State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
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91_HR0011

 
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 1                          HOUSE RESOLUTION

 2        RESOLVED,  BY  THE  HOUSE  OF  REPRESENTATIVES   OF   THE
 3    NINETY-FIRST  GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that
 4    the following are adopted  as  the  Rules  of  the  House  of
 5    Representatives of the Ninety-first General Assembly:

 6                              ARTICLE I
 7                            ORGANIZATION

 8        (House Rule 1)
 9        1.  Election of the Speaker.
10        (a)  At  the  first  meeting of the House of each General
11    Assembly, the Secretary of State shall convene the  House  at
12    12:00  noon,  designate  a  Temporary Clerk of the House, and
13    preside during the nomination and election  of  the  Speaker.
14    As the first item of business each day before the election of
15    the Speaker, the Secretary of State shall order the Temporary
16    Clerk  to  call  the  roll  of  the  members to establish the
17    presence of a quorum as required by the Constitution.   If  a
18    majority  of  those  elected are not present, the House shall
19    stand  adjourned  until  the  next  calendar  day,  excepting
20    weekends, at the hour prescribed in Rule 29.  If a quorum  of
21    members elected is present, the Secretary of State shall then
22    call  for  nominations  of members for the Office of Speaker.
23    All nominations require a second.  When the  nominations  are
24    completed,  the Secretary of State shall direct the Temporary
25    Clerk to call the roll of the members to elect the Speaker.
26        (b)  The election of the Speaker requires the affirmative
27    vote of a majority of those elected.  Debate is not in  order
28    following nominations and preceding or during the vote.
29        (c)  No  legislative  measure  may  be  considered and no
30    committees may be appointed or meet before  the  election  of
31    the Speaker.
32        (d)  When  a vacancy in the Office of Speaker occurs, the
 
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 1    foregoing procedure shall be employed to elect a new Speaker;
 2    when the Secretary of State is of  a  political  party  other
 3    than  that  of  the  majority  caucus,  however, the Majority
 4    Leader shall preside during the nomination  and  election  of
 5    the  successor  Speaker.  No legislative measures, other than
 6    for the nomination and election of a successor  Speaker,  may
 7    be  considered by the House during a vacancy in the Office of
 8    Speaker.

 9        (House Rule 2)
10        2.  Election of the Minority Leader.
11        (a)  The House shall elect a Minority Leader in a  manner
12    consistent with the laws of Illinois.  The Minority Leader is
13    the leader of the numerically strongest political party other
14    than the party to which the Speaker belongs.
15        (b)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
16    vote of 71 members elected.

17        (House Rule 3)
18        3.  Majority and Minority Leadership.
19        (a)  The Speaker and the Minority  Leader  shall  appoint
20    from  within  their  respective  caucuses  the members of the
21    Majority and Minority Leaderships as allowed by law.
22        (b)  Appointments are effective upon being filed with the
23    Clerk and remain effective at the pleasure of the Speaker and
24    Minority Leader, respectively, or until a vacancy  occurs  by
25    reason  of resignation or because a leader has ceased to be a
26    Representative.  Successor leaders shall be appointed in  the
27    same manner as their predecessors.  Leaders have those powers
28    delegated  to  them by the Speaker or Minority Leader, as the
29    case may be.

30        (House Rule 4)
31        4.  The Speaker.
 
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 1        (a)  The Speaker has those powers conferred upon  him  or
 2    her  by  the  Constitution,  the  laws  of  Illinois, and any
 3    motions or resolutions adopted by the House or jointly by the
 4    House and Senate.
 5        (b)  Except as otherwise provided by law, the Speaker  is
 6    the  chief  administrative officer of the House and has those
 7    powers necessary to carry out those functions.   The  Speaker
 8    may  delegate  administrative  duties  as  he  or  she  deems
 9    appropriate.
10        (c)  The duties of the Speaker include the following:
11             (1)  To  preside  at  all  sessions  of  the  House,
12        although  the  Speaker  may call on any member to preside
13        temporarily as Presiding Officer.
14             (2)  To open the session at the time  at  which  the
15        House  is  to  meet  by  taking the chair and calling the
16        members to order.  The Speaker may call on any member  to
17        open the session as Presiding Officer.
18             (3)  To  announce  the  business before the House in
19        the order upon which it is to  be  acted.  The  Presiding
20        Officer shall perform this duty during the period that he
21        or she is presiding.
22             (4)  To  recognize  those  members  entitled  to the
23        floor.
24             (5)  To state and put to a vote all  questions  that
25        are  regularly  moved  or  that  necessarily arise in the
26        course of the proceedings, and to announce the result  of
27        the vote.
28             (6)  To preserve order and decorum.
29             (7)  To  decide  all  points  of  order,  subject to
30        appeal, and to speak on these  points  in  preference  to
31        other members.
32             (8)  To inform the House when necessary, or when any
33        question  is  raised,  on  any point of order or practice
34        pertinent to the pending business.
 
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 1             (9)  To sign or authenticate all acts,  proceedings,
 2        or  orders  of  the  House.   All  writs,  warrants,  and
 3        subpoenae  issued  by  order  of the House, or any of its
 4        committees, shall be signed by the Speaker  and  attested
 5        by the Clerk.
 6             (10)  To  sign  all bills passed by both chambers of
 7        the General  Assembly  to  certify  that  the  procedural
 8        requirements for passage have been met.
 9             (11)  To  have  general  supervision,  including the
10        duty to protect the security and  safety,  of  the  House
11        Chamber, galleries, and adjoining and connecting hallways
12        and  passages,  including  the  power  to clear them when
13        necessary.  The House Chamber shall not be  used  without
14        permission of the Speaker.
15             (12)  To  have  general supervision of the Clerk and
16        his or her assistants, the  Doorkeeper  and  his  or  her
17        assistants,    the    majority    caucus    staff,    the
18        parliamentarians,  and  all employees of the House except
19        the minority caucus staff.
20             (13)  To determine the  number  of  majority  caucus
21        members  and  minority  caucus members to be appointed to
22        all committees, except the  Rules  Committee  created  by
23        Rule  15,  the Committee on Conflicts of Interest created
24        by Rule 71, and those  committees  that  may  be  created
25        under Article XII of these Rules.
26             (14)  To  appoint all Chairpersons, Co-Chairpersons,
27        and Vice-Chairpersons  of  committees  (from  either  the
28        majority or minority caucus), and to appoint all majority
29        caucus members of committees.
30             (15)  To   enforce  all  constitutional  provisions,
31        statutes, rules, and regulations applicable to the House.
32             (16)  To guide and direct  the  proceedings  of  the
33        House subject to the control and will of the members.
34             (17)  To direct the Clerk to correct non-substantive
 
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 1        errors in the Journal.
 2             (18)  To  assign meeting places and meeting times to
 3        committees and subcommittees.
 4             (19)  To perform any other duties  assigned  to  the
 5        Speaker  by these House Rules or jointly by the House and
 6        Senate.
 7             (20)  To decide, subject to the control and will  of
 8        the  members,  all  questions relating to the priority of
 9        business.
10             (21)  To issue, in cooperation with the  Comptroller
11        and  after  clearance  with  the  United  States Internal
12        Revenue    Service,    written    regulations    covering
13        administration  of  contingent  expense   allowances   of
14        members of the House.
15             (22)  To  appoint  one  or  more parliamentarians to
16        serve at the pleasure of the Speaker.
17        (d)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
18    vote of 71 members elected.

19        (House Rule 5)
20        5.  Powers and Duties of the Minority Leader.
21        (a)  The  Minority Leader has those powers conferred upon
22    him or her by the Constitution, the laws of Illinois, and any
23    motions or resolutions adopted by the House or jointly by the
24    House and Senate.
25        (b)  The Minority Leader shall appoint to all  committees
26    the  members  from  the minority caucus and shall designate a
27    Minority Spokesperson for each  committee,  except  that  the
28    Speaker   may   appoint   a  minority  caucus  member  to  be
29    Chairperson  of  a  standing  committee  or  Chairperson   or
30    Co-Chairperson of a special committee.
31        (c)  The  Minority  Leader has general supervision of the
32    minority caucus staff.
 
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 1        (House Rule 6)
 2        6.  Clerk of the House.
 3        (a)  The  House  shall  elect  a  Clerk,  who  may  adopt
 4    appropriate policies or procedures for the conduct of his  or
 5    her  office.  The Speaker is the final arbiter of any dispute
 6    arising in connection with the operation of the Office of the
 7    Clerk.
 8        (b)  The duties of the Clerk include the following:
 9             (1)  To have  custody  of  all  bills,  papers,  and
10        records of the House, which shall not be taken out of the
11        Clerk's  custody except in the regular course of business
12        in the House.
13             (2)  To endorse on every original bill and each copy
14        its  number,  the  names  of  sponsors,   the   date   of
15        introduction,  and  the several orders taken on it.  When
16        reproduced, the names of the sponsors shall appear on the
17        front page of the bill in the same  order  they  appeared
18        when introduced.
19             (3)  To  cause each bill to be reproduced and placed
20        on the desks of the members as soon as it is  reproduced,
21        as provided in Rule 39.
22             (4)  To  keep  the Journal of the proceedings of the
23        House and, under the direction of  the  Speaker,  correct
24        errors in the Journal.
25             (5)  To  keep  the transcripts of the debates of the
26        House  and  make  them  available  to  the  public  under
27        reasonable conditions.
28             (6)  To keep the necessary records for the House and
29        its committees and to prepare the House Calendar for each
30        legislative day.
31             (7)  To examine all House Bills  and  Constitutional
32        Amendment Resolutions following Second Reading and before
33        final   passage   for   the  purpose  of  correcting  any
34        non-substantive errors, and to report the  same  back  to
 
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 1        the  Speaker  promptly;  to  supervise  the enrolling and
 2        engrossing of  bills  and  resolutions,  subject  to  the
 3        direction of the Speaker; and to attest to the passage or
 4        adoption of legislative measures, and to note thereon the
 5        date  of final House action.  Any corrections made by the
 6        Clerk and approved by the Speaker shall be entered on the
 7        Journal.
 8             (8)  To  transmit  bills,   other   documents,   and
 9        messages to the Senate and secure a receipt therefor, and
10        to  receive  from  the Senate bills, other documents, and
11        messages and give receipt therefor.
12             (9)  To file with  the  Secretary  of  State  debate
13        transcripts and House documents as required by law.
14             (10)  To  attend  every session of the House; record
15        the roll; and read  all  bills,  resolutions,  and  other
16        papers  as  directed by the Speaker.  Bills shall be read
17        by title only.
18             (11)  To  supervise   the   Assistant   Clerk,   the
19        Doorkeeper,  pages,  messengers,  committee  clerks,  and
20        other employees of his or her office.
21             (12)  To  establish  the  format  for all documents,
22        forms,  and  committee  records  and  tapes  prepared  by
23        committee clerks.
24             (13)  Subject  to  approval  by  the   Speaker,   to
25        establish   standards  of  decorum  and  other  standards
26        regarding written statements filed under Rule 53.
27             (14)  To  perform  other  duties  assigned  by   the
28        Speaker.

29        (House Rule 7)
30        7.  Assistant  Clerk of the House.  The House shall, in a
31    manner  consistent  with  the  laws  of  Illinois,  elect  an
32    Assistant Clerk, who shall perform those duties  assigned  by
33    the Clerk.
 
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 1        (House Rule 8)
 2        8.  Doorkeeper.   The  House shall elect a Doorkeeper who
 3    shall perform those duties assigned by law, or as ordered  by
 4    the Speaker, Presiding Officer, or Clerk.  Those duties shall
 5    include the following:
 6             (1)  To  attend  the  House  during its sessions and
 7        execute the commands of the Speaker or Presiding Officer.
 8             (2)  To maintain  order  among  spectators  admitted
 9        into  the  House  Chamber,  galleries,  and  adjoining or
10        connecting hallways and passages.
11             (3)  To take proper measures to prevent interruption
12        of the House.
13             (4)  To  remove  unruly  persons  from   the   House
14        Chamber, galleries, and adjoining and connecting hallways
15        and passages.
16             (5)  To  ensure  that  only  authorized persons have
17        access to the House  Chamber,  galleries,  and  adjoining
18        hallways  and  passages,  subject to the direction of the
19        Speaker.
20             (6)  To supervise any Assistant Doorkeepers.
21             (7)  To  perform  other  duties  assigned   by   the
22        Speaker.

23        (House Rule 9)
24        9.  Schedule.
25        (a)  The  Speaker shall periodically establish a schedule
26    of  days  on  which  the  House  shall  convene  in  regular,
27    perfunctory, and veto session, with that schedule subject  to
28    revision at the discretion of the Speaker.
29        (b)  The  Speaker may schedule or reschedule deadlines at
30    his or her discretion for  any  action  on  any  category  of
31    legislative   measure   as  the  Speaker  deems  appropriate,
32    including deadlines for the following legislative actions:
33             (1)  Final day to request bills from the Legislative
 
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 1        Reference Bureau.
 2             (2)  Final day for introduction of bills.
 3             (3)  Final day for standing committees of the  House
 4        to report House bills, except House appropriation bills.
 5             (4)  Final  day for standing committees of the House
 6        to report House appropriation bills.
 7             (5)  Final day for  Third  Reading  and  passage  of
 8        House bills, except House appropriation bills.
 9             (6)  Final  day  for  Third  Reading  and passage of
10        House appropriation bills.
11             (7)  Final day for standing committees of the  House
12        to report Senate appropriation bills.
13             (8)  Final  day for standing committees of the House
14        to report Senate bills, except appropriation bills.
15             (9)  Final day for special committees to  report  to
16        the House.
17             (10)  Final  day  for  Third  Reading and passage of
18        Senate appropriation bills.
19             (11)  Final day for Third  Reading  and  passage  of
20        Senate bills, except appropriation bills.
21             (12)  Final  day  for  consideration of joint action
22        motions and conference committee reports.
23        (c)  The Speaker may schedule or reschedule any necessary
24    deadlines for legislative action during any  special  session
25    of  the  House.  The  Speaker may establish a Weekly Order of
26    Business or a Daily Order of Business setting forth the  date
27    and  approximate  time at which specific legislative measures
28    may be considered by the House.  The Weekly Order of Business
29    or Daily Order of Business is effective upon being  filed  by
30    the  Speaker  with  the  Clerk  and  takes  the  place of the
31    standing order of business for the amount of  time  necessary
32    for  its  completion.   Nothing in this Rule, however, limits
33    the  Speaker's  or  Presiding  Officer's  powers  under  Rule
34    4(c)(3) or Rule 43(a).
 
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 1        (d)  The foregoing deadlines, or any revisions  to  those
 2    deadlines, are effective upon being filed by the Speaker with
 3    the Clerk.  The Clerk shall journalize those deadlines.
 4        (e)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
 5    vote of 71 members elected.

 6                             ARTICLE II
 7                             COMMITTEES

 8        (House Rule 10)
 9        10. Committees.
10        (a)  The committees of the House are:  (i)  the  standing
11    committees  listed  in  Rule  11; (ii) the special committees
12    created  under  Rule  13;  (iii)  subcommittees  created   by
13    standing  committees or by special committees; (iv) the Rules
14    Committee  created  under  Rule  15;  (v)  the  Committee  on
15    Conflicts  of  Interest  created  under  Rule  71;  (vi)  the
16    Election Contest or Qualifications Challenge  Committees,  if
17    any,  created  under  Article  X;  and  (vii)  any committees
18    created under  Article  XII.  Subcommittees  may  not  create
19    subcommittees.
20        (b)  Except  as  otherwise  provided  in  this  Rule, all
21    committees, except special committees created under Rule  13,
22    shall  have  a Chairperson and Minority Spokesperson, who may
23    be of the same political party.  Special  committees  created
24    under  Rule  13  that  have  Co-Chairpersons  from  different
25    political  parties  shall  not  have a Minority Spokesperson.
26    Each committee may have a Vice-Chairperson appointed  by  the
27    Speaker.   Committees  of  the  Whole  shall  consist  of all
28    Representatives.  The number of majority caucus  members  and
29    minority  caucus  members of all committees, except the Rules
30    Committee created under Rule 15, the Committee  on  Conflicts
31    of  Interest  created  under Rule 71, and any committees that
32    may be created under Article XII, shall be determined by  the
 
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 1    Speaker.  The  Speaker  shall  file  a  notice with the Clerk
 2    setting forth the number  of  majority  caucus  and  minority
 3    caucus members of each committee, which shall be journalized.
 4    A  member  may  be temporarily replaced on a committee due to
 5    illness or if  the  member  is  otherwise  unavailable.   All
 6    leaders  are  non-voting  ex-officio members of each standing
 7    committee and each special committee, except that the leaders
 8    may also be  appointed  to  standing  committees  or  special
 9    committees  as  voting  members. The Speaker may also appoint
10    any member of the majority caucus, and  the  Minority  Leader
11    may   appoint  any  member  of  the  minority  caucus,  as  a
12    non-voting ex-officio member of  any  standing  committee  or
13    special committee.
14        (c)  The  Chairperson of a committee has the authority to
15    call the committee to order, designate  the  order  in  which
16    bills  and  resolutions posted for hearing shall be taken up,
17    order a record vote to be taken on each  legislative  measure
18    called   for  a  vote,  preserve  order  and  decorum  during
19    committee meetings, establish procedural  rules  (subject  to
20    approval  by  the  Speaker)  governing  the  presentation and
21    consideration  of   legislative   measures,   and   generally
22    supervise the affairs of the committee.  The Vice-Chairperson
23    of  a  committee  or  other  member of the committee from the
24    majority caucus may preside over its meetings in the  absence
25    or  at  the  direction  of  the  Chairperson.  In the case of
26    special  committees  with  Co-Chairpersons   from   different
27    political  parties,  the  "Chairperson"  for purposes of this
28    Rule is the Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus.
29        (d)  A vacancy on a committee,  or  in  the  position  of
30    Chairperson,  Co-Chairperson,  Vice-Chairperson,  or Minority
31    Spokesperson on a committee, exists  when  a  member  resigns
32    from   the   position  or  ceases  to  be  a  Representative.
33    Resignations shall be made in writing to the Clerk, who shall
34    promptly notify the  Speaker  and  Minority  Leader.   Absent
 
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 1    concurrence  by  a  majority  of  those  elected,  except  as
 2    otherwise  provided  in Rule 15 and except in connection with
 3    temporary  replacements  under  Rule  10(b),  no  member  who
 4    resigns from  a  committee  shall  be  re-appointed  to  that
 5    committee  for the remainder of the term. Replacement members
 6    shall be of the same political party as that  of  the  member
 7    who resigns, and shall be appointed in the same manner as the
 8    original   appointment,  except  that  in  the  case  of  the
 9    resignation  of  a   Chairperson   or   Co-Chairperson,   the
10    replacement member need not be from the same political party.
11    In  the  case of vacancies on subcommittees that were created
12    by committees, the parent committee shall fill the vacancy in
13    the same manner as the original appointment.
14        (e)  The Chairperson of a committee has the authority  to
15    call  meetings  of that committee, subject to the approval of
16    the  Speaker.   In  the  case  of  special  committees   with
17    Co-Chairpersons   from   different   political  parties,  the
18    Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus has the authority  to
19    call  meetings  of  the  special  committee,  subject  to the
20    approval of the Speaker.  Except  as  otherwise  provided  by
21    these   Rules,   committee  meetings  shall  be  convened  in
22    accordance with Rule 21.
23        (f)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
24    vote of 71 members elected.

25        (House Rule 11)
26        11.  Standing Committees.  The Standing Committees of the
27    House are as follows:
28        AGING
29        AGRICULTURE & CONSERVATION
30        APPROPRIATIONS - EDUCATION
31        APPROPRIATIONS - GENERAL SERVICES & GOVERNMENT OVERSIGHT
32        APPROPRIATIONS - HUMAN SERVICES
33        APPROPRIATIONS - PUBLIC SAFETY
 
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 1        CHILDREN & YOUTH
 2        CONSUMER PROTECTION
 3        LABOR & COMMERCE
 4        REGISTRATION & REGULATION
 5        LOCAL GOVERNMENT
 6        ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION
 7        ENVIRONMENT & ENERGY
 8        EXECUTIVE
 9        FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
10        HUMAN SERVICES
11        HEALTH CARE AVAILABILITY & ACCESS
12        HIGHER EDUCATION
13        INSURANCE
14        JUDICIARY I - CIVIL LAW
15        JUDICIARY II - CRIMINAL LAW
16        PERSONNEL & PENSIONS
17        PUBLIC UTILITIES
18        REVENUE
19        STATE GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION & ELECTION REFORM
20        TRANSPORTATION & MOTOR VEHICLES
21        VETERANS AFFAIRS

22        (House Rule 12)
23        12.  Members  and  Officers  of  Standing Committees. The
24    members of each standing committee shall be appointed for the
25    term by the Speaker and the  Minority  Leader.   The  Speaker
26    shall  appoint  the  Chairperson (from either the majority or
27    minority caucus) and the remaining standing committee members
28    of the majority caucus (one of whom the Speaker may designate
29    as Vice-Chairperson), and the Minority Leader  shall  appoint
30    the  remaining  standing  committee  members  of the minority
31    caucus (one of whom the  Minority  Leader  may  designate  as
32    Minority  Spokesperson).  Appointments are effective upon the
33    delivery of appropriate correspondence  from  the  respective
 
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 1    leader  to  the  Clerk, regardless of whether the House is in
 2    session, and shall remain effective for the duration  of  the
 3    term,  subject to Rule 10(d).  The Clerk shall journalize the
 4    appointments.   Committees  may  conduct  business   when   a
 5    majority  of  the  total number of committee members has been
 6    appointed.

 7        (House Rule 13)
 8        13.  Special Committees.
 9        (a)  A Special Committee on Prison Management Reform  and
10    a  Special  Committee  on Electrical Utility Deregulation are
11    created. The Speaker may create additional special committees
12    by filing a notice of the creation of the  special  committee
13    with  the  Clerk.  The  notice creating an additional special
14    committee shall specify the subject  matter  of  the  special
15    committee and the number of members to be appointed.
16        (b)  The  Speaker  shall determine the number of majority
17    and minority  caucus  members  to  be  appointed  to  special
18    committees  in  accordance  with Rule 10(b).  The Speaker, at
19    his  or  her  discretion,  shall  appoint  a  Chairperson  or
20    Co-Chairpersons.  The Speaker may appoint  any  member  as  a
21    Chairperson  or Co-Chairperson of a special committee. If the
22    Chairperson or Co-Chairperson is a member of the majority  or
23    minority   leadership   or   the   Chairperson   or  Minority
24    Spokesperson  of  a  standing  committee,  the  member  shall
25    receive no additional stipend or compensation for serving  as
26    Chairperson  or  Co-Chairperson of the special committee. For
27    purposes of Section 1 of the  General  Assembly  Compensation
28    Act  (25  ILCS  115/1),  (i)  a special committee under these
29    rules  is  considered  a  "select  committee"  and  (ii)  one
30    Co-Chairperson of a special  committee  shall  be  considered
31    "Chairman"  and  the  other  shall  be  considered  "Minority
32    Spokesman". The appointed members of special committees shall
33    be  designated  by  the  Speaker and the Minority Leader in a
 
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 1    like manner as provided in Rule 12 with respect  to  standing
 2    committees,   except   that  if  the  special  committee  has
 3    Co-Chairpersons from different political parties, the special
 4    committee shall not have a Minority  Spokesperson.   In  that
 5    case,  the  Minority Leader shall appoint the minority caucus
 6    members to the special committee, except  the  Co-Chairperson
 7    from  the  minority  caucus  who  shall  be  appointed by the
 8    Speaker. The Speaker may establish a  reporting  date  during
 9    the term for each special committee by filing a notice of the
10    reporting  date  with  the  Clerk.  Unless an earlier date is
11    specified by the notice, special committees expire at the end
12    of the term.
13        (c)  Special committees are empowered to conduct business
14    when a majority of the total number of committee members  has
15    been appointed.
16        (d)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
17    vote of 71 members elected.

18        (House Rule 14)
19        14.  Subcommittees.
20        (a)  The Chairperson of a standing committee or a special
21    committee may create a subcommittee by filing a  notice  with
22    the  committee  clerk.  The  number  of  majority  caucus and
23    minority caucus members to be  appointed  to  a  subcommittee
24    shall  be  determined by the Committee Chairperson, and filed
25    with the committee clerk.  In the case of special  committees
26    with  Co-Chairpersons  from  different political parties, the
27    creation of subcommittees and the number of  majority  caucus
28    and   minority   caucus   members  to  be  appointed  to  the
29    subcommittee shall be determined by the  Co-Chairperson  from
30    the majority caucus. Members of subcommittees must be members
31    of  the  creating  committee,  and  shall be appointed in the
32    manner determined by the committee  Chairperson,  or  in  the
33    case   of   special   committees  with  Co-Chairpersons  from
 
                            -16-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    different political parties, by the Co-Chairperson  from  the
 2    majority caucus.
 3        (b)  The notice creating a subcommittee shall specify the
 4    subject  matter of the subcommittee and the number of members
 5    to be appointed, and may specify a reporting date during  the
 6    term.   Unless  an  earlier  date is specified by the notice,
 7    subcommittees expire at the end of the term.
 8        (c)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
 9    vote of 71 members elected.

10        (House Rule 15)
11        15.  Rules Committee.
12        (a)  The  Rules  Committee  is  created  as  a  permanent
13    committee.  The Rules Committee shall consist of 5 members, 3
14    appointed by the Speaker and  2  appointed  by  the  Minority
15    Leader.   The  Speaker  and  the  Minority  Leader  are  each
16    eligible  to  be appointed to the Rules Committee.  The Rules
17    Committee may conduct business when a majority of  the  total
18    number of its members has been appointed.
19        (b)  The  majority  caucus members of the Rules Committee
20    shall serve at the pleasure of the Speaker, and the  minority
21    caucus  members  shall  serve at the pleasure of the Minority
22    Leader.  Appointments shall  be  by  notice  filed  with  the
23    Clerk,  and shall be effective for the balance of the term or
24    until a replacement  appointment  is  made,  whichever  first
25    occurs.  Appointments take effect upon filing with the Clerk,
26    regardless   of   whether   the   House   is   in    session.
27    Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  these  Rules, any
28    Representative who is replaced on the Rules Committee may  be
29    re-appointed  to  the  Rules Committee without concurrence of
30    the House.
31        (c)  Notwithstanding any other provision of these  Rules,
32    the  Rules  Committee  may meet upon reasonable public notice
33    that includes a statement of the subjects to  be  considered.
 
                            -17-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    All  legislative  measures pending before the Rules Committee
 2    are eligible for consideration at any of  its  meetings,  and
 3    all  of  those  legislative  measures  are  deemed posted for
 4    hearing by the Rules Committee for all of its meetings.
 5        (d)  Upon concurrence of a majority of  those  appointed,
 6    the  Rules  Committee  may  advance  any  legislative measure
 7    pending before it to the House, without referral  to  another
 8    committee;  the Rules Committee, however, shall not so report
 9    any bill that has never been before a standing committee or a
10    special committee of the House.
11        (e)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
12    vote of 71 members elected.

13        (House Rule 16)
14        16.  Referrals of Resolutions and Reorganization Orders.
15        (a)  All  resolutions, except adjournment resolutions and
16    resolutions considered under subsection (b) or  (c)  of  this
17    Rule,   after   being   initially  read  by  the  Clerk,  are
18    automatically referred to  the  Rules  Committee,  which  may
19    thereafter  refer any resolution before it to the House or to
20    a standing committee or special  committee.   No  resolution,
21    except  adjournment  resolutions  and  resolutions considered
22    under subsection (b) or (c) of this Rule, may  be  considered
23    by  the  House  unless  referred  to  the  House by the Rules
24    Committee under Rule  18,  or  by  a  standing  committee  or
25    special  committee.   An adjournment resolution is subject to
26    Rule 66.
27        (b)  Any member may file a congratulatory resolution  for
28    consideration  by  the  House.  The Principal Sponsor of each
29    congratulatory  resolution  shall  pay  a   reasonable   fee,
30    determined  by the Clerk with the approval of the Speaker, to
31    offset  the  actual  cost  of  producing  the  congratulatory
32    resolution.  The fee may be paid from  the  office  allowance
33    provided  by  Section  4 of the General Assembly Compensation
 
                            -18-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Act, or from any other funds available to  the  member.  Upon
 2    agreement   of   the   Speaker   and   the  Minority  Leader,
 3    congratulatory resolutions may be immediately considered  and
 4    adopted by the House without referral to the Rules Committee.
 5    Those  resolutions  may  be  adopted  as  a group by a single
 6    motion.  Congratulatory resolutions shall be entered  on  the
 7    Journal  only  by  number,  sponsorship,  and  subject.   The
 8    provisions of this subsection requiring the Principal Sponsor
 9    to pay a reasonable fee may not be suspended.
10        (c)  Death resolutions in memory of former members of the
11    General  Assembly  and  former  constitutional officers, upon
12    introduction, may be  immediately  considered  by  the  House
13    without  referral  to the Rules Committee.  Those resolutions
14    shall be entered on the Journal in full.
15        (d)  Executive  reorganization  orders  of  the  Governor
16    issued under Article V, Sec. 11  of  the  Constitution,  upon
17    being  read  into  the record by the Clerk, are automatically
18    referred to  the  Rules  Committee  for  its  referral  to  a
19    standing  committee or a special committee, which may issue a
20    recommendation to the House with  respect  to  the  Executive
21    Order. The House may disapprove of an Executive Order only by
22    resolution  adopted  by  a majority of those elected; no such
23    resolution is in  order  until  a  standing  committee  or  a
24    special  committee has reported to the House on the executive
25    reorganization,  or  until  the  Executive  Order  has   been
26    discharged under Rule 58.

27        (House Rule 17)
28        17.  Sponsorship   by  the  Rules  Committee.  The  Rules
29    Committee may consider any legislative measure referred to it
30    under these Rules, by motion or resolution, or  by  order  of
31    the  Presiding  Officer  upon  initial  reading.   The  Rules
32    Committee  may,  with  the concurrence of a majority of those
33    appointed, sponsor motions  or  resolutions;  notwithstanding
 
                            -19-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    any  other provision of these Rules, any motion or resolution
 2    sponsored  by  the  Rules  Committee   may   be   immediately
 3    considered by the House without referral to a committee.  Any
 4    such  motion  or resolution shall be assigned standard debate
 5    status, subject to Rule 52.

 6        (House Rule 18)
 7        18.  Referrals to Committees.
 8        (a)  All  House  Bills  and  Senate  Bills,  after  being
 9    initially read by the Clerk, are  automatically  referred  to
10    the Rules Committee.
11        (b)  During odd-numbered years, the Rules Committee shall
12    thereafter  refer  any  such  bill  before  it  to a standing
13    committee or a special committee within 3  legislative  days.
14    During  even-numbered  years, the Rules Committee shall refer
15    to  a  standing  committee  or  a  special   committee   only
16    appropriation  bills implementing the budget and bills deemed
17    by the Rules Committee, by the affirmative vote of a majority
18    appointed,  to  be  of  an  emergency  nature  or  to  be  of
19    substantial importance to the operation of government. At any
20    time, however, upon the  written  request  of  the  Principal
21    Sponsor  of a bill before the Rules Committee, the bill shall
22    automatically be referred to the Executive Committee  without
23    further action by the Rules Committee, if the Rules Committee
24    has  not  referred  the  bill  to  a  standing committee or a
25    special  committee  within  15  calendar   days   after   its
26    introduction.  This  subsection  (b) applies equally to House
27    Bills and Senate Bills introduced into  or  received  by  the
28    House.
29        (c)  A  standing  committee  or  a  special committee may
30    refer a subject matter or a legislative  measure  pending  in
31    that committee to a subcommittee of that committee.
32        (d)  All  legislative  measures  favorably  reported by a
33    standing committee or a special committee, or discharged from
 
                            -20-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    a standing committee or a special committee  under  Rule  58,
 2    shall  be referred to the House and placed on the appropriate
 3    order of business, which shall appear on the daily  calendar.
 4    All  legislative measures, except bills or resolutions on the
 5    Consent Calendar, bills or resolutions assigned short  debate
 6    status  by  a  standing  committee  or special committee, and
 7    floor amendments,  so  referred  are  automatically  assigned
 8    standard debate status, subject to Rule 52.
 9        (e)  All floor amendments, joint action motions for final
10    action,  and  conference  committee reports, upon filing with
11    the Clerk, are automatically referred to the Rules Committee.
12    The Rules Committee may refer any  joint  action  motion  for
13    final  action  or conference committee report to the House or
14    to a standing committee or a special committee for its review
15    and consideration (in those  instances,  and  notwithstanding
16    any other provision of these Rules, the standing committee or
17    special  committee  may  hold a hearing on and consider those
18    legislative measures pursuant to a one-hour advance  notice).
19    Any  joint  action  motion  for  final  action  or conference
20    committee report that is not referred to  the  House  by  the
21    Rules Committee is out of order, except that any joint action
22    motion  for  final  action  or  conference  committee  report
23    favorably  approved  by  a  standing  committee  or a special
24    committee is deemed  referred  to  the  House  by  the  Rules
25    Committee  for  purposes  of  this  Rule.   All  joint action
26    motions for final action and conference committee reports  so
27    referred  are  automatically assigned standard debate status,
28    subject to Rule 52.
29        (f)  The  Rules  Committee  may  at  any  time  refer  or
30    re-refer  a  legislative  measure  from  a  committee  to   a
31    Committee of the Whole or to any other committee.
32        (g)  Legislative  measures  shall  be discharged from the
33    Rules Committee upon  the  affirmative  vote  of  71  members
34    elected.   Any bill discharged from the Rules Committee shall
 
                            -21-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    be placed  on  the  order  of  Second  Reading  and  assigned
 2    standard  debate  status,  subject  to  Rule 52. Motions made
 3    pursuant to this Rule 18(g) may not be referred to the  Rules
 4    Committee  and  must  be  considered  by the House before the
 5    House proceeds to any other orders or items of business.
 6        (h)  Except for those provisions that  require  unanimous
 7    consent,  this  Rule may be suspended only by the affirmative
 8    vote of 71 members elected.

 9        (House Rule 19)
10        19.  Re-Referrals to the Rules Committee.
11        (a)  All legislative  measures  that  fail  to  meet  the
12    applicable deadline established under Rule 9 for reporting to
13    the House by a standing committee or a special committee, for
14    Third  Reading  and  passage,  or  for consideration of joint
15    action  motions  and   conference   committee   reports   are
16    automatically  re-referred to the Rules Committee unless: (i)
17    the deadline has been suspended or revised  by  the  Speaker,
18    with  re-referral to the Rules Committee to occur if the bill
19    has not been reported to  the  House  in  accordance  with  a
20    revised  deadline;  or  (ii) the Rules Committee has issued a
21    written exception to the Clerk with respect to  a  particular
22    bill  before  the  reporting  deadline,  with  re-referral to
23    occur, if at all, in accordance with the written exception.
24        (b)  All legislative measures pending before the House or
25    any of its committees are automatically  re-referred  to  the
26    Rules  Committee  on  the 31st consecutive day that the House
27    has  not  convened  for  session  unless:  (i)  any  deadline
28    applicable to the bill or resolution that has been designated
29    by the Speaker under Rule 9 exceeds 31 days, with re-referral
30    to occur, if at all, in accordance with that  deadline;  (ii)
31    this  Rule  is  suspended  under  Rule 67; or (iii) the Rules
32    Committee, by the affirmative vote of a  majority  appointed,
33    issues a written exception to the Clerk before that 31st day.
 
                            -22-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 20)
 2        20.  Reporting by Committees.  Committees shall report to
 3    the  House,  and  subcommittees  shall report to their parent
 4    committees.

 5        (House Rule 21)
 6        21.  Notice.
 7        (a)  Except as provided in Rule 18 or unless this Rule is
 8    suspended under Rule 67, no  standing  committee  or  special
 9    committee may consider or conduct a hearing with respect to a
10    legislative  measure  absent  notice  first  being  given  as
11    follows:
12             (1)  The   Chairperson  of  the  committee,  or  the
13        Co-Chairperson from the  majority  caucus  of  a  special
14        committee,  shall,  no  later  than  6  days  before  any
15        proposed  hearing,  post  a  notice on the House bulletin
16        board identifying each legislative measure, other than  a
17        committee amendment upon initial consideration under Rule
18        40,  that  may  be  considered  during that hearing.  The
19        notice shall contain the day,  hour,  and  place  of  the
20        hearing.
21             (2)  Meetings  of  the Rules Committee may be called
22        under Rule 15; meetings of the  standing  committees  and
23        special  committees  to  consider floor amendments, joint
24        action motions for final  consideration,  and  conference
25        committee reports may be called under Rule 18.
26             (3)  The  Chairperson,  or  Co-Chairperson  from the
27        majority caucus of a special committee, shall, in advance
28        of a committee hearing, notify all Principal Sponsors  of
29        legislative measures posted for that hearing of the date,
30        time,  and  place  of hearing.  When practical, the Clerk
31        shall  include  a  notice  of  all  scheduled   hearings,
32        together  with  all  posted bills and resolutions, in the
33        Daily Calendar of the  House.  Regardless  of  whether  a
 
                            -23-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        particular legislative measure or subject matter has been
 2        posted for hearing, it is in order for a committee during
 3        any  of  its  meetings  to  refer  a  subject  matter  or
 4        legislative  measure  pending before it to a subcommittee
 5        of that committee.
 6        (b)  Other than the Rules  Committee,  no  committee  may
 7    meet  during  any  session  of  the  House, and no commission
 8    created by Illinois law that has legislative  membership  may
 9    meet during any session of the House.
10        (c)  Regardless  of  whether  notice  has been previously
11    given, it is always in order for a  committee  to  table  any
12    legislative  measure  pending  before  it  when the Principal
13    Sponsor so requests.
14        (d)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
15    vote of 71 members elected.

16        (House Rule 22)
17        22.  Committee Procedure.
18        (a)  A  committee  may  consider  any legislative measure
19    referred to it and may make with respect to that  legislative
20    measure  one  of the following reports to the House or to the
21    parent committee, as appropriate:
22             (1)  that the bill "do pass";
23             (2)  that the bill "do not pass";
24             (3)  that the bill "do pass as amended";
25             (4)  that the bill "do not pass as amended";
26             (5)  that the resolution "be adopted";
27             (6)  that the resolution "be not adopted";
28             (7)  that the resolution "be adopted as amended";
29             (8)  that  the  resolution  "be   not   adopted   as
30        amended";
31             (9)  that  the floor amendment, joint action motion,
32        or conference committee  report  referred  by  the  Rules
33        Committee "be adopted";
 
                            -24-               LRB9101282REmb
 1             (10)  that the floor amendment, joint action motion,
 2        or  conference  committee  report  referred  by the Rules
 3        Committee "be not adopted";
 4             (11)  "without recommendation"; or
 5             (12)  "tabled".
 6        Any of the foregoing reports may be made  only  upon  the
 7    concurrence   of   a   majority   of  those  appointed.   All
 8    legislative  measures  reported  "do  pass",  "do   pass   as
 9    amended",  "be  adopted",  or  "be  adopted  as  amended" are
10    favorably reported to the House. Except as otherwise provided
11    by  these  Rules,  any  legislative   measure   referred   or
12    re-referred  to  a committee and not reported under this Rule
13    shall remain in that committee.
14        (b)  No bill that provides for an appropriation of  money
15    from  the State Treasury may be considered for passage by the
16    House unless it has  first  been  favorably  reported  by  an
17    Appropriations Committee or:
18             (1)  the  bill was discharged from an Appropriations
19        Committee under Rule 58;
20             (2)  the bill was exempted from this requirement  by
21        a majority of those appointed to the Rules Committee; or
22             (3)  this Rule was suspended under Rule 67.
23        (c)  The Chairperson of each committee, or Co-Chairperson
24    from  the majority caucus of a special committee, shall keep,
25    or cause to be  kept,  a  record  in  which  there  shall  be
26    entered:
27             (1)  The  time  and  place  of  each  meeting of the
28        committee.
29             (2)  The attendance of  committee  members  at  each
30        meeting.
31             (3)  The  votes cast by the committee members on all
32        legislative measures acted on by the committee.
33             (4)  The  "Record  of   Committee   Witness"   forms
34        executed  by each person appearing or registering in each
 
                            -25-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        committee meeting, which shall include identification  of
 2        the  witness,  the  person, group, or firm represented by
 3        appearance and the capacity in which  the  representation
 4        is made (if the person is representing someone other than
 5        himself   or   herself),  his  or  her  position  on  the
 6        legislation under consideration, and the nature of his or
 7        her desired testimony.
 8             (5)  A tape recording of the proceedings.
 9             (6)  Such additional information as may be requested
10        by the Clerk.
11        (d)  The committee  Chairperson,  or  the  Co-Chairperson
12    from  the  majority caucus of a special committee, shall file
13    with the Clerk, along with every bill or resolution  reported
14    upon,   a  written  report  containing  such  information  as
15    required by the Clerk.  The Clerk may adopt forms,  policies,
16    and  procedures  with respect to the preparation, filing, and
17    maintenance of the reports.
18        (e)  When a  committee  fails  to  report  a  legislative
19    measure  pending  before it to the House, or when a committee
20    fails to hold a  public  hearing  on  a  legislative  measure
21    pending   before  it,  the  exclusive  means  to  bring  that
22    legislative  measure  directly  before  the  House  for   its
23    consideration is as provided in Rule 18 or Rule 58.
24        (f)  No  bill or resolution may be called for a vote in a
25    standing committee or special committee in the absence of the
26    Principal Sponsor.  The Chairperson of a committee or a chief
27    co-sponsor may present a bill or resolution in committee with
28    the approval of the  Principal  Sponsor  when  the  committee
29    consents.   In   the   case   of   special   committees  with
30    Co-Chairpersons  from  different   political   parties,   the
31    "Chairperson"  means  the  Co-Chairperson  from  the majority
32    caucus. This subsection may not be suspended.
33        (g)  No bill or resolution may  be  voted  on  more  than
34    twice  in  any  committee  on  motions  to report the bill or
 
                            -26-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    resolution favorably, or to reconsider the vote by which  the
 2    committee  adopted  a motion to report the bill or resolution
 3    unfavorably.  A bill or resolution having failed to receive a
 4    favorable recommendation after 2 such record votes  shall  be
 5    automatically   reported  with  the  appropriate  unfavorable
 6    recommendation.
 7        (h)  A bill or resolution shall  be  given  short  debate
 8    status  by  report of the committee if the bill or resolution
 9    was favorably reported by a three-fifths vote of the  members
10    present.  Bills  and  resolutions receiving favorable reports
11    may be placed upon the Consent Calendar as provided  in  Rule
12    42.
13        (i)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
14    vote of 71 members elected.

15        (House Rule 23)
16        23.  Witnesses and Subpoenae.
17        (a)  Standing committees may  compel,  by  subpoena,  any
18    person  to  appear and give testimony as a witness before the
19    standing committee and produce papers, documents,  and  other
20    materials  relating  to  a legislative measure pending before
21    the standing committee.
22        (b)  Special committees  may  compel,  by  subpoena,  any
23    person  to  appear  and  give  testimony  before  the special
24    committee and produce papers, documents, and other  materials
25    relating   to  the  subject  matter  for  which  the  special
26    committee was created or relating to  a  legislative  measure
27    pending before the special committee.
28        (c)  Subpoenae  issued under this Rule must be issued and
29    signed by the Chairperson of the committee  and  must  comply
30    with  Rule  4(c)(9).   In the case of special committees with
31    Co-Chairpersons from different political  parties,  the  term
32    "Chairperson"   for   purposes   of   this   Rule  means  the
33    Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus.
 
                            -27-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (d)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
 2    vote of 71 members elected.

 3        (House Rule 24)
 4        24.  Committee Reports.
 5        (a)  All  bills  favorably  reported  to the House from a
 6    committee, or with respect to  which  a  committee  has  been
 7    discharged,  shall  be  reported  to  the  House and shall be
 8    placed on the order of Second Reading and  assigned  standard
 9    debate  status,  subject  to  Rule 52.  Bills reported to the
10    House from committee "do not pass", "do not pass as amended",
11    "without recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie on the table.
12        (b)  All floor amendments, joint action motions for final
13    action, and conference committee reports  favorably  reported
14    from  a  standing  committee  or  special  committee shall be
15    referred to the House and eligible for consideration when the
16    House is on an appropriate order of business.  Amendments  to
17    bills  that are not on the order of Second Reading are out of
18    order.  All floor amendments, joint action motions for  final
19    action, and conference committee reports that are reported to
20    the   House   from   committee  "be  not  adopted",  "without
21    recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie on the table. When the
22    Rules Committee refers a floor amendment, joint action motion
23    for  final  action,  or  conference  committee  report  to  a
24    standing committee or a  special  committee  that  thereafter
25    favorably  reports that legislative measure to the House, the
26    legislative measure shall be referred to the House,  assigned
27    standard  debate  status  subject  to  Rule  52 (except floor
28    amendments, which shall be assigned amendment debate status),
29    and eligible for  consideration  when  the  House  is  on  an
30    appropriate order of business.
31        (c)  All resolutions favorably reported to the House from
32    the  Rules  Committee,  a  standing  committee,  or a special
33    committee, or with respect to which the  committee  has  been
 
                            -28-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    discharged,  shall be referred to the House and placed on the
 2    order of Resolutions and  assigned  standard  debate  status,
 3    subject to Rule 52.  All resolutions that are reported to the
 4    House  from  committee  "be  not adopted", "be not adopted as
 5    amended", "without recommendation", or "tabled" shall lie  on
 6    the  table.   Floor  amendments to resolutions are subject to
 7    the same procedure applicable to floor amendments to bills.

 8        (House Rule 25)
 9        25.  Suspension of Posting Requirements.
10        (a)  A motion to suspend the posting requirements of Rule
11    21 must be in writing, specifying the committee and the bills
12    or resolutions to which the motion applies, be carried on the
13    calendar before it may be taken up by the House, and  adopted
14    by  the affirmative vote of 60 members elected.  The calendar
15    requirements of this Rule may be suspended only by  unanimous
16    consent.   The  requirement that the motion be in writing may
17    not be suspended.
18        (b)  Except  for  those  provisions  that  may   not   be
19    suspended or that require unanimous consent, this Rule may be
20    suspended only by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.

21        (House Rule 26)
22        26.  Rights of the Public.
23        (a)  If  a  bill  or resolution has been properly set for
24    hearing and witnesses are present and wish  to  testify,  the
25    committee  shall hear the witnesses at the scheduled time and
26    place.
27        (b)  Any person wishing to offer testimony to a committee
28    hearing of a bill or resolution shall be given  a  reasonable
29    opportunity  to do so, orally or in writing.  The Chairperson
30    may set time limits for presentation of oral  testimony.   No
31    testimony  in  writing  is  required  of any witness, but any
32    witness may submit a statement in writing for  the  committee
 
                            -29-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    record.   All  persons  offering  testimony  shall complete a
 2    "Record of Committee Witness"  form  and  submit  it  to  the
 3    committee  clerk  before  testifying.  In the case of special
 4    committees  with  Co-Chairpersons  from  different  political
 5    parties, the "Chairperson" means the Co-Chairperson from  the
 6    majority caucus.
 7        (c)  A  motion  to  foreclose  further  oral testimony by
 8    witnesses on a matter before a committee may be adopted  only
 9    by a three-fifths majority of those voting on the motion.  No
10    such  motion  is in order until both proponents and opponents
11    requesting to be heard have been given a fair and substantial
12    opportunity to express their  positions.   No  one  shall  be
13    prohibited  from  filing  for the record "Record of Committee
14    Witness" forms or written  statements  while  the  matter  is
15    before the committee.
16        (d)  Meetings  of  committees  and subcommittees shall be
17    open to the public.  Committee meetings of the House  may  be
18    closed  to the public if two-thirds of the members elected to
19    the House determine,  by  a  record  vote,  that  the  public
20    interest so requires.
21        (e)  This Rule cannot be suspended retroactively.

22        (House Rule 27)
23        27.  Smoking.  Smoking  is  prohibited  at  any  official
24    committee  hearing, and no committee member, staff member, or
25    member of the public is permitted to smoke  in  the  room  in
26    which the hearing is being held.

27                             ARTICLE III
28                         CONDUCT OF BUSINESS

29        (House Rule 28)
30        28.  Sessions of the House.
31        (a)  The  House  is  in  session  whenever it convenes in
 
                            -30-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    perfunctory  session,  regular  session,  veto  session,   or
 2    special  session.   Members  are entitled to per diem expense
 3    reimbursements only  on  those  regular,  veto,  and  special
 4    session  days  that  they  are  in  attendance  at the House.
 5    Attendance  by  members  is  not  required  or  recorded   on
 6    perfunctory session days.
 7        (b)  Regular  and  veto  session  days shall be scheduled
 8    with notice by the Speaker under Rule 9. Special session days
 9    shall be scheduled in accordance with  the  Constitution  and
10    laws of Illinois.
11        (c)  The  Speaker  may  schedule perfunctory session days
12    during which the Clerk may read into  the  House  record  any
13    legislative measure. Committees may meet and may consider and
14    act  upon  legislative  measures during a perfunctory session
15    day, and the Clerk may receive  and  read  committee  reports
16    into  the  House record during a perfunctory day.  Except for
17    automatic referral under these Rules, no further  action  may
18    be  taken  by the House with respect to a legislative measure
19    during a perfunctory session day.

20        (House Rule 29)
21        29.  Hour of Meeting.  Unless otherwise  ordered  by  the
22    Speaker  or  Presiding  Officer or as provided in Rule 1, the
23    House shall regularly convene at 12:30 p.m. on the first  day
24    of  each  week  that  the House convenes in regular, veto, or
25    special session and shall convene at noon on all other days.

26        (House Rule 30)
27        30.  Access to the House Floor.
28        (a)  Except as otherwise provided in  these  Rules,  only
29    the following persons shall be admitted to the House while it
30    is  in session: members and officers of the General Assembly;
31    elected officers of the executive  branch;  justices  of  the
32    Supreme Court; the designated aide to the Governor, except as
 
                            -31-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    limited  by  the Speaker; the parliamentarian; majority staff
 2    members and minority staff members, except as limited by  the
 3    Speaker  or  Presiding  Officer;  former  members,  except as
 4    limited by the Speaker or prohibited  under  subsection  (d);
 5    and  employees of the Legislative Reference Bureau, except as
 6    limited by the Speaker.  Representatives of the press,  while
 7    the House is in session, may have access to the galleries and
 8    places  allotted  to  them  by  the  Speaker.   No  person is
 9    entitled to the floor  unless  appropriately  attired.   Only
10    members  of  the  General  Assembly may use telephones at the
11    members' desks or in the telephone booths at the rear of  the
12    House  Chamber.   Smoking  is  prohibited on the floor of the
13    House and in the House galleries.
14        (b)  On days during which the House is  in  session,  the
15    Doorkeeper  shall clear the floor of all persons not entitled
16    to access to the floor 15 minutes before the convening  time,
17    and the Doorkeeper shall enforce all other provisions of this
18    Rule.
19        (c)  The Speaker may authorize the admission to the floor
20    of  any  other  person, except as prohibited under subsection
21    (d).
22        (d)  No person who is directly or  indirectly  interested
23    in defeating or promoting any pending legislative measure, if
24    required  to  be  registered  as a lobbyist, shall be allowed
25    access to the floor of the  House  at  any  time  during  the
26    session.
27        (e)  When   he   or   she  deems  it  necessary  for  the
28    preservation of order, the Presiding  Officer  may  by  order
29    remove   any   person   from   the  floor  of  the  House.  A
30    Representative may be  removed  from  the  floor  only  under
31    Article XI or XII of these Rules.

32        (House Rule 31)
33        31.  Standing   Order   of  Business.   Unless  otherwise
 
                            -32-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    determined by the Presiding Officer, the standing daily order
 2    of business of the House is as follows:
 3             (1)  Call   to   Order,   Invocation,   Pledge    of
 4        Allegiance, and Roll Call.
 5             (2)  Approval of the Journal.
 6             (3)  Reading of House Bills a first time.
 7             (4)  Reports  from committees, with reports from the
 8        Rules Committee ordinarily made at any time.
 9             (5)  Presentation  of  Resolutions,  Petitions,  and
10        Messages.
11             (6)  Introduction of House Bills.
12             (7)  Messages from the Senate, not including reading
13        Senate Bills a first time.
14             (8)  Reading of House Bills a second time.
15             (9)  Reading of House Bills a third time.
16             (10)  Reading of Senate Bills a third time.
17             (11)  Reading of Senate Bills a second time.
18             (12)  Reading of Senate Bills a first time.
19             (13)  House Bills on the Order of Concurrence.
20             (14)  Senate Bills on the Order of Non-Concurrence.
21             (15)  Conference Committee Reports.
22             (16)  Motions in Writing.
23             (17)  Constitutional Amendment Resolutions.
24             (18)  Motions with respect to Vetoes.
25             (19)  Consideration of Resolutions.
26             (20)  Motions to Discharge Committee.
27             (21)  Motions to Take from the Table.
28             (22)  Motions to Suspend the Rules.
29             (23)  Consideration  of  Bills  on  the   Order   of
30        Postponed Consideration.

31        (House Rule 32)
32        32.  Quorum.
33        (a)  A  majority of those elected constitutes a quorum of
 
                            -33-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    the House, and a majority of those  appointed  constitutes  a
 2    quorum  of a committee, but a smaller number may adjourn from
 3    day to day, or recess for less than one day, and  compel  the
 4    attendance  of  absent  members.   The  attendance  of absent
 5    members may also be compelled by order of the Speaker.
 6        (b)  The question of the presence  of  a  quorum  in  any
 7    committee may not be raised on consideration of a legislative
 8    measure  by the House unless the same question was previously
 9    raised before the committee with respect to that  legislative
10    measure.

11        (House Rule 33)
12        33.  Approval  of the Journal.  The Speaker or his or her
13    designee shall periodically examine and report to  the  House
14    any corrections he or she deems should be made in the Journal
15    before  it is approved.  If those corrections are approved by
16    the House, they shall be made by the Clerk.

17        (House Rule 34)
18        34.  Executive Sessions.  The sessions of the House shall
19    be open to the public.  Sessions and  committee  meetings  of
20    the  House  may  be closed to the public if two-thirds of the
21    members elected determine, by a record vote, that the  public
22    interest so requires.

23        (House Rule 35)
24        35.  Length  of  Adjournment.   The  House,  without  the
25    consent of the Senate, shall not adjourn for more than 3 days
26    or  to a place other than where the 2 chambers of the General
27    Assembly are sitting.  The House is in session on any day  in
28    which  it  convenes  in perfunctory session, regular session,
29    veto session, or special session.

30        (House Rule 36)
 
                            -34-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        36.  Transcript of the House.  Nothing contained  in  the
 2    official transcript of the House shall be changed or expunged
 3    except  by  written  request of a Representative to the Clerk
 4    and Speaker, and that request may be  approved  only  by  the
 5    record vote of 71 members elected.

 6                             ARTICLE IV
 7                        BILLS AND AMENDMENTS

 8        (House Rule 37)
 9        37.  Bills.
10        (a)  A bill may be introduced in the House by sponsorship
11    of  one or more members of the House, whose names shall be on
12    the reproduced copies of the bills, in the House Journal, and
13    in the Legislative Digest. The Principal Sponsor shall be the
14    first name to appear on the bill and may be joined by no more
15    than 4 chief co-sponsors with the approval of  the  Principal
16    Sponsor;  other  co-sponsors  shall  be  separated  from  the
17    Principal  Sponsor  and any chief co-sponsors by a comma. The
18    Principal Sponsor may change the sponsorship  of  a  bill  to
19    that  of one or more other Representatives, or to that of the
20    standing committee or special committee to which the bill was
21    referred or from which the bill was  reported.   Such  change
22    may  be made at any time the bill is pending before the House
23    or any of its committees by filing a notice with  the  Clerk.
24    This subsection may not be suspended.
25        (b)  The  Principal Sponsor of a bill controls that bill.
26    A standing committee-sponsored  bill  is  controlled  by  the
27    Chairperson of the committee, who for purposes of these Rules
28    is    deemed    the    Principal    Sponsor.     A    special
29    committee-sponsored bill is controlled by the Chairperson, or
30    if Co-Chairpersons have been appointed, by the Co-Chairperson
31    from  the majority caucus, who for purposes of these Rules is
32    deemed the Principal Sponsor.  Committee-sponsored bills  may
 
                            -35-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    not have individual co-sponsors.
 2        (c)  The  Senate  sponsor  of  a  bill originating in the
 3    Senate may request substitute House sponsorship of that  bill
 4    by  filing  a  notice  with  the  Clerk;  such  a  notice  is
 5    automatically  referred  to  the  Rules  Committee and deemed
 6    adopted if approved by the Rules Committee.   If  disapproved
 7    by the Rules Committee, the notice shall lie on the table. If
 8    the Rules Committee fails to act on a notice, that notice may
 9    be discharged by unanimous consent.
10        (d)  All  bills  introduced in the House shall be read by
11    title a first time,  ordered  reproduced,  and  automatically
12    referred  to  the Rules Committee in accordance with Rule 18.
13    When a Senate Bill is received, it shall be  read  by  title,
14    ordered  reproduced,  and placed on the order of Senate Bills
15    on first reading; after  being  read  a  first  time,  it  is
16    automatically  referred  to the Rules Committee in accordance
17    with Rule 18.
18        (e)  All  bills  introduced  into  the  House  shall   be
19    accompanied  by  9  copies.   Any  bill that amends a statute
20    shall  indicate  the  particular  changes  in  the  following
21    manner:
22             (1)  All new matter shall be underscored.
23             (2)  All matter that is to be omitted or  superseded
24        shall be shown crossed with a line.
25        (f)  No  bill  shall  be  passed by the House except on a
26    record vote of a majority of those elected.  A bill that  has
27    lost  and  has  not  been  reconsidered may not thereafter be
28    revived.
29        (g)  All   legislative   measures   providing   for   the
30    appropriation of money  from  the  State  Treasury  shall  be
31    confined to appropriations for a single agency or department.

32        (House Rule 38)
33        38.  Reading and Reproduction of Bills.  Every bill shall
 
                            -36-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    be  read  by  title on 3 different days before passage by the
 2    House, and the bill and all amendments adopted to it shall be
 3    reproduced, under Rule 39, before the vote is  taken  on  its
 4    final passage.

 5        (House Rule 39)
 6        39.  Reproduction  and Distribution.  The Clerk shall, as
 7    soon as any bill is reproduced, cause the bill to  be  placed
 8    upon the desks of the members.  Reproduction and distribution
 9    may  be  done  electronically,  or  the Clerk may establish a
10    method that any member may use to secure a copy of any bill.

11        (House Rule 40)
12        40.  Amendments.
13        (a)  An amendment to a bill may be adopted by a  standing
14    committee  or  special committee when the bill is before that
15    committee. An amendment to a bill may be adopted by the House
16    when a bill  is  on  the  order  of  Second  Reading  if  the
17    amendment  has  been  filed  as  provided in Rule 40(c).  All
18    amendments must be in writing. All committee amendments  that
19    have  been  timely  filed,  as determined by the Chairperson,
20    shall be considered by the committee  or  a  subcommittee  of
21    that committee prior to consideration by the committee of the
22    bill  to  which  the  amendment relates. All amendments still
23    pending in a committee upon the passage or defeat of  a  bill
24    on  Third  Reading are automatically tabled. A bill shall not
25    be advanced to the order of Third  Reading  until  all  floor
26    amendments have either been adopted or rejected by the House.
27        (b)  Except   as   otherwise  provided  in  these  Rules,
28    committee amendments may be offered  only  by  the  Principal
29    Sponsor  or a member of the committee while the affected bill
30    is before that committee, and shall be adopted by a  majority
31    of  those appointed.  Floor amendments may be offered only by
32    a Representative while the bill is on  the  order  of  Second
 
                            -37-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Reading,  subject  to  Rule  18,  and  shall  be adopted by a
 2    majority vote of the House.  A committee amendment may be the
 3    subject of a motion to  "do  adopt"  or  "do  not  adopt".  A
 4    committee  amendment  may  be  adopted  only  by a successful
 5    motion to "do adopt". The  Chairperson  of  a  committee  may
 6    refer  any  committee  amendment  to  a  subcommittee of that
 7    committee.
 8        (c)  Committee  amendments  shall  be  filed   with   the
 9    Chairperson  of  the  committee,  and  are in order only when
10    sufficient copies have been filed to provide each  member  of
11    the  committee  with  a  copy  (which may be done in the same
12    manner  as  distribution  of  bills  under  Rule  39)  and  9
13    additional copies for the Chairperson. Floor amendments shall
14    be filed with the Clerk, and are in order only when 9  copies
15    have been filed.
16        (d)  The   Clerk   shall   have  reproduced  all  adopted
17    committee amendments that come before the  House.  The  Clerk
18    shall  also  have reproduced all floor amendments referred to
19    the House by a committee.  No floor amendment may be  adopted
20    by  the House unless it has been reproduced and placed on the
21    members' desks in the same manner as for bills under Rule 39.
22        (e)  No floor amendment is in order unless  it  has  been
23    first  referred  to  the House for consideration by the Rules
24    Committee under Rule  18,  or  by  a  standing  committee  or
25    special committee.
26        (f)  Amendments  that  propose  to alter any existing law
27    shall conform to the requirements of Rule 37(e).
28        (g)  If a committee reports a bill "do pass as  amended",
29    the  committee amendments are deemed adopted by the committee
30    action and shall be reproduced and  placed  on  the  members'
31    desks  (which  may be done in the same manner as provided for
32    bills under Rule 39) before the bill may  be  read  a  second
33    time.
34        (h)  In    the    case   of   special   committees   with
 
                            -38-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Co-Chairpersons  from  different   political   parties,   the
 2    "Chairperson"   for   the   purposes  of  this  Rule  is  the
 3    Co-Chairperson from the majority caucus.

 4        (House Rule 41)
 5        41.  Fiscal and Other Notes.
 6        (a)  The  House  shall  comply  with  all  Illinois  laws
 7    requiring fiscal or other notes.  The notes  shall  be  filed
 8    with  the  Clerk, who shall affix each note with a time stamp
 9    endorsing the date and time received,  and  attached  to  the
10    original  of  the  bill  and  available for inspection by the
11    members. As soon as practical, the Clerk shall provide a copy
12    of the note to the Legislative Reference Bureau, which  shall
13    provide  an  informative  summary  of  the note in subsequent
14    issues of the Legislative Digest.
15        (b)  No bill authorizing or directing the  conveyance  by
16    the  State  of  any particular interest in real estate to any
17    individual or entity other than a governmental unit or agency
18    may be voted upon in committee or upon Second Reading  unless
19    a  certified  appraisal of the value of the interest has been
20    filed.  The appraisal shall be filed with the  clerk  of  the
21    committee to which the bill is assigned, and shall be part of
22    the  permanent  committee record, unless the bill is advanced
23    without reference to committee, or discharged under Rule  58,
24    in which event the appraisal shall be filed with the Clerk of
25    the House.

26        (House Rule 42)
27        42.  Consent Calendar.
28        (a)  The  Clerk  shall  include a Consent Calendar on the
29    daily calendar and designate it as a separate calendar.   The
30    Consent  Calendar shall contain 3 orders of business: Consent
31    Calendar - Second Reading, Consent Calendar - Third  Reading,
32    and  Consent  Calendar  -  Resolutions.  Within each order of
 
                            -39-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    business, bills or resolutions shall be  listed  in  separate
 2    groups according to the number of required days each has been
 3    on  that  order  of business on the Consent Calendar. No more
 4    than 80 bills and resolutions shall be listed in each  group.
 5    All  bills  or  resolutions  to  which  amendments  have been
 6    adopted shall be so designated.
 7        (b)  No debate is in order  regarding  any  item  on  the
 8    Consent  Calendar.   The  Presiding  Officer,  however, shall
 9    allow a reasonable time for  questions  from  the  floor  and
10    answers  to  those questions.  No amendment from the floor is
11    in order regarding any bill  or  resolution  on  the  Consent
12    Calendar.
13        (c)  A  bill  on  the  Consent Calendar shall stand for 2
14    legislative days on the order of Consent  Calendar  -  Second
15    Reading,  and for at least 2 legislative days on the order of
16    Consent Calendar - Third Reading, before a vote on the  final
17    passage  may  be  taken.  Resolutions on the Consent Calendar
18    shall stand for at least 4 legislative days before a vote  on
19    adoption  may  be  taken.   One  record vote on final passage
20    shall be taken on  those  bills  called  for  final  passage.
21    Immediately  before  a  vote  on  the  bills  on  the Consent
22    Calendar, the Presiding Officer shall call to  the  attention
23    of the members the fact that the next legislative action will
24    be the vote on the Consent Calendar.
25        (d)  A  bill  or  resolution may be placed on the Consent
26    Calendar by report of a  standing  committee  upon  a  motion
27    adopted  by  a  unanimous  vote  of the members present.  For
28    purposes of this subsection (d),  a  unanimous  vote  on  the
29    motion is a vote with no member voting nay.
30        (e)  No  bill  regarding revenue or appropriations may be
31    placed on the Consent Calendar.  No resolution requiring more
32    than 60 affirmative votes for adoption and no bill  requiring
33    more  than  60 affirmative votes for passage by the House may
34    be placed on the Consent Calendar.
 
                            -40-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (f)  The Speaker  and  the  Minority  Leader  shall  each
 2    appoint  3 members who may challenge the presence of any bill
 3    or resolution on the Consent  Calendar.   Before  a  vote  on
 4    final  passage  of  any item on the Consent Calendar, an item
 5    shall be removed from the Consent Calendar if (i) 4  or  more
 6    members,   (ii)   the   Principal  Sponsor  of  the  bill  or
 7    resolution, or (iii) one or more of the appointed challengers
 8    file with the Clerk written objections to the presence of the
 9    bill or resolution on the  Consent  Calendar.   Any  bill  or
10    resolution  so  removed  may  not be placed thereafter on the
11    Consent Calendar during that session of the General Assembly,
12    unless the member or members who objected to the presence  of
13    the  bill  or  resolution  on the Consent Calendar consent in
14    writing to restoration of  the  bill  or  resolution  on  the
15    Consent Calendar.
16        Any bill removed from the Consent Calendar shall stand on
17    the order of Second Reading with short debate status, subject
18    to  Rule 52, and any resolution so removed shall stand on the
19    order of Resolutions with short  debate  status,  subject  to
20    Rule 52.

21        (House Rule 43)
22        43.  Changing Order of Business.
23        (a)  Any  order of business may be changed at any time by
24    the Speaker or Presiding Officer.
25        (b)  Any order of business may be  changed  at  any  time
26    upon  the  motion  of  any  member, supported by 5 additional
27    members, if the motion is adopted by an affirmative  vote  of
28    71 members elected.
29        (c)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
30    vote of 71 members elected.
31        (d)  Notwithstanding any Rule to the contrary, if a  bill
32    favorably  reported  from  a  standing  committee  or special
33    committee has remained on the order  of  Second  Reading  for
 
                            -41-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    more  than  15  calendar  days,  the  Speaker shall, upon the
 2    motion  of the Chairperson of the committee that reported the
 3    bill, joined by at least one Member of the  Minority  Caucus,
 4    or  upon  the  motion  of  the  Minority  Spokesperson of the
 5    committee that reported the bill,  joined  by  at  least  one
 6    Member  of  the  Majority  Caucus,  and  with  the  Principal
 7    Sponsor's   approval,  if  the  motion  is  supported  by  an
 8    affirmative vote of at least 60 Members, advance the bill  to
 9    the  order of Third Reading and, on the next legislative day,
10    call the bill for a vote  on  the  order  of  Third  Reading.
11    Motions  made pursuant to this Rule 43(d) may not be referred
12    to the Rules Committee or any standing or  special  committee
13    and  shall  take  precedence  over  all other motions and all
14    other matters of business.

15        (House Rule 44)
16        44.  Special Orders; Rules Committee.
17        (a)  A special order of business may be set by the  Rules
18    Committee or by the Speaker.  The Principal Sponsor of a bill
19    or  resolution  must  consent to the placement of the bill or
20    resolution on a special order. A special order shall fix  the
21    day  to which it applies and the matters to be included.  The
22    Speaker, or the Rules Committee by a vote of  a  majority  of
23    the  members  appointed,  may  establish  time  limits  for a
24    special order and may establish limitations on debate  during
25    a special order (notwithstanding Rule 52), in which event the
26    allotted  time shall be fairly divided between proponents and
27    opponents of the legislation to  be  considered.   A  special
28    order  of  business takes the place of the standing order for
29    such time as may  be  necessary  for  its  completion.   Only
30    matters  that  may otherwise properly be before the House may
31    be included in a special order.
32        (b)  A special order shall appear on the  Daily  Calendar
33    for   3   legislative  days.   This  subsection  (b)  may  be
 
                            -42-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    suspended only by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
 2        (c)  A  special  order  may  be  suspended,  amended,  or
 3    modified by motion adopted  by  an  affirmative  vote  of  60
 4    members.   A  special  order  shall be suspended by a written
 5    objection signed by 3 members  of  the  Rules  Committee  and
 6    filed  during  the first legislative day on which the special
 7    order appears on the calendar.

 8                              ARTICLE V
 9             RESOLUTIONS AND CERTIFICATES OF RECOGNITION

10        (House Rule 45)
11        45.  Resolutions.
12        (a)  A resolution may  be  introduced  in  the  House  by
13    sponsorship  of  one  or  more  members of the House, and the
14    names of all sponsors shall be included in the House  Journal
15    and  in  the  Legislative  Digest. Each resolution introduced
16    shall  be  accompanied  by   9   copies.   Consideration   of
17    resolutions shall be governed by Rule 16 and Rule 66.
18        (b)  Any  resolution calling for the expenditure of State
19    funds may be adopted only by a record vote of a  majority  of
20    those elected.

21        (House Rule 46)
22        46.  State  Constitutional  Amendments.   All resolutions
23    introduced in the House proposing amendments to the  Illinois
24    Constitution  shall be reproduced and distributed in the same
25    manner in which bills are reproduced  and  distributed  under
26    Rule 39.  Every such resolution that originated in the Senate
27    and is presented to the House shall be ordered reproduced and
28    distributed in like manner. No such resolution may be adopted
29    unless  read  in  full in its final form on 3 different days.
30    Amendments are in order only  on  First  Reading  and  Second
31    Reading.

 
                            -43-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 47)
 2        47.  Federal Constitutional Amendments and Constitutional
 3    Conventions.  The  affirmative  vote  of  71  of  the members
 4    elected is required to adopt any resolution:
 5             (1)  requesting   Congress   to   call   a   federal
 6        constitutional convention;
 7             (2)  ratifying   a   proposed   amendment   to   the
 8        Constitution of the United States; or
 9             (3)  calling a State convention to ratify a proposed
10        amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

11        (House Rule 48)
12        48.  Certificates of Recognition.  Any member may sponsor
13    a certificate of recognition to be signed by the Speaker  and
14    attested  by the Clerk to recognize any person, organization,
15    or event worthy of  public  commendation.  The  form  of  the
16    Certificate  of  Recognition shall be determined by the Clerk
17    with the approval of the Speaker.

18                             ARTICLE VI
19                       PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE

20        (House Rule 49)
21        49.  Voting.  The  Presiding  Officer   shall   put   all
22    questions  distinctly,  as follows:  "All those in favor vote
23    AYE, and those opposed vote NAY."  No member may vote on  any
24    question before the House unless on the floor before the vote
25    is  announced.  No  member  of a committee may vote except in
26    person at the time of the call of the  committee  vote.   Any
27    vote  of  the  House  shall  be  by  record  vote  whenever 5
28    Representatives shall so request or  whenever  the  Presiding
29    Officer shall so order.

30        (House Rule 50)
 
                            -44-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        50.  Announcing  a  Record  Vote.   When a record vote is
 2    requested, the Presiding Officer shall put the  question  and
 3    then  announce to the House: "The voting is open."  While the
 4    vote is being taken, the Presiding Officer shall state: "Have
 5    all voted who wish?"  The voting is closed when the Presiding
 6    Officer  announces:   "Take  the  Record."    The   Presiding
 7    Officer,   unless   an   intervening   motion   to   postpone
 8    consideration  by  the  Principal Sponsor is made, shall then
 9    announce the results of the record vote.  After the record is
10    taken, no member may vote, change his or her vote, or  remove
11    his or her vote as recorded.

12        (House Rule 51)
13        51.  Decorum.
14        (a)  When  any  member is about to speak to the House, he
15    or she shall  rise  and  address  the  Presiding  Officer  as
16    "Speaker".   The  Presiding  Officer,  upon  recognizing  the
17    member,  shall  address him or her by name, and thereupon the
18    engineer in charge of operating the microphones in the  House
19    shall  give  the  use of the microphone to the member who has
20    been so recognized.  The member  in  speaking  shall  confine
21    himself or herself to the subject matter under discussion and
22    avoid personalities.
23        (b)  Questions  affecting  the  rights,  reputation,  and
24    conduct  of  members  of  the  House  in their representative
25    capacity are questions of personal privilege.   A  matter  of
26    personal  explanation  does  not  constitute  a  question  of
27    personal privilege.
28        (c)  If  2  or  more  members rise at once, the Presiding
29    Officer shall name the member who is to speak first.
30        (d)  No person shall give any  signs  of  approbation  or
31    disapprobation while the House is in session.
32        (e)  Recognition  of  guests by any member is prohibited,
33    except that the Speaker or Presiding Officer may recognize an
 
                            -45-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    honored guest.
 2        (f)  While the Presiding Officer is putting  a  question,
 3    no member shall leave or walk across the House Chamber.  When
 4    a  member  is addressing the House, no member or other person
 5    entitled to the floor shall entertain  private  discourse  or
 6    pass between the member speaking and the Presiding Officer.
 7        (g)  In  case  of  any disturbance or disorderly conduct,
 8    the Speaker or Presiding Officer may order  that  the  lobby,
 9    gallery, or hallways adjoining the House Chamber be cleared.
10        (h)  No literature may be distributed on the House floor.
11        (i)  No  member may be absent from a session of the House
12    unless he or she has leave or is sick or his or  her  absence
13    is  unavoidable.   The  switch  to  the  electrical roll call
14    recording equipment located on the desk of any member who has
15    been excused or is absent shall be locked by  the  Clerk  and
16    shall not be unlocked until the member returns and files with
17    the Clerk a request to be shown as present on the quorum roll
18    call.

19        (House Rule 52)
20        52.  Debate.
21        (a)  All  legislative  measures, except those legislative
22    measures placed on the Consent Calendar under  Rule  42,  are
23    subject to a debate status as follows:
24             (1)  Short  Debate:  Debate is limited to a 2-minute
25        presentation  by  the  Principal  Sponsor  or  a   member
26        designated   by   the   Principal   Sponsor,  a  2-minute
27        presentation by a member in response, and one minute  for
28        the  Principal Sponsor to close debate, or yield to other
29        members; provided that at the request of 7 members before
30        the close of debate, the debate status shall be opened to
31        standard debate;
32             (2)  Standard  Debate:   Debate  is  limited  to   a
33        5-minute  presentation  by  the  Principal  Sponsor  or a
 
                            -46-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        member designated by the  Principal  Sponsor,  debate  by
 2        each  of  2  additional  proponents  of  the  legislative
 3        measure  and  by 3 members in response to the legislative
 4        measure, and 3 minutes for the Principal Sponsor to close
 5        debate, or yield to other members;
 6             (3)  Extended  Debate:   Debate  is  limited  to   a
 7        5-minute  presentation  by  the  Principal  Sponsor  or a
 8        member designated by the  Principal  Sponsor,  debate  by
 9        each  of  4  proponents  of the legislative measure and 5
10        members in response, and  5  minutes  for  the  Principal
11        Sponsor to close debate, or yield to other members;
12             (4)  Unlimited  Debate:   Debate  shall consist of a
13        10-minute presentation by  the  Principal  Sponsor  or  a
14        member  designated  by  the  Principal Sponsor, debate by
15        each  proponent  and  member  in   response   who   seeks
16        recognition,  and  5 minutes for the Principal Sponsor to
17        close debate, or yield to other members; or
18             (5)  Amendment Debate:  Debate on  floor  amendments
19        referred  to  the  House  from a committee, or discharged
20        from a committee, is limited to a  3-minute  presentation
21        by  the  Principal Sponsor, or a member designated by the
22        Principal Sponsor, debate by  one  proponent,  debate  by
23        each  of  2  members  in  response, and 3 minutes for the
24        Principal Sponsor to close  debate,  or  yield  to  other
25        members.
26        No  debate  is  in  order  on bills or resolutions on the
27    order of First Reading or Second Reading, except  for  debate
28    on floor amendments as provided in this Rule.
29        (b)  All  legislative  measures, except floor amendments,
30    referred to the House from a committee, or discharged from  a
31    committee, are automatically assigned standard debate status,
32    subject to subsection (c) of this Rule, except those assigned
33    to  the Consent Calendar or short debate status by a standing
34    committee or  a  special  committee.   All  floor  amendments
 
                            -47-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    referred  to the House from a committee, or discharged from a
 2    committee,  are  automatically  assigned   amendment   debate
 3    status, subject to subsection (c) of this Rule.
 4        (c)  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of these Rules
 5    to the contrary, the debate status of any legislative measure
 6    may be changed only (i) by the Speaker, as  defined  in  item
 7    (27)  of Rule 102, by filing a notice with the Clerk, or (ii)
 8    by the Rules Committee by motion approved by  a  majority  of
 9    those  appointed.   While  a  legislative  measure  is  being
10    considered  by  the  House,  the  debate  status  may also be
11    changed  by  unanimous  consent.   No  legislative   measure,
12    however,  may  be  placed  on the Consent Calendar under this
13    Rule. No legislative measure, except a floor  amendment,  may
14    be assigned amendment debate status under this Rule.
15        (d)  The  Speaker or Rules Committee, as the case may be,
16    shall notify the Clerk of any action  to  change  the  debate
17    status  of  any  legislative  measure.  The Clerk shall cause
18    that information to be reflected on  the  Daily  Calendar  on
19    subsequent legislative days, provided the legislative measure
20    is still before the House.
21        (e)  No  member  shall speak longer than 5 minutes at one
22    time or more than once on the same question except  by  leave
23    of  the  House.   The  Principal   Sponsor  of a measure or a
24    member designated by the Principal Sponsor, however, shall be
25    allowed to open  the  debate  and  to  close  the  debate  in
26    accordance  with subsection (a) of this Rule.  The provisions
27    of  this  subsection  (e)  are  subject  to  and  limited  by
28    subsections (a), (b), and (c) of  this  Rule.  A  member  may
29    yield  to  another  member the time allotted for the member's
30    debate.
31        (f)  The Presiding Officer shall allocate the  debate  on
32    each  legislative  measure  alternately, if possible, between
33    proponents and opponents of  the  legislative  measure  under
34    debate.
 
                            -48-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (g)  This Rule may not be suspended.

 2        (House Rule 53)
 3        53.  Written Statements.
 4        (a)  Any  member may submit a written statement regarding
 5    any bill, resolution, or floor amendment  considered  by  the
 6    House,  by  submitting that statement to the Clerk within one
 7    legislative day or 3 business  days,  whichever  is  shorter,
 8    after  the  day  on  which  the  bill,  resolution,  or floor
 9    amendment to which the comments relate was considered by  the
10    House.   The Clerk shall affix a time stamp to each statement
11    indicating the date on which  the  statement  was  submitted.
12    Each  statement shall indicate the member or members on whose
13    behalf the statement is submitted, the bill,  resolution,  or
14    floor  amendment  to which it applies, the names of any other
15    members mentioned  in  the  statement,  and  the  person  who
16    actually  submits the statement to the Clerk.  Each member on
17    whose behalf a statement is submitted is under an  obligation
18    to   ensure   that  all  required  information,  specifically
19    including the names of any other  members  mentioned  in  the
20    statement, is indicated at the time a statement is submitted.
21    Each   statement  shall  comply  with  standards  as  may  be
22    established by the Clerk with the approval  of  the  Speaker.
23    The  standards  established  by the Clerk, however, shall not
24    relate to the contents of the written  statement.  The  Clerk
25    shall  maintain  statements  that  comply  with this Rule and
26    established standards in files for each bill and  resolution.
27    A  statement  is  not  considered  filed  until the Clerk has
28    determined that it complies with this  Rule  and  established
29    standards.   The  Clerk shall notify the member or members on
30    whose behalf a statement was submitted if  the  statement  is
31    determined  not  to comply.  Statements filed under this Rule
32    shall be considered part of the transcript and made available
33    to the public.
 
                            -49-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (b)  If  a  statement  mentions   another   member,   the
 2    statement  shall  not  be  considered  filed until the member
 3    mentioned has an  opportunity  to  respond  as  a  matter  of
 4    personal  privilege.   The Clerk shall notify each member who
 5    is identified at the time a statement is submitted  as  being
 6    mentioned   in  the  statement.   The  member  identified  as
 7    mentioned in the statement shall have one legislative day  or
 8    3  business days, whichever is shorter, after notification by
 9    the Clerk  in  which  to  file  a  written  response  to  the
10    statement.    The   original  statement  and  any  responsive
11    statement shall both be considered  filed  at  the  close  of
12    business  on  the final day on which a response may be filed.
13    If, however, a  statement  is  submitted  mentioning  another
14    member  and the name of the member mentioned is not indicated
15    to the Clerk at the time of submission, the  statement  shall
16    be  stricken  at  the  request of the member mentioned in the
17    statement.  The Clerk  shall  notify  each  member  on  whose
18    behalf  the  statement  was  submitted that the statement has
19    been stricken from the record.
20        (c)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
21    vote of 71 members elected.

22        (House Rule 54)
23        54.  Motions.
24        (a)  The following are general rules for all motions:
25             (1)  Every  motion,  except  to  adjourn, recess, or
26        postpone consideration, shall be reduced  to  writing  if
27        ordered  by  the  Presiding  Officer.   Unless  otherwise
28        provided  in  these  Rules,  no second is required to any
29        motion presented to the House, or in any committee.   The
30        Presiding  Officer  may  refer  any  motion  to the Rules
31        Committee.
32             (2)  Before  the  House  debates   a   motion,   the
33        Presiding  Officer  shall  state  an  oral motion and the
 
                            -50-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        Clerk shall read aloud a  written  motion.  Each  motion,
 2        unless  otherwise  provided  in  these Rules, is assigned
 3        standard debate status, subject to Rule 52.
 4             (3)  After a  motion  is  stated  by  the  Presiding
 5        Officer  or  read  by  the  Clerk,  it  is  deemed in the
 6        possession of the House, but may be withdrawn at any time
 7        before decision with consent of a majority of the members
 8        elected.
 9             (4)  If a motion is divisible, any member  may  call
10        for a division of the question.
11             (5)  Any  question  taken under consideration may be
12        withdrawn, postponed, or tabled by unanimous consent  or,
13        if  unanimous consent is denied, by a motion adopted by a
14        majority of the members elected.
15        (b)  The Rule may be suspended only  by  the  affirmative
16    vote of 71 members elected.

17        (House Rule 55)
18        55.  Precedence of Motions.
19        (a)  When  a  question  is under debate, no motion may be
20    entertained except:
21             (1)  to adjourn to a time certain;
22             (2)  to adjourn;
23             (3)  to question the presence of a quorum;
24             (4)  to recess;
25             (5)  to lay on the table;
26             (6)  for the previous question;
27             (7)  to postpone consideration;
28             (8)  to commit or recommit; or
29             (9)  to amend, except as otherwise provided in these
30        Rules.
31        The foregoing motions have precedence  in  the  order  in
32    which they are listed.
33        (b)  During  a record vote, no motion (except a motion to
 
                            -51-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    postpone  consideration)  is  in  order   until   after   the
 2    announcement of the result of the vote.
 3        (c)  A  motion  to  commit  or  re-commit,  until  it  is
 4    decided,  precludes  all  amendments  and  debate on the main
 5    question.  A motion to postpone consideration,  until  it  is
 6    decided,  precludes  all  amendments  and  debate on the main
 7    question.

 8        (House Rule 56)
 9        56.  Verification.
10        (a)  After any  record  vote,  except  for  a  vote  that
11    requires  a specific number of affirmative votes and that has
12    not received  the  required  votes,  and  before  intervening
13    business,   it   is  in  order  for  any  member  to  request
14    verification of the results of the record vote.
15        (b)  In verifying a record vote,  the  Presiding  Officer
16    shall  instruct  the Clerk to call the names of those members
17    whose votes are to be verified.  The  member  requesting  the
18    verification  may thereafter identify those members he or she
19    wishes to verify.  If a member does not answer,  his  or  her
20    vote  shall  be stricken; the member's vote shall be restored
21    to the roll, however, if his or her  presence  is  recognized
22    before  the  Presiding  Officer announces the final result of
23    the verification.  The Presiding Officer shall determine  the
24    presence  or absence of each member whose name is called, and
25    shall then announce the results of the verification.
26        (c)  While the results  of  any  record  vote  are  being
27    verified,  it  is  in order for any member to announce his or
28    her presence on the floor and thereby have his  or  her  vote
29    verified.
30        (d)  A  request for a verification of the affirmative and
31    negative results of a record vote may be made  only  once  on
32    each record vote.
 
                            -52-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 57)
 2        57.  Appealing a Ruling.
 3        (a)  If  any  appeal  is  taken  from  a  ruling  of  the
 4    Presiding  Officer,  the Presiding Officer shall be sustained
 5    unless 71  of  the  members  elected  vote  to  overrule  the
 6    Presiding  Officer. A motion to appeal is not in order if the
 7    House has conducted intervening business since the ruling  at
 8    issue was made.
 9        (b)  If  any appeal is taken from a ruling of a committee
10    Chairperson,  the  Chairperson  shall  be  sustained   unless
11    three-fifths   of   those  appointed  vote  to  overrule  the
12    Chairperson.  A motion to appeal  is  not  in  order  if  the
13    committee  has  adjourned  or  recessed,  or  if  intervening
14    business  has  occurred.   In  the case of special committees
15    with Co-Chairpersons from different  political  parties,  the
16    "Chairperson" for purposes of this Rule is the Co-Chairperson
17    from the majority caucus.
18        (c)  In an appeal of a ruling of the Presiding Officer or
19    Chairperson, the question is:  "Shall the ruling of the Chair
20    be sustained?"
21        (d)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
22    vote of 71 members elected.

23        (House Rule 58)
24        58.  Discharge of Committee.
25        (a)  Any member may move that a standing committee  or  a
26    special  committee  be  discharged  from consideration of any
27    legislative measure assigned to  it  and  not  reported  back
28    unfavorably.
29        (b)  The  motion  must be in writing and shall be carried
30    on the Daily Calendar for the next legislative day under  the
31    order  of  "Motions".  No action shall be taken on the motion
32    until it is on the calendar.
33        (c)  If the motion receives an  affirmative  vote  of  60
 
                            -53-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    members,  the legislative measure subject to the motion shall
 2    be referred to the House and placed on the appropriate  order
 3    of business.
 4        (d)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
 5    vote of 71 members elected.

 6        (House Rule 59)
 7        59.  Previous Question.
 8        (a)  A motion for the previous question may  be  made  at
 9    any  time.   A  motion  for  the  previous  question  is  not
10    debatable  and  requires  the  affirmative vote of 71 members
11    elected.
12        (b)  The  previous  question  shall  be  stated  in   the
13    following  form:  "Shall the main question be put?" Until the
14    previous question is decided, all amendments and  debate  are
15    precluded.   When  it is decided that the main question shall
16    not be put, the main question remains under debate.
17        (c)  The effect of the main question being ordered is  to
18    put an end to all debate and bring the House to a direct vote
19    on  the  immediately  pending motion.  After a motion for the
20    previous question has been approved, unless the vote on  that
21    motion  suggests  the absence of a quorum, it is not in order
22    to move for adjournment or to make any other motion before  a
23    decision on the main question.
24        (d)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
25    vote of 71 members elected.

26        (House Rule 60)
27        60.  Tabling.
28        (a)  Except as otherwise provided in  subsection  (d),  a
29    motion  to  lay  on  the table applies only to the particular
30    proposition and is neither debatable nor amendable.
31        (b)  A  motion  to  table  a  bill  or  resolution  shall
32    identify the bill or resolution  by  number.   The  Principal
 
                            -54-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Sponsor of a bill or resolution may, with leave of the House,
 2    table that bill or resolution at any time.  A motion to table
 3    a committee bill that is before the House may be adopted only
 4    by the affirmative vote of a majority of those elected.
 5        (c)  The Principal Sponsor of a bill or resolution before
 6    a  committee may, with leave of the committee, table the bill
 7    or  resolution.   Upon  tabling,  the  Chairperson   of   the
 8    committee  shall  return the bill or resolution to the Clerk,
 9    noting thereon that it has been tabled.
10        (d)  A motion to table a committee amendment has priority
11    over a floor amendment.   Motions  to  table  amendments  are
12    debatable  and  may  be  adopted by the affirmative vote of a
13    majority vote of those elected.

14        (House Rule 61)
15        61.  Motion to Take from Table.
16        (a)  A  motion  to  take  from  the  table  requires  the
17    affirmative vote of a majority of those elected if the  Rules
18    Committee  has  previously recommended that action by written
19    notice filed with the Clerk; otherwise, a motion to take from
20    the  table  requires  the  affirmative  vote  of  71  members
21    elected.
22        (b)  A bill taken from the table shall be placed  on  the
23    Daily  Calendar  on  the order on which it appeared before it
24    was tabled.
25        (c)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
26    vote of 71 members elected.

27        (House Rule 62)
28        62.  Motion  to  Postpone  Consideration.   A  motion  to
29    postpone  consideration  on  a  bill or resolution may not be
30    made more than once on the same bill or  resolution.   Unless
31    otherwise  provided  by  these  Rules,  a  motion to postpone
32    consideration shall be granted as a matter of  privilege;  no
 
                            -55-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    motion to postpone consideration is in order, however, if the
 2    bill or resolution initially received a vote of fewer than 47
 3    of the members elected.

 4        (House Rule 63)
 5        63.  Motion  on  Different  Subject.   No motion or other
 6    legislative measure on a subject different  from  that  under
 7    consideration shall be admitted under color of amendment.

 8        (House Rule 64)
 9        64.  Division  of  Question.   If  the question in debate
10    contains several points, any member  may  have  the  question
11    divided.   On a motion to strike out and insert, it is not in
12    order to move for a division of the question.  The  rejection
13    of a motion to strike out and insert one proposition does not
14    prevent  a  motion  to  strike  out  and  insert  a different
15    proposition.

16        (House Rule 65)
17        65.  Reconsideration.
18        (a)  A member who voted  on  the  prevailing  side  of  a
19    record vote on a legislative measure still within the control
20    of  the  House   may on the same or the following legislative
21    day move to reconsider the vote.  The  motion  to  reconsider
22    may  be laid on the table without affecting the vote to which
23    it refers.  When the motion to reconsider is made during  the
24    last  3  days  of  April  or  any  time thereafter during the
25    regular session, or at any time  during  a  veto  or  special
26    session, any member may move that the vote on reconsideration
27    be   taken   immediately.    A  question  that  requires  the
28    affirmative vote of a majority of those elected  or  more  to
29    carry requires a majority of those elected to reconsider.
30        (b)  A motion to reconsider a record vote on the adoption
31    of an amendment to a bill may be made only on Second Reading.
 
                            -56-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (c)  If  a  motion  to reconsider is made under this Rule
 2    and the motion is later tabled, the  question  shall  not  be
 3    further  reconsidered.   This subsection (c) may be suspended
 4    only by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.
 5        (d)  When a motion to reconsider is made within the  time
 6    prescribed by these Rules, the Clerk shall not allow the bill
 7    or  other  subject  matter  of  the motion to pass out of the
 8    possession of the House  until  after  the  motion  has  been
 9    decided or withdrawn.  Such a motion shall be deemed rejected
10    if laid on the table.
11        (e)  A  Representative  who  voted "present" or failed to
12    vote on a question does  not  have  the  right  to  move  for
13    reconsideration.
14        (f)  Upon  a  motion  to reconsider the vote on the final
15    passage of any bill, the affirmative vote of  a  majority  of
16    those elected is required to reconsider.

17        (House Rule 66)
18        66.  Motion to Adjourn.
19        (a)  A  motion to adjourn is in order at any time, except
20    when a prior motion to  adjourn  has  been  defeated  and  no
21    intervening business has transpired.
22        (b)  A   motion  to  adjourn  is  neither  debatable  nor
23    amendable.
24        (c)  The Clerk shall enter in the  Journal  the  hour  at
25    which every motion to adjourn is made.
26        (d)  Unless  the  Presiding Officer otherwise orders, the
27    standing hour to which the  House  adjourns  is  12:00  noon,
28    except  on the last day of a week in which the House convenes
29    in regular, veto, or  special  session,  in  which  case  the
30    standing hour to which the House adjourns is 12:30 p.m.
31        (e)  A  motion  to adjourn for more than 3 days is not in
32    order unless both  chambers  of  the  General  Assembly  have
33    adopted  a  joint  resolution  permitting  that  adjournment.
 
                            -57-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Notwithstanding   any  other  provision  of  these  Rules,  a
 2    resolution filed under this Rule may be referred to the Rules
 3    Committee by the Presiding  Officer  or  may  be  immediately
 4    considered and adopted by the House.

 5        (House Rule 67)
 6        67.  Adoption and Amendment to or Suspension of Rules.
 7        (a)  Adoption  of  Rules.  At the commencement of a term,
 8    the House shall adopt new rules of organization and procedure
 9    by resolution setting forth those rules  in  their  entirety.
10    The  resolution  must be adopted by the affirmative vote of a
11    majority of those  elected.  These  Rules  of  the  House  of
12    Representatives  of  the 91st General Assembly are subject to
13    revision or amendment only in accordance with this Rule.
14        (b)  Rules  may  be  amended  only  by  resolution.   Any
15    resolution to amend  these  Rules  shall  show  the  proposed
16    changes  in the existing rules by underscoring all new matter
17    and by crossing out with a line all  matter  that  is  to  be
18    omitted or superseded.
19        (c)  Any  resolution  proposing  to amend a House Rule or
20    any Joint House-Senate Rule,  upon  initial  reading  by  the
21    Clerk,  is  automatically  referred  to  the Rules Committee.
22    Resolutions  to  amend  the  House   Rules   or   any   Joint
23    House-Senate  Rules  may  be  initiated  and sponsored by the
24    Rules Committee; those resolutions shall not be referred to a
25    committee and may be immediately considered  and  adopted  by
26    the  House.  Those  resolutions  shall  be  assigned standard
27    debate status, subject to Rule 52.
28        (d)  A resolution to amend the House Rules or  any  Joint
29    House-Senate  Rules  that has been reported "do adopt" or "do
30    adopt as amended" by a majority of  those  appointed  to  the
31    Rules  Committee  requires the affirmative vote of a majority
32    of those elected  for  adoption  by  the  House.   Any  other
33    resolution  proposing  to  amend the House Rules or any Joint
 
                            -58-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    House-Senate Rules requires the affirmative vote of 71 of the
 2    members elected for adoption by the House.
 3        (e)  No House Rule or any Joint House-Senate Rule may  be
 4    suspended  except by unanimous consent of the members present
 5    or upon a motion supported by affirmative vote of a  majority
 6    of  those  elected  unless a higher number is required in the
 7    Rule sought to be suspended.  A committee may not suspend any
 8    Rule.
 9        (f)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
10    vote of 71 members elected.

11        (House Rule 68)
12        68.  Motion  to  Commit or Recommit.  No motion to commit
13    or recommit a legislative measure to committee, being decided
14    in the negative, shall again be allowed on the same  day,  or
15    at the same stage of the legislative measure.

16        (House Rule 69)
17        69.  Effective Date.
18        (a)  A  bill passed after May 31 of a calendar year shall
19    not become effective prior to June 1  of  the  next  calendar
20    year  unless  an  earlier  effective date is specified in the
21    bill and it is approved by the affirmative vote of 71 members
22    elected.
23        (b)  If a majority of those elected, but fewer  than  71,
24    vote  affirmatively  for a bill on Third Reading after May 31
25    and the bill specifies an effective  date  earlier  than  the
26    following  June 1, the bill has not passed, but the Principal
27    Sponsor  has  the  right  to  have  the  bill   automatically
28    reconsidered  and returned to the order of Second Reading for
29    an amendment  to  remove  the  earlier  effective  date.  The
30    amendment,  if  offered  and  referred  to  the  House  by  a
31    committee, shall be reproduced and placed on the desks of the
32    members,  in the same manner as provided for bills under Rule
 
                            -59-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    39, before the bill is taken up again on the order  of  Third
 2    Reading.

 3        (House Rule 70)
 4        70.  Home  Rule.   No  bill denies or limits any power or
 5    function of a home rule unit under paragraph (g),  (h),  (i),
 6    (j),  or  (k)  of  Sec.  6 of Article VII of the Constitution
 7    unless there is specific language  limiting  or  denying  the
 8    power or function and the language specifically sets forth in
 9    what  manner  and to what extent it is a denial or limitation
10    of the power or function of a home rule unit. If  a  majority
11    of those elected, but fewer than 71, vote affirmatively for a
12    bill  on  Third Reading that requires the affirmative vote of
13    71 members elected to deny or limit a power of  a  home  rule
14    unit,  the bill has not passed, but the Principal Sponsor has
15    the right to have the  bill  automatically  reconsidered  and
16    returned  to  the order of Second Reading for an amendment to
17    remove those effects of the bill. The amendment, if  referred
18    to  the  House by a committee, shall be reproduced and placed
19    on the desks of the members, in the same manner  as  provided
20    for bills under Rule 39, before the bill is taken up again on
21    the order of Third Reading.

22                             ARTICLE VII
23                        CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

24        (House Rule 71)
25        71.  Conflicts of Interest.
26        (a)  A Committee on Conflicts of Interest is created.  It
27    shall  consist  of  4  members appointed by the Speaker and 4
28    members appointed by the Minority Leader.  The Speaker  shall
29    designate  one  of  the  members as Chairperson. The Minority
30    Leader shall designate one of the minority caucus members  as
31    Minority   Spokesperson.  The  Committee  shall  not  have  a
 
                            -60-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    Vice-Chairperson.
 2        (b)  The Committee shall study the problems of  conflicts
 3    of   interest   in   relation   to  the  responsibilities  of
 4    legislators and the  laws  relating  thereto,  including  the
 5    Illinois   Governmental  Ethics  Act.   The  Committee  shall
 6    develop guidelines for the conduct of members  in  regard  to
 7    conflicts  of  interest, including procedures for appropriate
 8    disclosure of the  existence  of  conflicts.   The  Committee
 9    shall  also  recommend  changes  in  the law determined to be
10    desirable to assure members  appropriate  guidance  in  their
11    conduct.  Any report of the Committee shall be filed with the
12    Clerk, who shall reproduce the report and  distribute  it  to
13    each  member,  in the same manner as provided for bills under
14    Rule 39.

15                            ARTICLE VIII
16                            JOINT ACTION

17        (House Rule 72)
18        72.  Concurring in or Receding from Amendments.
19        (a)  If a bill or resolution  is  received  back  in  the
20    House  with one or more amendments added by the Senate, it is
21    in order for the Principal Sponsor to present  a  motion  "to
22    concur"  or  "not  to concur and to ask the Senate to recede"
23    with respect to each, several, or all  of  those  amendments.
24    Any  2  members  may  demand a separate record vote on any of
25    those amendments.
26        (b)  When the Senate has refused to concur in one or more
27    amendments added to a bill or resolution by the House and has
28    returned the bill or resolution to the House with  a  message
29    requesting  the  House  to  recede  from  one  or more of its
30    amendments, it is in  order  for  the  Principal  Sponsor  to
31    present  a  motion  "to  recede" from the House amendments or
32    "not to recede and to request a conference".  Any  2  members
 
                            -61-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    may demand a separate record vote on any of those amendments.

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

29        (House Rule 74)
30        74.  Conference Committee Reports.
31        (a)  No   subject   matter   shall  be  included  in  any
32    conference committee report on any bill unless  that  subject
 
                            -62-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    matter  directly relates to the matters of difference between
 2    the  House  and  Senate  that  have  been  referred  to   the
 3    conference   committee  unless  the  Rules  Committee,  by  a
 4    majority vote of the members appointed, determines  that  the
 5    proposed  subject  matter  is  of  an emergency nature, is of
 6    substantial importance to the operation of government, or  is
 7    in the best interests of Illinois.
 8        (b)  No  conference committee report shall be received by
 9    the Clerk or acted upon by  the  House  unless  it  has  been
10    signed by at least 6 conferees. The report shall be signed in
11    duplicate.   One  of  the  reports  shall  be  filed with the
12    Secretary of the Senate and one with the Clerk.   The  report
13    shall contain the agreements reached by the committee.
14        (c)  If  the  conference  committee determines that it is
15    unable to reach agreement, the committee shall so  report  to
16    each  chamber of the General Assembly and request appointment
17    of a second conference committee.  If there is agreement, the
18    committee shall so report to each chamber.

19        (House Rule 75)
20        75.  House Consideration of Joint Action.
21        (a)  No  joint  action  motion  for   final   action   or
22    conference  committee  report  may be considered by the House
23    unless it has first been referred to the House by  the  Rules
24    Committee  or  a  standing  committee or special committee in
25    accordance with Rule 18, or unless the joint action motion or
26    conference committee report  has  been  discharged  from  the
27    Rules Committee under Rule 18. Joint action motions for final
28    consideration  and conference committee reports referred to a
29    standing  committee  or  special  committee  by   the   Rules
30    Committee  may  not be discharged from the standing committee
31    or special committee.  This subsection (a) may  be  suspended
32    by unanimous consent.
33        (b)  No  conference committee report may be considered by
 
                            -63-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    the House unless it has been reproduced  and  placed  on  the
 2    members'  desks,  in  the  same  manner as provided for bills
 3    under Rule 39, for one full session day before  May  1st,  or
 4    one full hour on or after May 1st.
 5        (c)  Before   any   conference  committee  report  on  an
 6    appropriation bill is considered by the House, the conference
 7    committee report shall first  be  the  subject  of  a  public
 8    hearing  by  a standing Appropriations Committee or a special
 9    committee  (the  conference  committee  report  need  not  be
10    referred to an Appropriations Committee or special committee,
11    but instead may remain before  the  Rules  Committee  or  the
12    House,  as  the  case  may  be).  The  hearing  shall be held
13    pursuant  to  not  less  than  one  hour  advance  notice  by
14    announcement on the House floor, or one day advance notice by
15    posting on  the  House  bulletin  board.   An  Appropriations
16    Committee  or  special  committee  shall not issue any report
17    with respect to the conference committee report following the
18    hearing.
19        (d)  Any House Bill amended in the Senate and returned to
20    the House for concurrence in the Senate amendment  shall  lie
21    upon  the desk of the Clerk for not less than one hour before
22    being further considered.
23        (e)  No House Bill that is returned  to  the  House  with
24    Senate  amendments  may  be  called  except  by the Principal
25    Sponsor, or by a chief co-sponsor with  the  consent  of  the
26    Principal Sponsor. This subsection may not be suspended.
27        (f)  Except  as otherwise provided in Rule 74, the report
28    of a conference committee  on  a  non-appropriation  bill  or
29    resolution  shall  be  confined to the subject of the bill or
30    resolution referred to the conference committee.  The  report
31    of  a  conference committee on an appropriation bill shall be
32    confined to the subject of appropriations.

33        (House Rule 76)
 
                            -64-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        76.  Action on Conference Committee Reports.
 2        (a)  Each chamber of the General  Assembly  shall  inform
 3    the  other  by  message of any action taken with respect to a
 4    conference committee report.  Copies of all papers  necessary
 5    for  a  complete  understanding of the action shall accompany
 6    the message.  The original bill or resolution shall remain in
 7    the chamber of origin.
 8        (b)  No conference committee report may be called  except
 9    by the Principal Sponsor of the bill for which the conference
10    committee  was  appointed.  A  chief  co-sponsor  may  call a
11    conference committee report with the consent of the Principal
12    Sponsor. This subsection may not be suspended.
13        (c)  If either chamber refuses to adopt the report of the
14    conference committee, or the first  conference  committee  is
15    unable  to  reach  agreement,  either  chamber  may request a
16    second conference committee.  When such a  request  is  made,
17    each  chamber shall again appoint a conference committee.  If
18    either chamber refuses  to  adopt  the  report  of  a  second
19    conference  committee,  the  2 chambers shall have adhered to
20    their disagreement, and the bill or resolution is lost.

21                             ARTICLE IX
22                               VETOES

23        (House Rule 77)
24        77.  Recording of Vetoes.  Upon the receipt by the  House
25    of  any  bill  returned  by  the  Governor  under  any of the
26    provisions of Article IV, Sec. 9  of  the  Constitution,  the
27    Clerk  shall  enter  the  objections  of  the Governor on the
28    Journal, and shall distribute copies of all veto messages  to
29    each  member's  desk, together with copies of the vetoed bill
30    or item, as soon as practical, in  the  same  manner  as  for
31    bills under Rule 39.
 
                            -65-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 78)
 2        78.  Amendatory Vetoes.
 3        (a)  The Principal Sponsor of a bill that has been passed
 4    by  the  General Assembly may request the Clerk to notify the
 5    Governor that the Principal Sponsor wishes to be consulted by
 6    the Governor or his  or  her  designee  before  the  Governor
 7    returns  the  bill together with specific recommendations for
 8    change under subsection (e) of Section 9 of Article IV of the
 9    Illinois Constitution.
10        (b)  Any bill returned  by  the  Governor  together  with
11    specific  recommendations  for change under subsection (e) of
12    Section 9 of Article  IV  of  the  Illinois  Constitution  is
13    automatically  referred  to  the Rules Committee and shall be
14    considered as provided in this Rule.
15        (c)  The Governor's specific recommendations  for  change
16    with  respect  to  a  bill  returned  under subsection (e) of
17    Section 9 of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution shall be
18    limited to addressing the Governor's objections  to  portions
19    of  a bill the general merit of which the Governor recognizes
20    and shall not alter the fundamental  purpose  or  legislative
21    scheme set forth in the bill as passed.
22        (d)  Any  bill  returned  by  the  Governor together with
23    specific recommendations for change shall be reviewed by  the
24    Rules  Committee.   The  Rules  Committee  shall  examine the
25    Governor's specific recommendations for change and  determine
26    by   a  majority  of  the  members  appointed  whether  those
27    recommendations  comply  with  the  standard  set  forth   in
28    subsection (c).  Any bill that the Rules Committee determines
29    is  in  compliance  with subsection (c) of this Rule shall be
30    subject to action by the Rules Committee in the  same  manner
31    as  floor  amendments,  joint  action motions, and conference
32    committee reports under Rule 18(e).
33        (e)  This rule may not be suspended.
 
                            -66-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 79)
 2        79.  Motions to Consider Vetoes.  For  purposes  of  this
 3    Article,  the  term  "motions"  means  motions  to  accept or
 4    override a veto of the Governor.   Motions  with  respect  to
 5    bills  returned  by the Governor may be made by the Principal
 6    Sponsor,  the  committee  Chairperson  in  the  case   of   a
 7    committee-sponsored  bill,  or  if  Co-Chairpersons have been
 8    appointed, by the Co-Chairperson of the  majority  caucus  in
 9    the  case of special committee-sponsored bills. Motions shall
10    be filed in writing with the Clerk.   All  motions  shall  be
11    assigned standard debate status, subject to Rule 52.

12        (House Rule 80)
13        80.  Consideration of Motions.
14        (a)  The  vote to override a veto of a bill vetoed in its
15    entirety shall be by record vote and shall be entered on  the
16    Journal. The form of motion with respect to these bills shall
17    be:    "I   move   that   ________   Bill   _____   do  pass,
18    notwithstanding the veto of the Governor."
19        (b)  The vote to override an item veto shall be by record
20    vote as to each item separately and shall be entered  on  the
21    Journal.   The  form  of motion with respect to an item shall
22    be:  "I move that the item on page ____, line ____,  of  ____
23    Bill  _____  do  pass,  notwithstanding  the item veto of the
24    Governor."
25        (c)  The vote to restore an item that  has  been  reduced
26    shall  be by record vote as to each item separately and shall
27    be entered on the Journal.  The form of motion  with  respect
28    to  an  item  shall  be:  "I move that the item on page ____,
29    line ____, of ____ Bill ____ be restored, notwithstanding the
30    item reduction of the Governor."
31        (d)  A   bill    returned    together    with    specific
32    recommendations  of the Governor may be acted upon, by record
33    vote, in either of the following manners:
 
                            -67-               LRB9101282REmb
 1             (1)  By   a   motion   to   accept   the    specific
 2        recommendations of the Governor. The form of motion shall
 3        be:   "I  move  to accept the specific recommendations of
 4        the Governor as to _____ Bill _____ in manner and form as
 5        follows:  (inserting herein the language deemed necessary
 6        to effectuate the specific recommendations)."; or
 7             (2)  By considering the bill as a  vetoed  bill  and
 8        overriding the recommendation and passing the bill in its
 9        original  form.   The  form  of motion shall be:  "I move
10        that  _____  Bill  _____  do  pass,  notwithstanding  the
11        specific recommendations of the Governor.".

12        (House Rule 81)
13        81.  Vetoed Bills Considered in Entirety.  If a  bill  is
14    returned  by the Governor containing more than one item veto,
15    reduction  veto,  specific  recommendation  for  change,   or
16    combination  of  them,  the  bill  shall be acted upon in its
17    entirety before the bill is released from the custody of  the
18    House.

19        (House Rule 82)
20        82.  Disposition  of  Vetoes.   When  a  bill or item has
21    received the  affirmative  vote  of  the  number  of  members
22    elected  necessary  under  the  Constitution,  the  Presiding
23    Officer  shall  declare that the bill or item has been passed
24    or restored over the  veto  of  the  Governor,  or  that  the
25    specific  recommendations  for  change have been approved, as
26    the case may be.  The bill shall then be attested to  by  the
27    Clerk  who  shall  note thereon the day the bill passed.  The
28    bill and  the  objections  of  the  Governor  shall  then  be
29    immediately   delivered   to   the   Senate.   When  specific
30    recommendations  have  been  accepted,  then  the   accepting
31    language shall be attached to the original bill, and the bill
32    shall be delivered to the Senate.
 
                            -68-               LRB9101282REmb
 1                              ARTICLE X
 2           ELECTION CONTESTS AND QUALIFICATIONS CHALLENGES

 3        (House Rule 83)
 4        83.  Election Contests and Qualifications Challenges.
 5        (a)  An   election  contest  places  in  issue  only  the
 6    validity of the results of an election of  a  member  to  the
 7    House  in a representative district.  An election contest may
 8    result only in a determination of  which  candidate  in  that
 9    election  was  properly  elected  to  the  House and shall be
10    seated.
11        (b)  A qualifications challenge places in issue only  the
12    qualifications  of an incumbent member of the House under the
13    Constitution, or the legality of an appointment of  a  person
14    as a member of the House to fill a vacancy.  A qualifications
15    challenge  may  result  only  in a determination of whether a
16    member of the House is properly seated.
17        (c)  Election  contests  and  qualifications   challenges
18    shall be brought and conducted as provided in these Rules.
19        (d)  If  an  election contest or qualifications challenge
20    is filed with the Clerk, the Speaker shall create an Election
21    Contest or Qualifications Challenge Committee,  as  the  case
22    may be, within 3 legislative days by filing a notice with the
23    Clerk.   The  creation of any committee under this Rule shall
24    be  governed  by  Rule   10.    The   election   contest   or
25    qualifications  challenge  shall be automatically referred to
26    the Election Contest or Qualifications  Challenge  Committee,
27    as  the  case  may be. For purposes of this Article, the term
28    "committee" means only the Election Contest or Qualifications
29    Challenge  Committees  created   under   this   Rule.    This
30    subsection may not be suspended.
31        (e)  The  committee  may  adopt  rules to govern election
32    contests and qualifications challenges, but  those  committee
33    rules must be consistent with these Rules, must be filed with
 
                            -69-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    the  Clerk,  and must be made available to all parties and to
 2    the  public.   Any  committee  rule  shall  be   subject   to
 3    amendment, suspension, or repeal by House resolution.

 4        (House Rule 84)
 5        84.  Initiating Election Contests.
 6        (a)  Election   contests   may   be  brought  only  by  a
 7    registered voter of  the  representative  district  or  by  a
 8    member of the House.
 9        (b)  Election   contests  may  be  brought  only  by  the
10    procedures and within the  time  limits  established  by  the
11    Election  Code.   Notice  of  intention  to  contest shall be
12    served on the person certified as elected to the  House  from
13    the   representative   district   within   the   time  limits
14    established by the Election Code.  The requirements  of  this
15    subsection apply to a member of the House appointed to fill a
16    vacancy  the  same  as if that member had been elected to the
17    House.
18        (c)  Within 10 days after the convening of the  House  in
19    January   following  the  general  election  contested,  each
20    contestant shall file with the Clerk a petition  of  election
21    contest  and shall serve the petition on the incumbent member
22    of the House from the representative district.  A petition of
23    election contest shall allege the contestant's qualifications
24    to bring the contest and to serve as a member of  the  House,
25    that  he  or  she  believes  that a mistake or fraud has been
26    committed in specified precincts in the counting, return,  or
27    canvass  of the votes, or that there was some other specified
28    irregularity in the conduct  of  the  election  in  specified
29    precincts.   A  petition  of election contest shall contain a
30    prayer specifying the relief requested and the  precincts  in
31    which  a  recount or other inquiry is desired.  A petition of
32    election contest shall be verified by affidavit  swearing  to
33    the  truth  of  the allegations or based upon information and
 
                            -70-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    belief, and shall be accompanied by proof of service  on  all
 2    respondents.
 3        (d)  A  notice of intent to contest may not be amended to
 4    cure a defect under the statutory requirements.   A  petition
 5    of  election contest, if filed and served after the notice of
 6    intention to contest, may not raise points not  expressed  in
 7    the notice.
 8        (e)  The   incumbent   member   of  the  House  from  the
 9    representative  district  is  a  necessary   party   to   the
10    initiation of an election contest.

11        (House Rule 85)
12        85.  Initiating Qualifications Challenges.
13        (a)  Qualifications  challenges  may be brought only by a
14    registered  voter  of  the  representative  district  of  the
15    representative challenged or by a member of the House.
16        (b)  Qualifications challenges must be brought within  90
17    days  after  the  day  the challenged member takes his or her
18    oath of office as a member of the House, or  within  90  days
19    after  the day the petitioner first learns of the information
20    on which the challenge is based, whichever occurs later.
21        (c)  A  qualifications  challenge  shall  be  brought  by
22    filing a petition of qualifications challenge with the Clerk,
23    and by serving a copy  of  the  petition  on  the  respondent
24    member  of  the  House.   The petition must be accompanied by
25    proof of personal service upon the respondent member and must
26    be verified  by  affidavit  swearing  to  the  truth  of  the
27    allegations or based upon information and belief.  A petition
28    of  qualifications  challenge  shall set forth the grounds on
29    which the respondent member is alleged to be constitutionally
30    unqualified, or on which his or her appointment to the  House
31    is  claimed to be legally improper, the qualifications of the
32    petitioner to bring the challenge, and a prayer for relief.
 
                            -71-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        (House Rule 86)
 2        86.  Contests and Challenges; Due Process.
 3        (a)  Election contests and challenges shall be heard  and
 4    determined  as  expeditiously  as  possible  under  adversary
 5    procedures  wherein  each  party  to  the  proceedings  has a
 6    reasonable opportunity  to  present  his  or  her  claim,  to
 7    present any defense and arguments, and to respond to those of
 8    his  or  her  opponents.   All  parties may be represented by
 9    counsel.
10        (b)  Election  contests  and  qualifications   challenges
11    shall   be  heard  and  determined  in  accordance  with  the
12    applicable provisions of the Election Code and other Illinois
13    statutes,  the Illinois Constitution, and the  United  States
14    Constitution.  Judicial decisions that bear on a point of law
15    in  a  contest  or  challenge  shall  be  admissible  in  the
16    arguments  of the parties and the deliberations and decisions
17    of the committee.  Judicial decisions applicable to  a  point
18    of law or to a fact situation to the committee shall be given
19    weight as precedent.
20        (c)  In  addition  to  notice  of meetings required under
21    these Rules, the committee and any  subcommittee  shall  give
22    notice  to  all parties reasonably in advance of each meeting
23    or other proceeding.  The committee shall also give notice of
24    all rules, timetables, or deadlines adopted by the committee.
25    Notice under this subsection shall be in writing and shall be
26    given either personally with receipt, or  by  certified  mail
27    (return  receipt requested)  addressed to the party at his or
28    her place of residence, and to his or her attorney of  record
29    at the attorney's office if so requested by the party.

30        (House Rule 87)
31        87.  Committee  Proceedings  and  Powers  in Contests and
32    Challenges.
33        (a)  All   proceedings   of   the   committee   and   any
 
                            -72-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    subcommittees concerning election contests and qualifications
 2    challenges  shall  be  transcribed  by  a   certified   court
 3    reporter.   Copies  of the transcript shall be made available
 4    to the members of the committee and to the parties.
 5        (b)  The committee may dismiss  an  election  contest  or
 6    qualifications  challenge,  or  may determine to proceed to a
 7    recount or other inquiry.  The committee may limit the issues
 8    to be determined in a contest or challenge, except that  when
 9    a  recount  is conducted in an election contest, any precinct
10    timely requested by  any  party  to  be  recounted  shall  be
11    recounted by the committee.
12        (c)  In   conducting   inquiries,   investigations,   and
13    recounts  in election contests and qualifications challenges,
14    the committee has the  power  to  send  for  and  compel  the
15    attendance  of witnesses and the production of books, papers,
16    ballots, documents, and records by  subpoena  signed  by  the
17    Chairperson  of  the committee as provided by law and subject
18    to Rule 4(c)(9).    In  conducting  proceedings  in  election
19    contests  and  qualifications  challenges, the Chairperson of
20    the committee and the Chairperson  of  any  subcommittee  may
21    administer  oaths  to  witnesses, as provided by law, and for
22    this purpose a subcommittee is deemed to be  a  committee  of
23    the House.
24        (d)  The   committee   may   issue   commissions  by  its
25    Chairperson to any officer authorized to take depositions  of
26    any  necessary  witnesses  as  may  be  permitted by law.  In
27    recounting the ballots in any election contest,  however,  no
28    person  other than a member of the committee shall handle any
29    ballots, tally sheets, or other  election  materials  without
30    consent of the committee or subcommittee.  The responsibility
31    for the actual recounting of ballots may not be delegated.
32        (e)  The   committee   shall  maintain  an  accurate  and
33    complete record of proceedings in every election contest  and
34    qualifications  challenge.   That  record  shall  include all
 
                            -73-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    notices and pleadings, the transcripts and roll  call  votes,
 2    all  reports  and  dissents,  and  all  documents  that  were
 3    admitted  into  the proceeding.  The committee shall file the
 4    record with the Clerk of the House upon the adoption  of  its
 5    final  report.   The  record  shall  then  be  available  for
 6    examination in the Clerk's office.
 7        (f)  With  the approval of the Speaker, the committee may
 8    employ clerks, stenographers, court  reporters,  professional
 9    staff, and messengers.

10        (House Rule 88)
11        88.  Adoption of Reports in Contests and Challenges.
12        (a)  All  final  decisions  of the committee regarding an
13    election contest or qualification challenge shall be approved
14    by a majority of the members appointed to the  committee  and
15    reported  in  writing  to the House.  Reports shall include a
16    specific recommendation to the House as to the disposition of
17    the contest  or  challenge.   Final  reports  following  full
18    inquiry on the merits of a contest or challenge shall contain
19    findings of fact and, when necessary, conclusions of law.
20        (b)  Any  member of the committee may file a dissent from
21    a report of the committee, a minority report,  or  a  special
22    concurrence  with  the  majority  report or with any minority
23    report.
24        (c)  A subcommittee shall  report  to  the  committee  in
25    writing  in  the  same  form  as  required  for the committee
26    report.  Subcommittee members may file dissents, reports, and
27    special concurrences.
28        (d)  Reports shall not be adopted by the committee  or  a
29    subcommittee  until  a  hearing  has  been held thereon, with
30    notice to all parties and a reasonable opportunity to examine
31    and respond to a proposed majority report.
32        (e)  Reports of the committee shall  be  filed  with  the
33    Clerk,  reproduced,  and  placed on the members' desks, along
 
                            -74-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    with any dissents, minority reports, or special concurrences,
 2    in the same manner as provided for bills under Rule 39.   The
 3    report  shall  be  listed  on  the calendar under the heading
 4    "Report of Election Contest"  or  "Report  of  Qualifications
 5    Challenge".   The  report  shall  be  carried  on  the  Daily
 6    Calendar  for  2  legislative  days  before any action by the
 7    House.
 8        (f)  The House shall  adopt  the  majority  report  or  a
 9    minority  report  in  an  election  contest or qualifications
10    challenge or shall refuse  to  adopt  any  report  filed  and
11    re-refer  the  contest  or  challenge  to  the  committee for
12    further proceedings or for a modified report.  A report  that
13    has  the effect of unseating an incumbent member of the House
14    shall be adopted only by the affirmative vote of  60  members
15    elected.
16        (g)  Each party to a contest or challenge shall file with
17    the Clerk of the committee within 10 days after the filing of
18    the  final report a detailed statement of attorney's fees and
19    expenses incurred by that party in connection with the  case.
20    The   committee  shall  make  recommendations  to  the  House
21    concerning reimbursement of attorney's fees and the  expenses
22    of  the  parties.   The recommendation shall not exceed a sum
23    that is reasonable, just, and proper.

24                             ARTICLE XI
25                       DISCIPLINE AND PROTEST

26        (House Rule 89)
27        89.  Disorderly Behavior.
28        (a)  In accordance with Article  IV,  Sec.  6(d)  of  the
29    Constitution,  the  House  may  punish any of its members for
30    disorderly behavior and, with the concurrence  of  two-thirds
31    of  the members elected, expel a member (but not for a second
32    time for the same offense).  The reason for  expulsion  shall
 
                            -75-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    be entered upon the Journal with the names and votes of those
 2    members voting on the question.
 3        (b)  In  accordance  with  Article  IV, Sec. 6(d)  of the
 4    Constitution, the House during  its  session  may  punish  by
 5    imprisonment  any  person, not a member, guilty of disrespect
 6    to the House by disorderly or contemptuous  behavior  in  its
 7    presence.  That imprisonment shall not extend beyond 24 hours
 8    at  one  time  unless  the  person  persists in disorderly or
 9    contemptuous behavior.

10        (House Rule 90)
11        90.  Protest.  Any 2 members have the  right  to  dissent
12    and  protest,  in  respectful  language,  against  any act or
13    resolution that they may think injurious to the public or  to
14    any  individual, and have the reason of their protest entered
15    upon the Journal.  When  by  motion  a  majority  of  members
16    determines  that the language of a protest is not respectful,
17    the protest shall be referred back to the protesting members.

18                             ARTICLE XII
19                      DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS

20        (House Rule 91)
21        91.  Initiating Disciplinary Proceedings.
22        (a)  Disciplinary proceedings may be commenced by  filing
23    with  the  Speaker  a  petition  for  a special investigating
24    committee. The petition must be signed by at least one member
25    of the House, and shall contain suggested charges  which,  if
26    true,  may  subject  the  member  named  in  the  petition to
27    disciplinary action by the House.  If the petition is  signed
28    by  3 or more members of the House, the Speaker shall appoint
29    3 members of the majority  caucus  and  the  Minority  Leader
30    shall  appoint  3 members of the minority caucus to a special
31    investigating committee.  If the petition is signed by  fewer
 
                            -76-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    than  3  members  of the House, the Speaker shall consult the
 2    member named in the petition, and unless that member  objects
 3    in writing, the Speaker and the Minority Leader shall appoint
 4    a  special  investigating  committee.  If the member named in
 5    the  petition  objects  to  the  appointment  of  a   special
 6    investigating committee, any member who signed a petition for
 7    an  investigation  under this Rule may introduce a resolution
 8    to initiate disciplinary proceedings.   Unless  a  resolution
 9    initiating  disciplinary proceedings is introduced under this
10    Rule, the contents of a petition for a special  investigating
11    committee  shall  be  confidential  except  as  to the member
12    named, the members signing it, the Speaker, and  the  members
13    of a special investigating committee.
14        (b)  A  resolution  to  initiate disciplinary proceedings
15    shall be substantially in the following form:
16        "BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF  REPRESENTATIVES  OF  THE
17    ______________  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY  OF  THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
18    that  a  Special  Investigating  Committee  be  appointed  to
19    investigate   allegations   concerning   the    conduct    of
20    Representative  _______________________,  which, if true, may
21    subject that member to disciplinary action by  the  House  of
22    Representatives."
23        A  resolution to initiate disciplinary proceedings may be
24    introduced only as permitted under this Rule.  It is improper
25    to attempt to initiate disciplinary proceedings in any manner
26    not authorized by this Rule.
27        (c)  A resolution to  initiate  disciplinary  proceedings
28    shall  not  be  assigned  to  committee,  notwithstanding the
29    provisions of Rule  15.  The  resolution  shall  lie  on  the
30    Speaker's  Table  and  shall  be  called within 5 legislative
31    days.
32        (d)  A resolution to initiate disciplinary proceedings is
33    debatable.
34        (e)  A resolution initiating disciplinary proceedings may
 
                            -77-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    be adopted  only  by  the  affirmative  vote  of  60  members
 2    elected.
 3        (f)  This   Rule  may  be  suspended  only  by  unanimous
 4    consent.

 5        (House Rule 92)
 6        92.  Preliminary Investigation.
 7        (a)  Pursuant to a petition or upon  the  adoption  of  a
 8    resolution  initiating  disciplinary proceedings, as provided
 9    in Rule 91, a special investigating committee consisting of 6
10    members shall be appointed, of whom 3 shall be  appointed  by
11    the Speaker from the majority caucus and 3 shall be appointed
12    by the Minority Leader from the minority caucus.  The Speaker
13    shall  appoint  the  Chairperson of the special investigating
14    committee  from  among  the  6  members.  Sponsors   of   the
15    initiating  resolution  may  not  be appointed to the special
16    investigating committee.
17        (b)  The special investigating committee shall conduct  a
18    thorough  investigation  of  all  allegations  and charges of
19    impropriety concerning the member  named  in  the  initiating
20    resolution  that are brought to its attention to determine if
21    reasonable grounds exist to bring charges against the  member
22    for  formal  disciplinary  proceedings  by  the  House.   The
23    special investigating committee shall meet with the Principal
24    Sponsor of the initiating resolution at its initial meeting.
25        At  the  initial  meeting,  the  Principal Sponsor of the
26    initiating   resolution   shall   submit   to   the   special
27    investigating committee a written list of suggested  charges.
28    The   list   shall   define  the  scope  of  the  inquiry  or
29    investigation pursuant to the initiating resolution.  If  the
30    Principal  Sponsor  of  the  initiating  resolution  fails to
31    submit  a  list,  the  special  committee  shall   report   a
32    resolution of exoneration.
33        The  Principal Sponsor of the initiating resolution shall
 
                            -78-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    also  submit  to  the  special  investigating  committee  all
 2    information he or she may have relevant to  the  charges  and
 3    allegations.
 4        (c)  The  special  investigating  committee shall conduct
 5    all of  its  proceedings  in  executive  session,  and  shall
 6    maintain  strict  confidence as to all of its proceedings and
 7    all witnesses, testimony, information, and exhibits that  may
 8    come before it.  No transcript or record of proceedings shall
 9    be  taken.   This  subsection  shall be adopted and effective
10    upon an affirmative vote of 79 members.  This subsection  may
11    not be suspended.
12        (d)  Except  for  its  initial  meeting,  any  posting or
13    notice requirements do not apply to meetings of  the  special
14    investigating  committee,  but  the  Chairperson  shall  give
15    notice  of  all  meetings  to  the  member  named  in and the
16    Principal Sponsor of the initiating resolution and shall give
17    reasonable notice to the  public.   The  member  who  is  the
18    subject of the initiating resolution has the right to counsel
19    during proceedings of the special investigating committee.
20        (e)  Except   for   subsection  (c),  this  Rule  may  be
21    suspended only by the affirmative vote of 71 members elected.

22        (House Rule 93)
23        93.  Report of Special Investigating Committee.
24        (a)  The special investigating committee shall report  in
25    writing.    All  reports  shall  be  signed  by  the  members
26    supporting the report.
27        (b)  If  a  majority  of  the  members  of  the   special
28    committee  determines  to  prefer charges, it shall file with
29    the Clerk a formal statement of charges  and  specifications,
30    and  shall  appoint  2  members  of  the  House, one from the
31    majority caucus and one from the minority caucus, who are not
32    members of the special investigating committee to be managers
33    for the House at the hearing on the charges.   The  statement
 
                            -79-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    of  charges  shall  constitute  the  report  of  the  special
 2    committee,  but  the  special committee in its discretion may
 3    file a supplementary  report  stating  its  reasons  for  not
 4    bringing  any  other  charges that may have been suggested to
 5    it.
 6        (c)  If the special committee determines  not  to  prefer
 7    charges,   it   shall   file  with  the  Clerk  a  resolution
 8    exonerating the member named  in  the  initiating  resolution
 9    together with a report stating its reasons for not preferring
10    charges.
11        (d)  If  the special committee cannot by majority vote of
12    its  members  determine  whether  to  prefer   charges,   the
13    committee   shall   file  with  the  Clerk  a  resolution  of
14    exoneration and a report stating the affirmative reasons  for
15    not  preferring  charges.  That report shall be signed by all
16    members of the special investigating committee, regardless of
17    their original vote in the committee proceedings  on  whether
18    to prefer charges.
19        (e)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
20    vote of 71 members elected.

21        (House Rule 94)
22        94.  Select Committee on Discipline.
23        (a)  When charges are preferred against any member of the
24    House under Rule 93, the  Speaker  and  the  Minority  Leader
25    shall  appoint a committee, to be known as a select committee
26    on discipline, to hear and determine the charges. The  select
27    committee shall consist of 12 members of the House, 6 of whom
28    shall  be  appointed  by the Speaker from the majority caucus
29    and 6 of whom shall be appointed by the Minority Leader  from
30    the minority caucus.  The Speaker shall appoint a Chairperson
31    of the select committee from among the 12 members.  No member
32    who  served  on  the  special  investigating committee or any
33    sponsor of the initiating resolution may be appointed to  the
 
                            -80-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    select committee.
 2        (b)  All appointments to a select committee on discipline
 3    shall  be  completed  and  the select committee shall convene
 4    within 30 days after the filing  of  charges  for  which  the
 5    committee is appointed.
 6        (c)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
 7    vote of 79 members elected.

 8        (House Rule 95)
 9        95.  Hearings on Disciplinary Charges.
10        (a)  Proceedings   before   the   select   committee   on
11    discipline shall be adversary in form, with the managers  for
12    the  House  presenting the case for disciplinary action.  The
13    respondent member may be represented by counsel.
14        (b)  Stipulations of fact  shall  be  encouraged  by  the
15    select committee.
16        (c)  The   rules   of  evidence  applicable  to  criminal
17    proceedings apply except as may be waived by the managers  or
18    respondent, as may be appropriate.

19        (House Rule 96)
20        96.  Report of Select Committee.
21        (a)  The  committee  shall vote on each specification and
22    charge, except that a vote of exoneration on a  charge  shall
23    be  a  vote  as to all specifications under that charge.  All
24    final votes on the merits of a charge or specification  shall
25    be by record vote.
26        (b)  A   finding   of   fault   or   exoneration  on  any
27    specification or charge requires an  affirmative  vote  of  a
28    majority of the members appointed to the select committee.
29        (c)  The committee shall file a report of its findings on
30    each  specification  and  charge  and  a recommendation as to
31    penalty with the Clerk.  The report shall state  the  reasons
32    for  each  conclusion  and  recommendation.  If the committee
 
                            -81-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    finds the respondent member exonerated regarding any  charge,
 2    it shall report a resolution of exoneration together with its
 3    report.   If the select committee finds the respondent member
 4    at fault regarding any charge, it shall report  a  resolution
 5    embodying its findings and recommended penalty.
 6        (d)  If  a  select  committee  reports a finding of fault
 7    regarding any charge, any member of the select committee  may
 8    file  a minority report with the Clerk either dissenting from
 9    a finding, reason, or recommendation in the  majority  report
10    or  stating a concurrence on different grounds.  A dissenting
11    report may include a resolution  of  exoneration  as  to  any
12    charge or specifications.
13        (e)  When  a select committee has found a member at fault
14    regarding   a   charge,   the   committee   shall   adopt   a
15    recommendation for disciplinary action.   The  committee  may
16    recommend  a  reprimand, a censure, expulsion from the House,
17    or  that  no  penalty  be  invoked.   The  recommendation  on
18    disciplinary action  requires  an  affirmative  vote  of  the
19    majority of the members appointed to the select committee.
20        (f)  This  Rule  may be suspended only by the affirmative
21    vote of 71 members elected.

22        (House Rule 97)
23        97.  House Action on Disciplinary Reports.
24        (a)  The report of a select committee, together with  any
25    dissenting   or  concurring  reports,  and  any  accompanying
26    resolution, shall be reproduced and placed  on  the  members'
27    desks,  in  the  same manner as for bills under Rule 39.  The
28    report shall be placed on  the  calendar  under  the  heading
29    "Report of Select Committee on Discipline".  The report shall
30    be  carried  on  the  Daily  Calendar  for 2 legislative days
31    before any action by the House.
32        (b)  If the report of a select  committee  or  a  special
33    investigating committee exonerates the respondent member, the
 
                            -82-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    House  shall  take  up the resolution or re-refer the case to
 2    the committee for further proceedings.
 3        (c)  If the select committee reports a finding  of  fault
 4    as  to any charge, the House shall take up the resolution for
 5    disciplinary action together with any  minority  resolutions.
 6    The  House  may amend a resolution for disciplinary action to
 7    decrease the recommended penalty.
 8        (d)  The House shall take action by a record vote on each
 9    resolution.  Adoption of a resolution finding the  respondent
10    member  at  fault  regarding charges and specifications shall
11    dispose of any minority resolution of  exoneration  on  those
12    charges and specifications.  If the House adopts a resolution
13    of  exoneration as to any charge or specification, a majority
14    resolution shall be amended in accord with  that  disposition
15    of  those  charges and specifications before it may be called
16    for a final vote.  If the adoption of exoneration resolutions
17    disposes of all the charges and specifications in a  majority
18    resolution  for  disciplinary action, the majority resolution
19    shall be tabled.
20        (e)  Following record votes on all majority and  minority
21    resolutions  arising  out  of  a  select committee finding of
22    fault on a charge or  specification,  if  there  remains  any
23    charge  or  specification  on  which  the  House  has neither
24    exonerated the member or adopted a finding of fault, then any
25    member may introduce and move a resolution of exoneration  on
26    that charge or specification.
27        (f)  A  resolution  finding a member at fault regarding a
28    charge may be adopted only by  the  affirmative  vote  of  71
29    members elected, except that a resolution the effect of which
30    is  to  expel a member may be adopted only by the affirmative
31    vote of 79 members elected.
32        (g)  This Rule may be suspended only by  the  affirmative
33    vote of 79 members elected.
 
                            -83-               LRB9101282REmb
 1                            ARTICLE XIII
 2                          FORCE AND EFFECT

 3        (House Rule 98)
 4        98.  Applicability.   The  meetings  and  actions  of the
 5    House, including all of its committees, are governed by these
 6    House Rules.

 7        (House Rule 99)
 8        99.  Parliamentary Authority.  The rules of parliamentary
 9    practice appearing in the latest edition of Robert's Rules of
10    Order govern the House in all cases to which  they  apply  so
11    long as they are not inconsistent with these Rules.

12        (House Rule 100)
13        100.  Certification  by  Speaker.   With  respect to each
14    bill that is certified by  the  Speaker  in  accordance  with
15    Article  IV,  Sec.  8(d)  of  the  Constitution,  there is an
16    irrebuttable presumption that the procedural requirements for
17    passage have been met.

18        (House Rule 101)
19        101.  Effective Date.  These rules are in full force  and
20    effect  upon  their  adoption, and shall remain in full force
21    and effect except as amended in accordance with these  Rules,
22    or  until  superseded  by  new  rules  adopted as part of the
23    organization of a newly-constituted General Assembly  at  the
24    commencement of a term.

25                             ARTICLE XIV
26                             DEFINITIONS

27        (House Rule 102)
28        102.  Definitions.   As  used  in these Rules, terms have
 
                            -84-               LRB9101282REmb
 1    the meanings ascribed to them as follows, unless the  context
 2    clearly requires a different meaning:
 3             (1)  Chairperson.     "Chairperson"    means    that
 4        Representative  designated  by  the  Speaker  to serve as
 5        chair of a committee.
 6             (2)  Co-Chairperson.    "Co-Chairperson"   means   a
 7        Representative designated by  the  Speaker  to  serve  as
 8        co-chair of a special committee.
 9             (3)  Clerk.   "Clerk" means the elected Clerk of the
10        House.
11             (4)  Committee.  "Committee" means  a  committee  of
12        the  House  and  includes a standing committee, the Rules
13        Committee,  a  special  committee,   the   Committee   on
14        Conflicts of Interest, committees created under Article X
15        and  Article  XII of these Rules, and a subcommittee of a
16        committee.   "Committee"  does  not  mean  a   conference
17        committee,  and  the  procedural  and notice requirements
18        applicable to  committees  do  not  apply  to  conference
19        committees.
20             (5)  Constitution.     "Constitution"    means   the
21        Constitution of the State of Illinois.
22             (6)  General Assembly.  "General Assembly" means the
23        91st General Assembly of the State of Illinois.
24             (7)  House.    "House"   means    the    House    of
25        Representatives of the General Assembly.
26             (8)  Joint  Action  Motions.  "Joint action motions"
27        means the following motions before the House:  to  concur
28        in   a  Senate  amendment,  to  non-concur  in  a  Senate
29        amendment, to recede from a House amendment, to refuse to
30        recede  from  a  House  amendment,  to  request  that   a
31        conference   committee  be  appointed,  and  to  adopt  a
32        conference committee report.
33             (9)  Legislative Digest.  "Legislative Digest" means
34        the Legislative Synopsis and Digest that is  prepared  by
 
                            -85-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        the Legislative Reference Bureau of the General Assembly.
 2             (10)  Legislative  Measures.  "Legislative measures"
 3        means  all  matters  brought   before   the   House   for
 4        consideration, whether originated in the House or Senate,
 5        and  includes  bills, amendments, resolutions, conference
 6        committee  reports,  motions,  messages,   notices,   and
 7        Executive Orders from the executive branch.
 8             (11)  Majority.   "Majority"  means  a  majority  of
 9        those  members  present and voting on a question.  Unless
10        otherwise specified with respect to  a  particular  House
11        Rule,  for  purposes of determining the number of members
12        present and voting on a question, a "present" vote  shall
13        not be counted.
14             (12)  Majority Caucus.  "Majority caucus" means that
15        group  of  Representatives from the numerically strongest
16        political party in the House.
17             (13)  Majority of  those  Appointed.   "Majority  of
18        those  appointed" means a majority of the total number of
19        Representatives  authorized  under  these  Rules  to   be
20        appointed to a committee.
21             (14)  Majority of those Elected.  "Majority of those
22        elected"   means  a  majority  of  the  total  number  of
23        Representatives entitled to  be  elected  to  the  House,
24        regardless   of   the  number  of  elected  or  appointed
25        Representatives actually serving in office.  So  long  as
26        118  Representatives  are  entitled  to be elected to the
27        House, "majority of those elected" means  60  affirmative
28        votes;  71  affirmative  votes  means three-fifths of the
29        members  elected;  and   79   affirmative   votes   means
30        two-thirds of the members elected.
31             (15)  Member.    "Member"  means  a  Representative.
32        Where the context so requires, "member" may also  mean  a
33        Senator of the Illinois Senate.
34             (16)  Members  Appointed.  "Members appointed" means
 
                            -86-               LRB9101282REmb
 1        the total  number  of  Representatives  authorized  under
 2        these Rules to be appointed to a committee.
 3             (17)  Members  Elected.  "Members elected" means the
 4        118 Representatives entitled to be elected to the  House,
 5        regardless   of   the  number  of  elected  or  appointed
 6        Representatives actually serving in office.
 7             (18)  Minority Caucus.  "Minority caucus" means that
 8        group of  Representatives  from  the  second  numerically
 9        strongest political party in the House.
10             (19)  Minority  Leader.  "Minority Leader" means the
11        Minority Leader of the House elected under Rule 2.
12             (20)  Minority       Spokesperson.         "Minority
13        spokesperson" means that Representative designated by the
14        Minority  Leader to serve as the minority spokesperson of
15        a committee.
16             (21)  Perfunctory  Session.   "Perfunctory  session"
17        means  the  convening  of  the  House,  pursuant  to  the
18        scheduling of the Speaker, for purposes  consistent  with
19        Rule 28.
20             (22)  Presiding  Officer.  "Presiding Officer" means
21        that Representative serving as the presiding  officer  of
22        the  House, whether that Representative is the Speaker or
23        another Representative designated by  the  Speaker  under
24        Rule 4.
25             (23)  Principal  Sponsor.  "Principal sponsor" means
26        the  first  listed  House  sponsor  of  any   legislative
27        measure;  with  respect to a standing committee-sponsored
28        bill or resolution,  it  means  the  Chairperson  of  the
29        committee;  with respect to a special committee-sponsored
30        bill or resolution, it means the Co-Chairperson from  the
31        majority caucus.
32             (24)  Record  Vote.   "Record  vote" means a vote by
33        ayes and nays entered on the journal.
34             (25)  Representative.   "Representative"  means  any
 
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 1        duly   elected   or   duly   appointed   Illinois   State
 2        Representative, and means the same as "member".
 3             (26)  Senate.  "Senate"  means  the  Senate  of  the
 4        General Assembly.
 5             (27)  Speaker.   "Speaker"  means the Speaker of the
 6        House elected as provided in Rule 1.
 7             (28)  Term.  "Term"  means  the  2-year  term  of  a
 8        General Assembly.
 9             (29)  Vice-Chairperson.    "Vice-Chairperson"  means
10        that Representative designated by the Speaker to serve as
11        Vice-Chairperson of a committee.

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