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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
3HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that the
4following (which are the same as the Rules of the House of
5Representatives of the Ninety-Ninth General Assembly except as
6indicated by striking and underscoring) are adopted as the
7Rules of the House of Representatives of the One Hundredth
8General Assembly:
 
 
9
ARTICLE I
10
ORGANIZATION

11    (House Rule 1)
12    1. Election of the Speaker.
13    (a) At the first meeting of the House of each General
14Assembly, the Secretary of State shall convene the House at
1512:00 noon, designate a Temporary Clerk of the House, and
16preside during the nomination and election of the Speaker. As
17the first item of business each day before the election of the
18Speaker, the Secretary of State shall order the Temporary Clerk
19to call the roll of the members to establish the presence of a
20quorum as required by the Constitution. If a majority of those
21elected are not present, the House shall stand adjourned until
22the next calendar day, excepting weekends, at the hour

 

 

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1prescribed in Rule 29. If a quorum of members elected is
2present, the Secretary of State shall then call for nominations
3of members for the Office of Speaker. All nominations require a
4second. When the nominations are completed, the Secretary of
5State shall direct the Temporary Clerk to call the roll of the
6members to elect the Speaker.
7    (b) The election of the Speaker requires the affirmative
8vote of a majority of those elected. Debate is not in order
9following nominations and preceding or during the vote.
10    (c) No legislative measure may be considered and no
11committees may be appointed or meet before the election of the
12Speaker.
13    (d) When a vacancy in the Office of Speaker occurs, the
14foregoing procedure shall be employed to elect a new Speaker;
15when the Secretary of State is of a political party other than
16that of the majority caucus, however, the Majority Leader shall
17preside during the nomination and election of the successor
18Speaker. No legislative measures, other than for the nomination
19and election of a successor Speaker, may be considered by the
20House during a vacancy in the Office of Speaker.
 
21    (House Rule 2)
22    2. Election of the Minority Leader.
23    (a) The House shall elect a Minority Leader in a manner
24consistent with the laws of Illinois. The member nominated for
25Speaker who received the second highest number of votes shall

 

 

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1be elected Minority Leader, provided the member is affiliated
2with The Minority Leader is the leader of the numerically
3strongest political party other than the party to which the
4Speaker belongs.
5    (b) When a vacancy in the Office of Minority Leader occurs,
6the Speaker shall preside during the nomination and election of
7the successor Minority Leader.
8    (c) (b) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative
9vote of 71 members elected.
 
10    (House Rule 3)
11    3. Majority and Minority Leadership.
12    (a) The Speaker and the Minority Leader shall appoint from
13within their respective caucuses the members of the Majority
14and Minority Leaderships as allowed by law.
15    (b) Appointments are effective upon being filed with the
16Clerk and remain effective at the pleasure of the Speaker and
17Minority Leader, respectively, or until a vacancy occurs by
18reason of resignation or because a leader has ceased to be a
19Representative. Successor leaders shall be appointed in the
20same manner as their predecessors. Leaders have those powers
21delegated to them by the Speaker or Minority Leader, as the
22case may be.
 
23    (House Rule 4)
24    4. The Speaker.

 

 

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1    (a) The Speaker has those powers conferred upon him or her
2by the Constitution, the laws of Illinois, and any motions or
3resolutions adopted by the House or jointly by the House and
4Senate.
5    (b) Except as otherwise provided by law, the Speaker is the
6chief administrative officer of the House and has those powers
7necessary to carry out those functions. The Speaker may
8delegate administrative duties as he or she deems appropriate.
9    (c) The duties of the Speaker include the following:
10        (1) To preside at all sessions of the House, although
11    the Speaker may call on any member to preside temporarily
12    as Presiding Officer.
13        (2) To open the session at the time at which the House
14    is to meet by taking the chair and calling the members to
15    order. The Speaker may call on any member, or the Clerk in
16    the case of perfunctory session, to open the session as
17    Presiding Officer.
18        (3) To announce the business before the House in the
19    order upon which it is to be acted. The Presiding Officer
20    shall perform this duty during the period that he or she is
21    presiding.
22        (4) To recognize those members entitled to the floor.
23        (5) To state and put to a vote all questions that are
24    regularly moved or that necessarily arise in the course of
25    the proceedings, and to announce the result of the vote.
26        (6) To preserve order and decorum.

 

 

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1        (7) To decide all points of order, subject to appeal,
2    and to speak on these points in preference to other
3    members.
4        (8) To inform the House when necessary, or when any
5    question is raised, on any point of order or practice
6    pertinent to the pending business.
7        (9) To sign or authenticate all acts, proceedings, or
8    orders of the House. All writs, warrants, and subpoenae
9    issued by order of the House, or any of its committees,
10    shall be signed by the Speaker and attested by the Clerk.
11        (10) To sign all bills passed by both chambers of the
12    General Assembly to certify that the procedural
13    requirements for passage have been met.
14        (11) To have general supervision of the House Chamber,
15    House galleries, House committee rooms and chapel, and
16    adjoining and connecting hallways and passages, including
17    the duty to protect their security and safety and the power
18    to clear them when necessary. The House Chamber shall not
19    be used without permission of the Speaker.
20        (12) To have general supervision of the Clerk and his
21    or her assistants, the Doorkeeper and his or her
22    assistants, the majority caucus staff, the
23    parliamentarians, and all employees of the House except the
24    minority caucus staff.
25        (13) To determine the number of majority caucus members
26    and minority caucus members to be appointed to all

 

 

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1    committees, except as otherwise provided by these Rules.
2        (14) To appoint all Chairpersons, Co-Chairpersons, and
3    Vice-Chairpersons of committees (from either the majority
4    or minority caucus), and to appoint all majority caucus
5    members of committees.
6        (15) To enforce all constitutional provisions,
7    statutes, rules, and regulations applicable to the House.
8        (16) To guide and direct the proceedings of the House
9    subject to the control and will of the members.
10        (17) To direct the Clerk to correct non-substantive
11    errors in the Journal.
12        (18) To assign meeting places and meeting times to
13    committees and subcommittees.
14        (19) To perform any other duties assigned to the
15    Speaker by these House Rules or jointly by the House and
16    Senate.
17        (20) To decide, subject to the control and will of the
18    members, all questions relating to the priority of
19    business.
20        (21) To issue, in cooperation with the Comptroller and
21    after clearance with the United States Internal Revenue
22    Service, written regulations covering administration of
23    contingent expense allowances of members of the House.
24        (22) To appoint one or more parliamentarians to serve
25    at the pleasure of the Speaker.
26    (c-5) The Speaker may call on any member, or the Clerk in

 

 

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1the case of perfunctory session, to open and preside at any
2session as Presiding Officer. A Presiding Officer shall perform
3the duties of the Speaker necessary and related to the conduct
4of session.
5     (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative
6vote of 71 members elected.
 
7    (House Rule 5)
8    5. Powers and Duties of the Minority Leader.
9    (a) The Minority Leader has those powers conferred upon him
10or her by the Constitution, the laws of Illinois, and any
11motions or resolutions adopted by the House or jointly by the
12House and Senate.
13    (b) The Minority Leader shall appoint to all committees the
14members from the minority caucus and shall designate a Minority
15Spokesperson for each committee, except that the Speaker may
16appoint a minority caucus member to be Chairperson or
17Co-Chairperson of a standing committee or a special committee.
18    (c) The Minority Leader has general supervision of the
19minority caucus staff.
 
20    (House Rule 6)
21    6. Clerk of the House.
22    (a) The House shall elect a Clerk, who may adopt
23appropriate policies or procedures for the conduct of his or
24her office. The Speaker is the final arbiter of any dispute

 

 

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1arising in connection with the operation of the Office of the
2Clerk.
3    (b) The duties of the Clerk include the following:
4        (1) To have custody of all bills, papers, and records
5    of the House, which shall not be taken out of the Clerk's
6    custody except in the regular course of business in the
7    House.
8        (2) To endorse on every original bill and each copy its
9    number, the names of sponsors, the date of introduction,
10    and the several orders taken on it. When reproduced, the
11    names of the sponsors shall appear on the front page of the
12    bill in the same order they appeared when introduced.
13        (3) To cause each measure subject to such a requirement
14    to be reproduced and placed on the desks of the members as
15    soon as it is reproduced, as provided in Rule 39.
16        (4) To keep the Journal of the proceedings of the House
17    and, under the direction of the Speaker, correct errors in
18    the Journal.
19        (5) To keep the transcripts of the debates of the House
20    and make them available to the public under reasonable
21    conditions.
22        (6) To keep the necessary records for the House and its
23    committees and task forces; and to prepare the House
24    Calendar for each legislative day, except perfunctory
25    session days.
26        (7) To examine all House Bills and Constitutional

 

 

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1    Amendment Resolutions following Second Reading and before
2    final passage for the purpose of correcting any
3    non-substantive errors, and to report the same back to the
4    Speaker promptly; to supervise the enrolling and
5    engrossing of bills and resolutions, subject to the
6    direction of the Speaker; and to attest to the passage or
7    adoption of legislative measures, and to note thereon the
8    date of final House action. Any corrections made by the
9    Clerk and approved by the Speaker shall be entered on the
10    Journal.
11        (8) To transmit bills, other documents, and messages to
12    the Senate and secure a receipt therefor, and to receive
13    from the Senate bills, other documents, and messages and
14    give receipt therefor.
15        (9) To file with the Secretary of State debate
16    transcripts and House documents as required by law.
17        (10) To attend every session of the House; record the
18    roll; and read all bills, resolutions, and other papers as
19    directed by the Speaker. Bills shall be read by title only.
20        (11) To supervise the Assistant Clerk, the Doorkeeper,
21    pages, messengers, committee clerks, and other employees
22    of his or her office.
23        (12) To establish the format for all documents, forms,
24    and committee records and audio recordings prepared by
25    committee clerks.
26        (13) Subject to approval by the Speaker, to establish

 

 

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1    standards of decorum and other standards regarding written
2    statements filed under Rule 53 or Rule 53.5.
3        (14) To serve as the Speaker's authorized designee for
4    purposes of the Freedom of Information Act. The Clerk shall
5    provide copies of all requests for information under the
6    Freedom of Information Act to the member or staff subject
7    to the request, as well as any responses, notifications, or
8    public records included with responses and notifications.
9        (15) To ensure each motion under consideration for a
10    roll call vote is accurately displayed on the public
11    viewing board. Accurate and appropriate display of items
12    shall be determined by the standard practices set forth by
13    the Speaker within the technological abilities and
14    limitations of the system.
15        (16) To review vouchers to be presented to the
16    Comptroller for payment of expenditures related to the
17    operations of the House, including vouchers for payment
18    from members' office allowances under the General Assembly
19    Compensation Act. The Clerk shall have the authority to
20    deny any such voucher if the expenditure or payment is not
21    properly authorized.
22        (17) To perform other duties assigned by the Speaker.
23    (c) The Clerk and those under the supervision of the Clerk,
24including the Assistant Clerk, committee clerks, and other
25employees, may accept a bill, amendment, conference committee
26report, amendatory veto acceptance motion, or resolution for

 

 

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1filing only if (i) it is a document entered into the General
2Assembly's computer system, at the direction of or with the
3approval of a member, by the Legislative Reference Bureau, the
4House or the Senate Democratic staff, the House or the Senate
5Republican staff, or House or Senate Enrolling and Engrossing
6or, with respect to appropriation documents only, entered into
7the General Assembly's computer system by the Governor's Office
8of Management and Budget, (ii) it bears a bar coded document
9number of the drafting entity that is compatible with the
10computer system used by the House, and (iii) the bar coded
11document number does not duplicate one on another document that
12has already been filed in the House or the Senate.
 
13    (House Rule 7)
14    7. Assistant Clerk of the House. The House shall, in a
15manner consistent with the laws of Illinois, elect an Assistant
16Clerk, who shall perform those duties assigned by the Clerk.
 
17    (House Rule 8)
18    8. Doorkeeper. The House shall elect a Doorkeeper who shall
19perform those duties assigned by law, or as ordered by the
20Speaker, Presiding Officer, or Clerk. Those duties shall
21include the following:
22        (1) To attend the House during its sessions and execute
23    the commands of the Speaker or Presiding Officer.
24        (2) To maintain order among spectators admitted into

 

 

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1    the House Chamber, galleries, and adjoining or connecting
2    hallways and passages.
3        (3) To take proper measures to prevent interruption of
4    the House.
5        (4) To remove unruly persons from the House Chamber,
6    galleries, and adjoining and connecting hallways and
7    passages.
8        (5) To ensure that only authorized persons have access
9    to the House Chamber, galleries, and adjoining hallways and
10    passages, subject to the direction of the Speaker.
11        (6) To supervise any Assistant Doorkeepers.
12        (7) To perform other duties assigned by the Speaker.
 
13    (House Rule 9)
14    9. Schedule.
15    (a) The Speaker shall periodically establish a schedule of
16days on which the House shall convene in regular, perfunctory,
17and veto session, with that schedule subject to revision at the
18discretion of the Speaker.
19    (b) The Speaker may schedule or reschedule deadlines at his
20or her discretion for any action on any category of legislative
21measure as the Speaker deems appropriate, including deadlines
22for the following legislative actions:
23        (1) Final day to request bills from the Legislative
24    Reference Bureau.
25        (2) Final day for introduction of bills.

 

 

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1        (3) Final day for standing committees of the House to
2    report House bills, except House appropriation bills.
3        (4) Final day for standing committees of the House to
4    report House appropriation bills.
5        (5) Final day for Third Reading and passage of House
6    bills, except House appropriation bills.
7        (6) Final day for Third Reading and passage of House
8    appropriation bills.
9        (7) Final day for standing committees of the House to
10    report Senate appropriation bills.
11        (8) Final day for standing committees of the House to
12    report Senate bills, except appropriation bills.
13        (9) Final day for special committees to report to the
14    House.
15        (10) Final day for Third Reading and passage of Senate
16    appropriation bills.
17        (11) Final day for Third Reading and passage of Senate
18    bills, except appropriation bills.
19        (12) Final day for consideration of joint action
20    motions and conference committee reports.
21    (c) The Speaker may schedule or reschedule any necessary
22deadlines for legislative action during any special session of
23the House.
24    (d) The foregoing deadlines, or any revisions to those
25deadlines, are effective upon being filed by the Speaker with
26the Clerk. The Clerk shall journalize those deadlines.

 

 

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1    (e) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
2of 71 members elected.
 
3
ARTICLE II
4
COMMITTEES

5    (House Rule 10)
6    10. Committees.
7    (a) The committees of the House are: (i) the standing
8committees listed in Rule 11; (ii) the special committees
9created under Rule 13; (iii) any subcommittees created under
10these Rules; (iv) the Rules Committee created under Rule 15;
11(v) any committees created under Article X or Article XII; and
12(vi) any Committee of the Whole. Committees of the Whole shall
13consist of all Representatives.
14    (b) Except as otherwise provided in this Rule and subject
15to Rules 12 and 13, all committees shall have a Chairperson and
16Minority Spokesperson, who may be of the same political party.
17A Minority Spokesperson may not be appointed until after a
18Chairperson has been appointed. Standing committees that have
19Co-Chairpersons from different political parties shall not
20have a Minority Spokesperson. Special committees that have
21Co-Chairpersons from different political parties shall not
22have a Minority Spokesperson. No member may be appointed to
23serve as a Chairperson, Minority Spokesperson, or
24Co-Chairperson of any committee unless the member is serving in

 

 

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1at least his or her third elected term as a member of the
2General Assembly, including any terms in which the member was
3appointed to fill a vacancy in the office of Representative or
4Senator; provided that this requirement does not apply if the
5member was appointed on August 12, 2013, March 30, 2014, or
6July 30, 2014. received a stipend or additional amount during a
7previous General Assembly as an "officer", "committee
8chairman", or "committee minority spokesman" as provided in
9Section 1 of the General Assembly Compensation Act (25 ILCS
10115/1) and in Rule 13(b). No member initially appointed or
11elected on and after January 28, 2015 may be appointed to serve
12as a Chairperson, Minority Spokesperson, or Co-Chairperson of
13any committee unless the member is serving in at least his or
14her third elected term as a member of the General Assembly.
15Each committee may have a Vice-Chairperson appointed by the
16Speaker. The number of majority caucus members and minority
17caucus members of all committees, except the Rules Committee
18created under Rule 15 and as otherwise provided by these Rules,
19shall be determined by the Speaker. The Speaker shall file a
20notice with the Clerk setting forth the number of majority
21caucus and minority caucus members of each committee, which
22shall be journalized. A member may be temporarily replaced on a
23committee due to illness or if the member is otherwise
24unavailable. The appointment of a member as a temporary
25replacement shall remain in effect until (i) the permanent
26member who was replaced is in attendance at the hearing and has

 

 

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1been added to the committee roll, (ii) the appointing authority
2withdraws the temporary replacement appointment or appoints a
3different member to serve as the temporary replacement, or
4(iii) the hearing is adjourned or the authority has expired for
5a re-convened hearing following a recess of the committee,
6whichever occurs first. All leaders are non-voting ex-officio
7members of each standing committee and each special committee,
8except that the leaders may also be appointed to standing
9committees or special committees as voting members. The Speaker
10may also appoint any member of the majority caucus, and the
11Minority Leader may appoint any member of the minority caucus,
12as a non-voting member of any standing committee or special
13committee.
14    (c) The Chairperson of a committee has the authority to
15call the committee to order, designate which legislative
16measures bills and subject matters resolutions posted for
17hearing shall be taken up and in what order, order a record
18vote to be taken on each legislative measure called for a vote,
19preserve order and decorum during committee meetings,
20establish procedural rules (subject to approval by the Speaker)
21governing the presentation and consideration of legislative
22measures and subject matters, and generally supervise the
23affairs of the committee. Any such procedural rules must be
24filed with the Clerk and copies provided to all members of the
25committee. The Vice-Chairperson of a committee or other member
26of the committee from the majority caucus may preside over its

 

 

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1meetings in the absence or at the direction of the Chairperson.
2In the case of standing or special committees with
3Co-Chairpersons from different political parties, the
4"Chairperson" for purposes of this Rule is the Co-Chairperson
5from the majority caucus.
6    (d) A vacancy on a committee, or in the position of
7Chairperson, Co-Chairperson, Vice-Chairperson, or Minority
8Spokesperson on a committee, exists when a member resigns from
9the position, ceases to be a Representative, or changes
10political party affiliation. Resignations and notices of a
11change in political party affiliation shall be made in writing
12to the Clerk, who shall promptly notify the Speaker and
13Minority Leader. Replacement members shall be of the same
14political party as that of the member who resigns, and shall be
15appointed in the same manner as the original appointment,
16except that in the case of the resignation of a Chairperson or
17Co-Chairperson, the replacement member need not be from the
18same political party. The Speaker or Minority Leader may
19appoint a temporary replacement to fill a vacancy until such
20time as a permanent member has been appointed. In the case of
21vacancies on subcommittees, the parent committee shall fill the
22vacancy in the same manner as the original appointment.
23    (e) The Chairperson of a committee has the authority to
24call meetings of that committee, subject to the approval of the
25Speaker. In the case of standing or special committees with
26Co-Chairpersons from different political parties, the

 

 

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1Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus has the authority to
2call meetings of the special committee, subject to the approval
3of the Speaker. Except as otherwise provided by these Rules,
4committee meetings shall be convened in accordance with Rule
521.
6    (f) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
7of 71 members elected.
 
8    (House Rule 11)
9    11. Standing Committees. The Standing Committees of the
10House are as follows:
11    AGRICULTURE & CONSERVATION
12    APPROPRIATIONS-ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION
13    APPROPRIATIONS-GENERAL SERVICES
14    APPROPRIATIONS-HIGHER EDUCATION
15    APPROPRIATIONS-HUMAN SERVICES
16    APPROPRIATIONS-PUBLIC SAFETY
17    BUSINESS INCENTIVES FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES
18    BUSINESS & OCCUPATIONAL LICENSES
19    CITIES & VILLAGES
20    COMMUNITY COLLEGE ACCESS & AFFORDABILITY
21    CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY & CODE ENFORCEMENT
22    CONSUMER PROTECTION
23    COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
24    COUNTIES & TOWNSHIPS
25    CYBERSECURITY, DATA ANALYTICS, & IT (INFORMATION 

 

 

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1TECHNOLOGY)
2    ECONOMIC JUSTICE & EQUITY
3    ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY DEVELOPMENT & HOUSING
4    ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGN FINANCE
5    ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION: SCHOOL CURRICULUM & 
6POLICIES
7    ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION: CHARTER SCHOOL POLICY
8    ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION: LICENSING,
9        ADMINISTRATION & OVERSIGHT
10    ENERGY
11    ENVIRONMENT
12    EXECUTIVE
13    FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
14    FIRE & EMERGENCY SERVICES
15    GOVERNMENT CONSOLIDATION & MODERNIZATION
16    GOVERNMENT TRANSPARENCY
17    HEALTH CARE AVAILABILITY & ACCESSIBILITY
18    HEALTH CARE LICENSES
19    HIGHER EDUCATION
20    HUMAN SERVICES
21    INSURANCE: HEALTH & LIFE
22    INSURANCE: PROPERTY & CASUALTY
23    INTERNATIONAL TRADE & COMMERCE
24    JUDICIARY - CIVIL
25    JUDICIARY - CRIMINAL
26    JUVENILE JUSTICE & SYSTEM-INVOLVED YOUTH

 

 

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1    LABOR & COMMERCE
2    MASS TRANSIT
3    PERSONNEL & PENSIONS
4    PUBLIC UTILITIES
5    REVENUE & FINANCE
6    SMALL BUSINESS EMPOWERMENT & WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT
7    STATE GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
8    TOURISM, HOSPITALITY & CRAFT INDUSTRIES
9    TRANSPORTATION: REGULATION, ROADS & BRIDGES
10    TRANSPORTATION: VEHICLES & SAFETY
 
11    (House Rule 12)
12    12. Members and Officers of Standing Committees. The
13members of each standing committee shall be appointed for the
14term by the Speaker and the Minority Leader. The Speaker, at
15his or her discretion, shall appoint a Chairperson or
16Co-Chairpersons. The Speaker may appoint any member as a
17Chairperson or Co-Chairperson of a standing committee, subject
18to Rule 10(b). If the Chairperson or Co-Chairperson is a member
19of the majority or minority leadership or the Chairperson or
20Minority Spokesperson of any other standing committee or of a
21special committee, the member shall receive no additional
22stipend or compensation for serving as Chairperson or
23Co-Chairperson of the standing committee. For purposes of
24Section 1 of the General Assembly Compensation Act (25 ILCS
25115/1), one Co-Chairperson of a standing committee shall be

 

 

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1considered "Chairman" and the other shall be considered
2"Minority Spokesman" unless both Co-Chairpersons are members
3of the majority caucus. The Speaker shall appoint the remaining
4standing committee members of the majority caucus (one of whom
5the Speaker may designate as Vice-Chairperson), and the
6Minority Leader shall appoint the remaining standing committee
7members of the minority caucus (one of whom the Minority Leader
8may designate as Minority Spokesperson), except that if the
9standing committee has Co-Chairpersons from different
10political parties, the standing committee shall not have a
11Minority Spokesperson. In that case, the Minority Leader shall
12appoint the minority caucus members to the standing committee,
13except the Co-Chairperson from the minority caucus, who shall
14be appointed by the Speaker. Appointments are effective upon
15the delivery of appropriate correspondence from the respective
16leader to the Clerk, regardless of whether the House is in
17session, and shall remain effective for the duration of the
18term, subject to Rule 10(d). The Clerk shall journalize the
19appointments. Committees may conduct business when a majority
20of the total number of committee members has been appointed.
 
21    (House Rule 13)
22    13. Special Committees.
23    (a) The following Special Committees are created:
24    AGING
25    ADOPTION REFORM

 

 

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1    BUSINESS GROWTH & INCENTIVES 
2    HEALTH & HEALTHCARE DISPARITIES
3    INTERMODAL INFRASTRUCTURE
4    INTERNATIONAL TRADE & COMMERCE
5    MENTAL HEALTH
6    MUSEUMS, ARTS, & CULTURAL ENHANCEMENT
7    POLICE & FIRST RESPONDERS
8    RENEWABLE ENERGY & SUSTAINABILITY
9    RESTORATIVE JUSTICE 
10    SPECIAL NEEDS SERVICES 
11    TOLLWAY OVERSIGHT
12    TOURISM & CONVENTIONS
13    VETERANS' AFFAIRS
14    YOUTH & YOUNG ADULTS 
15    Additional special committees may be created by (i) the
16Speaker or (ii) a House resolution approved by a majority of
17those elected.
18    The Speaker may create additional special committees by
19filing a notice of the creation of the special committee with
20the Clerk. The notice or House resolution creating an
21additional special committee shall specify the subject matter
22of the special committee and the number of majority and
23minority caucus members to be appointed. Any committee created
24by a House resolution shall be deemed a special committee,
25unless otherwise provided, for purposes of these Rules. Such a
26resolution must be approved by a majority of those elected and

 

 

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1may include the number of majority and minority caucus members
2to be appointed.
3    (b) The Speaker shall determine the number of majority and
4minority caucus members to be appointed to special committees
5in accordance with Rule 10(b). The Speaker, at his or her
6discretion, shall appoint a Chairperson or Co-Chairpersons.
7The Speaker may appoint any member as a Chairperson or
8Co-Chairperson of a special committee, subject to Rule 10(b).
9If the Chairperson or Co-Chairperson is a member of the
10majority or minority leadership or the Chairperson or Minority
11Spokesperson of a standing committee, the member shall receive
12no additional stipend or compensation for serving as
13Chairperson or Co-Chairperson of the special committee. For
14purposes of Section 1 of the General Assembly Compensation Act
15(25 ILCS 115/1), (i) a special committee under these rules is
16considered a "select committee" and (ii) one Co-Chairperson of
17a special committee shall be considered "Chairman" and the
18other shall be considered "Minority Spokesman" unless both
19Co-Chairpersons are members of the majority caucus. The
20appointed members of special committees shall be designated by
21the Speaker and the Minority Leader in a like manner as
22provided in Rule 12 with respect to standing committees. If the
23special committee has Co-Chairpersons from different political
24parties, the special committee shall not have a Minority
25Spokesperson. In that case, the Minority Leader shall appoint
26the minority caucus members to the special committee, except

 

 

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1the Co-Chairperson from the minority caucus who shall be
2appointed by the Speaker. The Speaker may establish a reporting
3date during the term for each special committee by filing a
4notice of the reporting date with the Clerk. Unless an earlier
5date is specified by the notice, special committees expire at
6the end of the term.
7    (c) Special committees are empowered to conduct business
8when a majority of the total number of committee members has
9been appointed.
10    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
11of 71 members elected.
 
12    (House Rule 13.5)
13    13.5. Task Forces.
14    A task force may be created by (i) the Speaker, or (ii) a
15House resolution approved by a majority of those elected. A
16notice or resolution creating a task force shall include the
17subject matter of the task force and the number of majority and
18minority caucus members to be appointed. House members shall be
19designated by the Speaker and the Minority Leader. Except as
20otherwise provided for in the notice or House resolution
21creating the task force, the Speaker shall designate the Chair
22and the Minority Leader shall designate the Minority
23Spokesperson; however, the special committee shall not have a
24Minority Spokesperson if the task force has Co-Chairpersons
25from different political parties. Except as otherwise provided

 

 

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1for in the notice or House resolution creating the task force,
2all actions and recommendations of the task force must be
3approved by a majority of those appointed to the task force.
4Task forces are empowered to conduct business when a majority
5of the total number of members has been appointed. For purposes
6of Section 1 of the General Assembly Compensation Act (25 ILCS
7115/1), a task force is not considered a "select committee".
8    The Chair or Co-Chairpersons of a task force shall provide,
9no later than 48 hours before a proposed hearing, a notice
10identifying the date, time, location, and subject matter of any
11hearing. The Clerk shall be the custodian of record for
12documents, records, and audio recordings for task force
13hearings.
 
14    (House Rule 14)
15    14. Subcommittees.
16    (a) The Chairperson of a standing committee, a special
17committee, or a committee created under Article X may create a
18subcommittee by filing a notice with the Clerk. The notice
19shall specify the subject matter, the number of majority caucus
20and minority caucus members to be appointed to a subcommittee,
21and the manner in which appointments shall be made, and may
22specify a reporting date during the term. In the case of
23standing or special committees with Co-Chairpersons from
24different political parties, the creation of subcommittees and
25the number of majority caucus and minority caucus members to be

 

 

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1appointed to the subcommittee shall be determined by the
2Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus. Members of
3subcommittees and any temporary replacements must be members of
4the parent committee. Subcommittees shall not create
5subcommittees.
6    Unless an earlier date is specified by the notice,
7subcommittees expire at the end of the term.
8    (b) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
9of 71 members elected.
 
10    (House Rule 15)
11    15. Rules Committee.
12    (a) The Rules Committee is created as a permanent
13committee. The Rules Committee shall consist of 5 members, 3
14appointed by the Speaker and 2 appointed by the Minority
15Leader. The Speaker and the Minority Leader are each eligible
16to be appointed to the Rules Committee. The Rules Committee may
17conduct business when a majority of the total number of its
18members has been appointed.
19    (b) The majority caucus members of the Rules Committee
20shall serve at the pleasure of the Speaker, and the minority
21caucus members shall serve at the pleasure of the Minority
22Leader. Appointments shall be by notice filed with the Clerk,
23and shall be effective for the balance of the term or until a
24replacement appointment is made, whichever first occurs.
25Appointments take effect upon filing with the Clerk, regardless

 

 

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1of whether the House is in session.
2    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules, the
3Rules Committee may meet upon reasonable public notice that
4includes a statement of the subjects to be considered. All
5legislative measures pending before the Rules Committee are
6eligible for consideration at any of its meetings, and all of
7those legislative measures are deemed posted for hearing by the
8Rules Committee for all of its meetings.
9    (d) Upon concurrence of a majority of those appointed, the
10Rules Committee may advance any legislative measure pending
11before it to the House, without referral to another committee;
12the Rules Committee, however, shall not so report (i) any
13committee amendment, or (ii) any bill that has never been
14favorably reported by or discharged from a standing committee
15or a special committee of the House or recommended for action
16by a joint committee of the House and Senate. A bill advanced
17to the House shall be placed on the Daily Calendar on the order
18on which it appeared before it was re-referred to the Rules
19Committee. Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules,
20a floor amendment, joint action motion for final action, or
21conference committee report advanced to the House by the Rules
22Committee may be considered for adoption no sooner than one
23hour after the Clerk announces the report of the Rules
24Committee referring such a legislative measure to the House.
25    (e) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
26of 71 members elected.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 16)
2    16. Referrals of Resolutions and Reorganization Orders.
3    (a) All resolutions, except adjournment resolutions and
4resolutions considered under subsection (b) or (c) of this
5Rule, after being initially read by the Clerk, shall be ordered
6reproduced and distributed as provided in Rule 39 and
7automatically referred to the Rules Committee, which may
8thereafter refer any resolution before it to the House or to a
9standing committee or special committee. No resolution, except
10adjournment resolutions and resolutions considered under
11subsection (b), (c), or (d) of this Rule, may be considered by
12the House unless (i) referred to the House by the Rules
13Committee under Rule 18, (ii) favorably reported by a standing
14committee or special committee, (iii) authorized under Article
15XII, or (iv) discharged from committee pursuant to Rule 18(g)
16or Rule 58. An adjournment resolution is subject to Rule 66.
17    (b) Any member may file a congratulatory or death
18resolution for consideration by the House. The Principal
19Sponsor of each congratulatory or death resolution shall pay a
20reasonable fee, determined by the Clerk with the approval of
21the Speaker, to offset the actual cost of producing the
22congratulatory or death resolution. The fee may be paid from
23the office allowance provided by Section 4 of the General
24Assembly Compensation Act, or from any other funds available to
25the member. Upon agreement of the Speaker and the Minority

 

 

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1Leader, congratulatory or death resolutions may be immediately
2considered and adopted by the House without referral to the
3Rules Committee. Those resolutions may be adopted as a group by
4a single motion pursuant to a voice vote. A member may record a
5vote of "present" or "no" for a particular resolution by filing
6a notice with the Clerk to be included in the House Journal.
7Congratulatory and death resolutions shall be entered on the
8Journal only by number, sponsorship, and subject. The
9provisions of this subsection requiring the Principal Sponsor
10to pay a reasonable fee may not be suspended.
11    (c) Death resolutions in memory of former members of the
12General Assembly and former constitutional officers, upon
13introduction, may be immediately considered by the House
14without referral to the Rules Committee. Those resolutions
15shall be entered on the Journal in full.
16    (d) Executive reorganization orders of the Governor issued
17under Article V, Sec. 11 of the Constitution, upon being read
18into the record by the Clerk, are automatically referred to the
19Rules Committee for its referral to a standing committee or a
20special committee, which may issue a recommendation to the
21House with respect to the Executive Order. The Rules Committee
22may refer a resolution to disapprove an Executive Order to the
23House if a standing committee or a special committee has
24reported to the House on the Executive Order, or if the
25Executive Order has been discharged under Rule 58. The House
26may disapprove of an Executive Order by resolution adopted by a

 

 

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1majority of those elected.
 
2    (House Rule 17)
3    17. Sponsorship by the Rules Committee. The Rules Committee
4may consider any legislative measure referred to it under these
5Rules, by motion or resolution, or by order of the Presiding
6Officer upon initial reading. The Rules Committee may, with the
7concurrence of a majority of those appointed, sponsor motions
8or resolutions; notwithstanding any other provision of these
9Rules, any motion or resolution sponsored by the Rules
10Committee may be immediately considered by the House without
11referral to a committee. Any such motion or resolution shall be
12assigned standard debate status, subject to Rule 52.
 
13    (House Rule 18)
14    18. Referrals to Committees.
15    (a) All House Bills and Senate Bills, after being initially
16read by the Clerk, are automatically referred to the Rules
17Committee. All bills must be reproduced and distributed as
18provided in Rule 39.
19    (b) The Rules Committee may refer any such bill before it
20to a standing committee or a special committee. During
21even-numbered years, the Rules Committee shall refer to a
22standing committee or a special committee only appropriation
23bills implementing the budget and bills deemed by the Rules
24Committee, by the affirmative vote of a majority of those

 

 

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1appointed, to be of an emergency nature or to be of substantial
2importance to the operation of government. This subsection (b)
3applies equally to House Bills and Senate Bills introduced into
4or received by the House.
5    (b-5) Notwithstanding subsection (b), the Rules Committee
6may refer any legislative measure to a joint committee of the
7House and Senate created by joint resolution. That joint
8committee shall report back to the Rules Committee any
9recommendation for action made by that joint committee. The
10Rules committee may, at any time, however, refer the
11legislative measure to a standing or special committee of the
12House.
13    (c) A standing committee or a special committee may refer a
14subject matter or a legislative measure pending in that
15committee to a subcommittee of that committee.
16    (d) All legislative measures favorably reported by a
17standing committee or a special committee, or discharged from a
18standing committee or a special committee under Rule 58, shall
19be referred to the House and placed on the appropriate order of
20business, which shall appear on the daily calendar. All
21legislative measures, except bills or resolutions on the
22Consent Calendar, bills or resolutions assigned short debate
23status by a standing committee or special committee, and floor
24amendments, so referred are automatically assigned standard
25debate status, subject to Rule 52.
26    (e) All committee amendments, floor amendments, joint

 

 

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1action motions for final action, conference committee reports,
2and motions to table committee amendments, upon filing with the
3Clerk, are automatically referred to the Rules Committee. The
4Rules Committee may refer any committee amendment to the
5standing committee or the special committee to which the bill
6or resolution it amends has been referred for its review and
7consideration, provided the committee amendment is filed no
8later than 3:00 p.m. the business day before a meeting at which
9that bill or resolution may be considered. "Business day" does
10not include Saturday, Sunday, or State or federal holidays
11unless the House is in session or the Clerk's office is
12otherwise open to the public on that day. The Rules Committee
13may refer any floor amendment, joint action motion for final
14action, conference committee report, or motion to table a
15committee amendment to the House or to a standing committee or
16a special committee for its review and consideration (in those
17instances, and notwithstanding any other provision of these
18Rules, the standing committee or special committee may hold a
19hearing on and consider those legislative measures pursuant to
20a one-hour advance notice, and referrals to the House shall be
21subject to the notice requirements of Rule 15(d)). Any floor
22amendment, joint action motion for final action, conference
23committee report, or motion to table a committee amendment that
24is not referred to the House by, or discharged from, the Rules
25Committee is out of order, except that any floor amendment,
26joint action motion for final action, conference committee

 

 

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1report, or motion to table a committee amendment favorably
2reported by, or discharged from, a standing committee or a
3special committee is deemed referred to the House by the Rules
4Committee for purposes of this Rule. All joint action motions
5for final action, conference committee reports and motions to
6table committee amendments so referred are automatically
7assigned standard debate status, subject to Rule 52. Floor
8amendments referred to the House under this Rule are
9automatically assigned amendment debate status.
10    (f) The Rules Committee may at any time refer or re-refer a
11legislative measure from a committee to a Committee of the
12Whole or to any other committee. If a bill or resolution is
13re-referred from a standing or special committee to a Committee
14of the Whole or to any other committee pursuant to this Rule,
15any committee amendments pending in the standing or special
16committee shall be automatically re-referred with the bill or
17resolution.
18    (g) Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules, any
19bill pending before the Rules Committee shall be immediately
20discharged and referred to a standing committee, special
21committee, or order of the Daily Calendar, as provided in this
22Rule, if the Principal Sponsor of the bill files a motion that
23is signed by no less than three-fifths of the members of both
24the majority and minority caucuses, provided each member
25signing the motion is a sponsor of the underlying bill subject
26to the motion and the motion specifies the appropriate standing

 

 

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1committee, special committee, or order on the Daily Calendar to
2which the bill shall be referred. Such a motion shall be filed,
3in writing, with the Clerk. All other legislative measures may
4be discharged from the Rules Committee only by unanimous
5consent of the House. A bill or resolution discharged from the
6Rules Committee shall be referred as follows: (i) a bill or
7resolution that was not previously referred shall be referred
8to the standing committee or special committee designated on
9the motion, subject to the notice requirement of Rule 21; (ii)
10a bill or resolution re-referred to the Rules Committee from a
11standing committee or special committee shall be re-referred to
12that committee, subject to the notice requirement of Rule 21;
13and (iii) a bill or resolution re-referred to the Rules
14Committee from an order of business on the Daily Calendar shall
15be re-referred to the same order of business, provided the bill
16or resolution shall be carried on the Daily Calendar for at
17least one legislative day prior to consideration by the House.
18Legislative measures, other than bills or resolutions, that are
19discharged from the Rules Committee shall be referred as
20follows: (i) an amendment, joint action motion for final
21action, or conference committee report shall be referred to the
22committee that considered the underlying bill or resolution and
23(ii) any other legislative measure shall be referred to the
24proper order of business on the Daily Calendar, provided the
25legislative measure shall be carried on the Daily Calendar for
26at least one legislative day prior to consideration by the

 

 

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1House. Rulings of the Presiding Officer related to this
2subsection (g) may not be appealed. This subsection may not be
3suspended.
4    (h) Except for those provisions that may not be suspended,
5this Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote of 71
6members elected.
 
7    (House Rule 19)
8    19. Re-Referrals to the Rules Committee.
9    (a) All legislative measures that fail to meet the
10applicable deadline established under Rule 9 for reporting to
11the House by a standing committee or a special committee, for
12Third Reading and passage, or for consideration of joint action
13motions and conference committee reports are automatically
14re-referred to the Rules Committee unless: (i) the deadline has
15been suspended or revised by the Speaker, with re-referral to
16the Rules Committee to occur if the bill has not been reported
17to the House in accordance with a revised deadline; or (ii) the
18Rules Committee has issued a written exception to the Clerk
19with respect to a particular bill before the reporting
20deadline, with re-referral to occur, if at all, in accordance
21with the written exception; or (iii) the deadline has been
22automatically suspended because the bill has been passed, but
23remains subject to further consideration pursuant to Rule 65.
24When a bill is re-referred to the Rules Committee after failure
25to meet a committee reporting or Third Reading deadline, any

 

 

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1amendment to the bill remaining in a standing or special
2committee shall also be re-referred to the Rules Committee.
3    (b) All legislative measures pending before the House or
4any of its committees are automatically re-referred to the
5Rules Committee on the 31st consecutive day that the House has
6not convened for session unless: (i) any deadline applicable to
7the bill or resolution that has been designated by the Speaker
8under Rule 9 exceeds 31 days, with re-referral to occur, if at
9all, in accordance with that deadline; (ii) this Rule is
10suspended under Rule 67; or (iii) the Rules Committee, by the
11affirmative vote of a majority of those appointed, issues a
12written exception to the Clerk before that 31st day.
 
13    (House Rule 20)
14    20. Reporting by Committees. Committees shall report to the
15House, and subcommittees shall report to their parent
16committees unless otherwise provided in these Rules.
 
17    (House Rule 21)
18    21. Notice.
19    (a) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules or unless
20this Rule is suspended under Rule 67 or unless the Rules
21Committee by majority vote waives the notice requirement for a
22subject matter hearing of any committee, standing committees,
23special committees, committees created under Article X of these
24Rules, and subcommittees of those committees shall not consider

 

 

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1or conduct a hearing with respect to a subject matter or a
2legislative measure absent notice first being given as follows:
3        (1) The Chairperson of the committee, or the
4    Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus of a standing or
5    special committee, shall, no later than 6 days before any
6    proposed hearing, post a notice on the House bulletin board
7    or the General Assembly website identifying each subject
8    matter and each legislative measure, other than a committee
9    amendment upon initial consideration under Rule 40, that
10    may be considered during that hearing. The notice shall
11    contain the day, hour, and place of the hearing. The
12    scheduled time for a hearing may be (i) changed to a later
13    hour without requiring additional notice, or (ii) set to
14    begin upon adjournment of the House. The location of a
15    hearing may be changed at any time, provided notice is
16    posted on the House bulletin board or the General Assembly
17    website. Legislative measures and subject matters posted
18    for hearing as provided in this item (1) may also be
19    considered at any committee hearing re-convened following
20    a recess of the committee for which notice was posted, but
21    only if (i) the House has met or was scheduled to meet in
22    regular, veto, or special session on each calendar day from
23    the time of the original committee hearing to the
24    re-convened committee hearing and (ii) notice is provided
25    on the House bulletin board or the General Assembly
26    website.

 

 

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1        (2) Meetings of the Rules Committee may be called under
2    Rule 15; meetings of the standing committees and special
3    committees to consider floor amendments, joint action
4    motions for final action, conference committee reports,
5    and motions to table committee amendments may be called
6    under Rule 18.
7        (3) The Chairperson, or Co-Chairperson from the
8    majority caucus of a standing or special committee, shall,
9    in advance of a committee hearing, notify all Principal
10    Sponsors of legislative measures posted for that hearing of
11    the date, time, and place of hearing. When practical, the
12    Clerk shall include a notice of all scheduled hearings,
13    together with all posted legislative measures and subject
14    matters bills and resolutions, in the Daily Calendar of the
15    House. Regardless of whether a particular legislative
16    measure or subject matter has been posted for hearing, it
17    is in order for a committee during any of its meetings to
18    refer a subject matter or legislative measure pending
19    before it to a subcommittee of that committee.
20    (b) Except as authorized under Rule 28, no committee, other
21than the Rules Committee, may meet during any session of the
22House, and no commission created by Illinois law that has
23legislative membership may meet during any session of the
24House.
25    (c) Regardless of whether notice has been previously given,
26it is always in order for a committee to table any legislative

 

 

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1measure pending before it when the Principal Sponsor so
2requests, subject to Rule 60.
3    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
4of 71 members elected, subject to Rule 25.
 
5    (House Rule 22)
6    22. Committee Procedure.
7    (a) A committee may consider any legislative measure
8referred to it, except as provided in subsection (b), and may
9make with respect to that legislative measure one of the
10following reports to the House or to the parent committee, as
11appropriate:
12        (1) that the bill "do pass";
13        (2) that the bill "do not pass";
14        (3) that the bill "do pass as amended";
15        (4) that the bill "do not pass as amended";
16        (5) that the resolution "be adopted";
17        (6) that the resolution "be not adopted";
18        (7) that the resolution "be adopted as amended";
19        (8) that the resolution "be not adopted as amended";
20        (9) that the floor amendment, joint action motion,
21    conference committee report, or motion to table a committee
22    amendment "be adopted";
23        (10) that the floor amendment, joint action motion,
24    conference committee report, or motion to table a committee
25    amendment "be not adopted";

 

 

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1        (11) that the Executive Order "be disapproved";
2        (12) that the Executive Order "be not disapproved";
3        (13) "without recommendation"; or
4        (14) "tabled".
5    Any of the foregoing reports may be made only upon the
6concurrence of a majority of those appointed. All legislative
7measures reported "do pass", "do pass as amended", "be
8adopted", or "be adopted as amended" are favorably reported to
9the House. Except as otherwise provided by these Rules, any
10legislative measure referred or re-referred to a committee and
11not reported under this Rule shall remain in that committee.
12    (b) No bill that provides for an appropriation of money
13from the State Treasury may be considered for passage by the
14House unless it has first been favorably reported by an
15Appropriations Committee or:
16        (1) the bill was discharged from an Appropriations
17    Committee under Rule 58;
18        (2) the bill was exempted from this requirement by a
19    majority of those appointed to the Rules Committee; or
20        (3) this Rule was suspended under Rule 67.
21    (c) The Clerk shall keep a record in which there shall be
22entered:
23        (1) The time and place of each meeting of the
24    committee.
25        (2) The attendance of committee members at each
26    meeting.

 

 

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1        (3) The votes cast by the committee members on all
2    legislative measures acted on by the committee.
3        (4) The "Record of Committee Witness" forms executed by
4    each person appearing or registering in each committee
5    meeting, which shall include identification of the
6    witness, the person, group, or firm represented by
7    appearance and the capacity in which the representation is
8    made (if the person is representing someone other than
9    himself or herself), his or her position on the legislation
10    under consideration, and the nature of his or her desired
11    testimony.
12        (5) An audio recording of the proceedings.
13        (6) Documents submitted to the committee by persons
14    providing testimony or registering in each committee
15    meeting.
16        (7) Such additional information as may be requested by
17    the Clerk.
18    (d) The committee Chairperson, or the Co-Chairperson from
19the majority caucus of a standing or special committee, shall
20file with the Clerk, along with every legislative measure
21reported upon, a written report containing such information as
22required by the Clerk. The Clerk may adopt forms, policies, and
23procedures with respect to the preparation, filing, and
24maintenance of the reports.
25    (e) When a committee fails to report a legislative measure
26pending before it to the House, or when a committee fails to

 

 

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1hold a public hearing on a legislative measure pending before
2it, the exclusive means to bring that legislative measure
3directly before the House for its consideration is as provided
4in Rule 18 or Rule 58.
5    (f) No legislative measure may be called for a vote in a
6standing committee or special committee in the absence of the
7Principal Sponsor. The committee Chairperson, the committee
8Minority Spokesperson, or a chief co-sponsor may present a bill
9or resolution in committee with the approval of the Principal
10Sponsor when the committee consents. In the case of standing or
11special committees with Co-Chairpersons from different
12political parties, the "Chairperson" means the Co-Chairperson
13from the majority caucus, and the "Minority Spokesperson" means
14the Co-Chairperson from the minority caucus. This subsection
15may not be suspended.
16    (g) Motions to favorably report a legislative measure for
17committee approval of bills and resolutions are renewable,
18provided that no legislative measure bill or resolution may be
19voted on more than twice in any committee on motions to report
20the legislative measure bill or resolution favorably, or to
21reconsider the vote by which the committee adopted a motion to
22report the legislative measure bill or resolution unfavorably.
23A legislative measure bill or resolution having failed to
24receive a favorable recommendation after 2 such record votes
25shall be automatically reported with the appropriate
26unfavorable recommendation.

 

 

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1    (g-5) A legislative measure, having failed to receive a
2favorable recommendation after 2 such record votes of a
3subcommittee or having received a recommendation to
4unfavorably report, shall be automatically reported to the
5parent committee with the appropriate unfavorable
6recommendation and the parent committee shall report the
7unfavorable recommendation to the House.
8    (h) A bill or resolution shall be given short debate status
9by report of the committee if the bill or resolution was
10favorably reported by a three-fifths vote of the members
11present and voting, including those voting "present". Bills and
12resolutions receiving favorable reports may be placed upon the
13Consent Calendar as provided in Rule 42.
14    (i) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
15of 71 members elected.
 
16    (House Rule 23)
17    23. Witnesses, Oaths, and Subpoenae.
18    (a) At the discretion of the Chairperson, standing
19committees may administer oaths and may compel, by subpoena,
20any person to appear and give testimony as a witness before the
21standing committee and produce papers, documents, and other
22materials relating to a legislative measure pending before the
23standing committee.
24    (b) At the discretion of the Chairperson, special
25committees may administer oaths and may compel, by subpoena,

 

 

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1any person to appear and give testimony before the special
2committee and produce papers, documents, and other materials
3relating to the subject matter for which the special committee
4was created or relating to a legislative measure pending before
5the special committee.
6    (c) At the discretion of the Speaker, a Committee of the
7Whole may administer oaths and may compel, by subpoena, any
8person to appear and give testimony before the committee of the
9whole and produce papers, documents, and other materials
10relating to the subject matter for which the committee of the
11whole was created or relating to a legislative measure pending
12before the committee of the whole.
13    (d) Oaths may be administered under this Rule by the
14Presiding Officer or by the Chairperson of a committee or any
15person sitting in his or her stead.
16    (e) Subpoenae issued under this Rule must be issued and
17signed by the Chairperson of the committee and must comply with
18Rule 4(c)(9).
19    (f) In the case of special committees with Co-Chairpersons
20from different political parties, the term "Chairperson" for
21purposes of this Rule means the Co-Chairperson from the
22majority caucus.
23    (g) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
24of 71 members elected.
 
25    (House Rule 24)

 

 

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1    24. Committee Reports.
2    (a) All bills favorably reported to the House from a
3committee, or with respect to which a committee has been
4discharged, shall be reported to the House and shall be placed
5on the order of Second Reading and assigned standard debate
6status, subject to Rule 52. Bills reported to the House from
7committee "do not pass", "do not pass as amended", "without
8recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie on the table.
9    (b) All floor amendments, joint action motions for final
10action, conference committee reports, and motions to table
11committee amendments favorably reported from a standing
12committee or special committee shall be referred to the House
13and eligible for consideration when the House is on an
14appropriate order of business. Amendments to bills that are not
15on the order of Second Reading are out of order. All floor
16amendments, joint action motions for final action, conference
17committee reports, and motions to table committee amendments
18that are reported to the House from committee "be not adopted",
19"without recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie on the table.
20When the Rules Committee refers a floor amendment, joint action
21motion for final action, conference committee report, or motion
22to table a committee amendment to a standing committee or a
23special committee that thereafter favorably reports that
24legislative measure to the House, the legislative measure shall
25be referred to the House, assigned standard debate status
26subject to Rule 52 (except floor amendments, which shall be

 

 

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1assigned amendment debate status), and eligible for
2consideration when the House is on an appropriate order of
3business.
4    (c) All resolutions favorably reported to the House from
5the Rules Committee, a standing committee, or a special
6committee, or with respect to which the committee has been
7discharged, shall be referred to the House and placed on the
8order of Resolutions and assigned standard debate status,
9subject to Rule 52. All resolutions that are reported to the
10House from committee "be not adopted", "be not adopted as
11amended", "without recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie on
12the table.
 
13    (House Rule 25)
14    25. Suspension of Posting Requirements.
15    (a) A motion to suspend the posting requirements of Rule 21
16must be in writing, specifying the committee and the bills or
17resolutions to which the motion applies, and adopted by the
18affirmative vote of 60 members elected. The requirement that
19the motion be in writing may not be suspended.
20    (b) Except for those provisions that may not be suspended
21or that require unanimous consent, this Rule may be suspended
22only by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
 
23    (House Rule 26)
24    26. Rights of the Public.

 

 

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1    (a) If a legislative measure or subject matter has been
2properly set for hearing and witnesses are present and wish to
3testify, the committee shall hear the witnesses at the
4scheduled time and place, subject to Rule 10(c).
5    (b) Any person wishing to offer testimony to a committee
6hearing of a legislative measure or subject matter shall be
7given a reasonable opportunity to do so, orally or in writing.
8The Chairperson may set time limits for presentation of oral
9testimony. No testimony in writing is required of any witness,
10but any witness may submit a statement in writing for the
11committee record. All persons offering testimony shall
12complete a "Record of Committee Witness" form and submit it to
13the committee clerk before testifying. In the case of standing
14or special committees with Co-Chairpersons from different
15political parties, the "Chairperson" means the Co-Chairperson
16from the majority caucus.
17    (c) A motion to foreclose further oral testimony by
18witnesses on a matter before a committee may be adopted only by
19a three-fifths majority of those voting on the motion. No such
20motion is in order until both proponents and opponents
21requesting to be heard have been given a fair and substantial
22opportunity to express their positions. No one shall be
23prohibited from filing for the record "Record of Committee
24Witness" forms or written statements while the matter is before
25the committee.
26    (d) Meetings of committees and subcommittees shall be open

 

 

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1to the public. Committee meetings of the House may be closed to
2the public if two-thirds of the members elected to the House
3determine, by a record vote, that the public interest so
4requires.
5    (e) This Rule cannot be suspended retroactively.
 
6    (House Rule 27)
7    27. Smoking. Smoking is prohibited at any official
8committee hearing, and no committee member, staff member, or
9member of the public is permitted to smoke in the room in which
10the hearing is being held.
 
11
ARTICLE III
12
CONDUCT OF BUSINESS

13    (House Rule 28)
14    28. Sessions of the House.
15    (a) The House is in session whenever it convenes in
16perfunctory session, regular session, veto session, special
17session, or joint session with the Senate. Members are entitled
18to per diem expense reimbursements authorized by law only on
19those regular, veto, special session, and joint session days
20that they are in attendance at the House and either (i) are
21recorded as present on the quorum roll call or (ii) personally
22appear before the Clerk or the Clerk's designee after the
23quorum roll call but prior to the close of the Clerk's Office

 

 

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1for the day. Attendance by members is not required or recorded
2on perfunctory session days.
3    (b) Regular and veto session days shall be scheduled with
4notice by the Speaker under Rule 9. Special session days shall
5be scheduled in accordance with the Constitution and laws of
6Illinois. The Speaker may convene the House when deemed
7necessary, regardless of whether a different date or time has
8been established.
9    (c) The Speaker may schedule perfunctory session days
10during which the Clerk may read into the House record any
11legislative measure. Committees may meet and may consider and
12act upon legislative measures during a perfunctory session day,
13and the Clerk may receive and read committee reports into the
14House record during a perfunctory day. In accordance with Rule
1553.5, and with the approval of the Clerk, a member may make an
16oral statement during a perfunctory session. Except for
17automatic referral under these Rules, no further action may be
18taken by the House with respect to a legislative measure during
19a perfunctory session day.
 
20    (House Rule 29)
21    29. Hour of Meeting. Unless otherwise ordered by the
22Speaker or Presiding Officer or as provided in Rule 1, the
23House shall regularly convene at 12:30 p.m. on the first day of
24each week that the House convenes in regular, veto, or special
25session and shall convene at noon on all other days.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 30)
2    30. Access to the House Floor.
3    (a) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, only the
4following persons shall be admitted to the House while it is in
5session: members and officers of the General Assembly; elected
6officers of the executive branch; justices of the Supreme
7Court; the designated aide to the Governor, except as limited
8by the Speaker; the parliamentarian; majority staff members and
9minority staff members, except as limited by the Speaker or
10Presiding Officer; former members, except as limited by the
11Speaker or prohibited under subsection (d); and employees of
12the Legislative Reference Bureau, except as limited by the
13Speaker. Representatives of the press, while the House is in
14session, may have access to the galleries and places allotted
15to them by the Speaker. No person is entitled to the floor
16unless appropriately attired. Only members of the General
17Assembly may use telephones at the members' desks. Smoking is
18prohibited on the floor of the House and in the House
19galleries.
20    (b) On days during which the House is in session, the
21Doorkeeper shall clear the floor of all persons not entitled to
22access to the floor 15 minutes before the convening time, and
23the Doorkeeper shall enforce all other provisions of this Rule.
24    (c) The Speaker may authorize the admission to the floor of
25any other person, except as prohibited under subsection (d).

 

 

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1    (d) No person who is directly or indirectly interested in
2defeating or promoting any pending legislative measure, if
3required to be registered as a lobbyist or compensated by an
4entity required to register as a lobbyist, shall be allowed
5access to the floor of the House at any time during the
6session. The Speaker, or his or her designee, shall have the
7authority to determine whether a person may be granted or
8denied access in accordance with this subsection.
9    (e) When he or she deems it necessary for the preservation
10of order, the Presiding Officer may by order remove any person
11from the floor of the House. A Representative may be removed
12from the floor only under Article XI or XII of these Rules.
 
13    (House Rule 31)
14    31. Standing Order of Business.
15    (a) Unless otherwise determined by the Presiding Officer,
16the standing daily order of business of the House is as
17follows:
18        (1) Call to Order, Invocation, Pledge of Allegiance,
19    and Roll Call.
20        (2) Approval of the Journal.
21        (3) Reading of House Bills a first time.
22        (4) Reports from committees, with reports from the
23    Rules Committee ordinarily made at any time.
24        (5) Presentation of Resolutions, Petitions, and
25    Messages.

 

 

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1        (6) Introduction of House Bills.
2        (7) Messages from the Senate, not including reading
3    Senate Bills a first time.
4        (8) Reading of House Bills a second time.
5        (9) Reading of House Bills a third time.
6        (10) Reading of Senate Bills a third time.
7        (11) Reading of Senate Bills a second time.
8        (12) Reading of Senate Bills a first time.
9        (13) House Bills on the Order of Concurrence.
10        (14) Senate Bills on the Order of Non-Concurrence.
11        (15) Conference Committee Reports.
12        (16) Motions in Writing.
13        (17) Constitutional Amendment Resolutions.
14        (18) Motions with respect to Vetoes.
15        (19) Consideration of Resolutions.
16        (20) Motions to Discharge Committee.
17        (21) Motions to Take from the Table.
18        (22) Motions to Suspend the Rules.
19        (23) Consideration of Bills on the Order of Postponed
20    Consideration.
21    (b) The Speaker may establish a Weekly Order of Business or
22a Daily Order of Business setting forth the date and
23approximate time at which specific legislative measures may be
24considered by the House. The Weekly Order of Business or Daily
25Order of Business is effective upon being filed by the Speaker
26with the Clerk and takes the place of the standing order of

 

 

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1business for the amount of time necessary for its completion.
2Nothing in this Rule, however, limits the Speaker's or
3Presiding Officer's powers under Rule 4(c)(3) or Rule 43(a).
4    (c) A special order of business may be set by the Rules
5Committee or by the Speaker as provided in Rule 44.
6    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
7of 71 members elected.
 
8    (House Rule 32)
9    32. Quorum.
10    (a) A majority of those elected constitutes a quorum of the
11House, and a majority of those appointed constitutes a quorum
12of a committee, but a smaller number may adjourn from day to
13day, or recess for less than one day, and compel the attendance
14of absent members. When a quorum is not present for a hearing
15of a committee, a smaller number may conduct a hearing on a
16subject matter as authorized by Rule 21 or Rule 25. The
17attendance of absent members may also be compelled by order of
18the Speaker. This subsection may not be suspended.
19    (b) The question of the presence of a quorum in any
20committee may not be raised on consideration of a legislative
21measure by the House unless the same question was previously
22raised before the committee with respect to that legislative
23measure.
24    (c) Any member not answering the quorum roll call of the
25House on any session day who is in attendance and wishes to be

 

 

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1added to that quorum roll call must file a request to be shown
2present on the quorum roll call with the Clerk. The request
3must be in writing and filed in person by the member on the
4same calendar day the quorum roll call was taken.
 
5    (House Rule 33)
6    33. Approval of the Journal. The Speaker or his or her
7designee shall periodically examine and report to the House any
8corrections he or she deems should be made in the Journal
9before it is approved. If those corrections are approved by the
10House, they shall be made by the Clerk.
 
11    (House Rule 34)
12    34. Executive Sessions. The sessions of the House shall be
13open to the public. Sessions and committee meetings of the
14House may be closed to the public if two-thirds of the members
15elected determine, by a record vote, that the public interest
16so requires.
 
17    (House Rule 35)
18    35. Length of Adjournment. The House, without the consent
19of the Senate, shall not adjourn for more than 3 days or to a
20place other than where the 2 chambers of the General Assembly
21are sitting. The House is in session on any day in which it
22convenes in perfunctory session, regular session, veto
23session, special session, or joint session with the Senate.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 36)
2    36. Transcript of the House. Nothing contained in the
3official transcript of the House shall be changed or expunged
4except by written request of a Representative to the Clerk and
5Speaker, and that request may be approved only by the record
6vote of 71 members elected.
 
7
ARTICLE IV
8
BILLS AND AMENDMENTS

9    (House Rule 37)
10    37. Bills.
11    (a) A bill may be introduced in the House by sponsorship of
12one or more members of the House, whose names shall be on the
13reproduced copies of the bills, in the House Journal, and in
14the Legislative Digest. The Principal Sponsor shall be the
15first name to appear on the bill and may be joined by no more
16than 4 chief co-sponsors with the approval of the Principal
17Sponsor; other co-sponsors shall be separated from the
18Principal Sponsor and any chief co-sponsors by a comma. The
19Principal Sponsor may change the sponsorship of a bill to that
20of one or more other Representatives, or to that of the
21standing committee or special committee to which the bill was
22referred or from which the bill was reported. Such change may
23be made at any time the bill is pending before the House or any

 

 

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1of its committees by filing a notice with the Clerk, provided
2that the addition of any member as a Principal Sponsor, chief
3co-sponsor, or co-sponsor must be with that member's consent.
4This subsection may not be suspended.
5    (b) The Principal Sponsor of a bill controls that bill. A
6committee-sponsored bill is controlled by the Chairperson, or
7if Co-Chairpersons have been appointed, by the Co-Chairperson
8from the majority caucus, who for purposes of these Rules is
9deemed the Principal Sponsor. Committee-sponsored bills may
10not have individual co-sponsors.
11    (c) The Senate sponsor of a bill originating in the Senate
12may request substitute House sponsorship of that bill by filing
13a notice with the Clerk. Such notice is automatically referred
14to the Rules Committee. The notice shall include the bill
15number, signature of the Senate sponsor, signature of the
16substitute House sponsor, and a statement that the original
17House sponsor was provided with notice of intent to request a
18substitute House sponsor. A notice that satisfies the
19requirements of this subsection shall be approved by the Rules
20Committee. If the Rules Committee does not act on a notice that
21satisfies the requirements of this subsection within 3
22legislative days after its referral, then the notice is deemed
23approved and the Clerk shall substitute sponsorship. This
24subsection shall be in effect if, and only for so long as, the
25Rules of the Senate include a reciprocal privilege for House
26sponsors and the Senate complies with the rule. This subsection

 

 

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1may not be suspended.
2    (d) All bills introduced in the House shall be read by
3title a first time, ordered reproduced and distributed in
4accordance with Rule 39, and automatically referred to the
5Rules Committee in accordance with Rule 18. After a Senate Bill
6is received and a House member has submitted notification to
7the Clerk of sponsorship of that bill, it shall be read by
8title, ordered reproduced and distributed in accordance with
9Rule 39, and automatically referred to the Rules Committee in
10accordance with Rule 18.
11    (e) All bills introduced into the House shall be
12accompanied by 1 copy. Any bill that amends a statute shall
13indicate the particular changes in the following manner:
14        (1) All new matter shall be underscored.
15        (2) All matter that is to be omitted or superseded
16    shall be shown crossed with a line.
17    (f) No bill shall be passed by the House except on a record
18vote of a majority of those elected, subject to Rule 69. A bill
19that has lost on third reading and has not been reconsidered
20may not thereafter be revived. If a motion for the adoption of
21a first conference committee report fails and the motion is not
22reconsidered, then a second conference committee may be
23appointed as provided in Rule 76(c). If a motion for the
24adoption of a second conference committee report fails and is
25not reconsidered, then the bill may not thereafter be revived.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 37.5)
2    37.5 Amendments to Taxpayer Accountability and Budget
3Stabilization Act.
4    (a) From the commencement of the 97th General Assembly
5until June 30, 2015, no bill that amends or refers to Section
6201.5 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, or that seeks to
7appropriate or transfer money pursuant to a declaration of a
8fiscal emergency under Section 201.5 of that Act, may be moved
9from the order of Second Reading to the order of Third Reading
10unless a motion to approve such measure for consideration has
11been adopted by a record vote of 71 members. If such a bill is
12on the order of concurrence or in the form of a conference
13committee report, no motion to concur or to adopt that
14conference committee report is in order unless a motion to
15approve such measure for consideration has been adopted by a
16record vote of 71 members. Nothing in this House Rule shall be
17deemed to alter the vote requirement for final passage of a
18legislative measure required by the Illinois Constitution.
19    (b) Any motion made pursuant to subsection (a) to approve a
20legislative measure for consideration must be in writing. Upon
21receipt of the written motion, the Clerk shall immediately
22notify the Speaker and the Minority Leader. The motion shall
23not be referred to a committee. The motion must be carried on
24the calendar before it may be taken up by the House and may
25then be immediately considered and adopted by the House. The
26motion is renewable and may be reconsidered, provided that once

 

 

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1that motion is adopted, it shall not be reconsidered.
2    (c) This Rule may not be suspended except by unanimous
3consent.
 
4    (House Rule 37.6)
5    37.6. Amendments to State Pension Funds Continuing
6Appropriation Act.
7    (a) From the commencement of the 97th General Assembly
8until June 30, 2015, no bill that amends or refers to the State
9Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act may be moved from
10the order of Second Reading to the order of Third Reading
11unless a motion to approve such measure for consideration has
12been adopted by a record vote of 71 members. If such a bill is
13on the order of concurrence or in the form of a conference
14committee report, no motion to concur or to adopt that
15conference committee report is in order unless a motion to
16approve such measure for consideration has been adopted by a
17record vote of 71 members. Nothing in this House Rule shall be
18deemed to alter the vote requirement for final passage of a
19legislative measure required by the Illinois Constitution.
20    (b) Any motion made pursuant to subsection (a) to approve a
21legislative measure for consideration must be in writing. Upon
22receipt of the written motion, the Clerk shall immediately
23notify the Speaker and the Minority Leader. The motion shall
24not be referred to a committee. The motion must be carried on
25the calendar before it may be taken up by the House and may

 

 

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1then be immediately considered and adopted by the House. The
2motion is renewable and may be reconsidered, provided that once
3that motion is adopted, it shall not be reconsidered.
4    (c) This Rule may not be suspended except by unanimous
5consent.
 
6    (House Rule 38)
7    38. Reading of Bills. Every bill shall be read by title on
83 different days before passage by the House.
 
9    (House Rule 39)
10    39. Reproduction and Distribution. The Clerk shall cause
11any measure subject to this Rule to be reproduced and
12distributed to the members. Reproduction and distribution may
13be done electronically, or the Clerk may establish a method
14that any member may use to secure a copy.
 
15    (House Rule 40)
16    40. Amendments.
17    (a) A committee amendment to a bill may be adopted by a
18standing committee or special committee when the bill is before
19that committee. A floor amendment to a bill may be adopted by
20the House when a bill is on the order of Second Reading if: (i)
21the Rules Committee has referred the floor amendment to the
22House for consideration under Rule 18; (ii) a standing
23committee or special committee has referred the floor amendment

 

 

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1to the House; or (iii) the floor amendment has been discharged
2from committee pursuant to Rule 58. All amendments filed in the
3House must be accompanied by 1 copy and reproduced and
4distributed as provided in Rule 39. All committee amendments
5that have been referred to a standing committee or special
6committee by the Rules Committee shall be considered by the
7committee or a subcommittee of that committee prior to
8consideration by the committee of the bill to which the
9amendment relates. All committee amendments not adopted to a
10bill prior to the favorable reporting of the bill by a standing
11committee or special committee are automatically tabled. All
12floor amendments not adopted to a bill and that are still
13pending in a committee or before the House upon the passage or
14defeat of a bill on Third Reading are automatically tabled,
15provided that any floor amendment tabled pursuant to this Rule
16shall automatically be taken from the table upon the adoption
17of a motion to reconsider the vote for the passage or defeat of
18the bill on Third Reading.
19    (b) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, committee
20amendments may be offered only by the Principal Sponsor or a
21member of the committee while the affected bill is before that
22committee, and shall be adopted by a majority of those
23appointed. Floor amendments may be offered for adoption only by
24a Representative while the bill is on the order of Second
25Reading, subject to Rule 18, and shall be adopted by a majority
26vote of the House. The sponsor of a committee or floor

 

 

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1amendment may change the sponsorship of the amendment to that
2of another member, with that other member's consent. Such
3change may be made at any time the amendment is pending before
4the House or any of its committees by filing notice with the
5Clerk. A committee amendment may be the subject of a motion to
6"do adopt" or "do not adopt". A committee amendment may be
7adopted only by a successful motion to "do adopt". The
8Chairperson of a committee may refer any committee amendment to
9a subcommittee of that committee.
10    (c) Committee amendments shall be filed with the Clerk no
11later than 3:00 p.m. the business day before a meeting at which
12the bill or resolution it amends may be considered. Floor
13amendments shall be filed with the Clerk only while the bill is
14on the order of Second Reading or Third Reading. The Clerk
15shall number amendments sequentially in the order submitted,
16and all amendments that are in order shall be considered in
17ascending numerical order.
18    (d) No amendment shall be filed with the Clerk while a bill
19is assigned to the Rules Committee. Committee amendments may be
20filed for a resolution pending in the Rules Committee only if
21the resolution would adopt or amend House Rules or Joint
22House-Senate Rules pursuant to Rule 67.
23    (e) No floor amendment is in order unless it has been first
24referred to the House for consideration by the Rules Committee
25under Rule 18, or favorably reported by, or discharged from, a
26standing committee or special committee. A floor amendment may

 

 

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1be referred to the House for consideration, or to a standing or
2special committee, only while the bill is on the order of
3Second Reading or Third Reading.
4    (f) Amendments that propose to alter any existing law shall
5conform to the requirements of Rule 37(e).
6    (g) If a committee reports a bill "do pass as amended", the
7committee amendments are deemed adopted by the committee
8action.
9    (h) Floor amendments to resolutions are subject to the same
10procedure applicable to floor amendments to bills.
11    (i) In the case of special committees with Co-Chairpersons
12from different political parties, the "Chairperson" for the
13purposes of this Rule is the Co-Chairperson from the majority
14caucus.
 
15    (House Rule 41)
16    41. Note Requests; Quick Takes.
17    (a) The House shall comply with all Illinois laws requiring
18fiscal or other notes. The notes shall be filed with the Clerk,
19who shall affix each note with a time stamp endorsing the date
20and time received, and attached to the original of the bill and
21available for inspection by the members. As soon as practical,
22the Clerk shall provide a copy of the note to the Legislative
23Reference Bureau, which shall provide an informative summary of
24the note in subsequent issues of the Legislative Digest.
25    At the request of the principal sponsor of a bill, a note

 

 

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1request for the bill as introduced into the House or received
2from the Senate shall be automatically deemed inapplicable if
3(i) one or more House amendments to the bill have been adopted,
4and (ii) a note of the same type for the bill as amended by each
5adopted House amendment has been filed with the Clerk. If any
6such adopted House amendment is later tabled, the note request
7for the bill as introduced into or received by the House shall
8immediately become applicable.
9    (b) No bill authorizing or directing the conveyance by the
10State of any particular interest in real estate to any
11individual or entity other than a governmental unit or agency
12may be voted upon in committee or upon Second Reading unless a
13certified appraisal of the value of the interest has been
14filed. The appraisal shall be filed with the Clerk of the
15House, and shall be part of the permanent record for that bill.
16    (c) No bill authorizing the State or a unit of local
17government to acquire property by eminent domain using
18"quick-take" powers under the Eminent Domain Act may be voted
19upon in committee or on Second Reading unless the State or the
20unit of local government, as applicable, has complied with all
21of the following procedures:
22        (1) The State or the unit of local government must
23    notify each owner of an interest in the property, by
24    certified mail, of the intention of the State or the unit
25    of local government to request approval of legislation by
26    the General Assembly authorizing the State or the unit of

 

 

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1    local government to acquire the property by eminent domain
2    using "quick-take" powers under Section 20-5-5 of the
3    Eminent Domain Act.
4        (2) The State or the unit of local government must
5    cause notice of its intention to request authorization to
6    acquire the property by eminent domain using "quick-take"
7    powers to be published in a newspaper of general
8    circulation in the territory sought to be acquired by the
9    State or the unit of local government.
10        (3) Following the notices required under paragraphs
11    (1) and (2), the State or the unit of local government must
12    hold at least one public hearing, at the place where the
13    unit of local government normally holds its business
14    meetings (or, in the case of property sought to be acquired
15    by the State: (i) at a location in the county in which the
16    property sought to be acquired by the State is located, or
17    (ii) if the property is located in Cook County, at a
18    location in the township in which the property is located,
19    or (iii) if the property is located in 2 adjacent counties
20    other than Cook County or in 2 adjacent townships in Cook
21    County, at a location in the county or in the township in
22    Cook County in which the majority of the property is
23    located, or (iv) if the property is located in Cook County
24    and an adjacent county, at a location in the other county
25    or in the township in Cook County in which the majority of
26    the property is located), on the question of the

 

 

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1    acquisition of the property by the State or the unit of
2    local government by eminent domain using "quick-take"
3    powers.
4        (4) In the case of property sought to be acquired by a
5    unit of local government, following the public hearing or
6    hearings held under paragraph (3), the unit of local
7    government must adopt, by recorded vote, a resolution to
8    request approval of legislation by the General Assembly
9    authorizing the unit of local government to acquire the
10    property by eminent domain using "quick-take" powers under
11    the Eminent Domain Act. The resolution must include a
12    statement of the time period within which the unit of local
13    government requests authority to exercise "quick-take"
14    powers, which may not exceed one year.
15        (5) Following the public hearing or hearings held under
16    paragraph (3), the head of the appropriate State office,
17    department, or agency or the chief elected official of the
18    unit of local government, as applicable, must submit to the
19    Chairperson and Minority Spokesperson of the House
20    Executive Committee a sworn, notarized affidavit that
21    contains, or has attached as an incorporated exhibit, all
22    of the following:
23            (A) The legal description of the property.
24            (B) The street address of the property.
25            (C) The name of each State Senator and State
26        Representative who represents the territory that is

 

 

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1        the subject of the proposed taking.
2            (D) The date or dates on which the State or the
3        unit of local government contacted each such State
4        Senator and State Representative concerning the
5        intention of the State or the unit of local government
6        to request approval of legislation by the General
7        Assembly authorizing the State or the unit of local
8        government to acquire the property by eminent domain
9        using "quick-take" powers.
10            (E) The current name, address, and telephone
11        number of each owner of an interest in the property.
12            (F) A summary of all negotiations between the State
13        or the unit of local government and the owner or owners
14        of the property concerning the sale of the property to
15        the State or the unit of local government.
16            (G) A statement of the date and location of each
17        public hearing held under paragraph (3).
18            (H) A statement of the public purpose for which the
19        State or the unit of local government seeks to acquire
20        the property.
21            (I) The certification of the head of the
22        appropriate State office, department, or agency or the
23        chief elected official of the unit of local government,
24        as applicable, that (i) the property is located within
25        the territory under the jurisdiction of the State or
26        the unit of local government and (ii) the State or the

 

 

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1        unit of local government seeks to acquire the property
2        for a public purpose.
3            (J) A map of the area in which the property to be
4        acquired is located, showing the location of the
5        property.
6            (K) Photographs of the property.
7            (L) An appraisal of the property by a real estate
8        appraiser who is certified or licensed under the Real
9        Estate Appraiser Licensing Act of 2002.
10            (M) In the case of property sought to be acquired
11        by a unit of local government, a copy of the resolution
12        adopted by the unit of local government under paragraph
13        (4).
14            (N) Documentation of the public purpose for which
15        the State or the unit of local government seeks to
16        acquire the property.
17            (O) A copy of each notice sent to an owner of an
18        interest in the property under paragraph (1).
19    A request for quick-take authority shall not be considered
20by a House committee fewer than 30 days after the date of the
21notice to each property owner as required by paragraph (1).
22    Every affidavit submitted by the State or a unit of local
23government pursuant to this Rule 41(c), together with all
24documents and other items submitted with the affidavit, must be
25made available to any person upon request for inspection and
26copying.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 42)
2    42. Consent Calendar.
3    (a) The Clerk shall include a Consent Calendar on the daily
4calendar and designate it as a separate calendar. The Consent
5Calendar shall contain 3 orders of business: Consent Calendar -
6Second Reading, Consent Calendar - Third Reading, and Consent
7Calendar - Resolutions. Within each order of business, bills or
8resolutions shall be listed in separate groups according to the
9number of required days each has been on that order of business
10on the Consent Calendar. No more than 80 bills and resolutions
11shall be listed in each group. All bills or resolutions to
12which amendments have been adopted shall be so designated.
13    (b) No debate is in order regarding any item on the Consent
14Calendar. The Presiding Officer, however, shall allow a
15reasonable time for questions from the floor and answers to
16those questions. No amendment from the floor is in order
17regarding any bill or resolution on the Consent Calendar.
18    (c) A bill on the Consent Calendar shall stand for 2
19legislative days on the order of Consent Calendar - Second
20Reading, and for at least 2 legislative days on the order of
21Consent Calendar - Third Reading, before a vote on the final
22passage may be taken. Resolutions on the Consent Calendar shall
23stand for at least 4 legislative days before a vote on adoption
24may be taken. One record vote on final passage shall be taken
25on those bills called for final passage. Immediately before a

 

 

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1vote on the bills on the Consent Calendar, the Presiding
2Officer shall call to the attention of the members the fact
3that the next legislative action will be the vote on the
4Consent Calendar.
5    (d) A bill or resolution may be placed on the Consent
6Calendar by report of a standing committee upon a motion
7adopted by a unanimous vote of the members present. For
8purposes of this subsection (d), a unanimous vote on the motion
9is a vote with no member voting nay.
10    (e) No bill regarding revenue or appropriations may be
11placed on the Consent Calendar. No resolution requiring more
12than 60 affirmative votes for adoption and no bill requiring
13more than 60 affirmative votes for passage by the House may be
14placed on the Consent Calendar.
15    (f) The Speaker and the Minority Leader shall each appoint
163 members who may challenge the presence of any bill or
17resolution on the Consent Calendar. Before a vote on final
18passage of any item on the Consent Calendar, an item shall be
19removed from the Consent Calendar if (i) 4 or more members,
20(ii) the Principal Sponsor of the bill or resolution, or (iii)
21one or more of the appointed challengers file with the Clerk
22written objections to the presence of the bill or resolution on
23the Consent Calendar. Any bill or resolution so removed may not
24be placed thereafter on the Consent Calendar during that
25session of the General Assembly, unless the member or members
26who objected to the presence of the bill or resolution on the

 

 

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1Consent Calendar consent in writing to restoration of the bill
2or resolution on the Consent Calendar.
3    Any bill removed from the Consent Calendar shall stand on
4the order of Second Reading with short debate status, subject
5to Rule 52, and any resolution so removed shall stand on the
6order of Resolutions with short debate status, subject to Rule
752.
 
8    (House Rule 43)
9    43. Changing Order of Business.
10    (a) Any order of business may be changed at any time by the
11Speaker or Presiding Officer.
12    (b) Any order of business may be changed at any time upon
13the motion of any member, supported by 5 additional members, if
14the motion is adopted by an affirmative vote of 71 members
15elected.
16    (c) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
17of 71 members elected.
 
18    (House Rule 44)
19    44. Special Orders; Rules Committee.
20    (a) A special order of business may be set by the Rules
21Committee or by the Speaker. The Principal Sponsor of a bill or
22resolution must consent to the placement of the bill or
23resolution on a special order. A special order shall fix the
24day to which it applies and the matters to be included. The

 

 

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1Speaker, or the Rules Committee by a vote of a majority of
2those appointed, may establish time limits for a special order
3and may establish limitations on debate during a special order
4(notwithstanding Rule 52), in which event the allotted time
5shall be fairly divided between proponents and opponents of the
6legislation to be considered. A special order of business takes
7the place of the standing order for such time as may be
8necessary for its completion. Only matters that may otherwise
9properly be before the House may be included in a special
10order.
11    (b) A special order shall appear on the Daily Calendar for
123 legislative days. This subsection (b) may be suspended only
13by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
14    (c) A special order may be suspended, amended, or modified
15by motion adopted by an affirmative vote of 60 members. A
16special order shall be suspended by a written objection signed
17by 3 members of the Rules Committee and filed during the first
18legislative day on which the special order appears on the
19calendar.
 
20
ARTICLE IX
21
VETOES

 
22
ARTICLE V
23
RESOLUTIONS AND CERTIFICATES OF RECOGNITION

 

 

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1    (House Rule 45)
2    45. Resolutions.
3    (a) A resolution may be introduced in the House by
4sponsorship of one or more members of the House. The name of
5the Principal Sponsor shall be included in the House Journal,
6and the names of all sponsors shall be included in the
7Legislative Digest. The Principal Sponsor of a resolution, or
8the sponsor of an amendment to a resolution, may change the
9sponsorship of the resolution or amendment, as applicable, to
10that of another member, with that other member's consent, by
11filing notice with the Clerk. Each resolution introduced shall
12be accompanied by 1 copy.
13    (b) The Principal Sponsor of a resolution controls that
14resolution. A standing committee-sponsored resolution is
15controlled by the Chairperson of the committee, or if
16Co-Chairpersons have been appointed, by the Co-Chairperson
17from the majority caucus, who for purposes of these Rules is
18deemed the Principal Sponsor. A special committee-sponsored
19resolution is controlled by the Chairperson, or if
20Co-Chairpersons have been appointed, by the Co-Chairperson
21from the majority caucus, who for purposes of these Rules is
22deemed the Principal Sponsor. Committee-sponsored resolutions
23may not have individual co-sponsors.
24    (c) Any resolution calling for the expenditure of State
25funds may be adopted only by a record vote of a majority of
26those elected.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 46)
2    46. State Constitutional Amendments. All resolutions
3introduced in the House proposing amendments to the Illinois
4Constitution shall be reproduced and distributed as provided in
5Rule 39. Every such resolution that originated in the Senate
6and is presented to the House shall be ordered reproduced and
7distributed in like manner. No such resolution shall pass
8unless read in full in its final form on 3 different days.
9Amendments are in order only on First Reading and Second
10Reading. Upon adoption of any amendment, the Clerk shall read
11the amended resolution in full form on 3 different days. Final
12passage requires the affirmative vote of 71 members elected. No
13resolution proposing a change in the Constitution of the State
14of Illinois may be considered for passage after the last day
15preceding the day marking the beginning of the last 6 months
16before the general election occurring during the term of this
17General Assembly, and all such resolutions still pending shall
18be tabled at the end of business on that day.
 
19    (House Rule 47)
20    47. Federal Constitutional Amendments and Constitutional
21Conventions.
22    (a) The affirmative vote of 71 of the members elected is
23required to adopt any resolution:
24        (1) requesting Congress to call a federal

 

 

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1    constitutional convention;
2        (2) ratifying a proposed amendment to the Constitution
3    of the United States; or
4        (3) calling a State convention to ratify a proposed
5    amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
6    (b) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
7of 71 members elected.
 
8    (House Rule 48)
9    48. Certificates of Recognition. Any member may sponsor a
10certificate of recognition to be signed by the Speaker and
11attested by the Clerk to recognize any person, organization, or
12event worthy of public commendation. The form of the
13Certificate of Recognition shall be determined by the Clerk
14with the approval of the Speaker.
 
15
ARTICLE VI
16
PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE

17    (House Rule 49)
18    49. Voting. The Presiding Officer shall put all questions
19distinctly, as follows: "All those in favor vote AYE, and those
20opposed vote NAY." No member may vote on any question before
21the House unless on the floor before the vote is announced. No
22member of a committee may vote except in person at the time of
23the committee vote, provided the member is on the committee

 

 

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1roll before the vote is announced. Any vote of the House shall
2be by record vote whenever 5 Representatives shall so request
3or whenever the Presiding Officer shall so order.
 
4    (House Rule 50)
5    50. Announcing a Record Vote. When a record vote is
6requested, the Presiding Officer shall put the question and
7then announce to the House: "The voting is open." While the
8vote is being taken, the Presiding Officer shall state: "Have
9all voted who wish?" The voting is closed when the Presiding
10Officer announces: "Take the Record." The Presiding Officer,
11unless an intervening motion to postpone consideration by the
12Principal Sponsor is made, shall then announce the results of
13the record vote. After the record is taken, no member may vote,
14change his or her vote, or remove his or her vote as recorded;
15except that when a record vote is taken on more than one
16legislative measure at the same time, each member has the right
17to have his or her votes recorded separately for each of those
18legislative measures by filing a signed document with the Clerk
19on the same legislative day.
 
20    (House Rule 51)
21    51. Decorum.
22    (a) When any member is about to speak to the House, he or
23she shall rise and address the Presiding Officer as "Speaker".
24The Presiding Officer, upon recognizing the member, shall

 

 

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1address him or her by name, and thereupon the engineer in
2charge of operating the microphones in the House shall give the
3use of the microphone to the member who has been so recognized.
4The member in speaking shall confine himself or herself to the
5subject matter under discussion and avoid personalities.
6    (b) Questions affecting the rights, reputation, and
7conduct of members of the House in their representative
8capacity are questions of personal privilege. A matter of
9personal explanation does not constitute a question of personal
10privilege.
11    (c) If 2 or more members rise at once, the Presiding
12Officer shall name the member who is to speak first.
13    (d) No person shall give any signs of approbation or
14disapprobation while the House is in session.
15    (e) Recognition of guests by any member is prohibited
16during debate on a legislative measure or motion, except that
17the Speaker or Presiding Officer may recognize an honored
18guest.
19    (f) While the Presiding Officer is putting a question, no
20member shall leave or walk across the House Chamber. When a
21member is addressing the House, no member or other person
22entitled to the floor shall entertain private discourse or pass
23between the member speaking and the Presiding Officer.
24    (g) In case of any disturbance or disorderly conduct, the
25Speaker or Presiding Officer may order that the lobby, gallery,
26or hallways adjoining the House Chamber be cleared.

 

 

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1    (h) No literature may be distributed on the House floor,
2except staff may distribute documents to caucus members at the
3direction of the Speaker or Minority Leader.
4    (i) No member may be absent from a session of the House
5unless he or she has leave or is sick or his or her absence is
6unavoidable. The switch to the electrical roll call recording
7equipment located on the desk of any member who has been
8excused or is absent shall be locked by the Clerk and shall not
9be unlocked until the member returns and files with the Clerk a
10request to be shown as present on the quorum roll call as
11provided in Rule 32(c).
 
12    (House Rule 52)
13    52. Debate.
14    (a) All legislative measures, except those legislative
15measures that are not debatable as provided in these Rules, are
16subject to a debate status as follows:
17        (1) Short Debate: Debate is limited to a 2-minute
18    presentation by the Principal Sponsor or a member
19    designated by the Principal Sponsor, a 2-minute
20    presentation by a member in response, and one minute for
21    the Principal Sponsor to close debate, or yield to other
22    members; provided that at the request of 7 members before
23    the close of debate, the debate status shall be opened to
24    standard debate;
25        (2) Standard Debate: Debate is limited to a 5-minute

 

 

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1    presentation by the Principal Sponsor or a member
2    designated by the Principal Sponsor, debate by each of 2
3    additional proponents of the legislative measure and by 3
4    members in response to the legislative measure, and 3
5    minutes for the Principal Sponsor to close debate, or yield
6    to other members;
7        (3) Extended Debate: Debate is limited to a 5-minute
8    presentation by the Principal Sponsor or a member
9    designated by the Principal Sponsor, debate by each of 4
10    proponents of the legislative measure and 5 members in
11    response, and 5 minutes for the Principal Sponsor to close
12    debate, or yield to other members;
13        (4) Unlimited Debate: Debate shall consist of a
14    10-minute presentation by the Principal Sponsor or a member
15    designated by the Principal Sponsor, debate by each
16    proponent and member in response who seeks recognition, and
17    5 minutes for the Principal Sponsor to close debate, or
18    yield to other members; or
19        (5) Amendment Debate: Debate on floor amendments
20    referred to the House from a committee, or discharged from
21    a committee, is limited to a 3-minute presentation by the
22    Principal Sponsor, or a member designated by the Principal
23    Sponsor, debate by one proponent, debate by each of 2
24    members in response, and 3 minutes for the Principal
25    Sponsor to close debate, or yield to other members.
26    No debate is in order on bills or resolutions on the order

 

 

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1of First Reading or Second Reading, except for debate on floor
2amendments as provided in this Rule.
3    (b) All legislative measures, except floor amendments,
4referred to the House from a committee, or discharged from a
5committee, are automatically assigned standard debate status,
6subject to subsection (c) of this Rule, except those assigned
7to the Consent Calendar or short debate status by a standing
8committee or a special committee. All floor amendments referred
9to the House from a committee, or discharged from a committee,
10are automatically assigned amendment debate status, subject to
11subsection (c) of this Rule.
12    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules to
13the contrary (except Rule 44), the debate status of any
14legislative measure may be changed only (i) by the Speaker, as
15defined in item (27) of Rule 102, by filing a notice with the
16Clerk, or (ii) by the Rules Committee by motion approved by a
17majority of those appointed. While a legislative measure is
18being considered by the House, the debate status may also be
19changed by unanimous consent. No legislative measure, however,
20may be placed on the Consent Calendar under this Rule. No
21legislative measure, except a floor amendment, may be assigned
22amendment debate status under this Rule.
23    (d) The Speaker or Rules Committee, as the case may be,
24shall notify the Clerk of any action to change the debate
25status of any legislative measure. The Clerk shall cause that
26information to be reflected on the Daily Calendar on subsequent

 

 

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1legislative days, provided the legislative measure is still
2before the House.
3    (e) No member shall speak longer than 5 minutes at one time
4or more than once on the same question except by leave of the
5House. The Principal Sponsor of a measure or a member
6designated by the Principal Sponsor, however, shall be allowed
7to open the debate and to close the debate in accordance with
8subsection (a) of this Rule. The provisions of this subsection
9(e) are subject to and limited by subsections (a), (b), and (c)
10of this Rule. A member may yield to another member the time
11allotted for the member's debate.
12    (f) The Presiding Officer shall allocate the debate on each
13legislative measure alternately, if possible, between
14proponents and opponents of the legislative measure under
15debate.
16    (g) This Rule may not be suspended.
 
17    (House Rule 53)
18    53. Written Statements.
19    (a) Any member may submit a written statement regarding any
20bill, resolution, or floor amendment considered by the House,
21by submitting that statement to the Clerk within one
22legislative day or 3 business days, whichever is shorter, after
23the day on which the bill, resolution, or floor amendment to
24which the comments relate was considered by the House. The
25Clerk shall affix a time stamp to each statement indicating the

 

 

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1date on which the statement was submitted. Each statement shall
2indicate the member or members on whose behalf the statement is
3submitted, the bill, resolution, or floor amendment to which it
4applies, the names of any other members mentioned in the
5statement, and the person who actually submits the statement to
6the Clerk. Each member on whose behalf a statement is submitted
7is under an obligation to ensure that all required information,
8specifically including the names of any other members mentioned
9in the statement, is indicated at the time a statement is
10submitted. Each statement shall comply with standards as may be
11established by the Clerk with the approval of the Speaker. The
12standards established by the Clerk, however, shall not relate
13to the contents of the written statement. The Clerk shall
14maintain statements that comply with this Rule and established
15standards in files for each bill and resolution. A statement is
16not considered filed until the Clerk has determined that it
17complies with this Rule and established standards. The Clerk
18shall notify the member or members on whose behalf a statement
19was submitted if the statement is determined not to comply.
20Statements filed under this Rule shall be considered part of
21the transcript and made available to the public.
22    (b) If a statement mentions another member, the statement
23shall not be considered filed until the member mentioned has an
24opportunity to respond as a matter of personal privilege. The
25Clerk shall notify each member who is identified at the time a
26statement is submitted as being mentioned in the statement. The

 

 

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1member identified as mentioned in the statement shall have one
2legislative day or 3 business days, whichever is shorter, after
3notification by the Clerk in which to file a written response
4to the statement. The original statement and any responsive
5statement shall both be considered filed at the close of
6business on the final day on which a response may be filed. If,
7however, a statement is submitted mentioning another member and
8the name of the member mentioned is not indicated to the Clerk
9at the time of submission, the statement shall be stricken at
10the request of the member mentioned in the statement. The Clerk
11shall notify each member on whose behalf the statement was
12submitted that the statement has been stricken from the record.
13    (c) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
14of 71 members elected.
 
15    (House Rule 53.5)
16    53.5. Member Statements.
17    While the House in perfunctory session, a member may
18request to make an oral statement regarding any legislative
19measure filed with the Clerk. Statements shall comply with the
20standards established by the Clerk.
 
21    (House Rule 54)
22    54. Motions.
23    (a) The following are general rules for all motions:
24        (1) Every motion, except to adjourn, recess, or

 

 

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1    postpone consideration, shall be reduced to writing if
2    ordered by the Presiding Officer. Unless otherwise
3    provided in these Rules, no second is required to any
4    motion presented to the House, or in any committee. The
5    Presiding Officer may refer any motion, except to adjourn,
6    recess, or postpone consideration, to the Rules Committee.
7        (2) Before the House debates a motion, the Presiding
8    Officer shall state an oral motion and the Clerk shall read
9    aloud a written motion. Each motion, unless otherwise
10    provided in these Rules, is assigned standard debate
11    status, subject to Rule 52.
12        (3) After a motion is stated by the Presiding Officer
13    or read by the Clerk, it is deemed in the possession of the
14    House, but may be withdrawn at any time before decision
15    with consent of a majority of those the members elected.
16        (4) If a motion is divisible, any member may call for a
17    division of the question.
18        (5) Any question taken under consideration may be
19    withdrawn, postponed, or tabled by unanimous consent or, if
20    unanimous consent is denied, by a motion adopted by a
21    majority of those the members elected.
22    (b) The Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
23of 71 members elected.
 
24    (House Rule 55)
25    55. Precedence of Motions.

 

 

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1    (a) When a question is under debate, no motion may be
2entertained except:
3        (1) to adjourn to a time certain;
4        (2) to adjourn;
5        (3) to question the presence of a quorum;
6        (4) to recess;
7        (5) to lay on the table;
8        (6) for the previous question;
9        (7) to postpone consideration;
10        (8) to commit or recommit; or
11        (9) to amend, except as otherwise provided in these
12    Rules.
13    The foregoing motions have precedence in the order in which
14they are listed.
15    (b) During a record vote, no motion (except a motion to
16postpone consideration) is in order until after the
17announcement of the result of the vote.
18    (c) A motion to commit or re-commit, until it is decided,
19precludes all amendments and debate on the main question. A
20motion to postpone consideration, until it is decided,
21precludes all amendments and debate on the main question.
 
22    (House Rule 56)
23    56. Verification.
24    (a) After any record vote, except for a vote that requires
25a specific number of affirmative votes and that has not

 

 

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1received the required votes, and before intervening business,
2it is in order for any member to request verification of the
3results of the record vote, except that (i) a member voting in
4the affirmative may not request verification of the affirmative
5votes and (ii) a member voting in the negative may not request
6a verification of the negative votes. If a member is
7disqualified from requesting a verification because of his or
8her vote, a qualifying member who makes a subsequent request
9for a verification shall be allowed to proceed with the
10verification.
11    (b) In verifying a record vote, the Presiding Officer shall
12instruct the Clerk to call the names of those members whose
13votes are to be verified. The member requesting the
14verification may thereafter identify those members he or she
15wishes to verify. If a member does not answer, his or her vote
16shall be stricken; the member's vote shall be restored to the
17roll, however, if his or her presence is recognized before the
18Presiding Officer announces the final result of the
19verification. The Presiding Officer shall determine the
20presence or absence of each member whose name is called, and
21shall then announce the results of the verification.
22    (c) While the results of any record vote are being
23verified, it is in order for any member to announce his or her
24presence on the floor and thereby have his or her vote
25verified. The Presiding Officer may announce the presence of
26any member and thereby have his or her vote verified prior to

 

 

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1ordering the Clerk to call the names of the members whose votes
2are to be verified.
3    (d) A request for a verification of the affirmative and
4negative results of a record vote may be made only once on each
5record vote.
 
6    (House Rule 57)
7    57. Appealing a Ruling.
8    (a) If any appeal is taken from a ruling of the Presiding
9Officer, the Presiding Officer shall be sustained unless 71 of
10the members elected vote to overrule the Presiding Officer.
11Notwithstanding Rule 52, debate on a motion to appeal is
12limited to a 2-minute presentation by the Principal Sponsor or
13a member designated by the Principal Sponsor, a 2-minute
14presentation by a member in response, and one-minute for the
15Principal Sponsor to close debate, or yield to other members. A
16motion to appeal is not in order if the House has conducted
17intervening business since the ruling at issue was made.
18    (b) If any appeal is taken from a ruling of a committee
19Chairperson, the Chairperson shall be sustained unless
20three-fifths of those appointed vote to overrule the
21Chairperson. A motion to appeal is not in order if the
22committee has adjourned or recessed, or if intervening business
23has occurred. In the case of special committees with
24Co-Chairpersons from different political parties, the
25"Chairperson" for purposes of this Rule is the Co-Chairperson

 

 

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1from the majority caucus.
2    (c) In an appeal of a ruling of the Presiding Officer or
3Chairperson, the question is: "Shall the ruling of the Chair be
4sustained?"
5    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
6of 71 members elected.
 
7    (House Rule 58)
8    58. Discharge of Committee.
9    (a) Any member may move that a standing committee or a
10special committee be discharged from consideration of any
11legislative measure assigned to it and not reported back
12unfavorably.
13    (b) The motion must be in writing and shall be carried on
14the Daily Calendar for the next legislative day under the order
15of "Motions". No action shall be taken on the motion until it
16is on the calendar.
17    (c) If the motion receives an affirmative vote of 60
18members, the legislative measure subject to the motion shall be
19referred to the House and placed on the appropriate order of
20business.
21    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
22of 71 members elected.
 
23    (House Rule 59)
24    59. Previous Question.

 

 

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1    (a) A motion for the previous question may be made at any
2time, except that a member may not move the previous question
3while participating in debate pursuant to Rule 52. A motion for
4the previous question is not debatable and requires the
5affirmative vote of 60 members elected.
6    (b) The previous question shall be stated in the following
7form: "Shall the main question be put?" Until the previous
8question is decided, all amendments and debate are precluded.
9When it is decided that the main question shall not be put, the
10main question remains under debate.
11    (c) The effect of the main question being ordered is to put
12an end to all debate and bring the House to a direct vote on the
13immediately pending motion. After a motion for the previous
14question has been approved, it is not in order to move for
15adjournment or to make any other motion before a decision on
16the main question.
17    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
18of 71 members elected.
 
19    (House Rule 60)
20    60. Tabling.
21    (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (d) and
22(e), a motion to lay on the table applies only to the
23particular proposition and is neither debatable nor amendable.
24    (b) A motion to table a bill or resolution shall identify
25the bill or resolution by number. The Principal Sponsor of a

 

 

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1bill or resolution may, with leave of the House, table that
2bill or resolution at any time. A motion to table a committee
3bill that is before the House may be adopted only by the
4affirmative vote of a majority of those elected.
5    (c) The Principal Sponsor of a bill or resolution before a
6committee may, with leave of the committee, table the bill or
7resolution. Upon tabling, the Chairperson of the committee
8shall return the bill or resolution to the Clerk, noting
9thereon that it has been tabled.
10    (d) If a floor amendment to a bill has been adopted by the
11House, then a motion to table that amendment is in order and
12may be adopted only when the bill is on Second Reading. If a
13floor amendment to a resolution has been adopted by the House,
14then a motion to table that amendment is in order and may be
15adopted only when the resolution is pending before the House.
16Motions to table floor amendments are debatable and may be
17adopted by the affirmative vote of a majority of those elected.
18    (e) If a committee amendment to a bill has been adopted by
19a committee, then a motion to table that amendment is in order
20and may be adopted (i) by that committee at any time while the
21bill is before that committee or (ii) by the House only when
22the bill is on Second Reading. If a committee amendment to a
23resolution has been adopted by a committee, then a motion to
24table that amendment is in order and may be adopted (i) by the
25committee at any time while the resolution is before that
26committee or (ii) by the House only when the resolution is

 

 

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1pending before the House. No motion to table a committee
2amendment to a bill or resolution before the House is in order
3unless it has been first referred to the House for
4consideration by the Rules Committee under Rule 18, or by a
5standing or special committee. Motions to table committee
6amendments are debatable and may be adopted by the affirmative
7vote of a majority of those the members elected to the House or
8majority of those appointed to the committee, as applicable.
 
9    (House Rule 61)
10    61. Motion to Take from Table.
11    (a) A motion to take from the table requires the
12affirmative vote of a majority of those elected if the Rules
13Committee has previously recommended that action by written
14notice filed with the Clerk; otherwise, a motion to take from
15the table requires the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
16    (b) A bill taken from the table shall, as applicable, (i)
17be placed on the Daily Calendar on the order on which it
18appeared before it was tabled or (ii) be returned to the
19committee to which it was assigned before it was tabled.
20    (b-5) An amendment taken from the table shall be returned
21to the position it held before it was tabled, provided that an
22amendment may be taken from the table while the bill is on the
23order of Second Reading or in a committee, but a committee
24amendment that has been tabled by a committee may be taken from
25the table only while the bill is in committee.

 

 

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1    (c) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
2of 71 members elected.
 
3    (House Rule 62)
4    62. Motion to Postpone Consideration. A motion to postpone
5consideration on a bill or resolution may not be made more than
6once on the same bill or resolution. Unless otherwise provided
7by these Rules, a motion to postpone consideration shall be
8granted as a matter of privilege; no motion to postpone
9consideration is in order, however, if the bill or resolution
10initially received an affirmative vote of fewer than 47 of the
11members elected.
 
12    (House Rule 63)
13    63. Motion on Different Subject. No motion or other
14legislative measure on a subject different from that under
15consideration shall be admitted under color of amendment.
 
16    (House Rule 64)
17    64. Division of Question. If the question under
18consideration contains several points, any member may have the
19question divided. On a motion to strike out and insert, it is
20not in order to move for a division of the question. The
21rejection of a motion to strike out and insert one proposition
22does not prevent a motion to strike out and insert a different
23proposition.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 65)
2    65. Reconsideration.
3    (a) A member who voted on the prevailing side of a record
4vote on a legislative measure still within the control of the
5House may on the same or the following legislative day move to
6reconsider the vote. The motion to reconsider may be laid on
7the table without affecting the vote to which it refers. When
8the motion to reconsider is made during the last 3 days of
9April or any time thereafter during the regular session, or at
10any time during a veto or special session, any member may move
11that the vote on reconsideration be taken immediately. The
12member who filed the motion to reconsider may withdraw the
13motion at any time by filing a notice of withdrawal with the
14Clerk. A question that requires the affirmative vote of a
15majority of those elected or more to carry requires a majority
16of those elected to reconsider. A question in committee that
17requires the affirmative vote of a majority of those appointed
18or more to carry requires a majority of those appointed to
19reconsider; any other question in committee requires a majority
20of those voting to reconsider.
21    (b) A motion to reconsider a record vote on the adoption of
22a floor amendment to a bill may be made only on Second Reading.
23    (c) If a motion to reconsider is made under this Rule and
24the motion is later tabled, the question shall not be further
25reconsidered. This subsection (c) may be suspended only by the

 

 

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1affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
2    (d) When a motion to reconsider is made within the time
3prescribed by these Rules, the Clerk shall not allow the bill
4or other subject matter of the motion to pass out of the
5possession of the House until after the motion has been decided
6or withdrawn. Such a motion shall be deemed rejected if laid on
7the table.
8    (e) A Representative who voted "present" or failed to vote
9on a question does not have the right to move for
10reconsideration.
 
11    (House Rule 66)
12    66. Motion to Adjourn or adjourn to a time certain.
13    (a) A motion to adjourn or adjourn to a time certain is in
14order at any time, except when a prior motion to adjourn or
15adjourn to a time certain has been defeated and no intervening
16business has transpired.
17    (b) A motion to adjourn or adjourn to a time certain is
18neither debatable nor amendable.
19    (c) The Clerk shall enter in the Journal the hour at which
20every motion to adjourn or adjourn to a time certain is made.
21    (d) Unless the Presiding Officer otherwise orders, the
22standing hour to which the House adjourns is 12:00 noon, except
23on the last day of a week in which the House convenes in
24regular, veto, or special session, in which case the standing
25hour to which the House adjourns is 12:30 p.m.

 

 

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1    (d-5) A motion to adjourn to a time certain shall include
2the date and time to which the House shall adjourn and must be
3limited to the same or next scheduled legislative day. A motion
4to adjourn to a time certain on a date the House is not
5scheduled to convene shall be out of order.
6    (e) A motion to adjourn for more than 3 days is not in
7order unless both chambers of the General Assembly have adopted
8a joint resolution permitting that adjournment.
9Notwithstanding any other provision of these Rules, any such
10resolution filed in the House or received from the Senate may
11be referred to the Rules Committee by the Presiding Officer or
12may be immediately considered and adopted by the House.
 
13    (House Rule 67)
14    67. Adoption and Amendment to or Suspension of Rules.
15    (a) Adoption of Rules. At the commencement of a term, the
16House shall adopt new rules of organization and procedure by
17resolution setting forth those rules in their entirety. The
18resolution must be adopted by the affirmative vote of a
19majority of those elected. These Rules of the House of
20Representatives are subject to revision or amendment only in
21accordance with this Rule.
22    (b) Rules may be amended only by resolution. Any resolution
23to amend these Rules shall show the proposed changes in the
24existing rules by underscoring all new matter and by crossing
25out with a line all matter that is to be omitted or superseded.

 

 

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1    (c) Any resolution proposing to amend a House Rule or any
2Joint House-Senate Rule, upon initial reading by the Clerk, is
3automatically referred to the Rules Committee. Resolutions to
4amend the House Rules or any Joint House-Senate Rules may be
5initiated and sponsored by the Rules Committee and may be
6amended by the Rules Committee; those resolutions shall not be
7referred to a committee and may be immediately considered and
8adopted by the House. Those resolutions shall be assigned
9standard debate status, subject to Rule 52.
10    (d) A resolution to amend the House Rules or any Joint
11House-Senate Rules that has been reported "be adopted" or "be
12adopted as amended" by a majority of those appointed to the
13Rules Committee requires the affirmative vote of a majority of
14those elected for adoption by the House. Any other resolution
15proposing to amend the House Rules or any Joint House-Senate
16Rules requires the affirmative vote of 71 of the members
17elected for adoption by the House.
18    (e) No House Rule or any Joint House-Senate Rule may be
19suspended except by unanimous consent of the members present or
20upon a motion supported by the affirmative vote of a majority
21of those elected unless a higher number is required in the Rule
22sought to be suspended. A committee may not suspend any Rule.
23    (f) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
24of 71 members elected.
 
25    (House Rule 68)

 

 

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1    68. Motion to Commit or Recommit. A motion to commit or
2recommit requires an affirmative vote of 71 members the
3majority of those elected. No motion to commit or recommit a
4legislative measure to committee, being decided in the
5negative, shall again be allowed on the same day, or at the
6same stage of the legislative measure.
 
7    (House Rule 69)
8    69. Effective Date.
9    (a) A bill passed after May 31 of a calendar year shall not
10become effective prior to June 1 of the next calendar year
11unless an earlier effective date is specified in the bill and
12it is approved by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
13    (b) If a majority of those elected, but fewer than 71, vote
14affirmatively for a bill on Third Reading after May 31 and the
15bill specifies an effective date earlier than the following
16June 1, the bill has not passed, but the Principal Sponsor has
17the right to have the bill automatically reconsidered and
18returned to the order of Second Reading for an amendment to
19remove the earlier effective date. The amendment, if offered
20and referred to the House by a committee, shall be reproduced
21and placed on the desks of the members, in the same manner as
22provided for bills under Rule 39, before the bill is taken up
23again on the order of Third Reading.
 
24    (House Rule 70)

 

 

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1    70. Home Rule. No bill denies or limits any power or
2function of a home rule unit under paragraph (g), (h), (i),
3(j), or (k) of Sec. 6 of Article VII of the Constitution unless
4there is specific language limiting or denying the power or
5function and the language specifically sets forth in what
6manner and to what extent it is a denial or limitation of the
7power or function of a home rule unit. If a majority of those
8elected, but fewer than 71, vote affirmatively for a bill on
9Third Reading that requires the affirmative vote of 71 members
10elected to deny or limit a power of a home rule unit, the bill
11has not passed, but the Principal Sponsor has the right to have
12the bill automatically reconsidered and returned to the order
13of Second Reading for an amendment to remove those effects of
14the bill.
 
15
ARTICLE VII
16
(RESERVED)

17    (House Rule 71)
18    71. (Blank.)
 
19
ARTICLE VIII
20
JOINT ACTION

21    (House Rule 72)
22    72. Concurring in or Receding from Amendments.

 

 

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1    (a) If a House bill or House resolution is received back in
2the House with one or more amendments added by the Senate, the
3bill or resolution shall be placed on the calendar on the order
4of "Concurrence", and it is in order for the Principal Sponsor
5may to present a motion "to concur" or "not to concur and to
6ask the Senate to recede" with respect to each, several, or all
7of those amendments, subject to Rules 18 and 75. A motion to
8concur shall be by record vote and shall be adopted by the
9affirmative vote of a majority of those elected, subject to
10Rule 69. Any member may demand a separate vote or a separate
11record vote, as applicable, on any of those amendments.
12    (b) When the Senate has refused to concur in one or more
13amendments added to a Senate bill or Senate resolution by the
14House and has delivered returned the bill or resolution to the
15House with a message requesting the House to recede from one or
16more of its amendments, the bill or resolution shall be placed
17on the calendar on the order of "Non-Concurrence", and it is in
18order for the Principal Sponsor may to present a motion "to
19recede" from the House amendments or "not to recede and to
20request a conference", subject to Rules 18 and 75. A motion to
21recede shall be by record vote and shall be adopted by the
22affirmative vote of a majority of those elected, subject to
23Rule 69. Any member may demand a separate vote or a separate
24record vote, as applicable, on any of those amendments.
25    (c) Motions authorized by this Rule are renewable and may
26be reconsidered, provided that no such motion may be voted on

 

 

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1more than twice by the House.
 
2    (House Rule 73)
3    73. Conference Committees.
4    (a) A disagreement between the House and Senate exists with
5respect to any bill or resolution in the following situations:
6        (1) when the Senate refuses to recede from the adoption
7    of any amendment, after the House has previously refused to
8    concur in the amendment; or
9        (2) when the House refuses to recede from the adoption
10    of any amendment, after the Senate has previously refused
11    to concur in the amendment.
12    In those cases of disagreement between the House and
13Senate, the House may request a conference. When such a request
14is made, both chambers of the General Assembly shall appoint
15members to a committee to confer on the subject of the bill or
16resolution giving rise to the disagreement. The combined
17membership of the 2 chambers appointed for that purpose is the
18conference committee.
19    (b) The conference committee shall consist of 5 members
20from each chamber of the General Assembly. The number of
21majority caucus members from each chamber shall be one more
22than the number of minority caucus members from each chamber.
23    (c) Each conference committee shall be comprised of 5
24members of the House, 3 appointed by the Speaker and 2
25appointed by the Minority Leader. No conference committee

 

 

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1report may be filed with the Clerk until a majority of the
2House conferees has been appointed.
 
3    (House Rule 74)
4    74. Conference Committee Reports.
5    (a) No subject matter shall be included in any conference
6committee report on any bill unless that subject matter
7directly relates to the matters of difference between the House
8and Senate that have been referred to the conference committee
9unless the Rules Committee, by a majority of those appointed,
10determines that the proposed subject matter is of an emergency
11nature, is of substantial importance to the operation of
12government, or is in the best interests of Illinois.
13    (b) No conference committee report shall be received by the
14Clerk or acted upon by the House unless it has been signed by
15at least 6 conferees. The report shall be signed in duplicate.
16One of the reports shall be filed with the Secretary of the
17Senate and one with the Clerk. The report shall contain the
18agreements reached by the committee.
19    (c) If the conference committee determines that it is
20unable to reach agreement, the committee shall so report to
21each chamber of the General Assembly and request appointment of
22a second conference committee. If there is agreement, the
23committee shall so report to each chamber.
24    (d) No conference committee report shall be adopted by the
25House except on a record vote of a majority of those elected,

 

 

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1subject to Rule 69.
 
2    (House Rule 75)
3    75. House Consideration of Joint Action.
4    (a) No joint action motion for final action or conference
5committee report may be considered by the House unless it has
6first been referred to the House by the Rules Committee or a
7standing committee or special committee in accordance with Rule
818, or unless the joint action motion or conference committee
9report has been discharged from the Rules Committee under Rule
1018. Joint action motions for final action and conference
11committee reports referred to a standing committee or special
12committee by the Rules Committee may not be discharged from the
13standing committee or special committee. This subsection (a)
14may be suspended by unanimous consent.
15    (b) No conference committee report may be considered by the
16House unless it has been reproduced and distributed as provided
17in Rule 39, for one full day during the period beginning with
18the convening of the House on the 2nd Wednesday of January each
19year and ending on the 30th day prior to the scheduled
20adjournment of the regular session established each year by the
21Speaker pursuant to Rule 9(a), and for one full hour on any
22other day.
23    (c) Before any conference committee report on an
24appropriation bill is considered by the House, the conference
25committee report shall first be the subject of a public hearing

 

 

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1by a standing Appropriations Committee or another a special
2committee (the conference committee report need not be referred
3to a an Appropriations Committee or special committee, but
4instead may remain before the Rules Committee or the House, as
5the case may be). The hearing shall be held pursuant to not
6less than one hour advance notice by announcement on the House
7floor, or one day advance notice by posting on the House
8bulletin board or the General Assembly website. An
9Appropriations Committee or special committee shall not issue
10any report with respect to the conference committee report
11following the hearing.
12    (d) (Blank).
13    (e) No House Bill that is returned to the House with Senate
14amendments may be called except by the Principal Sponsor, or by
15a chief co-sponsor with the consent of the Principal Sponsor.
16This subsection may not be suspended.
17    (f) Except as otherwise provided in Rule 74, the report of
18a conference committee on a non-appropriation bill or
19resolution shall be confined to the subject of the bill or
20resolution referred to the conference committee. The report of
21a conference committee on an appropriation bill shall be
22confined to the subject of appropriations.
 
23    (House Rule 76)
24    76. Action on Conference Committee Reports.
25    (a) Each chamber of the General Assembly shall inform the

 

 

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1other by message of any action taken with respect to a
2conference committee report. Copies of all papers necessary for
3a complete understanding of the action shall accompany the
4message. The original bill or resolution shall remain in the
5chamber of origin.
6    (b) No conference committee report may be called except by
7the Principal Sponsor of the bill for which the conference
8committee was appointed. A chief co-sponsor may call a
9conference committee report with the consent of the Principal
10Sponsor. This subsection may not be suspended.
11    (c) If either chamber refuses to adopt the report of the
12conference committee, the report of the conference committee is
13laid on the table, or the first conference committee is unable
14to reach agreement, either chamber may request a second
15conference committee. When such a request is made, each chamber
16shall again appoint a conference committee. If either chamber
17refuses to adopt the report of a second conference committee,
18the 2 chambers shall have adhered to their disagreement, and
19the bill or resolution is lost.
 
20    (House Rule 77)
21    77. Recording of Vetoes. Upon the receipt by the House of
22any bill returned by the Governor under any of the provisions
23of Article IV, Sec. 9 of the Constitution, the Clerk shall
24enter the objections of the Governor on the Journal, and shall
25reproduce and distribute copies of all veto messages, together

 

 

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1with copies of the vetoed bill or item, as provided in Rule 39.
 
2    (House Rule 78)
3    78. Amendatory Vetoes.
4    (a) The Principal Sponsor of a bill that has been passed by
5the General Assembly may request the Clerk to notify the
6Governor that the Principal Sponsor wishes to be consulted by
7the Governor or his or her designee before the Governor returns
8the bill together with specific recommendations for change
9under subsection (e) of Section 9 of Article IV of the Illinois
10Constitution.
11    (b) Any bill returned by the Governor together with
12specific recommendations for change under subsection (e) of
13Section 9 of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution shall
14automatically be placed on the Daily Calendar on the order of
15amendatory vetoes, and shall be considered as provided in this
16Rule.
17    (c) The Governor's specific recommendations for change
18with respect to a bill returned under subsection (e) of Section
199 of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution shall be limited
20to addressing the Governor's objections to portions of a bill
21the general merit of which the Governor recognizes and shall
22not alter the fundamental purpose or legislative scheme set
23forth in the bill as passed.
24    (d) Any motion to accept the Governor's specific
25recommendations for change shall be automatically referred to

 

 

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1the Rules Committee. The Rules Committee shall examine the
2Governor's specific recommendations for change and determine
3by a majority of those appointed whether those recommendations
4comply with the standard set forth in subsection (c). Any
5motion to accept specific recommendations for change that the
6Rules Committee determines are in compliance with subsection
7(c) of this Rule shall be subject to action by the Rules
8Committee in the same manner as floor amendments, joint action
9motions, conference committee reports and motions to table
10committee amendments under Rule 18(e).
11    (e) Any motion to override the Governor's specific
12recommendations for change shall not be referred to a committee
13and may be immediately considered and adopted by the House
14subject to Rule 80(d).
15    (f) This rule may not be suspended.
 
16    (House Rule 79)
17    79. Motions to Consider Vetoes. For purposes of this
18Article, the term "motions" means motions to accept or override
19a veto of the Governor. Motions with respect to bills returned
20by the Governor may be made by the Principal Sponsor, the
21committee Chairperson in the case of a committee-sponsored
22bill, or if Co-Chairpersons have been appointed, by the
23Co-Chairperson of the majority caucus in the case of special
24committee-sponsored bills. Motions shall be filed in writing
25with the Clerk. Any motion to override a veto of the Governor

 

 

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1shall not be referred to a committee and may be immediately
2considered and adopted by the House subject to Rule 80. All
3motions shall be assigned standard debate status, subject to
4Rule 52, are renewable, and may be reconsidered, provided that
5no motion may be voted on more than twice by the House.
 
6    (House Rule 80)
7    80. Consideration of Motions.
8    (a) The vote to override a veto of a bill vetoed in its
9entirety shall be by record vote and shall be entered on the
10Journal. The form of motion with respect to these bills shall
11be: "I move that ________ Bill _____ do pass, notwithstanding
12the veto of the Governor."
13    (b) The vote to override an item veto shall be by record
14vote as to each item separately and shall be entered on the
15Journal. The form of motion with respect to an item shall be:
16"I move that the item on page ____, line ____, of ____ Bill
17_____ do pass, notwithstanding the item veto of the Governor."
18    (c) The vote to override an item reduction veto and restore
19an item that has been reduced shall be by record vote as to
20each item separately and shall be entered on the Journal. The
21form of motion with respect to an item shall be: "I move that
22the item on page ____, line ____, of ____ Bill ____ be
23restored, notwithstanding the item reduction of the Governor."
24    (d) A bill returned together with specific recommendations
25of the Governor may be acted upon, by record vote, in either of

 

 

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1the following manners:
2        (1) By a motion to accept the specific recommendations
3    of the Governor. The form of motion shall be: "I move to
4    accept the specific recommendations of the Governor as to
5    _____ Bill _____ in manner and form as follows: (inserting
6    herein the language deemed necessary to effectuate the
7    specific recommendations)."; or
8        (2) By considering the bill as a vetoed bill and
9    overriding the recommendation and passing the bill in its
10    original form. The form of motion shall be: "I move that
11    _____ Bill _____ do pass, notwithstanding the specific
12    recommendations of the Governor.".
 
13    (House Rule 81)
14    81. Vetoed Bills Considered in Entirety. If a bill is
15returned by the Governor containing more than one item veto,
16reduction veto, specific recommendation for change, or
17combination of them, the bill shall be acted upon in its
18entirety before the bill is released from the custody of the
19House.
 
20    (House Rule 82)
21    82. Disposition of Vetoes. When a bill or item has received
22the affirmative vote of the number of members elected necessary
23under the Constitution, the Presiding Officer shall declare
24that the bill or item has been passed or restored over the veto

 

 

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1of the Governor, or that the specific recommendations for
2change have been approved, as the case may be. The bill shall
3then be attested to by the Clerk who shall note thereon the day
4the bill passed. The bill and the objections of the Governor
5shall then be immediately delivered to the Senate. When
6specific recommendations have been accepted, then the
7accepting language shall be attached to the original bill, and
8the bill shall be delivered to the Senate.
 
9
ARTICLE X
10
ELECTION CONTESTS AND QUALIFICATIONS CHALLENGES

11    (House Rule 83)
12    83. Election Contests and Qualifications Challenges.
13    (a) An election contest places in issue only the validity
14of the results of an election of a member to the House in a
15representative district. An election contest may result only in
16a determination of which candidate in that election was
17properly elected to the House and shall be seated.
18    (b) A qualifications challenge places in issue only the
19qualifications of an incumbent member of the House under the
20Constitution, or the legality of an appointment of a person as
21a member of the House to fill a vacancy. A qualifications
22challenge may result only in a determination of whether a
23member of the House is properly seated.
24    (c) Election contests and qualifications challenges shall

 

 

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1be brought and conducted as provided in these Rules.
2    (d) If an election contest or qualifications challenge is
3filed with the Clerk, the Speaker shall create an Election
4Contest or Qualifications Challenge Committee, as the case may
5be, within 3 legislative days by filing a notice with the
6Clerk. The creation of any committee under this Rule shall be
7governed by Rule 10. The election contest or qualifications
8challenge shall be automatically referred to the Election
9Contest or Qualifications Challenge Committee, as the case may
10be. For purposes of this Article, the term "committee" means
11only the Election Contest or Qualifications Challenge
12Committees created under this Rule. This subsection may not be
13suspended.
14    (e) The committee may adopt rules to govern election
15contests and qualifications challenges, but those committee
16rules must be consistent with these Rules, must be filed with
17the Clerk, and must be made available to all parties and to the
18public. Any committee rule shall be subject to amendment,
19suspension, or repeal by House resolution.
 
20    (House Rule 84)
21    84. Initiating Election Contests.
22    (a) Election contests may be brought only by a registered
23voter of the representative district or by a member of the
24House.
25    (b) Election contests may be brought only by the procedures

 

 

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1and within the time limits established by the Election Code.
2Notice of intention to contest shall be served on the person
3certified as elected to the House from the representative
4district within the time limits established by the Election
5Code. The requirements of this subsection apply to a member of
6the House appointed to fill a vacancy the same as if that
7member had been elected to the House.
8    (c) Within 10 days after the convening of the House in
9January following the general election contested, each
10contestant shall file with the Clerk a petition of election
11contest and shall serve the petition on the incumbent member of
12the House from the representative district. A petition of
13election contest shall allege the contestant's qualifications
14to bring the contest and to serve as a member of the House,
15that he or she believes that a mistake or fraud has been
16committed in specified precincts in the counting, return, or
17canvass of the votes, or that there was some other specified
18irregularity in the conduct of the election in specified
19precincts. A petition of election contest shall contain a
20prayer specifying the relief requested and the precincts in
21which a recount or other inquiry is desired. A petition of
22election contest shall be verified by affidavit swearing to the
23truth of the allegations or based upon information and belief,
24and shall be accompanied by proof of service on all
25respondents.
26    (d) A notice of intent to contest may not be amended to

 

 

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1cure a defect under the statutory requirements. A petition of
2election contest, if filed and served after the notice of
3intention to contest, may not raise points not expressed in the
4notice.
5    (e) The incumbent member of the House from the
6representative district is a necessary party to the initiation
7of an election contest.
 
8    (House Rule 85)
9    85. Initiating Qualifications Challenges.
10    (a) Qualifications challenges may be brought only by a
11registered voter of the representative district of the
12representative challenged or by a member of the House.
13    (b) Qualifications challenges must be brought within 90
14days after the day the challenged member takes his or her oath
15of office as a member of the House, or within 90 days after the
16day the petitioner first learns of the information on which the
17challenge is based, whichever occurs later.
18    (c) A qualifications challenge shall be brought by filing a
19petition of qualifications challenge with the Clerk, and by
20serving a copy of the petition on the respondent member of the
21House. The petition must be accompanied by proof of personal
22service upon the respondent member and must be verified by
23affidavit swearing to the truth of the allegations or based
24upon information and belief. A petition of qualifications
25challenge shall set forth the grounds on which the respondent

 

 

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1member is alleged to be constitutionally unqualified, or on
2which his or her appointment to the House is claimed to be
3legally improper, the qualifications of the petitioner to bring
4the challenge, and a prayer for relief.
 
5    (House Rule 86)
6    86. Contests and Challenges; Due Process.
7    (a) Election contests and challenges shall be heard and
8determined as expeditiously as possible under adversary
9procedures wherein each party to the proceedings has a
10reasonable opportunity to present his or her claim, to present
11any defense and arguments, and to respond to those of his or
12her opponents. All parties may be represented by counsel.
13    (b) Election contests and qualifications challenges shall
14be heard and determined in accordance with the applicable
15provisions of the Election Code and other Illinois statutes,
16the Illinois Constitution, and the United States Constitution.
17Judicial decisions that bear on a point of law in a contest or
18challenge shall be admissible in the arguments of the parties
19and the deliberations and decisions of the committee. Judicial
20decisions applicable to a point of law or to a fact situation
21to the committee shall be given weight as precedent.
22    (c) In addition to notice of meetings required under these
23Rules, the committee and any subcommittee shall give notice to
24all parties reasonably in advance of each meeting or other
25proceeding. The committee shall also give notice of all rules,

 

 

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1timetables, or deadlines adopted by the committee. Notice under
2this subsection shall be in writing and shall be given either
3personally with receipt, or by certified mail (return receipt
4requested) addressed to the party at his or her place of
5residence, and to his or her attorney of record at the
6attorney's office if so requested by the party.
 
7    (House Rule 87)
8    87. Committee Proceedings and Powers in Contests and
9Challenges.
10    (a) All proceedings of the committee and any subcommittees
11concerning election contests and qualifications challenges
12shall be transcribed by a certified court reporter. Copies of
13the transcript shall be made available to the members of the
14committee and to the parties.
15    (b) The committee may dismiss an election contest or
16qualifications challenge, or may determine to proceed to a
17recount or other inquiry. The committee may limit the issues to
18be determined in a contest or challenge, except that when a
19recount is conducted in an election contest, any precinct
20timely requested by any party to be recounted shall be
21recounted by the committee.
22    (c) In conducting inquiries, investigations, and recounts
23in election contests and qualifications challenges, the
24committee has the power to send for and compel the attendance
25of witnesses and the production of books, papers, ballots,

 

 

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1documents, and records by subpoena signed by the Chairperson of
2the committee as provided by law and subject to Rule 4(c)(9).
3In conducting proceedings in election contests and
4qualifications challenges, the Chairperson of the committee
5and the Chairperson of any subcommittee may administer oaths to
6witnesses, as provided by law, and for this purpose a
7subcommittee is deemed to be a committee of the House.
8    (d) The committee may issue commissions by its Chairperson
9to any officer authorized to take depositions of any necessary
10witnesses as may be permitted by law. In recounting the ballots
11in any election contest, however, no person other than a member
12of the committee shall handle any ballots, tally sheets, or
13other election materials without consent of the committee or
14subcommittee. The responsibility for the actual recounting of
15ballots may not be delegated.
16    (e) The committee shall maintain an accurate and complete
17record of proceedings in every election contest and
18qualifications challenge. That record shall include all
19notices and pleadings, the transcripts and roll call votes, all
20reports and dissents, and all documents that were admitted into
21the proceeding. The committee shall file the record with the
22Clerk of the House upon the adoption of its final report. The
23record shall then be available for examination in the Clerk's
24office.
25    (f) With the approval of the Speaker, the committee may
26employ clerks, stenographers, court reporters, professional

 

 

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1staff, and messengers.
 
2    (House Rule 88)
3    88. Adoption of Reports in Contests and Challenges.
4    (a) All final decisions of the committee regarding an
5election contest or qualification challenge shall be approved
6by a majority of those appointed to the committee and reported
7in writing to the House. Reports shall include a specific
8recommendation to the House as to the disposition of the
9contest or challenge. Final reports following full inquiry on
10the merits of a contest or challenge shall contain findings of
11fact and, when necessary, conclusions of law.
12    (b) Any member of the committee may file a dissent from a
13report of the committee, a minority report, or a special
14concurrence with the majority report or with any minority
15report.
16    (c) A subcommittee shall report to the committee in writing
17in the same form as required for the committee report.
18Subcommittee members may file dissents, reports, and special
19concurrences.
20    (d) Reports shall not be adopted by the committee or a
21subcommittee until a hearing has been held thereon, with notice
22to all parties and a reasonable opportunity to examine and
23respond to a proposed majority report.
24    (e) Reports of the committee shall be filed with the Clerk,
25reproduced, and distributed, along with any dissents, minority

 

 

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1reports, or special concurrences, as provided in Rule 39. The
2report shall be listed on the calendar under the heading
3"Report of Election Contest" or "Report of Qualifications
4Challenge". The report shall be carried on the Daily Calendar
5for 2 legislative days before any action by the House.
6    (f) The House shall adopt the majority report or a minority
7report in an election contest or qualifications challenge or
8shall refuse to adopt any report filed and re-refer the contest
9or challenge to the committee for further proceedings or for a
10modified report. A report that has the effect of unseating an
11incumbent member of the House shall be adopted only by the
12affirmative vote of 60 members elected.
13    (g) Each party to a contest or challenge shall file with
14the Clerk of the committee within 10 days after the filing of
15the final report a detailed statement of attorney's fees and
16expenses incurred by that party in connection with the case.
17The committee shall make recommendations to the House
18concerning reimbursement of attorney's fees and the expenses of
19the parties. The recommendation shall not exceed a sum that is
20reasonable, just, and proper.
 
21
ARTICLE XI
22
DISCIPLINE AND PROTEST

23    (House Rule 89)
24    89. Disorderly Behavior.

 

 

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1    (a) In accordance with Article IV, Sec. 6(d) of the
2Constitution, the House may punish any of its members for
3disorderly behavior and, with the concurrence of two-thirds of
4the members elected, expel a member (but not for a second time
5for the same offense). The reason for expulsion shall be
6entered upon the Journal with the names and votes of those
7members voting on the question.
8    (b) In accordance with Article IV, Sec. 6(d) of the
9Constitution, the House during its session may punish by
10imprisonment any person, not a member, guilty of disrespect to
11the House by disorderly or contemptuous behavior in its
12presence. That imprisonment shall not extend beyond 24 hours at
13one time unless the person persists in disorderly or
14contemptuous behavior.
 
15    (House Rule 90)
16    90. Protest. Any 2 members have the right to dissent and
17protest, in respectful language, against any act or resolution
18that they may think injurious to the public or to any
19individual, and have the reason of their protest entered upon
20the Journal. When by motion a majority of members determines
21that the language of a protest is not respectful, the protest
22shall be referred back to the protesting members.
 
23
ARTICLE XII
24
DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS

 

 

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1    (House Rule 91)
2    91. Special Investigating Committee.
3    (a) Disciplinary proceedings may be commenced by filing
4with the Speaker and the Minority Leader a petition, signed by
53 or more members of the House, for a special investigating
6committee. The petition shall contain the alleged charge or
7charges that, if true, may subject the member named in the
8petition to disciplinary action by the House and may include
9any other factual information that supports the charge or
10charges.
11    (b) Upon filing the petition, a special investigating
12committee consisting of 6 members shall be created. The Speaker
13shall appoint 3 members from the majority caucus and the
14Minority Leader shall appoint 3 members from the minority
15caucus. The Speaker shall appoint the Chairperson from among
16the 6 members. Members signing the petition may not be
17appointed to the special investigating committee. The contents
18of a petition for a special investigating committee shall be
19confidential until the appointment of all members except as to
20the member named, the members signing it, the Speaker, the
21Minority Leader, and the members of a special investigating
22committee.
23    (c) The Chairperson shall give reasonable notice of all
24meetings to the member named in the petition and to the public.
25All meetings of the special investigating committee shall be

 

 

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1open to the public, unless, pursuant to Article IV, Section
25(c) of the Illinois Constitution, the House votes by the
3affirmative vote of 79 members to hold proceedings in executive
4session. The Clerk shall keep an audio recording and transcript
5of all meetings.
6    (d) The member named in the petition has the right to
7counsel during all meetings of the special investigating
8committee.
9    (e) The Chairperson may establish procedural rules
10(subject to the approval of the Speaker). The Committee may, in
11the discretion of the Chairperson, administer oaths and compel
12by subpoena (subject to Rule 4(c)(9)) any person to appear and
13give testimony as a witness or produce papers, documents, or
14other materials relevant to the charge or charges.
15    (f) This Rule may be suspended only by unanimous consent.
 
16    (House Rule 92)
17    92. Investigation.
18    (a) At the initial meeting of the special investigating
19committee, the Chairperson shall enter the petition into the
20record.
21    (b) The special investigating committee shall conduct a
22thorough investigation of all charges alleged in the petition.
23The special investigating committee shall meet as often as
24necessary and consider any information or testimony it deems
25relevant to the charges alleged in the petition, regardless of

 

 

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1whether such information was contained in the petition or is
2discovered through subsequent investigation.
3    (c) The special investigating committee shall give the
4member named in the petition an opportunity to be present at
5all meetings and to testify or otherwise present any relevant
6information.
7    (d) The special investigating committee shall determine if
8reasonable grounds exist to authorize charges against the
9member named in the petition that may result in disciplinary
10action by the House. The special investigating committee shall
11vote on each charge alleged in the petition by record vote. A
12motion to authorize a charge requires the affirmative vote of a
13majority of those appointed.
14    (e) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
15of 71 members elected.
 
16    (House Rule 93)
17    93. Report of the Special Investigating Committee.
18    (a) The special investigating committee shall file with the
19Clerk a written report that includes, at a minimum, a summary
20of each charge alleged in the petition, the vote on each charge
21alleged in the petition, and the reasons the committee did or
22did not authorize each charge against the member. Any member of
23the special investigating committee may include a supplemental
24statement in the report, either concurring with or dissenting
25from all or part of the report, or explaining a reason for his

 

 

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1or her vote on a charge. The report shall be signed by all of
2the members of the special investigating committee, regardless
3of their original vote in the committee proceedings on whether
4to authorize charges.
5    (b) If a majority of those appointed determines that
6reasonable grounds exist to authorize a charge or charges, then
7for each authorized charge the report shall include a statement
8of the authorized charge and any factual information supporting
9that charge. Within the report, the special investigating
10committee shall appoint 2 members of the House, one from the
11majority caucus and one from the minority caucus, who are not
12members of the special investigating committee and did not sign
13the petition, to be managers for the House at the hearing on
14the authorized charge or charges.
15    (c) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
16of 71 members elected.
 
17    (House Rule 94)
18    94. Select Committee on Discipline.
19    (a) If a special investigating committee authorizes
20charges against any member of the House, the Speaker and the
21Minority Leader shall appoint a select committee on discipline
22to hear and determine those charges. The select committee shall
23consist of 12 members of the House, 6 of whom shall be
24appointed by the Speaker from the majority caucus and 6 of whom
25shall be appointed by the Minority Leader from the minority

 

 

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1caucus. The Speaker shall appoint a Chairperson from among the
212 members. No member who signed the petition or served on the
3special investigating committee may be appointed to the select
4committee.
5    (b) All appointments to a select committee shall be
6completed and the select committee shall convene within 30 days
7after the filing of a report issued by the special
8investigating committee.
9    (c) The Chairperson shall give reasonable notice of all
10meetings to the member named in the petition and to the public.
11All meetings of the select committee shall be open to the
12public, unless, pursuant to Article IV, Section 5(c) of the
13Illinois Constitution, the House votes by the affirmative vote
14of 79 members to hold proceedings in executive session. The
15Clerk shall keep an audio recording and transcript of all
16meetings.
17    (d) The Chairperson may establish procedural rules
18(subject to the approval of the Speaker). The select committee
19may, at the discretion of the Chairperson, administer oaths and
20compel by subpoena (subject to Rule 4(c)(9)) any person to
21appear and give testimony as a witness or produce papers,
22documents, or other materials relevant to the charge or
23charges.
24    (e) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
25of 79 members elected.
 

 

 

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1    (House Rule 95)
2    95. Hearings on Disciplinary Charges.
3    (a) Proceedings before the select committee shall be
4adversarial in form, with the managers for the House presenting
5the case for disciplinary action. The member subject to charges
6has the right to counsel during all hearings of the select
7committee.
8    (b) Stipulations of fact shall be encouraged by the select
9committee.
 
10    (House Rule 96)
11    96. Report of the Select Committee on Discipline.
12    (a) The select committee shall vote on each charge by
13record vote. For each charge the select committee shall vote on
14the question, "Is the Member at fault on this charge?" If a
15majority of those appointed vote in the affirmative, the member
16shall be found at fault on that charge. If less than a majority
17of those appointed vote in the affirmative, it shall be
18reported that there is insufficient evidence to find the member
19at fault on that charge.
20    (b) If the select committee finds the member at fault on
21any charge, the committee shall adopt a recommendation for
22disciplinary action. The committee may recommend a reprimand, a
23censure, expulsion from the House, or that no penalty be
24invoked. The recommendation on disciplinary action requires an
25affirmative vote of the majority of those appointed. If a

 

 

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1majority of those appointed cannot, by record vote, agree on a
2penalty, it shall report a recommendation that no penalty be
3invoked.
4    (c) The select committee shall file a report of its
5findings on each charge. The report shall include, at a
6minimum, the vote of the committee on each charge, the reasons
7for each conclusion, and any recommendation as to a penalty for
8a finding of fault on a charge. Any member of the select
9committee may include a supplemental statement in the report,
10either concurring with or dissenting from all or part of the
11report, or explaining a reason for his or her vote on a charge.
12    (d) If the select committee finds the member at fault on
13any charge, the select committee shall file a resolution that
14includes its findings, the charge, and the recommended penalty
15for that charge. Separate resolutions must be filed for each
16charge.
17    (e) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
18of 71 members elected.
 
19    (House Rule 97)
20    97. House Action on the Report of the Select Committee on
21Discipline.
22    (a) The report of a select committee and any accompanying
23resolution shall be filed with the Clerk and reproduced and
24distributed as provided in Rule 39. The report and any
25accompanying resolutions shall be placed on the calendar under

 

 

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1the heading "Report and Resolutions of Select Committee on
2Discipline". The report and resolutions shall be carried on the
3Daily Calendar for 2 legislative days before any action by the
4House.
5    (b) The House shall take action by a record vote on each
6resolution. The House may amend a resolution for disciplinary
7action to decrease the recommended penalty by a record vote of
860 members elected.
9    (c) A resolution finding a member at fault regarding a
10charge may be adopted only by the affirmative vote of 71
11members elected, except that a resolution the effect of which
12is to expel a member may be adopted only by the affirmative
13vote of 79 members elected.
14    (d) This Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative vote
15of 79 members elected, except that paragraph (c) may not be
16suspended.
 
17
ARTICLE XIII
18
FORCE AND EFFECT

19    (House Rule 98)
20    98. Applicability. The meetings and actions of the House,
21including all of its committees, are governed by these House
22Rules.
 
23    (House Rule 99)

 

 

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1    99. Parliamentary Authority. The rules of parliamentary
2practice appearing in the latest edition of Robert's Rules of
3Order Newly Revised govern the House in all cases to which they
4apply so long as they are not inconsistent with these Rules.
 
5    (House Rule 100)
6    100. Certification by Speaker. With respect to each bill
7that is certified by the Speaker in accordance with Article IV,
8Sec. 8(d) of the Constitution, there is an irrebuttable
9presumption that the procedural requirements for passage have
10been met.
 
11    (House Rule 101)
12    101. Effective Date. These rules are in full force and
13effect upon their adoption, and shall remain in full force and
14effect except as amended in accordance with these Rules, or
15until superseded by new rules adopted as part of the
16organization of a newly-constituted General Assembly at the
17commencement of a term.
 
18
ARTICLE XIV
19
DEFINITIONS

20    (House Rule 102)
21    102. Definitions. As used in these Rules, terms have the
22meanings ascribed to them as follows, unless the context

 

 

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1clearly requires a different meaning:
2        (1) Chairperson. "Chairperson" means that
3    Representative designated by the Speaker to serve as chair
4    of a committee.
5        (2) Co-Chairperson. "Co-Chairperson" means a
6    Representative designated by the Speaker to serve as
7    co-chair of a standing or special committee.
8        (3) Clerk. "Clerk" means the elected Clerk of the
9    House.
10        (4) Committee. "Committee" means a committee of the
11    House and includes a standing committee, a special
12    committee, any subcommittee of a committee, the Rules
13    Committee, committees created under Article X and Article
14    XII of these Rules, and a Committee of the Whole.
15    "Committee" does not mean a conference committee, and the
16    procedural and notice requirements applicable to
17    committees do not apply to conference committees.
18        (5) Constitution. "Constitution" means the
19    Constitution of the State of Illinois.
20        (6) General Assembly. "General Assembly" means the
21    current General Assembly of the State of Illinois.
22        (7) House. "House" means the House of Representatives
23    of the General Assembly.
24        (8) Joint Action Motions. "Joint action motions" means
25    the following motions before the House: (i) to concur in a
26    Senate amendment, (ii) to non-concur in a Senate amendment

 

 

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1    and ask the Senate to recede, (iii) to recede from a House
2    amendment, (iv) to not recede from a House amendment and
3    request that a conference committee be appointed, (v) to
4    adopt a conference committee report, or (vi) to refuse to
5    adopt a conference committee report and request
6    appointment of a second conference committee.
7        (9) Legislative Digest. "Legislative Digest" means the
8    Legislative Synopsis and Digest that is prepared by the
9    Legislative Reference Bureau of the General Assembly.
10        (10) Legislative Measures. "Legislative measures"
11    means all matters brought before the House for
12    consideration, whether originated in the House or Senate,
13    and includes bills, amendments, resolutions, conference
14    committee reports, motions, messages, notices, and
15    Executive Orders from the executive branch.
16        (11) Majority. "Majority" means a majority of those
17    members present and voting on a question. Unless otherwise
18    specified with respect to a particular House Rule, for
19    purposes of determining the number of members present and
20    voting on a question, a "present" vote shall not be
21    counted.
22        (12) Majority Caucus. "Majority caucus" means that
23    group of Representatives from the numerically strongest
24    political party in the House.
25        (13) Majority of those Appointed. "Majority of those
26    appointed" means a majority of the total number of

 

 

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1    Representatives authorized to be appointed to a committee,
2    but does not include ex-officio or non-voting members.
3        (14) Majority of those Elected. "Majority of those
4    elected" means a majority of the total number of
5    Representatives entitled to be elected to the House,
6    regardless of the number of elected or appointed
7    Representatives actually serving in office. So long as 118
8    Representatives are entitled to be elected to the House,
9    "majority of those elected" means 60 affirmative votes; 71
10    affirmative votes means three-fifths of the members
11    elected; and 79 affirmative votes means two-thirds of the
12    members elected.
13        (15) Member. "Member" means a Representative. Where
14    the context so requires, "member" may also mean a Senator
15    of the Illinois Senate.
16        (16) (Blank).
17        (17) Members Elected. "Members elected" means the 118
18    Representatives entitled to be elected to the House,
19    regardless of the number of elected or appointed
20    Representatives actually serving in office.
21        (18) Minority Caucus. "Minority caucus" means that
22    group of Representatives from the second numerically
23    strongest political party in the House.
24        (19) Minority Leader. "Minority Leader" means the
25    Minority Leader of the House elected under Rule 2.
26        (20) Minority Spokesperson. "Minority spokesperson"

 

 

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1    means that Representative designated by the Minority
2    Leader to serve as the minority spokesperson of a
3    committee.
4        (21) Perfunctory Session. "Perfunctory session" means
5    the convening of the House, pursuant to the scheduling of
6    the Speaker, for purposes consistent with Rule 28.
7        (22) Presiding Officer. "Presiding Officer" means that
8    Representative serving as the presiding officer of the
9    House, whether that Representative is the Speaker or
10    another Representative designated by the Speaker under
11    Rule 4.
12        (23) Principal Sponsor. "Principal sponsor" means the
13    first listed House sponsor of any legislative measure; with
14    respect to a committee-sponsored bill or resolution, it
15    means the Chairperson of the committee or the
16    Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus.
17        (24) Record Vote. "Record vote" means a vote by ayes
18    and nays entered on the journal.
19        (25) Representative. "Representative" means any duly
20    elected or duly appointed Illinois State Representative,
21    and means the same as "member".
22        (26) Senate. "Senate" means the Senate of the General
23    Assembly.
24        (27) Speaker. "Speaker" means the Speaker of the House
25    elected as provided in Rule 1.
26        (28) Term. "Term" means the 2-year term of a General

 

 

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1    Assembly.
2        (29) Vice-Chairperson. "Vice-Chairperson" means that
3    Representative designated by the Speaker to serve as
4    Vice-Chairperson of a committee.