HOUSE . . . . . . . . . No. 2006
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Filed by Speaker DiMasi of Boston (House, No. 2005, as amended). Adopted, January 26, 2005. |

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
______________________
In
the Year Two Thousand Five.
______________________
Ordered, That the rules of the House of Representatives for the years 2005-2006 be adopted, as follows:
SPEAKER.
1. The Speaker shall take the Chair at the hour to which the House stands adjourned, call the members to order, and, on the appearance of a quorum, proceed to business. [1.] (Senate Rule 1.)
1A. The House shall not be called to
order before the hour of ten o’clock A.M. nor meet beyond the hour of nine o’clock P.M. At the hour of nine o’clock P.M., if the House is in session, the
Speaker shall interrupt the business then pending and shall, without debate,
place before the House the question on suspension of this rule which shall be
decided by a majority of members present and voting by a recorded yea and nay
vote. If the vote is in the affirmative, said vote shall permit the House to
remain in session until the hour of midnight; provided that the session shall
not continue beyond the hour of midnight, unless by unanimous consent of the
members present. The House shall then return to the pending business; and if no
matter was pending, to the next order of business. However, if the vote is in
the negative, the Speaker shall forthwith, and without further debate, adjourn
or recess the House to a time not earlier than ten o’clock A.M. on the next
succeeding calendar day.
[Adopted Jan. 12, 1983; Amended Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 14, 1997; May 16, 2000.]
2. The Speaker shall preserve decorum
and order in the House Chamber. While in the House Chamber during formal
sessions, members and staff shall be required to dress in proper and
appropriate attire and to refrain from the use of cellular telephones, beepers
and pagers. The Speaker also may speak to points of order in preference to
other members; and shall decide all questions of order, subject to an appeal to
the House. [2.] (2.) [With regard to appeals, see Rule 77.]
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 9, 2003.]
3. The Speaker shall declare all votes,
subject to verification as hereinafter provided. [3.] (55.) [See Rules 49 to
53, inclusive.]
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
4. In all cases the Speaker may vote.
[4.] (3.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
4A. The Speaker may appoint a Speaker pro tempore. The Speaker pro tempore shall assist the Speaker in the coordination of policy development and the ceremonial functions of the House and shall perform such duties assigned to him by the Speaker. Upon a vacancy in the office of Speaker, the office of Speaker pro tempore shall be considered vacant until a Speaker pro tempore is elected or appointed.
[Adopted Jan. 26, 2005.]
5. The Speaker may appoint a member to
perform the duties of the Chair. In the event the Speaker fails to appoint a
member to perform the duties of the Chair, the Speaker pro tempore shall
be the Acting Speaker until the Speaker otherwise provides or until a vacancy
in the office of Speaker occurs. In the event that the Speaker pro tempore
is absent or is unable to perform the duties of Acting Speaker, the Majority
Leader, the Assistant Majority Leader, the Second Assistant Majority Leader or
other designee shall be the Acting Speaker. [7.] (4.)
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 14, 1997; Jan. 26, 2005.]
6. In case of a vacancy in the office of
Speaker, or in case the Speaker or the member named by said Speaker in
accordance with the preceding rule is absent at the hour to which the House
stands adjourned, the senior member present shall call the House to order, and
shall preside until a Speaker pro tempore or a Speaker is elected, which
shall be the first business in order. [8.] (5.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
7. At the beginning of the first year of
the two year General Court the Speaker shall, unless the House otherwise
directs, appoint a Chaplain; and the Speaker shall promptly fill any vacancy in
the office of Chaplain. [7A.] (4.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
SCHEDULING.
7A. There shall be appointed a standing
committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling consisting of eleven members. The
committee shall not be subject to the provisions of Rule 17A, but shall be
authorized to meet from time to time at the call of the Chair for the purpose
of assisting the members of the House of Representatives in identifying the
major matters pending before the General Court, the relative urgency and
priority for consideration of such matters, and alternative methods of
responding to such matters by the General Court. Said committee shall schedule
legislative matters in a manner that will provide for an even distribution and
orderly consideration of reports of legislative committees on the daily
Calendar.
The committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling shall not be authorized to
recommend changes or amendments to legislation or recommend that a matter ought
to pass or ought not to pass, but shall only report asking to be discharged
from further consideration of a bill, and recommending that it be referred or
recommitted to another committee, provided, however, that it shall not
recommend that a matter be referred or recommitted to the committee on Rules or
the committees on Rules of the two branches, acting concurrently, or what date
a matter shall be scheduled for consideration by the House and placed in the
Orders of the Day. All reports by the committee on petitions filed or approved
by the voters of a city or town, or by the mayor and city council, or other
legislative body of a city or the town meeting of a town with respect to a law
relating to that city of town shall be read and considered by the House at a
formal or informal session before being accepted, rejected or otherwise acted
upon.
All matters received from the Senate or reported from standing committees
of the House and joint standing committees of the General Court shall, unless
subject to provisions of any other House or joint rules, be referred to the
committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling. All matters reported by said
committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling recommending that a matter shall
be scheduled for consideration by the House shall be placed in the Orders of
the Day for the next sitting. Said committee may report on a legislative matter
within thirty days following the day the matter was referred. If the committee
fails to report a matter within thirty days following the date of its
reference, the Clerk shall place the matter on the Calendar of the House as if
it had been scheduled for consideration by said committee on Steering, Policy
and Scheduling.
[Adopted Jan. 14, 1997; Amended Jan. 26, 1999; Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
7B. The committee on Rules shall
be authorized to originate and report special orders for the scheduling and
consideration of legislation on the floor of the House. Said committee shall
not be subject to the notification provisions contained in Rule 17A but may
hold public hearings and shall accept testimony only from the members of the
House. A majority of the members appointed to the committee shall constitute a
quorum. When reported, such orders may be amended by a two-thirds vote of the
members present and voting, and shall be subject to approval by a majority of
the members of the House present and voting. Debate on the question on adoption
of such orders shall be limited to thirty minutes. No orders adopted pursuant
to this paragraph shall limit the powers of the Speaker as provided in Rules 1
to 6, inclusive. Such orders shall not be subject to reconsideration.
[Adopted Jan. 14, 1997; Amended Jan. 24, 2001.]
7C. The committee on Rules may consider
and make recommendations designed to improve and expedite the business and
procedures of the House and its committees, and to recommend to the House any
amendments to the Rules deemed necessary; provided that a majority of the
members of the House present and voting shall be required to approve such
recommendations.
The committee shall be privileged to report at any time.
[Adopted Jan. 14, 1997.]
7D. The Speaker shall, in consultation
with the committee on Rules and the committee on Steering, Policy and
Scheduling, establish a committee scheduling system that would minimize to the
greatest extent possible scheduling conflicts for members of committees.
The Speaker shall determine a schedule for the House for each week relative
to formal and informal sessions and shall make such schedule available to the
members by Thursday of the preceding week; provided, however, that the Speaker
may make, notwithstanding the provisions of Rule 7A, changes in the schedules
to facilitate the business
of the House in an efficient and timely fashion. The Speaker shall communicate
notice of any such scheduling change to the members in writing or by way of
electronic mail as soon as practicable, and whenever possible, the Speaker
shall provide such notice not less than twenty-four hours before the event so
rescheduled is set to commence.
[Adopted Jan. 14, 1997; January 9, 2003.]
MONITORS.
8. Two monitors shall be appointed by the Speaker for each division of the House, whose duty it shall be to see to the due observance of the rules, and, on request of the Speaker, to return the number of votes and members in their respective divisions. [9.]
9. If a member transgress any of the
rules after being notified thereof by a monitor, it shall be the duty of such
monitor to report the case to the House.
It shall be the duty of a monitor to report his or her knowledge of the
occurrence of a member voting for another member, in his or her division of the
House, to the Speaker of the House and the Minority Leader. [10.] [See Rules 16
and 16A.]
[Amended Jan. 9, 1991; May 5, 1993.]
9A. There shall be established a Floor
Division Committee for each of the four divisions of the House. The Speaker
shall appoint a Floor Division chairperson for each of the four divisions. Said
committee shall consist of the members assigned to the respective divisions.
In order to create a continuous flow of debate, each chairperson shall be
responsible for reviewing the daily Calendar and providing advance notice to
committee members in the respective divisions of all matters scheduled for
consideration in the Orders of the Day. Said committee chairpersons shall
provide information to members of their committees on pending legislation and
other matters of business before the House.
In addition to the legislative duties, chairpersons shall oversee the
physical appearance of the Chamber and the various areas under the jurisdiction
of the House of Representatives. Said chairpersons shall be authorized to act
as a committee and may meet at any time at the request of at least two
chairpersons. Said chairpersons, as a committee, shall be authorized to meet
with the appropriate agencies and historical commissions of the Commonwealth
for the purpose of requesting expeditious appraisals and necessary repairs and
renovations to the interior and exterior of the State House. The committee of
chairpersons shall report directly to the Speaker the results of all
consultations.
[Adopted Jan. 14, 1997.]
CLERK.
10. The Clerk shall keep the Journal of
the House. The Clerk shall enter therein a record of each day’s proceedings and,
whenever practicable, submit it to the Speaker
and the Minority Leader before the hour fixed for the next sitting, and shall
cause the same to be available daily in a format to be determined by the Clerk;
and provided further that a copy of said Journal shall also be made available
to each member of the House. Any objection to the Journal shall be made before
the House proceeds to the consideration of the Orders of the Day. [11.] (6.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan 11, 1985; Jan. 17, 1995; Jan. 9, 2003.]
10A. The Clerk shall be the official
parliamentarian of the House of Representatives.
[Adopted Jan. 9, 1991.]
11. Every question of order with the decision thereof shall be entered at large in the Journal, and shall be noted in an appendix, which shall also contain the rules of the House and of the two branches. [12.] (6.)
12. The Clerk shall prepare and make
available on each day of formal session a Calendar of matters in order for
consideration and such other memoranda as the House or the Speaker may direct.
The Clerk shall prepare a Calendar on which shall appear any question on
passage of a bill or resolve notwithstanding the objections of His Excellency
the Governor.
When, in the determination of the Clerk, a volume of matters exists for the
next legislative day, the Clerk shall be authorized to prepare and cause to be made
available an advance calendar of the matters in order of consideration for the
next legislative day and such other memoranda as the House or Speaker may
direct. The Clerk may indicate on the advance calendar that the matters
contained therein are subject to change.
The Clerk shall be authorized to dispense with preparing and making
available a Calendar for designated formal sessions of the House only after
two-thirds of the members present and voting consent thereto on a recorded yea
and nay vote. Debate on this question shall be limited to fifteen minutes, no
member shall speak more than three minutes, and such question shall not be
subject to reconsideration.
The Clerk shall dispense with preparing and making available a Calendar for
designated Informal Sessions of the House.
As soon as practicable whenever the Clerk prepares a Calendar or advance
Calendar under this rule, he also shall cause a true copy thereof to be saved
on a portion of the House Computer Network that is generally available by all
members and their staff, and reasonably promptly thereafter he shall cause the
members and their staff to be notified of the same by way of electronic mail,
and, at a time as is feasible, as determined by the Clerk, shall cause said
Calendar to be posted on the Legislative Web Page. [13.] (7.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; May 5, 1993; Jan. 17, 1995; Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
13. Any objection to the Calendar shall be made and disposed of before the House proceeds to the consideration of the Orders of the Day. [14.]
MEMBERS.
14. No member shall stand up, to the
inconvenience of others, while a member is speaking; or be involved in
disturbing conversation while another member is speaking in debate; or pass
unnecessarily between the Speaker of the House and the member speaking; or
stand in the passages, or in the area in front of the Chair; or stand at the
Clerk’s desk while a roll call is in progress. [16.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1989; Jan. 26, 1999.]
15. When it appears to the presiding
officer that the presence of a quorum is endangered, the Chair shall order the
doors closed. If a quorum is doubted the Chair shall order the doors closed and
thereafter no member shall enter or leave the House until an initial
determination has been made as to the presence of a quorum or lack thereof; and
thereafter, provided that no quorum is present, no member shall leave the House
unless by permission of the presiding officer, but members shall be admitted, at
any time.
Upon the doubting of a quorum and after ascertaining that a quorum is not
present, the Speaker may order a recorded attendance roll call to be taken on
the electronic roll call machine.
Said roll call, if ordered, shall be taken at a time determined by the
Speaker.
Members answering a quorum call shall vote “YES” on the roll call machine.
[17.] (11.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Feb. 22, 1982; Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991.]
ETHICS.
16. There shall be appointed a committee
on Ethics as authorized by Rule 17 but shall not be subject to the provisions
of Rule 17A when the committee is meeting pursuant to an alleged violation of
House Rule 16A. The committee shall consist of eleven members, seven of whom
shall be appointed by the Speaker, four of whom shall be appointed by the
Minority Leader.
Any member appointed to this committee shall, upon declaration of candidacy
for any other state or federal elective office, remove himself/herself from
said committee.
The House committee on Ethics is empowered to investigate and evaluate, at the
direction of the Speaker, by a sworn written complaint filed and delivered by a
member, officer or employee to the chairman of the Ethics committee, or by a
majority vote of the members appointed to the Ethics committee, any matters
relative to alleged violations of the Code of Ethics (Rule 16A) by a member,
officer or employee.
Upon the receipt of said sworn written complaint, at the direction of the
Speaker or by a majority vote of the members appointed to the Ethics committee,
the committee shall notify any person named of the nature of the alleged
violation and a list of prospective witnesses, and also shall notify said
person of the final disposition and the recommendations, if any, of the committee.
Any member, officer, or employee of the House named relative to an alleged
violation shall be afforded the opportunity to appear before the committee on
Ethics with counsel.
All proceedings including the filing of the initial complaint shall be
considered confidential information.
If the alleged violation received in the manner described above is deemed
to have merit by a majority vote of the members appointed to the committee, the
committee shall file a report with the Clerk of the House. Said report shall be
a public document. The committee shall not disclose any allegation deemed to be
frivolous or without merit.
If a majority appointed finds that any member of the House, officer, or
employee has violated any provision of the Code of Ethics, a majority appointed
may, in the case of a member, recommend a reprimand, censure, removal from a
chairmanship or other position of authority, or expulsion; and in the case of
an officer or employee, a majority appointed may recommend a reprimand,
suspension, or removal from employment.
Should such an alleged violation be filed with the committee regarding a
member or members of the House Ethics committee, said member or members shall
not participate in the committee deliberations on said alleged violation.
Any member of the House, officer, or employee may request in writing from
the House committee on Ethics an advisory opinion concerning any contemplated
personal action or potential personal conflict. The committee on Ethics shall
issue written advisory opinions and clarification in response to said written
request. The committee shall respond within sixty days of receipt of such a
request, unless the General Court has prorogued. In that event, the committee
shall respond within thirty days following the opening of the new session.
No member, officer, or employee of the House shall be penalized in any
manner for having acted within the guidelines of an advisory opinion, provided
that all pertinent facts are stated in the original request for an advisory
opinion.
The chairman of the Ethics committee may convene the committee at any time.
The chairman shall also convene the committee at the written request of at
least five members of the committee.
Upon convening of the first annual session of the General Court and after
the adoption of rules, all members, officers and employees of the House shall
be provided with a current copy of the Code of Ethics contained in Rule 16A.
[19.] (12A.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1987; May 5, 1993; Jan. 17, 1995; Mar. 6, 1995; Jan. 14, 1997.]
CODE OF ETHICS.
16A. (1.) While members, officers, and
employees should not be denied those opportunities available to all other
citizens to acquire and retain private, economic and other interests, members,
officers, and employees should exercise prudence in any and all such endeavors
and make every reasonable effort to avoid transactions, activities, or
obligations, which are in substantial conflict with or will substantially
impair their independence of judgement.
(2.) No member, officer, or employee shall solicit or accept any
compensation or political contribution other than that provided for by law for
the performance of official legislative duties.
(3.) No member, officer, or employee shall serve as a legislative agent as
defined in Chapter 3 of the General Laws regarding any legislation before the
General Court.
(4.) No member, officer, or employee shall receive any compensation or
permit any compensation to accrue to his or her beneficial interest by virtue
of influence improperly exerted from his or her official position in the House.
(5.) No member, officer, or employee shall accept employment or engage in
any business or professional activity, which will require the disclosure of
confidential information gained in the course of, and by reason of, his or her
official position.
(6.) No member, officer, or employee shall willfully and knowingly disclose
or use confidential information gained in the course of his or her official
position to further his or her own economic interest or that of any other
person.
(7.) Except as provided in Rule 49, no member shall cast a vote for any
other member, nor shall any officer or employee vote for any member, except
that the Clerk or an assistant Clerk may record a vote for a member who votes
late under the provisions of Rule 52, or is prohibited from voting from his
desk due to a malfunction of the electronic roll call voting machine; provided
the Clerk’s action shall not be construed as voting for said member.
(8.) No member shall use profane, insulting, or abusive language in the
course of public debate in the House Chamber or in testimony before any
committee of the General Court.
(9.) No member, officer, or employee shall employ anyone from public funds
who does not perform tasks which contribute substantially to the work of the
House and which are commensurate with the compensation received; and no officer
or full time employee of the House shall engage in any outside business
activity during regular business hours, whether the House is in session or not.
All employees of the House are assumed to be full time unless their personnel
record indicates otherwise.
(10.) No member, officer, or employee shall accept or solicit compensation
for non-legislative services which is in excess of the usual and customary
value of such services.
(11.) No member, officer, or employee shall accept or solicit an honorarium
for a speech, writing for publication, or other activity from any person,
organization, or enterprise having a direct interest in legislation or matters
before any agency, authority, board, or commission of the Commonwealth which is
in excess of the usual and customary value of such services.
(12.) No member of the House, officer, or employee shall knowingly accept
any gifts with an aggregate value of $100.00 or more in a calendar year from
any legislative agent.
No member of the House, officer, or employee shall accept any gift of cash from
any person or entity having a direct interest in legislation before the General
Court (For the purpose of paragraph 12, the definitions of “gift” and “person”
are defined in Chapter 268B, Section 1(g) and 1(m).).
(13.) No member shall convert campaign funds to personal use in excess of
reimbursements for legitimate and verifiable campaign expenditures. Members
shall consider all proceeds from testimonial dinners and other fund raising
activities as campaign funds.
(14.) No member shall serve on any committee or vote on any question in
which his/her private right is immediately concerned, distinct from the public
interest. [19.]
(15.) No member, officer or employee shall violate the confidentiality of
any proceeding before the Ethics committee. [19A.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; May 5, 1993; Jan. 24, 2001.]
16B. The Committee on Personnel and
Administration shall develop and conduct an ethics law training program to be
offered to every member of the House and all House staff personnel biannually,
commencing on January 1, 2005.
[Adopted Jan. 9, 2003.]
COMMITTEES.
17. At the beginning of the first year of the two year General Court, standing committees shall be appointed as follows:
A committee on Rules;
(to consist of fifteen members).
A committee on Ways and Means;
(to consist of thirty-two members).
A committee on Bills in the Third Reading;
(to consist of three members).
A committee of each Floor Division;
(to consist of the members of each division).
A committee on Ethics;
(to consist of eleven members).
A committee on Personnel and Administration;
(to consist of thirteen members).
A committee on Post Audit and Oversight;
(to consist of eleven members).
A committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling;
(to consist of eleven members).
Committee meetings, insofar as practicable, shall not be scheduled in conflict with formal sessions of the House of Representatives. [20.] (12, 12A, 12B.)
[Amended March 6, 1979; Sept. 16, 1981; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; May 5, 1993; Oct. 6, 1993; May 23, 1996; Jan. 14, 1997; Jul. 17, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
17A. The following terms shall have the
following meanings:
“Deliberation”, a verbal exchange between a quorum of members of a
committee attempting to arrive at a decision on any public business within its
jurisdiction.
“Emergency”, a sudden, generally unexpected occurrence or set of
circumstances demanding immediate action.
“Executive session”, any meeting or part of a meeting of a committee
which is closed to certain persons for deliberation on certain matters.
“Meeting”, any corporal convening and deliberation of a committee
for which a quorum is required in order to make a decision at which any public
policy matter over which the committee has supervision, control, jurisdiction
or advisory power is discussed or considered; but shall not include any on site
inspection of any project or program.
“Quorum”, a simple majority of a committee unless otherwise defined
by constitution, rule or law applicable to such committee. A quorum shall be
presumed to be present unless otherwise doubted.
All meetings, including hearings and executive sessions, of House standing
committees, and special committees of the House of Representatives, shall be
open to the public and any person shall be permitted to attend any meeting
except as otherwise provided by this rule. Areas for the media and the public
may be specifically designated by the presiding officer.
No quorum of a committee shall meet in private for the purpose of deciding
on deliberating toward a decision on any matter except as provided by this
rule.
No executive session shall be held until the committee has first convened
in an open session for which notice has been given, the presiding officer
having stated the authorized purpose of the executive session, a majority of
the members of the committee present have voted to go into executive session
and the vote of each member recorded on a roll call vote and entered into the
minutes, the presiding officer has stated before the executive session if the
committee will reconvene after the executive session.
Nothing except the limitations contained in this rule shall be construed to
prevent the committee from holding an executive session after an open meeting
has been convened and after a recorded vote has been taken to hold an executive
session. Executive sessions may be held only for the following purposes:
(1) To discuss the reputation, character, physical condition or mental
health rather than the professional competence of an individual, provided that
the individual to be discussed in such executive session has been notified in
writing by the committee, at least forty-eight hours prior to the proposed
executive session. Notification may be waived upon agreement of the parties.
A committee shall hold an open meeting if the individual involved requests
that the meeting be open. If an executive session is held, such individual
shall have the following rights:
(a) to be present at such executive session during discussions or
considerations which involve that individual.
(b) to have counsel or a representative of his/her own choosing present and
attending for the purpose of advising said individual and not for the purpose
of active participation in said executive session.
(c) to speak in his/her own behalf.
(2) To consider the discipline or dismissal of, or to hear complaints or
charges brought against, a public officer, employee, staff member, or
individual, provided that the individual involved in such executive session has
been notified in writing by the committee at least forty-eight hours prior to
the proposed executive session. Notification may be waived upon agreement of
the parties. A committee shall hold an open meeting if the individual involved
requests that the meeting be open. If an executive session is held, such
individual shall have the following rights:
(a) to be present at such executive session during discussions or
considerations which involve that individual.
(b) to have counsel or a representative of his/her own choosing present and
attending for the purpose of advising said individual and not for the purpose
of active participation in said executive session.
(c) to speak in his/her own behalf.
(3) To discuss strategy with respect to litigation if an open meeting may
have a detrimental effect on the position of the committee.
(4) To consider the purchase, exchange, lease or value of real property, if
such discussions may have a detrimental effect on the negotiating position of
the Commonwealth and a person, firm or corporation.
This rule shall not apply to any chance meeting or social meeting at which
matters relating to official business are discussed so long as no final
agreement is reached. No chance meeting or social meeting shall be used in
circumvention of the spirit or requirements of this section to discuss or act
upon a matter over which the committee has supervision, control, jurisdiction,
or advisory power.
Except in an emergency, a notice and agenda of every meeting of a committee
subject to this rule shall be filed with the Clerk of the House and publicly
posted on the bulletin board outside the Clerk’s Office, and, at such time as
is feasible, as determined by the Clerk, the Legislative Web Page, and in such
other places as are designated in advance for such purpose by said Clerk, at
least forty-eight hours, including Saturdays but not Sundays and legal
holidays, prior to the time of such meeting and a list of the bills, petitions,
and resolutions to be considered for a vote or other action by the committee.
The notice shall include the date, time and place of such meeting. Such filing
and posting shall be the responsibility of the officer calling such
meetings. The Clerk shall furnish copies of such notices, upon request, to
members and the public.
A committee shall maintain accurate records of its meetings and hearings
setting forth the date, time and place thereof, and recording any action taken
at each meeting, hearing or executive session. The record of each meeting shall
become a public record and be available to the public; provided, however, that
the records of any executive session may remain secret as long as publication
may defeat the lawful purposes of the executive session, but no longer. All
votes requested to be taken in executive sessions shall be recorded roll call
votes and shall become a part of the record of said executive sessions.
A meeting of a committee may be recorded by a person in attendance by means
of a tape recorder or any other means of sonic reproduction except when a
meeting is held in executive session; provided, that during such recording
there is no active interference with the conduct of the meeting.
Copies of all bills that have been redrafted in a substantial manner and
that are to be voted on in Executive Session by the House Ways and Means
Committee shall be available to all members of the committee in the form they
will be considered not less than twenty-four hours in advance of consideration
by the Ways and Means Committee; provided, however, that said committee may
vote on a bill that has not been available for said period of time by vote of a
majority of the committee members present and voting to do so.
[Adopted Nov. 17, 1983; Amended Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; May 5, 1993; Jan. 17, 1995; Jan. 14, 1997; Jan. 9, 2003.]
17B. Whenever any member of a House
committee present at the committee meeting so requests, the vote to give any
legislation a favorable or adverse report shall be a recorded vote of the full
committee. Such votes shall be recorded on appropriate forms that show all
votes for and against the particular committee action. The record of all such
roll calls shall be kept in the offices of the committee and shall be available
for public inspection.
No report of a House committee on any legislation shall be final until
those members of the committee present and voting with the majority have been
given the opportunity to sign such appropriate forms before the report is made
to the House. No signature shall be valid unless the forms to which the
signatures are affixed include the substantially complete text of the
legislation being reported.
[Adopted Nov. 17, 1983; Amended Jan. 12, 1987.]
17C. There shall be a committee on
Personnel and Administration on the part of the House consisting of thirteen
members. Said committee shall be responsible for the allocation of office space
as equitably as possible among the various members and joint and standing
committees on the part of the House and their respective House staffs.
The committee shall allocate space among the various committees on the part
of the House taking into account the work load, duties and responsibilities and
size of staff of each.
The Speaker may make temporary office assignments in accordance with the
foregoing principles.
The committee on Personnel and Administration may from time to time make
changes in the assignment of office space for committees and the various staffs
in accordance with the established standards.
Said committee shall establish the staffing levels and positions for each
joint and standing committee of the House together with a classification plan
for all employees of the House of Representatives.
For each person who is employed or is to be employed by a joint or standing
committee on the part of the House, each committee chairman shall nominate each
such person and the House members of the committee by a majority vote shall
vote on whether to approve each said nominee. The House members of the
committee shall approve such persons whose character and qualifications are
acceptable to the majority of the House members of the committee and are in
accordance with the qualifications established by the Personnel and
Administration committee.
The chairman of each standing committee shall have the authority to
discharge an employee.
The House staff members of each committee shall be appointed solely on the
basis of fitness to perform the duties of their respective positions and
consistent with section four of chapter one hundred fifty-one B of the General
Laws. The said committee staff shall:
(1) not engage in any work other than committee business during business
hours.
(2) not be assigned any duties other than those pertaining to committee
business.
The committee shall meet on request of the chairman or any three members of
the committee. Any such meeting requested shall be convened on or within the
fifth business day following such request. All such requests shall be in
writing and forwarded to the chairman and each member of the committee.
Funds shall be allocated from the budget to carry out the determination of
the committee.
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985; Amended Jan. 16, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991.]
17D. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
17E. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
17F. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
18. The Speaker shall appoint, and
may recommend the removal of, the Majority Floor Leader, Assistant Majority
Floor Leader, and Second Assistant Majority Floor Leader. The Minority Leader
shall appoint, and may recommend the removal of, the Assistant Minority Floor
Leader, Second Assistant Minority Floor Leader, and Third Assistant Minority
Floor Leader. The Minority Leader shall be that member of the minority party
who is selected for that position by the members of his/her party.
Each of the foregoing appointments and/or removals shall be ratified by a
majority vote of the respective party caucus. In the event that an appointment
is rejected by such caucus another appointment shall be made by the person
designated to make the initial appointment, which shall also be subject to
ratification in the same manner.
The Speaker shall appoint, and may recommend the removal of, the chair of
each standing committee. The Speaker shall appoint, and may recommend the
removal of, the vice chair and assistant vice chair of the Ways and Means
committee and the vice chair of the Post Audit and Oversight committee.
The majority party shall then vote to accept or reject each such
appointment and/or recommendation for removal by a majority vote.
In the event that any such appointment is rejected by the caucus, the
procedure of this rule shall be repeated until an appointment for the said
position has been approved by the caucus. A vacancy in any position to which
the provisions of this section apply shall be filled in the same manner as
provided in this section for original appointment.
[Amended Jan. 16, 1979; Nov. 17, 1983; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 14, 1997.]
18A. There shall be one member of the
minority party on all committees of conference and one on the committee on
Bills in the Third Reading. On all other standing and joint committees, the
percent of minority party membership shall be at least equal to the percent of
minority party membership in the House of Representatives as of the first day
of the session, provided however that the minority party shall under no
circumstances have less than four members on the committee on Ethics, four on
the committee on Personnel and Administration, three on the committee on Rules
and six on the committee on Ways and Means. Where such percentage results in a
fraction of a number, the fraction shall be rounded off to the nearest whole.
In no case shall minority party representation be less than two members on all
other standing and joint committees.
The Speaker and the Minority Leader shall appoint the members of their
respective party caucuses to be assigned to each standing committee. The
Speaker shall appoint the vice chair of each standing committee. The
appointments, except those to which Rule 18 applies, shall be voted upon
together and shall be subject to ratification by majority vote of the appropriate
party caucus.
No member shall be removed from a standing committee except upon the
recommendation of the Speaker or Minority Leader, as the case may be, subject
to the ratification by their respective caucuses; provided, however if any
vacancy occurs in a position to which Rule 18 does not apply, subsequent to the
initial ratification, the Speaker or Minority Leader shall fill such vacancy.
The Speaker shall announce committee appointments of majority party
members, and the member first named shall be chairman, and the second named
member shall be vice-chairman. The Minority Leader shall announce committee
appointments of minority party members. (13.)
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985; Amended Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 14, 1997.]
18B. All votes on ratification by the
caucus required by these rules shall be by written ballot and shall require a
majority of those present and voting.
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985.]
19. A majority and minority party
caucus may be called by the Speaker or Minority Leader, respectively, or upon
petition of twenty-five percent of the members of the respective party caucus.
A caucus may entertain resolutions, motions, or other means of ascertaining the
sense of the respective party members on any subject.(13B.)
[Adopted Nov. 17, 1983; Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
19A. The majority party and minority
party shall establish caucus rules that shall dictate the procedures of each
caucus.
[Adopted Nov. 17, 1983; Amended Jan. 14, 1997.]
20. The committee on Ways and
Means shall report in appropriation bills the total amount appropriated. The
General Appropriation Bill shall be available to the members at least seven
calendar days prior to consideration thereof by the House. [25.] (27A.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985; Mar. 24, 1986; Jan. 14, 1997; Jan. 26, 2005.]
20A. Notwithstanding the provisions of
Rule 33A, amendments to the General Appropriation Bill shall be filed with the
Clerk of the House in a format to be determined by the Clerk by five o’clock
P.M. within the close of three business days of said General Appropriation bill
being made available in a format to be determined by the Clerk and release of
said document by said Clerk if the release of said document occurs by two
o’clock P.M. Otherwise, the day following the release shall be considered the
first business day. The Clerk, with the assistance of the committee on Ways and
Means, shall categorize the subject-matter of the amendments and arrange such
amendments for consideration sequentially by subject as appearing in the
printed version of the General Appropriation Bill, or the Clerk, with the
assistance of the committee on Ways and Means, shall categorize the
subject-matter of the amendments and arrange such subject matters for
consideration as determined by the committee on Ways and Means. Debate on the
General Appropriation Bill shall not commence until a date and time to be
determined by the House which is subsequent to the
designated time established for filing of amendments.
Before the main question on the General Appropriation Bill is placed
before the House, an amendment may be postponed or withdrawn at the request of
the primary sponsor of the amendment or postponed by the committee on Ways and
Means; provided that further consideration of any amendment so postponed shall
take place immediately subsequent to consideration of the amendments within the
particular subject-matter to which the postponed amendment was assigned
according to the provisions of paragraph one of said rule; provided that if
more than one amendment is so postponed, subsequent consideration of said
amendments shall be in the order determined by the committee on Ways and Means;
provided further, an amendment so postponed shall not be subsequently
considered outside of its assigned subject-matter; and provided further, that
notwithstanding the provisions of Rule 33A, amendments submitted to the Clerk
shall be in a format to be determined by said Clerk and shall include an
original copy only; and provided further that perfecting or substitute
amendments, including, but not limited to an amendment consolidating more than
one amendment, may be submitted by the committee on Ways and Means during
consideration of the subject category to which the amendment or amendments were
assigned; provided, however, that an amendment may be removed from the
consolidated amendment at the request of the sponsor of said amendment for the
purpose of it being offered as a further amendment to the consolidated
amendment.
[Adopted Jan. 24, 2001; Amended Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
20B. When the General Appropriation
Bill is reported by the committee on Ways and Means it shall be made available
in a format to be determined by the Clerk. The committee on Ways and Means
shall provide the membership with a copy of its proposed text of said General
Appropriation Bill, and an executive summary which shall include a list of
outside sections, and a short summary of each outside section prior to full
House consideration of such bill. When the House considers said General
Appropriation Bill, it shall be read a second time and forthwith ordered to a
third reading without any amendments. The bill shall be immediately read a
third time and then be open to amendments as previously determined by the House.
[Adopted Jan. 9, 2003.]
21. Whenever the committee on Ways and Means reports an appropriation bill or capital outlay bill, it shall make available to the members a report which includes an explanation of any increase or decrease of five percent or more which results in an increase or decrease of one million dollars or more for any item for which the Governor has made a recommendation, and an explanation for the deletion of an item recommended by the Governor, and for the addition of an item for which the Governor has made no recommendation. [25A.] (27A.)
22. Bills and resolves when ordered to a
third reading shall be referred forthwith to the committee on Bills in the
Third Reading, which shall examine and correct them, for the purpose of avoiding
repetitions and unconstitutional provisions, and insuring accuracy in the text
and references, and consistency with the language of existing statutes; but any
change in the sense or legal effect, or any material change in construction,
shall be reported to the House as an amendment.
The committee may consolidate into one bill any two or more related bills
referred to it, whenever legislation may be simplified thereby.
Resolutions received from and adopted by the Senate or introduced or reported
into the House, after they are read and before they are adopted, shall be
referred to the committee on Bills in the Third Reading.
Amendments of bills, resolves and resolutions adopted by the Senate and
sent to the House for concurrence, shall, subsequently to the procedure
required by rule thirty-five in respect to amendments, also be referred, in
like manner, to the committee on Bills in the Third Reading.
When a bill, resolve or resolution has been so referred, no further action
shall be taken until report thereon has been made by the committee.
Accompanying said report shall be a written explanation prepared by the
committee defining any changes made in a bill, resolve or resolution so as to
facilitate the proceedings of the House.
If a bill or resolve referred to the committee on Bills in the Third
Reading requires a two-thirds vote because it contains an emergency preamble,
or if it provides for the borrowing of money by the Commonwealth and comes
within the provisions of Section 3 of Article LXII of the Amendments to the
Constitution, or provides for the giving, loaning or pledging of the credit of
the Commonwealth and comes within the provisions of Section 1 of Article LXII
(as amended by Article LXXXIV) of the Amendments to the Constitution, or
provides, upon recommendation of the Governor, for a special law relating to an
individual city or town and comes within the provisions of clause (2) of
Section 8 of Article LXXXIX of the Amendments to the Constitution or provides
for environmental protection within the provisions of Article XLIX as amended
by Article XCVII, the committee shall plainly indicate the fact on the outside
of the bill or resolve, or on a wrapper or label attached thereto. [26.] (33.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 11, 1985; May 5, 1993.]
23. Bills and resolves prepared for
final passage shall be certified by the Clerk of the House, after comparison,
to be the same as the bills or resolves passed to be engrossed; and if found to
be properly prepared, the Clerk shall so endorse on the envelope thereof; and
the question on enactment or final passage or adopting an emergency preamble
shall be taken thereon, without further reading, unless specifically ordered.
When a bill or resolve prepared for final passage contains an emergency
preamble or when it provides for the borrowing of money by the Commonwealth and
comes within the provisions of Section 3 of Article LXII of the Amendments to
the Constitution, or provides for the giving, loaning or pledging of the credit
of the Commonwealth and comes within the provisions of Section 1 of Article
LXII (as amended by Article LXXXIV) of the Amendments to the Constitution, or
provides, upon recommendation of the Governor, for a special law relating to an
individual city or town and comes within the provisions of clause (2) of
Section 8 of Article LXXXIX of the Amendments to the Constitution, or provides
for environmental protection within the provisions of Article XLIX as amended
by Article XCVII, the Clerk shall plainly indicate the fact on the envelope
thereof. [27.] (34.) [See Rule 40.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983.]
23A. No member of the House, except the
Speaker, Speaker pro tempore, Majority Leader, Assistant Majority
Leader, Second Assistant Majority Leader, Minority Leader, Assistant Minority
Leader, Second Assistant Minority Leader, Third Assistant Minority Leader and
committee chairmen with respect to committee business, shall receive privileges
or compensation greater than any other member for postage.
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985; Amended Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 26, 2005.]
24. (1) Petitions, recommendations and
reports of state officials, departments, commissions and boards, and reports of
special committees and commissions, shall be filed with the Clerk in a format
to be determined by said Clerk, who shall, unless they be subject to other
provisions of these rules or the rules of the two branches, refer them, with
the approval of the Speaker, to the appropriate committees, subject to such
change of reference as the House may make. The reading of all such documents
may be dispensed with, but they shall be entered in the Journal of the same or
the next legislative day after such reference except as provided in joint rule
thirteen.
(2) All orders, including motions or orders proposed for joint adoption,
resolutions and other papers intended for presentation, except those
hereinbefore mentioned, shall be filed with the Clerk in a format to be
determined by said Clerk, who shall, prior to the procedure required by other
provisions of these rules or of the rules of the two branches, refer them to
the committee on Rules.
(3) Petitions and other papers so filed which are subject to the provisions
of joint rule seven A, seven B, or nine, shall be referred by the Clerk to the
committee on Rules. Petitions and other papers so filed, which are subject to
the provisions of the second paragraph of Joint Rule 12, shall, prior to the
procedure required by said rule, be referred by the Clerk to the committee on
Rules. The reading of all such papers may be dispensed with, but they shall be
entered in the Journal of the same or the next legislative day after such
reference.
(4) Matters which have been placed on file during the preceding year may be
taken from the files by the Clerk upon request of any member or member-elect;
and matters so taken from the files shall be referred or otherwise disposed of
as provided above.
(5) Recommendations and special reports of state officials, departments,
commissions and boards, reports of special committees and commissions, bills
and resolves accompanying petitions, recommendations and reports, and
resolutions shall be made available under the direction of the Clerk, who may
cause to be made available, with the approval of the Speaker, any other documents
filed as herein provided.
(6) All such legislation and reports filed with the Clerk shall be submitted in a format prescribed by said Clerk. Said documents shall contain the name or names of the primary sponsors and a list of the names of all petitioners praying for the legislation. Additional names may be added to the list of the petitioners; provided, however, that, such additional names shall be submitted in a format to be determined by the Clerk.
(7) Any petition so submitted that is a refile of a measure submitted in a previous session shall include, in the appropriate space provided, the session year for which the measure was filed and the House or Senate bill number or docket number assigned to such measure in such previous session.
(8) Debate upon the suspension
of this rule shall be limited to ten minutes, three minutes for each member,
and the Speaker shall recognize the member presenting the order, resolution or
petition first; provided, however, that suspension of this rule shall require
unanimous consent of the members present. Any order, except such order that
would amend the Rules of the House, resolution or petition referred to the
committee on Rules after the question of suspension of this rule has been
negatived, or any order, resolution or petition filed after the beginning of
the session and referred to the committee on Rules, shall not be discharged
from said committee except by unanimous consent of the House. Motions to
discharge the committee on Rules shall be subject to the provisions of
paragraph 2 of Rule 28. [28.] (20.) [See Rules 36 and 85.]
[Amended April 27, 1981; Jan. 9, 1989; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 26, 2005.]
25. Every petition for legislation shall be accompanied by a bill or resolve embodying the legislation prayed for. [29.] [See Joint Rule 12.]
26. When the object of an application can be secured without a special act under existing laws, or, without detriment to the public interests, by a general law, the committee to which the matter is referred shall report such general law or ought not to pass, as the case may be. The committee may report a special law on matters referred to it upon (1) a petition filed or approved by the voters of a city or town, or the mayor and city council, or other legislative body, of a city, or the town meeting of a town, with respect to a law relating to that city or town; (2) a recommendation by the Governor; and (3) matters relating to erecting and constituting metropolitan or regional entities, embracing any two or more cities and towns, or established with other than existing city or town boundaries, for any general or special public purpose or purposes. [30.] (16.) [See Joint Rule 7.]
27. With the exception of matters
referred to the committee on Rules under the provisions of paragraph (3) of
rule twenty-four, committees shall report on all matters referred to them. The
committee on Ways and Means shall report the General Appropriation Bill not
later than the second Wednesday of May; and provided further that said
committee shall make available to the members all data compiled for
justification of budgetary recommendations in all appropriation bills. [33.]
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 14, 1997.]
27A. A committee reporting a matter
which contemplates legislation, may insert a clear and explicit statement in
such report which states the legislative intent and purpose of the legislation.
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985.]
28. (1) Motions directing the committee on Ways and Means to
report certain matters to the House, or motions discharging said committees
from further consideration of certain matters, shall not be considered until
the expiration of seven calendar days and shall require a majority vote of the
members present and voting for adoption. Committees so directed to report shall
file a report with the Clerk within four legislative days. The committee on Ways and Means may not be directed
to report or be discharged from further consideration of any appropriation or
capital outlay measure.
(2) The committee on Rules, except as provided in Rule 24, and the
committee on Bills in the Third Reading shall not be discharged from
consideration of any measure or be directed to report on any measure within ten
calendar days of its reference without the unanimous consent of the House, or
after such ten day period except by a vote of a majority of the members present
and voting thereon.
(3) Matters discharged under the provisions of this rule shall be placed in
the Orders of the Day for the next sitting. Petitions discharged under the
provisions of this rule shall be considered as favorably reported and the bill,
resolve, resolution or order accompanying such petitions shall be placed in the
Orders of the Day for the next sitting.
(4) During the last week of the session the provisions of paragraphs (1)
and (3) of this rule shall be inoperative.
(5) A second motion to discharge a matter from a committee or a second
motion to direct a committee to report a matter shall not be entertained until
the first such motion has been disposed of.
(6) As an alternative procedure to that provided under the provisions of
this rule, the members of the House may, by filing a petition signed by a
majority of the members elected to the House, discharge the House committee on
Ways and Means, the House committee on Bills in the Third Reading, and the
House committee on Rules from further consideration of a legislative matter.
Seven days following the filing of the petition with the House Clerk, the
committee shall be discharged from further consideration of the legislative
matter specified in the petition and the House Clerk shall place the matter in
the Orders of the Day for the next calendar day that the House is meeting.
(7) For the purpose of this rule, matters not appearing on the Calendar
which are not before any committee shall be deemed to be before the Rules
committee. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, a bill which has been
engrossed by the House and Senate, shall be placed before the House for
enactment. Any member may request that a matter, engrossed in the House and
Senate, be placed before the House for enactment. The Speaker shall, in
response to such a request of a member, put the matter before the House at the
conclusion of the matter then pending.
(8) This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the
members present. (27C, 32A.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; April 27, 1981; Jan. 12, 1983; Nov. 17, 1983; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 9, 1989; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
28A. The committee on Bills in the Third
Reading shall report on a legislative matter not later than forty-five days
following the day the matter was referred to it. The Clerk shall indicate on
the Calendar entry of every matter before the Committee on Bills in the Third
Reading the date that said matter was referred to said committee.
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985; Amended Jan. 9, 2003.]
REGULAR COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS.
Petitions.
29. The member presenting a petition
shall endorse his/her name thereon; and the reading thereof shall be dispensed
with, unless specially ordered. [37.] (18.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
Motions Contemplating Legislation, etc.
30. All motions contemplating
legislation shall be founded upon petition, except as follows:
The committee on Ways and Means may originate and report appropriation
bills as provided in rule twenty. Messages from the Governor shall, unless
otherwise ordered, be referred to the appropriate committee, which may report
by bill or otherwise thereon. A similar disposition shall, unless otherwise
ordered, be made of reports by state officers and committees authorized to
report to the Legislature, and similar action may be had thereon.
Messages from the Governor returning appropriation bills, or parts of
appropriation bills, with objections or reductions of sections or items
thereof, shall be reconsidered subsequent to a report of the committee on Ways
and Means. [40.] (19.)
[Amended Jan. 24, 2001.]
Bills and Resolves.
31. Bills shall be drafted in a format
approved by the Counsel to the House and submitted in a format to be determined
by the Clerk. Bills amending existing laws shall not provide for striking words
from, or inserting words in, such laws, unless such course is best calculated
to show clearly the subject and nature of the amendment. No repealed law, and
no part of any repealed law, shall be re-enacted by reference merely. [42.]
(17.)
[Amended Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
32. If a committee to which a bill is referred reports that the same ought not to pass, the question shall be “Shall this bill be rejected?”. If the question on rejection is negatived, the bill, if it has been read but once, shall go to a second reading without question; otherwise it shall be placed in the Orders of the Day for the next day, pending the question on ordering to a third reading, or to engrossment, as the case may be. [43.] (30.)
32A. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
33. Bills involving an
expenditure of public money or grant of public property, or otherwise affecting
the state finances, unless the subject matter has been acted upon by the joint
committee on Ways and Means, shall, after their first reading, be referred to
the committee on Ways and Means, for report on their relation to the finances
of the Commonwealth.
New provisions shall not be added to such bills by the committee on Ways
and Means, unless directly connected with the financial features thereof.
Orders reported in the House or received from the Senate involving the
expenditure of public money for special committees, shall, before the question
is taken on the adoption thereof, be referred to the committee on Ways and
Means, whose duty it shall be to report on their relation to the finances of
the Commonwealth.
Every such bill involving a capital expenditure for new projects, or an
appropriation for repairs, or any legislation, the cost of which, in the
opinion of the committee, exceeds the sum of one hundred thousand dollars when
reported into the House by the committee on Ways and Means, shall be
accompanied by a fiscal note indicating the amount of public money which will
be required to be expended to carry out the provisions of the proposed
legislation, together with an estimate of the cost of operation and maintenance
for the first year if a new project is involved. [44.] (27.)
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 12, 1981; Jul. 17, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
33A. Copies of all bills shall be
available, in a format to be determined by the Clerk, to all members of the
House and the public at least twenty-four hours in advance of consideration by
the House.
All amendments offered by members to any legislative matter in the House
shall be submitted in a format to be determined by the Clerk; and shall be considered
chronologically as submitted to the Clerk, except for an amendment in the
second degree; provided that all of said amendments shall be double spaced and
drafted in proper form; and provided further that there shall be available to
the members a duplicate copy of each amendment. (33A.)
[Adopted Nov. 17, 1983; Amended Nov. 28, 1984; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 17, 1995l; Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
33B. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
33C. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
33D. [Omitted Jan. 26, 2005.]
34. Bills from the Senate, after their
first reading, shall be referred to a committee of the House. [45.] (26.)
[Amended Jan. 26, 1999.]
35. Amendments proposed by the Senate,
and sent back to the House for concurrence, shall be referred to the committee
which reported the measure proposed to be amended, unless such committee is
composed of members of both branches, in which case such amendments shall be
placed in the Orders of the Day for the next day; provided, that amendments
affecting state finances shall be referred to the committee on Ways and Means
on the part of the House. [46.] (36.)
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 26, 2005.]
36. No bill shall be proposed or introduced unless received from the Senate, reported by a committee, or moved as an amendment to the report of a committee. [47.] (36.)
37. Bills, resolves and other papers
that have been, or, under the rules or usage of the House, are to be made
available in a format to be determined by the Clerk, shall be read by their
titles only, unless the full reading is requested by vote of a majority of
those members present and voting.
[Amended Jan. 9, 2003.] [48.] (29.)
38. When a bill, resolve, order, petition or memorial has been finally rejected or disposed of by the House, no measure substantially the same shall be introduced by any committee or member during the same session. This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members present. [49.] (54.)
39. No bill shall be passed to be
engrossed without having been read on three separate legislative days. [51.]
(28.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
40. No engrossed bill shall be amended, except by striking out the enacting clause. A motion to strike out the enacting clause of a bill shall be received when the bill is before the House for enactment. This rule shall not apply to a bill or resolve returned by the Governor with a recommendation of amendment in accordance with the provisions of Article LVI of the Amendments to the Constitution; nor shall it apply to amendments of engrossed bills proposed by the Senate and sent to the House for concurrence, which amendments shall be subject to the provisions of rule thirty-five. [53.] (49.)
41. Bills received from the Senate and
bills reported favorably by committees, when not referred to another standing
committee of the House, shall, prior to being placed in the Orders of the Day,
be referred to the committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling. Resolutions
received from and adopted by the Senate, or reported in the House by
committees, shall, if proposed for joint adoption, be referred to said
committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling. [56.] (26.)
[Amended Jan. 14, 1997; Jan. 26, 1999.]
42. Reports of committees, not by bill
or resolve, including orders if proposed for joint adoption, after they are
received from the Senate, or made in the House, as the case may be, shall,
unless subject to the provisions of any other House or joint rules, be referred
to the committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling; provided that the report
of a committee asking to be discharged from further consideration of a subject,
and recommending that it be referred or recommitted to another committee, or a
report of a committee recommending that a matter be placed on file, shall be
immediately considered. Reports of committees on proposals for amendments to
the Constitution shall be dealt with in accordance with the provisions of joint
rule twenty-three. [57.] (36.)
[Amended Jan. 14, 1997.]
42A. The Clerk shall, prior to three o’clock P.M., on the day preceding a session, make available by electronic communication or other means, a list of all reports of the committee on Steering, Policy and Scheduling, asking to be discharged from further consideration of subjects, and recommending that the subjects be referred to other committees.
[Adopted Jan. 26, 2005.]
43. Bills ordered to a third reading shall be placed in the Orders of the Day for the next day for such reading. [58.] (32.)
Special Rules Affecting the Course of Proceedings.
44. The Speaker may designate when an
informal session of the House shall be held provided said Speaker gives notice
of such informal session at a prior session of the House. The Speaker may, in
cases of emergency, cancel a session or declare any session of the House to be
an informal session. At such session the House shall only consider reports of
committees, papers from the Senate, bills for enactment or resolves for final
passage, bills containing emergency preambles and the matters in the Orders of
the Day. Motions to reconsider moved at such informal session shall be placed
in the Orders of the Day for the succeeding day, and no new business shall be
entertained, except by unanimous consent.
Formal debate, or the taking of the sense of the House by yeas and nays
shall not be conducted during such informal session.
Upon the receipt of a petition signed by at least a majority of the members
elected to the House, so requesting, the Speaker shall, when the House is meeting
in formal session under the provisions of Joint Rule 12A, designate a formal
session, to be held within seven days of said receipt, for the purpose of
considering the question of passage of a bill, notwithstanding the objections
of the Governor, returned pursuant to Article 2, Section 1, Clause 1, Part 2 of
the Massachusetts Constitution. This rule shall not be suspended unless by
unanimous consent of the members present. [59.] (5A.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 17, 1995; Jan. 14, 1997; Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 9, 2003.]
45. After entering upon the
consideration of the Orders of the Day, the House shall proceed with them in
regular course as follows: Matters not giving rise to a motion or debate shall
first be disposed of in the order in which they stand in the Calendar; after
which the matters that were passed over shall be considered in like order and
disposed of. The provisions of this paragraph shall not be suspended unless by
unanimous consent of the members present.
Notwithstanding the provisions of this rule, during consideration of the
Orders of the Day, the committee on Ways and Means and the committee on Bills
in the Third Reading may present matters for consideration of the House after approval
of two-thirds of the members present and voting, without debate. [59.] (37.)
[See Rule 47.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 12, 1983.]
46. When the House does not finish the
consideration of the Orders of the Day, those which had not been acted upon
shall be the Orders of the Day for the next and each succeeding day until
disposed of, and shall be entered in the Calendar, without change in their
order, to precede matters added under Rule seven A; provided, however, that all
other matters shall be listed in numerical order by Calendar item.
The unfinished business in which the House was engaged at the time of
adjournment shall have the preference in the Orders of the Day for the next
day. [60.] (35.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 26, 1999.]
47. No matter which has been duly placed in the Orders of the Day shall be discharged therefrom, or considered out of the regular course. [61.] (38.) [See Rule 45.]
Voting.
48. Members desiring to be excused from voting shall make application to that effect before the division of the House or the taking of the yeas and nays is begun. Such application may be accompanied by a brief statement of reasons by the member making it, but shall be decided without debate, and shall not be subject to the provisions of rule fifty-two. [64.] (57.)
49. If the presence of a quorum is
doubted, a count of the House shall be made. When a yea and nay vote is taken,
the members, with the exception of the Speaker, shall vote only from their
seats. A member who has been appointed by the Speaker to perform the duties of
the Chair, or a person who has been elected Speaker pro tempore, may
designate some member or a court officer to cast a vote for him/her on any vote
taken on the electronic voting machine while such member is presiding. Said
designated member performing the duties of the Chair, or Speaker pro tempore,
may, if the Speaker is in the State House, cast the vote for the Speaker. The
Speaker shall state the pending question before opening the machine for voting.
Except in the case of a vote to ascertain the presence of a quorum, if a
member is prevented from voting personally on the voting machine at his/her
assigned seat because of physical disability, said member shall, if present in
the State House, be excused from so voting and the Speaker shall assign a court
officer to cast said member’s vote so long as said physical disability
continues; provided that the Speaker shall announce the action of the Chair to
the membership prior to assigning a court officer to cast the member’s vote and
provided further that the Speaker shall announce the action to the membership
the first time a vote is cast for that member on each successive day. [65.]
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 9, 2003.]
50. When a question is put, the sense of
the House shall be taken by the voices of the members, and the Speaker shall
first announce the vote as it appears to said Speaker by the sound. If the
Speaker is unable to decide by the sound of the voices, or if the announcement
made thereupon is doubted by a member rising in his/her place for that purpose,
the Speaker shall order a division of the number voting in the affirmative and
in the negative, without further debate upon the question. [66.] (55.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
51. When a return by division of the members voting in the affirmative and in the negative is ordered, the members for or against the question, when called on by the Speaker, shall rise in their places, and stand until they are counted. If, upon the taking of such a vote, the presence of a quorum is doubted, a count of the House shall be had, and if a quorum is present the vote shall stand. [67.]
52. The sense of the House shall be
taken by yeas and nays whenever required by ten percent of the members elected.
The Speaker shall, after waiting up to an interval of twelve minutes, state the
pending question and, after opening the electronic voting machine, instruct the
members to vote for not less than two minutes and no more than twenty-two
minutes, the Speaker shall close said, machine and cause totals to be displayed
and a record made of how each member present voted.
Any member desiring to be recorded as being “present” when a yea and nay
vote is taken on the roll call machine shall so notify the Clerk in person
after said vote is ordered and before the vote is announced.
In the event the voting machine is not in operating order, the roll of the
House shall be called in alphabetical order but however said vote may be taken
no member shall be allowed to vote or to answer “present” who was not on The
floor before the vote is declared; provided, however, that a member, who was in
the State House on a previous roll call, may be recorded by reporting to the
Clerk within five minutes after such vote is closed, unless objection is made
thereto and it is seconded; and provided further that the presiding officer
shall not, for said purpose, interrupt the member who is speaking on the floor.
The Speaker shall not entertain any requests beyond said five minute period.
Once the voting has begun it shall not be interrupted except for the purpose of
questioning the validity of a member’s vote before the result is announced.
Except as heretofore provided, any member who shall vote or attempt to vote for
another member or any person not a member who votes or attempts to vote for a
member, or any member or other person who willfully tampers with or attempts to
impair or destroy in any manner whatsoever the voting equipment used by the
House, or change the records thereon shall be punished in such manner as the
House determines. [68.] (56, 57.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 11, 1985; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 24, 2001; Jan. 9, 2003; Jan. 26, 2005.]
53. The call for yeas and nays shall be
decided without debate. If the yeas and nays have been ordered before the
question is put, the proceedings under rules fifty and fifty-one relative to
verification of the vote by the voices of the members or by a return of
divisions shall be omitted; if not, they may be called for in lieu of a return
by divisions when the Speaker’s announcement is doubted by a member rising in
his/her place, and, if then ordered, the proceedings under rules fifty and
fifty-one shall be omitted. [69.] (52.)
[Amended Jan. 26, 1999.]
Reconsideration.
54. No motion to reconsider a vote shall
be entertained unless it is made on the same day on which the vote was taken,
or before the Orders of the Day have been taken up on the next day thereafter
on which a quorum is present. If reconsideration is moved on the same day, the
motion shall (if made prior to July first) be placed first in the Orders of the
Day for the succeeding day; but, if it is moved on the succeeding day, the
motion shall be considered forthwith except that if said motion is moved on a
day on which an informal session has been designated, it shall be placed in the
Orders of the Day for the succeeding day. If reconsideration is moved on July
first, and thereafter, on any main question, it shall be considered forthwith.
This rule shall not prevent the reconsideration of a vote on a subsidiary,
incidental or dependent question at any time when the main question to which it
relates is under consideration; and provided, further, that a motion to
reconsider a vote on any subsidiary, incidental or dependent question shall not
remove the main subject under consideration from before the House, but shall be
considered at the time when it is made. This rule shall not be suspended unless
by unanimous consent of the members present. [70.] (53.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
55. When a motion for reconsideration is
decided, that decision shall not be reconsidered, and no question shall be
twice reconsidered; nor shall any vote be reconsidered upon any of the
following motions:
to recess,
to adjourn,
on sustaining a ruling of the Chair,
to close debate at a specified time,
to postpone if voted in the negative,
to discharge or direct a committee to report,
to commit or recommit,
for second or subsequent legislative days,
for the previous question, or
for suspension of rules.
This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members
present. [71.] (53.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 9, 1991.]
56. Debate on motions to reconsider
shall be limited to fifteen minutes, and no member shall occupy more than three
minutes, but on a motion to reconsider a vote upon any subsidiary or incidental
question, debate shall be limited to ten minutes, and no member shall occupy
more than three minutes.
If the House has voted to close debate on any question, a motion to
reconsider said question shall be decided without debate. [72.] (52.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 12, 1987.]
RULES OF DEBATE.
57. Every member, when about to speak,
shall rise and respectfully address the Speaker and shall confine
himself/herself to the question under debate. [73.] (39.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
58. Every member while speaking shall avoid
personalities; and shall sit down when finished. No member shall speak out of
his/her place without leave of the Speaker. [73.] (39.)
When two or more members rise at the same time, the Speaker shall name the
member entitled to the floor, preferring one who rises in his/her place to one
who does not. [74.] (40.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
59. If a member repeatedly violates any
of the rules of the House, or disrupts the orderly procedure of the House, the
Speaker, after warning the member of such violations, shall call the member to
order, and order that said member take his/her seat. A member so called to
order shall lose the right to speak on the pending subject-matter but shall not
be debarred from voting. A member so called to order shall remain seated until
the House begins consideration of another subject-matter or unless the Speaker
earlier returns to the member his/her rights to the floor.
If a member so called to order refuses to immediately take his/her seat,
the Speaker shall immediately name that member, who shall be escorted from the
Chamber under escort of the Sergeant-at-Arms. The matter shall thereupon, on
motion, be referred to a special committee of three to be appointed by the
Speaker. Said special committee shall make a report to the House of its
recommendations, which report shall be read and accepted.
Having been named, a member shall not be allowed to resume his/her seat
until said member has complied with the recommendations of the committee as
accepted by the House.
If, after a member is seated or named, the action of the Speaker is
appealed, the House shall decide the case by a majority vote of the members
present and voting, but if there is no immediate appeal, the decision of the
Speaker shall be conclusive.
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 11, 1985.]
60. No member shall interrupt another
while speaking except by rising to a point of order, to a question of personal
privilege, to doubt the presence of a quorum, or to ask the person speaking to
yield.
Members may rise to explain matters personal to themselves by leave of the
presiding officer, but shall not discuss pending questions in such
explanations.
Questions of personal privilege shall be limited to questions affecting the
rights, reputation, and conduct of the member in his/her representative
capacities.
Members may rise to ask questions of parliamentary inquiry concerning the
pending matter by leave of the presiding officer, but shall not debate the
pending questions. [75.] (42.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
61. No member shall speak more than once
to the prevention of those who have not spoken and desire to speak on the same
question.
This prohibition shall not apply to those members designated by the
committee or committees reporting the bill.
No member shall occupy more than thirty minutes at a time while speaking on
any question where debate is unlimited.
Unless the operation of another rule provides to the contrary (such as
previous question, limitation of debate, etc.), no member shall be prohibited
from speaking more than once on any question when no other member who has not
spoken is seeking recognition by the Chair. [76.] (41.)
Motions.
62. Every motion shall be reduced to writing, if the Speaker so directs. [77.] (44.)
63. A motion need not be seconded,
except an appeal from the decision of the Chair, and may be withdrawn by the
mover if no objection is made. [78.] (44.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
Limit of Debate.
64. A motion to recess or adjourn shall
always be first in order, and shall be decided without debate; and on the
motions to close debate at a specified time, to postpone to a time certain, to
commit or recommit, not exceeding ten minutes shall be allowed for debate, and
no member shall speak more than three minutes. On the motion to discharge any
committee, or on a motion directing any committee to report matters before it,
not exceeding fifteen minutes shall be allowed for debate, and no member shall
speak more than three minutes.
If the main motion is undebatable, any subsidiary or incidental motion made
relating to it shall also be decided without debate. [79.] (52.) [See Rules 56
and 83.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
64A. Debate on the question on adoption
of orders for second and subsequent legislative days shall be limited to ten
minutes, and no member shall speak more than three minutes. After entering into
a second or subsequent legislative day, the House shall immediately proceed to
consideration of engrossed bills, reports of committees, papers from the Senate
or the Orders of the Day. This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous
consent of the members present.
[Adopted Jan. 12, 1983.]
65. When a question is before the House, until it is disposed of, the Speaker shall receive no motion that does not relate to the same, except the motion to recess or adjourn or some other motion that has precedence either by express rule of the House, or because it is privileged in its nature; and the Speaker shall receive no motion relating to the same, except,—
|
for the previous question, . . .
. . |
See Rules 66, 67 and 68 |
— which several motions shall have precedence
in the order in which they are arranged in this rule. [80.] (46.)
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985.]
Previous Question.
66. Any member may call for the previous
question on the main question.
The previous question shall be put in the following form: “Shall the
main question be now put?” and all debate on the main question shall be
suspended until the previous question is decided.
The adoption of the previous question shall require the affirmative vote of
two-thirds of the members present and voting and shall put an end to all
debate, and bring the House to direct vote upon pending amendments, if any, in
their regular order, and then upon the main question.
A motion to reconsider the vote on any of the pending amendments shall be
decided without debate. [81.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
67. Any member may call for the previous
question on any pending amendment.
The previous question shall be put in the following form: “Shall the
question on adoption of the amendment be now put?” and all debate shall be
suspended until the previous question is decided.
The adoption of the previous question on a pending amendment shall require
the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members present and voting and shall
put an end to all debate and bring the House to a direct vote upon the pending
amendment.
A motion to reconsider the vote on the pending amendment shall be decided
without debate.
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
68. The previous question shall be decided without debate.
Motion to Close Debate at a Specified Time.
69. Debate may be closed at any time not less than thirty minutes from the adoption of a motion to that effect. This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members present. [85.] (47.)
Motion to Postpone to a Time Certain.
70. When a motion is made to postpone to a time certain, and different times are proposed, the question shall first be taken on the most remote time; and the time shall be determined before the question is put on postponement, which may then be rejected if the House sees fit. [87.] (51.)
Motion to Commit.
71. When a motion is made to commit, and
different committees are proposed, the question shall be taken in the following
order:
a standing committee of the House,
a select committee of the House,
a joint standing committee,
a joint selected committee;
and a subject may be recommitted to the same committee or to another committee
at the pleasure of the House. [88.] (48.)
Motion to Amend.
72. A motion to amend an amendment may
be received; but no amendment in the third degree shall be allowed. This rule
shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members present.
[89.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983.]
73. No motion or proposition on a
subject different from that under consideration shall be admitted under color
of amendment. This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the
members present. [90.] (50.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1987.]
73A. No motion to amend a report from
the committee on Ways and Means or a report from the committee on Bills in the
Third Reading, when such an amendment contains an expenditure of public money
or an increase or decrease in taxes, shall be considered unless a brief
explanation of the amendment is stated.
[Adopted Jan. 17, 1995; Amended Jan. 26, 1999.]
74. A question containing two or more
propositions capable of division shall be divided whenever desired by any
member, if the question includes points so distinct and separate that, one of
them being taken away, the other will stand as a complete proposition. The
motion to strike out and insert shall be considered as one proposition and therefore
indivisible. The question on ordering a bill or resolve to a third reading, or
to be engrossed, or to be enacted, or similar main motions shall be considered
as indivisible under this rule. This rule shall not be suspended unless by
unanimous consent of the members present. [91.] (45.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1983.]
75. In filling blanks, the largest sum and longest time shall be put first. [92.] (51.) [See Rule 70.]
Declaration of Recess.
76. The Speaker may declare a recess of
fifteen minutes duration, or less.
[Amended Jan. 9, 1991.]
APPEAL.
77. No appeal from the decision of the
Speaker shall be entertained unless it is seconded; and no other business shall
be in order until the question on the appeal has been disposed of. Debate shall
be limited to fifteen minutes on the question of sustaining a ruling by the
Chair, and no member shall occupy more than three minutes. [94.] (43A.) [See
Rule 2.]
[Amended Jan. 9, 1989.]
RESOLVES.
78. Such of these rules as are applicable to bills, whether of the House or of the Senate, shall apply likewise to such resolves as require the concurrence of the Senate and approval by the Governor in order to become law and have force as such. [95.]
SEATS.
79. (1) The desk on the right of the Speaker
shall be assigned to the use of the Clerk and such persons as he/she may employ
to assist said Clerk, and that on the left to the use of the chairman and
vice-chairman of the committee on Bills in the Third Reading.
(2) The Speaker shall assign members to vacant seats. The seat assigned to
any member, other than seats assigned under paragraph (1) of this rule, shall
be his/her seat for the year and for such additional years as said member may
elect so long as service in the House remains continuous. An exchange of seats
may be made with the approval of the Speaker. [98.]
[Amended Jan. 11, 1985; May 5, 1993.]
PRIVILEGE OF THE FLOOR.
80. The following persons shall be
entitled to admission to the House of Representatives, during the session thereof,
to stand in an area designated by the Speaker in the rear of the Chamber,
unless otherwise invited by said Speaker to occupy seats not numbered:
(1) The Governor and the Lieutenant-Governor, members of the Executive
Council, Secretary of the Commonwealth, Treasurer and Receiver-General, Auditor
of the Commonwealth, Attorney-General, Librarian and Assistant Librarian.
(2) The members of the Senate.
(3) Persons in the exercise of an official duty directly connected with the
business of the House.
(4) The legislative reporters entitled to the privileges of the reporters’
galleries.
Contestants for seats in the House, whose papers are in the hands of a special
committee of the House, may be admitted, while their cases are pending, to seats
to be assigned by the Speaker.
No other person shall be admitted to the floor during the session, except
upon the permission of the Speaker. This rule shall not be suspended unless by
unanimous consent of the members present. [99.] (60, 61.)
[Amended Jan. 9, 1991.]
REPRESENTATIVES’
CHAMBER AND
ADJOINING ROOMS.
81. Use of the Representatives’ Chamber
shall be subject to the approval of the committee on Rules.
No person shall be admitted to the members’ corridor and adjoining rooms,
except persons entitled to the privilege of the floor of the House, unless upon
written invitation, bearing the name of the person it is desired to invite and
the name of the member extending the invitation, which invitation shall be
surrendered upon the person entering the corridor. No legislative agent or
counsel shall be admitted to said corridor and adjoining rooms.
No person shall be admitted to the north gallery of the House except upon a
card of the Speaker.
Subject to the approval and direction of the committee on Rules during the
session and of the Speaker after prorogation, the use of the reporters’
galleries of the House Chamber shall be under the control of the organization
of legislative reporters known as the Massachusetts State House Press Association
and the State House Broadcasters Association.
Every legislative reporter desiring admission to the reporters’ galleries
shall state in writing that he/she is not the agent or representative of any
person or corporation interested in legislation before the General Court, and
will not act as representative of any such person or corporation while
retaining a place in the galleries; but nothing herein contained shall prevent
such legislative reporter from engaging in other employment, provided such
other employment is specifically approved by the committee on Rules and
reported to the House.
All formal sessions of the House of Representatives shall be open to both
commercial and public radio and television, except designated times during such
sessions, as determined by the House, reserved for the consideration of
non-controversial business which does not give rise to debate. The manner and
conditions of such broadcasts shall be established by the Speaker. Television
or radio broadcasts may be prohibited on any given day by the Speaker with the
approval of the House.
This rule shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members
present. [100.] (59.)
[Amended April 18, 1979; Jan. 12, 1983; Jan. 12, 1987; Jan. 9, 1991; Jan. 26, 1999.]
QUORUM.
82. Eighty-one members shall constitute
a quorum for the organization of the House and the transaction of business.
[See amendments to the Constitution, Art. XXXIII.]
In the event that a quorum is not present, the presiding officer shall
compel the attendance of a quorum. During the absence of a quorum, no other
business may be transacted or motions entertained except a declaration of
adjournment or a recess by the Speaker. [105.]
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 14, 1997.]
DEBATE ON MOTIONS FOR
SUSPENSION OF RULES.
83. The question of suspension of House
rules 45, 47, 56, 61, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69, 77 and 83 shall be decided without
debate. Debate upon the motion for the suspension of any other House rule,
unless otherwise indicated, or any joint rule shall be limited to fifteen
minutes and no member shall occupy more than three minutes. This rule shall not
be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members present. [102.] (52.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981; Jan. 9, 1989.]
84. Unless otherwise indicated, nothing
in the House rules or joint rules shall be suspended, altered or repealed
unless two-thirds of the members present and voting consent thereto. This rule
shall not be suspended unless by unanimous consent of the members present.
[103.] (63.)
[Amended Jan. 12, 1981.]
REFERENCE TO COMMITTEE ON RULES.
85. All motions or orders authorizing committees of the House to travel or to employ stenographers, all propositions involving special investigations by committees of the House, all resolutions presented for adoption by the House only, and all motions and orders except those which relate to the procedure of the House or are privileged in their nature or are authorized by rule sixty-five, shall be referred without debate to the committee on Rules, which shall report thereon, recommending what action should be taken. The committee shall not recommend suspension of joint rule nine, unless evidence satisfactory to the committee is produced that the petitioners have previously given notice, by public advertisement or otherwise, equivalent to that required by Chapter 3 of the General Laws. [104.] (13A.)
85A. The House committee on Rules shall
provide that outside, independent audits of House financial accounts be
conducted at the end of each fiscal year. A copy of such audit shall be filed
with the Clerk of the House and copies shall be made available to the members
and the general public. (13C.)
[Adopted Jan. 11, 1985.]
PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE.
86. The rules of parliamentary practice shall govern the House in all cases to which they are applicable, and in which they are not inconsistent with these rules or the joint rules of the two branches. (62.)
INDEX TO THE HOUSE RULES.
____
[The figures refer to the numbers of the Rules.]
Adjourn, motion to, 55, 64, 65, 82.
Adjournment at hour of midnight, unless by unanimous consent, 1A.
Admission to the floor, 80.
Advance Calendar, 12.
Advertising, Joint Rule 9, 85.
AMENDMENTS:
to be referred to committee on Bills in the Third Reading, 22.
to be reported by committee on Bills in the Third Reading, 22.
to General Appropriation Bill, 20A.
from Senate, sent back for concurrence, 22, 35, 40.
committee changes, twenty-four hours, 33A.
submission to Clerk, 33A.
bill may be moved as, 36.
engrossed bill not to be amended, except, 40.
striking out enacting clause, 40.
to be reduced to writing, 62.
motions to amend, 65, 72 to 75.
when previous question is in order, 66, 67.
amendment to amendment, etc., 72.
not to be admitted of a different subject, 73.
when question is divided, 74.
in filling blanks, largest sum, etc., 75.
of rules, 84.
Appeals from the decision of the Speaker, 2, 55, 59, 77.
Appropriation bill, general, available seven days prior to debate, 20.
Appropriation bill, general, procedures for consideration, 20A, 20B.
Appropriation bill, general, time for reporting, 27.
Appropriation bills, explanations, 20B, 21.
Appropriation bills returned by the Governor, 30.
Auditing of House accounts, 85A.
Ballot, ratification in caucus, 18B.
BILLS:
1. Preliminary.
to be deposited with Clerk, 24.
accompanying petitions, 24.
for special legislation, not to be reported if object is attainable by
general or existing laws, 26.
motions contemplating legislation, etc., to be founded upon petition
or upon bill or resolve, 30.
how to be drafted, 31.
copies, twenty-four hours, 17A, 33A.
how to be introduced, 36.
to be read by titles only, unless, etc., 37.
2. As reported by committees.
restriction or regulation of reports, 17, 17B, 26, 33A, 38.
general rather than special, 26.
3. Before the second reading.
from the Senate, or from committees, 7A, 41.
referred to committee, etc., 34.
if opposed, question on rejection, etc.; otherwise, second reading,
32, 41.
involving expenditures of public money, referred to committee on
Ways and Means, 33.
4. Before the third reading.
duties and powers of committee on Bills in the Third Reading, 22,
79(1).
referred to said committee, 22.
placed in Orders of the Day, 43.
5. After the third reading.
not to be engrossed unless read on three several days, 39.
6. After engrossment.
certified by Clerk for final passage, 23.
not to be amended, except, 40.
returned by Governor with recommendations of amendment, 40.
7. Provisions applicable at several stages.
arrangement of matters in Orders of the Day, 12, 46.
final disposition precludes renewal of subject, 38.
consideration of matters in Orders of the Day, 45.
matters not to be discharged from Orders of the Day, 47.
motion to strike out enacting clause, when receivable, 40.
provisions respecting bills also applicable to resolves, 78.
Bills in the Third Reading, committee on, 17, 18A, 22, 28, 43, 45, 79(1).
written explanation of changes, 22.
motion to discharge or report, 28, 55, 64.
time for reporting, 28A.
floor amendments, 73A.
BLANKS, filling of, 75.
Bonding and pledging the credit, 32A.
Calendar, 12, 13, 28A, 45, 46, 47.
Calendar, dispense with printing of, 12.
Capital outlay bills, 20, 21.
Caucus, 17C, 18, 18A, 18B, 19, 19A.
Cellular telephones, 2.
Chairpersons, etc., nomination and caucus approval, 18.
Chaplain, to be appointed by Speaker, 7.
Clerk, 7A, 10, 10A, 11, 12, 14, 16A, 17A, 17C, 20, 23, 24, 28, 33B, 42A, 79(1), 85A.
amendments, submission to, 33A.
availability of bills, etc., by the, 7D, 10, 12, 17A, 20, 20A, 20B, 21, 24(5), 33A, 37, 42A, 85A.
certifying bills for final passage, 23.
Legislative web age, 17A.
Code of Ethics, 16A, 16B.
Commit, motion to, 64, 65, 71.
COMMITTEES:
hearings and House sessions, scheduling, 7B, 7D, 17.
chairpersons of, ratification, 18.
conference, minority member, 18A.
duty of committee on Ways and Means, 20, 20A, 21, 27, 28, 30, 33, 35.
members of, ratification, 18A.
no member to serve where his private right, etc., 16A(14).
office space, 17C.
on Bills in the Third Reading, 17, 18A, 22, 28, 28A, 45, 79(1).
on each Floor Division, 9A, 17.
on Ethics, 16, 16A.
on Rules, 7B, 7C, 7D, 17, 85.
on Steering, Policy and Scheduling, 7A, 7D, 17, 41, 42, 42A.
open meetings, 17A.
reports, 17B.
reports on local matters, 7A.
staffing, 17C.
standing, to be appointed, 17.
time for reporting appropriation bill, 27.
to be appointed by Speaker and Minority Leader, 18.
to discharge or direct to report, 7A, 28, 42A, 55, 64.
to make report on all matters, except, 27.
to report adversely in certain cases, 26, 85.
smoking in hearing rooms, regulating, 81.
statements of intent, 27A.
Travel, propositions for, to committee on Rules, 85.
voting, 16A, 17B.
Constitution, proposals for amendment, 42.
Credit, pledging of, 22, 23, 32A.
DEBATE, RULES OF, 57 to 61, 64.
Speaker may speak to points of order, etc., 2.
matters to be disposed of without debate, 45, 47, 48, 50, 53, 56, 61,
64, 66 to 69, 77, 83.
motion to close debate, 55, 64, 65, 69.
debate on motions to postpone to a time certain, 55, 64, 70.
second, etc., legislative days, 55, 64A.
debate on motions to reconsider, 56.
during informal sessions, prohibit, 44.
yielding, 60.
thirty minute limit, 61, 77.
debate on motions to commit or recommit, 64.
motions to be decided without debate, 64, 83.
debate on motions for suspension of rules, 83.
Disabled members, voting by, 49.
Discharges from Orders of the Day, 47.
Discharge of a committee, 7A, 24(6), 28, 55, 64.
Discharge reports, 7A, 42, 42A.
limit of time to debate, 64.
Division of a question, 74.
Doubt: when a vote is doubted, 49 to 53.
Elections, to fill vacancies, 6.
Electronic mail and Legislative Web Page, 7D, 12, 42A.
Electronic voting machine, 15, 49, 52.
Emergency preamble, 22, 23.
Employees, classification plan, 17C(b).
Enacting clause, when motion to strike out, receivable, 40.
Engrossed bills, 23, 28(6), 40.
Ethics, code of, 16A.
Ethics, committee on, 16, 17.
Excuse from voting, time for application for, 48.
Executive committee meetings, 17A.
Files, taking of matters from, 24.
Final passage, to be certified by Clerk, 23.
Financial accounts, auditing, 85A.
Fiscal note on bills, 33.
Floor leaders, 18.
Formal session to consider veto, petition for, 44.
Formal sessions, dress code and cellular telephones, 2.
General appropriation bill, 20, 20A, 27.
General bill rather than special, 26.
GOVERNOR:
messages from, to be referred, unless, 30.
messages setting terms of re-authorizing bonds and notes, 32A.
return of appropriation bills by, 30.
return of bills and resolves by, 40.
Session to consider vetoes of, 44.
Home rule matters, reports on to be considered, 7A.
Hours of meetings, 1A.
Informal sessions, 12, 44, 54.
Investigations, propositions involving special, by committees, to be
referred to committee on Rules, 85.
Journal, 10, 11, 24.
Legislative days, second or subsequent, 55, 64A.
Legislative Web Page, 17A.
Loan bills, 22, 23.
motions to discharge, etc., 28, 55, 64.
Local matters, reports on to be considered, 7A.
Majority Leader, etc., Acting Speaker, 5.
Majority leaders, 18.
Meetings, regulating hours of, 1A.
MEMBERS, 14, 15.
proper attire, 2.
monitors, regulating voting, 9.
Journal, 10.
not to stand up, etc., 14.
not to stand at Clerk’s desk during roll call, 14.
not to serve on committee where his private right, etc., 16A(14).
not to vote where his private right, etc., 16A(14).
number of, on each standing committee, 17.
first named, to be chairman of committee, etc., appointment,
ratification and removal, 18.
to deposit petition, etc., with the Clerk, 24.
may request the taking of matters from the files, 24.
may request an enactment, 28(6).
to endorse name on certain papers, 29.
desiring to be excused from voting, etc., 48.
voting, recording within five minutes, 52.
about to speak, to rise and address the Speaker, etc., 57.
Speaker, recognition of members, 58.
naming or seating, 59.
not to interrupt another, etc., 60.
not to speak more than once, etc., 61.
not to vote for other members, 16A.
seats, 79.
privilege of the floor, 80. See Voting.
Messages from the Governor to be referred, etc., 30.
MINORITY LEADER:
to nominate Assistant Minority Floor Leader, etc., 18.
to nominate committee members, 18A.
to call a caucus, 19.
Minority party, caucus rules, 19A.
Minority party, percentage of committee membership, 18A.
Monitors, 8, 9.
Motions, 62 to 75, 83, 85.
to be reduced to writing, 62.
Naming of members, 59.
Notice to parties, 85.
Office space, 17C.
Open meetings, 17A.
Order. See Questions of Order.
ORDERS:
filing of, 24.
involving expenditures for special committees, 33.
once rejected or disposed of, not to be renewed, 38.
reported by committees, 42.
providing that information be transmitted to the House, 85.
Orders of the Day, 12, 13, 28, 41 to 47.
Parliamentarian, 10A.
Parliamentary inquiry, 60.
Personal privilege, 60.
Personnel and Administration, committee on, 16B, 17, 17C.
PETITIONS, 24, 25, 29, 30.
Final disposition precludes renewal, 38.
Petitions and other papers, availability, 12, 20, 20A, 24, 33A.
Petition for formal session to consider veto, 44.
Petitions to discharge a committee, 28(6).
Placed on file, 24(4), 42.
Pledging credit, bills providing for, 22, 23, 32A.
Points of order, 2, 11, 60, 77.
Political subdivisions, 32A.
Postage, regulating, 23A.
Post Audit and Oversight, committee on, 17.
Postpone to a time certain, motion to, 55, 64, 65, 70.
“Present”, recording of members as being, 52.
Previous question, 55, 65 to 68.
Privilege of the floor, 80.
Question of order, 2, 11, 60, 77.
Quorum, 1, 15, 17A, 49, 51, 82.
Radio and television broadcasting of sessions, 81.
Ratification in caucus, ballot, 18B.
Reading of papers, 24, 29, 37.
Recess, 55, 64, 65, 76, 82.
Recommendations and reports of state officials, etc., to be referred,
etc., 24, 30.
Recommit, motion to, 42, 64, 65, 71.
Reconsideration, 54, 55, 56.
Rejected bills, 32, 38, 41.
Repealed laws not to be re-enacted by reference, 31.
Reporters’ gallery, control of, 81.
Reports of committees, 17B, 26, 27, 41, 42. See Bills.
Representatives’ Chamber and adjoining rooms, 81.
Resolutions, 22, 41.
Rules, observance, suspension or transgression of, 8, 9, 24, 55, 83,
84, 86.
Rules, committee on, 7B, 7C, 7D, 17, 24(2,3), 27, 28, 81, 85, 85A.
motion to discharge, 24, 28.
Rules, violations of, 59.
Rulings of the Chair, 2, 55, 77.
Schedule, House sessions, 7A, 7B, 7D, 44.
Seating of a member, 59.
Seats, 79.
Second, etc., legislative days, 55, 64A.
SENATE:
papers from, 22, 34, 35, 36, 41, 42.
Sessions, informal, 44, 54.
Sessions, regulating hours of, 1A.
Sessions and committees, scheduling, 7A, 7B, 7D, 44.
Sessions, radio and television broadcasting of, 81.
SPEAKER, 1 to 7.
adjourn or recess, 2, 82.
Casting of vote for, 49
Committee scheduling, 7D.
decorum and order, 2.
to appoint monitors, 8.
may direct as regards matters in Calendar, 12.
to nominate Majority Leader, etc., 18.
to nominate committee members, 18A.
to call a caucus, 19.
to approve reference of petitions, etc., and printing of certain
documents, 24.
to declare informal sessions, 44.
to name member entitled to floor, 58.
may direct motion to be reduced to writing, 62.
may declare a recess, 76.
appeal of decisions, 77.
shall assign seats, 79.
may invite visitors to seats on the floor, 80.
Speaker pro tempore, 4A, 5, 6, 23A, 49.
Special bills reported by committee, 26.
Standing committees, staffing, 17C.
State finances, 33.
Steering, Policy and Scheduling, committee on, 7A, 42A.
Stenographers, employment of, by committees, 85.
Strike out and insert, motion to, 74.
enacting clause, 40.
SUSPENSION OF RULES, 55, 83, 84.
limit of debate on motion for, 83.
Tampering with electronic voting machine, 52.
Tape recordings, committees, 17A.
Television and radio broadcasting of sessions, 81.
Third Reading, Bills in the, committee on, 17, 18A, 22, 28, 43, 45, 79(1).
motions to discharge or report, 28, 55, 64.
time for reporting, 28A.
Title, bills to be read by title only, 37.
Travel, orders authorizing committees to, referred to committee on
Rules, 85.
Undebatable matters and motions, 64. See Debate, Rules of.
Unfinished business, 46.
Vacancies, filling of, 5, 6, 7.
Veto of bill or resolve, printing of Calendar, 12.
Veto, petition for formal session to consider, 44.
Violations of rules and questions of conduct, 16, 59.
Voting, 3, 4, 9, 16A, 48 to 53.
Warning a member, 59.
Ways and Means, committee on, 17, 20, 20A, 21, 27, 28, 30, 33, 35, 45.
Motions directing, to report, etc., 28, 55, 64.
Floor amendments, 73A.
Redrafts of, availability, 17A.
Yeas and nays, 48 to 53.
Yeas and nays, during informal sessions, prohibit, 44.
Yielding floor in debate, 60.