Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 5


Introduced by Senator Steinberg

January 3, 2013


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 5—Relative to the adoption of the Joint Rules of the Senate and Assembly for the 2013–14 Regular Session.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 5, as introduced, Steinberg. Joint Rules.

This measure adopts the Joint Rules of the Senate and Assembly for the 2013-14 Regular Session.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
2thereof concurring,
That the following rules be adopted as the
3Joint Rules of the Senate and Assembly for the 2013-14 Regular
4Session:


5

7JOINT RULES OF THE SENATE AND ASSEMBLY


8

10Standing Committees


11

131. Each house shall appoint standing committees as the business
14of the house may require, the committees, the number of members,
15and the manner of selection to be determined by the rules of each
16 house.


17

P2    2Joint Meeting of Committees


3

53. Whenever any bill has been referred by the Senate to one of
6its committees, and the same or a like bill has been referred by the
7Assembly to one of its committees, the chairpersons of the
8respective committees, when in their judgment the interests of
9legislation or the expedition of business will be better served
10thereby, shall arrange for a joint meeting of their committees for
11the consideration of the bill.


12

14Effect of Adoption of Joint Rules


15

173.5. The adoption of the Joint Rules for any extraordinary
18session may not be construed as modifying or rescinding the Joint
19Rules of the Senate and Assembly for any previous session, nor
20as affecting in any way the status or powers of the committees
21created by those rules.


22

24Definition of Word “Bill”


25

274. Whenever the word “bill” is used in these rules, it includes
28any constitutional amendment, any resolution ratifying a proposed
29amendment to the United States Constitution, and any resolution
30calling for a constitutional convention.


31

33Concurrent and Joint Resolutions


34

365. Concurrent resolutions relate to matters to be treated by both
37houses of the Legislature.

38Joint resolutions relate to matters connected with the federal
39government.


40

P3    2Resolutions Treated as Bills


3

56. Concurrent and joint resolutions, other than resolutions
6ratifying proposed amendments to the United States Constitution
7and resolutions calling for constitutional conventions, shall be
8treated in all respects as bills except as follows:

9(a) They shall be given only one formal reading in each house.

10(b) They may not be deemed bills within the meaning of
11subdivision (a) of Section 8 of Article IV of the California
12Constitution.

13(c) They may not be deemed bills for the purposes of Rules
1410.8, 53, 55, 56, and 61, subdivisions (a) and (c) of Rule 54, and
15subdivisions (a) and (b) of Rule 62.

16(d) They may not, except for those relating to voting procedures
17on the floor or in committee, be deemed bills for the purposes of
18subdivision (c) of Rule 62.


19

21PREPARATION AND INTRODUCTION OF BILLS


22

24Title of Bill


25

277. The title of every bill introduced shall convey an accurate
28idea of the contents of the bill and shall indicate the scope of the
29act and the object to be accomplished. In amending a code section,
30the mere reference to the section by number is not deemed
31sufficient.


32

34Division of Bill Into Sections


35

378. A bill amending more than one section of an existing law
38shall contain a separate section for each section amended.

39Bills that are not amendatory of existing laws shall be divided
40into short sections, where this can be done without destroying the
P4    1sense of any particular section, to the end that future amendments
2may be made without the necessity of setting forth and repeating
3sections of unnecessary length.


4

6Digest of Bills Introduced


7

98.5. A bill may not be introduced unless it is contained in a
10cover attached by the Legislative Counsel and it is accompanied
11by a digest, prepared and attached to the bill by the Legislative
12Counsel, showing the changes in the existing law that are proposed
13by the bill. A bill may not be printed where the body of the bill or
14the Legislative Counsel’s Digest has been altered, unless the
15alteration has been approved by the Legislative Counsel. If any
16bill is presented to the Secretary of the Senate or Chief Clerk of
17the Assembly for introduction that does not comply with the
18foregoing requirements of this rule, the Secretary or Chief Clerk
19shall return it to the Member who presented it. The digest shall be
20printed on the bill as introduced, commencing on the first page
21thereof.


22

24Digest of Bills Amended


25

278.6. Whenever a bill is amended in either house, the Secretary
28of the Senate or the Chief Clerk of the Assembly, as the case may
29be, shall request the Legislative Counsel to prepare an amended
30digest and cause it to be printed on the first page of the bill as
31amended. The digest shall be amended to show changes in the
32existing law that are proposed by the bill as amended, with any
33material changes in the digest indicated by the use of appropriate
34type.


35

37Errors in Digest


38

P5    18.7. If a material error in a printed digest referred to in Rule
28.5 or 8.6 is brought to the attention of the Legislative Counsel,
3he or she shall prepare a corrected digest that shows the changes
4made in the digest as provided in Rule 10 for amendments to bills.
5He or she shall deliver the corrected digest to the Secretary of the
6Senate or the Chief Clerk of the Assembly, as the case may be. If
7the correction so warrants in the opinion of the President pro
8Tempore of the Senate or the Speaker of the Assembly, a corrected
9print of the bill as introduced shall be ordered with the corrected
10digest printed thereon.


11

13Bills Amending Title 9 of the Government Code


14

168.8. A Member who is the first-named author of a bill that
17would amend, add, or repeal any provision of Title 9 (commencing
18with Section 81000) of the Government Code, upon introduction
19or amendment of the bill in either house, shall notify the Chief
20Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of the Senate, as the case
21may be, of the nature of the bill. Thereafter, the Chief Clerk of the
22Assembly or the Secretary of the Senate shall deliver a copy of
23the bill as introduced or amended to the Fair Political Practices
24Commission pursuant to Section 81012 of the Government Code.


25

27Bills Amending the California Stem Cell Research and Cures
28Act


29

318.9. A Member who is the first-named author of a bill that
32would amend, add, or repeal any statutory provision of the
33California Stem Cell Research and Cures Act, other than the bond
34provisions thereof, upon introduction or amendment of the bill in
35either house, shall notify the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the
36Secretary of the Senate, as the case may be, of the nature of the
37bill. At least 14 days prior to passage in the Assembly or Senate,
38respectively, the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of
39the Senate shall make copies of the bill as introduced or amended
40available in the Bill Room for access by the public and news media.



P6    1

3Restrictions as to Amendments


4

69. A substitute or amendment must relate to the same subject
7as the original bill, constitutional amendment, or resolution under
8consideration. An amendment is not in order when all that would
9be done to the bill is the addition of a coauthor or coauthors, unless
10the Committee on Rules of the house in which the amendment is
11to be offered grants prior approval.


12

14Changes in Existing Law to be Marked by Author


15

1710. In a bill amending or repealing a code section or a general
18law, any new matter shall be underlined, and any matter to be
19omitted shall be in type bearing a horizontal line through the center
20and commonly known as “strikeout” type. When printed the new
21matter shall be printed in italics, and the matter to be omitted shall
22be printed in “strikeout” type.

23In an amendment to a bill that sets out for the first time a section
24being amended or repealed, any new matter to be added and any
25matter to be omitted shall be indicated by the author and shall be
26printed in the same manner as though the section as amended or
27repealed was a part of the original bill and was being printed for
28the first time.

29When an entire code is repealed as part of a codification or
30recodification, or when an entire title, part, division, chapter, or
31article of a code is repealed, the sections comprising the code, title,
32part, division, chapter, or article shall not be set forth in the bill or
33 amendment in strikeout type.


34

36Rereferral to Fiscal and Rules Committees


37

3910.5. A bill shall be rereferred to the fiscal committee of each
40house when it would do any of the following:

P7    1(1) Appropriate money.

2(2) Result in a substantial expenditure of state money.

3(3) Result in a substantial loss of revenue to the state.

4(4) Result in substantial reduction of expenditures of state money
5by reducing, transferring, or eliminating any existing
6responsibilities of any state agency, program, or function.

7Concurrent and joint resolutions shall be rereferred to the fiscal
8committee of each house when they contemplate any action that
9would involve any of the following:

10(1) Any substantial expenditure of state money.

11(2) Any substantial loss of revenue to the state.

12The above requirements do not apply to bills or concurrent
13resolutions that contemplate the expenditure or allocation of
14operating funds.

15A bill that assigns, requests, or requires a study, or is amended
16to assign, request, or require a study, shall be referred to the
17respective Committees on Rules.

18This rule may be suspended in either house as to any particular
19bill by approval of the Committee on Rules of the house and
20 two-thirds vote of the membership of the house.


21

23Short Title


24

2610.6. A bill may not add a short title that names a current or
27former Member of the Legislature.


28

30Heading of Bills


31

3310.7. A bill or resolution may be authored only by a Member
34or committee of the house of origin. Members or committees that
35are not of the house of origin may be “principal coauthors” or
36“coauthors.” A bill may not indicate in its heading or elsewhere
37that it was introduced at the request of a state agency or officer or
38any other person. A bill may not contain the words “By request”
39or words of similar import.


40

P8    2Consideration of Bills


3

510.8. The limitation contained in subdivision (a) of Section 8
6of Article IV of the Constitution may be dispensed with as follows:

7(a) A written request for dispensation entitled “Request to
8Consider and Act on Bill Within 30 Calendar Days” shall be filed
9with the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of the
10Senate, as the case may be, and transmitted to the Committee on
11Rules of the appropriate house.

12(b) The Committee on Rules of the Assembly or Senate, as the
13case may be, shall determine whether there exists an urgent need
14for dispensing with the 30-calendar-day waiting period following
15the bill’s introduction.

16(c) If the Committee on Rules recommends that the waiting
17period be dispensed with, the Member may offer a resolution,
18without further reference thereof to committee, authorizing hearing
19and action upon the bill before the 30 calendar days have elapsed.
20The adoption of the resolution requires an affirmative recorded
21vote of three-fourths of the elected Members of the house in which
22the resolution is presented.


23

25Printing of Amendments


26

2811. (a) Any bill amended by either house shall be immediately
29reprinted. Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b), if new
30matter is added by the amendment, the new matter shall be printed
31in italics in the printed bill; if matter is omitted, the matter to be
32omitted shall be printed in strikeout type. When a bill is amended
33in either house, the first or previous markings shall be omitted.

34(b) If amendments to a bill, including the report of a committee
35on conference, are adopted that omit the entire contents of the bill,
36the matter omitted need not be reprinted in the amended version
37of the bill. Instead, the Secretary of the Senate or the Chief Clerk
38of the Assembly, as the case may be, may select the amended bill
39and cause to be printed a brief statement to appear after the last
P9    1line of the amended bill identifying which previously printed
2version of the bill contains the complete text of the omitted matter.


3

5Manner of Printing Bills


6

812. The State Printer shall observe the directions of the Joint
9Rules Committee in printing all bills, constitutional amendments,
10and concurrent and joint resolutions.


11

13Distribution of Legislative Publications


14

1613. The Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the
17Assembly shall order a sufficient number of bills and legislative
18publications as may be necessary for legislative requirements.

19A complete list of bills may not be delivered except upon
20payment therefor of the amount fixed by the Joint Rules Committee
21for any regular or extraordinary session. No more than one copy
22of any bill or other legislative publication, nor more than a total
23of 100 bills or other legislative publications during a session, may
24be distributed free to any person, office, or organization. The
25limitations imposed by this paragraph do not apply to Members
26of the Legislature, the Secretary of the Senate, or the Chief Clerk
27of the Assembly for the proper functioning of their respective
28houses; the Legislative Counsel Bureau; the Attorney General’s
29office; the Secretary of State’s office; the Controller’s office; the
30State Treasurer’s office; the Insurance Commissioner’s office; the
31Superintendent of Public Instruction; the State Board of
32Equalization; the Governor’s office; the Lieutenant Governor’s
33office; the Clerk of the Supreme Court; the clerk of the court of
34appeal for each district; the Judicial Council; the California Law
35Revision Commission; the State Library; the Library of Congress;
36the libraries of the University of California at Berkeley and at Los
37Angeles; or accredited members of the press. The State Printer
38shall fix the cost of the bills and publications, including postage,
39and moneys as may be received by him or her shall, after deducting
40the cost of handling and mailing, be remitted on the first day of
P10   1each month, one-half each to the Secretary of the Senate and the
2Chief Clerk of the Assembly for credit to legislative printing.
3Legislative publications heretofore distributed through the Bureau
4of Documents shall be distributed through the Bill Room. Unless
5otherwise provided for, the total number of each bill to be printed
6may not exceed 2,500.


7

9Legislative Index


10

1213.1. The Legislative Counsel shall provide for the periodic
13publication of a cumulative Legislative Index, which shall include
14tables of sections affected by pending legislation. The State Printer
15shall print the Legislative Index in the quantities, and at the times,
16determined by the Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of
17the Assembly. The costs of that printing shall be paid from the
18legislative printing appropriation.


19

21Summary Digest


22

2413.3. The Legislative Counsel shall compile and prepare for
25publication a summary digest of legislation passed at each regular
26and extraordinary session, which digest shall be prepared in a form
27suitable for inclusion in the publication of statutes. The digest shall
28be printed as a separate legislative publication on the order of the
29Joint Rules Committee, and may be made available to the public
30in the quantities, and at the prices, determined by the Joint Rules
31Committee.


32

34Statutory Record


35

3713.5. The Legislative Counsel shall prepare for publication
38from time to time a cumulative statutory record. The statutory
39record shall be printed as a legislative publication on the order of
40the Secretary of the Senate or the Chief Clerk of the Assembly.



P6    1

3OTHER LEGISLATIVE PRINTING


4

6Printing of the Daily Journal


7

914. The State Printer shall print, in the quantities directed by
10the Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the Assembly,
11copies of the Daily Journal of each day’s proceedings of each
12house. At the end of the session he or she shall also print, as
13directed by the Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the
14Assembly, a sufficient number of copies properly paged after being
15corrected and indexed by the Secretary of the Senate and the Chief
16Clerk of the Assembly, to bind in book form as the Daily Journal
17of the respective houses of the Legislature.


18

20What Shall Be Printed in the Daily Journal


21

2315. The following shall be printed in the Daily Journal of each
24house:

25(a) Messages from the Governor and messages from the other
26house, and the titles of all bills, joint and concurrent resolutions,
27and constitutional amendments when introduced in, offered to, or
28acted upon by, the house.

29(b) Every vote taken in the house, and a statement of the contents
30of each petition, memorial, or paper presented to the house.

31(c) A true and accurate account of the proceedings of the house,
32when not acting as a Committee of the Whole.


33

35Printing of the Daily File


36

3816. A Daily File of bills ready for consideration shall be printed
39each day for each house when the Legislature is not in joint recess,
40except days when a house does not meet.



P6    1

3Printing of History


4

617. Each house shall cause to be printed, once each week, a
7complete Weekly History of all bills, constitutional amendments,
8and concurrent, joint, and house resolutions originating in,
9considered by, or acted upon by, the respective houses and
10 committees thereof. A regular form shall be prescribed by the
11Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the Assembly. The
12Weekly History shall show the action taken upon each measure
13up to and including the legislative day preceding its issuance.
14Except for periods when the houses are in joint recess, for each
15day intervening there shall be published a Daily History or
16summary showing the consideration given to or action taken upon
17any measure since the issuance of the complete Weekly History.


18

20Authority for Printing Orders


21

2318. The State Printer may not print for use of either house, nor
24charge to legislative printing, any matter other than provided by
25law or by the rules, except upon a written order signed by the
26 Secretary of the Senate, on behalf of the Senate, or the Chief Clerk
27of the Assembly or other person authorized by the Assembly, on
28behalf of the Assembly. Persons authorized to order printing under
29this rule may, when necessity requires it, order certain matter
30printed in advance of the regular order, by the issuance of a rush
31order.

32The Secretary of the Senate, on behalf of the Senate, and the
33Chief Clerk of the Assembly or other person authorized by the
34Assembly, on behalf of the Assembly, are hereby authorized and
35directed to order and distribute for the Members stationery and
36legislative publications for which there is a demand, and, subject
37to the rules of their respective houses, to approve the bills covering
38those orders. All bills for printing must be presented by the State
39Printer within 30 days after the completion of the printing.


40

P13   2RECORD OF BILLS


3

5Secretary and Chief Clerk to Keep Records


6

819. The Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the
9Assembly shall keep a complete and accurate record of every action
10taken by the Senate and Assembly on every bill.


11

13Secretary and Chief Clerk Shall Endorse Bills


14

1620. The Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the
17Assembly shall endorse on every original or engrossed bill a
18statement of any action taken by the Senate or Assembly
19concerning the bill.


20

22ACTION IN ONE HOUSE ON BILL TRANSMITTED FROM
23THE OTHER


24

26After a Bill Has Been Passed by the Senate or Assembly


27

2921. When a bill has been passed by either house it shall be
30transmitted promptly to the other, unless a motion to reconsider
31or a notice of motion to reconsider has been made or it is held
32pursuant to some rule or order of the house.

33The procedure of referring bills to committees shall be
34determined by the respective houses.


35

37Messages to Be in Writing Under Proper Signatures


38

P14   122. Notice of the action of either house to the other shall be in
2writing and under the signature of the Secretary of the Senate or
3the Chief Clerk of the Assembly, as the case may be. A receipt
4shall be taken from the officer to whom the message is delivered.


5

7Consent Calendar: Uncontested Bills


8

1022.1. Each standing committee may report an uncontested bill
11out of committee with the recommendation that it be placed on
12the Consent Calendar. The Secretary of the Senate and the Chief
13Clerk of the Assembly shall provide to each committee chairperson
14appropriate forms for that report. As used in this rule, “uncontested
15bill” means a bill that (a) receives a do-pass or do-pass-as-amended
16recommendation from the committee to which it is referred, by
17unanimous vote of the members present provided a quorum is
18present, (b) has no opposition expressed by any person present at
19the committee meeting with respect to the final version of the bill
20as approved by the committee, and (c) prior to final action by the
21committee, has been requested by the author to be placed on the
22Consent Calendar.


23

25Consent Calendar


26

2822.2. Following its second reading and the adoption of any
29committee amendments thereto, any bill certified by the committee
30chairperson as an uncontested bill shall be placed by the Secretary
31of the Senate or the Chief Clerk of the Assembly on the Consent
32Calendar, and shall be known as a “Consent Calendar bill.” Any
33Consent Calendar bill that is amended from the floor shall cease
34to be a Consent Calendar bill and shall be returned to the Third
35Reading File. Upon objection of any Member to the placement or
36retention of any bill on the Consent Calendar, the bill shall cease
37to be a Consent Calendar bill and shall be returned to the Third
38Reading File. No Consent Calendar bill may be considered for
39adoption until the second legislative day following the day of its
40placement on the Consent Calendar.



P6    1

3Consideration of Bills on Consent Calendar


4

622.3. A bill on the Consent Calendar is not debatable, except
7that the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the Assembly
8shall allow a reasonable time for questions from the floor and shall
9permit a proponent of the bill to answer the questions. Immediately
10prior to voting on the first bill on the Consent Calendar, the
11President of the Senate or the Speaker of the Assembly shall call
12to the attention of the Members the fact that the next rollcall will
13be the rollcall on the first bill on the Consent Calendar.

14The Consent Calendar shall be considered as the last order of
15business on the Daily File.


16

18PASSAGE AND ENROLLING OF BILL


19

21Procedure on Defeat of More Than Majority Bill


22

2423.5. Whenever a bill containing a section or sections requiring
25for passage an affirmative recorded vote of more than 21 votes in
26the Senate and more than 41 votes in the Assembly is being
27considered for passage, and the urgency clause, if the bill is an
28urgency bill, or the bill, in any case, fails to receive the necessary
29votes to make all sections effective, further action may not be taken
30on the bill, except that an amendment to remove all sections
31requiring the higher vote for passage from the bill shall be in order
32prior to consideration of further business. If the amendment is
33adopted, the bill shall be reprinted to reflect the amendment. When
34the bill is reprinted, it shall be returned to the same place on the
35file that it occupied when it failed to receive the necessary votes.


36

38Enrollment of Bill After Passage


39

P16   124. After a bill has passed both houses it shall be printed in
2enrolled form, omitting symbols indicating amendments, and shall
3be compared by the Engrossing and Enrolling Clerk and the proper
4committee of the house where it originated to determine that it is
5in the form approved by the houses. The enrolled bill shall
6thereupon be signed by the Secretary of the Senate and Chief Clerk
7of the Assembly and, except as otherwise provided by these rules,
8presented without delay to the Governor. The committee shall
9report the time of presentation of the bill to the Governor to the
10 house and the record shall be entered in the Daily Journal. After
11enrollment and signature by the officers of the Legislature,
12constitutional amendments, and concurrent and joint resolutions,
13shall be filed without delay in the office of the Secretary of State
14and the time of filing shall be reported to the house and the record
15entered in the Daily Journal.


16

18AMENDMENTS AND CONFERENCES


19

21Amendments to Amended Bills Must Be Attached


22

2425. Whenever a bill or resolution that has been passed in one
25house is amended in the other, it shall immediately be reprinted
26as amended by the house making the amendment or amendments.
27One copy of the amendment or amendments shall be attached to
28the bill or resolution so amended, and endorsed “adopted”; the
29amendment or amendments, if concurred in by the house in which
30the bill or resolution originated, shall be endorsed “concurred in”;
31and the endorsement shall be signed by the Secretary or Assistant
32Secretary of the Senate, or the Chief Clerk or Assistant Clerk of
33the Assembly, as the case may be. However, an amendment to the
34title of a bill adopted after the passage of the bill does not
35necessitate reprinting, but the amendment must be concurred in
36by the house in which the bill originated.


37

39Amendments to Concurrent and Joint Resolutions


40

P17   225.5. When a concurrent or joint resolution is amended, and
3the only effect of the amendments is to add coauthors, the joint or
4concurrent resolution may not be reprinted unless specifically
5requested by one of the added coauthors, but a list of the coauthors
6shall appear in the Daily Journal and History.


7

9To Concur or Refuse to Concur in Amendments


10

1226. If the Senate amends and passes an Assembly bill, or the
13Assembly amends and passes a Senate bill, the Senate (if it is a
14Senate bill) or the Assembly (if it is an Assembly bill) must either
15“concur” or “refuse to concur” in the amendments. If the Senate
16concurs (if it is a Senate bill), or the Assembly concurs (if it is an
17Assembly bill), the Secretary of the Senate or Chief Clerk of the
18Assembly shall so notify the house making the amendments, and
19the bill shall be ordered to enrollment.


20

22Reference to Committee


23

2526.5. Pursuant to Rule 26, whenever a bill is returned to its
26house of origin for a vote on concurrence in an amendment made
27in the other house, the Legislative Counsel shall promptly prepare
28and transmit to the Chief Clerk of the Assembly and the Speaker
29of the Assembly in the case of an Assembly bill, or to the Secretary
30of the Senate and Chair of the Senate Committee on Rules in the
31case of a Senate bill, a brief digest summarizing the effect of the
32amendment made in the other house. The Secretary or Chief Clerk
33shall, upon receipt from the Legislative Counsel, cause the digest
34to be printed in the Daily File immediately following any reference
35to the bill covered by the digest. A motion to concur or refuse to
36concur in the amendment is not in order until the Legislative
37Counsel’s Digest has appeared in the Daily File or an analysis of
38the bill has been prepared and distributed pursuant to Senate Rule
3929.8 or Assembly Rule 77.

P18   1If the digest discloses that the amendment of the other house has
2made a substantial substantive change in the bill as first passed by
3the house of origin, the bill, if it is a Senate bill, shall, on motion
4of the Chair of the Senate Committee on Rules, be referred to the
5Senate Committee on Rules for reference to an appropriate standing
6committee. If the bill is an Assembly bill it shall be referred by
7the Speaker to the appropriate committee.

8Upon receipt of the bill, the committee may, by a vote of a
9majority of its membership, recommend concurrence or
10nonconcurrence in the amendment or hold the bill in committee.
11The committee shall be subject to all the requirements for
12procedure provided under Rule 62 for committees, other than
13committees of first referral, and shall be subject to other
14requirements for normal committee procedure as the Assembly or
15Senate may separately provide in the standing rules of their
16respective houses.

17Any of the provisions of this rule may be dispensed with regard
18to a particular bill in its house of origin upon an affirmative vote
19of a majority of the Members of that house.


20

22Concurring in Amendments Adding Urgency Section


23

2527. When a bill that has been passed in one house is amended
26in the other by the addition of a section providing that the act shall
27take effect immediately as an urgency statute, and is returned to
28the house in which it originated for concurrence in the amendment
29or amendments thereto, the procedure and vote thereon shall be
30as follows:

31The presiding officer shall first direct that the urgency section
32be read and put to a vote. If two-thirds of the membership of the
33house vote in the affirmative, the presiding officer shall then direct
34that the question of whether the house shall concur in the
35amendment or amendments shall be put to a vote. If two-thirds of
36the membership of the house vote in the affirmative, concurrence
37in the amendments shall be effective.

38If the affirmative vote on either of the questions is less than
39two-thirds of the membership of the house, the effect is a refusal
P19   1 to concur in the amendment or amendments, and the procedure
2thereupon shall be as provided in Rule 28.


3

5When Senate or Assembly Refuses to Concur


6

828. If the Senate (if it is a Senate bill) or the Assembly (if it is
9an Assembly bill) refuses to concur in amendments to the bill made
10by the other house, and the other house has been notified of the
11refusal to concur, a conference committee shall be appointed for
12each house in the manner prescribed by these rules. The Senate
13Committee on Rules, on behalf of the Senate, and the Speaker of
14the Assembly, on behalf of the Assembly, shall each appoint a
15committee of three on conference, and the Secretary of the Senate
16or the Chief Clerk of the Assembly shall immediately notify the
17other house of the action taken.


18

20Committee on Conference


21

2328.1. (a) The Senate Committee on Rules and the Speaker of
24the Assembly, in appointing a committee on conference, shall each
25select two Members from those voting with the majority on the
26point about which the difference has arisen, and the other Member
27from the minority, in the event there is a minority vote.

28Whether a Member has voted with the majority or minority on
29the point about which the difference has arisen is determined by
30his or her vote on the appropriate rollcall, as follows:

31(1) In the Assembly--

32(A) The rollcall on the question of final passage of a Senate bill
33amended in the Assembly when the Senate has refused to concur
34with the Assembly amendments.

35(B) The rollcall on the question of concurrence with Senate
36amendments to an Assembly bill.

37(2) In the Senate--

38(A) The rollcall on the question of final passage of an Assembly
39bill amended in the Senate when the Assembly has refused to
40concur with the Senate amendments.

P20   1(B) The rollcall on the question of concurrence with Assembly
2amendments to a Senate bill.

3(b) Either house may suspend this rule by a two-thirds vote of
4the membership of the house.


5

7Meetings and Reports of Committees on Conference


8

1029. The first Senator named on the conference committee shall
11act as chairperson of the committee from the Senate, and the first
12Member of the Assembly named on the committee shall act as
13chairperson of the committee from the Assembly. The chairperson
14of the committee on conference for the house of origin of the bill
15shall arrange the time and place of meeting of the conference
16committee, and shall prepare or direct the preparation of reports.
17It shall require an affirmative vote of not less than two of the
18Assembly Members and two of the Senate Members constituting
19the committee on conference to agree upon a report, and the report
20shall be submitted to both the Senate and the Assembly. The
21committee on conference shall report to both the Senate and the
22Assembly. The report is not subject to amendment. If either house
23refuses to adopt the report, the conferees shall be discharged and
24other conferees appointed, except that no more than three different
25conference committees may be appointed on any one bill. A
26Member who has served on a committee on conference may not
27be appointed a member of another committee on conference on
28the same bill. It shall require the same affirmative recorded vote
29to adopt any conference report as required by the California
30Constitution upon the final passage of the bill affected by the
31report. It shall require an affirmative recorded vote of two-thirds
32of the entire elected membership of each house to adopt any
33conference report affecting any bill that contains an item or items
34of appropriation that are subject to subdivision (d) of Section 12
35of Article IV of the California Constitution. The report of a
36conference committee shall be in writing, and shall have affixed
37thereto the signatures of each Senator and each Member of the
38Assembly consenting to the report. Space shall also be provided
39where a member of a conference committee may indicate his or
40her dissent in the committee’s findings. Any dissenting member
P21   1may have attached to a conference committee report a dissenting
2report which shall not exceed, in length, the majority committee
3report. A copy of any amendments proposed in the majority report
4shall be placed on the desk of each Member of the house before
5it is acted upon by the house.

6The vote on concurrence or upon the adoption of the conference
7report shall be deemed the vote upon final passage of the bill.


8

10Conference Committees


11

1329.5. (a) All meetings of any conference committee on the
14Budget Bill shall be open and readily accessible to the public.

15A conference committee on any bill may not meet, consider, or
16act on the subject matter of the bill except in a meeting that is open
17and readily accessible to the public, unless the action is on a report
18determined by the Legislative Counsel to be nonsubstantive. The
19Legislative Counsel shall examine each proposed report and shall
20note upon the face of the report that the amendments proposed are
21“substantive” or “nonsubstantive” as the case may be.

22The chairperson of the conference committee of each house shall
23give notice to the File Clerk of their respective houses of the time
24and place of the meeting. Notice of each public meeting shall be
25published in the Daily File of each house one calendar day prior
26to the meeting, except that the notice is not required for a meeting
27of a conference committee on the Budget Bill. When this
28subdivision is waived with respect to a meeting of any public
29conference committee, or when there is a meeting of a conference
30committee on the Budget Bill, every effort shall be made to inform
31the public that a meeting has been called. When this subdivision
32has been waived with respect to the meeting of any public
33conference committee, the chairperson of the conference committee
34of each house shall immediately notify the chairperson of the policy
35committee of their respective houses that considered the bill in
36question of the waiver, and of the time and place of the meeting.

37(b) The first committee on conference of the Budget Bill, if a
38committee is appointed, shall submit its report to each house no
39later than 15 days after the Budget Bill has been passed by both
40houses. If the report is not submitted by that date, the conference
P22   1committee shall be deemed to have reached no agreement and shall
2so inform each house pursuant to Rule 30.7.

3(c) A committee on conference of the Budget Bill may consider
4only differences between the Assembly version of the Budget Bill
5as passed by the Assembly and the Senate version of the Budget
6Bill as passed by the Senate, and may not approve any item of
7expenditure or control that exceeds that contained in one of the
8two versions before the conference committee.

9(d) A conference committee on any bill, other than the Budget
10Bill, may not approve any substantial financial provision in any
11bill if the financial provision has not been heard by the fiscal
12committee of each house, nor may any conference committee
13approve substantial policy changes that have not been heard by
14the policy committee of each house.

15(e) A waiver of the one-calendar-day Daily File notice
16requirement of subdivision (a) is not effective for longer than three
17calendar days.


18

20Conference Committee Reports


21

2330. Upon submission of any report of a committee on
24conference recommending that the bill be further amended, the
25bill shall be reprinted incorporating the amendments recommended
26by the conference committee. The consideration of the report of
27a committee on conference is not in order until the bill, in the form
28recommended by the report of the committee on conference, has
29both been in print and been noticed in the Daily File for not less
30than one legislative day.

31If the conference committee’s report recommends only that the
32amendments of the Senate or the Assembly “be concurred in,”
33consideration of the report shall be in order at any time, and
34reprinting of the bill is not required, but notice shall appear in the
35Daily File for not less than one legislative day.

36A conference committee report is not in order unless it has been
37received by the Secretary of the Senate and the Chief Clerk of the
38Assembly at least three calendar days preceding the scheduled
39commencement of the summer, interim, or final recess of the
40Legislature.

P23   1This rule may be suspended as to any particular conference
2committee report by a two-thirds vote of the membership of either
3house.

4This rule does not apply to a report of a committee on conference
5on the Budget Bill.


6

8Conference Committee Reports on Urgency Statutes


9

1130.5. When the report of a committee on conference
12recommends the amendment of a bill by the addition of a section
13providing that the act shall take effect immediately as an urgency
14statute, the procedure and the vote thereon shall be as follows:

15The presiding officer shall first direct that the urgency section
16be read and put to a vote. If two-thirds of the Members elected to
17the house vote in the affirmative, the presiding officer shall then
18direct that the question of whether the house shall adopt the report
19of the committee on conference shall be put to a vote. If two-thirds
20of the Members elected to the house vote in the affirmative, the
21adoption of the report and the amendments proposed thereby shall
22be effective.

23If the affirmative vote on either of the questions is less than
24two-thirds of the Members elected to the house, the effect is a
25refusal to adopt the report of the committee on conference.


26

28Failure to Agree on Report


29

3130.7. A conference committee may find and determine that it
32is unable to submit a report to the respective houses, upon the
33affirmative vote to that effect of not less than two of the Assembly
34Members and not less than two of the Senate Members constituting
35the committee. That finding may be submitted to the Chief Clerk
36of the Assembly and the Secretary of the Senate in the form of a
37letter from the chairperson of the committee on conference for the
38house of origin of the bill, containing the signatures of the members
39of the committee consenting to the finding and determination that
40the committee is unable to submit a report. The Chief Clerk of the
P24   1Assembly and the Secretary of the Senate, upon being notified that
2a conference committee is unable to submit a report, shall so inform
3each house, whereupon the conferees shall be discharged and other
4conferees appointed, in accordance with Rule 29.


5

7MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS


8

10Authority When Rules Do Not Govern


11

1331. All relations between the houses that are not covered by
14these rules shall be governed by Mason’s Manual.


15

17Press Rules


18

2032. (a) Any person desiring privileges of an accredited press
21representative shall make application to the Joint Rules Committee.
22The application shall constitute compliance with any provisions
23of the rules of the Assembly or the Senate with respect to
24registration of news correspondents. The application shall state in
25writing the name of any print or electronic periodic news
26publication, news association, or radio or television station that
27employs the press representative, and any other occupations or
28employment he or she may have. The press representative shall
29further declare in the application that he or she is not employed,
30directly or indirectly, to assist in the prosecution of the legislative
31business of any person, corporation, or association, and will not
32become so employed while retaining the privilege of an accredited
33press representative.

34(b) The application required by subdivision (a) of this rule shall
35be authenticated in a manner that is satisfactory to the Standing
36Committee of the Capitol Correspondents Association, which shall
37see that occupation of seats and desks in the Senate and the
38Assembly Chambers is confined to bona fide correspondents of
39reputable standing in their business, who represent news media
40identified in subdivision (a). It is the duty of the standing
P25   1committee, at its discretion, to report any violation of accredited
2press privileges to the Speaker of the Assembly or the Senate
3Committee on Rules and, pending action thereon, the offending
4correspondent may be suspended by the standing committee.

5(c) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, persons
6engaged in other occupations whose chief attention is not given
7to newspaper correspondence or to news associations requiring
8telegraphic, radio, television, or electronic service are not entitled
9to the privileges accorded accredited press representatives. The
10press list in the Handbook of the California Legislature and the
11Senate and Assembly Histories shall be a list of only those persons
12authenticated by the Standing Committee of the Capitol
13Correspondents Association. Accreditation may be granted to any
14bona fide correspondent of reputable standing employed by a
15periodic publication of general circulation if the applicant is
16employed on a regular basis in the Capitol area preparing articles
17dealing with state government and politics and the publication is
18not an organ or organization involved in legislative advocacy.

19(d) The press seats and desks in the Senate and Assembly
20Chambers shall be under the control of the standing committee of
21correspondents, subject to the approval and supervision of the
22Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate Committee on Rules.
23Press cards shall be issued by the President pro Tempore of the
24Senate and the Speaker of the Assembly only to correspondents
25properly accredited in accordance with this rule.

26(e) An accredited member of the Capitol Correspondents
27Association may not, for compensation, perform any service for
28state constitutional officers or members of their staffs, for state
29agencies, for the Legislature, for candidates for state office, for a
30state officeholder, or for any person registered or performing as a
31legislative advocate.

32(f) An accredited member of the association who violates
33subdivision (a) or (e) of this rule shall be subject to the following
34penalties:

35(1) For the first offense, the Standing Committee of the Capitol
36Correspondents Association shall send a letter of admonition to
37the offending member, his or her employer, and the Joint Rules
38Committee. The letter shall state the nature of the member’s rule
39violation and shall warn of an additional penalty for a second
40offense.

P26   1(2) For a second offense, the Standing Committee of the Capitol
2Correspondents Association shall recommend to the Joint Rules
3Committee that the member’s accreditation be suspended or
4revoked and that he or she lose all rights and privileges attached
5thereto. The Standing Committee of the Capitol Correspondents
6Association shall also dismiss the member from the association.

7Any member of the Standing Committee of the Capitol
8Correspondents Association may propose that the committee make
9an inquiry to determine if an association member has violated
10subdivision (a) or (e) of this rule. Upon a majority vote of the
11Standing Committee of the Capitol Correspondents Association,
12an inquiry shall be made.

13Upon receipt of a signed, written notice from any association
14member of his or her belief that another association member may
15have violated subdivision (a) or (e) of this rule, the Standing
16Committee of the Capitol Correspondents Association shall
17commence an inquiry into the possible violation.

18If the Standing Committee of the Capitol Correspondents
19Association determines by majority vote that an association
20member has violated an association rule, it shall inform the member
21of its finding. Within two weeks of notification, the member may
22request a meeting of the membership. If the member makes that
23request, the Standing Committee of the Capitol Correspondents
24Association shall promptly schedule a meeting at the earliest
25possible time. After hearing the member and the committee review
26the circumstances of the alleged violation, the membership may,
27by majority vote, nullify the finding of the Standing Committee
28of the Capitol Correspondents Association. If nullification does
29not occur, the Standing Committee of the Capitol Correspondents
30Association immediately shall impose the appropriate penalty.


31

33Dispensing with Joint Rules


34

3633. A joint rule may not be dispensed with except by a vote of
37two-thirds of each house or as otherwise provided in these rules.
38If either house violates a joint rule, a question of order may be
39raised in the other house and decided in the same manner as in the
40case of the violation of the rules of the house. If it is decided that
P27   1the joint rules have been violated, the bill involving the violation
2shall be returned to the house in which it originated, and the
3disputed matter shall be considered in like manner as in conference
4committee.


5

7Dispensing with Joint Rules: Unanimous Consent


8

1033.1. Notwithstanding any other rule, a joint rule that may be
11dispensed with by one house may be done so by unanimous consent
12if the rules committee of that house has approved.


13

15Opinions of Legislative Counsel


16

1834. Whenever the Legislative Counsel issues a written opinion
19to any person other than the first-named author analyzing the
20constitutionality, operation, or effect of a bill or other legislative
21measure that is then pending before the Legislature or of any
22amendment made or proposed to be made to the bill or measure,
23he or she is authorized and instructed to deliver two copies of the
24opinion to the first-named author as promptly as feasible after the
25delivery of the original opinion and also to deliver a copy to any
26other author of the bill or measure who so requests. A copy of any
27letter prepared by the Legislative Counsel for the sole purpose of
28advising a Member of a conflict between two or more bills as to
29the sections of law being amended, repealed, or added shall be
30submitted to the chairperson of the committee to which each bill
31has been referred.


32

34Resolutions Prepared by Legislative Counsel


35

3734.1. Whenever the Legislative Counsel has been requested to
38draft a resolution commemorating or taking note of any event, or
39a resolution congratulating or expressing sympathy toward any
40person, and subsequently receives a similar request from another
P28   1Member of the Legislature, he or she shall inform that requester
2and each subsequent requester that a resolution is being, or has
3been, prepared, and shall inform them of the name of the Member
4for whom the resolution was, or is being, prepared.


5

7Resolutions


8

1034.2. A concurrent resolution, Senate resolution, or House
11resolution may be introduced to memorialize the death of a present
12or former state or federal elected official or a member of his or her
13immediate family. In all other instances, a resolution other than a
14concurrent resolution, as specified by the Committee on Rules of
15each house, or as provided by the Joint Rules Committee in those
16cases requiring that the resolution should emanate from both
17houses, shall be used for the purpose of commendation,
18congratulation, sympathy, or regret with respect to any person,
19group, or organization.

20A concurrent resolution requesting the Governor to issue a
21proclamation may not be introduced without the prior approval of
22the Committee on Rules of the house in which the resolution is to
23be introduced.


24

26Identical Drafting Requests


27

2934.5. Whenever it comes to the attention of the Legislative
30 Counsel that a Member has requested the drafting of a bill that
31will be substantially identical to one already introduced, the
32Legislative Counsel shall inform the Member of that fact.


33

35Expense of Members


36

3835. As provided in Section 8902 of the Government Code, each
39Member of the Legislature is entitled to reimbursement for living
40expenses while required to be in Sacramento to attend a session
P29   1of the Legislature, while traveling to and from or in attendance at
2a committee meeting, or while attending to any legislative function
3or responsibility as authorized or directed by legislative rules or
4the Committee on Rules of the house of which he or she is a
5Member, at the same rate as may be established by the California
6Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board for other
7elected state officers. Each Member shall be reimbursed for travel
8expenses incurred in traveling to and from a session of the
9Legislature, when traveling to and from a meeting of a committee
10of which he or she is a member, or when traveling pursuant to any
11other legislative function or responsibility as authorized or directed
12by legislative rules or the Committee on Rules of the house of
13which he or she is a Member, at the rate prescribed by Section
148903 of the Government Code.

15Expense allowances for Members of the Senate and Assembly
16shall be approved and certified to the Controller by the Secretary
17of the Senate, on behalf of the Senate, and the Chief Clerk of the
18Assembly or other person authorized by the Assembly Committee
19on Rules, on behalf of the Assembly, weekly or as otherwise
20directed by either house, and upon certification the Controller shall
21draw his or her warrants in payment of the allowances to the
22 respective Members.


23

25Issuance of Subpoenas


26

2835.5. A subpoena requiring the attendance of a witness or the
29production of documents may be issued by the Senate Committee
30on Rules, the Speaker of the Assembly, or the chairperson of a
31committee conducting an investigation only if permission has been
32secured from the rules committee of the respective house, or from
33the Joint Rules Committee if the subpoena is issued by the
34chairperson of a joint committee.


35

37Investigating Committees


38

P30   136. In order to expedite the work of the Legislature, either
2house, or both houses jointly, may by resolution or statute provide
3for the appointment of committees to ascertain facts and to make
4recommendations as to any subject within the scope of legislative
5regulation or control.

6The resolution providing for the appointment of a committee
7pursuant to this rule shall state the purpose of the committee and
8the scope of the subject concerning which it is to act, and may
9authorize it to act either during sessions of the Legislature or, when
10authorization may lawfully be made, after final adjournment.

11In the exercise of the power granted by this rule, each committee
12may employ clerical, legal, and technical assistants as may be
13authorized by: (a) the Joint Rules Committee in the case of a joint
14committee, (b) the Senate Committee on Rules in the case of a
15Senate committee, or (c) the Assembly Committee on Rules in the
16case of an Assembly committee.

17Except as otherwise provided herein for joint committees or by
18the rules of the Senate or the Assembly for single house
19committees, each committee may adopt and amend rules governing
20its procedure as may appear necessary and proper to carry out the
21powers granted and duties imposed under this rule. The rules may
22include provisions fixing the quorum of the committee and the
23number of votes necessary to take action on any matter. With
24respect to all joint committees, a majority of the membership from
25each house constitutes a quorum, and an affirmative vote of a
26majority of the membership from each house is necessary for the
27committee to take action.

28Each committee is authorized and empowered to summon and
29subpoena witnesses, to require the production of papers, books,
30accounts, reports, documents, records, and papers of every kind
31and description, to issue subpoenas, and to take all necessary means
32to compel the attendance of witnesses and to procure testimony,
33oral and documentary. A committee’s issuance of a subpoena shall
34comply with Rule 35.5.

35Each member of the committees is authorized and empowered
36to administer oaths, and all of the provisions of Chapter 4
37(commencing with Section 9400) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title
382 of the Government Code, relating to the attendance and
39examination of witnesses before the Legislature and the committees
40thereof, apply to the committees. A committee may grant a witness
P31   1immunity from criminal prosecution, pursuant to subdivision (a)
2of Section 9410 of the Government Code, only after securing
3permission from the rules committee of the respective house, or
4from the Joint Rules Committee in the case of a joint committee.

5The Sergeant at Arms of the Senate or Assembly, or other person
6as may be designated by the chairperson of the committee, shall
7serve any and all subpoenas, orders, and other process that may
8be issued by the committee, when directed to do so by the
9chairperson, or by a majority of the membership of the committee.

10Every department, commission, board, agency, officer, and
11employee of the state government, including the Legislative
12Counsel and the Attorney General and their subordinates, and of
13every political subdivision, county, city, or public district of or in
14this state, shall give and furnish to these committees and to their
15subcommittees upon request information, records, and documents
16as the committees deem necessary or proper for the achievement
17of the purposes for which each committee was created.

18Each committee or subcommittee of either house, in accordance
19with the rules of that respective house, and each joint committee
20or subcommittee thereof, may meet at any time during the period
21in which it is authorized to act, either at the State Capitol or at any
22other place in the State of California, in public or executive session,
23and do any and all things necessary or convenient to enable it to
24exercise the powers and perform the duties herein granted to it or
25accomplish the objects and purposes of the resolution creating it,
26subject to the following exceptions:

27(a) When the Legislature is in session:

28(1) A committee or subcommittee of either house may not meet
29outside the State Capitol without the prior approval of the Senate
30Committee on Rules with respect to Senate committees and
31subcommittees, or the Speaker of the Assembly with respect to
32Assembly committees and subcommittees.

33(2) A committee or subcommittee of either house, other than a
34standing committee or subcommittee thereof, may not meet unless
35notice of the meeting has been printed in the Daily File for four
36days prior thereto. This requirement may be waived by a majority
37vote of either house with respect to a particular bill.

38(3) A joint committee or subcommittee thereof, other than the
39Joint Committees on Legislative Audit, Legislative Budget, and
P32   1Rules, may not meet outside the State Capitol without the prior
2approval of the Joint Rules Committee.

3(4) A joint committee or subcommittee thereof, other than the
4Joint Committees on Legislative Audit, Legislative Budget, and
5Rules, may not meet unless notice of the meeting has been printed
6in the Daily File for four days prior thereto.

7(b) When the Legislature is in joint recess, each joint committee
8or subcommittee, other than the Joint Committees on Legislative
9Audit, Legislative Budget, and Rules, shall notify the Joint Rules
10Committee at least two weeks prior to a meeting.

11(c) The requirements placed upon joint committees by
12subdivisions (a) and (b) of this rule may be waived as deemed
13necessary by the Joint Rules Committee.

14Each committee may expend such money as is made available
15to it for its purpose, but a committee may not incur any
16indebtedness unless money has been first made available therefor.

17Living expenses may not be allowed in connection with
18legislative business for a day on which the Member receives
19reimbursement for expenses while required to be in Sacramento
20to attend a session of the Legislature. The chairperson of each
21committee shall audit and approve the expense claims of the
22members of the committee, including claims for mileage in
23connection with attendance on committee business, or in
24connection with specific assignments by the committee chairperson,
25but excluding other types of mileage, and shall certify the amount
26approved to the Controller. The Controller shall draw his or her
27warrants upon the certification of the chairperson.

28Subject to the rules of each house for the respective committees
29of each house, or the joint rules for any joint committee, with the
30permission of the appointing authority of the respective house, or
31the permission of the appointing authorities of the two houses in
32the case of a joint committee, the chairperson of any committee
33may appoint subcommittees and chairpersons thereof for the
34purpose of more expeditiously handling and considering matters
35referred to it, and the subcommittees and the chairpersons thereof
36shall have all the powers and authority herein conferred upon the
37committee and its chairperson. The chairperson of a subcommittee
38shall audit the expense claims of the members of the subcommittee,
39and other claims and the expenses incurred by it, and shall certify
40the amount thereof to the chairperson of the committee, who shall,
P33   1if he or she approves the same, certify the amount thereof to the
2Controller; the Controller shall draw his or her warrant therefor
3upon that certification, and the Treasurer shall pay the same. Any
4committee or subcommittee thereof that is authorized to leave the
5State of California in the performance of its duties shall, while out
6of the state, have the same authority as if it were acting and
7functioning within the state, and the members thereof shall be
8reimbursed for expenses.

9Notwithstanding any other provision of this rule, if the standing
10rules of either house require that expense claims of committees
11for goods or services, pursuant to contracts, or for expenses of
12employees or members of committees be audited or approved,
13after approval of the committee chairperson, by another agency
14of either house, the Controller shall draw his or her warrants only
15upon the certification of the other agency. All expense claims
16approved by the chairperson of any joint committee, other than
17the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and the Joint Legislative
18Audit Committee, shall be approved by the Joint Rules Committee,
19and the Controller shall draw his or her warrants only upon the
20certification of the Joint Rules Committee.

21Except salary claims of employees clearly subject to federal
22withholding taxes and the requirement as to loyalty oaths, claims
23presented for services or pursuant to contract shall refer to the
24agreement, the terms of which shall be made available to the
25Controller.


26

28Expenses of Committee Employees


29

3136.1. Unless otherwise provided by respective house or
32 committee rule or resolution, employees of legislative committees,
33when entitled to traveling expenses, are entitled to allowances in
34lieu of actual expenses for hotel accommodations, breakfast, lunch,
35and dinner, at the rates fixed by the California Victim
36Compensation and Government Claims Board from time to time
37in limitation of reimbursement of expenses of state employees
38generally. However, if an allowance for hotel accommodations,
39breakfast, lunch, and dinner is made by a committee at a rate in
40excess of the rate fixed by the California Victim Compensation
P34   1and Government Claims Board, the chairperson of the committee
2shall notify the Controller of that fact in writing.


3

5Appointment of Committees


6

836.5. This rule applies whenever a joint committee is created
9by a statute or resolution that either provides that appointments be
10made and vacancies be filled in the manner provided for in the
11Joint Rules, or makes no provision for the appointment of members
12or the filling of vacancies.

13The Senate members of the committee shall be appointed by the
14Senate Committee on Rules; the Assembly members of the
15committee shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly; and
16vacancies occurring in the membership of the committee shall be
17filled by the respective appointing powers. The members appointed
18shall hold over until their successors are regularly selected.


19

21Appointment of Joint Committee Chairpersons


22

2436.7. The chairperson of each joint committee heretofore or
25hereafter created, except the Joint Legislative Budget Committee
26and the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, shall be appointed by
27the Joint Rules Committee from a Member or Members
28recommended by the Senate Committee on Rules and the Speaker
29of the Assembly.


30

32Joint Committee Funds


33

3536.8. Each joint committee heretofore or hereafter created,
36except the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and the Joint
37Legislative Audit Committee, shall expend the funds heretofore
38or hereafter made available to it in compliance with the policies
39set forth by the Joint Rules Committee with respect to personnel,
40salaries, purchasing, office space assignment, contractual services,
P35   1rental or lease agreements, travel, and any and all other matters
2relating to the management and administration of committee affairs.


3

5Joint Legislative Budget Committee


6

837. In addition to any other committee provided for by these
9rules, there is a joint committee to be known as the Joint Legislative
10Budget Committee, which is hereby declared to be a continuing
11body.

12It is the duty of the committee to ascertain facts and make
13recommendations to the Legislature and to the houses thereof
14concerning the State Budget, the revenues and expenditures of the
15state, and the organization and functions of the state and its
16departments, subdivisions, and agencies, with a view to reducing
17the cost of the state government and securing greater efficiency
18and economy.

19The committee consists of eight Members of the Senate and
20eight Members of the Assembly. The Senate members of the
21committee shall be appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules.
22The Assembly members of the committee shall be appointed by
23the Speaker of the Assembly. The committee shall select its own
24chairperson.

25Any vacancy occurring at any time in the Senate membership
26of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee shall be filled by the
27Senate Committee on Rules, and the Senators appointed shall hold
28over until their successors are regularly selected. For the purposes
29of this rule, a vacancy shall be deemed to exist as to a Senator
30whose term is expiring whenever he or she is not reelected at the
31general election.

32Any vacancy occurring at any time in the Assembly membership
33of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee shall be filled by
34appointment by the Speaker of the Assembly, and the Members
35of the Assembly appointed shall hold over between regular sessions
36until their successors are regularly selected. For the purposes of
37this rule, a vacancy shall be deemed to exist as to a Member of the
38Assembly whose term is expiring whenever he or she is not
39reelected at the general election.

P36   1The committee may adopt rules to govern its own proceedings
2and its employees. The committee, with the permission of the
3appointing authorities of the two houses, may also create
4subcommittees from its membership, assigning to its
5subcommittees any study, inquiry, investigation, or hearing that
6the committee itself has authority to undertake or hold. A
7subcommittee for the purpose of this assignment has and may
8exercise all the powers conferred upon the committee, limited only
9by the express terms of any rule or resolution of the committee
10defining the powers and duties of the subcommittee. Those powers
11may be withdrawn or terminated at any time by the committee.

12The Joint Legislative Budget Committee may render services to
13any investigating committee of the Legislature pursuant to contract
14between the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and the committee
15for which the services are to be performed. The contract may
16provide for payment to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee
17of the cost of the services from the funds appropriated to the
18contracting investigating committee. All legislative investigating
19committees are authorized to enter into those contracts with the
20Joint Legislative Budget Committee. Money received by the Joint
21Legislative Budget Committee pursuant to any agreement shall be
22in augmentation of the current appropriation for the support of the
23Joint Legislative Budget Committee.

24The provisions of Rule 36 shall apply to the Joint Legislative
25Budget Committee, which has all the authority provided in that
26rule or pursuant to Section 11 of Article IV of the California
27Constitution.

28The committee has authority to appoint a Legislative Analyst,
29to fix his or her compensation, to prescribe his or her duties, and
30to appoint any other clerical and technical employees as may appear
31necessary. The duties of the Legislative Analyst are as follows:

32(1) To ascertain the facts and make recommendations to the
33Joint Legislative Budget Committee and, under its direction, to
34the committees of the Legislature concerning:

35(a) The State Budget.

36(b) The revenues and expenditures of the state.

37(c) The organization and functions of the state and its
38departments, subdivisions, and agencies.

39(2) To assist the Senate Committee on Appropriations, the
40Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee, and the Assembly
P37   1Committees on Appropriations and Budget in consideration of the
2Budget, all bills carrying express or implied appropriations, and
3all legislation affecting state departments and their efficiency; to
4appear before any other legislative committee; and to assist any
5other legislative committee upon instruction by the Joint Legislative
6Budget Committee.

7(3) To provide all legislative committees and Members of the
8Legislature with information obtained under the direction of the
9Joint Legislative Budget Committee.

10(4) To maintain a record of all work performed by the
11Legislative Analyst under the direction of the Joint Legislative
12Budget Committee, and to keep and make available all documents,
13data, and reports submitted to him or her by any Senate, Assembly,
14or joint committee. The committee may meet either during sessions
15of the Legislature, any recess thereof, or after final adjournment,
16and may meet or conduct business at any place within the State of
17California.

18The chairperson of the committee or, in the event of that person’s
19inability to act, the vice chairperson, shall audit and approve the
20expenses of members of the committee or salaries of the
21employees, and all other expenses incurred in connection with the
22performance of its duties by the committee. The chairperson shall
23certify to the Controller the expense amount approved, the
24Controller shall draw his or her warrants upon the certification of
25the chairperson, and the Treasurer shall pay the same to the
26chairperson of the committee, to be disbursed by the chairperson.

27On and after the commencement of a succeeding regular session,
28those members of the committee who continue to be Members of
29the Senate and Assembly, respectively, continue as members of
30the committee until their successors are appointed, and the
31committee continues with all its powers, duties, authority, records,
32papers, personnel, and staff, and all funds theretofore made
33available for its use.

34Upon the conclusion of its work, any Assembly, Senate, or joint
35committee (other than a standing committee) shall deliver to the
36Legislative Analyst for use and custody all documents, data,
37reports, and other materials that have come into the possession of
38the committee and that are not included within the final report of
39the committee to the Assembly, Senate, or the Legislature, as the
40case may be. The documents, data, reports, and other materials
P38   1shall be available, upon request, to Members of the Legislature,
2the Senate Office of Research, and the Assembly Office of
3Research.

4The Legislative Analyst, with the consent of the committee, shall
5make available to any Member or committee of the Legislature
6any other reports, records, documents, or other data under his or
7her control, except that reports prepared by the Legislative Analyst
8in response to a request from a Member or committee of the
9Legislature may be made available only with the written permission
10of the Member or committee who made the request.

11The Legislative Analyst, upon the receipt of a request from any
12committee or Member of the Legislature to conduct a study or
13provide information that falls within the scope of his or her
14responsibilities and that concerns the administration of the
15government of the State of California, shall at once advise the Joint
16Legislative Budget Committee of the nature of the request without
17disclosing the name of the Member or committee making the
18request.

19The Legislative Analyst shall immediately undertake to provide
20the requesting committee or legislator with the service or
21information requested, and shall inform the committee or legislator
22of the approximate date when this information will be available.
23Should there be any material delay, he or she shall subsequently
24communicate this fact to the requester.

25Neither the Committee on Rules of either house nor the Joint
26Rules Committee may assign any matter for study to the Joint
27Legislative Budget Committee or the Legislative Analyst without
28first obtaining from the Joint Legislative Budget Committee an
29estimate of the amount required to be expended by it to make the
30study.

31Any concurrent, joint, Senate, or House resolution assigning a
32study to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee or to the
33Legislative Analyst shall be referred to the respective rules
34committees. Before the committees may act upon or assign the
35resolution, they shall obtain an estimate from the Joint Legislative
36Budget Committee of the amount required to be expended to make
37the study.


38

40Citizen Cost Impact Report



P6    1

337.1. Any Member or committee of the Legislature may
4recommend that the Legislative Analyst prepare a citizen cost
5impact analysis on proposed legislation. However, the
6recommendation shall first be reviewed by the Committee on Rules
7of the house where the recommendation originated, and this
8committee shall make the final determination as to which bills
9shall be assigned for preparation of an impact analysis.

10In selecting specific bills for assignment to the Legislative
11Analyst for preparation of citizen cost impact analyses, the
12Committee on Rules shall request the Legislative Analyst to present
13an estimate of his or her time and prospective costs for preparing
14the analyses. Only those bills that have a potential significant cost
15impact shall be assigned. Where necessary, the Committee on
16Rules shall provide funds to offset added costs incurred by the
17Legislative Analyst.

18The citizen cost impact analyses shall include those economic
19effects that the Legislative Analyst deems significant and that he
20or she believes will result directly from the proposed legislation.
21Insofar as feasible, the economic effects considered by the
22Legislative Analyst shall include, but not be limited to, the
23following:

24(a) The economic effect on the public generally.

25(b) Any specific economic effect on persons or businesses in
26the case of legislation that is regulatory.

27The Legislative Analyst shall submit the citizen cost impact
28analyses to the committee or committees when completed, and at
29the time or times designated by the Committee on Rules.

30The Legislative Analyst shall submit from time to time, but at
31least once a year, a report to the Legislature on the trends and
32directions of the state’s economy, and shall list the alternatives
33and make recommendations as to legislative actions that, in his or
34her judgment, will ensure a sound and stable state economy.


35

37Joint Legislative Audit Committee


38

P40   137.3. The Joint Legislative Audit Committee is created pursuant
2to the Legislature’s rulemaking authority under the California
3Constitution, and pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing with Section
4 10500) of Part 2 of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
5The committee consists of seven Members of the Senate and seven
6Members of the Assembly, who shall be selected in the manner
7provided for in these rules. Notwithstanding any other provision
8of these rules, four Members from each house constitute a quorum
9of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee and the number of votes
10necessary to take action on any matter. The Chairman or
11Chairwoman of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, upon
12receiving a request by any Member of the Legislature or committee
13thereof for a copy of a report prepared or being prepared by the
14Bureau of State Audits, shall provide the Member or committee
15with a copy of the report when it is, or has been, submitted by the
16Bureau of State Audits to the Joint Legislative Audit Committee.


17

19Study or Audits


20

2237.4. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Joint
23Legislative Audit Committee shall establish priorities and assign
24all work to be done by the Bureau of State Audits.

25(b) Any bill requiring action by the Bureau of State Audits shall
26contain an appropriation for the cost of any study or audit.

27(c) Any bill or concurrent, joint, Senate, or House resolution
28assigning a study or audit to the Joint Legislative Audit Committee
29or to the Bureau of State Audits shall be referred to the respective
30rules committees. Before the committees may act upon or assign
31the bill or resolution, they shall obtain an estimate from the Joint
32Legislative Audit Committee of the amount required to be
33expended to make the study or audit.


34

36Waiver


37

3937.5. Subdivision (b) of Rule 37.4 may be waived by the Joint
40Legislative Audit Committee. The chairperson of the committee
P41   1shall notify the Secretary of the Senate, the Chief Clerk of the
2Assembly, and the Legislative Counsel in writing when subdivision
3(b) of Rule 37.4 has been waived. If the cost of a study or audit is
4less than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), the chairperson
5of the committee may exercise the committee’s authority to waive
6subdivision (b) of Rule 37.4.


7

9Administrative Regulations


10

1237.7. (a) Any Member of the Senate may request the Senate
13Committee on Rules, and any Member of the Assembly may
14request the Speaker of the Assembly, to direct a standing committee
15or the Office of Research of his or her respective house to study
16any proposed or existing regulation or group of related regulations.
17Upon receipt of a request, the Senate Committee on Rules or the
18Speaker of the Assembly shall, after review, determine whether a
19study shall be made. In reviewing the request, the Senate
20Committee on Rules or the Speaker of the Assembly shall
21determine:

22(1) The cost of making the study.

23(2) The potential public benefit to be derived from the study.

24(3) The scope of the study.

25(b) The study may consider, among other relevant issues,
26whether the proposed or existing regulation:

27(1) Exceeds the agency’s statutory authority.

28(2) Fails to conform to the legislative intent of the enabling
29statute.

30(3) Contradicts or duplicates other regulations adopted by
31federal, state, or local agencies.

32(4) Involves an excessive delegation of regulatory authority to
33a particular state agency.

34(5) Unfairly burdens particular elements of the public.

35(6) Imposes social or economic costs that outweigh its intended
36benefits to the public.

37(7) Imposes unreasonable penalties for violation.

38The respective reviewing unit shall, in a timely manner, transmit
39its concerns, if any, to the Senate Committee on Rules or the
40Speaker of the Assembly, and the promulgating agency.

P42   1In the event that a state agency takes a regulatory action that the
2reviewing unit finds to be unacceptable, the unit shall file a report
3for publication in the Daily Journal of its respective house
4indicating the specific reasons why the regulatory action should
5not have been taken. The report may include a recommendation
6that the Legislature adopt a concurrent resolution requesting the
7state agency to reconsider its action or that the Legislature enact
8a statute to restrict the regulatory powers of the state agency taking
9the action.


10

12Joint Rules Committee


13

1540. The Joint Rules Committee is hereby created. The
16committee has a continuing existence and may meet, act, and
17conduct its business during sessions of the Legislature or any recess
18thereof.

19The committee consists of the members of the Assembly
20Committee on Rules, the Assembly Majority Floor Leader, the
21Assembly Minority Floor Leader, the Speaker of the Assembly,
22four members of the Senate Committee on Rules, and as many
23Members of the Senate as may be required to maintain equality in
24the number of Assembly Members and Senators on the committee,
25to be appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules. Vacancies
26occurring in the membership shall be filled by the appointing
27power.

28The committee and its members have and may exercise all of
29the rights, duties, and powers conferred upon investigating
30committees and their members by the Joint Rules of the Senate
31and Assembly as they are adopted and amended from time to time,
32which provisions are incorporated herein and made applicable to
33this committee and its members.

34The committee shall ascertain facts and make recommendations
35to the Legislature and to the houses thereof concerning:

36(a) The relationship between the two houses and procedures
37calculated to expedite the affairs of the Legislature by improving
38that relationship.

39(b) The legislative branch of the state government and any
40defects or deficiencies in the law governing that branch.

P43   1(c) Methods whereby legislation is proposed, considered, and
2acted upon.

3(d) The operation of the Legislature and the committees thereof,
4and the means of coordinating the work thereof and avoiding
5duplication of effort.

6(e) Aids to the Legislature.

7(f) Information and statistics for the use of the Legislature, the
8respective houses thereof, and the Members.

9Any matter of business of either house, the transaction of which
10would affect the interests of the other house, may be referred to
11the committee for action if the Legislature is not in recess, and
12shall be referred to the committee for action if the Legislature is
13in recess.

14The committee has the following additional powers and duties:

15(a) To select a chairperson from its membership. The vice
16chairperson of the committee shall be one of the Senate members
17of the committee, to be selected by the Senate Committee on Rules.

18(b) To allocate space in the State Capitol Building and all
19annexes and additions thereto as provided by law.

20(c) To approve, as provided by law, the appearance of the
21Legislative Counsel in litigation.

22(d) To contract with other agencies, public or private, for the
23rendition and affording of services, facilities, studies, and reports
24to the committee as the committee deems necessary to assist it to
25carry out the purposes for which it is created.

26(e) To cooperate with and secure the cooperation of county,
27city, city and county, and other local law enforcement agencies in
28investigating any matter within the scope of this rule, and to direct
29the sheriff of any county to serve subpoenas, orders, and other
30process issued by the committee.

31(f) To report its findings and recommendations, including
32recommendations for the needed revision of any and all laws and
33constitutional provisions relating to the Legislature, to the
34Legislature and to the people from time to time.

35(g) The committee, and any subcommittee when so authorized
36by the committee, may meet and act without as well as within the
37State of California, and are authorized to leave the state in the
38performance of their duties.

P44   1(h) To expend funds as may be made available to it to carry out
2the functions and activities related to the legislative affairs of the
3Senate and Assembly.

4(i) To appoint a chief administrative officer of the committee,
5who shall have duties relating to the administrative, fiscal, and
6business affairs of the committee as the committee shall prescribe.
7The committee may terminate the services of the chief
8administrative officer at any time.

9(j) To employ persons as may be necessary to assist all other
10joint committees, except the Joint Legislative Budget Committee
11and the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, in the exercise of their
12powers and performance of their duties. In accordance with Rule
1336.8, the committee shall govern and administer the expenditure
14of funds by other joint committees, requiring that the claims of
15joint committees be approved by the Joint Rules Committee or its
16designee. All expenses of the committee and of all other joint
17committees may be paid from the Operating Funds of the Assembly
18and Senate.

19(k) To appoint the chairpersons of joint committees, as
20authorized by Rule 36.7.

21(l) To do any and all other things necessary or convenient to
22enable it fully and adequately to exercise its powers, perform its
23duties, and accomplish the objects and purposes of this rule.

24The members of the Joint Rules Committee from the Senate may
25meet separately as a unit, and the members of the Joint Rules
26Committee from the Assembly may meet separately as a unit, and
27consider any action that is required to be taken by the Joint Rules
28Committee. If the majority of members of the Joint Rules
29Committee of each house at the separate meetings vote in favor
30of that action, the action shall be deemed to be action taken by the
31Joint Rules Committee.

32The Joint Rules Committee shall meet not less than biweekly
33during a session of the Legislature, other than during a joint recess,
34at a regularly scheduled time and place. If the full committee fails
35to so meet, the members of the committee from the Senate shall
36meet separately as a unit and the members of the committee from
37the Assembly shall meet separately as a unit within five days of
38the regularly scheduled meeting date.

39The committee succeeds to, and is vested with, all of the powers
40and duties of the Joint Committee on Legislative Organization,
P45   1the State Capitol Committee, the Joint Committee on Interhouse
2Cooperation, the Joint Legislative Committee for School
3Visitations, and the Joint Standing Committee on the Joint Rules
4of the Senate and the Assembly.


5

7Review of Administrative Regulations


8

1040.1. The Joint Rules Committee, with regard to joint
11 committees, and the respective rules committee of each house,
12with regard to standing and select committees of the house, shall
13approve any request for a priority review made by a committee
14pursuant to Section 11349.7 of the Government Code and shall
15submit approved requests to the Office of Administrative Law.
16The Joint Rules Committee or the respective rules committee, and
17the committee initiating the request, shall each receive a copy of
18the priority review.


19

21Subcommittee on Legislative Space and Facilities


22

2440.3. (a) A subcommittee of the Joint Rules Committee is
25hereby created, to be known as the Subcommittee on Legislative
26Space and Facilities. The subcommittee consists of three Members
27of the Senate and three Members of the Assembly, appointed by
28the Chairman or Chairwoman of the Joint Rules Committee, and
29the chairperson of the fiscal committee of each house who shall
30have full voting rights on the subcommittee. The chairperson of
31the subcommittee shall be appointed by the members thereof. For
32purposes of this subcommittee, the chairpersons of the fiscal
33committees are ex officio members of the Joint Rules Committee,
34but do not have voting rights on that committee, nor may they be
35counted in determining a quorum. The subcommittee shall consider
36the housing of the Legislature and legislative facilities.

37(b) The subcommittee and its members have and may exercise
38all of the rights, duties, and powers conferred upon investigating
39committees and their members by the Joint Rules of the Senate
40and Assembly as they are adopted and amended from time to time,
P46   1which provisions are incorporated herein and made applicable to
2this subcommittee and its members.

3(c) The subcommittee has the following additional powers and
4duties:

5(1) To contract with other agencies, public or private, for the
6rendition and affording of services, facilities, studies, and reports
7to the subcommittee as the committee deems necessary to assist
8it to carry out the purposes for which it is created.

9(2) To cooperate with and secure the cooperation of county,
10city, city and county, and other local law enforcement agencies in
11investigating any matter within the scope of this rule, and to direct
12the sheriff of any county to serve subpoenas, orders, and other
13process issued by the subcommittee.

14(3) To report its findings and recommendations to the
15Legislature and to the people from time to time.

16(4) To do any and all other things necessary or convenient to
17enable it fully and adequately to exercise its powers, perform its
18duties, and accomplish the objects and purposes of this rule.

19(d) The subcommittee is authorized to leave the State of
20California in the performance of its duties.


21

23Claims for Workers’ Compensation


24

2641. The Chairman or Chairwoman of the Committee on Rules
27of each house, or a designated representative, shall sign any
28required worker’s compensation report regarding injuries or death
29arising out of and within the course of employment suffered by
30any Member, officer, or employee of the house, or any employee
31of a standing or investigating committee thereof. In the case of a
32joint committee, the Chairman or Chairwoman of the Committee
33on Rules of either house, or a designated representative, may sign
34any report with respect to a member or employee of a joint
35committee.


36

38Information Concerning Committees


39

P47   142. The Committee on Rules of each house shall provide for a
2continuous cumulation of information concerning the membership,
3organization, meetings, and studies of legislative investigating
4committees. Each Committee on Rules shall be responsible for
5information concerning the investigating committees of its own
6house, and concerning joint investigating committees under a
7chairperson who is a Member of that house. To the extent possible,
8each Committee on Rules shall seek to ensure that the investigating
9committees for which it has responsibility under this rule have
10organized, including the organization of any subcommittees, and
11have had all topics for study assigned to them within a reasonable
12period of time.

13The information thus cumulated shall be made available to the
14public by the Committee on Rules of each house and shall be
15published periodically under their joint direction.


16

18Joint Committees


19

2143. Any concurrent resolution creating a joint committee of the
22Legislature and any concurrent resolution allocating moneys from
23the Operating Funds of the Assembly and Senate to the committee
24shall be referred to the Committee on Rules of the respective
25houses.


26

28Conflict of Interest


29

3144. (a) A Member of the Legislature may not, while serving,
32have any interest, financial or otherwise, direct or indirect, engage
33in any business or transaction or professional activity, or incur any
34obligation of any nature, that is in substantial conflict with the
35proper discharge of his or her duties in the public interest and of
36his or her responsibilities as prescribed by the laws of this state.

37(b) A Member of the Legislature may not, during the term for
38which he or she was elected:

39(1) Accept other employment that he or she has reason to believe
40will either impair his or her independence of judgment as to his
P48   1or her official duties, or require him or her, or induce him or her,
2to disclose confidential information acquired by him or her in the
3course of and by reason of his or her official duties.

4(2) Willfully and knowingly disclose, for pecuniary gain, to any
5other person, confidential information acquired by him or her in
6the course of and by reason of his or her official duties, or use the
7information for the purpose of pecuniary gain.

8(3) Accept or agree to accept, or be in partnership with any
9person who accepts or agrees to accept, any employment, fee, or
10other thing of value, or portion thereof, in consideration of his or
11her appearance, agreeing to appear, or taking of any other action
12on behalf of another person regarding a licensing or regulatory
13matter, before any state board or agency that is established by law
14for the primary purpose of licensing or regulating the professional
15activity of persons licensed, pursuant to state law.

16This rule does not prohibit a Member who is an attorney at law
17from practicing in that capacity before the Workers’ Compensation
18Appeals Board or the Commissioner of Corporations, and receiving
19compensation therefor, or from practicing for compensation before
20any state board or agency in connection with, or in any matter
21related to, any case, action, or proceeding filed and pending in any
22state or federal court. This rule does not prohibit a Member from
23making inquiry for information on behalf of a constituent before
24a state board or agency, if no fee or reward is given or promised
25in consequence thereof. The prohibition contained in this rule does
26not apply to a partnership in which a Member of the Legislature
27is a member if the Member of the Legislature does not share
28directly or indirectly in the fee resulting from the transaction, nor
29does it apply in connection with any matter pending before any
30state board or agency on the operative date of this rule if the
31affected Member of the Legislature is attorney of record or
32representative in the matter prior to the operative date.

33(4) Receive or agree to receive, directly or indirectly, any
34compensation, reward, or gift from any source except the State of
35California for any service, advice, assistance, or other matter related
36to the legislative process, except fees for speeches or published
37works on legislative subjects and except, in connection therewith,
38the reimbursement of expenses for actual expenditures for travel
39and reasonable subsistence for which no payment or reimbursement
40is made by the State of California.

P49   1(5) Participate, by voting or any other action, on the floor of
2either house, or in committee or elsewhere, in the enactment or
3defeat of legislation in which he or she has a personal interest,
4except as follows:

5(i) If, on the vote for final passage, by the house of which he or
6she is a Member, of the legislation in which he or she has a
7personal interest, he or she first files a statement (which shall be
8entered verbatim in the Daily Journal) stating in substance that he
9or she has a personal interest in the legislation to be voted on and
10that, notwithstanding that interest, he or she is able to cast a fair
11and objective vote on the legislation, he or she may cast his or her
12vote without violating any provision of this rule.

13(ii) If the Member believes that, because of his or her personal
14interest, he or she should abstain from participating in the vote on
15the legislation, he or she shall so advise the presiding officer prior
16to the commencement of the vote and shall be excused from voting
17on the legislation without any entry in the Daily Journal of the fact
18of his or her personal interest. In the event that a rule of the house
19requiring that each Member who is present vote aye or nay is
20invoked, the presiding officer shall order the Member excused
21from compliance and shall order entered in the Daily Journal a
22simple statement that the Member was excused from voting on the
23legislation pursuant to law.

24(c) A person subject to this rule has an interest that is in
25substantial conflict with the proper discharge of his or her duties
26in the public interest and of his or her responsibilities as prescribed
27by the laws of this state, or a personal interest, arising from any
28situation, within the scope of this rule, if he or she has reason to
29believe or expect that he or she will derive a direct monetary gain
30or suffer a direct monetary loss, as the case may be, by reason of
31his or her official activity. He or she does not have an interest that
32is in substantial conflict with the proper discharge of his or her
33duties in the public interest and of his or her responsibilities as
34prescribed by the laws of this state, or a personal interest, arising
35from any situation, within the scope of this rule, if any benefit or
36detriment accrues to him or her as a member of a business,
37profession, occupation, or group to no greater extent than any other
38member of the business, profession, occupation, or group.

39(d) A person who is subject to this rule may not be deemed to
40be engaged in any activity that is in substantial conflict with the
P50   1proper discharge of his or her duties in the public interest and of
2his or her responsibilities as prescribed by the laws of this state,
3or to have a personal interest, arising from any situation, within
4the scope of this rule, solely by reason of any of the following:

5(1) His or her relationship to any potential beneficiary of any
6situation is one that is defined as a remote interest by Section 1091
7of the Government Code or is otherwise not deemed to be a
8prohibited interest under Section 1091.1 or 1091.5 of the
9Government Code.

10(2) Receipt of a campaign contribution that is regulated,
11received, reported, and accounted for pursuant to Chapter 4
12(commencing with Section 84100) of Title 9 of the Government
13Code, so long as the contribution is not made on the understanding
14or agreement, in violation of law, that the person’s vote, opinion,
15judgment, or action will be influenced thereby.

16(e) The enumeration in this rule of specific situations or
17conditions that are deemed not to result in substantial conflict with
18the proper discharge of the duties and responsibilities of a legislator
19or legislative employee, or in a personal interest, may not be
20construed as exclusive.

21The Legislature, in adopting this rule, recognizes that Members
22of the Legislature and legislative employees may need to engage
23in employment, professional, or business activities other than
24legislative activities in order to maintain a continuity of
25professional or business activity, or may need to maintain
26investments, which activities or investments do not conflict with
27specific provisions of this rule. However, in construing and
28administering this rule, weight should be given to any coincidence
29of income, employment, investment, or other profit from sources
30that may be identified with the interests represented by those
31sources that are seeking action of any character on matters then
32pending before the Legislature.

33(f) An employee of either house of the Legislature may not,
34during the time he or she is so employed, commit any act or engage
35in any activity prohibited by any part of this rule.

36(g) A person may not induce or seek to induce any Member of
37the Legislature to violate any part of this rule.

38(h) A violation of any part of this rule is punishable as provided
39in Section 8926 of the Government Code.


40

P51   2Ethics Committees


3

545. The Senate Committee on Legislative Ethics and the
6Assembly Legislative Ethics Committee, respectively, shall receive
7complaints concerning Members of their respective houses, and
8may investigate and make findings and recommendations
9concerning violations by Members of their respective houses of
10Article 2 (commencing with Section 8920) of Chapter 1 of Part 1
11of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Government Code. Each house shall
12adopt rules governing the establishment and procedures of the
13committee of that house.


14

16Designating Legislative Sessions


17

1950. Regular sessions shall be identified with the odd-numbered
20year subsequent to each general election, followed by a hyphen,
21and then the last two digits of the following even-numbered year.
22For example: 2013-14 Regular Session.


23

25Designating Extraordinary Sessions


26

2850.3. All extraordinary sessions shall be designated in numerical
29order by the session in which convened.


30

32Days and Dates


33

3550.5. (a) As used in these rules, “day” means a calendar day,
36unless otherwise specified.

37(b) When the date of a deadline, recess requirement, or
38circumstance falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Monday that is a
39holiday, the date shall be deemed to refer to the preceding Friday.
P52   1When the date falls on a holiday on a weekday other than a
2Monday, the date shall be deemed to refer to the preceding day.


3

5Legislative Calendar


6

851. (a) The Legislature shall observe the following calendar
9during the first year of the regular session:

10(1) Organizational Recess--The Legislature shall meet on the
11first Monday in December following the general election to
12organize. Thereafter, each house shall be in recess from the time
13it determines until the first Monday in January, except when the
14first Monday is January 1 or January 1 is a Sunday, in which case,
15the following Wednesday.

16(2) Spring Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess from the
1710th day prior to Easter until the Monday after Easter.

18(3) Summer Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess from
19July 12 until August 12. This recess shall not commence until the
20Budget Bill is passed.

21(4) Interim Study Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess
22from September 13 until the first Monday in January, except when
23the first Monday is January 1 or January 1 is a Sunday, in which
24case, the following Wednesday.

25(b) The Legislature shall observe the following calendar for the
26remainder of the legislative session:

27(1) Spring Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess from the
2810th day prior to Easter until the Monday after Easter.

29(2) Summer Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess from
30July 3 until August 4. This recess may not commence until the
31Budget Bill is passed.

32(3) Final Recess--The Legislature shall be in recess on
33September 1 until adjournment sine die on November 30.

34(c) Recesses shall be from the hour of adjournment on the day
35specified, reconvening at the time designated by the respective
36houses.

37(d) The recesses specified by this rule shall be designated as
38joint recesses.


39

P53   1Recall from Recess


2

452. Notwithstanding the power of the Governor to call a special
5session, the Legislature may be recalled from joint recess and
6 reconvene in regular session by any of the following means:

7(a) It may be recalled by joint proclamation, which shall be
8entered in the Daily Journal, of the Senate Committee on Rules
9and the Speaker of the Assembly or, in his or her absence from
10the state, the Assembly Committee on Rules.

11(b) Ten or more Members of the Legislature may present a
12request for recall from joint recess to the Chief Clerk of the
13Assembly and the Secretary of the Senate. The request immediately
14shall be printed in the Daily Journal. Within 10 days thereafter,
15the Speaker of the Assembly or, if the Speaker is absent from the
16state, the Assembly Committee on Rules, and the Senate
17Committee on Rules shall act upon the request. If they concur in
18desiring to recall the Legislature from joint recess, they shall issue
19their joint proclamation to that effect entered in the Daily Journal
20no later than 20 days after publication of the request in the Daily
21Journal.

22(c) If either or both of the parties specified in subdivision (b)
23does not concur, 10 or more Members of the Legislature may
24request the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of the
25Senate to petition the membership of the respective house. The
26petition shall be entered in the Daily Journal and shall contain a
27specified reconvening date commencing not later than 20 days
28after the date of the petition. If two-thirds of the Members of the
29house or each of the two houses concur, the Legislature shall
30reconvene on the date specified. The necessary concurrences must
31be received at least 10 days prior to the date specified for
32reconvening.


33

35Procedure on Suspending Rules by Single House


36

3853. Whenever these rules authorize suspension of the Joint
39Rules as to a particular bill by action of a single house after
P54   1approval by the Committee on Rules of that house, the following
2procedure shall be followed:

3(a) A written request to suspend the joint rule shall be filed with
4the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of the Senate, as
5the case may be, and shall be transmitted to the Committee on
6Rules of the appropriate house.

7(b) The Assembly Committee on Rules or the Senate Committee
8on Rules, as the case may be, shall determine whether there exists
9an urgent need for the suspension of the joint rule with regard to
10the bill.

11(c) If the appropriate rules committee recommends that the
12suspension be permitted, the Member may offer a resolution,
13without further reference thereof to committee, granting permission
14to suspend the joint rule. The adoption of the resolution granting
15permission shall require an affirmative recorded vote of the elected
16Members of the house in which the request is made.


17

19Introduction of Bills


20

2254. (a) A bill may not be introduced in the first year of the
23regular session after February 22 and a bill may not be introduced
24in the second year of the regular session after February 21. These
25deadlines do not apply to constitutional amendments, committee
26bills introduced pursuant to Assembly Rule 47 or Senate Rule 23,
27bills introduced in the Assembly with the permission of the Speaker
28of the Assembly, or bills introduced in the Senate with the
29permission of the Senate Committee on Rules. Subject to these
30deadlines, a bill may be introduced at any time except when the
31houses are in joint summer, interim, or final recess. Each house
32may provide for introduction of bills during a recess other than a
33joint recess. Bills shall be numbered consecutively during the
34regular session.

35(b) The Desks of the Senate and Assembly shall remain open
36during a joint recess, other than a joint spring, summer, interim,
37or final recess, for the introduction of bills during business hours
38on Monday through Friday, inclusive, except holidays. Bills
39received at the Senate Desk during these periods shall be numbered
40and printed. After printing, the bills shall be delivered to the
P55   1Secretary of the Senate and referred by the Senate Committee on
2Rules to a standing committee. Bills received at the Assembly
3Desk during these periods shall be numbered, printed, and referred
4to a committee by the Assembly Committee on Rules. After
5printing, the bills shall be delivered to the Chief Clerk of the
6Assembly. On the reconvening of each house, the bills shall be
7read the first time, and shall be delivered to the committee to which
8they were referred.

9(c) A Member may not author a bill during a session that would
10have substantially the same effect as a bill he or she previously
11introduced during that session. This restriction does not apply in
12cases where the previously introduced bill was vetoed by the
13Governor or its provisions were “chaptered out” by a later
14chaptered bill pursuant to Section 9605 of the Government Code.
15An objection based on this restriction may be raised only while
16the bill is being considered by the house in which it is introduced.
17The objection shall be referred to the Committee on Rules of the
18house for a determination. The bill shall remain on the Daily File
19or with a committee, as the case may be, until a determination is
20made. If, upon consideration of the objection, the Committee on
21Rules determines that the bill objected to would have substantially
22the same effect as another bill previously introduced during the
23session by the author, the bill objected to shall be stricken from
24the Daily File or returned to the desk by the committee, as the case
25may be, and may not be acted upon during the remainder of the
26session. If the Committee on Rules determines that the bill objected
27to would not have substantially the same effect as a bill previously
28introduced during the session by the author, the bill may thereafter
29be acted upon by the committee or the house, as the case may be.
30The Committee on Rules may obtain assistance as it may desire
31from the Legislative Counsel as to the similarity of a bill or
32amendments to a prior bill.

33Except as provided in subdivision (e), this joint rule may be
34suspended by approval of the Committee on Rules and
35three-fourths vote of the membership of the house.

36(d) During a joint recess, the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or
37Secretary of the Senate shall order the preparation of preprint bills
38when so ordered by any of the following:

39(1) The Speaker of the Assembly.

40(2) The Committee on Rules of the respective house.

P56   1(3) A committee, with respect to bills within the subject matter
2jurisdiction of the committee.

3Preprint bills shall be designated and shall be printed in the order
4received and numbered in the order printed. To facilitate
5subsequent amendment, a preprint bill shall be so prepared that,
6when introduced as a bill, the page and the line numbers will not
7change. The Chief Clerk of the Assembly and Secretary of the
8Senate shall publish a list periodically of preprint bills showing
9the preprint bill number, the title, and the Legislative Counsel’s
10Digest. The Speaker of the Assembly and Senate Committee on
11Rules may refer any preprint bill to committee for study.

12(e) (1) Bills providing for appropriations related to the Budget
13Bill, within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section 12 of Article
14IV of the California Constitution, shall be authored only by the
15Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review or the Assembly
16Committee on Budget.

17(2) This subdivision may be suspended by approval of the
18Committee on Rules of the house of origin.


19

2130-Day Waiting Period


22

2455. A bill other than the Budget Bill may not be heard or acted
25upon by committee or either house until the bill has been in print
26for 30 days. The date a bill is returned from the printer shall be
27entered in the Daily History. This rule may be suspended
28concurrently with the suspension of the requirement of Section 8
29of Article IV of the Constitution or, if that period has expired, this
30rule may be suspended by approval of the Committee on Rules
31and two-thirds vote of the house in which the bill is being
32considered.


33

35Return of Bills


36

3856. Bills introduced in the first year of the regular session and
39passed by the house of origin on or before the January 31st
40constitutional deadline are “carryover bills.” Immediately after
P57   1January 31, bills introduced in the first year of the regular session
2that do not become “carryover bills” shall be returned to the Chief
3Clerk of the Assembly or Secretary of the Senate, respectively.
4Notwithstanding Rule 4, as used in this rule “bills” does not include
5constitutional amendments.


6

8Appropriation Bills


9

1157. Appropriation bills that, pursuant to paragraph (4) of
12subdivision (b) of Section 12 of Article IV of the California
13Constitution, may not be sent to the Governor shall be held, after
14enrollment, by the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or Secretary of
15the Senate, respectively. The bills shall be sent to the Governor
16immediately after the Budget Bill has been enacted.


17

19Urgency Clauses


20

2258. An amendment to add a section to a bill to provide that the
23act shall take effect immediately as an urgency statute may not be
24adopted unless the author of the amendment has first secured the
25approval of the Committee on Rules of the house in which the
26amendments are offered.


27

29Vetoes


30

3258.5. The Legislature may consider a Governor’s veto for only
3360 days, not counting days when the Legislature is in joint recess.


34

36Publications


37

P58   159. During periods of joint recess, weekly, if necessary, the
2following documents shall be published: Daily Files, Histories,
3and Daily Journals.


4

6Committee Hearings


7

960. (a) A standing committee or subcommittee thereof may
10not take action on a bill at any hearing held outside of the State
11 Capitol.

12(b) A committee may hear the subject matter of a bill or convene
13for an informational hearing during a period of recess. Four days’
14notice in the Daily File is required prior to the hearing.

15(c) A bill may not be acted upon by a committee during a joint
16recess.


17

19Deadlines


20

2261. The deadlines set forth in this rule shall be observed by the
23Senate and Assembly. After each deadline, the Secretary of the
24Senate and the Chief Clerk of the Assembly may not accept
25committee reports from their respective committees except as
26otherwise provided in this rule:

27(a) Odd-numbered year:

28(1) Feb. 22--Last day for bills to be introduced.

29(2) May 3--Last day for policy committees to hear and report
30to fiscal committees fiscal bills introduced in their house.

31(3) May 10--Last day for policy committees to hear and report
32to the floor nonfiscal bills introduced in their house.

33(4) May 17--Last day for policy committees to meet prior to
34June 3.

35(5) May 24--Last day for fiscal committees to hear and report
36to the floor bills introduced in their house.

37(6) May 24--Last day for fiscal committees to meet prior to
38June 3.

39(7) May 28-May 31--Floor session only. No committee may
40meet for any purpose.

P59   1(8) May 31--Last day for each house to pass bills introduced
2in that house.

3(9) June 3--Committee meetings may resume.

4(10) July 12--Last day for policy committees to meet and report
5bills.

6(11) Aug. 30--Last day for fiscal committees to meet and report
7bills.

8(12) Sept. 3-Sept. 13--Floor session only. No committee may
9meet for any purpose.

10(13) Sept. 6--Last day to amend on the floor.

11(14) Sept. 13--Last day for each house to pass bills.

12(b) Even-numbered year:

13(1) Jan. 17--Last day for policy committees to hear and report
14to fiscal committees fiscal bills introduced in their house in the
15odd-numbered year.

16(2) Jan. 24--Last day for any committee to hear and report to
17the floor bills introduced in that house in the odd-numbered year.

18(3) Jan. 31--Last day for each house to pass bills introduced in
19that house in the odd-numbered year.

20(4) Feb. 21--Last day for bills to be introduced.

21(5) May 2--Last day for policy committees to hear and report
22to fiscal committees fiscal bills introduced in their house.

23(6) May 9--Last day for policy committees to hear and report
24to the floor nonfiscal bills introduced in their house.

25(7) May 16--Last day for policy committees to meet prior to
26June 2.

27(8) May 23--Last day for fiscal committees to hear and report
28to the floor bills introduced in their house.

29(9) May 23--Last day for fiscal committees to meet prior to
30June 2.

31(10) May 27-May 30--Floor session only. No committee may
32meet for any purpose.

33(11) May 30--Last day for each house to pass bills introduced
34in that house.

35(12) June 2--Committee meetings may resume.

36(13) June 27--Last day for policy committees to meet and report
37bills.

38(14) Aug. 15--Last day for fiscal committees to meet and report
39bills.

P60   1(15) Aug. 18-Aug. 31--Floor session only. No committee may
2meet for any purpose.

3(16) Aug. 22--Last day to amend on floor.

4(17) Aug. 31--Last day for each house to pass bills.

5(c) If a bill is acted upon in committee before the relevant
6deadline, and the committee votes to report the bill out with
7amendments that have not at the time of the vote been prepared
8by the Legislative Counsel, the Secretary of the Senate and the
9Chief Clerk of the Assembly may subsequently receive a report
10 recommending the bill for passage or for rereferral together with
11the amendments at any time within two legislative days after the
12deadline or, if the Legislature has recessed for the Summer Recess,
13within seven calendar days after the deadline.

14(d) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), a policy committee
15may report a bill to a fiscal committee on or before the relevant
16deadline for reporting nonfiscal bills to the floor if, after the policy
17committee deadline for reporting the bill to fiscal committee, the
18Legislative Counsel’s Digest is changed to indicate reference to
19fiscal committee.

20(e) Any bill in the house of origin that is not acted upon during
21the odd-numbered year as a result of the deadlines imposed in
22subdivision (a) may be acted upon when the Legislature reconvenes
23after the interim study joint recess, or at any time the Legislature
24is recalled from the interim study joint recess.

25(f) The deadlines imposed by this rule do not apply to the rules
26committees of the respective houses.

27(g) The deadlines imposed by this rule do not apply in instances
28where a bill is referred to committee under Rule 26.5.

29(h) The deadlines imposed by this rule do not apply in instances
30where a bill is referred to a committee under Assembly Rule 77.2.

31(i) (1) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), a policy
32committee or fiscal committee may meet for the purpose of hearing
33and reporting a constitutional amendment, or a bill that would go
34into immediate effect pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 8, or
35subdivision (e) of Section 12, of Article IV of the California
36Constitution, at any time other than those periods when no
37committee may meet for any purpose.

38(2) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), either house may
39meet for the purpose of considering and passing a constitutional
40amendment, or a bill that would go into immediate effect pursuant
P61   1to subdivision (c) of Section 8, or subdivision (e) of Section 12,
2of Article IV of the California Constitution, at any time during the
3session.

4(j) This rule may be suspended as to any particular bill by
5approval of the Committee on Rules and two-thirds vote of the
6membership of the house.


7

9Committee Procedure


10

1262. (a) Notice of a hearing on a bill by the committee of first
13reference in each house, or notice of an informational hearing,
14shall be published in the Daily File at least four days prior to the
15hearing. Otherwise, notice shall be published in the Daily File two
16days prior to the hearing. That notice requirement may be waived
17by a majority vote of the house in which the bill is being
18considered. A bill may be set for hearing in a committee only three
19times. A bill is “set,” for purposes of this subdivision, whenever
20notice of the hearing has been published in the Daily File for one
21or more days. If a bill is set for hearing, and the committee, on its
22own initiation and not the author’s, postpones the hearing on the
23bill or adjourns the hearing while testimony is being taken, that
24hearing is not counted as one of the three times a bill may be set.
25After hearing the bill, the committee may vote on the bill. If the
26hearing notice in the Daily File specifically indicates that
27“testimony only” will be taken, that hearing is not counted as one
28of the three times a bill may be set. A committee may not vote on
29a bill so noticed until it has been heard in accordance with this
30rule. After a committee has voted on a bill, reconsideration may
31be granted only one time. Reconsideration may be granted within
3215 legislative days or prior to the interim study joint recess,
33whichever first occurs. A vote on reconsideration may not be taken
34without the same notice required to set a bill unless that vote is
35taken at the same meeting at which the vote to be reconsidered
36was taken, and the author is present. When a bill fails to get the
37necessary votes to pass it out of committee, or upon failure to
38receive reconsideration, it shall be returned to the Chief Clerk of
39the Assembly or Secretary of the Senate of the house of the
40committee and may not be considered further during the session.

P62   1This subdivision may be suspended with respect to a particular
2bill by approval of the Committee on Rules and two-thirds vote
3of the Members of the house.

4(b) If the committee adopts amendments other than those offered
5by the author and orders the bill reprinted prior to its further
6consideration, the hearing shall not be the final time a bill may be
7set under subdivision (a) of this rule.

8(c) When a standing committee takes action on a bill, the vote
9shall be by rollcall vote only. All rollcall votes taken by a standing
10committee shall be recorded by the committee secretary on forms
11provided by the Chief Clerk of the Assembly and the Secretary of
12the Senate. The chairperson of each standing committee shall
13promptly transmit a copy of the record of the rollcall votes to the
14Chief Clerk of the Assembly or the Secretary of the Senate,
15respectively, who shall cause the votes to be published as
16prescribed by each house.

17This subdivision also applies to action of a committee on a
18subcommittee report. The rules of each house shall prescribe the
19procedure as to rollcall votes on amendments.

20Any committee may, with the unanimous consent of the members
21present, substitute a rollcall from a prior bill, provided that the
22members whose votes are substituted are present at the time of the
23substitution.

24A bill may not be passed out by a committee without a quorum
25being present.

26This subdivision does not apply to:

27(1) Procedural motions that do not have the effect of disposing
28of a bill.

29(2) Withdrawal of a bill from a committee calendar at the request
30of an author.

31(3) Return of a bill to the house where the bill has not been
32voted on by the committee.

33(4) The assignment of a bill to committee.

34(d) The chairperson of the committee hearing a bill may, at any
35time, order a call of the committee. Upon a request by any member
36of a committee or the author in person, the chairperson shall order
37the call.

38In the absence of a quorum, a majority of the members present
39may order a quorum call of the committee and compel the
40attendance of absentees. The chairperson shall send the Sergeant
P63   1at Arms for those members who are absent and not excused by
2their respective house.

3When a call of a committee is ordered by the chairperson with
4respect to a particular bill, he or she shall send the Sergeant at
5Arms, or any other person to be appointed for that purpose, for
6those members who have not voted on that particular bill and are
7not excused.

8A quorum call or a call of the committee with respect to a
9particular bill may be dispensed with by the chairperson without
10objection by any member of the committee, or by a majority of
11the members present.

12If a motion is adopted to adjourn the committee while the
13committee is operating under a call, the call shall be dispensed
14with and any pending vote announced.

15The committee secretary shall record the votes of members
16answering a call. The rules of each house may prescribe additional
17procedures for a call of a committee.


18

20Uniform Rules


21

2363. A standing committee of either house may not adopt or
24 apply any rule or procedure governing the voting upon bills that
25is not equally applicable to the bills of both houses.


26

28Votes on Bills


29

3164. Every meeting of each house and standing committee or
32subcommittee thereof where a vote is to be taken on a bill, or
33amendments to a bill, shall be public.


34

36Conflicting Rules


37

P64   165. The provisions of Rule 50 and following of these rules
2prevail over any conflicting joint rule with a lesser number.



O

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