What Is Interim Study?
What Is Interim Study? By Chris Micheli
For those who watched or participated in the Assembly Public Safety Committee hearing on seven fentanyl bills on April 27, 2023, you would have heard that one bill was sent to “interim study.” Such a motion has not been regularly made in many years, so a short refresher may be in order.
Obviously, a committee in the
California Legislature can pass a bill, hold a bill, or defeat a bill. For bills that are held in committee, there
are some subtle differences, as set forth below:
·
Held in Committee – this means a bill failed to get
sufficient votes to pass out of committee.
·
Held
under Submission – this means an action taken by a committee when a bill is
heard in committee and there is an indication that the author and the committee
members want to work on or discuss the bill further, but there is no motion for
the bill to progress out of committee.
This does not preclude the bill from being set for another hearing.
·
Held
without Recommendation – this means an action taken by a committee when a bill
is heard in committee and there is no indication that the committee wants the
bill to progress out of committee. There
is no motion for the bill to progress out of committee. This does not preclude
the bill from being set for another hearing.
·
Interim
Study – this means the assignment of the subject matter of a bill to the
appropriate committee for study during the interim recess.
·
Put Over – this means when action is delayed on a legislative measure until a
future date without jeopardy to the measure.
The Senate Rules do not discuss “interim study.” However,
Assembly Rule 59, titled “Subject Matter of Bill Recommended for Interim
Study,” does. AR 59 provides:
Whenever it is the decision of a standing committee that a bill referred to that committee shall not be given a do-pass recommendation, but that the subject matter of the bill should be referred for study, that standing committee shall retain the bill in its possession and report its recommendation to the Assembly that the subject matter of the bill be referred to the Committee on Rules for that committee’s assignment of the subject matter to an appropriate committee. Nothing in this rule shall be construed to prohibit a committee from subsequently reporting the bill to the Assembly with a do-pass or do-pass as amended recommendation or from reporting it out of committee without further action on the final day of the session.
When are “interim study” bills
heard? Normally, it is after adjournment during the first year of the 2-year
California Legislative Session. Joint Rule 51(a) specifies the calendar for the
first year of the regular session. JR 51(a)(4) provides for the “Interim Study
Recess—The Legislature shall be in recess from September 14 until the first
Monday in January, except when the first Monday is January 1 or January 1 is a
Sunday, in which case, the following Wednesday.”
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