The prayer was offered by the Chaplain, Valerie Hummel LaBounty, followed by the
Pledge of Allegiance led by House page Samuel McNeil.
Roll Call: All members present except Reps. Howard, Hunhoff, and Pourier who were
excused.
MR. SPEAKER:
The Committee on Legislative Procedure respectfully reports that the Chief Clerk of the
House has had under consideration the House Journal of the fifth day.
All errors, typographical or otherwise, are duly marked in the temporary journal for
correction.
And we hereby move the adoption of the report.
The Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources respectfully reports that it has had
under consideration HB 1023 and 1024 and returns the same with the recommendation that said
bills do pass.
The Committee on Taxation respectfully reports that it has had under consideration
HB 1014, 1015, and 1018 and returns the same with the recommendation that said bills do pass
and be placed on the consent calendar.
I have the honor to transmit herewith SCR 2 which has been adopted by the Senate and
your concurrence is respectfully requested.
SCR 2: A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION, To provide for legislative task forces to study,
report, and develop and consider recommendations and proposed legislation regarding
sustainable improvements to the continuum of mental health services available in the state.
Was read the first time and the Speaker waived the committee referral.
Reps. Livermont and Marty moved that the Speaker establish a Select Committee on Legislator Qualifications, which shall follow the procedural requirements under House Rules Chapter 6, for the purpose of investigating the qualifications of Rep. Peri Pourier, and in
particular Rep. Pourier's residency in this state for the two years preceding her election as a
Representative of District 27 on November 6, 2018.
The question being on Reps. Livermont and Marty's motion that the Speaker establish a
Select Committee on Legislator Qualifications, which shall follow the procedural requirements
under House Rules Chapter 6, for the purpose of investigating the qualifications of Rep. Peri
Pourier, and in particular Rep. Pourier's residency in this state for the two years preceding her
election as a Representative of District 27 on November 6, 2018.
And the roll being called:
Yeas 5, Nays 62, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Brunner; Frye-Mueller; Livermont; Marty; Mulally
Nays:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach; Dennert;
Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch; Greenfield (Lana); Gross;
Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris); Johnson (David); Karr;
Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; McCleerey; Mills; Milstead; Miskimins; Olson; Otten
(Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue); Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen;
Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish; Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis;
Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the motion not having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect,
the Speaker declared the motion failed.
Rep. Qualm moved that the report of the Standing Committee on Education on HB 1001
as found on page 44 of the House Journal be adopted.
Which motion prevailed.
HB 1050 Introduced by: Representatives Bartels, Anderson, Chaffee, Finck, Glanzer,
Johns, Koth, Peterson (Kent), and York and Senators White, Cronin, Ewing, Kolbeck, Rusch,
and Stalzer
Was read the first time and referred to the Committee on Judiciary.
HB 1051 Introduced by: Representatives Deutsch, Beal, Brunner, Dennert, Finck, Glanzer,
Goodwin, Greenfield (Lana), Gross, Jensen (Kevin), Johns, Johnson (David), Latterell, Mills,
Otten (Herman), Perry, Peterson (Kent), Peterson (Sue), Rasmussen, Reed, Schoenfish, Steele,
Willadsen, York, and Zikmund and Senators Bolin, Blare, Curd, DiSanto, Klumb, Maher,
Nelson, Novstrup, Otten (Ernie), Rusch, Solano, Stalzer, Steinhauer, and Wiik
FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to establish the South Dakota state seal of civics
literacy program.
Was read the first time and referred to the Committee on Education.
HB 1052 Introduced by: Representatives Marty, Chaffee, Diedrich, Duvall, Johns, Peterson
(Kent), and Rounds and Senators Maher, Langer, and Solano
FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to revise certain provisions regarding the notice given
to county commissioners for special sessions.
Was read the first time and referred to the Committee on Local Government.
HB 1053 Introduced by: Representatives Willadsen, Gosch, McCleerey, Reimer, Rounds,
and Zikmund and Senators Novstrup, Blare, and Heinert
FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to revise the value of gifts permitted for certain
insurance advertising or promotional programs.
Was read the first time and referred to the Committee on Commerce and Energy.
HB 1002: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to provide for criminal background checks
for certain applicants and employees of the Department of Public Safety.
The question being "Shall HB 1002 pass?"
Yeas 67, Nays 0, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch;
Greenfield (Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris);
Johnson (David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish;
Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the motion having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed, and the title agreed to.
Rep. Lake moved that HB 1009 be deferred to Wednesday, January 16, 2019, the
7th legislative day.
Which motion prevailed.
HB 1039: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to provide for the use of the Obligation
Recovery Center by certain postsecondary technical institutes.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1039 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 66, Nays 1, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch;
Greenfield (Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris);
Johnson (David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish; Smith
(Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
HB 1040: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to establish certain provisions regarding the
opportunity scholarship program.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1040 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 66, Nays 1, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Dennert;
Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch; Greenfield
(Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris); Johnson
(David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish;
Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Nays:
Cwach
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
HB 1030: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to allow the Office of School and Public
Lands to accept internet bidding for the leasing of state minerals.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1030 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch;
Greenfield (Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris);
Johnson (David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish;
Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
HB 1031: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to authorize certain wind and solar
easements and leases by the commissioner of School and Public Lands.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1031 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 56, Nays 11, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy;
Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris); Johnson (David); Karr; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister;
Marty; McCleerey; Mills; Milstead; Miskimins; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent);
Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish; Smith (Jamie);
St John; Steele; Sullivan; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Nays:
Dennert; Frye-Mueller; Gosch; Greenfield (Lana); Koth; Livermont; Mulally; Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Reimer; Weis
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1004 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 67, Nays 0, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch;
Greenfield (Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris);
Johnson (David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Rasmussen; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish;
Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
HB 1005: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to authorize a hearing panel of the Board
of Pardons and Paroles to make clemency recommendations.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1005 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 62, Nays 5, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Glanzer; Goodwin; Greenfield (Lana); Gross;
Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris); Johnson (David); Karr;
Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills; Milstead; Miskimins;
Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue); Pischke; Post; Qualm; Reed;
Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish; Smith (Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis;
Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Nays:
Frye-Mueller; Gosch; Perry; Randolph; Rasmussen
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
HB 1006: FOR AN ACT ENTITLED, An Act to revise the time requirements for parole
reports and plans.
Was read the second time.
The question being "Shall HB 1006 pass?"
And the roll being called:
Yeas 66, Nays 1, Excused 3, Absent 0
Yeas:
Anderson; Bartels; Barthel; Beal; Bordeaux; Borglum; Brunner; Chaffee; Chase; Cwach;
Dennert; Deutsch; Diedrich; Duba; Duvall; Finck; Frye-Mueller; Glanzer; Goodwin; Gosch;
Greenfield (Lana); Gross; Hammock; Hansen; Healy; Jensen (Kevin); Johns; Johnson (Chris);
Johnson (David); Karr; Koth; Lake; Latterell; Lesmeister; Livermont; Marty; McCleerey; Mills;
Milstead; Miskimins; Mulally; Olson; Otten (Herman); Perry; Peterson (Kent); Peterson (Sue);
Pischke; Post; Qualm; Randolph; Reed; Reimer; Ring; Rounds; Saba; Schoenfish; Smith
(Jamie); St John; Steele; Sullivan; Weis; Wiese; Willadsen; York; Zikmund; Haugaard
Nays:
Rasmussen
Excused:
Howard; Hunhoff; Pourier
So the bill having received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members-elect, the
Speaker declared the bill passed and the title was agreed to.
Rep. Steele moved that the House do now adjourn, which motion prevailed, and at
3:30 p.m. the House adjourned.
SENATE RULES
Table of Contents
THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR SHALL BE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE BUT SHALL
HAVE NO VOTE UNLESS THE SENATORS BE EQUALLY DIVIDED.
S1-2. Presiding officer in absence of president and president pro tempore. If the president
and the president pro tempore are absent or unable to serve, any member called to the chair by
the Senate may serve as presiding officer. When in session, the presiding officer, in the absence
of the pro tempore, may designate any member to perform the duties of the presiding officer,
but the designation may not extend beyond an adjournment. The acts of such a member have
the same validity as those of the president.
S2-2. Seating assignments. The president pro tempore of the Senate, with the advice of the
minority leader, shall make the seating assignments for the floor of the Senate.
S2-3. Hour of meeting. The hour of meeting of the Senate is 2:00 p.m. on each legislative day
unless otherwise ordered by the Senate.
1. Agriculture and Natural Resources (9)
2. Appropriations (9)
3. Commerce and Energy (7)
4. Education (7)
5. Government Operations and Audit (5)
6. Health and Human Services (7)
7. Judiciary (7)
8. Legislative Procedure (7)
9. Local Government (7)
10. Military and Veterans Affairs (5)
11. Retirement Laws (5)
12. State Affairs (9)
13. Taxation (7)
14. Transportation (7)
The president of the Senate is an ex officio member of the committee on legislative procedure.
S4-2. Chairs of standing committees. The president pro tempore of the Senate shall serve as
the chair of the legislative procedure committee. For other committees, the member of a
committee announced first is the chair. In the absence of the chair, the member announced next
shall act as chair, and so on as often as necessary.
S4-3. Referral of bills to committee. Upon the first reading of a bill, the president pro tempore
of the Senate or his designee shall assign that bill to an appropriate committee for hearing.
S5-2. Proceedings governed by Mason's Manual. Mason's Manual of Legislative Procedure
governs the proceedings of the Senate in all cases not covered by these rules or the Joint Rules.
S5-3. Conflicting rules. If the Senate rules and the Joint Rules conflict, the Senate Rules
govern.
S6-2. Approval of consent calendar is final disposition. Notwithstanding Joint Rule 13-4,
after allowing a reasonable time for questions from the floor on the bills and resolutions on the
consent calendar and after permitting the proponents to answer the questions, the president of
the Senate shall call for a vote on the consent calendar. Approval of the consent calendar by a
majority of the members-elect of the Senate is considered final disposition of all the bills and
resolutions on the consent calendar.
S7-2. Time for taking final action. Final action on nominations by the Governor may not be
taken until the second legislative day after receiving the nomination. This rule does not apply
to a nomination received during the three final legislative days.
S7-2.1. Uncontested nominations on consent calendar. Each standing committee may report
an uncontested nomination out of committee with recommendation that it be placed on the
consent calendar where it shall be subject to Joint Rules 13-2, 13-3, and 13-4.
S7-4. Vote requirements. Confirmation of nominations from the Governor requires a majority
vote of the members-elect.
S7-5. Reconsideration of vote. While a nomination from the Governor remains within the
Senate, the members may reconsider any vote taken on it.
S7-6. Written notice of final action. Upon final action, the secretary of the Senate shall notify
the Governor and the Secretary of State in writing of the action of the body.
S8-2. Meetings; notice; quorum; vote. All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline
and Expulsion shall be held in the Capitol. A majority of the members of the committee
constitutes a quorum. The affirmative vote of majority of those present and voting, assuming
a quorum, is required for actions of the committee.
All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion are open meetings in like
manner to any other Senate committee meeting. All meetings shall be webcast and archived in
like manner to any other Senate committee meeting.
All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion shall be scheduled at times
that are not in conflict with any other official Senate business. All members of the Senate have
the right to be present during all of the select committee's meetings.
S8-3. Oath. Prior to consideration of any matter referred to it, except establishing a quorum,
the members of the select committee shall subscribe to the following oath, which shall be
administered by the Secretary of the Senate.
"I do solemnly swear (affirm) that in all things appertaining to the matter referred to this select
committee, I will do impartial justice according to the Constitution, laws, Joint Rules, and
Senate Rules of the State of South Dakota. I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully and
impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me as a member of the Senate
Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion in the aforesaid matter, according to the best of
my ability and understanding, so help me God."
S8-4. Procedure in committee. The Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion shall:
(1) Conduct all hearings in like manner to any other Senate committee meeting, and only
after informing the member who is the subject of the hearing in writing of the date and time
of each meeting held for the purpose;
(2) Invite the member who is the subject of the hearing to attend all meetings of the
committee in person and to be accompanied by legal counsel, or to be represented at the
hearings by legal counsel of the member's choice and at the member's own expense;
(3) Afford the member full opportunity to present the member's position, to present
witnesses in support of the member's position, and extend the opportunity to confront and
to question witnesses called by the committee;
(4) Advise the member immediately of the date and time of each meeting, in cases where
the committee adjourns prior to completing its work and submitting its report to the Senate.
If the Senate is called into special session for the express purpose of investigating the conduct
of a Senator, the member is deemed to have received constructive notice within the provisions
of this rule.
S8-5. Subpoena power; punishment for contempt. The select committee is hereby
specifically and expressly granted the power and authority, with the written approval of the
chair of the committee, or the approval of a majority of the members of the committee, to hold
hearings, subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, require the production of books and records,
and to do all other things necessary to accomplish the purpose of its hearings and deliberations.
If a subpoena is not honored, the select committee also has the power to punish for contempt
and to provide for the prosecution of any person for refusal to testify, false swearing, or perjury
before the select committee in accordance with law.
S8-6. Receipt of resignation; authority of the chair. If, prior to resolution of the
investigation, a written resignation signed by the Senator who is the subject of the investigation
has been received by the chair, the chair may terminate the meetings of the select committee.
S8-7. Select committee report. Any action to expel, censure, discipline, or exonerate a Senator
shall be proposed in a select committee report of the Select Committee on Discipline and
Expulsion. If the select committee report calls for expulsion, censure, or discipline, the report
shall set forth the causes and grounds for which expulsion, censure, or discipline is being
recommended by the Senate, and it shall state the particular form of action recommended to the
Senate. If the select committee report calls for exoneration, the report shall set forth the reasons
why exoneration is appropriate.
S8-8. Procedure in the Senate. Adoption of a select committee report for the expulsion of a Senator requires the favorable vote of a two-thirds majority of the elected members. Adoption
of a select committee report for the censure or discipline of a Senator requires the favorable vote
of a three-fifths majority of the elected members. Adoption of a select committee report for the
exoneration of a Senator requires the favorable vote of a majority of the elected members.
The elective officers of the House of Representatives shall be a speaker and a speaker pro
tempore, who shall be members of that body, one chief clerk and such other officers as shall
be necessary to properly conduct the business of the House of Representatives.
§ 2-5-3.1. Tie vote for organizing House of Representatives.
In the event that there is a tie vote for purposes of organizing the House of Representatives
then, for the purposes of organization, the political party's candidate for speaker of the house,
speaker pro tempore and clerk, then having a member of its party duly elected as the Governor
of the state of South Dakota shall be deemed to be elected.
H1-2. Actions of the speaker pro tempore, other presiding officers. The speaker pro tempore shall act as presiding officer of the House of Representatives if the speaker is absent or unable to serve. The acts of the speaker pro tempore have the same validity as those of the speaker. If the speaker and the speaker pro tempore are absent or unable to serve, any member called to the chair by the House of Representatives may serve as presiding officer. When in session, the presiding officer, in the absence of the speaker pro tempore, may designate any
member to perform the duties of the presiding officer, but the designation may not extend
beyond an adjournment. The member's actions have the same validity as those of the speaker.
H1-3. Votes by the speaker. The speaker shall vote on all questions taken by yeas and nays
and shall vote in any election or division called for by any member. The speaker may, by
relinquishing the chair, assume all rights and privileges of a member of the House.
H1-4. Hour of meeting. The hour of meeting of the House of Representatives is 2:00 p.m. on
each legislative day unless otherwise ordered by the House.
H1-5. Seating assignments. The speaker of the House shall, with the advice of the majority
and minority leaders, make seating assignments for the floor of the House of Representatives.
H2-2. Repealed.
H2-3. Repealed.
In the absence of the committee chair, the vice chair shall act as chair. The speaker and speaker
pro tempore are members of the legislative procedure committee, and the speaker shall serve
as chair of the legislative procedure committee.
H4-2. Proceedings governed by Mason's Manual. Mason's Manual of Legislative Procedure
governs the proceedings of the House of Representatives in all cases not covered by these rules
or the Joint Rules.
H4-3. Conflicting rules. If the rules of the House of Representatives and the Joint Rules
conflict, the rules of the House of Representatives govern.
H5-2. Votes to be taken on the electronic system. On any question requiring the "yeas" and
"nays" to be entered upon the journal, the electronic voting system shall be used. On any such
question, neither individual votes nor vote totals may be displayed to any person including the
presiding officer until the time for voting has expired and the voting system has been locked.
If the electronic voting system is not in operating order at the time to vote on any such question,
the presiding officer shall order that all "yea" and "nay" votes be taken by calling the roll in
alphabetical order, except the name of the speaker of the House, which shall be last.
H5-3. Other votes. On all other questions to be voted upon, except upon elections, the
presiding officer may order the "yeas" and "nays" to be taken by the electronic voting system,
voice vote, or standing vote. Upon demand of a member requesting a division before the result
of a vote has been announced by the presiding officer, the "yeas" and "nays" may be taken by
the electronic voting system.
H5-4. Electronic voting system malfunctions. The vote of any member which has not been
recorded because of malfunction of the electronic voting system shall be entered upon the
journal, if the member was in the House chamber at the time of the vote and voted at the
appropriate time, and the malfunction is reported to the presiding officer before the presiding
officer's announcement of the result of the vote.
H5-5. Voting procedures. When the House is ready to vote upon any question using the
electronic voting system, the presiding officer shall state: "The question is . . . (designating the
matter to be voted upon). All in favor of such question shall vote 'yea', all opposed shall vote
'nay'." The presiding officer shall then direct the chief clerk to unlock the voting system and
announce, "The House will now proceed to vote."
H5-7. Voting records. On any question requiring the "yeas" and "nays" to be entered upon the
journal, the chief clerk shall retain one copy of the recorded vote on the electronic voting
system and provide it for purposes of the daily journal.
H5-8. Members to vote electronically from their desks, exceptions. A member may vote on
the electronic voting system only when at the member's desk. However, the presiding officer
may authorize the chief clerk to call the names of members who are on the floor but not at their
desks at the time of a vote and to record the votes of such members on the electronic voting
system. If a member other than the speaker of the House is presiding, the chief clerk shall
switch the voting system to allow the designated member presiding to vote in the presiding
officer's station.
H5-9. Voting by proxy prohibited. No member may vote for another member; nor may any
other person cast a vote for a member, except as otherwise provided in these rules. Any member
who votes or attempts to vote for another member, or a person not a member who votes or
attempts to vote for a member, is in contempt of the House and may be punished pursuant to
law.
H5-10. Tampering with electronic voting equipment prohibited. Any member or other
person who willfully tampers with or attempts to disarrange, deface, impair or destroy in any
manner whatsoever the electronic voting equipment used by the House of Representatives, or
who instigates, aids or abets with the intent to destroy or change the record of votes thereon, is
in contempt of the House and may be punished pursuant to law.
H5-11. Voting machine for session use only. The electronic voting equipment may only be
used when the House of Representatives is in session.
The other seven members of the select committee shall be chosen by the speaker of the House
in consultation with the majority leader and the minority leader. No more than five members
may be of the same political party.
H6-2. Meetings; notice; quorum; vote. All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline
and Expulsion shall be held in the Capitol. A majority of the members of the committee
constitutes a quorum. The affirmative vote of a majority of those present and voting, assuming
a quorum, is required for actions of the committee.
All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion are open meetings in like
manner to any other House of Representatives committee meeting. All meetings shall be
webcast and archived in like manner to any other House of Representatives committee meeting.
All meetings of the Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion shall be scheduled at times
that are not in conflict with any other official House of Representatives business. All members
of the House of Representatives have the right to be present during all of the select committee's
meetings.
H6-3. Oath. Prior to consideration of any matter referred to it, except establishing a quorum,
the members of the select committee shall subscribe to the following oath, which shall be
administered by the chief clerk of the House of Representatives:
"I do solemnly swear (affirm) that in all things appertaining to the matter referred to this select
committee, I will do impartial justice according to the Constitution, laws, Joint Rules, and
House Rules of the State of South Dakota. I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully and
impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me as a member of the House
Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion in the aforesaid matter, according to the best of
my ability and understanding, so help me God."
H6-4. Procedure in committee. The Select Committee on Discipline and Expulsion shall:
(1) Conduct all hearings in like manner to any other House of Representatives committee
meeting, and only after informing the member who is the subject of the hearing in writing of
the date and time of each meeting held for the purpose;
(2) Invite the member who is the subject of the hearing to attend all meetings of the committee
in person and to be accompanied by legal counsel, or to be represented at the hearings by legal
counsel of the member's choice and at the member's own expense;
(3) Afford the member full opportunity to present the member's position, to present witnesses
in support of the member's position, and extend the opportunity to confront and to question
witnesses called by the committee;
(4) Advise the member immediately of the date and time of each meeting, in cases where the
committee adjourns prior to completing its work and submitting its report to the House of
Representatives.
If a subpoena is not honored, the select committee also has the power to punish for contempt
and to provide for the prosecution of any person for refusal to testify, false swearing, or perjury
before the select committee in accordance with law.
H6-6. Receipt of resignation; authority of the chair. If, prior to resolution of the
investigation, a written resignation signed by the Representative who is the subject of the
investigation has been received by the chair, the chair may terminate the meetings of the select
committee.
H6-7. Select committee report. Any action to expel, censure, discipline, or exonerate a
Representative shall be proposed in a select committee report of the Select Committee on
Discipline and Expulsion. If the select committee report calls for expulsion, censure, or
discipline, the report shall set forth the causes and grounds for which expulsion, censure, or
discipline is being recommended by the House of Representatives, and it shall state the
particular form of action recommended to the House of Representatives. If the select committee
report calls for exoneration, the report shall set forth the reasons why exoneration is appropriate.
H6-8. Procedure in the House of Representatives. Adoption of a select committee report for
the expulsion of a Representative requires the favorable vote of a two-thirds majority of the
elected members. Adoption of a select committee report for the censure or discipline of a
Representative requires the favorable vote of a three-fifths majority of the elected members.
Adoption of a select committee report for the exoneration of a Representative requires the
favorable vote of a majority of the elected members.
H7-2. Approval of consent calendar is final disposition. Notwithstanding Joint Rule 13-4,
after allowing a reasonable time for questions from the floor on the bills and resolutions on the
consent calendar and after permitting the proponents to answer the questions, the speaker of the
House shall call for a vote on the consent calendar. Approval of the consent calendar by a
majority of the members-elect of the House is considered final disposition of all the bills and
resolutions on the consent calendar.
Table of Contents
THE PRESIDING OFFICER OF EACH HOUSE SHALL, IN THE PRESENCE OF THE
HOUSE OVER WHICH HE PRESIDES, SIGN ALL BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
PASSED BY THE LEGISLATURE, AFTER THEIR TITLES HAVE BEEN PUBLICLY READ
IMMEDIATELY BEFORE SIGNING, AND THE FACT OF SIGNING SHALL BE ENTERED
UPON THE JOURNAL.
Every person who intentionally disturbs the Legislature of this state, or either of the branches
composing it, while in session, or who commits any disorderly conduct in the immediate view
and presence of either branch of the Legislature tending to interrupt its proceedings or impair
the respect due to its authority, is guilty of a Class 2 misdemeanor.
§ 2-4-14. Contempt of Legislature--Punishment.
The Senate or the House of Representatives may punish, as a contempt, by imprisonment, a
breach of its privileges or the privileges of its members; but only for one or more of the
following offenses:
(1) Knowingly arresting a member or officer of the Senate or the House of Representatives, or
procuring such member or officer to be arrested in violation of his privilege from arrest;
(2) Disorderly conduct in the immediate view of the Senate or the House of Representatives,
and directly tending to interrupt its proceedings;
(3) Refusing to be examined as a witness either before the Senate or the House of
Representatives, or a committee thereof, or before any person authorized to take testimony in
legislative proceedings;
(4) Giving or offering a bribe to a member, or attempting, by menace or other corrupt means
or device, directly or indirectly, to control or influence a member in giving his vote, or to
prevent his giving the same;
but the term of imprisonment which the Senate or House of Representatives may impose for any
contempt specified in this section shall not extend beyond the session of the Legislature.
§ 2-7-22. Forfeiture of office on conviction of legislator--Disqualification from public office.
The conviction of a member of the Legislature of any crime defined in § 22-12A-17 or
§ 22-12A-18 involves as a consequence, in addition to the punishment prescribed therein, a
forfeiture of his office and disqualifies him from ever thereafter holding any public office under
this state.
1-2. Order of business. Each house shall begin each session as follows: call to order, prayer by the chaplain, pledge of allegiance, roll call, and determination of a quorum, then proceed
with the daily order of business. A majority of the members present may demand that the
journal for the preceding day be read.
1-3. Questions of order. The presiding officer of each house shall decide all questions of
order, subject to a motion of appeal, by a majority of the members present. No member may
speak more than once on an appeal without the consent of a majority of the members present.
1-4. Recognition of members for remarks. When a member desires to speak, that member
shall respectfully address the presiding officer. When the presiding officer recognizes the
member, that member is entitled to the floor. The member first to address the presiding officer
shall speak first. If two or more members address the presiding officer at the same time, the
presiding officer shall name the member who is to speak first.
1-5. Time allowed for a member to speak. Each member may speak on the pending subject
before any member speaks twice. No member may speak more than twice nor longer than ten
minutes on the same subject without the consent of a majority of the members present.
However, a member may speak an additional twenty minutes if the time is yielded by individual
members of the body. In computing the time allowed for argument, the time consumed in
asking questions is considered. If a member consents to the question, the time consumed by the
answer is taken out of the time allowed to the person asking the question.
1-6. Questions on the floor. If a member wishes to ask a question of another member, that
member shall courteously do so through the presiding officer and with the consent of the
member to whom the question is addressed. Any question addressed to a member shall relate
to a question before the body and shall be concisely asked for the sole purpose of obtaining
information. No question may reflect upon the character or conduct of any official, contain
argument or debate, or inquire about the course a member proposes to follow.
1-7. Call to order. If a member is called to order, that member shall remain silent until the
presiding officer determines whether the member is in order. The decision of the presiding
officer is subject to a motion of appeal.
1-8. Signing of documents by presiding officer. The presiding officer of each house shall
sign all concurrent resolutions and commemorations that are approved by the Legislature. The
president pro tempore and the speaker shall sign all writs, warrants, and subpoenas issued by
the house over which the officer presides.
1-9. Those permitted to speak to the body. No person other than a member of a house may
speak upon any subject before the house unless a member makes a motion to allow another
person to speak and the members present unanimously consent. However, the speaker of the
House and the president pro tempore of the Senate may allow any person other than a member
of the body to speak subject to advance notice to the majority and minority leaders. A motion
objecting to the decision of the presiding officer shall require a majority vote of the members-elect.
1-10. Dissent against an act or resolution. Any two members of a house may dissent or protest in respectful language against any act or resolution which they think injurious to the public or to any individual. The reason for their dissent or protest shall be presented to the
house and entered upon the subsequent legislative day's journal. However, if any member
objects prior to adjournment on the subsequent legislative day that the language of the dissent
or protest is not respectful, and a majority of the house agrees, the house may refer the dissent
or protest back to the dissenting or protesting members for emendation. Members submitting
a dissenting report shall be given one opportunity for emendation, which shall be completed
within one week of the request for emendation.
1-11. Repealed.
1A-2. Smoking prohibited. Smoking is prohibited in all areas of the Capitol.
1A-3. Alcoholic beverages prohibited. No alcoholic beverage, beer, wine, or other beverage
containing alcohol may be stored or consumed in any area of the Capitol that is under the
control of the Legislature.
1A-4. Repealed.
1A-5. Discrimination prohibited. The Legislature is an equal opportunity employer and
provides equal access to facilities and services without regard to race, color, creed, religion, sex,
disability, ancestry, or national origin.
1A-6. Person with a disability may request assistance. Individuals requesting assistance
pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act must contact the Legislative Research Council
at least forty-eight hours in advance of the needed assistance.
1A-7. Use of chambers for campaign photographs. Legislators and candidates for the
Legislature may use the chambers for campaign photographs; however, no changes may be
made to the arrangement of either chamber.
1A-8. Items distributed to the members' desks. Before any person may distribute an item
to the members' desks on the floor of the Senate or the House of Representatives, that person
must obtain the approval of the secretary of the Senate or the chief clerk of the House, subject
to the review of the speaker of the House and the president pro tempore of the Senate,
respectively. Any item distributed to the members' desks on the chamber floor must clearly bear
the name of the item originator.
1A-9. Cellular telephones. Cellular telephones may not be used in either chamber or gallery
while the Legislature is in session, except for silent functions that do not distract others.
1A-10. Presiding Officer's power to maintain order. The presiding officer may have any
member temporarily removed in order to preserve order and decorum.
1B-2. Compliance with specified requirements. Each legislator will comply with all
Constitutional and statutory requirements regarding conflicts of interest. Legislators will timely
file all required disclosure statements including Statements of Organization, Campaign Finance
Reports and Statements of Financial Interest. Legislators must also avoid any conflict of interest
which would interfere with their duties and responsibilities as legislators, interfere with the
exercise of their best judgment in support of the State of South Dakota or create an improper
personal benefit.
1B-3. Professional conduct and civility. The South Dakota Legislature will strengthen and
sustain an atmosphere of professional conduct and civility among its members and with all staff
and will not tolerate harassment or offensive behavior based on race, color, religion, national
origin, gender, age, or disability. Harassing or offensive behavior may include the use of
electronic communications through social media or otherwise, whether actual or attempted.
Legislators must refrain from any and all such harassment or offensive conduct. This
prohibition against harassment also encompasses sexual harassment including unwelcome
sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal, non-verbal, or physical conduct
of a sexually harassing nature, when: (1) submission to the harassment is made either explicitly
or implicitly a term or condition of employment or other employment determinations, or (2) the
harassment has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work
performance or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment.
1B-3.1. Sexual contact prohibited. No legislator or legislative employee may have sexual
contact with any legislative intern or page, and no legislative intern may have sexual contact
with a page.
1B-3.2. Sexual harassment prohibited. All members are responsible for ensuring that the
workplace is free from sexual harassment. All members shall avoid any action or conduct that
could be viewed as sexual harassment. A member shall report any sexual harassment complaint
to the president pro tempore or the speaker according to which house the member belongs. If
the situation is not resolved, the member shall forward the complaint to the Executive Board
of the Legislative Research Council.
1B-4. Action in event of violation. Failure to observe the highest standards of public conduct will subject a legislator to appropriate action, pursuant to the rules of the respective house.
THE LEGISLATURE SHALL MEET AT THE SEAT OF GOVERNMENT ON THE SECOND
TUESDAY OF JANUARY AT 12 O'CLOCK M. AND AT NO OTHER TIME EXCEPT AS
PROVIDED BY THIS CONSTITUTION.
Art. III, Sec. 9, Par. 2. Quorum.
A MAJORITY OF THE MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE SHALL CONSTITUTE A QUORUM,
BUT A SMALLER NUMBER MAY ADJOURN FROM DAY TO DAY, AND MAY COMPEL
THE ATTENDANCE OF ABSENT MEMBERS IN SUCH A MANNER AND UNDER SUCH
PENALTY AS EACH HOUSE MAY PROVIDE.
Art. III, Sec. 14. Elections viva voce.
IN ALL ELECTIONS TO BE MADE BY THE LEGISLATURE THE MEMBERS THEREOF
SHALL VOTE VIVA VOCE AND THEIR VOTES SHALL BE ENTERED IN THE JOURNAL.
Art. III, Sec. 15. Open legislative sessions--Exception.
THE SESSIONS OF EACH HOUSE AND OF THE COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE SHALL
BE OPEN, UNLESS WHEN THE BUSINESS IS SUCH AS OUGHT TO BE KEPT SECRET.
Art. III, Sec. 16. Adjournment of legislative houses.
NEITHER HOUSE SHALL WITHOUT THE CONSENT OF THE OTHER ADJOURN FOR
MORE THAN THREE DAYS, NOR TO ANY OTHER PLACE THAN THAT IN WHICH THE
TWO HOUSES SHALL BE SITTING.
2-2. Call of the house. One-sixth of the members-elect of either house may compel the attendance of absent members by ordering a call of the house of which they are members, but a call of the house may not be made after voting commences.
2-4. Access to chamber and lobbies. Except as otherwise provided in Joint Rule 2-1, no
person, except current legislators and legislative employees, may enter either chamber or space
reserved for members of the Legislature adjacent to either chamber at any time during a session
or for the period of three hours preceding a session except upon invitation of a member of the
chamber. However, under no circumstances may a lobbyist enter either chamber or reserved
space for a period of three hours preceding a session or one hour after adjournment of the
chamber.
EACH HOUSE SHALL DETERMINE THE RULES OF ITS PROCEEDINGS, SHALL CHOOSE
ITS OWN OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES AND FIX THE PAY THEREOF, EXCEPT AS
OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS CONSTITUTION.
The elective officers of the Senate shall be a president pro tempore of the Senate, who shall be
a member of that body, one secretary and such other officers as shall be necessary to properly
conduct the business of the Senate.
§ 2-5-3. Elective officers of House.
The elective officers of the House of Representatives shall be a speaker and a speaker pro
tempore, who shall be members of that body, one chief clerk and such other officers as shall
be necessary to properly conduct the business of the House of Representatives.
§ 2-5-5. Appointment of legislative employees by presiding officers.
The speaker of the House of Representatives shall appoint employees necessary to properly
conduct the business of the House and the president pro tempore of the Senate shall appoint
employees necessary to properly conduct the business of the Senate.
All elective and appointed officers and employees of the Senate and House of Representatives
designated in §§ 2-5-2, 2-5-3, and 2-5-5 shall receive compensation determined and agreed
upon by a joint select committee of both houses.
3-2. Duties of the secretary of the Senate and chief clerk of the House. The secretary of the
Senate and chief clerk of the House of Representatives are responsible to the president pro
tempore of the Senate or the speaker of the House, respectively. Their duties are:
(4) To attest the signature of the presiding officer to all bills, memorials, resolutions,
commemorations, writs, warrants, and subpoenas issued by the house;
(5) To deliver to the secretary of state at the close of each session the journals and all
books, bills, documents, resolutions, and papers in possession of the Legislature; to
preserve one true copy of each printed bill, joint resolution, and concurrent resolution of
each legislative session; to attach the copy together with a signed certificate that it is a true
and complete copy of each printed bill, joint resolution, and concurrent resolution of the
legislative session; and to file such certified copies with the secretary of state within ten
days after adjournment of the Legislature; and
(6) To perform all other acts appertaining to the office as may be required by the house or
its presiding officer.
3-3. Office of Engrossing and Enrolling. The Legislative Research Council shall perform all
engrossing and enrolling duties. In addition, each house may hire secretaries necessary to
conduct the business of the standing committees. Any secretary appointed to a committee is
responsible to the committee chair. In each house, a secretary is provided to the majority and
minority parties.
(1) To engross and enroll all bills delivered to them;
(2) To provide and supervise secretarial assistance to legislators as requested;
(3) To collect from the secretaries of all standing and special committees the minutes of
such committees and retain them in the Legislative Research Council Library; and
(4) To correct clerical errors, with the consent of the code counsel, in any bill. Clerical
errors which may be corrected are: errors in spelling, errors in numbering sections, errors
of omission or commission due to addition or deletion of material, and errors due to
copying incorrectly from the most recent statute. The code counsel shall inform the
principal sponsor of each correction.
3-5. Chaplains. The chief chaplain shall schedule a chaplain to serve in each house for each
legislative day. The duty of the chaplain of each house is to open each day's session with a
prayer.
3-6. Disputes or complaints involving a legislative session employee. Any dispute or
complaint involving the competency or decorum of a legislative session employee, including
any violation of SDCL 2-12, shall be referred to the president pro tempore of the Senate or the
speaker of the House. The officer may dismiss, suspend, or otherwise discipline the employee.
3-7. Sexual harassment prohibited. All employees are responsible for ensuring that the
workplace is free from sexual harassment. All employees shall avoid any action or conduct
which could be viewed as sexual harassment. An employee shall report any sexual harassment
complaint within one year of its occurrence. Such complaints may be reported to:
(1) The president pro tempore of the Senate, in the case of a Senate employee;
(2) The speaker of the House, in the case of a House employee;
(3) Any legislator who supervises House or Senate employees, respectively;
(4) A majority or minority party legislative secretary; or
(5) The Legislative Research Council Director, Deputy Director, or intern
coordinators.
Any complaints received pursuant to (3), (4), or (5) shall be reported promptly, in writing, by
the recipient of the complaint to the president pro tempore of the Senate or the speaker of the
House, respectively. If the situation is not resolved, the employee shall forward the complaint
to the Executive Board of the Legislative Research Council. The provisions of this section apply
only to complaints which are made on a timely basis under the provisions of this section.
(1) Prayer by the chaplain and pledge of allegiance;
(2) Roll call and determination of a quorum;
(3) Approval of the journal;
(4) Communications and petitions;
(5) Reports of standing committees;
(6) Reports of select committees;
(7) Messages from the other house;
(8) Motions and resolutions;
(9) Consideration of committee reports;
(10) Introduction, first reading and reference of bills and joint resolutions originating in
the house;
(11) First reading and reference of bills and joint resolutions originating in the other
house;
(12) Second reading of consent calendar bills and resolutions;
(13) Second reading of bills and joint resolutions originating in the house;
(14) Second reading of bills and joint resolutions originating in the other house;
(15) Announcements.
To revert to an old order of business or to pass to a new order of business requires a majority
vote of the members present. Any message or communication from the Governor or other state
officer may be received at any time.
4-2. Special orders. Any bill, resolution, memorial or other subject matter may be made a
special order for some subsequent time by a majority vote of the members present.
4-3. Order of bills and resolutions. Each bill and resolution up for consideration under any
order of business shall be listed and taken up in the order in which it is listed on the daily
calendar unless otherwise ordered by a majority of the members present.
5-1.1. Amendments proposing penalties. Any attempt to offer an amendment, whether in
committee or on the floor, that requires a prison or jail population cost estimate shall be ruled
out of order unless offered with a preexisting prison or jail population cost estimate.
5-2. Restatement and reading of motions. When a motion is made and seconded, it shall be
restated by the presiding officer, and, if requested by the presiding officer or a member, shall
be displayed electronically or reduced to writing and read aloud.
5-2.2. Withdrawal of motions. After a motion is stated by the presiding officer, it may not be
withdrawn without unanimous consent of the members present.
5-3. Priority of motions. When a question is under debate, no motion may be made except the
following motions which have precedence in the order listed:
5-5. Application and nondebatability of motions to lay on the table. A motion to lay on the
table which effects a disposition on the merits of any bill or resolution requires the vote of a
majority of the members-elect to carry and shall be decided without debate. Any other motion
to lay on the table requires the vote of a majority of the members present and shall be decided
without debate. No member may make introductory remarks prior to making a motion to lay
on the table.
5-5.1. Scope of motions to lay on the table. A motion to lay on the table may be made so as
to apply either to the main question or to a proposed amendment or to the bill and all pending
amendments, and the motion shall clearly state to which it is intended to apply.
5-5.2. Motion to take from the table. Whenever any bill or resolution is laid on the table, it
requires a majority vote of the members-elect to take it from the table. The motion to take from
the table is debatable.
5-5.3. Scope of motion to defer to day certain beyond sine die. The rules pertaining to
motions to table and to defer to a day certain beyond sine die shall be the same except that a
motion to defer to a day certain beyond sine die is debatable.
5-6. Motion to call the previous question. A motion for the previous question shall be decided immediately by a majority of the members present and without debate. The motion shall clearly indicate the question to which it applies. No member may make introductory remarks prior to making a motion to call the previous question. The effect of adopting a motion to call the previous question is to close debate, to prevent the moving of amendments or other
subsidiary motions, and to bring to vote immediately the question to be voted upon. The effect
of defeating a motion to call the previous question is to allow continuation of debate on the
question before the house.
5-7. Priority of vote after call of the previous question. After a motion to call the previous
question has prevailed, it is not in order to move a call of the house or to move to adjourn, prior
to a decision of the question before the house.
5-8. Dilatory motions to defer or refer. If a motion to defer to a day certain, to defer
indefinitely or to refer to committee is decided in the negative, such motion is not again in order
at the same stage of consideration of the bill or proposition.
5-8.1. Motion to defer indefinitely or to the 41st day as final action. A motion to defer
indefinitely or to the 41st day requires the vote of a majority of the members-elect.
5-9. Division of the question. Any member may call for a division of the question. The
presiding officer shall divide the question if it contains questions so distinct that, one being
taken away, the rest may stand as a separate proposition. A member may not call for the
division of a bill.
5-10. Motions to strike the enacting clause. A motion to strike the enacting clause of a bill
has precedence to a motion to amend, and if carried, is equivalent to the rejection of the bill.
5-11. Notice of intention to reconsider. Notice of intention to move for reconsideration shall
be made before the body proceeds to the next item of business. If any member fails to give
notice of intention to reconsider, the vote on a question shall be deemed to have been moved
for reconsideration and such motion for reconsideration to have been laid on the table.
5-11.1. Motions to reconsider. Having given notice of intent to reconsider, the member giving
notice may move to reconsider the question not later than the next legislative day, except as
provided in Joint Rule 5-13. Any motion to reconsider shall be made under order of business
No. 8, except as provided in Joint Rule 5-13, and takes precedence over all other motions
except to recess or to adjourn. No motion to reconsider the same question may be made twice
in the same house without unanimous consent. Every motion to reconsider shall be decided by
a majority vote of the members-elect on a roll call vote. No question may be reconsidered
except the final disposition of bills and joint resolutions and the override of vetoes. No motion
to lay on the table is subject to reconsideration.
5-12. Failure to make timely motion for reconsideration. If any member has given notice
of intent to move for reconsideration and does not move for reconsideration before the stated
deadline, the presiding officer shall immediately state that any member may move for
reconsideration.
5-13. Motion for reconsideration during final legislative days. During the seven final legislative days, any member who has given notice of intent to move for reconsideration shall make such motion at a time prior to the conclusion of business on the legislative day that the question sought to be reconsidered was acted upon. Such motion may be made at any time prior to adjournment.
5-14. Germaneness of amendments. No motion to amend a bill is in order unless it is
germane to the subject as expressed in the title of the bill.
5-15. Order of motions. All questions, other than privileged motions as listed in Joint Rule
5-3, shall be put in the order they are moved.
5-16. Limitations on number of motions to amend and substitute motions. When a motion
or proposition is under consideration, a motion to amend and a motion to amend that
amendment is in order. It is also in order to offer a further amendment as a substitute, but such
substitute is not subject to amendment.
5-17. Motion to delay action on amendments. Final action upon any amendment to a bill or
resolution may not be had until one legislative day has intervened, if a request for delay is made
and is supported by at least one-fifth of the members. However, no such request is in order
during the last fourteen days of the session, less one day for every two days that the session is
less than forty days. This rule cannot be invoked more than two times on the same bill in each
house.
5-17.1. Motion to delay action on amendments is nondebatable. No member invoking Joint
Rule 517 may speak to the merits of the amendment or make any other introductory remarks.
CHAPTER 6A. FORM OF BILLS - DEFINITIONS OF RESOLUTIONS -
GENERAL PROVISIONS
THE ENACTING CLAUSE OF A LAW SHALL BE: "BE IT ENACTED BY THE
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA" AND NO LAW SHALL BE PASSED
UNLESS BY ASSENT OF A MAJORITY OF ALL THE MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH
HOUSE OF THE LEGISLATURE. AND THE QUESTION UPON THE FINAL PASSAGE
SHALL BE TAKEN UPON ITS LAST READING, AND THE YEAS AND NAYS SHALL BE
ENTERED UPON THE JOURNAL.
Art. III, Sec. 21. One subject expressed in title.
NO LAW SHALL EMBRACE MORE THAN ONE SUBJECT, WHICH SHALL BE EXPRESSED
IN ITS TITLE.
THE GENERAL APPROPRIATIONS BILL SHALL EMBRACE NOTHING BUT
APPROPRIATIONS FOR ORDINARY EXPENSES OF THE EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATIVE,
AND JUDICIAL DEPARTMENTS OF THE STATE, THE CURRENT EXPENSES OF STATE
INSTITUTIONS, INTEREST ON THE PUBLIC DEBT, AND FOR COMMON SCHOOLS. ALL
OTHER APPROPRIATIONS SHALL BE MADE BY SEPARATE BILLS, EACH EMBRACING
BUT ONE OBJECT, AND SHALL REQUIRE A TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF ALL THE MEMBERS
OF EACH BRANCH OF THE LEGISLATURE.
Any person who fraudulently alters a bill which has been passed by the Legislature of this state,
with intent to have it approved by the Governor, certified by the secretary of state, or printed
or published by the printer of the statutes, in language different from that in which it was
passed by the Legislature, is guilty of a Class 6 felony.
(2) A concurrent resolution expresses the opinion or a principle of the Legislature not having
the force of law. A concurrent resolution shall only be used to authorize interim studies,
sessions or committees, to instruct a department of state government, or to petition federal
agencies;
(3) A joint resolution contains matters of legislation only. A joint resolution may be used to
refer a matter for referendum to the people, to place a constitutional amendment on the ballot
at the next general election, to ratify proposed amendments to the United States Constitution,
to enact legislative reapportionment, or to grant a water right pursuant to § 46-5-20.1;
(4) A House or Senate resolution of disapproval as provided under Article IV, Section 8, of the
South Dakota Constitution; and
(5) A legislative commemoration expresses recognition of service or achievements of national
or statewide importance or expresses sorrow over death or loss.
6A-3. Format of joint resolutions. If a joint resolution amends an existing provision of the
Constitution, the omitted matter shall be overstricken and the new matter shall be underscored.
A joint resolution shall contain sufficient introductory wording to give reasonable notice of the
effect of the proposed amendment.
6A-4. Bills at the request of the Governor, executive agencies, and the Chief Justice. A bill
introduced at the request of the Governor, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, a department,
board, commission, or any other agency of state government, shall indicate on the bill at whose
request such bill is being introduced.
6A-5. Review of bills by the Legislative Research Council. Before a bill, resolution, or
commemoration may be introduced, it shall be reviewed by the Legislative Research Council
for style and form. No bill or joint resolution may be submitted to the Legislative Research
Council for review less than forty-eight hours of the final introduction date for bills or joint
resolutions as provided in Joint Rule Chapter 17.
6A-6. Title of repealed law. A bill introduced for the sole purpose of repealing an existing law
shall include in its title the general subject to which the law relates.
6A-7. Placement of emergency clause. Any bill containing an emergency clause shall have
the emergency clause added at the end of the bill.
6A-8. Title and sponsors placed on bills and resolutions. Before a bill or resolution is
introduced, its title and the name or names of the member, members, or committee introducing
the bill or resolution shall be printed on it.
Any person who has been duly elected or appointed to serve during a regular session of the
Legislature may file bills and resolutions with the State Legislative Research Council at any
time within thirty days prior to the convening of such regular session. Notwithstanding the
provisions of § 276.1, any interim committee of the Legislative Research Council may file bills
and resolutions under the provisions of this section. The Executive Board of the State
Legislative Research Council shall prescribe rules for the handling and placing in proper form
of such bills and resolutions, subject to the provisions of §§ 274 to 276, inclusive.
The director of the Legislative Research Council shall, within the confines of such rules, receive
such bills and resolutions, place them in proper form, assign them numbers for introduction
in the proper house, and deliver copies to the printing contractor for pre-session printing. The
director shall deliver the original and one copy of each bill and resolution to the secretary of
the Senate or the chief clerk of the House of Representatives, as the case may be, on the day
when the session convenes. However, the director may not deliver any prefiled bill or resolution
until every sponsor of such bill or resolution has been duly sworn into office.
Upon prefiling, such bills and resolutions become the property of the Legislature and may not
thereafter be withdrawn. Prefiled bills and resolutions shall be considered as introduced on
the day of their delivery to each house.
§ 2-7-6.1. Committee introduction of bills and resolutions.
No bill or joint resolution may be introduced in either house of the Legislature by any
committee thereof, except:
(1) A bill or a joint resolution introduced by any standing committee of either house;
(2) A bill or joint resolution referred to the Legislature from an interim committee of the State
Legislative Research Council;
(3) A bill or joint resolution introduced at the request of the interim Rules Review Committee,
interim Government Operations and Audit Committee, the interim Retirement Laws Committee,
the interim Joint Bonding Review Committee, and the interim State-Tribal Relations Committee
by one or more committee members upon majority vote of the interim committee; or
(4) A bill or joint resolution introduced at the request of the Governor, an executive agency or
of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
The committee shall obtain a written request for such introduction from either the council, the
Governor, department head of an executive agency, a constitutional officer or board, or the
Chief Justice and shall retain such request in its file. Committee bills introduced on behalf of
a department head of an executive agency, a constitutional officer or board may be introduced
by the chairman without a vote of the committee for purposes of prefiling. Nothing in this
section prohibits one or more legislators from introduction of a bill or a joint resolution.
6B-2. Numbering of bills and resolutions. Bills shall be numbered consecutively as
introduced, beginning with No. 1 for Senate bills and with No. 1001 for House bills.
Resolutions shall be numbered consecutively as introduced, beginning with No. 1001 for House
resolutions and with No. 1 for Senate resolutions.
6B-3. Limit on number of bills that may be introduced. A legislator may introduce as prime
sponsor only three individual bills or joint resolutions during the last three days for bill
introduction prescribed by Joint Rule Chapter 17. A legislator may introduce as prime sponsor
only four concurrent resolutions, three of which must be introduced before the ninth legislative
day. The final day for introduction of the fourth concurrent resolution is prescribed by Joint
Rule Chapter 17.
6B-4. Sponsorship of bills and resolutions. Any bill, joint resolution, or concurrent resolution
may be introduced by any member or members of the house of origin. Any member or members
of the other house may join the member or members of the house of origin in introducing the
bill or resolution.
6B-5. Bill introduction by standing committees. Before a bill or joint resolution can be
introduced by a standing committee pursuant to § 2-7-6.1, the bill or resolution shall have
received an affirmative vote of a majority of the members of a standing committee at one of its
regular meetings with a statement of such fact on a separate slip attached to the cover of the bill
and signed by the chair of the committee.
6B-6. Pre-filing of agency bills. No bill or resolution introduced at the request of a
department, board, commission, or any other agency of state government, except bills or
resolutions introduced at the request of the Governor or Chief Justice, may be considered by
the Legislature unless such bill or resolution is pre-filed with the Director of the Legislative
Research Council at least forty-eight hours before the opening of a legislative session and
available for introduction on the first legislative day. The chairman may approve introduction
of the bill electronically.
6B-7. Disposition of copies of bills when introduced. An original and one copy of each bill
or resolution introduced shall be disposed of as follows:
(2) The copy shall be delivered to the prime sponsor.
A prison or jail population cost estimate shall be attached to any bill or amendment, except
misdemeanor penalties, that may impact the state prison or county jail population. A prison
or jail population cost estimate shall be attached to any measure proposed by ballot initiative,
except Class 2 misdemeanor penalties, that may impact the state prison or county jail
population. A prison or jail population cost estimate shall be prepared for a bill or amendment
with a Class 1 misdemeanor penalty only upon a request authorized by the rules of the
Legislature. The requirement for a cost estimate includes each bill, amendment, or ballot
initiative that meets the penalty requirements of this section and that increases the period of
imprisonment authorized for an existing crime, that adds a new crime for which imprisonment
is authorized, that imposes a minimum or mandatory minimum term of imprisonment, or that
modifies any law governing release of a prisoner from imprisonment or supervision.
The sponsor of the legislation, amendment, or ballot initiative shall request and allow sufficient
time to prepare a cost estimate from the Legislative Research Council. The cost estimate shall
be completed for a bill or amendment before the bill or amendment is considered by any
standing committee of the Legislature. Any ballot initiative shall have a cost estimate attached
to the Attorney General's statement required pursuant to § 12-13-9 or 12-13-25.1.
§ 2-9-34. Contents of cost estimate.
A cost estimate pursuant to § 2933 shall include the following:
(1) An analysis of the specific components that will impact the prison and jail population;
(2) The projected cost of the impact on the state prison system and the aggregate cost to county
jails on an annual basis and cost over a ten year period; and
(3) Operational costs and capital costs including all manner of construction.
extent to which the director relied on the information or data in preparing the fiscal note. If the
director is unable to acquire or develop sufficient information or data to prepare a fiscal note,
the director may prepare the fiscal note stating that fact, and the fiscal note shall be deemed to
comply with this rule. If the director determines that the fiscal impact of a bill, amendment, or
resolution cannot be determined, the director may prepare the fiscal note stating that fact, and
the fiscal note shall be deemed to comply with this rule.
This rule does not apply to prison or jail population cost estimates required by §§ 2-9-33 and
2-9-34.
6C-1.1. Request for fiscal note or prison or jail population cost estimate by any member.
A fiscal note or prison or jail population cost estimate may be requested by:
(1) The presiding officer when a bill, amendment, or resolution is introduced;
(2) The chair of the standing committee possessing the bill, amendment, or resolution;
(3) A majority vote of the standing committee possessing the bill, amendment, or
resolution; or
(4) A legislator, if the legislator is supported by a vote of one-fifth of the body before the
second reading of the bill or resolution.
6C-1.2. Certain bills require fiscal note. The Director of the Legislative Research Council
shall prepare a fiscal note for any bill which amends session law to affect the General
Appropriations Act enacted in a prior legislative session.
6C-1.3. Prison or jail population cost estimates. A prison or jail population cost estimate
may be requested pursuant to Joint Rule 6C-1.1 for any bill or amendment with a Class 1
misdemeanor penalty that may impact the state prison or county jail population. The cost
estimate shall be prepared pursuant to §§2-9-33 and 2-9-34.
6C-2. Deferral of bills without fiscal note. The original copy of a bill or resolution for which
a fiscal note has been requested shall be stamped by the bill clerk with the initials "F.N." before
referral to a committee. If the bill or resolution is reported back without a fiscal note, the
presiding officer shall defer placing the bill or resolution on the calendar until the requested
fiscal note is received. However, the presiding officer may place the bill or resolution on the
calendar if the presiding officer determines a fiscal note is no longer required.
6C-3. Attaching fiscal note to bill. If a fiscal note is available, it shall be attached by the bill
clerk at the end of the original copy of the bill or resolution.
6C-4. Retirement system actuarial statement. Each bill introduced affecting the benefits payable by the state or a local government retirement system shall have an actuarial statement attached to the bill. The actuarial statement shall be requested from the governing board of the retirement system affected and the statement shall identify the costs of the proposed change in the law as stated by the actuary for the affected retirement plan. If there is a doubt as to the need
for an actuarial statement, the presiding officer shall make the final decision. After the bill is
introduced, the bill clerk shall attach the actuarial statement to the original bill.
EVERY BILL SHALL BE READ TWICE, BY NUMBER AND TITLE ONCE WHEN
INTRODUCED, AND ONCE UPON FINAL PASSAGE, BUT ONE READING AT LENGTH
MAY BE DEMANDED AT ANY TIME BEFORE FINAL PASSAGE.
If any member introduces an appropriation bill, the bill shall be referred directly to a standing
committee. If any Committee on Appropriations introduces an appropriation bill, the presiding
officer of the house of origin may waive referral to a standing committee. If a bill has received
final disposition from the Joint Committee on Appropriations, the presiding officer may waive
the referral of the bill to a standing committee.
For the purposes of the Joint Rules, an appropriation bill is any bill that appropriates money
from public funds and that appropriation is expressed in the title of the bill.
The presiding officer may waive the referral of concurrent resolutions to a standing committee.
A copy of any concurrent resolution shall be posted to the Legislative Research Council internet
site before the resolution is acted upon.
6D-2. Referral of resolutions of disapproval. Any resolution of disapproval shall be referred
to a committee unless ordered to be placed directly on the calendar by a majority vote of the
members present.
AMENDMENTS TO THIS CONSTITUTION MAY BE PROPOSED . . . BY A MAJORITY VOTE
OF ALL MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE OF THE LEGISLATURE.
6E-3. Message required when one house amends bill or resolution of other house.
Whenever a bill or joint resolution is passed in one house and amended and passed in the other,
a message to the house of origin shall indicate that the bill or resolution has been amended.
6F-2. Second reading at least one day after committee report. No bill or joint resolution
may have its second reading or receive final passage until at least one legislative day after it has
been reported to the house by the committee to which the same has been referred and such
report has been read to the house.
6F-3. Action on committee reports. No report of any standing committee or select committee
may be acted upon until at least one legislative day after it has been read to the body, except the
report of the committee on legislative procedure, or the reports of standing committees
requesting referral to another standing committee of a bill or resolution which may be acted
upon immediately. However, during the last three days of the session, reports of conference
committees may be acted upon the same day as reported.
6F-4. Placement of unamended bills and resolutions on calendar. If any committee makes
a report that a bill or resolution "Do Pass" without proposing any amendment thereto, the bill
or resolution shall be placed upon the calendar for second reading on the next legislative day.
6F-5. Placement of amended bills and resolutions on calendar. If any standing committee
returns a bill or resolution to the house with the recommendation that the bill or resolution do
pass with proposed amendments, the report shall be received, read and entered upon the journal.
The committee report shall be placed on the calendar for adoption the following legislative day
and the bill shall be placed on the calendar for floor action on the legislative day following the
adoption of the committee report. On the final day for the committee to act upon a bill, the
report may be placed directly on the calendar for floor action. A report recommending the
passage of a bill or resolution with proposed amendments is not subject to change or
amendment.
6F-6. Placement of bills and resolutions not receiving a "Do Pass" recommendation on the calendar. Any bill or resolution reported "Do Not Pass" or "without recommendation" shall fail if no motion is made for its disposition under the order of business of Consideration of Committee Reports on the next legislative day after delivery to the house. On the final day to use Joint Rule 7-7, a motion must be made before adjournment on that day. A motion to place a bill or resolution on the calendar where a committee reports a bill or resolution "Do Not
Pass" or "without recommendation" shall require the vote of a majority of the members-elect
to carry. A bill or resolution failing to be placed on the calendar is lost after time for
reconsideration has passed.
The contractor for printing of the house and senate bills and joint resolutions of any kind shall
deliver them, completed, to the Legislature within two days after receiving the copy.
§ 2-7-15.1. Fees for copies of bills and journals--Mailing fees--Disposition.
The Executive Board of the Legislative Research Council may recover up to one-half of the
printing costs of legislative bills and journals by establishing uniform fees for the distribution
of legislative printed materials, to public agencies, lobbyists, and individuals. Fees for
estimated mailing costs may also be charged for mailing printed materials. Fees collected shall
be deposited in the state general fund.
§ 2-7-17. Certification and filing of printed bills and resolutions--Judicial notice.
It shall be the duty of the secretary of the Senate and chief clerk of the House of Representatives
to preserve one true copy of each printed bill, of each printed joint resolution, and of each
printed concurrent resolution of each session of the Legislature; and to attach same together,
to attach thereto, their signed certificate that they are true and complete copies of all the
printed bills, joint resolutions, and concurrent resolutions of the certain session of the
Legislature, and to file said copies so certified in the Office of the Secretary of State within ten
days after adjournment of the session. All copies so certified and filed shall be subject to
judicial notice in all courts of record.
§ 2-7-18. Engrossment of bills and amendments.
All bills, in either house of the Legislature, which have been favorably acted upon, preparatory
to going upon the calendar shall be engrossed if amendments have been made thereto.
Amendments to any bill made by either Senate or House of Representatives, after engrossment,
shall likewise be engrossed.
§ 2-7-19. Enrollment of bill after passage by both houses.
A bill which has passed both houses of the Legislature shall at once be enrolled by the house
in which it originated.
The original copy of each enrolled bill shall be signed by the president of the Senate, secretary
of the Senate, speaker of the House of Representatives, and chief clerk of the House of
Representatives and presented to the Governor. If the Governor approves the bill, the Governor
shall sign and transmit it to the secretary of state who shall deliver a photocopy of the
signature page to the code counsel to be used in preparing copy for session laws. The secretary
of state shall provide a permanent form of binder for the original enrolled bills and the bills
vetoed with the veto message attached. The secretary of state shall also provide the code
counsel with a photocopy of the signature page of each vetoed bill and veto message.
§ 22-12A-17. Fraudulent alteration of bill or resolution as felony.
Any person who fraudulently alters the draft of any bill or resolution which has been presented
to either house of the Legislature to be passed or adopted, with intent to procure it to be passed
or adopted by either house, or certified by the presiding officer of either house, in language
different from that intended by such house, is guilty of a Class 6 felony.
6G-2. (Reserved).
6G-3. (Reserved).
6G-4. (Reserved).
6G-5. Engrossing of bills and resolutions. If a bill or resolution is amended, the amendment
shall be engrossed on the bill or resolution before advancing to the next stage of the legislative
process. Amendments to any bill or resolution, made by either house after engrossment, shall
likewise be engrossed upon the original bill or resolution.
6G-6. Report to committee on legislative procedure. The chief of the office of engrossing
and enrolling shall examine all amended bills and joint resolutions.
6G-7. Enrolling of bills and joint resolutions. A bill which has passed both houses of the
Legislature shall be at once enrolled. An enrolled bill or joint resolution shall be free from
erasures, marks and interlineations, and each sheet thereof shall be initialed by the chief of
engrossing and enrolling and numbered for identification. The cover of the bill or joint
resolution shall indicate the house of origin.
6G-8. Review and signing of bills and joint resolutions. The committee on legislative procedure and the chief of engrossing and enrolling shall compare enrolled with engrossed bills and joint resolutions as passed by both houses and make a report thereon to the house of origin.
If a bill or joint resolution is reported by the committee as correctly enrolled, it shall be
presented to the presiding officers of both houses for their signatures.
6G-9. Presentation of bills and joint resolutions to Governor. After a bill or joint resolution
is signed by the officers of both houses, the chairmen of the committees on legislative
procedure shall jointly cause such bill to be presented to the Governor for the Governor's
signature and such joint resolution to the secretary of state for filing. The committees shall, at
any time, report such presentations to both houses.
6H-2. Numbering of commemorations. Each legislative commemoration shall be numbered
consecutively as introduced beginning with No. 1 for the Senate and No. 1001 for the House
of Representatives.
6H-3. Printing and calendaring of commemorations. Upon introduction, the presiding
officer shall order the legislative commemoration printed in the journal of that legislative day.
The presiding officer shall place each pending legislative commemoration on the calendar of
the next legislative day following its printing.
6H-4. Approval of commemorations in the house of origin. Any member of the body may
object to the approval of any legislative commemoration by so stating on the floor of the body
at any time before adjournment on the legislative day upon which the legislative
commemoration is calendared. If no such objection is made, the legislative commemoration
shall be deemed approved and the presiding officer shall deliver it to the other house. If there
is objection, the legislative commemoration shall be deemed disapproved.
6H-5. Calendaring of commemorations in the second house. Upon receipt of a legislative
commemoration from the other house, the presiding officer shall place it on the next day's
legislative calendar.
6H-6. Approval of commemorations in the second house. Any member of the receiving
body may object to the approval of any legislative commemoration by so stating on the floor
of the body at any time before adjournment on the legislative day upon which the legislative
commemoration is calendared. If no such objection is made, the legislative commemoration
shall be deemed approved and the presiding officer shall deliver it to the house of origin. If
there is objection, the legislative commemoration shall be deemed disapproved.
6H-7. Enrollment of commemorations. The secretary of the Senate or the chief clerk of the
House of Representatives shall deliver the original enrolled legislative commemoration to the
prime sponsor.
Any member of the Senate or House of Representatives, while acting as a member of any
committee thereof, shall have authority to administer oaths to such persons as shall be
examined before such committee.
§ 2-6-2. Composition and appointment of Government Operations and Audit Committee--Duties and reports--Assistance.
There shall be appointed at each regular session of the Legislature a Government Operations
and Audit committee of ten, consisting of five members of the Senate appointed by the president
pro tempore of the Senate, one of whom shall be a member of the Judiciary Committee, and five
members of the House of Representatives appointed by the speaker of the house, one of whom
shall be a member of the Judiciary Committee, for the purpose of inquiry and review of any
phase of the operations and the fiscal affairs of any department, institution, board, or agency
of the state, to review any findings of abuse or neglect in a juvenile corrections facility, to make
a continuing study of the operation of the state's correctional system, and to make a detailed
report to the Senate and House of Representatives and submit a copy of its report to the
appropriation committee of each house of the Legislature at the next succeeding session of the
Legislature or any special session of the Legislature upon request of the body.
The Department of Legislative Audit shall provide assistance, including clerical help, to the
committee upon request.
§ 2-6-4. Investigative powers of Government Operations and Audit Committee - Subpoenas.
The Government Operations and Audit Committee may examine all records and vouchers,
summon witnesses, and thoroughly examine all expenditures and the general management of
each department of state government. The Government Operations and Audit Committee may
issue a subpoena for the person, documents, or both and use the procedure provided in chapter
21-34 to enforce its subpoena when the subject of the subpoena refuses to comply with the
command to appear and testify before the committee. However, no subpoena may be issued
until the decision to issue a subpoena by the Government Operations and Audit Committee has
been ratified by the Executive Board of the Legislative Research Council.
Any person who is summoned to attend as a witness before either house of the Legislature or
any committee thereof authorized to summon or subpoena witnesses, and who refuses or
neglects without lawful excuse to attend pursuant to the summons or subpoena, is guilty of a
Class 2 misdemeanor.
§ 2-6-6. Refusal to testify or produce evidence before Legislature as misdemeanor.
Any person who, being present before either house of the Legislature or any committee thereof
authorized to summon witnesses, willfully refuses to be sworn or affirmed, or to answer any
material and proper question, or to produce upon reasonable notice any material or proper
books, papers, or documents in his possession or under his control, is guilty of a Class 2
misdemeanor.
§ 2-6-7. Forfeiture of office by legislator in violation--Disqualification from public office.
The conviction of a member of the Legislature of any crime defined in § 2-6-5 or 2-6-6 involves
as a consequence, in addition to the punishment prescribed therein, a forfeiture of his office
and disqualifies him from ever thereafter holding any public office under this state.
§ 2-6-8. Retirement laws study committee created--Purpose.
There is hereby created the South Dakota Retirement Laws Committee to make a continuing
study of the pension and annuity and benefit laws relating to employees and officers in public
service.
§ 2-6-9. Appointment and terms of Retirement Laws Committee members--Political
affiliations.
The Retirement Laws Committee shall consist of five members of the House of Representatives
to be appointed by the speaker of the House of Representatives and five members of the Senate
to be appointed by the president pro tempore of the Senate. The members of the Retirement
Laws Committee shall be appointed biennially for terms expiring on January first of each
succeeding odd-numbered year and shall serve until their respective successors are appointed
and qualified. No more than three from each legislative body may be from the same political
party.
§ 2-6-10. Officers of Retirement Laws Committee--Staff assistance.
The Retirement Laws Committee shall select a chairman and vice-chairman and shall be
provided with staff assistance from the Legislative Research Council staff.
§ 2-6-11. Study of retirement laws by committee--Emphasis.
The Retirement Laws Committee shall continue the study of the retirement and pension laws applicable to employees and officers in government service throughout the state and shall appraise and evaluate existing laws relating to retirement and pension. It shall give particular study and consideration to the financial affairs of the retirement funds and shall recommend
revisions in financial provisions and methods of amortizing the accrued liabilities of such funds
without impairment of any of the rights and equities of participants and beneficiaries but in
conformity with sound and established principles of financing retirement fund obligations.
§ 2-6-12. Legislative drafts and recommendations by Retirement Laws Committee--Reports--Review of proposals.
The Retirement Laws Committee shall present legislative drafts to effect sound and equitable
public employees retirement programs. The Retirement Laws Committee shall study and make
recommendations concerning the extension of retirement coverage to public employees to
whom retirement protection has not been accorded. The Retirement Laws Committee shall from
time to time report to the Legislature which report shall include but not be limited to the
financial soundness of the system. The Retirement Laws Committee shall review all proposed
legislation that affects public employee retirement in the state and shall make its report to the
Legislature. During the legislative session, however, the standing committees established to
review retirement laws legislation shall review proposed legislation that affects public
employee retirement.
7-1.1. Subcommittees. The president pro tempore of the Senate, speaker of the House or a
chair of a standing committee may designate subcommittees, the number of members to serve
on each subcommittee, the chair of each subcommittee, the members of the subcommittee, and
the period of time the subcommittee shall serve.
7-1.2. Committee action on bills and resolutions. Unless otherwise ordered under Joint
Rule 6D-1, all bills or resolutions shall be referred to one of the standing committees. The chair
of a standing committee may then assign a bill or resolution to a subcommittee of that standing
committee. All subcommittees shall return such bills or resolutions as are assigned to them for
consideration, to the standing committee with or without recommendation and within the time
which will permit the full standing committee to act upon the bill or resolution.
7-1.3. Meetings open to public. Subject to Article III, Section 15 of the Constitution, all
committee or subcommittee meetings shall be open to the public.
7-1.4. Posting of agendas. Agendas of the bills, resolutions, and other proposals to be considered at any meeting of a standing committee or subcommittee shall be posted on the bulletin board of the respective house. At least one legislative day shall intervene between the date of posting and the date of consideration. An agenda must be posted by 5 p.m. in order to allow for an intervening legislative day. However, if a day of legislative recess intervenes between the date of posting and the date of consideration, the requirement of posting is fulfilled
if posting is made by 5 p.m. on the day before the legislative recess. This rule does not apply
to consideration of a bill or resolution for which action is required pursuant to Joint Rule 7-7.
7-1.5. Consideration of matters not posted. A two-thirds majority of the committee members
present may bring a matter up for consideration at any time.
7-1.6. Formal action required on all legislative proposals. Standing committees shall take
formal action regarding each legislative proposal submitted for their consideration.
7-1.7. Vote requirement. Final disposition on a bill or resolution requires a majority vote of
the committee members-elect taken by roll call.
7-1.8. Final disposition. Final disposition is any action which moves a bill out of a committee
to the floor of a house or to another committee or which removes it from further consideration
by the committee. Examples of final disposition include "Do Pass," "Do Pass, Amended,"
"Refer to Another Committee," "Lay on the Table," and "Defer to 41st Day."
7-1.9. Attachment of amendments to bills or resolutions reported unfavorably. Unless a
bill has been ordered to be delivered pursuant to Joint Rule 7-7, a committee may amend a bill
or resolution that it reports "Do Not Pass" or "Without Recommendation."
7-1.10. Amendment of a previously tabled bill. If a bill is removed from the table and
amended so that it requires a title amendment, the title must be amended and then the bill
reported for a new hearing pursuant to Joint Rule 7-1.4, unless placed by Joint Rule 7-1.5.
7-2. Committee reports. Each committee shall report final committee actions on legislative
proposals. The chair of a committee shall sign the reports of the committee and present them
to the body when the call for committee reports is made. The chair is responsible for the
accuracy and propriety of the chair's statements and shall answer any questions pertaining to
the report. This rule does not prohibit the committees on legislative procedure from reporting
at any time. Formal actions shall be reported to the body not later than the next legislative day
in an informational committee report which is printed in the daily journal.
7-3. Reports of select committees. Select committees to which matters are referred shall in
all cases report a statement of facts and their opinion on the matters to the body.
7-4. Dissenting reports. If the members of a committee cannot agree on its report, the majority
and minority may each make a report. Any member dissenting in whole or in part from the
reasoning and conclusions of both majority and minority may also present a statement of the
member's reasoning and conclusions. All reports shall be entered in the journal if found by the
presiding officer to be decorous in language and respectful to the house.
7-5. Filing of committee minutes. The minutes of all standing committees shall be prepared
and filed on a computerized legislative information system. Computer terminals shall be
available in the Presidents' and Speakers' lobbies of the capitol.
7-6. Contents of committee minutes. Minutes of standing committees filed pursuant to Joint Rule 7-5 shall contain the number of each proposal considered; the title or a brief summary of
each proposal's major provisions; the committee's action, if any, on each proposal, including
a brief minority report if requested by any committee member; a record of how each committee
member voted when action was taken, including votes on motions to postpone consideration
of proposals; and a list of all persons testifying before the committee on each proposal and the
interest they represent. Minutes of budget hearings conducted by an appropriations committee
may contain a synopsis of testimony received. Minutes shall be open to the public for
inspection.
7-7. Demand for delivery of bill or resolution to house--"Smokeout." Each house may by
motion order its committee to deliver a bill or resolution under its consideration to that house,
if no more than three legislative days have passed since the committee reported that the bill or
resolution was tabled or deferred to the 41st legislative day. If the motion is supported by the
vote of one-third or more of the members-elect, the committee shall, not later than the next
legislative day, deliver the bill or resolution to the house with or without recommendation. The
bill or resolution shall be delivered to the house in the same form as it was when it was tabled
or deferred to the 41st legislative day by the committee.
7-8. Placement of "smokedout" bill or resolution on calendar. If a bill or resolution is
delivered to the House of
Representatives or Senate pursuant to Joint Rule 7-7 on the last day
for passage and it was not reported "Do Pass," the bill or resolution may, by motion approved
by a majority of the members-elect of the House of Representatives or Senate, be placed on that
day's calendar.
7-9. Calendar committee. The calendar committee in the Senate consists of the president pro
tempore, the Senate majority leader, and the Senate minority leader. The calendar committee
in the House consists of the speaker of the House, the House majority leader, and the House
minority leader. The committee shall determine the daily legislative calendar.
7-10. Co-chairs of joint committees. Chairs of standing committees operating and voting as
joint committees shall serve as co-chairs of the joint committees.
7-11. Introduction of general appropriation bill. Any general appropriation bill shall be
introduced in the House of Representatives in even-numbered years and in the Senate in odd-numbered years.
7-11.1. Selection of revenue targets. The Joint Committee on Appropriations shall select
general fund revenue targets for the current and next fiscal years by February 15th for the
purpose of setting appropriations. The Committee may subsequently adjust the general fund
revenue targets.
7-12. Joint committees on appropriations. The Joint Committee on Appropriations, consisting of the Senate and House Committees on Appropriations, is deemed to be a standing committee of the Senate and House of Representatives for the limited purposes of hearing agency or other budget presentations, and introducing, hearing, or acting on bills that authorize the sale of state property, appropriate money, or adjust school district property tax levies pursuant to an appropriations bill. All Joint Committee on Appropriations action shall be approved by a majority vote of the Joint Committee unless a member calls for a separate vote
of the House Committee on Appropriations and the Senate Committee on Appropriations in
which case a majority vote of each committee is required to adopt the action.
Each agenda for the Joint Committee on Appropriations shall be approved by the chair of the
Senate Committee on Appropriations and the chair of the House Committee on Appropriations.
The respective vice chair of each committee may sign in the absence of the chair.
7-13. Entertainment of motions. No motion may be debated until it is seconded. Following
the second of a debatable motion, the chair shall first recognize the member making the motion.
No member of the House of Representatives may make introductory remarks prior to making
a motion.
7-14. Restatement and reading of motions. When a motion is made and seconded, it shall
be restated by the chair.
7-15. Withdrawal of motions. After a motion is stated by the chair, it may not be withdrawn
without consent of the members who made and seconded the motion.
7-16. Motions. When a question is under debate, no motion may be made except the following
motions:
(1) Adjourn; (nondebatable)
(2) Recess;
(3) Call the previous question; (nondebatable)
(4) Lay on the table; (nondebatable)
(5) Defer to the 41st day;
(6) Do pass;
(7) Do pass, amended;
(8) Do not pass;
(9) Do not pass, amended;
(10) Without recommendation;
(11) Without recommendation, amended;
(12) Defer to a day certain;
(13) Refer to another committee;
(14) Refer to another committee, amended;
(15) Amend;
(16) Approve or amend minutes; and
(17) Appoint a subcommittee.
7-17. Application and nondebatability of motions to lay on the table. A motion to lay on
the table which effects a disposition on the merits of any bill or resolution requires the vote of
a majority of the committee members-elect to carry and shall be decided without debate. No
other motion may be made until the members have voted on the motion to lay on the table. Any
other motion to lay on the table requires the vote of a majority of the committee members
present and shall be decided without debate. No committee member may make introductory
remarks prior to making a motion to lay on the table.
7-19. Motion to take from the table or to reconsider the bill. Whenever any bill or
resolution is laid on the table or deferred to a day certain beyond sine die, it requires a majority
vote of the committee members-elect to take it from the table or to reconsider the bill or
resolution which was deferred. The motion to take from the table or to reconsider is debatable.
7-20. Scope of motion to defer to day certain beyond sine die. The rules pertaining to
motions to table and to defer to a day certain beyond sine die shall be the same except that a
motion to defer to a day certain beyond sine die is debatable.
7-21. Motion to call the previous question. A motion for the previous question shall be
decided immediately by a majority of the committee members present and without debate. The
motion shall clearly indicate the question to which it applies. No committee member may make
introductory remarks prior to making a motion to call the previous question. The effect of
adopting a motion to call the previous question is to close debate, to prevent the moving of
amendments or other subsidiary motions, and to bring to vote immediately the question to be
voted upon. The effect of defeating a motion to call the previous question is to allow
continuation of debate on the question before the committee.
7-22. Priority of vote after call of the previous question. After a motion to call the previous
question has prevailed, it is not in order to move to adjourn, prior to a decision of the question
before the committee.
7-23. Dilatory motions to defer or refer. If a motion to defer to a day certain, to defer
indefinitely or to refer to another committee is decided in the negative, such motion is not again
in order at the same stage of consideration of the bill or proposition.
7-24. Motion to postpone as final action. A motion to defer indefinitely or to a date beyond
the sine die adjournment of the Legislature requires the vote of a majority of the committee
members-elect.
7-25. Germaneness of amendments. No motion to amend a bill is in order unless it is
germane to the subject as expressed in the title of the bill.
7-26. Limitations on number of motions to amend and substitute motions. When a motion
or proposition is under consideration, a motion to amend and a motion to amend that
amendment is in order. It is also in order to offer a further amendment as a substitute, but such
substitute is not subject to amendment.
7-27. Division of the question. Any member may call for a division of the question. The chair
shall divide the question if it contains questions so distinct that, one being taken away, the rest
may stand as a separate proposition. A member may not call for the division of a bill.
8-2. Conference committee meetings, committee reports, and reports must be germane.
Conference committees shall meet in open session, and minutes shall be taken and prepared in
a like manner as provided for in Joint Rule 7-6. The presiding officer of the house of origin
shall announce to that body the time and location of each conference committee meeting. The
co-chairs of each conference committee shall report the results of each meeting to the body in
a conference committee report jointly signed by both. The conference committee report must
be germane to the title of the bill as submitted to the conference committee. The adoption of
any conference committee report constituting final disposition must be approved by the
recorded affirmative vote of at least two members from each house.
8-3. Final disposition of report and distribution of reports. Adoption of a conference
committee report recommending passage of a bill or adoption of a resolution constitutes final
disposition. The vote required to concur in the amendments of the other House or to adopt a
conference committee report shall be the same as that required for final passage of the bill or
resolution taking such bill or resolution as a whole. Before the final vote on the adoption of a
conference committee report may be taken, any member of the body may require that the report
be distributed in written form to the members of the body.
8-4. Member may move to not appoint a subsequent conference committee--Final
disposition. However, if a conference committee report is not adopted, any member may move
not to appoint a new conference committee. If that motion prevails it constitutes final
disposition of that bill or resolution.
9-2. Rules of the committee of the whole. The rules observed by the house concerned shall govern as far as practicable, except that:
(2) The previous question may not be enforced; and
(3) The time of speaking may not be limited.
9-3. Adjournment of the committee of the whole. A motion that the committee rise is always
in order and shall be decided without debate.
EACH HOUSE SHALL KEEP A JOURNAL OF ITS PROCEEDINGS AND PUBLISH THE
SAME FROM TIME TO TIME, EXCEPT SUCH PARTS AS REQUIRE SECRECY, AND THE
YEAS AND NAYS OF MEMBERS ON ANY QUESTION SHALL BE TAKEN AT THE DESIRE
OF ONE-SIXTH OF THOSE PRESENT AND ENTERED UPON THE JOURNAL.
It shall be the duty of the secretary of the Senate and chief clerk of the House of Representatives
to keep correct journals of the proceedings of the senate and house, respectively; to have the
custody of all records, accounts, and other papers committed to them and at the close of each
session of the Legislature to deposit for safekeeping in the Office of the Secretary of State all
books, bills, documents, resolutions, and papers in the possession of the Legislature, correctly
labeled, folded, and classified, and generally to perform such duties as shall be assigned them
by the senate or house, respectively; provided, such journals shall be deposited within forty
days after the adjournment of the Legislature.
§ 2-7-8. Time of delivery of daily legislative journals--Penalty for delay--Waiver.
The contractor for printing and binding of the journals of the Legislature shall deliver the daily
journals to the Legislature at least two hours before the convening of the Legislature on the
following legislative day and, if he fails to do so, he is subject to a penalty of ten dollars per
hour for each hour's delay to be deducted from any sum due him on the contract, or recovered
from his performance bond in the event such deduction from contract cannot be made. The
director of the Legislative Research Council may waive the penalty provisions of this section
if failure to deliver the daily journals as required is due to circumstances which the director
considers to be sufficiently extenuating.
The corrected daily copies of the journal of the Senate and House of Representatives, together
with the index thereof, shall constitute, and be the official permanent record of the legislative
proceedings.
§ 2-7-11. Time of delivery of permanent journals--Distribution and price.
The contractor for printing the journal indexes of the Legislature shall deliver them to the
Legislative Research Council within ninety days after copy therefor has been furnished. The
Legislative Research Council shall provide for the distribution of the journals. Price and
distribution of the journal indexes shall be determined by a joint-select committee of the
Legislature.
§ 2-7-12. Certified copies of journals as prima facie evidence of proceedings.
Duly certified copies of such journals shall be received in all courts of the state as original
evidence, and the volumes wherein the same are published by authority of the state, shall be
prima facie evidence of such proceedings.
10-2. Journal contents. In keeping a correct journal, the secretary of the Senate and the chief
clerk of the House shall record in the journals of their respective houses the motions,
resolutions, rules and decisions of the respective houses.
10-3. Journal format and certification. The secretary of the Senate and the chief clerk of the
House shall each furnish a corrected copy of their respective compiled daily journals to the
printer having the contract for the printing of the journals. The secretary and the chief clerk
shall preface the journals by a title to appear on the first page of the permanent volumes of the
journals, substantially as follows:
(Seal of State)
Begun and Held at Pierre South Dakota
on
Tuesday, January ____ 20__
One copy each of the daily permanent journals of the House and Senate shall be certified as
follows:
I hereby certify that the following (Senate or House) journal of the _______________legislative
day is correct.
EACH HOUSE SHALL BE THE JUDGE OF THE ELECTION RETURNS AND
QUALIFICATIONS OF ITS OWN MEMBERS. A MAJORITY OF THE MEMBERS OF EACH
HOUSE SHALL CONSTITUTE A QUORUM, BUT A SMALLER NUMBER MAY ADJOURN
FROM DAY-TO-DAY, AND MAY COMPEL THE ATTENDANCE OF ABSENT MEMBERS IN
SUCH A MANNER AND UNDER PENALTY AS EACH HOUSE MAY PROVIDE. EACH
HOUSE SHALL DETERMINE THE RULES OF ITS PROCEEDINGS, SHALL CHOOSE ITS
OWN OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES AND FIX THE PAY THEREOF, EXCEPT AS
OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS CONSTITUTION.
11-2. Adopting joint rules. A joint rule may be adopted by concurrence of a majority of the
members-elect of each house.
11-3. Proceedings governed by Mason's Manual. Mason's Manual of Legislative Procedure governs the proceedings of the Senate and the House of Representatives in all cases not covered by these rules.
THE ENACTING CLAUSE OF A LAW SHALL BE: " BE IT ENACTED BY THE
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA" AND NO LAW SHALL BE PASSED
UNLESS BY ASSENT OF A MAJORITY OF ALL THE MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH
HOUSE OF THE LEGISLATURE. AND THE QUESTION UPON THE FINAL PASSAGE
SHALL BE TAKEN UPON ITS LAST READING, AND THE YEAS AND NAYS SHALL BE
ENTERED UPON THE JOURNAL.
Art. XI, § 14. Vote required to impose or increase taxes.
THE RATE OF TAXATION IMPOSED BY THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA IN REGARD
TO ANY TAX MAY NOT BE INCREASED AND NO NEW TAX MAY BE IMPOSED BY THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA UNLESS BY CONSENT OF THE PEOPLE BY EXERCISE OF
THEIR RIGHT OF INITIATIVE OR BY A TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF ALL THE MEMBERS
ELECT OF EACH BRANCH OF THE LEGISLATURE.
Art. XII, § 2. Contents of general appropriation bill--Separate appropriation bills.
THE GENERAL APPROPRIATION BILL SHALL EMBRACE NOTHING BUT
APPROPRIATIONS FOR ORDINARY EXPENSES OF THE EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATIVE AND
JUDICIAL DEPARTMENTS OF THE STATE, THE CURRENT EXPENSES OF STATE
INSTITUTIONS, INTEREST ON THE PUBLIC DEBT, AND FOR COMMON SCHOOLS. ALL
OTHER APPROPRIATIONS SHALL BE MADE BY SEPARATE BILLS, EACH EMBRACING
BUT ONE OBJECT, AND SHALL REQUIRE A TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF ALL THE
MEMBERS OF EACH BRANCH OF THE LEGISLATURE.
Art. XXIII, § 1. Amendments.
AMENDMENTS TO THIS CONSTITUTION MAY BE PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE OR BY A
MAJORITY VOTE OF ALL MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE OF THE LEGISLATURE. AN
AMENDMENT PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE SHALL REQUIRE A PETITION SIGNED BY
QUALIFIED VOTERS EQUAL IN NUMBER TO AT LEAST TEN PER CENT OF THE TOTAL
VOTES CAST FOR GOVERNOR IN THE LAST GUBERNATORIAL ELECTION. THE
PETITION CONTAINING THE TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT AND THE
NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ITS SPONSORS SHALL BE FILED AT LEAST ONE YEAR
BEFORE THE NEXT GENERAL ELECTION AT WHICH THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
IS SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS. A PROPOSED AMENDMENT MAY AMEND ONE OR
MORE ARTICLES AND RELATED SUBJECT MATTER IN OTHER ARTICLES AS
NECESSARY TO ACCOMPLISH THE OBJECTIVES OF THE AMENDMENT.
Terms as used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires, mean:
12-2. Voting restrictions. No member may vote on any question unless within the chamber
and voting before the result of the vote is announced.
12-3. Voting procedures. Questions shall be put in this form: "As many as favor the question,
as stated, say 'Yea'; as many as are opposed to the question, as stated, 'Nay'." If the presiding
officer doubts the result of a vote or if a division is called for, the members shall divide. Those
in the affirmative shall rise from their seats and remain standing until counted. A vote of "aye"
or "yes" shall be recorded as "yea" and a vote of "no" shall be recorded as "nay."
12-4. Changing votes. If the yeas and nays have been taken on any question, no member may
change a vote after the decision is announced from the chair, unless by unanimous consent of
the house.
12-5. Majority vote required for resolutions. Any joint or concurrent resolution requires a
majority vote of the members elected to each house of the Legislature, and the yeas and nays
shall be entered upon the journal. Any House or Senate resolution requires a majority vote of
the members elected to that house, and the yeas and nays shall be entered upon the journal.
12-6. Two-thirds majority vote required to repeal or amend a sunset provision in the case
of a tax statute. Any repeal of or amendment to a provision which automatically abolishes the
imposition of a tax at a specified time allowing the tax to continue in force requires an
affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members elect.
at the committee meeting with respect to the final version of the bill or resolution as approved
by the committee.
13-2. Consent calendar placement, objections. Any bill or resolution certified by the
committee chair as an uncontested bill or resolution shall be placed by the secretary of the
Senate or the chief clerk of the House of Representatives, on the consent calendar, upon an
affirmative vote therefor of all the members present of the committee reporting the bill or
resolution to its respective house. Upon objection of any member to the placement or retention
of any bill or resolution on the consent calendar, the bill or resolution shall be removed from
the consent calendar and may be placed on the house calendar for second reading on the
following legislative day. No consent calendar bill or resolution may be considered for adoption
until the legislative day following the day of its placement on the consent calendar.
13-3. Consent calendar scheduling. The calendar committee in each house may schedule
consent calendar bills and resolutions at any time.
13-4. Consent calendar items--Questions, voting. Bills and resolutions on the consent
calendar are not debatable. The president of the Senate or the speaker of the House of
Representatives shall allow a reasonable time for questions from the floor and shall permit the
proponents of the bills or resolutions to answer the questions. Immediately before voting on the
first bill or resolution on the consent calendar, the president of the Senate or the speaker of the
House of Representatives shall call to the attention of the members the fact that the next roll
call will be the roll call on the bill or resolution on the consent calendar.
CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS
NO ACT SHALL TAKE EFFECT UNTIL NINETY DAYS AFTER THE ADJOURNMENT OF
THE SESSION AT WHICH IT PASSED, UNLESS IN CASE OF EMERGENCY, (TO BE
EXPRESSED IN THE PREAMBLE OR BODY OF THE ACT) THE LEGISLATURE SHALL BY
A VOTE OF TWO-THIRDS OF ALL THE MEMBERS ELECTED OF EACH HOUSE,
OTHERWISE DIRECT.
Art. IV, § 4, Par. 1, 2, 3, 4. Veto power.
WHENEVER THE LEGISLATURE IS IN SESSION, ANY BILL PRESENTED TO THE GOVERNOR FOR SIGNATURE SHALL BECOME LAW WHEN THE GOVERNOR SIGNS THE BILL OR FAILS TO VETO THE BILL WITHIN FIVE DAYS, NOT INCLUDING SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS, OR HOLIDAYS, OF PRESENTATION. A VETOED BILL SHALL BE RETURNED BY THE GOVERNOR TO THE LEGISLATURE TOGETHER WITH THE GOVERNOR'S OBJECTIONS WITHIN FIVE DAYS, NOT INCLUDING SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS, OR HOLIDAYS, OF PRESENTATION IF THE LEGISLATURE IS IN SESSION OR UPON THE RECONVENING OF THE LEGISLATURE FROM A RECESS. ANY VETOED
BILL SHALL BE RECONSIDERED BY THE LEGISLATURE AND, IF TWO-THIRDS OF ALL
MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE SHALL PASS THE BILL, IT SHALL BECOME LAW.
WHENEVER A BILL HAS BEEN PRESENTED TO THE GOVERNOR AND THE
LEGISLATURE HAS ADJOURNED SINE DIE OR RECESSED FOR MORE THAN FIVE
DAYS WITHIN FIVE DAYS FROM PRESENTATION, THE BILL SHALL BECOME LAW
WHEN THE GOVERNOR SIGNS THE BILL OR FAILS TO VETO IT WITHIN FIFTEEN DAYS
AFTER SUCH ADJOURNMENT OR START OF THE RECESS.
THE GOVERNOR MAY STRIKE ANY ITEMS OF ANY BILL PASSED BY THE LEGISLATURE
MAKING APPROPRIATIONS. THE PROCEDURE FOR RECONSIDERING ITEMS STRUCK
BY THE GOVERNOR SHALL BE THE SAME AS IS PRESCRIBED FOR THE PASSAGE OF
BILLS OVER THE EXECUTIVE VETO. ALL ITEMS NOT STRUCK SHALL BECOME LAW
AS PROVIDED HEREIN.
BILLS WITH ERRORS IN STYLE OR FORM MAY BE RETURNED TO THE LEGISLATURE
BY THE GOVERNOR WITH SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CHANGE. BILLS
RETURNED SHALL BE TREATED IN THE SAME MANNER AS VETOED BILLS EXCEPT
THAT SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CHANGE AS TO STYLE OR FORM MAY BE
APPROVED BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF ALL THE MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE. IF THE
GOVERNOR CERTIFIES THAT THE BILL CONFORMS WITH THE GOVERNOR'S
SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS, THE BILL SHALL BECOME LAW. IF THE GOVERNOR
FAILS TO CERTIFY THE BILL, IT SHALL BE RETURNED TO THE LEGISLATURE AS A
VETOED BILL.
Subject to the provisions of the Constitution and statutes relating to vetoes and the referendum,
an act of the Legislature which does not prescribe when it shall take effect, if passed at a
regular session, takes effect on the first day of July after its passage and if passed at a special
session on the ninety-first day after the final adjournment of such session.
§ 2-7-20.1. Certificate of conformity by Legislature in form and style.
Whenever the Governor certifies, pursuant to paragraph four of section 4 of article IV of the
Constitution, that the Legislature has conformed a bill to his recommendations, that certificate
shall be typed and signed on the enrolled bill.
§ 2-7-20.2. Veto of bills passed before last four session days--Message to house of origin--Reconsideration--Filing with secretary of state.
Whenever the Governor vetoes any bill or any items of a bill which was presented to him five or more calendar days before an adjournment or a recess of the Legislature, he shall transmit his veto message with the original bill to the secretary of the Senate or chief clerk of the House of Representatives, whichever was the house of origin, on the date of his exercise of the power but no later than noon on the last legislative day prior to adjournment or recess. The officer
of the house receiving the veto message shall certify on the original copy of the bill whether
reconsideration was had and the vote on any reconsideration and shall transmit the bill and
veto message to the secretary of state for filing when the time for reconsideration has passed.
§ 2-7-20.3. Veto of bills too late for return to Legislature--Transmittal to secretary of state.
Whenever the Governor vetoes a bill or any items of a bill which was presented to him during
the final four days preceding an adjournment or a recess and it cannot be transmitted to the
house of origin in session, he shall transmit the original bill and his veto message to the
secretary of state within one day following his veto but no later than the sixteenth day following
adjournment or recess.
§ 2-7-20.4. Bills becoming law without Governor's signature or objections.
Whenever the Governor fails to veto any bill which shall become law without his signature or
the certificate referred to in § 2720.1, he shall deliver it to the secretary of state who shall note,
beneath the signature line provided for the Governor, that it was delivered by the Governor
without his signature and without his objections. No communication relating to his reasons for
not signing the bill shall be filed or recorded by the secretary of state.
15-2. Notification of bill or resolution rejection. If a bill or joint resolution which has passed
one house is rejected by the other, the house of origin shall be immediately notified of this
action.
15-3. Notification of bill or resolution deferred to the 41st day. If the consideration of any
bill or joint resolution which originated in one house shall be postponed in the other house to
a day so distant that it will not be taken up again by the present session, the house of origin
shall be immediately notified of such action.
16-2. Call of the house. A call of the members of either house may be had in joint session by
order of the house in which the call is desired.
16-3. Recording of the proceedings. The secretary of the Senate and the chief clerk of the
House shall be the clerks of the joint session and keep a record of the proceedings and enter the
record in the journals of the Senate or of the House.
16-5. Suspension of floor privileges. During a joint session, former Governors, Lieutenant
Governors, members of the Congress of the United States from South Dakota and former
members of the South Dakota Legislature will not be admitted to the chamber. The presiding
officer will instruct the sergeant at arms to provide a reserve seating section in the chamber
gallery for these former officials who wish to witness the joint session.
Legislative Deadlines
Legislative Action
40 Day Session
A. Last day for unlimited introduction of
individual bills and joint resolutions1
12th Day
B. Last day for introduction of individual bills
and joint resolutions1
15th Day
C. Last day for introduction of committee bills
and joint resolutions1
16th Day
D. Last day upon which Joint Rule 5-17 can be
invoked on a bill or resolution in either house
26th Day
E. Last day to move required delivery of bills or
joint resolutions by a committee to the house of
origin
28th Day
F. Last day to pass bills or joint resolutions by the
house of origin and to introduce concurrent
resolutions
29th Day
G. Last day for introduction of commemorations
33rd Day
H. During the seven final legislative days
motions to reconsider and reconsideration being
made upon the same day (any time before
adjournment)
34th Day on
I. Last day to move required delivery of bills or
joint resolutions by a committee to the second
house
35th Day
J. Last day for a bill or joint resolution to pass
both houses
36th Day
K. The last day of a legislative session is reserved
for the consideration of vetoes
40th Day
1 Bills and joint resolutions must be submitted to the Legislative
Research Council at least 48 hours prior to this deadline, pursuant to
Joint Rule 6A-5.
Any appropriation bill that is not a general appropriation bill, which is referred to or reported
to the floor by the House Appropriations, the Senate Appropriations or the Joint Committee on
Appropriations, is subject to the following legislative deadlines, in lieu of the legislative
deadlines of E and F, in this chapter:
(1) Last day to move required delivery of bills by a committee to the house of origin:
31st Day;
(2) Last day to pass bills by the house of origin: 32nd Day.
17-2. Calendar less than 40 days. If a Session Calendar is adopted for a period of thirty-five
(35) days to thirty-nine (39) days, inclusive, the legislative deadlines set forth in Chapter 17 of
the Joint Rules shall be decreased as follows:
(1) Decrease the deadlines occurring after the 16th day but prior to the 34th day by one (1)
day for every two (2) days by which the length of the adopted calendar is less than forty
(40) days;
(2) Decrease the deadlines occurring on and after the 34th day by the same number of days
by which the length of the adopted calendar is less than forty (40) days.