CaliforniaAB 1302025-2026 Regular SessionHouseWALLET

Budget Act of 2025.

Sponsored By: Jesse Gabriel (Democratic)

Signed by Governor

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

58 provisions identified: 31 benefits, 2 costs, 25 mixed.

Cities face tighter limits blocking affordable housing

Cities cannot deny or make infeasible housing for very low‑, low‑, or moderate‑income households, or emergency shelters, unless they issue written findings with strong evidence under narrow rules. If a city failed to zone for shelters or show enough capacity, it cannot use plan rules to block a shelter. Section 65589.5 stays in effect through Dec 31, 2035 and is repealed Jan 1, 2036.

More help and protections in foreclosure

The law provides $300 million to CalHFA for HUD‑certified counseling, legal help, and mortgage assistance. Help is available to owners of 1–4 unit homes who face foreclosure. It also adds new rules for subordinate‑mortgage servicers: they must record a sworn certification with the notice of default and mail you notice. Missing required notices or statements, trying to collect time‑barred or discharged debts, and other listed acts are unlawful. You can ask a court to stop a nonjudicial foreclosure and raise these violations as a defense.

Use public land to build housing

Large surplus sites (10+ acres) can be sold for housing with at least 300 homes or 10 homes per acre (up to 10,000), and at least 25% must be affordable to lower‑income households. Community land trust transfers are exempt when the homes are permanently restricted for qualified buyers or renters. Former military bases over five acres can qualify if they plan at least 1,400 homes with 25% of the first 1,400 for lower‑income households and meet labor and reporting rules. Local transportation agencies can exempt some commercial uses if at least half the plan area is for homes and 25% of those homes are affordable. If a local agency violates disposal rules, it pays a civil penalty of 30% for a first violation or 50% for later ones, based on the higher of sale price or appraised value; funds must be spent on new affordable housing within five years. Agencies must notify HCD at least 30 days before certain exempt sales; HCD has 30 days to flag violations.

CEQA relief for many housing projects

Many qualifying housing projects are exempt from CEQA if they meet strict rules. Sites are usually 20 acres or less (some face a 5‑acre limit), in a city or urban area, and must meet plan consistency and minimum density tests. Projects cannot demolish listed historic structures. For certain projects complete on or after Jan 1, 2025, no space may be set aside for short‑term lodging.

Pause on new home-building rules

From October 1, 2025 to June 1, 2031, the state pauses most new residential building rules. The Building Standards Commission, other state agencies, and cities and counties cannot adopt stricter housing standards unless narrow exceptions apply, like emergency safety rules, home-hardening, certain fire rules, model-code or accessibility updates, or local plans approved by June 10, 2025 that permit mixed-fuel and incentivize all-electric. The Commission must reject local changes without required findings. The state also clarifies which national model codes it uses, including the Wildland-Urban Interface Code.

Deed rules and fees can’t block ADUs

The law voids deed rules and similar limits that effectively ban or unreasonably restrict ADUs or JADUs on qualifying single‑family lots. It also says “reasonable restrictions” cannot include fees or other financial requirements that block ADUs. This makes it easier to build and rent an ADU if you meet state ADU rules.

Mortgage settlement funds for housing help

Settlement money goes into a new National Mortgage Special Deposit Fund. The law sends $31 million to tenant legal services for eviction defense. It lets the $300 million CalHFA program also pay for legal help to keep people in their homes, on top of counseling and mortgage assistance. No more than 5% of these pots can be used for administration so most dollars go to direct help.

Stronger safety checks in homeless shelters

Cities and counties must inspect shelters each year and after any complaint. If a shelter is found substandard, officials must issue a correction notice within 10 business days, or immediately if there is an urgent danger. Shelters must post occupants’ rights, give contacts to report problems, and give free certified copies of inspection reports to affected people. The department or private parties can go to court to enforce the rules, and winning private plaintiffs can recover attorney’s fees. Every city and county must file an annual report by April 1 listing complaints, violations, dangerous conditions, emergency orders, and repeat violators.

Builder’s remedy faces fewer local hurdles

For builder’s remedy projects, cities can apply only objective, written, measurable rules and cannot impose standards that make a project infeasible. You do not need plan or zoning changes if you meet the builder’s remedy rules, and compliant projects are deemed consistent and conforming. If you qualify for a density bonus, you get two extra incentives; extremely low‑income units count like very low‑income units. Local affordable rules from Jan 1, 2024 can apply, but they are capped at 20% of units and cannot require deeper than lower‑income, and the city must show the rule won’t make the project infeasible. Some CEQA‑related disapproval remedies are inoperative until Jan 1, 2031, lowering certain litigation risks.

Easier refinancing for restricted housing owners

Owners of properties under HCD agreements can get loan extensions, payoffs, equity extraction, and new financing if the department approves and rents stay within allowed annual limits. Each extension runs 10–55 years (up to 58 to match tax credit terms) at 3% simple interest. When a loan is extended, scheduled payments are deferred for the whole extension term; only residual receipts are still due.

Faster city decisions and default approvals

Cities and counties must approve or deny projects on firm clocks: 180 days after an EIR, 90 days for some projects, and 60 days for many ministerial, exempt, or negative‑declaration cases. Projects with at least 49% very‑low or low‑income units get a 60‑day decision if affordability lasts at least 30 years and financing steps are noticed and confirmed before EIR certification. If an agency misses the deadline, the permit is deemed approved. If a city claims conflicts with objective standards, it must document them in 60 days (≤150 units) or 90 days (>150); otherwise, the project is deemed to meet those standards. Design review must be objective and finish within 90 days (≤150 units) or 180 days (>150).

Faster, clearer housing permit timelines

Housing projects that need a local entitlement now count as development projects for permit timing. Agencies must say in 30 days if an application is complete, list all missing items from their checklist, and cannot add new asks later; if they stay silent, it is deemed complete. Responsible agencies must act within 90 or 180 days after lead‑agency approval or receipt of a complete application. Compliant projects face no more than five hearings. Cities must publish what applicants must submit, including certain safety and location flags.

Small‑lot maps and CEQA shortcut

Local agencies must process qualifying small projects (10 or fewer parcels and units) ministerially and act within 60 days. Projects must meet lot‑size, average unit size (≤1,750 square feet), housing‑type, density, and site/utility rules. Subdivisions that follow all objective local subdivision standards are exempt from CEQA, which saves time and cost.

Use‑by‑right housing on faith/college land

Housing on land owned on or before January 1, 2024 by independent colleges or religious groups gets ministerial approval if it meets state criteria. In residential zones, qualifying projects can use densities that accommodate lower‑income housing and add one story or 11 feet over the usual height. In nonresidential zones, they may build 40 units per acre and add one story or 11 feet. Parking is capped at up to one space per unit, and no parking is required within a half‑mile walk of transit or where a car‑share is within one block.

Affordable homes on faith and college land

Projects using the use‑by‑right path on faith and higher‑education lands must make 100% of homes for lower‑income households. Up to 20% of homes may be for moderate‑income households and up to 5% for staff. Rentals must carry at least 55‑year deed restrictions; ownership homes at least 45 years. Cities and counties must include these approvals in their yearly housing reports.

Affordable housing definitions and voter exceptions

The law updates who counts as a “low-rent housing project” and who the No Place Like Home program serves. More projects financed with sources like federal COVID relief, state housing funds, low-income housing tax credits, or the 2024 Behavioral Health Infrastructure Bond are excluded from the voter-approval rule tied to that definition. Beginning January 1, 2025, if voters approved the March 5, 2024 Mental Health Services Act changes, No Place Like Home uses updated definitions for target populations and eligible recipients.

Affordable set‑asides for TOD housing

Projects in the Transit‑Oriented Development program must reserve at least 20% of units for very low‑ or low‑income households for at least 55 years. If another public funding source requires a higher share, the higher share applies.

Annual inspections and rights at shelters

Cities and counties must inspect every homeless shelter each year, with or without notice. Shelters must post occupant rights and give them in writing at intake. The state can enforce in court, award attorney’s fees to winners, and withhold state funds from places that do not fix problems or report results each year.

Easier building on faith and college land

For housing on faith and higher-education lands, the law lowers building hurdles. Projects can be one story or 11 feet taller than the usual limit. Parking minimums are capped at one space per unit unless a state or local rule allows even less. The law also clarifies “light industrial use” to mean uses not permitted by a district, which can help more of these sites qualify.

Faster local approvals for housing

Cities and counties keep a hard cap of five public hearings for qualifying housing projects, with no end date. They must decide if a site is historic when an application is complete, and that call stays in place during review. Key Housing Accountability Act protections and definitions now remain in force. Under the Permit Streamlining Act, agencies must approve or deny ministerial housing projects within 60 days of a complete application, and CEQA-exempt projects within 30 days after environmental review ends. The Housing Crisis Act continues permanently, limiting moratoria and restrictive approval rules.

Fewer roadblocks to approve housing

Local governments cannot claim zoning inconsistency or a welfare‑tax exemption as a "specific, adverse impact" to deny housing. For qualifying residential projects, some appeal grounds to the Coastal Commission are removed. These changes make it harder to block affordable housing.

More childcare space in housing

The law lets eligible faith and college land housing projects include ground‑floor childcare centers with no child limit. It also allows childcare centers run by community groups as permitted uses in most zones, except single‑family zones. Families get more nearby childcare options as new housing is built.

More housing reporting and enforcement

Each year by April 1, local planning agencies must send a public report to their council, the state planning office, and HCD. It must use HCD forms and list housing applications, units, approvals and denials by income and area, rezoned sites, and production data with site IDs. HCD posts these reports online. HCD can ask for corrections within 90 days; agencies must fix them within 30 days. Courts can order compliance within 60 days if a jurisdiction fails to submit the housing-element section on time.

More open regional housing planning

Starting January 1, 2025, regional councils must share fair housing survey results online and describe barriers and effective anti‑displacement strategies. They must invite the public into RHNA method setting, post the proposed method and data, and hold at least one hearing. They must also explain how each factor is used, show any weights, and post materials online.

Seismic retrofit grants for affordable apartments

The state can fund seismic retrofits for affordable multifamily housing when lawmakers provide money. Projects serving lower‑income households get priority. Up to 20% of units in a funded project may serve moderate‑income households.

Stronger process for housing need numbers

The state sets clearer steps and data for regional housing need (RHNA). Councils of governments must meet with HCD at least 26 months before housing-element updates, run member surveys, and use national comparisons for overcrowding and cost burden. HCD and regions follow a 30-day objection and 45-day final decision timeline, and must fix draft methods within 45 days if HCD finds problems. RHNA uses Department of Finance projections unless a region’s forecast is within 1.5%, in which case HCD uses the region’s number. Starting January 1, 2025, regions cannot cut a city’s share for reasons like permit caps, past underbuilding, or past stable population, and seventh-cycle and later plans must include acutely and extremely low-income units.

Surplus public land for affordable homes

Surplus land can be treated as exempt if 100% of the homes are affordable, with at least 75% for lower‑income households. Affordability lasts 55 years for rentals, 45 years for ownership, and 50 years on tribal trust lands, and prices or rents must be at least 20% below the neighborhood median. Another exemption covers competitive projects of 1–10 acres with 300+ homes that set aside at least 25% of units for lower‑income households.

Asbestos abatement deadlines for apartments

If asbestos is found during an exterior element inspection at a building with three or more units, the owner has up to nine months to complete abatement. After abatement, the follow‑up inspection must be finished within four months. Owners must keep records for three years after the inspection.

Tighter rules on homelessness grant spending

Recipients must collect data, follow HUD HMIS and privacy rules, and file annual reports by April 1. Round 1 recipients had to spend at least 50% by June 30, 2023 (or return at least 25%) and 100% by June 30, 2024. For later rounds, spend 50% and obligate 100% within two fiscal years or face corrective actions. Monthly fiscal reports are required. Final report deadlines: Round 3 by April 1, 2027; Round 4 by April 1, 2028; Round 5 by April 1, 2029; Round 6 by April 1, 2030.

Easier ADUs with fewer local hurdles

Local agencies must approve ADUs and junior ADUs ministerially. Single‑family lots can add one ADU and one junior ADU, and existing multifamily buildings must allow at least one ADU and up to 25% of units. Detached ADUs can be up to 800 square feet, and cities cannot add extra design rules or require sprinklers when the main home does not need them. ADUs must be rented for more than 30 days, and ADUs on onsite wastewater systems need a recent percolation test (within 5 years, or 10 years if recertified).

Stronger rent rules in assisted housing

The department cannot approve equity cash‑outs that push tenant rents above the normal annual adjustment, unless a third‑party shows it is needed for feasibility. Buildings that used low‑income housing tax credit‑style limits must keep those income and rent limits. If your unit is restructured, annual rent increases are capped at 5% if your income is at or below 35% of area median, or 10% if above 35%, and projected rent cannot exceed 50% of your income at restructuring. When a restructured unit becomes vacant, the new rent can move to the rehab rent level, and new tenants must meet the matching income limit. In annuity‑subsidized units, rent can be set at 30% of household income with at least 90 days’ notice.

Stronger safety rules for multifamily homes

Owners of buildings with 3 or more units must have balconies, stairs, and similar elevated wood elements inspected by qualified pros. The first inspection is due by January 1, 2026, then every six years, and must sample at least 15% of each element type. Inspectors must give a written report within 45 days; urgent hazards must be reported to the local agency within 15 days. If defects are found, apply for permits within 120 days and finish repairs within 120 days after approval, or get an extension; act at once for emergencies. If repairs lag, fines run $100–$500 per day and cities can record a building‑safety lien and foreclose. If asbestos blocks work, owners get up to nine months to abate and three months to finish the inspection; condo conversions must complete these inspections and share results before sales.

Tenant safeguards during rehab and refi

If a refinance will raise your rent, the sponsor must give an estimate 6 months ahead and the exact amount 90 days before. Rents may go up only to support needed rehab debt, not to pull out equity, and only with a department‑approved plan. At least 35% of assisted units must stay at the program’s midlevel rent target; other assisted units can rise up to 30% of 60% of area median income. If rehab displaces you, you get relocation benefits and first priority to return. The department records new or amended regulatory agreements with tenant selection, inspections, reporting, and other protections.

New renter tax credit needs funding

The law creates a renter tax credit for California residents with adjusted gross income of $50,000 or less who rented and lived in their home at least half the year. The credit is $250 if you have no dependents, or $500 if you have one or more dependents. Beginning with 2026 tax years, the credit amount is set to $0 unless lawmakers fund it each year.

Clear steps and deadlines to apply

To start a housing project, your preliminary application must include a set list of items and the permit fee. Once filed, your application is deemed complete under state rules, and any historic-site status is fixed at that time. You have 180 days to file a full application and 90 days to fix listed missing items, or the preliminary application expires. A change of 20% or more in unit count or square footage (not from a density bonus) makes you resubmit the preliminary packet. You can request a preliminary fee and exaction estimate within 30 business days, and agencies must use a standard checklist and form that cannot ask for extra items.

More financing tools to save rentals

The housing department may let owners of regulated affordable projects take new debt or extract equity for repairs and preservation, if the loan meets a 1.15 debt‑service coverage ratio and shows 15 years of positive cash flow. Allowed uses include repairs, reserves, paying deferred developer fees, buying a limited partner interest under guidelines, and other approved needs. The department may extend loans or regulatory agreements when needed to keep projects operating and can subordinate its lien if required for feasibility. The department charges monitoring and transaction fees that last through the regulatory agreement, but can waive or defer fees if needed.

Starter-home parcel limits and flexibility

Parcels split under the Starter Home Revitalization rules generally cannot be sold, leased, or financed on their own unless they meet specific criteria, like having a finished home. Localities can allow exceptions by ordinance or map condition. Projects can also label a remainder parcel with no new homes that keeps its current use; it does not count toward the 10‑parcel limit and is left out of certain density calculations.

Higher wages and worker benefits on projects

Qualifying housing projects must pay prevailing wages and follow apprenticeship and payroll rules. Projects with 50 or more units must fund health care per hour at least equal to a Platinum family plan’s pro rata cost. Developers must file monthly compliance reports. Missing a report costs 10% of that month’s construction value, up to $10,000. Contractors that miss apprenticeship or health‑care rules owe $200 per day for each affected worker. The Labor Commissioner can assess penalties within 18 months after the project is finished.

Environmental checks and freeway air filters

Projects must complete a Phase I environmental review, and a Phase II if needed. If hazards are found, they must be assessed and cleaned up or mitigated under state and federal rules. Homes within 500 feet of a freeway must install MERV‑13 air filters in regularly occupied areas. These steps add costs for builders but improve health and safety for residents.

Model home permits lock standards 10 years

New local building rules apply only to permits filed after the rule takes effect. A model code that newly covers an occupancy does not apply to permit applications filed before its start date. For homes built from an approved model, the state and local standards in place when the model home’s permit was filed apply to future homes using that model in the same city for up to 10 years, unless the design changes a lot. Emergency exceptions still apply.

Shelter funding tied to rule compliance

Cities and counties do not have to inspect complaints that do not claim a substandard condition, or from tenants who filed a frivolous complaint about the same property in the last 180 days. When a city or county applies for state shelter funding, it must report any unresolved violations and name the shelter owners or operators. The state can deny funding to ineligible owners or operators and withhold money if a jurisdiction fails to report or fix violations.

Stricter rules to sell public land

Before selling, leasing, or giving away public land, a local agency must declare it surplus or exempt surplus in a public meeting with written findings. For some exempt categories, agencies may use a 30-day public notice and comment process instead. Long leases over 15 years signed on or after January 1, 2024 count as a land disposal under these rules. Some school properties no longer count as exempt surplus land. The law also broadens what counts as an agency’s own use (for example, utility, port support, watershed, broadband, or buffer sites), which can keep some parcels out of the surplus process.

Stronger RHNA methods and state review

Starting January 1, 2025, regional bodies must consider many factors when setting housing‑need methods, including low‑wage jobs, rent burden, overcrowding, homelessness, disaster losses, transit use, and more. The state housing department reviews draft RHNA methods in 60 days and, if it objects, councils must revise and get acceptance within 45 days before final adoption. If the state does not respond in 60 days, councils may proceed.

Tools to preserve affordable housing and rents

The state creates an Affordable Housing Default Reserve Account to cure or avert project loan defaults, bid at foreclosure, and repair housing it acquires; amounts used are added to the loan and payable on demand. If spending from the account in a year exceeds 25% of the starting balance, the department must notify lawmakers within 30 days with details and risk assessment. The department can adopt implementation guidelines with public notice and a hearing. Within available resources, it must post household income levels and rents online for restructured developments within six months and update at least every three years. For assisted units in approved rehab plans, maximum annual rent equals 30% of 60% of AMI for lower‑income units and 30% of 35% of AMI for very low‑income units.

Transit-oriented affordable housing program and mitigation

The state runs a Transit‑Oriented Development program to help build higher‑density, VMT‑efficient affordable housing near transit. The department may give grants and repayable or forgivable loans, as funds are available. Starting July 1, 2026, a lead agency may mitigate a project’s transportation impact by paying into the TOD Fund, using Office guidance. Money in the fund is awarded first to location‑efficient affordable housing or related infrastructure in the same region as the originating project. Recipients must spend allocations by December 31, 2026 and submit final invoices by June 30, 2027, with a final report by June 30, 2027. The Office must issue guidance by July 1, 2026 and update it at least every three years; formal rulemaking starts by January 1, 2028. UC will evaluate mitigation methods and report by July 1, 2031. The law clarifies which multifamily projects count as residential development projects.

Condos exempt from new balcony inspections

Common interest developments, like many condos, are excluded from this exterior elevated element inspection program. Owners in these communities are not subject to the section’s inspection and repair timelines.

Fairer HOA discipline process

HOA boards must give you a chance to fix a violation before any discipline meeting. The board cannot discipline you if you cure in time, and a timely written financial plan pauses discipline when the fix takes longer. If you and the board settle after the meeting, both must sign a written resolution that binds the HOA and can be enforced in court.

HOA fines capped; faster notice

HOAs can fine a member no more than $100 per violation or the posted amount, whichever is less. Higher fines are allowed only after an open meeting and a written finding of a health or safety risk. Boards must send written discipline decisions within 14 days (shorter than 15 days).

Transitional rules for 2025 applications

If your housing application was deemed complete before January 1, 2025, you may choose the older rules or the rules in effect on that date. You may also revise the project to use the builder’s remedy without filing a new preliminary application, even if units or size change by 20% or more.

Ground-floor childcare and community spaces

Use‑by‑right housing can include ground‑floor childcare and community facilities in single‑family zones. In other zones, ground‑floor commercial uses allowed without special permits may be included. All ancillary uses must stay on the ground floor.

New state fund for mortgage settlements

The state creates the National Mortgage Special Deposit Fund. The Department of Finance allocates money in the fund as the law directs. This organizes settlement receipts for housing‑related uses.

One housing code section repealed

Government Code Section 66301 is repealed. The practical effect depends on the text that was removed.

Clearer, steadier building and project rules

Cities and counties may set stricter rules for exterior elevated elements, which can raise safety and compliance demands. When a model home design is approved, the same state and local building rules at the first permit submission apply to later homes built from that model in the same area. Listing a tribal cultural resource after a preliminary application is still allowed and does not change local ordinance or standard determinations under certain housing laws.

Homelessness grants: new reporting and timing

Homeless Housing, Assistance, and Prevention (HHAP) reporting now applies to every funding round and moves to HCD. Encampment Resolution Funding timelines are measured from each award date, not the Legislature’s appropriation date. This gives grantees more predictable time to obligate and spend funds, but it adds ongoing reporting work.

Local land rules and paperwork tweaks

More public entities now count as “local agencies” and must follow state surplus‑land disposal rules. Some agencies do not have to add military or airspace items to their applicant information lists if they have no military installation and are not under low‑level flight paths or special airspace, or if they are fully urbanized with no military installation.

Streamlined HCD financing and TOD guidance

HCD sets restructuring standards patterned on the Multifamily Housing Program but can adjust key parts, like vacancy loss, debt coverage, senior debt terms, developer fee limits, and long-term reserve needs. HCD can also issue Transit-Oriented Development program guidelines without formal rulemaking, so guidance comes faster but with less formal notice and comment.

Three-year building code update cycle

The state now publishes the full Building Standards Code every three years. Only limited changes are allowed between updates, such as technical fixes, emergency standards, wildland‑urban interface updates, errata, certain local clauses, and accessibility updates. This gives builders and officials a more stable code schedule.

Where mortgage settlement money goes

Civil penalty payments from the National Mortgage Settlement go into the Unfair Competition Law Fund. The State Controller can make short‑term cashflow loans from the National Mortgage Special Deposit Fund to the General Fund under existing state cash‑loan rules.

Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Jesse Gabriel

    Democratic • House

Cosponsors

There are no cosponsors for this bill.

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 156 • No: 26

Senate vote 6/30/2025

Item 94 — Senate SFLOOR

Yes: 28 • No: 5

House vote 6/30/2025

Item 1000 — Assembly AFLOOR

Yes: 62 • No: 3

legislature vote 6/30/2025

Vote in CS62

Yes: 13 • No: 1

House vote 3/20/2025

Item 60 — Assembly AFLOOR

Yes: 53 • No: 17

Actions Timeline

  1. Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 22, Statutes of 2025.

    6/30/2025Senate
  2. Approved by the Governor.

    6/30/2025legislature
  3. Enrolled and presented to the Governor at 6 p.m.

    6/30/2025legislature
  4. Senate amendments concurred in. To Engrossing and Enrolling. (Ayes 62. Noes 3. Page 2371.).

    6/30/2025House
  5. Assembly Rule 63 suspended. (Ayes 56. Noes 19. Page 2370.)

    6/30/2025House
  6. In Assembly. Concurrence in Senate amendments pending.

    6/30/2025House
  7. Read third time. Passed. Ordered to the Assembly. (Ayes 28. Noes 5. Page 1840.).

    6/30/2025Senate
  8. Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

    6/30/2025Senate
  9. From committee: Do pass. (Ayes 13. Noes 1.) (June 30).

    6/30/2025Senate
  10. Joint Rule 62(a) suspended. (Ayes 24. Noes 8. Page 1799.)

    6/27/2025Senate
  11. From committee chair, with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to committee. Read second time, amended, and re-referred to Com. on B. & F. R.

    6/27/2025Senate
  12. In committee: Set, first hearing. Testimony taken. Further hearing to be set.

    6/25/2025Senate
  13. From committee chair, with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to committee. Read second time, amended, and re-referred to Com. on B. & F. R.

    6/24/2025Senate
  14. Referred to Com. on B. & F. R.

    4/2/2025Senate
  15. In Senate. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment.

    3/20/2025Senate
  16. Read third time. Passed. Ordered to the Senate. (Ayes 53. Noes 17. Page 728.)

    3/20/2025House
  17. Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

    3/18/2025House
  18. (Ayes 53. Noes 17. Page 643.)

    3/17/2025House
  19. Ordered to second reading.

    3/17/2025House
  20. Withdrawn from committee.

    3/17/2025House
  21. Referred to Com. on BUDGET.

    2/3/2025House
  22. From printer. May be heard in committee February 8.

    1/9/2025House
  23. Read first time. To print.

    1/8/2025House

Bill Text

  • Chaptered

    6/30/2025

  • Enrolled

    6/30/2025

  • Amended Senate

    6/27/2025

  • Amended Senate

    6/24/2025

  • Introduced

    1/8/2025

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