Legislative Advocacy Roadmap

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CSDC created the Advocacy Roadmap to provide a high-level overview of how bills move through the legislative process in California. The Roadmap shows the steps it takes to pass legislation and the places along the timeline that advocates may wish to interact with their legislators.

Drafting and Introduction

Legislators and their constituents generate ideas for proposed legislation. Legislative Counsel, the lawyers who work for the legislature, draft the actual bill text, along with a descriptive digest that summarizes the bill’s provisions. After the bill is drafted, it is officially introduced

First Reading

The bill is given its first “reading” on the floor of the Assembly or the Senate. This “reading” is actually a formality

30 Days

Rules Committee

The Rules Committee is the initial stop for all legislation. Committee members “assign” bills to one or more committees based on subject matter jurisdiction

Policy Committee

Most, but not all, charter school bills will be assigned to the Committee on Education. Substantive policy issues within the jurisdiction of education are discussed in these committees.

Policy Commitee Deadline

Bills must be heard by Policy Committee. Deadline: Late April

Appropriations Committee

Any bill assigned “fiscal” must be reviewed by the committee on Appropriations and the fiscal impact of the legislation must be considered.

Suspense File

All bills with a price tag of $150,000 or more must be “held” on the suspense file awaiting an additional fiscal hearing.

Suspense File Hearing

Decisions related to fiscal bills are made behind the scenes by the chair of the Appropriations committee and then a pro-forma hearing is held in public to disclose outcomes

Fiscal Committee Deadline

All fiscal bills must be heard by a fiscal committee. Deadline: Late May

Second Reading

Another formality, the bill is “read,” a second time, at the legislative desk.

Third Reading and Floor Vote

Third Reading is the technical name of the final discussion and vote that takes place on each legislative floor

House of Origin Deadline

All bills must be passed out of their house of origin by early June.

First Reading

The bill is given its first “reading” on the floor of the second house.

Rules Committee

The Rules Committee is the initial stop for all legislation. Committee members “assign” bills to one or more committees based on subject matter jurisdiction.

Policy Committee

Most, but not all, charter school bills will be assigned to the Committee on Education. Substantive policy issues within the jurisdiction of education are discussed in these committees.

Policy Committee Deadline

Bills must be heard by the policy committee of the second house. Deadline: Mid July

Appropriations Committee

Any bill assigned “fiscal” must be reviewed by the committee on Appropriations and the fiscal impact of the legislation must be considered.

Suspense File

All bills with a price tag of $150,000 or more must be “held” on the suspense file awaiting an additional fiscal hearing.

Suspense File Hearing

Decisions related to fiscal bills are made behind the scenes by the chair of the Appropriations committee and then a pro-forma hearing is held in public to disclose outcomes.

Fiscal Committee Deadline

All fiscal bills must be heard by a fiscal committee in the second house. Deadline: Early September

Second Reading

Another formality, the bill is “read,” a second time, at the legislative desk.

Third Reading and Floor Vote

This is the technical name of the final discussion and vote that takes place on each legislative floor.

Concurrence Vote

If there were any amendments, the first house must hold a Concurrence Vote to agree to the amendments.

Deadline for Bill to Pass Both Houses

The bill must be passed by both houses of the legislature by this deadline (Mid September of the second year of a legislative session) in order to move to the Governor’s Desk.

Governor’s Desk

If a bill reaches the Governor’s desk, the Governor may choose to sign the bill, allow it to become law without their signature, or they may veto the measure. If approved, most bills take effect on January 1 following enactment, though “urgency” bills that are passed by a two-thirds vote, as well as budget bills, can take effect immediately upon approval.

Sign or Veto

Bill becomes low

Download

A downloadable version (PDF) of the interactive timeline above is available here.