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Iowa General Assembly – Legislative Session Week 10

By Sydney J. Gangestad
March 18, 2024
  • Iowa
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With the end of the second legislative funnel, all eyes turn to the House and Senate Unfinished Business Calendar. Starting this week, the Senate can only consider House bills, House Joint Resolutions, and Unfinished Business, and the House can only consider only Senate bills, Senate Joint Resolutions, and Unfinished Business (Joint Rule 20); this Joint Rule allows for chambers to clear calendars of lingering policy issues.

Now that the Revenue Estimating Committee (REC) has met and provided its revenue estimate, the legislature can begin working in earnest to put together a budget for the Governor to approve. While budget discussions have been ongoing since the Governor submitted her budget proposal in January, the March REC provides the final guidance needed to begin making funding decisions for FY 2025.

The priorities laid out by the Governor continue to drive policy discussions as well. After the first funnel, she had this to say:

“My legislative priorities focus on improving literacy, teacher salaries, and special education, aligning our mental health and substance use regions to better serve Iowans, extending postpartum coverage for women in need, cutting taxes, and further strengthening our laws on foreign ownership of land.” 

Except for the foreign ownership of land (which she already signed into law), all of her other stated priorities remain alive either in bill form or in discussion.

With soil temperatures rising, March Madness in the air, and four-and-a-half weeks left until scheduled adjournment, there is much work left to be done before the legislature can adjourn and turn its attention to election season.

Dead or Alive?

Here is a quick take on key bills and their status after the second funnel—

BillNumberStatus
Behavioral Health RegionsHF 2509/SF 2354Alive
Expanding Postpartum Medicaid CoverageHF 2583/SF 2251Alive
Maternal Support ProgramHF 2267/SF 2252Alive
Prescription-Free ContraceptivesHF 2584Dead
Constitutional Amendment on Increasing Income Tax RatesHSB 721/SJR 2003Alive
House Income TaxHSB 543Alive
Senate Income TaxSF 2398Alive
E-VerifySF 108Dead
Exploitation of a Minor via Modified ImagesSF 2243To Gov
Defining Sex at Birth on IDsHF 2389Dead
Gender Identity in the Iowa Civil Rights ActHF 2082Dead
Hands-Free and Traffic CamerasSF 2337Alive
Road Use Tax FundSSB 3184Alive
Arming TeachersHF 2586Alive
School Safety InfrastructureHF 2652Alive
House AEA BillHF 2612Alive
Senate AEA BillSF 2386Alive
Storm WaterSF 455Alive
Work-Based LearningSF 2260Alive

The Chambers have yet to agree on the State Supplemental Aid (School Funding) for FY 2025. Both the House and Senate have placed their respective SSA bills on the Unfinished Business Calendar so they will remain eligible for consideration (HF2613/SF2258).

Governor Priorities

Compared to the first year of this General Assembly, the Governor’s priorities outlined in the Condition of the State in January are moving at a much slower pace. Here is a brief overview of where bills introduced by the Governor stand at the second funnel:

Working TitleHouseSenate
Behavioral Health Service SystemHF 2509 Passed HHS, in AppropriationsSF 2354 Passed HHS in Appropriations
Individual Income Tax, Property Tax, and State FundsHSB 543 Not advancingSF2398 Passed Ways and Means, placed on Unfinished Business calendar
State Government Reorganization, Code ChangesHF 2550 Passed State Government, in Ways and MeansSF 2377 Passed State Government, in Ways and Means
Area Education AgenciesHSB 542 Tabled (House introduced & passed their own version of the AEA bill)SF 2386 Passed Education, on Unfinished Business calendar
Literacy Requirements, Students and Teacher Preparation ProgramsHF 2618 Passed Education, on Unfinished Business calendarSSB 3155 Not advancing
Work-Based LearningHF 2516 Passed Appropriations subcommitteeSF 2260 Passed Workforce, in Appropriations
Postpartum Coverage, MedicaidHF 2583 Passed HHS, on Unfinished Business calendarSF 2251 Passed Senate
Administrative Rules, Regulatory Analyses and AuthorityHSB 696 Not advancingSF 2370 Passed Commerce, in State Government
Definition of Sex, Public Records and Statutory ConstructionHF 2389 Not advancingNo Senate Companion
Agricultural Land, Foreign OwnershipSF 2204 SubstitutedSF 2204 Signed by Governor
Dispensing of Self-Administered Hormonal ContraceptivesHF 2584 Passed HHS, placed on calendarNo Senate Companion

By the Numbers

So far this session, there have been over 1,500 bills introduced. Only 16 bills, a mere 1%, have made their way to the Governor’s desk. Typically, the likelihood of a bill making it through the lawmaking process and being signed by the Governor hovers just under 2%.

Bills Introduced by House894
Bills Introduced by Senate607
Total Bills & Resolutions Introduced1521
Bills to Governor16
Bills Signed by Governor1

After a bill has passed both chambers and is officially enrolled (signed by the President of the Senate and Speaker of the House) the bill is sent to the Governor for final action. The Governor must take final action on all bills passed by the General Assembly, either signing, vetoing, or taking no action. During the legislative session, the Governor has three calendar days to act on a bill once it is officially enrolled and messaged to her office (Note: although bills are automatically enrolled after final chamber action, there may be intentional or unintentional delays in official enrollment after final passage of a bill).

Below is a complete list of the bills awaiting enrollment/message to the Governor and bills signed by the Governor this session.

BillTitleDate Enrolled
HF 2101Water system purchases2/26/2024
HF 2175Extends the repeal date of the Iowa Cell Siting Act.2/26/2024
HF 2265Increases the time for notice of non-renewal/renewal of a personal lines insurance policy.2/26/2024
HF 2277Prohibits certain conduct of a brewer with regard to wholesaler agreements.2/26/2024
HF 2400Permits 3rd party access to dental provider care network under certain conditions.2/26/2024
SF 2096Repeals gender balance requirements for state boards and commissions.2/26/2024
SF 2161Increases the penalties for knowingly making swatting reports.2/26/2024
SF 2204Establishes registration requirements for foreign ownership of agricultural land.2/26/2024
SF 2291Brokerage agreements and broker powers.2/27/2024
SF 2160Creates new definitions and requirements for ambulatory surgical centers.2/27/2024
SF 2095Exercise of religion.02/29/2024
HF 2394Wholesaling of residential property.03/04/2024
SF 295Creation, administration, and termination of adult and minor guardianships and conservatorships.03/05/2024
SF 2243Sexual exploitation of a minor through altered images.03/06/2024
SF 2262Probation officer’s access to confidential information filed with the court for securing an arrest or search warrant.03/11/2024

Revenue Estimating Conference

The REC projected that the state would bring $9.626 billion in FY 2024 (the fiscal year that ends June 30); this would be a net revenue decrease of about 2.2% from FY 2023. Last week’s projection was about $120 million lower than the REC predicted in December; at that time, they projected $9.746 billion in revenue for FY 2024.

The REC also projected a slight increase into FY 2025 (which begins July 1), projecting a 0.7% increase which will result in about $9.697 billion in revenue. In contrast, the REC also projected a slight decrease for FY 2026, projecting a 1% decrease which will result in about $9.600 billion in revenue.

By law, lawmakers are required to use the lower estimate from March to craft their budgets for FY 2025. Also, by law, Iowa’s state budget cannot exceed 99% of state revenue each year.  Governor Kim Reynolds made her budget proposal in January using the December estimate.  She recommended a total appropriation of $8.92 billion for FY 2025 (more than $1 billion less than the projected revenue that year).

With the state revenue numbers agreed upon, lawmakers can begin conversations related to the development of the FY 2025 budget.

Legislative Activity

Local Government

Stormwater

The House reconsidered SF 455 last Monday and passed it 53-46, reversing the vote from the previous week where the bill failed 44-49. The bill prohibits local regulations on stormwater runoff from being more restrictive than the requirements set by the Department of Natural Resources. An amendment accepted last week allows cities and counties to impose more restrictions if they pay for the increased cost of implementation. Because the bill was amended in the House, it returns to the Senate for consideration of the House amendment – they can either pass the bill as amended and send it to the Governor or insist on the Senate version.

June Primary Filing Deadline

The deadline for filing for the June primary was March 15. Statewide offices are not up for re-election this year, including the Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, Secretary of Agriculture, or Attorney General.

Partisan Offices on the 2024 Primary Election Ballot

Full List of Iowa 2024 Primary Candidates

The deadline for filing for the June primary was March 15. Statewide offices are not up for re-election this year, including the Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor of State, Treasurer of State, Secretary of Agriculture, or Attorney General.

Full-List-of-Primary-Candidates-in-Iowa-for-2024-1Download

What’s next?

Budget season is upon us. Leaders and Chairs have the information they need from the REC to begin dialing in their budget targets; we expect to see budget targets as early as next week. 

Additionally, as appropriations and the state budget become evident, Republican lawmakers may focus their energy on finalizing a proposal on income tax reform in the coming weeks, which has been a top priority since the start of session. House and Senate leadership have not yet worked out a unified proposal. Senator Dan Dawson and Representative Bobby Kauffman have each introduced property tax legislation and will need to agree on a plan to send to the Governor if anything related to taxes is going to move this year.

Tax reform, education policy, and budgeting are likely to be the highlights in the coming weeks and in final negotiations leading up to (or past) the scheduled 100th Day of Session on April 16. The full 2024 Session Timetable can be found here.

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2024 Elections, Dentons Davis Brown, Iowa Bills, Iowa General Assembly, Joint Rule 20, Legislative Session Week 10, REC
Sydney J. Gangestad

About Sydney J. Gangestad

Sydney is an attorney and lobbyist with over seven years of public policy experience. In her various policy roles, she has developed a fundamental understanding of the legislative process and a non-partisan and bi-partisan approach to lobbying to help advance clients’ legislative agendas.

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