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The Reference Committee of the Ohio House of Representatives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Roscoe Baker
Affiliation:
Ohio State University

Extract

In 1921, the House of Representatives of the Ohio General Assembly established a committee of eight members whose duty it was to scan all bills introduced for the purpose of determining whether they were frivolous or irrelevant, not introduced in good faith, or duplications of existing law. When this committee had satisfied itself on these points, bills were to be reported back to the House with recommendations of assignment to appropriate standing committees, thus relieving the speaker of this particular duty. In 1929, the rule covering the functions of this Reference Committee was amended so as to permit it to recommend changes, combine bills, and give its approval to “the form and legal effect” of bills. Other changes in 1937 and 1939 dealt with the number of members serving on the committee, and allowed the committee eight legislative days, instead of six, for disposing of bills. The rule under which the committee now functions is as follows:

“When a bill has been read the first time, it shall be referred to the Reference Committee for its consideration and report within eight legislative days after such reference. If it be apparent to said committee that any bill is of a frivolous nature, or that it was not introduced in good faith, or that it is a duplication of a House bill, or can easily be handled as an amendment to a House bill already introduced, or that it is in conflict with or a duplication of an existing statute without making proper provision for the repeal or amendment of such existing statute, said committee shall report said bill back to the House for its return to the author with a notation thereon of the reason for its return.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1940

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References

1 Rules of the House of Representatives, 98rd General Assembly, pp. 19–21 (1939–40).

2 This was done in three cases in 1927. See infra, p. 310.

3 Rules of the House of Representatives, 1939–40, pp. 21–22.

4 Constitution of Ohio, Sec. 8, Art. 3.

5 All these are approximate figures.

6 It is to be noted that the trend in recommending that bills be “not printed” is upward. In the 1939 session, 23 per cent of the bills introduced were so recommended. The cost of printing bills averages approximately eight dollars a page.

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