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jr52(1)(d) (d) The relating clause shall record any of the following:
1. Expressly granting rule‐making authority, or providing an exemption from rule‐making procedures, or providing an exemption from or extending the time limit for emergency rule procedures.
2. Requiring a referendum.
3. Expressly providing for a penalty.
4. Making, continuing, or renewing an appropriation.
jr52(1)(e)(e) Executive budget bills under section 16.47 (1) of the statutes, other lengthy bills that encompass multiple subjects and that are to be introduced at the request of the governor or the committee on organization of either house, bills proposing bulk revision of one or more entire chapters of the statutes, reconciliation bills introduced by the committee on organization of either house, and revisor's correction and revisor's revision bills are not subject to the requirements of pars. (a) to (d), and instead may use a descriptive title similar to the following example: “An Act to amend and revise chapter .... and to make diverse other changes in the statutes; relating to:...."
jr52(2) (2) The analysis by the legislative reference bureau shall follow the title.
jr52(3)(3) The enacting clause, required by section 17 (1) of article IV of the constitution, shall follow the analysis and shall read as follows: “The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:"
jr52(4) (4) The subject matter of the bill shall follow the enacting clause and be displayed in one or more sections that, except for budget bills or other bills of unusual length, shall be numbered consecutively. Substitute amendments may follow the section numbering of the bill. Each section shall begin in one of the following forms:
jr52(4)(a) (a) Section.... (A designated part) of the statutes (or 19.. laws, chapter...., section.... [to 1981] and 19.. Wisconsin Act.... [starting 1983], section.... ) are (repealed) (renumbered....) (consolidated and renumbered....).
jr52(4)(b) (b) Section.... (A designated part) of the statutes (or 19.. laws, chapter...., section.... [to 1981] and 19.. Wisconsin Act.... [starting 1983], section.... ) are (renumbered.... and amended) (consolidated, renumbered.... and amended) (amended) (repealed and recreated) (created) to read:
jr52(4)(c) (c) Section ..... (provisions of new, nonstatutory material).
jr52(5) (5) Any proposal, substitute amendment, or amendment that proposes to amend an existing law or legislative rule, and any joint resolution that proposes to amend a section of the state constitution, shall display the full text of the unit of the law, rule, or constitution that is being amended, with any matter to be stricken out typed with a line through the matter, and any new matter underscored. This requirement does not apply to:
jr52(5)(a) (a) Reconciliation bills introduced by the committee on organization of either house and revisor's correction or revisor's revision bills.
jr52(5)(b) (b) Appropriation sections that only increase or decrease the amount of an existing appropriation, which shall instead indicate the amount by which the applicable appropriation is increased or decreased, and the purpose of this increase or decrease.
jr52(5)(c) (c) Proposals in which identical words are substituted for other words in existing law, if the laws in which the existing words occur are enumerated.
jr52(6) (6) All parts of the statutes and of other laws that are intended to be superseded or repealed should be specifically referred to, so far as practicable, and expressly superseded or repealed. This directive is not intended to affect judicial construction.
jr52(7) (7) Except as necessary to revise the relating clause of the affected proposal or substitute amendment, an amendment may not change the title of the proposal. When a substitute amendment or proposal is reproduced with all adopted amendments engrossed therein, or when the proposal is enrolled after passage, or adoption, and concurrence, the legislative reference bureau shall make the required changes in the title so that the title correctly lists all provisions affected by the proposal.
[(intro.), (1) and (4) am.; (5) and (6) rn.am.; (7) cr. 1987 SJR-48]
[(5)(intro.) am. 1991 SJR-1]
[(1)(d)1. am. 1991 AJR-2]
[(1)(intro.), (b) and (e) and (7) am. 1997 AJR-1]
[(1)(a) r.rc. 1997 AJR-1]
[(1)(e), (5)(a) and (7) am. 2001 AJR-15]
[(intro.), (1)(c) and (e), and (5)(intro.), (a), and (b) am. 2011 SJR-2]
jr53 Joint Rule 53. Incorporation of law into the statutes.
jr53(1)(1) It is the policy of this state that law of continuing application is incorporated into the statutes. The assignment of statute numbering to any part of a bill is indicative of a legislative intent that this text be incorporated into the statutes.
jr53(2) (2) In general, provisions of the following types need not be incorporated into the statutes:
jr53(2)(a) (a) An increase or decrease in the amount of an existing sum certain appropriation, but the dollar amount by which the existing appropriation is increased or decreased must be reflected in the appropriation total as shown in the statutes in the schedule under section 20.005 (3) of the statutes.
jr53(2)(b) (b) A conveyance of real property or of a real property right or interest to or from the state or its political subdivisions.
jr53(2)(c) (c) A declaration of intent or purpose.
jr53(2)(d) (d) A directive or request for a limited‐term study.
jr53(2)(e)(e) A creation of a committee as defined in section 15.01 (3) of the statutes.
jr53(2)(f) (f) A ratification of a collective bargaining agreement for state employees.
jr53(2)(g) (g) A change in the authorized state building program.
jr53(2)(h) (h) A position authorization.
jr53(2)(i) (i) A change in the authorized state trunk highway system.
jr53(2)(j) (j) An amendment to an existing nonstatutory provision.
jr53(2)(k) (k) A temporary transitional provision, not extending beyond July 1 of the even‐numbered year of the legislature's next biennial session.
jr53(2)(L) (L) A provision affecting the timing of a law's application or nonapplication, not extending beyond July 1 of the even‐numbered year of the legislature's next biennial session.
jr53(2)(m) (m) Any other provision that is narrow in scope and intended to be temporary.
[cr. 1987 SJR-48]
[(1) and (2)(a) am. 1997 AJR-1]
[(1) and (2)(a) am. 2011 SJR-2]
jr54 Joint Rule 54. Approval and jacketing of drafts.
jr54(1)(1) Before a proposal is jacketed for introduction, the legislative reference bureau shall submit a copy of the draft to the authorizing legislator, chief clerk, or state agency for approval, but substitute amendments or amendments shall be immediately prepared to be offered unless the authorizing legislator, chief clerk, caucus, or state agency requests prior submittal for approval.
jr54(2) (2) The legislative reference bureau, except as otherwise provided in sub. (2m), shall provide to the authorizing legislator, chief clerk, or state agency 4 copies of each proposal approved under sub. (1) and 6 copies of each amendment approved under sub. (1). One copy is for the use of the requester. The other copies shall, if a proposal, be inserted in the jacket envelope or, if a substitute amendment or amendment, be attached to an amendment jacket.
jr54(2m) (2m)
jr54(2m)(a)(a) The chief of the legislative reference bureau and a chief clerk of either house may enter into a written agreement under this joint rule to have the chief clerk, when the chief clerk's house is sitting in session, receive on the floor of the house copies of drafts of proposals, substitute amendments, and amendments transmitted electronically by the legislative reference bureau, and place the proposals in jacket envelopes and attach jacket cover sheets (stripes) to drafts of amendments and substitute amendments.
jr54(2m)(b) (b) The legislative reference bureau and the chief clerk may not act under this subsection until the legislative technology services bureau makes the computer programming changes and the legislative reference bureau and the chief clerk make the process changes necessary to permit the legislative reference bureau to transmit and the chief clerk to receive the drafts electronically in the chamber of the house, in a manner that ensures the confidentiality of the drafts, without changing the way the legislative reference bureau jackets proposals, substitute amendments, and amendments electronically.
jr54(2m)(c) (c) The legislative reference bureau and the chief clerk may not act under this subsection unless the chief clerk states in the agreement that the chief clerk and his or her employees:
1. Will comply with the requirements for confidentiality of drafts with which the legislative reference bureau must comply.
2. Provide, maintain, and supervise the equipment and the jackets for the electronic transmittal to the chief clerk as if the equipment and jackets were under the immediate supervision of the legislative reference bureau.
3. Submit directly to, and only to, the member any proposal in its jacket and any substitute amendment or amendment with its jacket attached.
jr54(2m)(d) (d) The legislative reference bureau may not transmit a draft of a proposal, substitute amendment, or amendment to the chief clerk under this rule unless the member requesting the draft waives confidentiality of the draft and requests the legislative reference bureau to transmit the draft under this rule.
jr54(3) (3)
jr54(3)(a)(a) Jacket envelopes for proposals, and amendment jackets for substitute amendments and amendments, shall be identified by red for proposals, substitute amendments, and amendments introduced or offered in the senate, and shall be identified by black for those introduced or offered in the assembly.
jr54(3)(b) (b) Each amendment jacket shall contain blanks to identify the substitute amendment or amendment by number, to list the date it is offered, and to enter the name or names of the member, members, or committee of the house of origin that offered the substitute amendment or amendment. Each amendment jacket shall allow sufficient space to add, if appropriate, the name of the individual or organization requesting that it be offered.
jr54(3)(c) (c) Each jacket envelope shall be large enough to hold the papers pertaining to the proposal without the papers being folded.
[cr. 1987 SJR-48]
[(1), (2) and (3)(a) and (b) am. 1991 SJR-1]
[(2) and (3) am. 1997 AJR-1]
[am.; (2m) cr. 2001 AJR-15]
[(1), (2), and (2m)(a) am. 2011 SJR-2]
jr55 Joint Rule 55. Authors and cosponsors.
jr55(1)(1) Any bill or joint resolution may have, following and separate from the names of the authors of the bill or joint resolution, the names of one or more cosponsors from the other house.
jr55(2) (2) When a proposal or amendment is introduced or offered by request, the name of the person requesting introduction or the offering of the proposal or offering of the amendment shall be made a part of the record of the proposal.
[rn. from Jt.Rule 53; (2) am. 1987 SJR-48]
[am. 2001 AJR-15]
[(1) am. 2011 SJR-2]
jr56 Joint Rule 56. Clerical corrections in legislative proposals and amendments.
jr56(1)(1) The chief clerks and the legislative reference bureau shall correct all minor clerical errors found in any proposal or amendment. Any correction under this rule shall be entered by the chief clerk in the history file for the proposal of the house having possession of the proposal.
jr56(2) (2) The current edition of Webster's new international dictionary is the standard on questions of correct spelling, word usage, and proper grammar.
jr56(3)(3) Except as enumerated in pars. (a) to (e), corrections under this rule require in each instance the specific prior authorization of the presiding officer of the house having possession of the proposal. The following corrections do not require prior authorization:
jr56(3)(a)(a) Inserting the enacting clause required for any bill by section 17 (1) of article IV of the constitution, or inserting the usual enabling clause in any resolution.
jr56(3)(b) (b) Correcting the title of a proposal so that the enumeration of sections affected accurately reflects the statutes, session laws, Wisconsin Acts, sections of the constitution, or legislative rules treated in the proposal.
jr56(3)(c) (c) Correcting the title of a bill so that the relating clause complies with joint rule 52 (1) (d).
jr56(3)(d) (d) Correcting the text of the proposal so that it conforms to sub. (2).
jr56(3)(e) (e) Correcting erroneous numeric references.
[cr. 1987 SJR-48]
[(1) am. 1997 AJR-1]
[(title) and (1) am. 2001 AJR-15]
jr57 Joint Rule 57. Amendments to state constitution.
jr57(1)(1) Every joint resolution proposing an amendment to the constitution introduced for the purpose of a first approval shall, in the closing paragraph, refer such proposed amendment to the legislature to be chosen at the next general election. Every joint resolution proposing the 2nd legislative approval of an amendment to the constitution shall, in the closing paragraph, provide for submission of the amendment to the people in accordance with section 1 of article XII of the constitution.
jr57(2)(a) (a) The text of a proposed constitutional amendment is not subject to change when a joint resolution submits such text for “2nd consideration" after the joint resolution was adopted on “first consideration" by the last preceding legislature, unless appropriate changes are made to revert the status of the constitutional amendment to “first consideration."
jr57(2)(am) (am) While the constitutional amendment has “2nd consideration" status, only the relating clause and those paragraphs of the joint resolution pertaining to the ballot question and to the date of submission to the voters may be changed by amendment.
jr57(2)(b) (b) Because any change in the text of a proposed constitutional amendment before the senate or assembly for “2nd consideration" reverts that proposed amendment to “first consideration" status, any change shall be presented to the senate or assembly in the form of a substitute amendment that, in its title, its resolving clauses, and its instructions for transmittal to the next succeeding legislature, properly sets forth the resultant “first consideration" status of the proposed constitutional amendment.
[rn. from Jt.Rule 55, 1987 SJR-48]
[(2)(intro.) and (b) am. 2001 AJR-15]
[(2)(intro.) and (a) rn. 2011 SJR-2]
jr58 Joint Rule 58. Amendments to U.S. constitution.
jr58(1)(1) Any amendment to the constitution of the United States, submitted to the legislatures of the several states for ratification, shall be considered in the form of a joint resolution.
jr58(2) (2) Every joint resolution to ratify an amendment to the constitution of the United States shall be given 3 readings in each house. The vote on adoption or concurrence shall be a roll call vote with the ayes and noes entered in the journal.
jr58(3) (3) That part of a joint resolution to ratify an amendment to the constitution of the United States which correctly sets forth the text of the proposed amendment may not be amended.
[cr. 1987 SJR-48]
jr59 Joint Rule 59. Explanative notes. In addition to such notes as are required by law or joint rule, explanative notes may be included in revision and correction bills prepared by the revisor of statutes, in reconciliation bills introduced by the committee on organization of either house, and in proposals introduced or offered and in substitute amendments or amendments offered by the joint legislative council or its law revision committee, at the request of the judicial council, and by or at the request of any other official interim study or investigative group. The notes shall be prepared by the requester, shall be factual in nature, shall be as brief as may be and, where feasible, shall follow the section of the proposal or amendment to which they relate. Notes may appear in the original reproduced version of the proposal or amendment only, and may not appear in the Wisconsin Acts or session law volumes unless the chief of the legislative reference bureau determines that including them is essential or in the statutes unless the revisor determines that including them is essential. The notes constitute no part of the proposed act or engrossed or enrolled resolution.
[rn. from Jt.Rule 56, 1987 SJR-48]
[am. 1997 AJR-1]
[am. 1999 AJR-18]
[am. 2001 AJR-15]
[am. 2011 SJR-2]
jr60 Joint Rule 60. Enrolled proposals.
jr60(1)(1) Except as provided in sub. (2), immediately after the passage of any bill, or the adoption of and concurrence in any joint resolution amending the constitution, and in the case of a bill, before it is presented to the governor for approval, the legislative reference bureau shall prepare the number of enrolled copies of the proposal requested by the chief clerk of the house in which the proposal originated. One copy shall be used as the enrolled bill that is presented to the governor or the enrolled resolution that is deposited with the secretary of state. Four copies of the enrolled bill or resolution shall be delivered to the secretary of state. A sufficient number of copies of the enrolled bill or enrolled resolution shall be delivered to the revisor of statutes.
jr60(2) (2) Whenever the legislative reference bureau determines that the text of a proposal passed by the legislature cannot be properly enrolled because of unreconciled conflicts in adopted amendments, the bureau shall report the problem to the committee on organization of the house in which the proposal originated. If the committee on organization concurs with that determination, the committee shall introduce a joint resolution recalling the proposal for further legislative action and the bureau may not enroll the proposal until the legislature acts on the joint resolution recalling the proposal.
[rn. from Jt.Rule 54, 1987 SJR-48]
[(1) rn.am.; (2) cr. 1989 AJR-24]
[(title) and (1) am. 2001 AJR-15]
[(2) am. 2011 SJR-2]
Chapter 7:
REPRODUCTION OF PROPOSALS
jr62 Joint Rule 62. Number of copies.
jr62(1)(1) The joint committee on legislative organization may determine the number of copies of each proposal and amendments thereto to be reproduced on a routine basis unless otherwise provided by joint resolution.
jr62(2) (2) Additional copies of a legislative proposal may be procured by the house in which the proposal originated, as provided in the rules of the house or upon authorization by the committee on organization or chief clerk of that house.
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