Red Tape Reduction Commission; established, report. (SB1449)

Introduced By

Sen. Amanda Chase (R-Midlothian) with support from co-patrons Sen. Tommy Norment (R-Williamsburg), and Sen. Glen Sturtevant (R-Midlothian)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Department of Planning and Budget; establishment of the Division of Regulatory Management and the Red Tape Reduction Commission; review of regulatory requirements; report. Creates the Division of Regulatory Management (the Division) within the Department of Planning and Budget to develop and maintain a state regulatory baseline of all current state regulatory requirements. The bill defines a regulatory requirement as any action required to be taken or information required to be provided in accordance with a statute, regulation, or policy in order to access government services or operate and conduct business. The bill also provides that after the regulatory baseline has been established, any subsequent regulatory requirement proposed by an agency that is not included in the initial state regulatory baseline is considered a new regulatory requirement and requires the approval of the Division before it may be enacted. The bill also creates the Red Tape Reduction Commission to review current state regulatory requirements and provide recommendations to the Governor and General Assembly on measures to reduce the baseline regulatory requirements. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Failed

History

DateAction
01/16/2017Presented and ordered printed 17103899D
01/16/2017Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology
01/30/2017Impact statement from DPB (SB1449)
01/30/2017Reported from General Laws and Technology with substitute (10-Y 5-N) (see vote tally)
01/30/2017Committee substitute printed 17104871D-S1
01/30/2017Substitute bill reprinted 17104871D-S1
01/30/2017Rereferred to Finance
02/02/2017Impact statement from DPB (SB1449S1)
02/02/2017Reported from Finance with amendment (11-Y 5-N) (see vote tally)
02/03/2017Constitutional reading dispensed (38-Y 0-N 1-A) (see vote tally)
02/06/2017Read second time
02/06/2017Reading of substitute waived
02/06/2017Committee substitute agreed to 17104871D-S1
02/06/2017Reading of amendment waived
02/06/2017Committee amendment agreed to
02/06/2017Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute with amendment SB1449ES1
02/06/2017Printed as engrossed 17104871D-ES1
02/07/2017Impact statement from DPB (SB1449ES1)
02/07/2017Read third time and passed Senate (21-Y 19-N) (see vote tally)
02/09/2017Placed on Calendar
02/09/2017Read first time
02/09/2017Referred to Committee on General Laws
02/14/2017Reported from General Laws (15-Y 7-N) (see vote tally)
02/14/2017Referred to Committee on Appropriations
02/21/2017Left in Appropriations

Video

This bill was discussed on the floor of the General Assembly. Below is all of the video that we have of that discussion, 1 clip in all, totaling 2 minutes.

Transcript

This is a transcript of the video clips in which this bill is discussed.



Sen. Jeremy McPike (D-Dale City): HAVE LEAD AND LEAD COMPONENTS WITHIN THE SCHOOL BUILDINGS. LEAD IS A KNOWN ISSUE THAT INHIBITS BRAIN DEVELOPMENT AND SPECIFICALLY DANGEROUS TO KIDS. THIS ISSUE, FRANKLY, MY OWN PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND, I TESTED, DID OVER 500 TESTING SAMPLES THIS PAST YEAR, SURPRISINGLY CAME BACK WITH 25 HIGH RESULTS BO 20 PARTS PER -- ABOVE 20 PARTS PER BLIN WHICH REQUIRE REMEDIATION. BASICALLY THE ISSUE IS BOTH WITHIN THE PINING AS WELL AS SOLDER JOINTS, MANY OF THE COMPONENTS STILL CONTAIN LEAD AND HOW YOU REPLETATE IS IDENTIFY AND TEST THE SOURCES. THIS BILL SIMPLY LAYS OUT THE SCHOOL SYSTEMS CREATE A PLAN TO TEST AND THAT CAN BE OVER MULTIPLE YEARS. THEY CAN DO AN ASSORTMENT OF WAYS TO DO THAT TO GO THROUGH. WHERE THEY DO FIND RESULTS ABOVE 20 PARTS PER BILLION, THEY ARE TO TAKE THAT FAUCET OR FOUNTAIN OUT OF SERVICE AND REMEDIATE. OBVIOUSLY IT JUST REMOVES THE ELEMENT OF LEAD FROM THE SYSTEM AND IT'S IMPORTANT WE DO THIS. WITH THAT, I ASK THE BILL PASS.

Del. Bill Howell (R-Fredericksburg): THANK YOU, SENATOR. THE QUESTION IS SHALL SENATE BILL 1359 ALL IN FAVOR OF THE MOTION WILL RECORD THEIR VOTES AYE, THOSE OPPOSED NO. ARE THE SENATORS READY TO VOTE? HAVE ALL THE SENATORS VOTED? DO ANY SENATORS DESIRE TO CHANGE THEIR VOTE? THE CLERK WILL CLOSE THE ROLL.

[Unknown]: AYES 31, NOS 9. AYES 31, NOS 9, THE BIM PASSES. SENATE BILL 1364, A BILL TO REQUIRE THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION TO CONVENE A TASK FORCE TO STUDY THE FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING A STATEWIDE ONE-STOP ONLINE PORTAL FOR ADDRESS CHANGES FOR THE PURPOSES OF DEVELOPING A STATEWIDE

Duplicate Bills

The following bills are identical to this one: HB1564.