Today marks Session Day 44, almost halfway to the end of the 100-day scheduled session. Friday was a a major turning point in the session, when the first legislative funnel deadline hit. The funnels are procedural mechanisms employed by the Iowa Legislature to winnow away policy bills that are not showing forward progress. Policy bills that were not passed by their originating committee by the end of Friday were marked ineligible for further debate. In other words, they are dead. The next major hurdle comes on March 15, when policy bills will need to be voted out of a committee in the opposite chamber in order to survive. Bills dealing with taxes and spending are exempt from these deadlines.
Now that you know the technical explanation of the funnel week, here’s the practical explanation: about a week and half of pure insanity. To reach the funnel, legislators hold hundreds of subcommittees on bills, sometimes over a dozen at any given moment, scattered in every last corner of the Capitol building. As subcommittees pass bills, they go onto full committee meeting agendas that often exceeded 20 bills. This made for some long and contentious committee meetings as legislators tried to close out the week.
Second Funnel Preparation
The second funnel will arrive in four weeks (March 15), but it is typically less chaotic with fewer bills in play. By the second funnel deadline, policy bills will need to have been passed by committee in both chambers. In order to prepare for that, the House and Senate will spend the next two weeks debating bills in order to give the second chamber time to advance them through the subcommittee and committee process. Heavy debate days means your legislators will be at their desks a lot, so it's a great time to call or email them about bills that may be important to you.
Budget and Appropriations Work Starts
The end of the first funnel flurry of activity also signals the soft start of the tax and budget discussions between the chambers. We will soon see an early-March meeting notice for the Revenue Estimating Conference (REC), where the 3-person panel will update their December predictions about State revenues and expenditures. Between the December and March estimates, the Legislature will use the lower of the two estimates.
While the Legislature cannot officially begin assembling appropriations bills until after that REC meeting, behind-the-scenes discussions will begin immediately between the Governor and House and Senate leaders. Any tax bill or spending initiative will alter the overall budget picture, so they need to agree to some basic principles before they can start to move forward, even if it’s just to nail down an overall number for acceptable tax reductions or an overall spending target. Despite all three decision-making bodies being currently controlled by the same political party, there are always a fair amount of disagreements that need to be worked through. This is the same every year, no matter who is in charge.
Candidate Deadline Coming
The second funnel's arrival on March 15th will also mark an important political deadline – the final date for legislators to file their campaign paperwork for the upcoming elections. On this day, we’ll become aware of a number of legislative retirements as well as determining which candidates will have primary and/or general election opponents.
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