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Keeping up with the General Assembly

by Cliff Terry

From tracking bills to communicating with your delegates or senator, you can find it all on the General Assembly's website

To discover what’s going on in the General Assembly, there’s no better way than the General Assembly’s website.  This article will point you to some of the most useful items there.  You could find them on your own, but some are easy to miss.

The site’s home page is at http://mlis.state.md.us/, and much of what you’d want is listed right on the home page.  The two-column table of contents near the top of the page takes you to items on this page, so browsing this page may be the best approach.

For a description of how a bill becomes a law, click on Department of Legislative Services in the section with the same name just above the bottom of the page, then Documents & Publications, then 2005 Drafting Manual, and see chapter II. 

The Bill Indexes section leads you to lists of every bill introduced on a subject you choose from a list.  If you know the number of a bill you’re interested in, the Bill Information and Status section leads you to its text, amendments if any, where it is in the process, and a statement of its fiscal impacts (“Fiscal Note”).  The Fiscal Note also gives a good explanation of the bill. Links to Senate Synopsis and House Synopsis in the last line of that section give you lists of every bill introduced in the session so far.

The Hearing Schedules section tells you when and where the assigned committee will hold a hearing on a bill. Anyone can testify, which means you can give your opinion and any relevant facts you can fit into the few minutes allowed, so don’t be shy.  See lower on that page for information on parking and security.

Toward the bottom of the home page, under the heading Everything Else and the subheading What’s Happening at the Maryland General Assembly, click on 2008 Session - Dates of Interest Calendar for critical dates in the session’s schedule.  Under the same subheading, click on Helpful Hints and Reminders for General Assembly Visitors for parking information and the warning that visitors must show photo ID and pass through a metal detector.  In the same section, under the subheading Publications from the Department of Legislative Services, is a link to the Legislative Wrap-up, a weekly summary of what’s happening to bills.

Instead of or in addition to testifying, you can contact your own legislators, and the Contact Your Legislators section near the top of the page can help.  Click on Find your legislators using a street address and type your address in.  The other item in the section invites you to e-mail them.  To identify your legislators if you know your district, scroll down to the Roster section and click on View Roster and List of Committees, then Roster of Legislators by District.   For mailing addresses and phone numbers, also click on View Roster and List of Committees, but then Senate Biographies or House of Delegates Biographies.   For a letter, however, the name plus Senate (or House) Office Building, Annapolis, MD 21401 will suffice.

 Adapted from, "Keeping up with the General Assembly" by Cliff Terry, March 2006 Chesapeake, The Sierra Club MD Chapter Newsletter Online".

   
   

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