RULES OF THE SENATE
2009 – 2010
1.
Determination of quorum; correction of Journal.
3.
Members, conduct when speaking.
4.
Members not to speak more than twice.
5.
President shall recognize whom.
6.
Questions of order, appeal.
7.
Member, absence from Session.
8.
Motions, order of preference.
9.
Questions postponed indefinitely not acted upon in same biennium.
11. Objections to reading paper, how determined.
12. Roll Call, everyone must vote.
15. Petitions, introduction of.
16. Bills; shall be numbered and expressed clearly.
20. Resolutions to be treated as bills.
21. Bills shall have three readings; Progress of; time for
second and third readings.
22. Bills, printing and distribution.
23. Bills amended only on second reading; filing of amendments.
24. Public hearings to be held and advertised.
25. Amended bills, printed distributed and disposed of.
26. Referral of Bills to Finance Committee.
27. President to sign bills, etc.
28. Committees, appointment of.
32. Voting; division of Senate.
35. Rules of Senate, how suspended.
36. Rules of Senate, how rescinded.
38. President may name member to chair.
39. Senate staff, composition and duties.
40. Senate staff, days of employment.
41. Committees, reports and meetings.
43. Committee of Conference reports.
45. Appeal, presiding officer ruling.
46. Motions, no substitution under color of amendment.
47. Requisition Approval Required.
49. Requests to the Legislative Budget Assistant
RULES OF THE SENATE
2009 – 2010
1. The President,
having taken the chair, shall determine a quorum to be present. Any erroneous
entry in the daily journal shall be corrected no later than the third
succeeding legislative day, and the permanent journal corrected within one week
after the permanent journal copy is placed in the hands of the Senate.
2. No member
shall hold conversation with another while a member is speaking in debate, or
use electronic devices, including but not limited to personal computers, and
telephonic devices, without leave of the Senate.
3. Any member,
wishing to speak, shall notify the President. When the member is recognized to
speak he shall rise and address the President, and when he has finished shall
then sit down.
4. No member
shall speak more than twice on the same question on the same day without leave
of the Senate President.
5. When more than
one member wishes to speak at the same time, the President shall decide who
shall speak first.
6. The President
shall preserve decorum and order. If any member transgresses the rules of the Senate,
the President shall, or any member may, call him to order in which case the
member so called to order shall immediately cease and desist, and the Senate,
if appealed to, shall decide the case. But if there is no appeal, the decision
of the President shall be conclusive.
7. No member
shall absent himself without permission from the Senate.
8. When any
question is under debate, no motion shall be received but first, to adjourn;
second, to lay upon the table; third, for the previous question; fourth, to
postpone to a certain day; fifth, to commit; sixth, to amend; and seventh, to
postpone indefinitely; which several motions shall have precedence in the order
in which they are so arranged. Motions to adjourn, to lay upon the table, for
the previous question, and to take from the table shall be decided without
debate. Motions to postpone to a certain day shall be debatable both as to time
and subject matter. No motion to postpone indefinitely, to postpone to a
certain day, or to commit, being decided, shall be in order at the same stage
of the bill or resolution, until after adjournment.
9. A question
which is postponed indefinitely shall not be acted upon during the biennium
except whenever two-thirds of the whole number of elected Senators shall on
division taken, vote in favor thereof. Any bill which is indefinitely postponed
shall not be reintroduced under cover of an amendment, bill, resolution, order, or committee of
conference report. No motion to suspend this rule shall be permitted.
10. Any member may call for the division of the question
when the sense will admit it. The
question of whether two or more propositions are capable of division is to be
determined by the Chair. Unless otherwise specifically provided for, each part
of a divided question shall pass only upon majority vote of those members
present and voting.
11. When the
reading of a paper or document is objected to by a member, the question shall
be determined by a vote of the Senate; and without debate.
12. When the nays
and yeas have been moved by a member and duly seconded by another member, each
member present shall declare his assent or dissent to the question, unless for
special reason he be excused by the Senate. The names of the persons so making
the motion and the second shall be recorded in the Journal. The President shall
determine the order of the roll call. No member shall be required to vote in
any case where he was not present when the question was put.
13. In case of any
disturbance or disorderly conduct in the gallery, the President shall have the
power to order the same to be cleared. The Chairman of the Committee of the
Whole may restrict attendance to the duly elected Senators.
14. No vote shall
be reconsidered, unless the motion for reconsideration is made by a member who
voted with the prevailing side. The notice of such motion for reconsideration
shall be given to the Senate in open session prior to adjournment on the same
day on which the vote was passed, or to the clerk within two working business
days of the vote. Any such notice of reconsideration shall be effective for
three legislative days only and thereafter shall be null and void.
Reconsideration of any bills subject to a deadline established by Senate rules
must be acted upon on or before the Senate rule deadline, and thereafter shall
be null and void.
15. Before any
petition shall be received and read, a brief statement of the contents thereof
shall be made by the member introducing the same.
16. All petitions,
memorials and other papers addressed to the Senate and all bills and
resolutions to be introduced in the Senate, shall be endorsed with the name of
the Senator presenting them, and with the subject matter of the same. Every
bill shall be marked on the first page "Senate Bill" and numbered
serially; every joint resolution shall be marked "Senate Joint
Resolution" and numbered serially; every concurrent resolution proposing a
constitutional amendment shall be marked "Concurrent Resolution Proposing
a Constitutional Amendment" and numbered serially; and every other
concurrent resolution shall be marked "Senate Concurrent Resolution"
and numbered serially, as each bill or resolution is introduced into the
Senate.
17. All petitions,
memorials and other papers addressed to the Senate and all bills and
resolutions to be introduced into the Senate shall be delivered or caused to be
delivered to the Office of Legislative Services, which in turn will submit it
to the sponsor for his signature, and then to the Clerk by Legislative
Services. If requested by the sponsor, a proposed bill, resolution or petition
shall not be made public, except by the sponsor, until signed by the sponsor.
During any adjournment the President may receive bills and resolutions for
printing and for reference to committee, provided that no bill shall have a
public hearing until it is formally introduced into the Senate, printed and
available for distribution.
18. Drafting of
Bills
(a) If a
drafting request for a bill or resolution has been filed with the Office of Legislative
Services requiring a fiscal note as provided in RSA 14:44-47, the substance or
a draft of the proposal may be provided to the Legislative Budget Assistant for
preparation of the required fiscal note without the specific consent of the
sponsor of the proposal, provided that the identity of the sponsor shall not be
disclosed.
(b)
Notwithstanding the provisions of Rule 17, a Senate bill, Senate joint
resolution, or Senate concurrent resolution may be accepted by the Office of
Legislative Services for drafting and introduced into the Senate at any time
prior to the deadline established by Senate Rules for the transfer of bills out
of the first body if approved by either a majority of the Senate Rules
Committee or a two-thirds vote on the floor.
(c) No bill the
subject matter of which has been indefinitely postponed or made inexpedient to
legislate in the Senate in the first-year session shall be admitted into the
second-year session whether as a bill, an amendment, a committee of conference
report or in any other manner.
(d) Legislation
returned from the non-originating body, with an amendment, shall not be
re-referred to committee but shall have one of the following recommendations:
Concur, Nonconcur, Nonconcur and Request a Committee of Conference. Adoption of
a motion to Nonconcur kills the legislation.
19. Committees of
Conference.
(a) Whenever
there be any disagreement between the Senate and the House on the content of
any bill or resolution, and whenever both bodies, voting separately, have
agreed to establish a committee of conference, the President of the Senate
shall appoint three members to the Senate conference committee on the bill and
the Speaker of the House shall appoint four members to the House conference
committee. Exceptions: (1) the House committee of conference on the operating
budget shall consist of five members; (2) the number of the members of the
committees of conference on any bill may increase or decrease if the President
and the Speaker both agree. The two committees of conference on a bill shall
meet jointly but vote separately while in conference. A unanimous vote by both
committees of conference shall be necessary for an agreed report to the Senate
and the House by the committees of conference.
(b) The
first-named person from the body where the bill or resolution in disagreement
originated shall have the authority to call the time and place for the first
meeting of the committees of conference on said bill.
(c) The
first-named person on a committee of conference shall be the chairman of that
conference. The chairman of the committee of conference of the body where the
bill or resolution in disagreement originated shall chair the joint meeting of
the committees of conference.
(d) No action
shall be taken in either body on any committee of conference report earlier
than some subsequent day, after the report has been delivered to the seats or
placed on a member's desk. A committee of conference may neither change the
title of any bill submitted to it nor add amendments which are not germane to
the subject matter of the bill as originally submitted to it.
(e) Conference
Committees on Budget Bills. The report of each committee of conference on
either the general appropriation bill, or the capital improvements bill shall
be printed in the journal or a supplement thereto of the appropriate body
before action on said report is taken on the floor. Non-germane amendments,
sections and footnotes to such bills (except footnotes in explanation of the
principal text of such bills or designating the use or restriction of any funds
or portions thereof) are prohibited and shall not be allowed under any
circumstances. Notwithstanding the general provisions of paragraph (h) of this
section, the Conference Committee on general appropriations bill may propose
new items for inclusion in said bill but no such item may be so included unless
and until it shall have been returned to both the Senate and the House and
adopted in identical form by a majority vote in each body.
(f) When both
committees of conference on a concurrent resolution proposing an amendment to
the constitution have agreed, the committee of conference from the body which
acceded to a request for committees of conference shall file its report with
the clerk of that body who shall print it in full in the journal or supplement
of that body. The report shall be made a special order of business at the late
session of a subsequent day. After said report has been adopted by the first
body, a message shall be transmitted to the second body which shall then act
upon the report of its committee of conference.
(g) The sponsor
of any bill or joint resolution referred to committees of conference shall,
upon his request, be granted a hearing before said committees prior to action
thereon.
(h) No member of
a committee of conference shall sign any report that contains non-germane
amendments or subject matter that has been indefinitely postponed in either
body. For the purposes of this rule, a non-germane amendment would be any
subject matter not contained in either the House or the Senate version of the
bill.
20. All
resolutions which may require the signature of the Governor shall be treated in
the same manner as bills.
21. Every bill
shall have three readings in the Senate previous to its passage. The first and
second readings shall be by title only which may be accomplished by a
conglomerate resolution, after which the bill shall be referred by the
President to the appropriate committee and shall be printed as provided in Rule
22, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate. No bill after it has been read a
second time shall have a third reading until after adjournment from the early
session. The time assigned for the third reading of bills and resolutions shall
be in the late session unless otherwise ordered by the Senate. The orders of
the day for the reading of bills shall hold for every succeeding day until
disposed of.
22. After every
bill shall have been read a second time, and referred by the President to the
appropriate committee, the Clerk shall procure a sufficient number of copies,
printed on paper of uniform size, for the use of the legislature, and cause the
same to be distributed to the members, and when printed the bill shall be
immediately delivered to the committee to which it shall have been referred.
Bills received from the House shall be printed at the same stage of their
procedure unless they have been printed in the House and copies distributed in
the Senate, in which case any amendment made by the House shall be duplicated
and distributed in the Senate.
23. No amendment
shall be made but upon the second reading of a bill; and all amendments to
bills and resolutions shall be in writing, with the name of the Senator and the
district he represents, or in the case of a committee amendment the name of the
committee that recommended it, thereon. No amendment to any bill shall be
proposed or allowed at any time or by any source, including a committee of
conference, except it be germane. Amendments shall have been reviewed by the
Office of Legislative Services for form, construction, statutory and chapter
reference.
24. A hearing
shall be held upon each bill referred to a committee, and notice of such
hearing shall be advertised at least 4 days before hearing in the Senate
Calendar. The Senate Calendar shall be available on the Internet for viewing as
soon as it has been released for printing.
(a) All bills
in the possession of committees shall be reported out with one of the following
recommendations: ought to pass, ought to pass with amendment, rerefer to
committee, inexpedient to legislate, or refer for interim study. Re-refer to
committee shall be a committee report only in the first-year session. All
rereferred bills shall be acted on by the fourth legislative day of the second
year session. Refer for interim study shall be a committee report only in the
second year session.
(b) Any
legislation creating a chapter study committee shall have membership
limited to
members of the General Court.
25. When a bill is
reported favorably with an amendment, the report of the committee shall state
the amendment, and then recite the section of the bill in full as amended. The
amendment shall be printed in the senate calendar on the date that the report
is listed for action. If no action is taken on that day, then the amendment
shall be printed on the day to which the bill has been referred. All bills
reported shall be retained by the clerk and shall not be finally acted upon
until the following legislative day, and a list of such bills with the report
of the committee thereon shall be published in the senate calendar for the day
on which action shall be taken.
26. Referral of Bills to Finance Committee
(a). Every bill and joint
resolution appropriating money, and every other bill which is accompanied by a
fiscal note pursuant to RSA 14:44, which has been referred to another committee
and favorably accepted by the Senate, shall be committed to the Finance
Committee for review. All bills which are referred directly to the
Finance Committee shall have a hearing.
(b). The chair
of a standing committee may request the Chair of the Finance
Committee to exempt from review a bill that is subject to a fiscal
note pursuant to RSA 14:44, but which the Chair of the Finance Committee
believes has an undetermined or insignificant fiscal impact. The Chair of
the Finance Committee shall announce on the floor all such bills exempted
from review as soon as practicable after receipt of the request.
27. All warrants,
subpoenas and other processes issued by order of the Senate shall be under the
hand and seal of the President attested by the Clerk.
28. All committees
of the Senate, including Senate members on committees of conference, shall
consist of members of both parties as nearly equal as possible, provided that
on all committees, both parties shall be represented. The President shall
appoint the members of all committees, after consulting with the minority
leader.
29. The standing committees of the Senate shall be as follows: the
Committee on Capital Budget, the Committee on Commerce, Labor and Consumer
Protection, the Committee on Education, the Committee on Election Law and
Veterans’ Affairs, the Committee on Energy, Environment and Economic Development, the Committee on Executive
Departments and Administration, the Committee on Finance, the Committee on
Health and Human Services, the Committee on Judiciary, the Committee on Public
and Municipal Affairs, the Committee on Rules and Enrolled Bills, the Committee
on Transportation and Interstate Cooperation, the Committee on Ways and Means
and the Committee on Wildlife,
Fish
and Game and Agriculture.
30. Messages shall
be sent to the House of Representatives by the Clerk of the Senate.
31. Messages from
the Governor or House of Representatives may be received at all times, except
when the Senate is engaged in putting the question, in calling the yeas and
nays, or in counting the ballots.
32. All questions
shall be put by the President, and each member of the Senate present shall signify
his assent or dissent by voting yea or nay, or shall abstain from voting by
reason of a conflict pursuant to Rule 42. If the President doubts, or a
division is called for, the Senate shall divide. Those in the affirmative on
the question shall first rise from their seats and stand until they be counted.
The President shall rise and state the decision of the Senate.
33. No person
except members of the Senate and its officers, the Governor, Council members,
the Secretary of State, the Treasurer, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives and its officers and clerks, shall be admitted to the floor of
the Senate while the Senate is in session, except by the invitation of the
President, or some member with the President’s consent.
34. The Senate
shall adjourn to meet on the subsequent legislative day for the early session
at the time mentioned in the adjournment motion. The late session shall
immediately follow the early session unless the Senate shall otherwise order.
35. No standing
rule of the Senate shall be suspended unless two-thirds of the members present
and voting vote in favor thereof. This rule shall not apply to Senate Rule 9.
36. No rule shall
be rescinded unless two days notice of the motion has been given and two-thirds
of those present and voting vote therefore.
37. The Senate may
resolve itself into a Committee of the Whole at any time on motion made for
that purpose; and in forming a Committee of the Whole, the President shall
leave the chair, and appoint a chairperson to preside in committee.
38. The President
when performing the duties of the Chair may, at any time, name any member to
perform the duties of the Chair.
39. The staff of
the Senate shall be comprised of a clerk, an assistant clerk, a
sergeant-at-arms, and a doorkeeper who are to be elected by the Senate, and
such other personnel as the President shall appoint. The President shall define
the duties of all members of the Senate staff which are not fixed by statute or
otherwise ordered by the Senate.
40. Each member of
the staff of the Senate shall be available on call to carry out the work of the
Senate.
41. The committees
shall promptly consider and report on all matters referred to them. The
President may authorize such committees having a heavy load of investigation,
re-drafting, research or amendments to meet as needed on non legislative days
during the legislative session. The Clerk of the Senate shall prepare a list by
number, title and sponsor of all Senate bills and resolutions in committee
which have not been acted upon within one week before the deadline established
for the transfer of bills and resolutions from the Senate to the House of
Representatives, and he/she shall distribute this list to every member of the
Senate as soon as it is prepared.
42. In all
instances every member shall act in conformance with the duly adopted Ethical
Guidelines and Opinions of the New Hampshire General Court.
43. Action on the
floor of a report of the Committee on Finance or a Committee of Conference on
either the general appropriations (budget) bill or the capital budget bill,
shall not be taken by the Senate, until said report has been available from the
Senate Clerk twenty-four hours in advance, in written form. Non-germane
amendments and footnotes to such bills (except footnotes in explanation of the
principal text of such bills or designating the use or restriction of any funds
or portions thereof) are prohibited and shall not be allowed under any
circumstances.
44. Personal
Privilege: A Senator may, as a matter of personal privilege, defend his/her
position on a bill, his/her integrity, his/her record, or his/her conduct,
against unfair or unwarranted criticism, or may speak of an issue which relates
to his/her rights, privileges or conveniences as a Senator; provided, however,
the matters raised under personal privilege shall not be subject to
questioning, answer, or debate, by another Senator. Personal Privilege remarks
may be included in the Daily Journal if requested by the Senator, and in the
Permanent Journal by vote of the Senate. A Senator may speak on other matters
of his/her choosing and in such cases may be subject to questioning and/or
answer according to the Rules of the Senate.
45. Any appeal
from the ruling of the presiding officer shall be decided by majority vote of
the members present and voting.
46.
No
new motion shall be admitted under color of amendment as a substitute for the
motion under debate.
47. No officer or
employee of the Senate during the session or any adjournment thereof shall
purchase or contract for the purchase, pay or promise to pay any sum of money
on behalf of the Senate or issue any requisition or manifest without the
approval of the Senate President.
(a) Wednesday, October 28, 2009 –
First day to file legislation for 2010 Session.
(b) The Office of Legislative Services shall not draft a Senate Bill,
Senate Concurrent Resolution, or Senate Joint Resolution, unless a request by a
member for drafting with complete information has been received not later than
4:00 p.m., Friday, November 06, 2009, for the 2010 Session.
(c) The last day to sign-off legislation for the above filing period
shall be Wednesday, December 09, 2009, at 4:00 p.m.
(d) Monday, February 22, 2010 -
Friday, February 26, 2010: SENATE BREAK.
(e) Thursday, March 04, 2010 - Deadline for Policy Committees to ACT on
all Senate money bills, except bills exempted pursuant to Senate Rule 26(b).
(f) Thursday, March 25, 2010 - CROSSOVER - Last day to ACT on all
remaining Senate Bills.
(g) Thursday, April 08, 2010 - Deadline for Policy Committees to ACT on
all House money bills, except bills exempted pursuant to Senate Rule 26(b).
(h) Wednesday, May 12, 2010 - Last Day to ACT on all remaining House
bills.
(i) Wednesday, May 19, 2010 - Last day to FORM Committees of
Conference.
(j) Thursday, May 27, 2010 at 12:00 p.m. - Last day to SIGN Committee
of Conference Reports.
(k) Wednesday, June 2, 2010 - Last day to ACT on Committee of
Conference Reports.
49. Any Senate member may make a request of the Office of the
Legislative Budget Assistant Budget Division, for technical staff assistance in
the areas of finance, accounting and budgeting. The Budget Division may respond
to that request when doing so will not interfere with the Budget Division’s
principal responsibilities as outlined in RSA 14:31-b, as determined by the
Legislative Budget Assistant.