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THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
2380 |
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THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2026 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
PROPOSING AMENDMENTS TO THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION TO ESTABLISH A CONTINUOUS LEGISLATIVE SESSION.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
The legislature further finds that the efficiency, productivity, and orderliness of the state legislature could be improved by requiring that the legislature be in session during every month of the year. Requiring the legislature to call a special session to address matters outside of regular session causes inefficiencies and delays while also creating uncertainty and limiting public input. Transitioning to a continuous legislature would allow for more proactive lawmaking and increase public engagement in the legislative process.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to propose amendments to the Hawaii State Constitution to establish a continuous legislative session, beginning in January 2031. Specifically, this Act:
(1) Defines each regular session to be two
calendar years;
(2) Requires the legislature to convene on the
first and third weeks of each month except for two months before a general or
primary election;
(3) Repeals language regarding special sessions,
adjournment, and recesses;
(4) Establishes procedures for the carry-over of
bills from the first to the second year of a regular session;
(5) Establishes deadlines for certain bills to be
submitted for gubernatorial consideration;
(6) Standardizes the number of days that the governor
must approve or veto a bill submitted for consideration;
(7) Repeals the governor's ability to appoint an
interim position if a vacancy occurs while the senate is not in session; and
(8) Establishes salaries of the members of the legislature pursuant to recommendations by the commission on salaries submitted during the 2030 regular session, unless those recommendations are amended by law.
SECTION 2. Article III, section 10, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"SESSIONS; MEETINGS
Section 10. The legislature shall convene annually in
regular session at 10:00 o'clock a.m. on the third Wednesday in January. Regular sessions shall be limited to a
period of two calendar years.
[At
the written request of two-thirds of the members to which each house is
entitled, the presiding officers of both houses shall convene the legislature
in special session. At the written
request of two-thirds of the members of the senate, the president of the senate
shall convene the senate in special session for the purpose of carrying out its
responsibility established by Section 3 of Article VI. The governor may convene both houses or the
senate alone in special session.
Regular
sessions shall be limited to a period of sixty days, and special sessions shall
be limited to a period of thirty days.
Any session may be extended a total of not more than fifteen days. Such extension shall be granted by the
presiding officers of both houses at the written request of two-thirds of the
members to which each house is entitled or may be granted by the governor.
Each
regular session shall be recessed for not less than five days at some period
between the twentieth and fortieth days of the regular session. The legislature shall determine the dates of
the mandatory recess by concurrent resolution.
Any session may be recessed by concurrent resolution adopted by a
majority of the members to which each house is entitled. Saturdays, Sundays, holidays, the days in mandatory
recess and any days in recess pursuant to a concurrent resolution shall be
excluded in computing the number of days of any session.]
The legislature shall meet on the first and third week and be in recess on the second and fourth week of each month; provided that the legislature shall be in recess for two months before any general or primary election. Each house shall hold committee meetings on Monday through Thursday and a floor session on Friday of each week the legislature meets.
All
[sessions] meetings shall be held in the capital of the
State. In case the capital shall be
unsafe, the governor may direct that any [session] meeting be
held at some other place."
SECTION 3. Article III, section 12, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"ORGANIZATION; DISCIPLINE; RULES; PROCEDURE
Section 12. Each house shall be the judge of the
elections, returns and qualifications of its own members and shall have, for
misconduct, disorderly behavior or neglect of duty of any member, power to
punish [such] the member by censure or, upon a two-thirds vote of
all the members to which [such] the house is entitled, by
suspension or expulsion of [such] the member. Each house shall choose its own officers,
determine the rules of its proceedings and keep a journal. The ayes and noes of the members on any
question shall, at the desire of one-fifth of the members present, be entered
upon the journal.
Twenty
days after a bill has been referred to a committee in either house, the bill
may be recalled from [such] the committee by the affirmative vote
of one-third of the members to which [such] the house is
entitled.
Every meeting of a committee in either house or of a committee comprised of a member or members from both houses held for the purpose of making decision on matters referred to the committee shall be open to the public.
[By
rule of its proceedings, applicable to both houses, each house shall provide
for the date by which all bills to be considered in a regular session shall be
introduced.]"
SECTION 4. Article III, section 15, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"PASSAGE OF BILLS
Section 15. No bill shall become law unless it shall pass three readings in each house on separate days. No bill shall pass third or final reading in either house unless printed copies of the bill in the form to be passed shall have been made available to the members of that house for at least forty-eight hours.
Every bill when passed by the house in which it originated, or in which amendments thereto shall have originated, shall immediately be certified by the presiding officer and clerk and sent to the other house for consideration.
Any
bill pending at the [final adjournment of a regular session in an
odd-numbered] end of a calendar year shall carry over with the same
status to the next [regular session.] calendar year; provided that
the next calendar year is in the same regular session; provided further that no
bill shall remain pending for more than two calendar years. Before the carried-over bill is enacted, it
shall pass at least one reading in the house in which the bill originated. The general appropriations bill or the
supplemental appropriations bill for the ensuing fiscal year, as the case may
be, or any other appropriations bill shall pass each house and be submitted for
gubernatorial consideration no later than forty-five days before the end of the
existing fiscal year. Any bill proposing
a constitutional amendment shall pass each house and be submitted for
gubernatorial consideration no later than June 30 in each even‑numbered
year. Any other bill shall pass each
house and be submitted for gubernatorial consideration no later than July 31 of
each year.
If the last day of the period within which the bill is required to be submitted for gubernatorial consideration falls on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday, the period shall extend to the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday or holiday."
SECTION 5. Article III, section 16, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"APPROVAL OR VETO
Section 16. Every bill [which shall have] that
has passed the legislature shall be certified by the presiding officers and
clerks of both houses and shall thereupon be presented to the governor. If the governor approves it, the governor
shall sign it and it shall become law.
If the governor does not approve [such] the bill, the
governor may return it, with the governor's objections to the legislature. Except for items appropriated to be expended
by the judicial and legislative branches, the governor may veto any specific
item or items in any bill [which] that appropriates money for
specific purposes by striking out or reducing the same; but the governor shall
veto other bills, if at all, only as a whole.
The
governor shall have [ten] thirty calendar days to consider bills
presented [to the governor ten or more days before the adjournment of the
legislature sine die], and if any [such] bill is neither signed nor
returned by the governor within that time, it shall become law in like manner
as if the governor had signed it. If
the last day of the period within which the bill presented is required to be
signed or returned falls on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday, the period shall
extend to the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday or holiday.
RECONSIDERATION
[AFTER ADJOURNMENT
The
governor shall have forty-five days, after the adjournment of the legislature
sine die, to consider bills presented to the governor less than ten days before
such adjournment, or presented after adjournment, and any such bill shall
become law on the forty-fifth day unless the governor by proclamation shall
have given ten days' notice to the legislature that the governor plans to
return such bill with the governor's objections on that day. The legislature may convene at or before noon
on the forty-fifth day in special session, without call, for the sole purpose
of acting upon any such bill returned by the governor. In case the legislature shall fail to so
convene, such bill shall not become law.]
Any [such] bill may be amended to meet the governor's objections
and, if so amended and passed, only one reading being required in each house
for [such] passage, it shall be presented again to the governor, but
shall become law only if the governor shall sign it within ten days after
presentation. If the last day of the
period within which the amended bill is required to be signed by the governor
falls on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday, the period shall extend to the next day
that is not a Saturday, Sunday or holiday.
[In
computing the number of days designated in this section, the following days
shall be excluded: Saturdays, Sundays,
holidays and any days in which the legislature is in recess prior to its
adjournment as provided in section 10 of this article.]"
SECTION 6. Article V, section 6, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"EXECUTIVE AND ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES
AND
DEPARTMENTS
Section 6. All executive and administrative offices,
departments and instrumentalities of the state government and their respective
powers and duties shall be allocated by law among and within not more than
twenty principal departments in [such] a manner as to group the same
according to common purposes and related functions. Temporary commissions or agencies for special
purposes may be established by law and need not be allocated within a principal
department.
Each
principal department shall be under the supervision of the governor and, unless
otherwise provided in this constitution or by law, shall be headed by a single
executive. [Such] The
single executive shall be nominated and, by and with the advice and consent of
the senate, appointed by the governor.
That person shall hold office for a term to expire at the end of the
term for which the governor was elected, unless sooner removed by the governor;
[except] provided that the removal of the chief legal officer of
the State shall be subject to the advice and consent of the senate.
Except
as otherwise provided in this constitution, whenever a board, commission or
other body shall be the head of a principal department of the state government,
the members thereof shall be nominated and, by and with the advice and consent
of the senate, appointed by the governor.
The term of office and removal of such members shall be as provided by
law. [Such] The board,
commission or other body may appoint a principal executive officer who, when
authorized by law, may be an ex officio, voting member thereof, and who may be
removed by a majority vote of the members appointed by the governor.
The governor shall nominate and, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, appoint all officers for whose election or appointment provision is not otherwise provided for by this constitution or by law. If the manner of removal of an officer is not prescribed in this constitution, removal shall be as provided by law.
[When
the senate is not in session and a vacancy occurs in any office, appointment to
which requires the confirmation of the senate, the governor may fill the office
by granting a commission which shall expire, unless such appointment is
confirmed, at the end of the next session of the senate. The person so appointed shall not be eligible
for another interim appointment to such office if the appointment failed to be
confirmed by the senate.
No
person who has been nominated for appointment to any office and whose
appointment has not received the consent of the senate shall be eligible to an
interim appointment thereafter to such office.]
Every
officer appointed under the provisions of this section shall be a citizen of
the United States and shall have been a resident of this State for at least one
year immediately preceding that person's appointment[, except];
provided that this residency requirement shall not apply to the president
of the University of Hawaii."
SECTION 7. Article XVI, section 3.5, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is amended to read as follows:
"SALARY COMMISSION
Section [[]3.5[]]. There
shall be a commission on salaries as provided by law, which shall review and
recommend salaries for the justices and judges of all state courts, members of
the legislature, department heads or executive officers of the executive
departments and the deputies or assistants to department heads of the executive
departments as provided by law, excluding the University of Hawaii and the
department of education. The commission
shall also review and make recommendations for the salary of the administrative
director of the State or equivalent position and the salary of the governor and
the lieutenant governor.
Any salary established pursuant to this section shall not be decreased during a term of office, unless by general law applying to all salaried officers of the State.
Not later than the fortieth legislative day of the 2007 regular legislative session and every six years thereafter, the commission shall submit to the legislature its recommendations and then dissolve.
The recommended salaries submitted shall become effective as provided in the recommendation, unless the legislature disapproves the entire recommendation as a whole by adoption of a concurrent resolution prior to adjournment sine die of the legislative session in which the recommendation is submitted; provided that any change in salary which becomes effective shall not apply to the legislature to which the recommendation for the change in salary was submitted.
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section, the commission on salaries shall convene no later than the month of November 2029 for the sole purpose of making recommendations for the salaries of the members of the legislature, to take effect from January 1, 2031, to December 31, 2034. Members of the commission shall be appointed in the same manner that members are normally appointed as provided by law. No later than the fortieth legislative day of the 2030 regular legislative session, the commission shall submit to the legislature its recommendations and shall then dissolve. The recommended salaries submitted shall become effective as provided in the recommendation, unless amended by law."
SECTION 8. Article III, section 11, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii is repealed.
["ADJOURNMENT
Section 11. Neither house shall adjourn during any
session of the legislature for more than three days, or sine die, without the
consent of the other."]
SECTION 9. The question to be printed on the ballot shall be as follows:
"Shall the legislature meet continuously throughout the year, beginning in January 2031, with legislators serving full-time and bills being subject to a two-year deadline?"
SECTION 10. Constitutional material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New constitutional material is underscored.
SECTION 11. These amendments shall take effect upon compliance with article XVII, section 3, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii during the 2028 general election; provided that sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8 shall take effect on January 1, 2031.
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INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Continuous Legislative Session; Constitutional Amendment; Constitutional Repeal
Description:
Establishes
a continuous Legislature beginning in January 2031. Defines each regular session to be two
calendar years. Requires the Legislature
to convene on the first and third weeks of each month except for two months
before a general or primary election. Repeals
language regarding special sessions, adjournment, and recesses. Establishes procedures for the carry-over of
bills from the first to the second year of a regular session. Establishes deadlines for certain bills to be
submitted for gubernatorial consideration.
Standardizes the number of days that the Governor must approve or veto a
bill submitted for consideration. Repeals
the Governor's ability to appoint an interim position if a vacancy occurs while
the Senate is not in session. Establishes
salaries of the members of the Legislature pursuant to recommendations by the
Commission on Salaries submitted during the 2030 regular session, unless those
recommendations are amended by law.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.