HR193 Alabama 2010 Session
Summary
- Session
- Regular Session 2010
- Title
- House of Representatives, Consent Calendar
- Summary
HR193 creates a House Consent Calendar to consider listed bills on the 10th legislative day (if not earlier) without amendments, substitutions, or debate and sets objection rules.
What This Bill DoesIt establishes a consent calendar process for the House, designates specific bills to be included, and requires members to file objections by adjournment on the 9th legislative day. Bills on the Consent Calendar may not be amended, substituted, debated, or carried over. The included bills are HB52 (trapping rules, license tags), HB223 (bicyclist hand signals from the right side), and HB373 (corrections and codifications related to 2009 acts and the Secretary of State's duties).
Who It Affects- Members of the Alabama House of Representatives, who must file objections by the deadline and will not be able to amend or debate consent calendar bills.
- Sponsors and constituents of HB52, HB223, and HB373, whose proposed changes would be considered as consent items and could pass without on-floor debate or amendments.
Key ProvisionsAI-generated summary using openai/gpt-5-nano on Feb 25, 2026. May contain errors — refer to the official bill text for accuracy.- Creates a House Consent Calendar for listed bills to be considered on the 10th legislative day (or later).
- Objections to consent calendar bills must be filed by adjournment on the 9th legislative day.
- Bills on the Consent Calendar may not be amended, substituted, debated, or carried over.
- HB52 would delete the requirement that the trap owner's license number appear on trap tags and adjust trapping licensing and tag practices.
- HB223 would amend Sec. 32-5A-135 to allow bicyclists to give hand signals from the right side.
- HB373 would correct and codify certain past acts and local laws, and adjust the duties of the Secretary of State (Sec. 19-3B-816).
- Subjects
- Resolution, Legislative
Bill Actions
Guin motion to Adopt adopted Voice Vote
Introduced
Bill Text
Documents
Source: Alabama Legislature