Introduced
by
To prohibit a city from adopting a charter, ordinance, or resolution that imposes any minimum staffing requirement on the number of its government employees. The bill “grandfathers” existing minimum staffing requirements.
Referred to the Committee on Local Government and Elections
Reported without amendment
With the recommendation that the substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Substitute offered
To adopt a version that creates an exception to the proposed future "minimum staffing" mandates for future local resolutions "involving a collective bargaining agreement" with a government employee union.
The substitute passed by voice vote
Passed in the Senate 26 to 12 (details)
To prohibit a city from adopting a charter, ordinance, or resolution that imposes any minimum staffing requirement on the number of its government employees, except for "a resolution involving a collective bargaining agreement" with a government employee union. The bill “grandfathers” existing minimum staffing requirements.
Referred to the Committee on Local, Intergovernmental, and Regional Affairs
Reported without amendment
Without amendment and with the recommendation that the bill pass.
Amendment offered
by
To strip out a provision inserted by a Senate committee that would allow local governments to continue imposing minimum staffing requirements on themselves through contracts with government employee unions.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the House 62 to 46 (details)
To prohibit a city from adopting a charter or ordinance that imposes any minimum staffing requirement on the number of its government employees. The bill “grandfathers” existing minimum staffing requirements.
To concur with the House-passed version of the bill, which stripped out the Senate provision allowing local governments to impose minimum staffing levels on themselves through employee union contracts.
Passed in the Senate 26 to 12 (details)