At the close of the eighth week of the Legislative Session, the House and Senate have passed their deadline to adopt committee reports. The House passed its second reading deadline, with Monday, March 4 being the final day for Senate Bills in the House and House bills on Second reading in the Senate. The session must conclude by March 14, although legislative leaders have set their sights on a March 8 end date.
The Week in Review
HB 1001, Education and Higher Education Matters (Rep. Chuck Goodrich, R-Noblesville) passed the Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday (11-3). The bill would introduce significant additions to work-based learning for high school students. HB 1001's primary fiscal function is to allow money from the 21st Century Scholarship Program or a Freedom of Choice grant to pay for post-secondary training and apprenticeships. Sen. Jeff Raatz (R-Richmond) is the principal Senate sponsor.
HB 1093, Employment of Minors (Rep. Kendell Culp, R-Rensselaer), passed the Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday (9-4). The bill seeks to allow minors to work longer hours with fewer restrictions, such as letting students work later on school nights. Proponents of the bill argue that it aligns the Indiana Code with federal statute. Sen. Brian Buchanan (R-Lebanon) is the principal Senate sponsor.
HB 1199, Economic Enhancement District (Rep. Julie McGuire, R-Indianapolis), passed out of the Senate (42-7). The amended legislation limits the power of the Indianapolis Economic Enhancement District (EED), making it expire after 10 years, excluding residential property, and allowing certain businesses to opt in or out of the program. The oversight board created by this bill would have considerable power to limit the EED.
HB 1216, Medicaid Reimbursement for Certain Detainees (Rep. Greg Steuerwald, R-Avon), passed unanimously out of the Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday (14-0). The bill would expand health providers' ability to involuntarily detain specific individuals by allowing them to be reimbursed by Medicaid for the expense. The bill would accomplish this by classifying care for mental health emergencies" as “medically necessary.” Sen. Tyler Johnson (R-Leo) is the principal Senate sponsor.
HB 1235, Prohibited Causes of Action for Concerning Firearms (Rep. Chris Jeter, R-Fishers) passed the Senate on a third reading on Tuesday, Feb. 27 (33-15). The bill would further protect gun manufacturers from litigation. The bill is specifically aimed at ending a decades-old lawsuit by the city of Gary against gun manufacturers and retailers. The bill would allow the state to reserve the right to sue the gun industry. The principal Senate sponsor is Sen. Aaron Freeman (R-Indianapolis).
SEA 1, Reading Skills (Sen. Linda Rogers, R-Granger), a bill addressing Indiana’s youth literacy crisis, passed the House on Tuesday, Feb. 27 (68-24). The bill was amended in the House to provide increased funding for summer schools and establish exemptions for English learners. The Senate concurred with the amendments on Thursday, which was sent to the Governor for signature.
SB 4, Fiscal and Administrative Matters (Sen. Chris Garten, R-Charlestown), was passed and amended by the House (95-0). The House amendments removed the mandates on the Legislative Services Agency and shifted the burden to the Legislative Council. The bill would increase the legislature's power over state agencies and revert funds unused by agencies to the general fund. However, the author dissented from the changes, and the bill is headed to the conference committee.
SB 5, Lead Water Line Replacement and Lead Remediation (Sen. Eric Koch, R-Bedford) passed the House (93-0). The bill would modern Indiana’s lead pipelines and give the state more power to deal with landlords who refuse to cooperate with updating lead pipelines. Its changes were concurred upon in the Senate and are now headed to the Governor.
SB 52, Prohibition on use of dedicated lanes (Sen. Aaron Freeman, R-Indianapolis) was not called down on second reading; effectively killing the legislation due to deadlines. Speaker Todd Huston released a statement saying he agreed with city and IndyGo officials to drop the bill in exchange for IndyGo prioritizing the maintenance of two lanes of traffic flow. While this may mean fewer dedicated transit lanes than initially, Indianapolis’s Blue Line can continue as planned.
SB 202, State educational institution matters (Sen. Spencer Deery, R-West Lafayette), passed the House (66-31) after being amended to clarify protections for tenured professors. The controversial bill addresses intellectual diversity and freedom of speech on college campuses, and the Senate concurred with the amendments. The governor’s office heads the bill.
This Week Ahead
The session must conclude by March 14, although legislative leaders have set their sights on a March 8 end date. Below are the upcoming deadlines for both houses in the Indiana General Assembly:
February
29th House 2nd Reading Deadline
29th Senate Committee Report Deadline
March
4th House 3rd Reading Deadline
4th Senate 2nd Reading Deadline
5th Senate 3rd Reading Deadline
5th Last Day for Senate Adoption of Committee Reports without Rules Committee Approval
8th Anticipated Last Day
14th Last Day to Adjourn
View House Schedule
View Senate Schedule
Conference Committees
Next week, we will begin to see the conference committee process play out. As Sine Die quickly approaches, bills returned to their original chamber with changes must either receive a motion to concur or dissent. Once a motion to concur is adopted/voted on legislation’s chamber or origin, the bill heads to the governor for approval. A motion to dissent sends the bill to a conference committee. Click here for more information on the conference committee process.
A conference committee grid displaying all of the engrossed bills returned with amendments can be found on the Indiana Assembly's Website.
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