HOW TO PASS
A STATE LAW
Introduction
Our countrys founding fathers designed a system for passing
laws that is intentionally cumbersome, so as to prevent the countrys
citizens from having to live with an excessive number of laws, as
well as laws which might be arbitrary. Therefore, New Mexicos
legislative system is purposely designed to create a lot of hurdles
for bills intended to be laws. For that reason, the process of passing
a law may seem unnecessarily burdensome. It is meant to be so.
The Legislature
When
In odd years (ex. 2001), New Mexicos legislature meets for
60 days (from the third week of January through the third week of
March). This is called the long session.
In even years (ex. 2000), the legislature meets for 30 days (from
the third week of January through the third week of February). This
short session is constitutionally restricted to:
fiscal matters:
special messages from the Governor;
bills passed in the previous legislature but vetoed by the
Governor.
(In general, animal-related bills are not easily introduced in the
short session, so animal advocates are generally restricted to getting
proactive bills passed only every two years. However, a variety
of bills affecting animals invariably is introduced in both short
and long sessions, so it is wise for animal advocates to monitor
bills in every legislative session.)
Who
New Mexico has a citizen legislature made up of 112
people (42 State Senators and 70 State Representatives). The Senate
and House of Representatives are called chambers. See
the New Mexico Roster in the Resources section of this book for
a listing of these legislators.
State Senators serve four-year terms.
State Representatives serve two-year terms (they are elected
before every long session,
which makes advanced lobbying a constant challenge).
How a bill progresses through the process
1) A bill is written, introduced and assigned a bill number in one
chamber (either the House or Senate). Each bill must have at least
a Sponsor, which is a legislator who wants to try to
push the bill through the process. Most bills also have several
co-sponsors, which are other legislators who also want to see the
legislation given a chance at the system.
2) The bill is assigned to several committees in the chamber (usually
two to three committees).
3) The bill is heard in each committee, sometimes with
expert witnesses testifying for and against the bill.
The public is encouraged to give their opinions at this stage by
attending hearings and speaking about the bill. After hearing public
testimony, legislators will discuss the bill in the committee, and
then vote to give it a Do Pass, Do Not Pass,
No Recommendation or Table recommendation.
A bill can only proceed to the next committee to which it was assigned
if it is given a Do Pass or No Recommendation.
If it is given a Do Not Pass in its first committee,
it is dead.
4) If a bill proceeds through all its assigned committees, it goes
to the full floor (all the members) of the chamber, to be heard
and discussed among all the members of that chamber. Public testimony
is not allowed at this point, although experts will sometimes be
invited to be guests on the floor to answer questions on complicated
bills. If the bill is voted down on the floor, it can go no further.
If it is approved by a majority vote on the full floor, it proceeds
onto the next chamber.
5) Once at the next chamber, it goes through the same process: consideration
by several committees and a final floor vote.
6) If the bill makes it through all the committees and the floor
votes of both chambers, it goes to the Governor for signature. The
Governor may veto or sign the bill. If the Governor signs the bill,
it becomes state law.
For more detailed legislative information, please refer to the New
Mexico Blue Book, a valuable reference book available for free from
the New Mexico Secretary of States office at (505) 827-3600,
and the Resources section of this book.
HOW TO PASS A COUNTY ORDINANCE
The process for making changes to county animal control ordiances
is similiar to that used to pass state legislation. The steps are
simply applied at the local level rather than the state level.
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