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Bill > S4809


NJ S4809

NJ S4809
Revises certain membership requirements of Commission on Latino and Hispanic Heritage.


summary

Introduced
11/06/2025
In Committee
01/08/2026
Crossed Over
12/18/2025
Passed
01/14/2026
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
01/14/2026

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill revises certain membership requirements of the Commission on Latino and Hispanic Heritage. Under current State law, the Commission on Latino and Hispanic Heritage is a permanent State-level commission tasked with surveying, designing, encouraging, and promoting the implementation of Latino and Hispanic cultural and educational programs in the State. Current law requires the Governor to appoint nine public members to the commission, with no less than four of the appointees required to have at least a Masters' degree in an area of Latino or Hispanic studies or culture. Similarly, one of the five public members appointed by the President of the Senate, and one of the five public members appointed by the Speaker of the General Assembly, are required to hold a Master's degree in an area of Latino or Hispanic studies or culture. This bill removes the requirement for these public members to hold Master's degrees and removes a requirement from current law that public members are required to have served prominently as spokespersons for, or as leaders of, organizations in the Latino or Hispanic heritage community which serve members of religious, ethnic, national heritage, or social groups or who are experienced in the field of Latino or Hispanic heritage education. Instead, the bill requires the public members to have knowledge and experience in Latino or Hispanic studies or education.

AI Summary

This bill revises the membership requirements for the Commission on Latino and Hispanic Heritage, a state-level commission dedicated to promoting Latino and Hispanic cultural and educational programs. Currently, the commission consists of 21 members, including two ex officio members and 19 public members appointed by the Senate President, General Assembly Speaker, and Governor. The bill removes the previous requirement that some public members must hold a Master's degree in Latino or Hispanic studies or culture, and eliminates the requirement that members must have served prominently as leaders or spokespersons in Latino or Hispanic community organizations. Instead, the bill now stipulates that public members simply need to have knowledge and experience in Latino or Hispanic studies or education. The other existing requirements remain unchanged, including that at least one-half of the public members must be of Latino or Hispanic descent, and members will continue to serve three-year terms without compensation but with reimbursement for necessary expenses. The changes aim to broaden the pool of potential commission members while maintaining the commission's focus on Latino and Hispanic heritage.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Approved P.L.2025, c.273. (on 01/14/2026)

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