss anything clearly derogatory
to the member or which reflects upon his or her character that
appears in the press or other
public medium but shall not include the right to discuss favorable
references to the senator, nor to
reply to generalized criticism of the senate which does not refer
to him or to her specifically, nor
to attack another member of the senate personally. Whether a
member's remarks constitute
personal privilege shall be determined by the presiding officer.
7.3 Unanimous
Consent.
Only
at the time provided for in section 3.3, a senator may request unanimous
consent of
the senators present to address the
senate on a topic or matter of importance to the welfare of the
state. A senator granted the right
to so address the senate may be interrupted at any time by
another senator who wishes to
object to the first senator's right to continue to address the senate
and upon such objection the first
senator's right to address the senate shall terminate.
7.4 Language.
No
senator shall use profane, insulting, or abusive language in the course of
public debate
in the senate chamber, or in
testimony before any committee of the general assembly.
7.5 Priority
of Business.
All
questions relating to priority of business to be acted upon shall be decided by
the
presiding officer without debate.
7.6 Calendar.
There
shall be a calendar kept by the secretary of the senate upon which shall be
placed
the bills reported by all
committees, and all other matters ordered placed thereon by the senate.
Matters on the calendar shall be
arranged by the secretary of the senate in numerical order by
committee unless otherwise ordered
by the president of the senate in agreement with the majority
leader and the minority leader.
Such calendar shall be electronically available to all members of
the senate. Except as provided in
section 7.13, and during consideration of the calendar, no other
business shall intervene except to
receive a message communication from the house or a motion
to suspend section 3.5.
All
business on the calendar not disposed of at the time of adjournment shall be
first in
order on the calendar the next day.
No matter of business on the calendar shall be considered
upon its merits unless it has been
on such calendar at least two (2) days; except that the president
of the senate may order a bill
placed on the calendar for more than two (2) days; provided,
however, a bill passed by the
senate and amended by the house of representatives may be
considered by the senate without
being on the calendar for two (2) days if the requirements of
section 4.10-1 have been met.
7.7 Consent
Calendar.
Notwithstanding
the provisions of section 7.6, the secretary of the senate shall also
maintain a separate calendar,
designated as the consent calendar, upon which shall be placed all
bills which are not public bills.
Matters on the consent calendar shall be in order for disposal on
each day and shall include all such
matters reported or referred thereto from the previous day.
Such consent calendar shall be
posted in the chamber of the senate. All matters on the consent
calendar shall be disposed by a
single motion except such matters as may be objected to by any
single senator, which said matter
or matters shall be held over on the regular calendar for the next
day.
7.8 Reports
of Joint Committees.
No
bill reported by or forwarded on the recommendation of a joint committee of the
two
houses shall be in order for
concurrence by the senate if it shall appear that the members of such
joint committee on the part of the
senate, if in attendance on the general assembly, shall not have
been notified or present when the
subject was acted on by such joint committee. No report shall
be acted on in the senate from any
joint committee unless as subscribed by a senator who is a
member of said committee. Any
report from a joint committee shall be made on the floor of the
senate by a member of said
committee, notwithstanding that said member may not have
concurred in the report and said
report shall be held on the desk unless ordered placed on the
calendar pursuant to section 7.6 by
the president of the senate or by a majority vote of the senate.
7.9 Messages
from the House.
When
a message is received from the house of representatives, transmitting any
papers,
the secretary of the senate shall transmit
to the office of the president of the senate all house
transmittals received on that day.
The president of the senate shall assign house transmittals to
committees upon adjournment of the
senate. The secretary of the senate shall cause all house
transmittals to be published in the
senate journal for the day such transmittals are received. Any
senator may object to the committee
assignment for any transmittal received during the previous
legislative day. Upon objection
being made, the presiding officer shall assign the transmittal to
the committee requested by the
senator making the objection, provided, however, that if another
senator objects to any assignment
or proposed assignment of the transmittal, then the presiding
officer shall call for a vote of
the senate on any motion for assignment which has been made and
seconded, such motion requiring a
majority vote of those senators present and voting for
assignment to a particular
committee.
During
the time for consideration of house transmittals, a senator may move for
immediate consideration of a house
transmittal, received by the secretary of the senate on the
previous legislative day. If there
is no objection to the motion, it is deemed to be approved, but if
there is objection to the motion
for immediate consideration, the presiding officer shall submit the
motion to a vote of the senate,
such motion for immediate consideration shall require the votes of
two-thirds (2/3) of those senators
present and voting, for approval.
7.10 Amendments.
No
senator may amend from the floor any bill pending before the senate unless such
amendment be submitted,
electronically or in writing, with sufficient copies signed by the
proponent, and read to the body;
provided, however, that no amendment to the annual budget bill
making appropriations for the
support of the state may be offered, except with the agreement of
two-thirds (2/3) of the members
present, unless copies thereof shall have been filed with the
secretary of the senate no later
than 12:00 o'clock noon on the legislative day preceding the
legislative day on which the budget
bill shall be in order for consideration.
7.11 Votes
in Concurrence.
Whenever
any bill shall come before the senate for concurrence, and be concurred in
without amendments, or nonconcurred
with, the secretary of the senate may announce the
concurrence or nonconcurrence to
the other house with the title of the bill or paper, but the
original bill concurred in by the
senate without amendments or non-concurred with, shall not be
transmitted to the other house.
7.12 Motions.
No
motion shall be debated until it has been seconded. For the purpose of recorded
votes
only the first second shall be
recorded. A motion may be withdrawn by the mover at any time
before a decision or a motion to
amend, except a motion to reconsider, which shall not be
withdrawn after the time has
elapsed within which it could be originally made.
7.13 Interruption
of Debate.
When
a question is under debate, no motion shall be received except to suspend
section
3.5, to adjourn, to recommit, for
the previous question, to close debate, to fix a time for closing
debate, to take a recess, to lay on
the table, to take from the table, to transmit, to postpone
indefinitely, or to amend, and any
motion or resolution the purpose of which is to take any bill or
any other matter from committees of
the senate or to discharge a committee from the
consideration thereof, which
several motions shall have precedence in the order in which they are
here arranged and shall be decided
by majority vote without debate.
7.14 Adjournment.
When
time for meeting of the senate shall have been previously fixed, a motion to
adjourn and a motion to suspend
section 3.5 shall always be in order. The senate shall not be
adjourned except by affirmative
vote of a majority of the senators present and voting.
7.15 Lay
on the Table.
When
an amendment proposed to any pending measure be laid on the table, it shall not
carry with it, or prejudice such
measure.
7.16 Dividing
Questions.
A
question that is susceptible of division shall, at the request of the majority,
be divided
and put separately upon the
propositions of which it is compounded.
7.17 Non-Germane
Amendments.
No
motion or proposition of a subject different from that under consideration
shall be
admitted under color of amendment.
7.18 Reconsideration.
When
any vote is passed any senator recorded voting with the prevailing side may by
motion made on the same day move to
reconsider it on the same or next day of the same session;
when a bill is reconsidered it
shall not be reconsidered again during the session. Bills and other
papers in reference to which any
senator has a right to move reconsideration, shall, unless
otherwise ordered, remain in the
possession of the secretary of the senate until the right of
reconsideration has expired. The
privilege to reconsider granted by this rule may be suspended by
a majority vote of the senators
present and voting.
7.19 Printed
Material.
If
the reading of any printed or written paper be objected to, the matter shall be
determined by a majority vote of
the senate without debate.
7.20 Recommittal.
No
motion to recommit shall be entertained by the presiding officer as to any bill
which
is placed on the calendar as the
result of section 6.10 until every senator desiring to be heard has
been recognized, notwithstanding
the provisions of section 7.13.
7.21 Immediate
Consideration.
During
the time for introduction and reference of new business, as provided in section
3.3, a senator may introduce a bill
and move for immediate consideration of the bill at that time.
If there is no objection to the
motion, it is deemed to be approved, but if there is objection to the
motion for immediate consideration,
the presiding officer shall submit the motion to a vote of the
senate; such motion for immediate
consideration shall require the votes of two-thirds (2/3) of
those senators present and voting,
for approval. If the bill is not available electronically to all
members of the senate at the time
of the request for immediate consideration, then a hard copy of
the bill shall be made available to
any senator upon request.
SECTION
8
VOTING ON THE SENATE FLOOR
8.1 Method
of Voting.
The
electronic roll of the senate shall be called upon any vote pertaining to a
public bill
and on any other vote at the
request of any senator present; otherwise, votes shall be put by yeas
and nays. In naming sums or
numbers, and fixing times, the largest sum or longest time shall be
put first.
8.2 Voting
Machine Inoperative.
In
the event the machine is not to be used to record a vote or is not operating
properly, all
votes and other determinations may
be taken as required by senate rules, either by voice vote,
division vote or by calling the
roll alphabetically and recording the yeas and nays. If a senator's
voting device is out of order, the
senator shall rise and announce it to the presiding officer and
cast his or her vote orally prior
to the declaration of the result of the vote.
8.3 Who
May Vote.
Any
member who is present in the senate chamber must vote. Any senator who is not
in
the chamber at such time, but who
returns before the machine is locked, shall be permitted to
vote.
8.4 Control
of Electronic Voting System.
The
electronic voting system shall be under the control of the presiding officer
and shall
be operated by such personnel as
the president of the senate so designates.
8.5 Conducting
a Vote.
At a
reasonable time, prior to any vote being taken, the presiding officer shall
announce
that a vote is about to be taken.
When any senator other than the president of the senate is
presiding, such senator may direct
either the Secretary of the Senate or the reading clerk to cast
his or her vote at his or her
voting station, but at no other time may a senator designate any other
person to cast his or her vote.
Until the completion of the voting, no senator shall be recognized,
and no other business shall be
transacted. When sufficient time has elapsed for each senator to
vote prior to locking the machine,
the presiding officer shall ask if any member present desires to
vote or change his or her vote. The
presiding officer shall then order the machine locked and
activate the recording process. The
voting machine shall remain locked between all votes.
8.6 Announcing
the Tally.
When
the vote is completely recorded, the Secretary of the Senate shall advise the
presiding officer of the result;
and the presiding officer shall announce the result to the senate and
the result shall be recorded in the
journal.
8.7 Changing
a Vote.
No
vote may be changed after the system has been locked and the vote recorded
except
that, after a vote has been
recorded, any senator may, by a majority vote of the senate, request that
his or her vote be changed,
provided that such change be effected on the same day as his or her
original vote.
8.8 Recording
Votes.
8.8-1
On any recorded vote, no senator shall be recorded as having voted unless he or
she
has
been recorded or recognized as being present prior to the conduct of said vote.
8.8-2
Upon request, on any non-recorded vote, any senator shall have his or her vote
recorded so that it shall appear in
the journal of the senate.
8.9 Voting
for Another.
No
senator may vote for another senator; nor may any person cast a vote for a senator,
except as otherwise provided in
section 8.5. A senator who voted for another senator may be
punished in a manner the senate
determines. A person voting for a senator, when not authorized
by section 8.5, is barred from the
floor of the senate and may be further punished as the senate
determines.
8.10 Explanation
of Vote.
No
explanation of any vote will be permitted during the voting or after a vote has
been
cast.
8.11 Statement
of the Question.
After
the question has been put, but before the system is locked, any senator may
call for
a statement of the question.
8.12 No
Interruption.
While
the presiding officer is putting the question, or the vote is being recorded,
no
senator shall speak or leave his or
her place.
SECTION
9
MISCELLANEOUS
9.1 Legislative
Aides.
The
president of the senate may appoint and prescribe the duties and terms of a
parliamentarian and one head page
and as many assistant pages, doorkeepers and legislative aides
as the president of the senate
shall deem necessary; and any or all of them may be removed at the
pleasure of the president of the
senate.
9.2 Absence
of a Quorum.
When
there shall be seven (7) or more senators, but less than a quorum of the senate
present, a majority of the senators
present may direct the presiding officer to compel the
attendance of absent senators in
accordance with law.
9.3 Amendment
and Suspension of Rules.
No
rule shall be repealed, suspended or amended, or the operation thereof
temporarily
suspended except by two-thirds
(2/3) of the members present and voting.
9.4 Access
to the Senate Floor.
9.4-1
Lobbying.
Lobbying
on the floor of the senate while the senate is in session is prohibited; and no
lobbyist shall be admitted to the
floor of the senate while the senate is in session; provided,
however, that the president may
make special admission to the floor for persons who, by reason
of disability, are unable to gain
access to the senate gallery.
9.4-2
Credentials Required.
Except
as provided in Rule 9.4-1, current and former general officers of the state;
judges
of the supreme, superior, family,
district, workers' compensation and administrative adjudication
courts; current and former senators;
current and former members of the house of representatives;
employees of the senate, the house
of representatives and agencies of the general assembly; the
executive counsel and the chief
administrative assistant to the governor or their designees; the
librarian of the state library;
representatives of the news media; and other persons as may be
permitted by the president of the
senate and subject to such limitations and regulations as the
president of the senate may from
time to time prescribe. In no event shall any person be
permitted to be seated on the floor
without permission of the president of the senate, the majority
leader and/or the minority leader.
9.4-3
Senators' Seats.
The
seat of each senator shall be assigned by the president of the senate, and in
no event
shall any other person be permitted
to occupy such assigned seat.
9.4-4
Sheriff's Duties.
It
shall be the duty of the sheriff, or the sheriff's deputies in attendance in
the senate, or in
their absence, a member of the
capitol police department, to see that rules 9.4-1, 9.4-2, 9.4-3, 9.4-
5 and 9.4-9 are enforced, and that
all senate entrances and exits are kept completely clear and
open to passage to and from the
chamber.
9.4-5
Gallery.
When
the normal seating accommodations for visitors in the gallery have been filled,
no
additional seats shall be
installed, and no persons shall be thereafter admitted to the gallery of the
senate while in session except to
fill vacancies.
9.5 Confidentiality
of Drafting.
At
the request of any senator or senate attorney to the director of the
legislative council,
an entry into the word processing
system may be made confidential so that the entry shall be
accessible only to the senator or
senate attorney making such request or his or her designee. An
entry may be a bill, letter,
memorandum or any other document.
9.6 Misuse
of Rules.
If it
appears that the rules are being used as a tactic to impede senate business,
the
presiding officer may make a
decision to that effect and put the matter before the senate and a
majority vote of the senators
present shall sustain with finality the rule of the presiding officer.
9.7 Extraordinary
and Special Session.
In
the event of the calling of an extraordinary session of the general assembly by
the
governor, or a reconvened session
by the speaker of the house and the president of the senate,
said session shall be conducted
pursuant to the foregoing rules; provided, however, that rules
4.11-1, 6.2, 7.6 and 7.8 are not
applicable to any such session; and, provided further, that any bill,
act or resolution for consideration
of which the session is called shall have been provided to the
members at least twenty-four (24)
hours prior to the consideration of the senate.
9.8 Robert's
Rules.
Robert's
Rules of Order shall govern procedure on the senate floor and in the committees
of the senate in all cases in which
they are not inconsistent with these rules or with any joint rules
of the senate and house.
9.9 Use
of Facilities.
The
senate locker room, lounge and corridor adjacent to them shall be for the
exclusive
use of the senators and their
guests.
9.10 Decorum.
No
senator shall use profane, insulting or abusive language or act in any manner
that
interferes with the orderly conduct
of the session of the senate.
9.11 Smoking
Prohibited.
Smoking
shall be prohibited in all senate areas including, but not limited to: the
chamber,
gallery, lounge, committee rooms,
offices, restrooms or hallways. The presiding officer shall
enforce this rule.
9.12 Consumption
of Food and Alcoholic Beverages.
The
consumption of food and alcoholic beverages shall be prohibited in the senate
chamber.
9.13 Appropriate
Attire Required.
All
persons on the floor of the senate while the senate is in session shall be
properly
dressed, and the presiding officer
shall enforce this rule by appropriate means.
9.14 Electronic
Devices.
During
sessions cell phones shall not be used on the floor of the senate or in
committee
hearing rooms when committee
meetings are in session. Further, pagers may be used only on the
silent/vibrate mode.
9-15 Photographic
Equipment.
During
sessions, photographic equipment shall not be used on the floor of the senate
or in
committee hearing rooms when
committee meetings are in session unless he or she has the
permission of the president of the
senate or the senate committee chair. This section shall not
apply to properly credentialed
representatives of the news media.
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LC01287/SUB A
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