Senate ResolutionNo. 4


Introduced by Senator De León

December 1, 2014


Senate Resolution No. 4—Relative to the Standing Rules of the Senate for the 2015–16 Regular Session.

P1    1Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, That the
2following rules be, and the same are hereby adopted as, the
3Standing Rules of the Senate for the 2015-16 Regular Session:

45STANDING RULES OF THE SENATE
6

7Convening and Sessions
8

9Hours of Meeting
10

111. The Senate shall meet at 9:00 a.m. daily, except Saturdays
12and Sundays, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate.

1314Calling to Order
15

162. The President pro Tempore, Vice Chair of the Committee
17on Rules, or senior member present shall call the Senate to order
18at the hour stated and, if a quorum is present, shall proceed with
19the order of business.

2021Attendance of Senators
22

233. No Senator may absent himself or herself from attendance
24upon the Senate without first obtaining leave. A lesser number
25than a quorum of the Senate is authorized to send the Sergeant at
P2    1Arms for any and all absent Senators at the expense of the absent
2Senators, unless an excuse for nonattendance made to the Senate
3when a quorum is present shall be judged sufficient, and in that
4case the expense shall be paid out of the Senate Operating Fund.
5The President pro Tempore, or less than a quorum present, shall
6have the power to issue process directly to the Sergeant at Arms
7to compel the attendance of Senators absent without leave. Any
8Senator who refuses to obey that process, unless sick or unable to
9attend, shall be deemed guilty of contempt of the Senate, and the
10Sergeant at Arms shall have power to use force as may be necessary
11to compel the attendance of the absent Senator, and for this purpose
12he or she may command the force of the county, or of any county
13in the state.

1415Order of Business
16

174. The order of business shall be as follows:

18   (1) Rollcall.

19   (2) Prayer by the Chaplain.

20   (3) Pledge of Allegiance.

21   (4) Privileges of the Floor.

22   (5) Communications and Petitions.

23   (6) Messages from the Governor.

24   (7) Messages from the Assembly.

25   (8) Reports of Committees.

26   (9) Motions, Resolutions, and Notices.

  
27(10) Introduction and First Reading of Bills.

  
28(11) Consideration of Daily File:

29       (a) Second Reading.

30       (b) Special Orders.

31       (c) Unfinished Business.

32       (d) Third Reading.

  
33(12) Announcement of Committee Meetings.

  
34(13) Leaves of Absence.

  
35(14) Adjournment.

3637Executive Sessions
38

395. When a motion is adopted to close the doors of the Senate,
40on the discussion of any business that may require an executive
P3    1session, he or she who is presiding shall require all persons, except
2the Senators, Secretary, Minute Clerk, and Sergeant at Arms, to
3withdraw, and during the discussion of that business the doors
4shall remain closed. Every Senator and officer present shall keep
5secret all matters and proceedings concerning which secrecy shall
6be enjoined by order of the Senate.

78Officers of the Senate
9

10The President
11

126. The President may preside upon invitation of the Senate.

1314The President pro Tempore
15

167. The President pro Tempore shall take the Chair and call the
17Senate to order at the hour of the meetings of the Senate. The
18President pro Tempore is the Presiding Officer of the Senate.

19It shall be the particular responsibility of the President pro
20Tempore to secure the prompt and businesslike disposition of bills
21and other business before the Senate. He or she shall maintain
22order in the Senate Chamber and, in case of a disturbance or
23disorderly conduct outside the bar or in the gallery, he or she shall
24have the power to order the same cleared.

25The President pro Tempore shall serve ex officio as a member
26of all Senate and joint committees of which he or she is not a
27regular member, with all of the rights and privileges of that
28membership except the right to vote. In counting a quorum of any
29of these committees, the President pro Tempore may not be counted
30as a member.

31The Vice Chair of the Committee on Rules shall, in the absence
32of the President pro Tempore, perform the duties, and have all
33powers and authority, of the President pro Tempore.

3435Presiding by Senators
36

378. The President pro Tempore of the Senate may name a Senator
38to perform the duties of the Chair in his or her absence. The Senator
39so named shall be vested, during that time on the floor, with all
P4    1the powers of the President pro Tempore, and the Senator who
2performs these duties shall be known as the Presiding Officer.

3In the absence of the President pro Tempore or the Vice Chair
4of the Committee on Rules, any Senator may perform the duties
5of the Chair.

67Secretary of the Senate
8

99. It shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Senate to attend
10every session, call the roll, and read all bills, amendments, and
11resolutions, and all papers ordered read by the Senate or the
12Presiding Officer.

13The Secretary of the Senate shall superintend all printing to be
14done for the Senate.

15The Secretary of the Senate shall certify to, and transmit to, the
16Assembly all bills, joint and concurrent resolutions, constitutional
17amendments, and papers requiring the concurrence of the
18Assembly, after their passage or adoption by the Senate.

19The Secretary of the Senate shall also keep a correct Journal of
20the proceedings of the Senate, and shall notify the Assembly of
21the action by the Senate on all matters originating in the Assembly
22and requiring action on the part of the Senate.

23The Secretary of the Senate shall have custody of all bills,
24documents, papers, and records of the Senate and may not permit
25any of the bills, documents, records, or papers to be taken from
26the Desk or out of his or her custody by any person, except in the
27regular course of the business of the Senate.

28The Secretary of the Senate is the Executive Officer of the
29Committee on Rules and shall act as its authorized representative
30in all matters delegated to him or her by the committee.

31Initiative measures received by the Secretary of the Senate in
32accordance with Section 9034 of the Elections Code shall be
33transmitted to the Committee on Rules and referred by the
34Committee on Rules to the appropriate committee.

3536Sergeant at Arms of the Senate
37

3810. The Sergeant at Arms shall attend the Senate during all of
39its sittings, and shall execute the commands of the Senate from
40time to time, together with all process issued by its authority, as
P5    1shall be directed to him or her by the President. The Sergeant at
2Arms is authorized to arrest for contempt all persons outside the
3bar, or in the gallery, found in loud conversation or otherwise
4making a noise to the disturbance of the Senate. The actual
5expenses for the Sergeant at Arms for every arrest and for each
6day’s custody and release, and his or her traveling expenses, shall
7be paid out of the Senate Operating Fund.

8The Sergeant at Arms shall place copies of all bills, joint and
9concurrent resolutions, constitutional amendments, Journals,
10Histories, and Files, when printed, on the desks of Senators, at
11least one hour previous to the opening of the session. If printed
12copies are not available, electronic copies will suffice for purposes
13of this rule.

1415Elected and Appointed Officers
16

1710.5. On the first day of each session, the President pro
18Tempore, members of the Committee on Rules, Secretary of the
19Senate, and Sergeant at Arms shall be elected by a majority vote
20of the duly elected and qualified Members of the Senate and shall
21serve until their successors are elected and qualify. The Committee
22on Rules shall appoint an Assistant Secretary, a Minute Clerk, a
23Chaplain, and other employees with such duties as the committee
24requires.

2526Officers and Employees Compensation: Approval
27

2810.6. The Controller is hereby authorized and directed to draw
29his or her warrants in favor of officers and employees who render
30services to the Senate, as certified by the Committee on Rules or
31by its authorized representative, from the fund set aside for the
32pay of officers and employees of the Senate at the rate of
33compensation certified by the committee or its representative, and
34the Treasurer is hereby directed to pay the same.

P6    1Committees of the Senate
2

3Appointment of Committees
4

511. The Committee on Rules shall consist of the President pro
6Tempore of the Senate, who shall be the chair of the committee,
7and four other Members of the Senate to be elected by the Senate.
8There is a vacancy on the committee in the event a member ceases
9to be a Member of the Senate or resigns from the Committee on
10Rules. Any vacancy occurring during a summer, interim study, or
11final recess, except in the case of the President pro Tempore, shall
12be filled by the remaining members of the Committee on Rules.
13A vacancy occurring at any other time shall be filled by election
14by the Senate.

15The Committee on Rules shall appoint all other committees of
16the Senate and shall designate a chair and vice chair of each
17committee.

18In making committee appointments, the Committee on Rules
19shall give consideration to seniority, preference, and experience.
20However, in making committee appointments, the Committee on
21Rules shall, as far as practicable, give equal representation to all
22parts of the state.

2324Standing Committees
25

2612. The standing committees of the Senate and subjects to be
27referred to each are set out below. The provisions set forth below
28as to the assignment of bills are intended as a guide to the
29Committee on Rules, but are not binding upon the committee.

30(1) Rules, 5 members. Proposed amendments to the rules and
31other matters relating to the business of the Legislature.

32The standing committees of any regular session shall be the
33standing committees of concurrent special or extraordinary sessions
34unless otherwise ordered by the Senate.

3536Committee on Legislative Ethics
37

3812.3.   (a) (1) The Committee on Legislative Ethics is hereby
39created. The committee shall be appointed by the Committee on
P7    1Rules and shall consist of six Senators, at least two of whom are
2members of the political party having the greatest number of
3members in the Senate and at least two of whom are members of
4the political party having the second greatest number of members
5in the Senate. The members of the committee shall serve two-year
6terms. The President pro Tempore and the Minority Floor Leader
7shall serve as ex officio, nonvoting members of the committee. A
8member of the Committee on Rules shall not be appointed to the
9committee.

10(2) The Committee on Rules shall select a Chair and a Vice
11Chair, who may not be members of the same political party. The
12Chair may not serve more than two consecutive two-year terms,
13and the Committee on Rules shall select a successor who is not a
14member of the same political party as the immediately previous
15Chair.

16(3) Vacancies in the committee shall be filled within 30 days
17by the Committee on Rules for the remainder of a term.

18(4) If a complaint is filed against a member of the committee,
19the Committee on Rules shall temporarily replace the member
20with a Senator of the same political party, who shall serve until
21the complaint is dismissed by the committee or the Senate takes
22action as it deems appropriate, whichever occurs earlier.

23(5) The Committee on Rules, upon the recommendation of the
24Committee on Legislative Ethics, may retain or appoint a Chief
25Counsel to assist the committee in carrying out its functions. The
26staff of the committee shall be considered permanent and
27professional, and shall perform their duties in a nonpartisan
28manner. Neither staff of the committee, nor persons currently
29contracted to provide services for the committee, shall engage in
30partisan activities regarding a Senate or Assembly election
31campaign.

32(6) (A) The Committee on Rules, upon the recommendation
33of the Committee on Legislative Ethics, shall appoint an ethics
34ombudsperson to facilitate the receipt of information about
35potential ethical violations, and to assist the Senate in providing
36remedies for retaliatory conduct, to ensure that an informant or
37complainant does not suffer adverse consequences with respect to
38his or her employment in violation of paragraph (1) of subdivision
39(u). Remedies for retaliatory conduct pursuant to this rule may
40include back pay and reinstatement.

P8    1(B) The ombudsperson shall be accessible to Senators, officers
2and employees of the Senate, and members of the public who wish
3to provide information or seek guidance about ethical standards
4or possible violations before filing a formal complaint pursuant to
5subdivision (c). All communications made pursuant to this
6subparagraph shall be confidential between the informant or
7complainant and the ombudsperson. In appropriate cases, especially
8where repeated or systematic violations appear to have occurred,
9the ombudsperson may refer the information to the Chair of the
10Committee on Rules, the Chair of the Committee on Legislative
11Ethics, the Secretary of the Senate, or all three; however, the
12identity of the informant or complainant shall be kept confidential
13unless that person otherwise consents.

14(C) The Committee on Legislative Ethics shall maintain a public
15hotline telephone number for purposes of contacting the
16ombudsperson. Complaints received through the hotline shall be
17considered informal complaints, and the nature and existence of
18the complaints shall be kept confidential.

19(b) The committee shall do all of the following:

20(1) The committee shall formulate and recommend, for adoption
21by the Senate, standards of conduct for Senators and officers and
22employees of the Senate in the performance of their legislative
23responsibilities. The Ethics Manual for Members, Officers, and
24Employees of the United States House of Representatives, as
25prepared by the Staff of the Committee on Standards of Official
26Conduct, 102nd Congress Second Session (United States
27Government Printing Office, Washington, 1992), the Code of
28Ethics (Article 2 (commencing with Section 8920) of Chapter 1
29of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Government Code), and
30Joint Rule 44 shall serve as guides in the formulation of the
31standards of conduct.

32(2) At the request of any Senator or officer or employee of the
33Senate, the committee shall provide an advisory opinion with
34respect to the standards of conduct of the Senate on the general
35propriety of past, current, or anticipated conduct of that Senator,
36officer, or employee. The opinion shall be rendered within 21 days
37unless the Chair and Vice Chair agree otherwise. The committee
38may, with appropriate deletions to ensure the privacy of the
39individuals concerned, publish the advisory opinions for the
40guidance of other Senators, officers, or employees.

P9    1(3) The committee shall develop, issue, and annually update a
2clear, informative, and usable manual for the Senate based on the
3standards of conduct adopted by the Senate, including any advisory
4opinions published pursuant to paragraph (2).

5(4) The committee shall conduct periodic workshops, at least
6once each calendar year, for Senators and officers and employees
7of the Senate, including workshops specifically designed for newly
8elected Senators and newly appointed officers and employees. At
9least once in each biennial session, each Senator, and each officer
10or employee of the Senate shall attend one of these workshops.
11The workshops shall include, but not be limited to, a
12comprehensive review of all applicable statutes and Senate rules.
13At least once in each biennial session, each Senator shall also
14attend an individual training or review session conducted by the
15ombudsperson.

16(5) After adoption by the Senate of the standards of conduct,
17the committee shall receive and review complaints alleging
18violations of the standards of conduct by Senators, or officers or
19employees of the Senate, in accordance with the procedures
20specified in this rule.

21(6) The committee shall maintain a record of its investigations,
22hearings, and other proceedings. All information, testimony,
23records, complaints, documents, and reports filed with, submitted
24to, or made by the committee, and all records and transcripts of
25any investigations or hearings of the committee, shall be
26confidential and shall not be open to inspection by any person
27other than a member of the committee, the staff of the committee,
28or any person engaged by contract or otherwise to perform services
29for the committee, except as otherwise specifically provided for
30in this rule. Any member of the committee or any person on the
31staff of the committee who, during the person’s tenure with the
32committee or anytime thereafter, and without authorization,
33 discloses, by writing, verbal communication, or conduct, or reveals
34in any way, in whole, in part, or by way of summary, any
35information, testimony, record, complaint, document, report, or
36transcript that is confidential shall be subject to discipline. In the
37case of a contract for the performance of services for the
38committee, the contract shall expressly prohibit any party to the
39contract from, without authorization, disclosing, by writing, verbal
40communication, or conduct, or from revealing in any way, in
P10   1whole, in part, or by way of summary, any information, testimony,
2record, complaint, document, report, or transcript that is
3confidential. The committee may, by a majority vote of the
4membership of the committee, authorize the release of any records,
5complaints, documents, reports, and transcripts in its possession
6to the appropriate enforcement agency if the committee determines
7that there is probable cause to believe that the violation or
8violations alleged in the complaint would constitute a felony or if
9the committee determines that the information is material to any
10matter pending before the enforcement agency.

11(c) (1) Any person may file a formal complaint with the
12committee that alleges a violation of the standards of conduct. A
13formal complaint does not include information provided to the
14ombudsperson pursuant to paragraph (6) of subdivision (a), unless
15the person who contacted the ombudsperson elects to file a
16complaint that complies with this subdivision and subdivision (d).

17(2) Except as provided in paragraphs (3) and (4), a complaint
18shall not be filed more than 18 months after the date that the alleged
19violation occurred.

20(3) If the committee determines that the person filing the
21complaint did not know, or through the exercise of reasonable
22diligence could not have known, of the alleged violation within
2318 months after the date that the alleged violation occurred, the
24complaint may be filed within three years after the date that the
25alleged violation occurred.

26(4) If a complaint is filed within 60 days prior to an election at
27which a Senator or officer or employee is a candidate for elective
28office, the complaint shall be returned to the person filing the
29complaint, and the person shall be informed that the complaint
30may be filed with an appropriate enforcement agency and may be
31refiled with the committee after the election. The period of time
32for filing the complaint shall be extended for 60 days.

33(5) A complaint shall not be filed if it alleges a violation that
34occurred prior to the adoption of the standards of conduct.

35(d) A formal complaint shall satisfy all of the following
36 requirements:

37(1) It shall be in writing.

38(2) It shall state the name and contact information of the person
39filing the complaint.

P11   1(3) It shall state the name of the Senator, or the name and
2position or title of the officer or employee of the Senate, who is
3alleged to have committed a violation of the standards of conduct.

4(4) It shall set forth allegations that, if true, would constitute a
5violation of the standards of conduct. The allegations shall be
6stated with sufficient clarity and detail to enable the committee to
7make a finding pursuant to subdivision (h).

8(5) It shall state the date of the alleged violation.

9(6) It shall include a statement that the allegations are true of
10the person’s own knowledge or that the person believes them to
11be true, and may include documents in the possession of the party
12filing the complaint relevant to, or supportive of, his or her
13allegations.

14(e) The committee, on its own motion, two-thirds of the
15membership concurring, may initiate a proceeding by filing a
16complaint that complies with paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of
17subdivision (d).

18(f) The committee shall promptly send a copy of a complaint
19to the Senator, or officer or employee of the Senate, alleged to
20have committed the violation, who shall thereafter be designated
21as the respondent.

22(g) If a complaint is filed by a person other than the committee,
23the Chair and Vice Chair of the committee shall examine the
24complaint to determine whether it was filed in accordance with
25this rule and any rules of the committee.

26(h) Within seven days after the complaint is filed, the Chair and
27Vice Chair shall provide to the committee a copy of the complaint
28and their opinion as to whether the allegations in the complaint,
29if true, would constitute a violation of the standards of conduct. If
30the committee, by a two-thirds vote of its membership, finds that
31the allegations, if true, would constitute a violation of the standards
32of conduct, the committee shall hold a hearing within 30 days to
33conduct a preliminary inquiry. If two-thirds of the membership of
34the committee fails to find that the allegations, if true, would
35constitute a violation of the standards of conduct, it shall dismiss
36the complaint and so notify the person who filed the complaint
37and the respondent, and the complaint shall not be made public.

38(i) At the preliminary inquiry, the respondent may respond to
39the allegations in the complaint by written statement or oral
40testimony. If two-thirds of the membership of the committee finds
P12   1that probable cause exists for believing that the respondent
2committed a violation of the standards of conduct, the committee
3shall issue a count-by-count statement of alleged violations. If
4two-thirds of the membership of the committee fails to find that
5probable cause exists, the committee shall dismiss the complaint.
6In either event, the committee shall immediately notify the
7respondent and the person who filed the complaint of its action.
8If the committee finds that probable cause exists, the statement of
9alleged violations shall be made public within seven days.

10(j) Within 21 days after the issuance of the statement of alleged
11violations, the respondent may file an answer that admits or denies
12each count. Upon request of the respondent, the committee may
13grant the respondent an additional 21 days to respond.

14(k) Within 60 days after the issuance of the statement of alleged
15violations, the committee shall hold a disciplinary hearing. If a
16majority of the membership of each party on the committee fails
17to find that the respondent committed a violation of the standards
18of conduct, the committee shall dismiss the complaint. If a majority
19of the membership of each party on the committee finds by clear
20and convincing evidence that the respondent committed a violation
21of the standards of conduct, the committee shall take the following
22action:

23(1) If the respondent is a Senator, it shall hold a hearing to
24determine an appropriate sanction.

25(2) If the respondent is an officer or employee, it shall transmit
26its findings to the Committee on Rules for appropriate action.

27(l) (1) At the hearing to determine an appropriate sanction,
28two-thirds of the membership of the committee shall determine
29whether the violation is serious or minor.

30(2) If the committee determines that a violation is minor or fails
31to determine that a violation is serious, two-thirds of the
32membership of the committee (A) shall, if it determines that the
33violation bears upon the exercise of a right or privilege, recommend
34that the Committee on Rules deny or limit that right or privilege
35and shall transmit its findings and recommendation to the
36Committee on Rules, or (B) shall impose any lesser sanction,
37including, but not limited to, issuing a private letter of
38admonishment for an inadvertent, technical, or otherwise de
39minimis violation, which shall not be considered discipline. Within
P13   115 days after the imposition of a lesser sanction, the respondent
2may appeal the sanction imposed to the Committee on Rules.

3(3) If the committee determines that a violation is serious,
4two-thirds of the membership of the committee shall recommend
5that the Senate take one or more of the following actions and shall
6transmit its findings and recommendation to the Senate:

7(A) The denial or limitation of any right or privilege, if the
8violation bears upon the exercise of that right or privilege.

9(B) A reprimand for a serious violation.

10(C) A censure for a more serious violation.

11(D) A suspension or expulsion for a most serious violation.

12(m) The Senate shall, within 15 legislative days after receiving
13the findings and recommendation, vote on the recommendation of
14the committee. The Senate, by 21 votes, may deny or limit any
15right or privilege of, reprimand, or censure the Senator or, by 27
16votes, may expel the Senator.

17(n) The committee or Senate may defer any action required by
18this rule if other proceedings have been commenced on the same
19matter.

20(o) (1) At all hearings, the Chief Counsel of the committee shall
21present the case. All relevant and probative evidence shall be
22admissible unless it is privileged. Witnesses may be called and
23cross-examined by the committee and the respondent, and exhibits
24and other documents may be entered into the record. The
25respondent shall have the right to be represented by legal counsel
26or any other person of his or her choosing.

27(2) If the committee receives, at any time, any exculpatory
28information relating to the alleged violation, the committee shall
29make the information available to the respondent. The committee
30and the respondent shall comply with requests for discovery
31consistent with Sections 1054, 1054.1, and 1054.3 of the Penal
32Code.

33(p) If the committee determines that the complaint was filed
34with malicious intent, it may request that the Committee on Rules
35reimburse the expenses incurred by the respondent.

36(q) At any time during the proceedings, the respondent may
37admit that he or she committed a violation of the standards of
38conduct. If the respondent admits some but not all of the violations
39alleged in the complaint or the counts set forth in the statement of
40alleged violations, the committee shall find that the admitted
P14   1violations constituted a violation of the standards of conduct and
2may continue the proceedings to determine whether the other
3alleged violations constituted violations of the standards of conduct.
4If the respondent admits to all alleged violations, the committee
5shall find that the admitted violations constituted a violation of
6the standards of conduct, terminate the preliminary inquiry or
7disciplinary hearing, and take the action required by paragraph (1)
8or (2) of subdivision (k).

9(r) Meetings of the committee shall not be open to the public
10until the committee finds that probable cause exists for believing
11that the respondent committed a violation of the standards of
12conduct. Subsequent meetings of the committee or Senate shall
13be public, and notice of any meeting shall be published in the
14Senate File for four calendar days prior to the meeting.

15(s) If the committee finds that probable cause exists for believing
16that the respondent committed a violation of the standards of
17conduct, the transcript of any testimony given, or any documents
18admitted into evidence, at a public hearing and any report prepared
19by the committee subsequent to that finding that states a final
20finding or recommendation shall be open to public inspection.

21(t) Upon request of the respondent, the committee may permit
22the respondent to inspect, copy, or photograph books, papers,
23documents, photographs, or other tangible objects that relate to
24the allegations in the complaint. If the committee finds that
25probable cause exists for believing that the respondent committed
26a violation of the standards of conduct, the committee shall permit
27the respondent to inspect, copy, or photograph books, papers,
28documents, photographs, or other tangible objects that relate to
29the statement of alleged violations.

30(u) (1) A Senator or officer or employee of the Senate shall not
31directly or indirectly use or attempt to use his or her official
32authority or influence to intimidate, threaten, coerce, command,
33or attempt to intimidate, threaten, coerce, or command any person
34for the purpose of interfering with the right of that person to file
35a complaint with the committee, testify before, or in any way
36cooperate with, the committee or any panel.

37(2) For the purpose of paragraph (1), “use of official authority
38or influence” includes promising to confer, or conferring, any
39benefit; effecting, or threatening to effect, any reprisal; or taking,
40or directing others to take, or recommending, processing, or
P15   1approving, any personnel action, including, but not limited to,
2appointment, promotion, transfer, assignment, performance
3evaluation, suspension, or other disciplinary action.

4(3) Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to authorize
5any person to disclose information, the disclosure of which is
6otherwise prohibited by law.

7(v) The committee may adopt rules governing its proceedings
8not inconsistent with this rule. The provisions of Joint Rule 36
9relating to investigating committees apply to the committee to the
10extent those provisions are consistent with this rule.

11(w) The powers and procedures set forth in subdivisions (b) to
12(v), inclusive, confer independent authority and shall not be limited
13or altered by Joint Rule 45.

14(x) Where confidentiality is required pursuant to this rule,
15confidentiality shall be maintained only to the extent that disclosure
16of the confidential information is not otherwise required by law.

1718General Research Committee
19

2012.5.    The General Research Committee is hereby created
21pursuant to Section 11 of Article IV of the California Constitution,
22which relates to legislative committees. The committee consists
23of the 40 Senators, and the President pro Tempore is its chair. The
24committee is allocated all subjects within the scope of legislative
25regulation and control, but may not undertake any investigation
26that another committee has been specifically requested or directed
27to undertake. The General Research Committee may act through
28subcommittees appointed by the Committee on Rules. Each
29member of the General Research Committee is authorized and
30directed to receive and investigate requests for legislative action
31made by individuals or groups and to report thereon to the full
32committee.

33The committee and its members shall have and exercise all of
34the rights, duties, and powers conferred upon investigating
35committees and their members by the Senate Rules and the Joint
36Rules of the Senate and Assembly. However, neither the committee
37nor its members may issue a subpoena without the prior approval
38of the Committee on Rules. The committee has the following
39additional powers and duties:

P16   1(a) To contract with other agencies, public or private, for the
2rendition and affording of services, facilities, studies, and reports
3to the committee as the committee deems necessary to assist it to
4carry out the purposes for which it is created.

5(b) To cooperate with and secure the cooperation of county,
6city, city and county, and other local law enforcement agencies in
7investigating any matter within the scope established by this rule,
8and to direct the sheriff of any county to serve subpoenas, orders,
9and other process issued by the committee.

10(c) To meet and act at any place within the State of California
11and, when authorized in writing by the Committee on Rules to do
12so, to meet and act outside the state to carry out its duties.

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

15(e) To act during sessions of the Legislature, including any
16recess.

17(f) To do any and all other things necessary or convenient to
18enable it fully and adequately to exercise its powers, perform its
19duties, and accomplish the objects and purposes of this rule.

20The Committee on Rules may allocate, from time to time, to the
21General Research Committee from the Senate Operating Fund
22those sums that are necessary to permit the General Research
23Committee and the members thereof to carry out the duties imposed
24on them. In addition, the Committee on Rules may allocate to any
25subcommittee from the Senate Operating Fund those sums that
26the Committee on Rules deems necessary to complete the
27investigation or study conferred upon that subcommittee.

2812.6.    A select committee is a subcommittee of the General
29Research Committee. Staff providing services to a select committee
30are Senate employees assigned by the Committee on Rules to the
31General Research Committee.

32(a) A Senator who proposes to establish a select committee shall
33submit to the Committee on Rules a written request that includes
34all of the following:

35(1) A description of the topic to be addressed by the select
36committee and a general work plan and timetable, including
37hearings, anticipated work product, and staffing needs and other
38anticipated resource demands.

39(2) A statement by the Senator proposing the select committee
40that he or she has discussed his or her plans with the chair of the
P17   1standing committee having jurisdiction over the subject matter of
2the proposed select committee. The statement shall describe any
3objections that chair has to the establishment of the proposed select
4committee.

5(b) A select committee may be established only by a resolution
6adopted by the Committee on Rules that specifies the jurisdiction
7of the select committee. In making this decision, the Committee
8on Rules shall consider any objections to that action raised by the
9chair of a standing committee having jurisdiction over the subject
10matter of the proposed select committee.

11(c) The Committee on Rules shall appoint the members of a
12select committee. A select committee may act only with regard to
13the particular study or investigation assigned to it by the Committee
14on Rules.

15(d) A select committee is terminated automatically upon the
16adjournment of the regular session in which it is established, or at
17an earlier time specified in the resolution. In deciding whether to
18reestablish a select committee established in a previous regular
19session, the Committee on Rules shall consider the extent to which
20the select committee successfully achieved its assigned objectives.

2122Additional Committee on Rules Powers
23

2412.7. In addition to other rights, duties, and powers vested in
25the Committee on Rules, the committee and the members thereof
26shall have and exercise all of the rights, duties, and powers of the
27General Research Committee and the members thereof, as provided
28in Rule 12.5, with authority to act on any subject allocated by Rule
2912.5 to the General Research Committee.

3031Committee on Rules
32

3313.   (a) The Committee on Rules is charged with the general
34responsibility for the administrative functioning of the Senate. The
35committee has general charge of the books, documents, and other
36papers and property of the Senate and shall see that the same are
37properly kept, cared for, filed, or otherwise disposed of in
38accordance with applicable law and rules. The committee also has
39the duties of making studies and recommendations designed to
40promote, improve, and expedite the business and procedure of the
P18   1Senate and its committees, including investigating committees
2consisting wholly or in part of Members of the Senate, and of
3proposing any amendments to the rules deemed necessary to
4accomplish those purposes.

5(b) The Committee on Rules shall continue in existence during
6any recess of the Legislature until the convening of the next regular
7session, and shall have the same powers and duties as while the
8Senate is in session. The committee has the authority to fill
9vacancies in any Senate committee or in the Senate membership
10of any joint committee.

11(c) The committee and its members shall have and exercise all
12of the rights, duties, and powers conferred upon investigating
13committees and their members by the Joint Rules of the Senate
14and Assembly as they are adopted and amended from time to time,
15which provisions are incorporated herein and made applicable to
16the Committee on Rules and its members.

17(d) The committee may make available to any Senate or joint
18committee, or any Member of the Senate, assistance in connection
19with the duties of the committee or other legislative matters as the
20 personnel resources under the direction of the committee or its
21other facilities permit.

22(e) (1) All employees on the payroll of the Senate are employees
23of the Senate and not of individual members, and they are under
24the direct control of the Committee on Rules. The Committee on
25Rules has general supervision over all employees of the Senate
26and the powers and duties to suspend, discipline, or discharge any
27employees when necessary. Any insubordination or inefficiency
28on the part of any employee shall be reported to the Committee
29on Rules.

30(2) A Senator or officer or employee of the Senate shall not
31retaliate against an employee of the Senate for reporting
32information to the Senate Committee on Rules, the Senate
33Committee on Legislative Ethics, or any government or law
34enforcement agency regarding a possible violation of the Senate
35Standards of Conduct or any state or federal law or regulation, or
36because the Senator, officer, or employee believes that the
37employee reported or may report such information, if the employee
38who reported the information reasonably believed that the
39information disclosed a violation of the Senate Standards of
40Conduct or any state or federal law or regulation.

P19   1(f) The committee shall make available and furnish to the
2Members of the Senate, and the Senate committees, personnel
3resources as may be reasonably necessary for the Members and
4the committees to carry out their duties.

5(g) The Committee on Rules constitutes the Committee on
6Introduction of Bills and has charge of the engrossment and
7enrollment of bills, the contingent expenses of the Senate, and
8legislative printing, except insofar as these functions are delegated
9to the Secretary of the Senate.

10(h) The rooms, passages, and buildings set apart for the use of
11the Senate are under the direction of the Committee on Rules, and
12the committee may assign the press desks in the Senate Chamber
13to accredited newspaper representatives.

14(i) Executive communication of nominations sent by the
15Governor, or any other entity with the authority to make
16appointments, to the Senate for confirmation shall be referred to
17the Committee on Rules, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate,
18without debate.

19(j) The Committee on Rules shall, at each regular session,
20appoint a Member of the Senate to serve on the Judicial Council
21and has the authority during any joint recess to fill any vacancy in
22that position that occurs during the recess.

23(k) When a report of a joint legislative committee is delivered
24to the Senate Desk, the Committee on Rules shall refer it to a
25standing committee for review and appropriate action.

2627Expenses of Senate Committees
28

2913.1. All claims for expenses incurred by investigating
30committees of the Senate, the Secretary of the Senate, and the
31Sergeant at Arms shall be approved by the Committee on Rules
32or its authorized representative before the claims are presented to
33the Controller.

34All proposed expenditures, including furniture, equipment, and
35other property, but not including stationery supplies, shall be
36approved by the Committee on Rules or its authorized
37representatives before the expenses are incurred, unless the
38expenditure is specifically exempted from the provisions of this
39rule by the resolution authorizing it.

P20   1A warrant may not be drawn in payment of any claim for
2expenses until the approval of the Committee on Rules, or its
3authorized representative, has been obtained in accordance with
4this rule.

5The Committee on Rules may adopt rules and regulations
6limiting the amount, time, and place of expenses and allowances
7to be paid to employees of Senate investigating committees and
8regulating the terms and conditions of employment of their
9employees. Copies of all rules and regulations adopted pursuant
10to this rule shall be distributed to the chair of every investigating
11committee.

1213Alteration, Repair, Improvement to Senate
14

1513.2. The Committee on Rules is authorized and directed to
16incur and pay expenses of the Senate not otherwise provided for
17as the committee determines are reasonably necessary, including
18the repair, alteration, improvement, and equipping of the Senate
19Chamber and the offices provided for the Senate in the State
20Capitol.

21In order to avoid unanticipated reversions of appropriations for
22contingent expenses, the Committee on Rules may designate the
23appropriation from which payment shall be made pursuant to
24allocations to committees or for other purposes. If insufficient
25money is available in any appropriation to pay all claims pursuant
26to allocations charged against it, the committee shall designate
27another appropriation from which the allocations shall be paid.

2829Rooms and Property of Senate
30

3113.3. The Committee on Rules is responsible for the safekeeping
32of Senate property. The Director of General Services is directed
33to maintain the Senate Chamber and all the committee rooms and
34other rooms used by the Senators and officers of the Senate in a
35condition that they will be available for the use of the Senate at
36any time. It is further directed that no persons other than the
37Members, officers, and employees of the Senate may occupy or
38use the offices, committee rooms, or other rooms now occupied
39by the Senate without permission as hereinafter provided, that the
40desks, furniture, and other equipment of the Senate shall be at the
P21   1disposal of the Committee on Rules, and that no person except
2Members of the Senate may occupy any of the Senate’s offices or
3make use of Senate equipment without permission of the committee
4or its authorized representative.

56Inventory of Senate Property
7

813.4. The Committee on Rules is authorized and directed,
9through its authorized representative, to make and maintain a
10complete inventory of all property of the Senate, including all
11property in the possession or control of any Senate committee.
12The Committee on Rules has custody and control of all property
13of the Senate and shall adopt rules or orders as it may determine
14are necessary relating to the purchase, care, custody, and use or
15disposal thereof.

1617Status of Standing Rules for Regular Session
18

1913.5. The adoption of the Standing Rules for any special session
20are not to be construed as modifying or rescinding the Standing
21Rules of the Senate for a regular session.

2223Operating Expense Fund
24

2513.6. The Committee on Rules is the committee identified in
26Section 9126 of the Government Code. The balance of all money
27in the Senate Operating Fund, including money now or hereafter
28appropriated by the Legislature, except sums that are made
29available specifically for purposes other than the expenses of
30designated committees, is hereby made available to the Committee
31on Rules for any charges or claims it may incur in carrying out the
32duties imposed upon it by these rules or by Senate or concurrent
33resolution.

3435Rules Committee Appointees
36

3713.8. The Committee on Rules shall review its nonlegislator
38appointees every two years. That review shall be completed not
39later than the 120th calendar day of the regular session in which
40the review is undertaken.

P22   1Schedule of Committee Meetings
2

314. The Committee on Rules shall propose to the Senate such
4schedules for regular meetings of the standing committees as will
5permit all members of each committee to attend without a conflict
6of committee engagements.

7The committee may also propose such special committee
8meetings or special schedules of committee meetings as will
9facilitate the business of the Senate. Those schedules may provide
10a special schedule of committee meetings upon certain days of the
11week or to meet any special condition that may arise.

1213Powers of Standing Committees
14

1516. Each standing committee of the Senate to which a proposed
16law or bill is assigned has full power and authority during the
17session of the Legislature, or any recess thereof, to make an
18investigation and study concerning any proposed law or bill as the
19committee shall determine necessary to enable it to properly act
20thereon.

21In the exercise of the power granted by this rule, each committee
22may appoint a secretary and employ clerical, legal, and technical
23assistants as may appear necessary when money has been made
24available therefor by the Senate.

25Each standing committee is authorized and empowered to
26summon and subpoena witnesses, to require the production of
27papers, books, accounts, reports, documents, records, and papers
28of every kind and description, to issue subpoenas, and to take all
29necessary means to compel the attendance of witnesses and to
30procure testimony, oral and documentary. However, no committee
31may issue a subpoena, nor may a committee require testimony
32under oath, without the prior approval of the Committee on Rules.

33The Sergeant at Arms, or other person designated by the Sergeant
34at Arms or by the committee, shall serve any and all subpoenas,
35orders, and other process that may be issued by the committee,
36when directed to do so upon a vote of the majority of the
37membership of the committee.

38Each of the members of the standing committees is authorized
39and empowered to administer oaths, and all of the provisions of
40 Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 9400) of Part 1 of Division
P23   12 of Title 2 of the Government Code, relating to the attendance
2and examination of witnesses before the Legislature and the
3committees thereof, apply to the committees.

4All officers of this state, including the head of each department,
5agency, and subdivision thereof, all employees of the departments,
6agencies, and subdivisions of the state, the Legislative Counsel,
7and all other persons, whether connected with the state government
8or not, shall give and furnish to these committees upon request
9such information, records, and documents as the committees deem
10necessary or proper for the achievement of the purposes for which
11each standing committee was created.

12Each standing committee may meet at the State Capitol and do
13any and all things necessary or convenient to enable it to exercise
14the powers and perform the duties herein granted to it, and may
15expend such money as may be made available by the Senate for
16that purpose, except that no committee may incur any indebtedness
17unless money has been first made available therefor.

1819Funerals
20

2117.5. The Chair or Vice Chair of the Committee on Rules may
22designate any one or more of the Members of the Senate as a Senate
23committee to attend funerals in appropriate circumstances. The
24Members so designated may receive expenses as provided in Joint
25Rule 35.

26The Chair or Vice Chair of the Committee on Rules, or any
27Member of the Senate designated by either of these officers, may
28incur such expense as may be necessary for the purchase on behalf
29of the Senate of suitable floral pieces for the funeral.

30All expenses incurred pursuant to this rule shall be paid out of
31the money allocated from the Senate Operating Fund to the
32Committee on Rules and disbursed, after certification by the Chair
33or Vice Chair of the committee or by the committee’s disbursing
34officer appointed and designated therefor by the committee, upon
35warrants drawn by the Controller upon the Treasury.

P24   1Expenditures
2

318. A member of a committee may not incur any expense
4chargeable to the Senate unless authorized by resolution of the
5Senate.

6The Committee on Rules shall provide, by rules and regulations,
7for the manner of authorizing expenditures by Members,
8committees, and officers and employees of the Senate that are not
9otherwise authorized by law, these rules, or the Joint Rules of the
10Senate and Assembly, and for the payment of the expenditures
11from the Senate Operating Fund upon certification of claims
12therefor to the Controller by the Committee on Rules or its
13authorized representative.

1415Printing of Reports
16

1718.5. All requests for the printing of reports of Senate
18committees shall be made to the Committee on Rules.

19The Committee on Rules shall determine if the report is to be
20printed, the number of copies needed, and whether or not the report
21shall be printed in the Journal.

22If the report is to be printed by the Office of State Publishing, it
23shall hold the type for each Senate committee report for a period
24of 90 days from the date of the first printing or for such other time
25as the Committee on Rules deems necessary.

2627Procedures and Rules
28

29Resolutions and Constitutional Amendments
30

3119. Joint, concurrent, and Senate resolutions, and constitutional
32amendments shall be treated the same as bills under these rules,
33except that they shall have only one official reading, which reading
34shall occur after they have been reported by committee.

3536Parliamentary Rules
37

3820. In all cases not provided for by the Constitution, these rules,
39the Joint Rules of the Senate and Assembly, or statute, the authority
P25   1shall be the latest edition of Mason’s Manual or the custom and
2usage of the Senate.

34Suspension of Rules or Amending of Rules
5

621. A standing rule of the Senate may not be adopted, amended,
7or repealed except upon an affirmative vote of a majority of the
8membership of the Senate, one day’s notice being given, except
9that any rule not requiring more than a majority vote may be
10temporarily suspended without that notice by a vote of a majority
11of the membership of the Senate. A rule requiring a two-thirds
12vote on any question may be amended only by a two-thirds vote
13on one day’s notice, except that a rule requiring a two-thirds vote
14may be temporarily suspended without that notice by a two-thirds
15vote.

16All proposed amendments to these rules shall, upon presentation,
17be referred to the Committee on Rules without debate.

1819Suspension of the Joint Rules
20

2121.1. Pursuant to Joint Rule 33, a joint rule may not be
22suspended by the Senate except with the concurrence of 27
23Members unless a lower vote is prescribed by these rules or the
24Joint Rules of the Senate and the Assembly.

2526Permission of Committee on Rules
27

2821.2. Notwithstanding Rule 21 or 21.1, a Senate or Joint Rule
29may not be suspended unless the Committee on Rules determines
30that an extraordinary circumstance exists that justifies the
31suspension.

3233Rules Governing Standing Committees
34

3521.5. Except as otherwise provided in these rules, standing
36committees of the Senate shall be governed as follows:

37(a) The officers of each Senate committee shall be a chair, vice
38chair, and secretary.

39(b) The chair shall preside at meetings when present except
40when the committee is considering a bill of which he or she is the
P26   1sole author or the lead author. Whenever the chair is not presiding,
2the vice chair shall assume the duties of the chair. In the absence
3of both, a member designated by the chair shall preside.

4(c) The secretary shall keep a complete record of the meetings
5and actions taken by the committee. Bills and other measures
6favorably acted upon shall be reported to the Senate as
7expeditiously as the reports can be prepared.

8(d) The committee shall meet in regular session on the day and
9hour designated by the Committee on Rules. Adjourned meetings
10or special meetings shall be held at the time fixed in the adjourning
11motion, or, for a special meeting, on the call of the chair.

12(e) A special meeting may be called by the chair, with the
13approval of the Committee on Rules, by giving reasonable notice
14to all members of the committee, either in writing or by telephone,
15specifying the purpose of the meeting, the time and place thereof,
16and the matters to be considered at the meeting. Notice of hearing
17of bills as required by subdivision (a) of Joint Rule 62 may also
18be given in the Daily File. A matter may not be considered at the
19special meeting unless specified in the notice.

20A special meeting shall be scheduled so as to permit all members
21of the committee to attend without conflict with other scheduled
22committee meetings.

23(f) A majority of the membership of the committee shall
24constitute a quorum. A vote of a majority of the membership of
25the committee shall be required to table a bill, remove it from the
26table, or reconsider a vote on a bill.

27(g) Action may not be taken on any measure outside of a duly
28constituted committee meeting.

29(h) The chair shall set the hearings of bills and arrange the
30calendar for committee hearings. Notice of hearing of any bill shall
31be given to the author and other persons requiring notice. A bill
32may not be considered in the absence of the author without his or
33her consent, except that a bill may be presented by the author’s
34representative who is authorized in writing.

35(i) A committee or a subcommittee thereof, by a majority vote
36of the membership of the committee, may meet in executive session
37for any purpose authorized by Section 9029 of the Government
38Code. Otherwise, all meetings shall be open and public.

39(j) The chair shall direct the order of presentation of the
40arguments for and against matters for consideration by the
P27   1committee, and shall permit questions to be asked by members of
2the committee in an orderly fashion and in keeping with proper
3decorum.

4(k) Further consideration of a bill that has been voted out of a
5committee or defeated shall be by reconsideration only, as follows:

6(1) A motion to reconsider a vote by which a bill is voted out
7shall be in order, and shall be voted upon at the same meeting. If
8the motion is carried by a vote of a majority of the membership of
9the committee, the bill may be considered at that meeting, provided
10the author is present, or at a subsequent meeting.

11(2) The procedure for reconsideration of a bill that has been
12defeated shall conform to the requirements of subdivision (a) of
13Joint Rule 62. Any bill as to which reconsideration has been
14granted pursuant to this paragraph may not be heard again until a
15subsequent meeting of the committee, after being calendared in
16the Daily File.

17(l) Any bill that has been laid on the table and is removed from
18the table at a later meeting may not be heard again until a
19subsequent meeting of the committee, after being calendared in
20the Daily File and after notice.

21(m) When a committee adopts proposed amendments to a bill,
22the bill may be taken up for vote at that meeting or, if the
23committee or author requests, sent out to print before final action.
24If the amendments are not in proper form, they shall be prepared
25and submitted to the chair for approval before being reported to
26the Desk. Amendments submitted by the author that, in the opinion
27of the committee chair, are major or substantial shall be submitted
28to the committee at least two legislative days before the bill is
29scheduled for hearing.

30(n) A bill may not be set for hearing, nor may any notice thereof
31be published, by a Senate committee until the bill has been referred
32to the committee by the Committee on Rules.

33(o) The chair may appoint, with the permission of the Committee
34on Rules, subcommittees of one or more members to consider and
35recommend to the full committee action on matters as may be
36assigned to the subcommittee for consideration from time to time
37by the chair. The chair may assign and reassign members of, and
38matters to, the various subcommittees. The recommendation of a
39subcommittee may be accepted by a vote of a majority of the
40members of the committee.

P28   1(p) In all cases not provided for by this rule, the Senate Rules,
2the Joint Rules of the Senate and Assembly, or statute, the authority
3shall be the latest edition of Mason’s Manual.

45Additional Rules
6

721.6. Committees may adopt additional rules that are not in
8conflict with Rule 21.5 or other rules.

910Reporting Measures Out of Committee
11

1221.7. The vote of a majority of the membership of a standing
13committee shall be required to report a bill, constitutional
14amendment, concurrent resolution, or joint resolution out of
15committee.

16A vote of a majority of all members of a standing committee
17who are present and voting shall be required to report a Senate
18resolution out of committee.

1920Press Participation
21

2221.8. Accredited press representatives may not be excluded
23from any public legislative meeting or hearing, and may not be
24prohibited from taking photographs of, televising, or recording the
25committee or house hearings, subject to the following conditions:

26(1) This rule extends to all public legislative meetings.

27(2) Lights may be used only when cameras are filming and,
28when possible, proceedings in hearing rooms and the chamber
29shall be filmed without lights.

30(3) Every effort should be made to set up filming equipment
31before hearings or sessions begin.

32(4) The committee chair or the Committee on Rules shall be
33notified, as far in advance of the proceedings as possible, that
34recordings and television cameras will be present and filming.

35(5) To the extent practical, flash cameras shall not be used.

36(6) Photographs shall be taken in an orderly and expeditious
37manner so as to cause the least possible inconvenience to the
38committee or to the Members in the chamber.

39However, the chair of a committee may request any person to
40relocate or remove any object, or discontinue the use of any
P29   1equipment, that is situated or used in a manner so as to disrupt the
2proceedings or to create a potential danger to, or substantially
3obstruct the view of, members of the committee or the public.

4In case any person fails to respond to a request of the chair to
5relocate, remove, or discontinue the use of the objects or
6equipment, the committee may, by majority vote, require it.

78Introduction and Reference of Measures
9

10Introduction, First Reading, and Reference of Measures
11

1222. Any Senator desiring to introduce a bill, constitutional
13amendment, concurrent resolution, joint resolution, or Senate
14resolution shall send it to the Senate Desk.

15When received at the Secretary’s desk, a bill shall, under the
16proper order of business, be numbered, read, printed, and referred
17by the Committee on Rules to a standing committee. The
18Committee on Rules shall check all Assembly measures before
19reference to committee and shall designate the committee to which
20they shall be referred.

21All joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, and Senate
22resolutions shall be automatically referred to the Committee on
23Rules upon introduction, and may be rereferred to any other
24 standing committee upon the vote of a majority of the membership
25of the Committee on Rules.

26Unless otherwise ordered by the Senate without debate, the
27assignment of the measure shall then be complete and, after
28printing, the Secretary shall deliver the measure to the committee
29designated by the Committee on Rules.

30Under the order of Messages from the Assembly, the Secretary
31shall read each Assembly bill the first time and shall read the name
32of the committee to which the bill has been assigned by the
33Committee on Rules. Unless otherwise ordered by the Senate
34without debate the assignment of the bill shall then be complete,
35and the Secretary shall deliver the bill to the committee so
36designated.

P30   1Bill Introduction Limitation
2

322.5. (a) A Member of the Senate may introduce or
4subsequently author not more than 40 bills in the regular session.

5(b) This rule may be suspended with respect to a particular bill
6by approval of the Committee on Rules.

7(c) This rule does not apply to a constitutional amendment, any
8type of resolution, or a bill introduced by a committee.

910Short Title
11

1222.6. A bill may not add a short title that names a current or
13former Member of the Legislature.

1415Introduction of Bills by a Committee
16

1723. (a) A standing committee may introduce a bill germane to
18any subject within the proper consideration of the committee in
19the same manner as any Member. A committee bill shall contain
20the signatures of all of the members of the committee.

21(b) A committee may amend into a bill related provisions
22germane to the subject and embraced within the title and, with the
23consent of the author, may constitute that bill a committee bill.

2425Bill Introduction Deadline
26

2723.5. The Senate Desk shall remain open for the introduction
28of bills from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on the days designated in
29subdivision (a) of Joint Rule 54 as the deadlines for the introduction
30of bills in the first and second years of the regular session.

3132Introduction of Bills and Resolutions at Special Sessions
33

3424. Whenever, at any special session, a bill or resolution is
35received at the Desk, under the order of Introduction of Bills, it
36shall be referred to the Committee on Rules, which shall decide
37whether or not the bill or resolution can properly be considered at
38the session. If, in the judgment of the Committee on Rules, the bill
39or resolution can be considered, the committee shall report the bill
40or resolution back and designate the committee to which it shall
P31   1be assigned. Thereafter the bill or resolution shall be assigned a
2number by the Secretary, read the first time, and referred to the
3committee recommended by the Committee on Rules unless
4otherwise referred on motion without debate.

56Resolutions
7

824.5. A Senate concurrent resolution or Senate resolution may
9be introduced relating to a present or former state or federal elected
10official or a member of his or her immediate family. Other
11resolutions for the purpose of commendation or congratulation of
12any person, group, or organization, or for the purpose of expressing
13sympathy, regret, or sorrow on the death of any person, shall be
14prepared as Rules Committee resolutions and presented to the
15Committee on Rules for appropriate action.

16The Committee on Rules may approve exceptions to this rule
17for Senate resolutions. The Secretary may not accept for
18introduction any Senate resolution that is contrary to this rule
19unless it is accompanied by the approval of the Committee on
20Rules.

2122Senate Resolutions
23

2425. All Senate resolutions eligible to be introduced under the
25rules, upon being presented, shall be given a number by the
26Secretary. A Senate resolution shall be printed, and indexed in the
27History and Journal.

2829Bills Authored by a Former Member
30

3126. Whenever a bill in the Senate is authored by an individual
32who is no longer a Member of the Legislature, upon a request of
33a committee or current Member of the house in which the bill was
34introduced, the Senate Committee on Rules may authorize that
35committee or Member to be the author of that bill. Absent that
36authorization, action may not be taken by a committee or the Senate
37with respect to a bill authored by a former Member.

P32   1Bills in Committee
2

3Author’s Amendments
4

527. Upon request of the author of a bill, the chair of the
6committee to which the bill has been referred may, by his or her
7individual action taken independently of any committee meeting,
8 cause the bill to be reported to the Senate with the recommendation
9that amendments submitted by the author be adopted and the bill
10be reprinted as amended and rereferred to the committee.

1112Withdrawing a Bill From Committee
13

1428. A bill or resolution may not be withdrawn from committee
15except upon written notice being first given to the Committee on
16Rules and by 21 votes of the Senate.

1718Consent Calendar
19

2028.3. (a) If a Senate bill or Assembly bill is amended in the
21Senate to create a new bill or to rewrite the bill, a standing
22committee may not place the bill on its consent calendar, and may
23not report the bill out of committee with the recommendation that
24it be placed on the consent calendar on the floor.

25(b) For purposes of this rule, an amendment creates a new bill
26or rewrites the bill if the amendment (1) changes the subject of the
27bill to a new or different subject, or (2) adds a new subject to the
28bill that is different from, and not related to, the contents of the
29bill.

3031Referral of Bills
32

3328.4. (a) If a Senate bill or Assembly bill is amended in the
34Committee on Appropriations to create a new bill or to rewrite the
35bill and the chair of the committee determines pursuant to Senate
36Rule 28.8 that (1) any additional state costs are not significant and
37do not and will not require the appropriation of additional state
38funds, and (2) the bill will cause no significant reduction in
39revenues, the bill shall be reported to the Senate with the
P33   1recommendation that it be placed on second reading, except that
2the bill first shall be referred to the Committee on Rules. Upon
3receipt of the bill, the Committee on Rules shall either refer the
4bill to an appropriate policy committee or order that the bill be
5placed on second reading.

6(b) For purposes of this rule, an amendment creates a new bill
7or rewrites the bill if the amendment (1) changes the subject of the
8bill to a new or different subject, or (2) adds a new subject to the
9bill that is different from, and not related to, the contents of the
10bill.

1112Measures to be Authored
13

1428.5. Each bill, constitutional amendment, or resolution shall
15be authored by a Member or committee of the Legislature before
16it is considered or voted on by a committee or the Senate. Each
17amendment to a bill, constitutional amendment, or resolution shall
18be signed by a Member or committee of the Legislature prior to
19adoption by the Senate. A bill may be authored only by a Member
20or committee of the house of origin. A Member other than a
21Member of the house of origin may be a “principal coauthor” or
22“coauthor.”

2324Vote in Committee
25

2628.7. Voting on the disposition of bills, constitutional
27amendments, concurrent resolutions, and joint resolutions by
28committees shall be by rollcall vote only. A rollcall vote shall be
29taken on a motion to amend only if requested by any member of
30the committee or the author of the measure. All rollcall votes taken
31in committees shall be promptly transmitted by their respective
32chairs to the Secretary of the Senate, who shall cause a record of
33the rollcall votes to be printed in the Journal.

34This rule does not apply to:

35(a) Procedural motions that do not have the effect of disposing
36of a bill.

37(b) Withdrawal of a bill from a committee calendar at the request
38of an author.

39(c) A committee’s return of a bill to the Senate, if the bill has
40not been voted on by the committee.

P34   1(d) The assignment of bills to committee.

2On a legislative day when the President pro Tempore or Minority
3Floor Leader is in attendance, he or she, in the absence of any
4objection, may instruct the committee secretary of a committee of
5which he or she is a member to add his or her vote to any
6previously announced vote that was taken while he or she was
7performing the responsibilities of the office of President pro
8Tempore or Minority Floor Leader, provided the outcome of the
9vote is not thereby changed. This provision does not apply to any
10rollcall after adjournment of the legislative day during which the
11rollcall in question was taken. The intent of this paragraph is to
12allow the President pro Tempore and the Minority Floor Leader
13to carry out the unique and special duties of their offices without
14losing the opportunity to vote on matters before the committees
15of which they are members.

1617Appropriations Committee
18

1928.8. Any bill referred to the Committee on Appropriations
20pursuant to Joint Rule 10.5 that does not appropriate money may
21not be set for hearing and shall, along with any nonsubstantive
22amendments, promptly be reported to the Senate with the
23recommendation it be placed on second reading if the chair of the
24committee determines that (a) any additional state costs are not
25significant and do not and will not require the appropriation of
26additional state funds, and (b) the bill will cause no significant
27reduction in revenues.

2829State-Mandated Local Program Bills
30

3128.9. (a) Any bill having a digest that, pursuant to Section
3217575 of the Government Code, indicates that the bill imposes a
33state-mandated local program on local agencies or school districts
34shall be rereferred to the Committee on Appropriations. The bill
35may not be rereferred to the Committee on Governance and
36Finance.

37(b) Any bill rereferred to the Committee on Appropriations
38pursuant to this rule that does not appropriate money and does not
39contain a complete disclaimer of all of the provisions of Section
40905.2 of, and Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division
P35   14 of Title 2 of, the Government Code, need not be set for hearing
2and may, along with any nonsubstantive amendments, be reported
3to the Senate with the recommendation that it be placed on second
4reading if the chair of the committee determines, after consideration
5of the analyses of local costs prepared by the Legislative Analyst
6and the Department of Finance, that (1) any additional local costs
7are not significant and (2) the bill will cause no significant
8reduction in local revenues.

9For the purposes of this rule, “complete disclaimer” means a
10provision in a bill that prohibits local agencies and school districts
11from filing claims with the Commission on State Mandates for
12reimbursement for the costs of unfunded mandated programs or
13services.

14(c) Whenever the Assembly amends and passes a Senate bill
15and the Senate must concur in the amendments, upon the request
16of any Senator the bill shall be rereferred to the Committee on
17Appropriations if, based upon the Legislative Counsel’s Digest of
18the Assembly amendments or an analysis prepared pursuant to
19Rule 29.8, the bill (1) imposes state-mandated local costs without
20providing adequate reimbursement, or (2) contains a complete
21disclaimer. The Committee on Appropriations shall make a
22recommendation to the Senate regarding whether the Senate should
23concur in the Assembly amendments.

24(d) Any bill referred to the Committee on Appropriations solely
25pursuant to this rule, and that otherwise would not be rereferred
26to the committee pursuant to Joint Rule 10.5, is not subject to
27subparagraph (a)(1), (a)(6), (b)(3), or (b)(8) of Joint Rule 61.

2829Display Bills
30

3128.10. A display bill shall not be heard or acted on in any
32committee, or voted on by the Senate. For purposes of this rule,
33“display bill” means a bill that sets forth substantive changes in
34or additions to existing law but states in the text of the bill that its
35provisions are set forth for display purposes only, or words of like
36effect.

P36   1Consideration of Bills
2

3Order of Making Files
4

529. When bills are reported from committee they shall be placed
6upon the Daily File, to be kept by the Secretary as follows: All
7bills when reported to the Senate by the committee shall be placed
8at the foot of the Second Reading Senate or Assembly File, in the
9order in which the reports are made and, after the second reading,
10shall be placed at the foot of the Senate or Assembly Third Reading
11File, in the order of reading. Unless otherwise ordered by the
12Senate the File shall be taken up in the following order: Senate
13Second Reading File, Assembly Second Reading File, Special
14 Orders, Unfinished Business, Senate Third Reading File, Assembly
15Third Reading File. The bills upon the third reading shall be
16considered in the order in which they appear upon the File, unless
17otherwise ordered by the Senate.

18A Senate bill returned from the Assembly for concurrence in
19Assembly amendments may not be considered until it appears
20under Unfinished Business on the Daily File pursuant to Joint Rule
2126.5 and an analysis is provided to each Senator pursuant to Senate
22Rule 29.8.

23An inactive file shall be kept, to which bills and resolutions may
24be transferred at the request of the author, or on motion. Bills shall
25be so transferred when they have been passed on third reading file
26without action three successive times. Bills and resolutions may
27be transferred from the inactive file to the second reading file on
28motion and, after being read the second time, the bills shall take
29their place regularly on third reading file and be available for
30consideration and passage.

31Bills, resolutions, and other questions may be transferred from
32the unfinished business file to the inactive file upon request or
33motion and may be returned to the unfinished business file by
34request or on motion.

35Placement of any question on the inactive file shall not prejudice
36the question.

P37   1Strike From File
2

329.2. A motion to strike any bill, resolution, or other question
4from the File shall require 21 votes. That bill, resolution, or other
5question may not be acted upon again during the session.

67Measures Amended From the Floor
8

929.3. (a) The consideration of a bill, constitutional amendment,
10concurrent resolution, joint resolution, or Senate resolution that
11has been amended by amendments offered from the floor, except
12committee amendments reported with measures or amendments
13offered with a motion to amend and rerefer to committee, is not
14in order until the amended measure has been in print for not less
15than one legislative day. Any measure so amended shall be placed
16on the second reading file.

17(b) A bill, constitutional amendment, concurrent resolution,
18joint resolution, or Senate resolution shall not be recommended
19for amendment by any committee after the last day specified in
20the Joint Rules for the 2015-16 Regular Session to amend bills on
21the floor, as specified in paragraph (13) of subdivision (a) of Joint
22Rule 61 for odd-numbered years, and in paragraph (16) of
23subdivision (b) of Joint Rule 61 for even-numbered years.

2425Bills Approving Memoranda of Understanding
26

2729.4. The Senate may not pass a bill that approves a
28memorandum of understanding, for purposes of Section 3517.5
29and following of the Government Code, until the final version of
30the subject memorandum of understanding is received by the
31Secretary of the Senate and made available for review for seven
32legislative days and its availability for review noted in the Senate
33Daily Journal for that period.

3435Amended Forms of Measures
36

3729.5. No bill, constitutional amendment, concurrent resolution,
38joint resolution, or Senate resolution may be considered for passage
39unless and until a copy of the measure as last amended is on the
40desk of each Member in printed or electronic form.

P38   1Conference Reports
2

329.6. (a) No conference committee on any bill, other than the
4Budget Bill and the budget implementation bills, may approve any
5substantial policy change in any bill if that substantial policy
6change has been defeated in a policy committee of the Senate
7during the current legislative session.

8(b) For purposes of subdivision (d) of Joint Rule 29.5, the term
9“heard” means that a printed bill with substantially similar language
10was before the appropriate committee and taken up at a regular or
11special hearing of the committee during the current legislative
12session, or that an amendment, which was drafted and given a
13request number or approved as to form by Legislative Counsel,
14was before the committee and taken up at a regular or special
15hearing of the committee.

1617Conference Committee Meetings
18

1929.7. Before the adoption of a conference report by the Senate,
20any Senator may raise a point of order and put the following
21question to the chair of the Committee on Conference from the
22Senate: “Did the Committee on Conference meet at a public
23meeting attended by at least two of the Assembly Members and
24two of the Senate Members of the Committee on Conference and
25adopt the conference report by an affirmative rollcall vote of not
26less than two of the Assembly Members and two of the Senate
27Members constituting the Committee on Conference?” If the chair
28answers this question in the negative, the conference report shall
29be returned to the Committee on Conference and may not be further
30considered by the Senate until the committee has met at a public
31meeting attended by at least two of the Assembly Members and
32two of the Senate Members of the committee, and has adopted the
33conference report by an affirmative rollcall vote of not less than
34two of the Assembly Members and two of the Senate Members
35 constituting the committee.

P39   1Analysis of Measures, Conference Reports, and Floor
2Amendments
3

429.8. (a) With the exception of the Budget Bill and budget
5implementation bills, no bill, constitutional amendment, concurrent
6resolution, joint resolution, Senate resolution, unfinished business
7item, or report of a conference committee may be considered unless
8and until an analysis thereof has been prepared by the Office of
9Senate Floor Analyses and placed upon the desks of the Senators,
10unless otherwise ordered by the President pro Tempore.

11(b) An amendment from the floor is not in order unless and until
12the amendment has been reviewed by the Office of Senate Floor
13Analyses. Upon a request by the Chair or Vice Chair of the
14Committee on Rules, or by the lead author of the measure to which
15a substantive amendment is proposed from the floor, an analysis
16thereof shall be prepared by the Office of Senate Floor Analyses
17and placed upon the desks of the Senators.

1819Consideration of Conference Reports
20

2129.9. No conference report may be adopted by the Senate until
22it has been in print for two days prior to being taken up by the
23Senate.

2425Referral of Bills
26

2729.10. (a) If the analysis, prepared in accordance with
28subdivision (b) of Rule 29.8, of proposed floor amendments to a
29bill, other than the Budget Bill, discloses that the amendments
30create a new bill or rewrite the current form of the bill, upon
31adoption of the amendments the bill shall be reprinted and referred
32to the Committee on Rules.

33(b) When amendments adopted pursuant to subdivision (a)
34rewrite the bill, as specified in subdivision (e), the Committee on
35Rules shall refer the bill to a standing committee. The standing
36committee shall meet and act upon the bill no later than the next
37scheduled hearing of the committee. If the bill is referred to a
38standing committee during a time when standing committees are
39not meeting, the standing committee shall meet and act upon the
40bill as directed by the Committee on Rules and, in any event, within
P40   1two legislative days of receipt of the bill. Upon receipt of the bill,
2the committee by a vote of a majority of the membership may do
3any of the following: (1) hold the bill, (2) return the bill to the
4Senate floor for consideration, or (3) rerefer the bill to fiscal
5committee pursuant to Joint Rule 10.5.

6If the bill is referred to a standing committee during the time
7when no committee may meet, the Committee on Rules shall grant
8permission to suspend the joint rule to allow the committee to meet
9as directed by the Committee on Rules.

10If the bill is referred to the Committee on Rules on the last
11legislative day preceding a joint recess, the Committee on Rules
12and, if the bill is referred to a standing committee, the standing
13committee, shall meet and act upon the bill before adjourning for
14the recess. If the bill is referred to the Committee on Rules on any
15of the three legislative days preceding February 1 or September 1
16of an even-numbered year, the Committee on Rules and, if the bill
17is referred to a standing committee, the standing committee, shall
18meet and act upon the bill on the same legislative day.

19(c) When amendments adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) create
20a new bill, as specified in subdivision (f), the bill shall be referred
21to the Committee on Rules. The Committee on Rules, by a vote
22of a majority of its membership may either (1) hold the bill, or (2)
23refer the bill to the appropriate standing committee subject to all
24of the time and other limitations provided in these rules and the
25Joint Rules for the hearing and passage of bills.

26(d) If the analysis, prepared in accordance with subdivision (a)
27of Rule 29.8, of a bill, other than the Budget Bill, that is returned
28to the Senate for a vote on concurrence discloses that the Assembly
29amendments create a new bill or rewrite the bill as passed by the
30Senate, the bill shall be referred to the Committee on Rules. The
31Committee on Rules by a vote of a majority of its membership
32may either (1) refer the bill to an appropriate standing committee,
33(2) recommend that the bill be taken up for consideration of the
34Assembly amendments, or (3) hold the bill.

35If the bill is referred to a standing committee, the committee
36shall meet and act upon the bill no later than the next scheduled
37hearing of the committee. If the bill is referred to a standing
38committee during a time when standing committees are not
39meeting, the standing committee shall meet and act upon the bill
40as directed by the Committee on Rules and, in any event, within
P41   1two legislative days of receipt of the bill. Upon receipt of the bill,
2the standing committee by a majority vote of the membership may
3either (1) hold the bill, or (2) return the bill to the Senate floor for
4consideration of the bill as amended in the Assembly.

5If the bill is referred to a standing committee during the time
6when no committee may meet, the Committee on Rules shall grant
7permission to suspend the joint rule to allow the committee to meet
8as directed by the Committee on Rules.

9If the bill is referred to the Committee on Rules on the last
10legislative day preceding a joint recess, the Committee on Rules
11and, if the bill is referred to a standing committee, the standing
12committee, shall meet and act upon the bill before adjourning for
13the recess. If the bill is referred to the Committee on Rules on any
14of the three legislative days preceding February 1 or September 1
15of an even-numbered year, the Committee on Rules and, if the bill
16is referred to a standing committee, the standing committee, shall
17meet and act upon the bill on the same legislative day.

18(e) An amendment rewrites a bill if the amendment (1) is
19germane to the previous version of the bill but adds a new subject
20to the bill that is different from, but related to, the contents of the
21bill, or (2) is not described in subdivision (f) and makes a change
22of fiscal or policy significance that may be appropriate for review
23by a standing committee.

24(f) An amendment creates a new bill if the amendment changes
25the subject of the bill to a new or different subject.

2627Special Order
28

2930. Any measure or subject may, by vote of a majority of those
30voting, be made a special order and, when the time fixed for its
31consideration arrives, he or she who is presiding shall lay it before
32the Senate.

3334Messages From the Governor or Assembly
35

3631. Messages from the Governor or from the Assembly may
37be introduced at any stage of business except while a question is
38being put, while the ayes and noes are being called, or while a
39Senator is addressing the Senate.

P42   1Messages from the Governor or from the Assembly may be
2considered when indicated in the order of business or at any other
3time by unanimous consent or upon motion.

45Engrossing Measures
6

732. All Senate bills, constitutional amendments, and joint and
8concurrent resolutions shall be engrossed after each amendment
9and before final action is taken on them in the Senate. Engrossment
10shall consist of comparing the printed engrossed measure with the
11original measure introduced and any amendments adopted to
12ascertain that it is correct, and making necessary technical
13corrections. When a measure is reported correctly engrossed it
14shall be substituted for the original measure.

1516Enrolling Measures
17

1833. All Senate measures shall be enrolled immediately following
19their final passage and receipt from the Assembly. An enrolled
20copy of every bill, constitutional amendment, or resolution shall
21be printed and examined to ascertain that it is a true and accurate
22copy of the measure as it was passed. It shall then be authenticated
23by the signature of the Secretary of the Senate or his or her
24designee, and the Chief Clerk of the Assembly or his or her
25designee, and transmitted to the Governor or Secretary of State,
26as the case may be.

2728Debate
29

30Statement of Motion
31

3234. A motion may not be debated until it is distinctly announced
33by he or she who is presiding, and it shall be reduced to writing if
34desired by any Senator, and read by the Secretary, before it is
35debated.

3637Regulations as to Speaking
38

3935. (a) When a Senator desires to address the Senate, he or she
40 shall rise in his or her place, address he or she who is presiding,
P43   1and, when recognized, proceed to speak through the public address
2system.

3(b) A Senator may not speak more than twice in any one debate
4on the same day, and at the same stage of the bill, without leave;
5Senators who have once spoken are not again entitled to the floor
6(except for explanation) so long as any Senator who has not spoken
7desires to speak.

8(c) When two or more Senators arise at the same time to address
9the Senate, he or she who is presiding shall designate the Senator
10who is entitled to the floor.

11(d) A Senator may not be interrupted when speaking, and no
12question may be asked of him or her except through he or she who
13is presiding.

14(e) The author of a bill, motion, or resolution shall have the
15privilege of closing the debate.

1617Order in Debate
18

1936. When a Senator is called to order he or she shall sit down
20until he or she who is presiding has determined whether or not he
21or she is in order. Every question of order shall be decided by he
22or she who is presiding, subject to an appeal to the Senate by any
23Senator. If a Senator is called to order for words spoken, the
24objectionable language shall immediately be taken down in writing
25by the Secretary of the Senate.

2627Right to Address the Senate
28

2937. A person other than a Member of the Senate may not
30address the Senate while it is in session, except that the Senate
31may resolve itself into a Committee of the Whole and, while sitting
32as a Committee of the Whole, may be addressed by persons other
33than Members.

P44   1Questions and Motions
2

3Amendments to Measures
4

538. When amendments to a measure are reported by a
6committee or offered from the floor, the amendments shall be
7submitted in writing.

8Adoption of amendments to any measure in the Senate prior to
9third reading, other than by rollcall, shall not preclude subsequent
10consideration, in committee or on the third reading of the measure,
11of the amendments or any part thereof by the Senate.

1213Amendments to Be Germane
14

1538.5. Every amendment proposed must be germane. In order
16to be germane, an amendment must relate to the same subject as
17the original bill, resolution, or other question under consideration.

18A point of order may be raised that the proposed amendment or
19an amendment now in the bill, resolution, or other question under
20consideration is not germane, so long as the question is within
21control of the body. In that case the President pro Tempore shall
22decide whether the point of order is well taken. In the absence of
23the President pro Tempore, the Vice Chair of the Committee on
24Rules shall decide whether the point of order is well taken. If, in
25the opinion of the President pro Tempore or the Vice Chair of the
26Committee on Rules, the point of order is well taken, the question
27of germaneness shall on his or her motion be referred to the
28Committee on Rules for determination. The Committee on Rules
29shall make its determination by the following legislative day. If
30the point of order is raised and referral is made on the last
31 legislative day preceding a joint recess, the Committee on Rules
32shall make its determination before adjourning for the recess.

33The proposition shall remain on file until the determination is
34made. If, upon consideration of the matter, the Committee on Rules
35determines that the amendment is not germane, the bill, resolution,
36or other question shall be stricken from the file and may not be
37acted upon during the remainder of the session, provided that the
38author of a bill, resolution, or other question shall be given the
39opportunity to amend the bill, resolution, or other question to delete
P45   1the portions that are not germane, in which case the bill, resolution,
2or other question may continue to be acted upon. If the Committee
3on Rules determines that the amendment is germane, the bill,
4resolution, or other question may thereafter be acted upon by the
5house.

6Notwithstanding Rule 21, this rule may not be suspended unless
7the Committee on Rules determines that an extraordinary
8circumstance and overwhelming public interest exist that justify
9the suspension.

1011Amendments From the Floor
12

1338.6. Amendments to a bill, constitutional amendment,
14concurrent resolution, joint resolution, or Senate resolution offered
15from the floor, except committee amendments reported with
16measures or amendments offered with a motion to amend and
17rerefer to committee, are not in order unless and until a copy of
18the proposed amendments provided by the author has been placed
19upon the desks of the Members.

2021Motion to Lay on the Table
22

2339. When an amendment proposed to any pending measure is
24laid on the table, it may not carry with it or prejudice the measure.

2526Division of a Question
27

2840. If a question in debate contains more than one distinct
29proposition, any Senator may have the same divided.

3031The Previous Question
32

3341. The previous question shall be put in the following form:
34“Shall the question be now put?” It shall require a majority vote
35of the Senators present, and its effect shall be to put an end to all
36the debate except that the author of the bill or the amendment shall
37have the right to close, and the question under discussion shall
38thereupon be immediately put to a vote.

P46   1Call of the Senate
2

342. Upon a motion being carried for a call of the Senate, he or
4she who is presiding shall immediately order the doors to be closed,
5and shall direct the Secretary to call the names of the absentees as
6disclosed by the last previous rollcall. Thereupon, a Member may
7not be permitted to leave the Senate Chamber except by written
8permission of the President pro Tempore or, in his or her absence,
9the Vice Chair of the Committee on Rules, or, in his or her absence,
10another member of the Committee on Rules designated for that
11purpose by the President pro Tempore or the Vice Chair of the
12Committee on Rules. Those Members who are found to be absent
13and for whom no excuse or insufficient excuses are made may, by
14order of those present, be taken into custody, as they appear, or
15may be sent for and then taken into custody by the Sergeant at
16Arms whenever found, or by special messenger to be appointed
17for that purpose. In the absence of a quorum, a majority of the
18Members present may order a rollcall of the Senate and compel
19the attendance of absentees in the manner above provided.

20A call of the Senate may be ordered after the roll has been called
21and prior to the announcement of the vote. A call of the Senate
22may be dispensed with at any time upon a majority vote of the
23Senators present, that action to become effective upon completion
24of the rollcall and the announcement of the vote upon the matter
25for which the call was ordered.

26A recess may not be taken during a call of the Senate. During
27any call, the call may be made to apply also to other items of
28business by a motion made and adopted by a majority vote of the
29Members present. Under those circumstances, when the call of the
30Senate is dispensed with as to any item of business, the call is
31deemed to be continued in effect until other items of business that
32have been made subject to the call by a majority of the Members
33present have been acted upon. When a call of the Senate is ordered,
34pending the announcement of the vote upon the completion of a
35 rollcall, the pending rollcall shall become unfinished business, the
36consideration of which shall be continued until further proceedings
37under the call of the Senate are dispensed with, when it will
38forthwith become the order of business before the Senate.

39A motion to adjourn is not in order during a call of the Senate.

P47   1Reconsideration
2

343. On the day on which a vote has been taken on any question,
4a motion to reconsider the vote may be made by any Member.
5Reconsideration may be granted only once.

6The motion may be considered on the day made or on the
7succeeding legislative day, but may not be further postponed
8without the concurrence of 30 Members.

9A vote by which a bill was passed may not be reconsidered on
10the last legislative day preceding the interim study joint recess or
11the final recess, and a vote by which the bill was passed may not
12be reconsidered on a Senate bill introduced during the first year
13of the biennium of the legislative session on January 31, or on the
14last legislative day immediately preceding January 31, of an
15even-numbered year.

16When reconsideration of the vote by which any bill has passed
17has been demanded, the Secretary may not transmit it to the
18Assembly until the demand has been disposed of or the time for
19reconsideration has expired, but if the bill has already been
20transmitted to the Assembly the demand for reconsideration shall
21be preceded by a motion to request the Assembly to return the bill.
22The motion shall be put to a vote immediately without debate and,
23if not adopted, shall preclude a demand for reconsideration.

24A demand to reconsider the vote on any debatable question opens
25the main question to debate, and the vote on the reconsideration
26shall be on the merits of the main question.

2728Voting by Senate
29

30Rescinding
31

3243.5. An action whereby a bill has been passed or defeated may
33not be rescinded without the concurrence of 27 Members.

3435Voting on Rollcall
36

3744. Whenever a rollcall is required by the Constitution or rules,
38or is ordered by the Senate or demanded by three Members, every
39Member within the Senate shall without debate answer “Aye” or
40“No” when his or her name is called.

P48   1The names of Members shall be called alphabetically.

2A Senator may not vote or change his or her vote after the
3announcement of the vote by the presiding officer.

4On a legislative day when the President pro Tempore or Minority
5Floor Leader is in attendance throughout a session, he or she, in
6the absence of any objection, may instruct the Secretary of the
7Senate to add his or her vote to any previously announced vote
8that was taken while he or she was performing the responsibilities
9of the office of President pro Tempore or Minority Floor Leader,
10provided the outcome of the vote is not thereby changed. This
11provision does not apply to any rollcall after adjournment of the
12legislative day during which the rollcall in question was taken.
13The intent of this paragraph is to allow the President pro Tempore
14and the Minority Floor Leader to carry out the unique and special
15duties of their offices without losing the opportunity to vote on
16matters before the Senate.

1718Excused From Voting
19

2045. When a Senator declines or fails to vote on call of his or
21her name, he or she may, after completion of the rollcall and before
22the announcement of the vote, be required to assign his or her
23reasons therefor and, the Senator having assigned them, the
24presiding officer shall submit the question to the Senate: “Shall
25the Senator, for the reasons assigned by him or her, be excused
26from voting?” which question shall be decided without debate.
27Unless the Senator is excused from voting he or she shall be
28required to vote.

2930Voting by Presiding Senator
31

3246. When any Member is presiding over the Senate, he or she
33shall vote on rollcall the same as though he or she were not
34presiding.

3536Vote Required
37

3847. Unless otherwise required by the Constitution, the Joint
39Rules of the Senate and Assembly, or these rules, any action that
P49   1can be taken by the Senate requires only a majority vote of the
2Senate, a quorum being present.

3The following actions require 32 votes:

4(1) To pass a bill amending specified provisions of the Tobacco
5Tax and Health Protection Act of 1988 (Prop. 99, Nov. 8, 1988;
6Sec. 30130, R.& T.C.).

7(2) To pass a bill amending the Clean Air and Transportation
8Improvement Act of 1990 (Prop. 116, June 5, 1990; Sec. 99605,
9P.U.C.).

10(3) To pass a bill amending the California Wildlife Protection
11Act of 1990 (Sec. 8, Prop. 117, June 5, 1990).

12The following actions require 30 votes:

13(4) To dispense with the constitutional provision requiring a
1430-calendar-day delay after introduction before a bill may be heard
15by any committee or acted upon by either house (Constitution,
16Art. IV, Sec. 8(a)).

17(5) To postpone the reconsideration of a vote beyond the first
18legislative day succeeding the day the motion was made.

19The following action requires 28 votes:

20(6) To pass a bill amending the statutory provisions, other than
21the bond provisions, of the California Stem Cell Research and
22Cures Act (Sec. 8, Prop. 71, Nov. 2, 2004).

23(7) To pass a bill amending the statutory provisions of the
24Victims’ Bill of Rights Act (Sec. 9, Prop. 9, Nov. 4, 2008).

25The following actions require 27 votes:

26(8) To pass an urgency clause and urgency statute (Constitution,
27Art. IV, Sec. 8(d)).

28(9) To dispense with the constitutional provision requiring the
29reading of bills on three several days (Constitution, Art. IV, Sec.
308(b)).

31(10) To pass a bill over the Governor’s veto (Constitution, Art.
32IV, Sec. 10).

33(11) To prescribe compensation and reimbursement for travel
34and living expenses of the Members of the Legislature
35(Constitution, Art. IV, Sec. 4).

36(12) To propose an amendment to or revision of the Constitution
37(Constitution, Art. XVIII, Secs. 1, 2).

38(13) To amend or withdraw a proposed legislative constitutional
39amendment or revision (Constitution, Art. XVIII, Sec. 1).

P50   1(14) To classify or exempt personal property for property
2taxation purposes (Constitution, Art. XIII, Sec. 2).

3(15) To permit an exemption of real property from taxation
4(Constitution, Art. XIII, Sec. 7).

5(16) To remove a member of the Public Utilities Commission
6(Constitution, Art. XII, Sec. 1).

7(17) To reconsider the vote by which a concurrent resolution
8proposing a constitutional amendment is defeated.

9(18) To rescind the action whereby a bill has been passed or
10defeated.

11(19) To suspend the rule against lobbying in the Senate
12Chamber.

13(20) To concur in Assembly amendments to, or adopt a report
14of a committee on conference concerning, a constitutional
15amendment or bill that requires 27 votes for passage.

16(21) To concur in Assembly amendments to, or adopt a report
17of a committee on conference concerning, a Senate bill that
18contains an item or items of appropriation subject to Section 12(d)
19of Article IV of the Constitution.

20(22) To amend an initiative statute that permits that action and
21requires 27 votes for passage.

22The following actions require 21 votes:

23(23) To adopt, amend, or suspend the rules, except as provided
24in Rule 21.

25(24) To pass a bill, unless under other rules a greater vote is
26required (Constitution, Art. IV, Sec. 8(b)).

27(25) To adopt a joint or concurrent resolution.

28(26) To reconsider a bill, or a joint or concurrent resolution.

29(27) To confirm an appointment by the Governor, unless a
30greater vote is required by statute, or to reconsider the same.

31(28) To recall a bill from committee.

32(29) To concur in Assembly amendments to, or adopt a report
33of a committee on conference concerning, a joint or concurrent
34resolution or bill that requires 21 votes for passage.

35(30) To change a rate of bank and corporation taxation, or tax
36on insurers, for state purposes (Constitution, Art. XIII, Secs. 27,
3728).

38(31) To strike from file.

39(32) To adopt a resolution that does not favor a Governor’s
40Reorganization Plan (Sec. 12080.5, Gov. Code).

P51   1Actions requiring 14 votes:

2(33) To reconsider a vote by which a concurrent resolution
3proposing a constitutional amendment was adopted.

45Vote Required for Amendments
6

748. A constitutional amendment or bill requiring a vote of
8two-thirds of the Members elected to the Senate for final adoption
9or passage may be amended by a majority of those voting.

1011Contents of Senate Journal
12

13Proceedings to Be Printed
14

1549. The proceedings of the Senate, when not acting as a
16Committee of the Whole, shall be entered in the Journal as
17concisely as possible, care being taken to record a true and accurate
18account of the proceedings.

19The Journal shall state the name of the Senator presenting each
20Assembly bill, concurrent or joint resolution, or constitutional
21amendment to the Senate for final action.

22Every vote of the Senate shall be recorded in the Journal.

2324Titles of Measures to Be Printed
25

2650. The titles of all bills, joint and concurrent resolutions, and
27constitutional amendments when introduced and when acted upon
28by the Senate, and a brief statement of the contents of each petition,
29memorial, or paper presented to the Senate, shall be printed in the
30Journal.

3132Other Matters to Be Printed
33

3451. Messages from the Governor (other than annual messages
35and inaugural addresses) shall be printed in the Journal, unless
36otherwise ordered by the Senate.

37Letters of transmittal presenting reports of committees and
38reports of state departments and agencies as shall be made to the
39Senate pursuant to law or resolution adopted by the Senate shall
P52   1be printed in the Journal, but the reports shall be printed in the
2Appendix to the Journal unless otherwise directed by the Senate.

34Duty of Secretary to Order Printing
5

652. It shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Senate, and he
7or she is hereby directed, to order for the Senate the necessary
8printing, including stationery for the Members, and to audit and
9approve all bills for printing to be charged to the Senate. The
10Secretary of the Senate shall order from the Office of State
11Publishing the number of copies of bills, Journals, Histories, Files,
12forms, and other printing as shall be necessary.

13It shall further be the duty of the Secretary of the Senate to order
14bills and other legislative publications for which there is a demand,
15to be printed before the supply of same shall become exhausted.

1617Printing Only on Written Orders; Rush Orders
18

1953. The Office of State Publishing may not charge any printing
20or other work to the Senate except as required by law unless he or
21she has a written order from the Secretary of the Senate prior to
22beginning the printing or other work. All printing orders by the
23Secretary of the Senate shall be delivered as directed by him or
24her. The Secretary of the Senate may, when necessity requires it,
25order from the Office of State Publishing the printing that he or
26she deems necessary to be printed in advance of the regular order
27of business, under a specially prepared written order to be known
28as a “Rush Order.”

2930The Senate Chamber
31

32Admission to the Senate Chamber
33

3455. (a) Persons who are not Members, officers, or employees
35of the Senate may be admitted to the Senate Chamber only as
36follows:

371. The Members, officers, and assistant clerks of the Assembly.

382. The Legislative Counsel or his or her representatives.

393. The accredited press, radio, and television representatives.

404. Former State Senators and Assembly Members.

P53   15. Visitors in the chairs reserved for that purpose, on invitation
2of the President or a Senator or on presentation of a pass.

3(b) While the Senate is in session a person, except Members of
4the Legislature, may not engage in influencing the passage or
5defeat of legislation in any way in the Senate Chamber.

6(c) A person meeting the definition of a lobbyist in Section
782039 of the Government Code may not be admitted to the Senate
8Chamber while the Senate is in session.

9(d) Only Members and officers of the Senate and Assembly,
10former Members of the Senate, assistant clerks of the Senate and
11the Assembly, the Legislative Counsel or his or her representatives,
12Senate employees for the purpose of delivering messages and when
13so directed by a Member of the Senate, and members of the press
14who have seats assigned to them may be permitted on the Floor
15of the Senate.

16(e) The Senate Chamber is the Senate Chamber proper, the
17adjoining hallway, Rooms 3030, 3046, 3191, 3195, and 3196 of
18the Capitol Annex, and Room 215 of the Capitol.

19(f) The Floor of the Senate is all of the Senate Chamber except
20the adjoining hallway and the rooms listed in subdivision (e), the
21visitors seating area, and the western portion of Room 3191.

22(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this rule, any person
23may be admitted to Room 3191 and Room 215 to attend a meeting
24of a Senate, Assembly, joint, or conference committee.

25(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of this rule, a person
26may not be permitted on the Floor of the Senate while it is in
27session unless the person is wearing appropriate attire. Appropriate
28attire includes coats and ties for men. Accredited camerapersons,
29sound technicians, and photographers are exempt from this
30requirement. Floor of the Senate, for this purpose, has the same
31meaning set forth in subdivision (f).

32(i) This rule may be suspended by a vote of two-thirds of the
33Members of the Senate.

3435Contribution Restriction Periods
36

3756.   (a) A Member of the Senate shall not solicit or accept a
38contribution from a lobbyist employer during any of the following
39periods:

P54   1(1) In each year, the period from the date on which the Director
2of Finance provides to the Legislature a revised estimate of General
3Fund revenues, proposals to reduce expenditures based on that
4revision, and proposed adjustments to the Governor’s Budget
5pursuant to subdivision (e) of Section 13308 of the Government
6Code to the date of enactment of a Budget Bill for the fiscal year
7commencing on July 1 of the same year, inclusive.

8(2) In each odd-numbered year, the period from the date 30 days
9preceding the date the Legislature is scheduled to adjourn for a
10joint recess to reconvene in the second calendar year of the
11biennium of the legislative session to the date that adjournment
12 occurs, inclusive.

13(3) In each even-numbered year, the period from August 1 to
14August 31, inclusive.

15(b) The Senate may take any disciplinary action it deems
16appropriate against a Member of the Senate who violates
17subdivision (a), including, but not limited to, reprimand, censure,
18suspension, or expulsion.

19(c) For purposes of this rule, “contribution” and “lobbyist
20employer” have the same meanings as set forth in the Political
21Reform Act of 1974 (Title 9 (commencing with Section 81000)
22of the Government Code).



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