MassachusettsS 2120194th General Court (2025-2026)Senate

An Act relative to removing the term hearing impaired from the general laws

Sponsored By: Cynthia Stone Creem (Democratic)

First Reading

State Administration and Regulatory OversightSenate Rules

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this bill affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Bill Overview

No Economic Impacts Identified for this Bill

Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Cynthia Stone Creem

    Democratic • Senate

Cosponsors

There are no cosponsors for this bill.

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 12 • No: 0

committee vote 3/10/2026

Committee Place in OD: Placed in the Orders of the Day

Yes: 7 • No: 0

committee vote 12/3/2025

Committee Favorable: Ought to pass

Yes: 5 • No: 0 • Other: 1

Actions Timeline

  1. Read second and ordered to a third reading

    3/30/2026Senate
  2. Rules suspended

    3/30/2026Senate
  3. Committee reported that the matter be placed in the Orders of the Day for the next session

    3/30/2026Senate
  4. Bill reported favorably by committee and referred to the committee on Senate Rules

    12/24/2025Senate
  5. Hearing rescheduled to 10/08/2025 from 01:00 PM-01:55 PM in 222 and Virtual<br> <span style="color: blue; font-style: italic;">Hearing updated to New End Time</span>

    10/8/2025legislature
  6. Hearing rescheduled to 10/08/2025 from 01:00 PM-05:00 PM in 222 and Virtual<br> <span style="color: blue; font-style: italic;">Hearing location changed</span>

    9/25/2025legislature
  7. Hearing scheduled for 10/01/2025 from 10:00 AM-01:00 PM in A-1

    9/24/2025legislature
  8. House concurred

    2/27/2025House
  9. Referred to the committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight

    2/27/2025Senate

Bill Text

Related Bills

Back to State Legislation