Legislator
Legislator > Josh Turek

State Representative
Josh Turek
(D) - Iowa
Iowa House District 020
In Office - Started: 01/01/2023

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State Capitol Building
1007 E. Grand Ave.
Des Moines, IA 50319
Phone: 515-281-3221

Bill Bill Name Summary Progress
HF617 A bill for an act modifying public improvements relating to housing and residential development in urban renewal areas, and including effective date and applicability provisions.(See HF 1037.) Under current law, any urban renewal area established upon the determination that the area is an economic development area, a division of revenue (tax increment financing) shall not be allowed for the purpose of providing or aiding in the provision of public improvements related to housing and residential development, unless the municipality assures that the project will include assistance for low and moderate income family housing. This bill expands assistance to low and moderate income family housing by specifying that in a city with a population of more than 15,000, for projects in an urban renewal area containing property that has been located entirely within the corporate limits of a city for 20 or more years, the low and moderate income family housing assistance for such projects shall not be less than an amount equal to 20 percent of the original project cost instead of the current law minimum of 10 percent. The bill also extends the division of the revenue for such projects to tax collections for 20 fiscal years instead of the current law maximum of 10 years. For such projects under the new requirements in the bill, the bill also specifies that “low and moderate income family housing” includes housing that meets the requirements of Code section 15.353 (workforce housing). The bill also modifies the defined term “low or moderate income families” in Code chapter 403 to “low and moderate income families” to align with the terminology usage within the Code chapter. The bill takes effect upon enactment and applies to revenues divided for projects approved on or after the effective date of the bill. In Committee
HF485 A bill for an act exempting from the state sales and use tax the sales price of adaptive driving equipment sold or adaptive driving equipment services furnished for installation in a motor vehicle. This bill exempts from the state sales and use tax the sales price of adaptive driving equipment sold or adaptive driving equipment services furnished for installation in a motor vehicle. The bill defines “adaptive driving equipment” to mean platform wheelchair lifts, under-vehicle lifts, power door openers, lowered floors, raised roofs, raised doors, hand controls, left foot gas pedals, reduced-effort and zero-effort steering and braking, and digital driving systems. Under the bill, adaptive driving equipment sold or adaptive driving equipment installation services furnished are exempt from the sales and use tax if such equipment is sold and services furnished are sold or furnished for the installation in a motor vehicle used primarily by a person unable to drive or be transported without such equipment installed in the motor vehicle. In Committee
HF812 A bill for an act requesting that the legislative council establish an interim study committee to plan an Iowa education summit to be held in 2026. This bill requests that the legislative council establish an interim study committee to plan an Iowa education summit to be held in 2026. The bill establishes the specific responsibilities of the interim study committee, which include determining a location, time, date, and agenda for the Iowa education summit; studying and determining the educational leaders and presenters who could speak during the Iowa education summit and provide information related to best practices in education; developing a list of prospective guest speakers and keynote speakers; and studying any other issues that the interim study committee determines are relevant to the planning and execution of the Iowa education summit. The interim study committee is authorized to solicit the advice or testimony of any organization or individual with information or expertise relevant to the purpose of the interim study committee. The bill establishes the membership of the interim study committee. The bill requires the interim study committee to, on or before December 18, 2025, submit a report to the general assembly and the governor that includes a proposed agenda, time, date, and location of the Iowa education summit, and potential guest speakers and keynote speakers for the Iowa education summit. In Committee
HF740 A bill for an act relating to rent increases under residential landlord and tenant rental agreements and in manufactured home communities and mobile home parks. This bill limits the amount a landlord can increase rent on current tenants under residential landlord and tenant agreements and in manufactured home communities or mobile home parks. The bill provides that if a landlord applies a rent increase to the dwelling unit or mobile home space of a current tenant, the percentage increase shall not be greater than either three times the percentage increase of the consumer price index for all urban consumers in the midwest region over the previous 12 months or the percentage increase of the property value of the premises or the manufactured home community or mobile home park, respectively, as determined by the county assessor for the same period since the last rent increase, whichever is higher. In Committee
HF738 A bill for an act establishing a centralized accommodation grant program and making appropriations. This bill directs the department of health and human services to establish a centralized accommodation grant program. The program shall provide grants to individuals with disabilities and employers thereof for the purposes of funding repairs to mobility devices and improving accessibility of workplaces. The bill directs the department to adopt administrative rules to administer the program, including but not limited to rules establishing eligibility requirements, an application process, and award criteria. The bill creates a centralized accommodation fund under the control of the department consisting of all moneys deposited in the fund pursuant to the bill and appropriations made to the fund. Moneys in the fund are appropriated to the department for purposes of the centralized accommodation grant program. The bill directs the state court administrator to allocate all of the fines and fees attributable to citations for specified violations of Code chapter 321L (parking for persons with disabilities) to the treasurer of state for deposit in the centralized accommodation fund. In Committee
HF745 A bill for an act concerning city regulation of single-family residential property. This bill allows cities to prohibit the purchase of single-family residential property by corporations or other business entities utilizing private equity funds, hedge funds, or real estate funds for the period beginning July 1, 2025, and ending June 30, 2030. In Committee
HF739 A bill for an act relating to reimbursement rates under the Medicaid dental wellness plan for adults. This bill relates to dental services provided to adults under the Medicaid dental wellness plan. The bill requires the department of health and human services to require any Medicaid dental plan contractor for the Medicaid dental wellness plan for adults to align reimbursement rates for dental providers with the reimbursement rates for dental providers under the healthy and well kids in Iowa (Hawki) program to maximize dental provider participation in and member access to dental services. In Committee
HF677 A bill for an act designating correctional officers as public safety employees for purposes of the public employment relations Act and including applicability provisions. This bill designates correctional officers employed by the Iowa department of corrections as public safety employees for the purposes of Code chapter 20, the public employment relations Act. Code chapters 20 and 400 include collective bargaining procedures specifically applicable to public safety employees that are not applicable to other public employees, including procedures relating to the scope of collective bargaining negotiations, arbitration procedures, and certain matters relating to city civil service employment. The bill applies to collective bargaining procedures pursuant to Code chapter 20 initiated on or after the effective date of the bill. In Committee
HF662 A bill for an act appropriating moneys to the department of health and human services for refugee resettlement assistance, and including effective date provisions. This bill appropriates $2.5 million for FY 2024-2025 from the general fund of the state to the department of health and human services (HHS) to distribute to nonprofit resettlement agencies (agency) participating in the reception and placement assistance program under the United States department of state to provide resettlement assistance to refugees in Iowa. HHS shall distribute the moneys proportionally to each agency based on the number of refugees the agency sponsors under the cooperative agreement. The bill takes effect upon enactment, and HHS shall distribute the moneys no later than seven calendar days after enactment. In Committee
HF661 A bill for an act relating to child care, including the child and dependent care tax credit, a child care workforce matching grant program, a small business child care tax credit, and state child care assistance, and including applicability provisions. This bill relates to child care and is separated into divisions. DIVISION I —— CHILD AND DEPENDENT CARE TAX CREDIT. The Iowa child and dependent care tax credit is a refundable credit calculated as a percentage of the federal child and dependent care tax credit, depending on the Iowa net income of the taxpayer. Currently, there are seven graduated Iowa net income thresholds used to calculate the credit. This division strikes the Iowa net income thresholds, and specifies a taxpayer may claim a tax credit to reduce Iowa net income equal to the amount of the child and dependent care credit of the federal child and dependent care credit provided in section 21 of the Internal Revenue Code, without regard to whether or not the federal credit was limited by the taxpayer’s federal tax liability. The division applies retroactively to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. DIVISION II —— CHILD CARE WORKFORCE MATCHING GRANT PROGRAM. This division establishes a child care workforce matching grant program (program). Moneys appropriated by the general assembly to the department of health and human services (HHS) for the program must be used to raise wages for persons employed by a child care facility; provide health insurance, paid leave, and retirement benefits for persons employed by a child care facility; raise the quality of the work environment at each child care facility; collect data to assess the needs of persons employed by a child care facility; and assist persons employed by a child care facility to identify sources and apply for benefits for which a person may qualify. The division requires HHS to adopt rules to administer the program. DIVISION III —— SMALL BUSINESS CHILD CARE TAX CREDIT. This division creates a small business child care tax credit available against the individual and corporate income taxes, the franchise tax, the insurance premiums tax, and the moneys and credits tax. The division defines “small business” as any enterprise located in this state, which is operated for profit under a single management and which has either fewer than 20 employees or an annual gross income of less than $4 million computed as the average of the three preceding fiscal years. The division allows a small business to receive a tax credit for providing child care employee benefits to employees of the business. The amount of the credit equals the costs to provide the benefit up to $3,000 per employee per year. The aggregate amount of tax credits cannot exceed a total of $2 million per fiscal year and are awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. The division requires a small business to provide child care employee benefits to employees through certain methods in order to be eligible for the small business child care tax credit. The division applies retroactively to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. DIVISION IV —— STATE CHILD CARE ASSISTANCE. This division relates to state child care assistance (CCA). Under current law, to be eligible for the CCA program, a family must be described by one of six different circumstances and meet income requirements. One of the six eligibility circumstances is that a child’s parent, guardian, or custodian (parent) is employed a minimum of 32 hours per week or an average of 32 hours per week during the month if the child requires basic care, or 28 hours per week or an average of 28 hours per week during the month if the child is a special needs child. The division changes the work requirements to 28 hours per week or an average of 28 hours per week during the month for parents of any child. Under current law, a family is required to have income at or below 160 percent of the federal poverty level applicable to the family’s size (FPL) for a family of a child needing basic care; 200 percent of the FPL for a family of a special needs child; or 85 percent of the state median gross monthly income, whichever is lower. The division sets initial eligibility at the lesser of 85 percent of the state median gross monthly income, or 250 percent of the FPL for families of children needing basic care or 290 percent of the FPL for families of special needs children. The division requires HHS to reimburse child care providers participating in the CCA program at a rate equal to the rate the provider charges a private-pay family for child care. The division provides that HHS shall pay providers based on the number of hours of child care scheduled for a child enrolled in the CCA program instead of for child care provided. The division makes a child eligible for CCA if the child is in a family with a parent, guardian, or custodian who is employed at a child care facility, a child care home registered with HHS, or an unregistered child care home with an agreement with HHS to accept CCA reimbursements; and who meets certain requirements as detailed in the division (qualified parent). The division provides that a director, co-director, or other administrative staff of a child care facility may qualify as a qualified parent if such person is regularly counted in the minimum child-to-staff ratio established by HHS by rule. The division requires a family who participates in CCA to make copayments for services received from the program, if the family’s eligibility is based on a parent being a qualified parent. The division directs HHS to adopt rules to implement and administer the division’s provisions related to qualified parents. The division prohibits HHS from applying waiting list requirements for CCA on persons deemed eligible for CCA due to eligibility based on a qualified parent. The division makes a conforming change by striking Code section 237A.13(6). In Committee
HF684 A bill for an act relating to the purchase of steel by state agencies. This bill requires state agencies to exclusively purchase steel that was manufactured in the United States. In Committee
HF664 A bill for an act relating to the requirements for authorized electronic monitoring in nursing facilities, and providing penalties. This bill provides for authorized electronic monitoring in nursing facilities. The bill provides that a nursing facility resident or a resident representative may conduct electronic monitoring of the resident’s room through the use of electronic monitoring devices placed in the resident’s room pursuant to the bill. The bill specifies the consents that must be obtained for a resident to conduct electronic monitoring in the resident’s room, including from any roommate; the process to be followed if a roommate refuses to consent; the provision of notice to the nursing facility; the notification and consent form requirements; the responsibility for the cost and installation relating to the electronic monitoring; penalties for obstruction of electronic monitoring devices; the dissemination of recordings created through electronic monitoring; the admissibility of evidence created through electronic monitoring; liability and penalties for violations of the bill; resident protections; and reporting requirements. The bill also directs the department of inspections, appeals, and licensing to prescribe the notification and consent form described in the bill and to make the form available on the department’s internet site. In Committee
HF671 A bill for an act relating to eligible parties to a valid marriage. This bill provides that a party who otherwise meets the requirements of Code chapter 595 (marriage) for a valid marriage is eligible to marry any other such party regardless of gender. The bill provides for conforming changes in that Code chapter to include provisions relating to void marriages to be gender neutral. The bill also provides that marriage is the legally recognized union of two eligible parties and that terms relating to the marital relationship or familial relationships shall be construed consistently with this provision for all purposes throughout the law, whether in the context of statute, administrative or court rule, government policy, common law, or any other source of civil or criminal law. In Committee
HF685 A bill for an act relating to state agency contracts involving steel. This bill requires that a state agency contract involving steel must contain a provision requiring any steel purchased with state moneys or tax credits to be manufactured in the United States. In Committee
HF688 A bill for an act relating to products and materials purchased by state agencies. Under current law, the department of administrative services must give preference to purchasing American-made products and purchases from American-based businesses if the life cycle costs are comparable to those of products sold by foreign businesses. In addition, as a condition of receiving an annual appropriation relating to state government administration and regulation, an entity receiving the appropriation must give first preference when purchasing a product to an Iowa product or a product produced by an Iowa-based business, and second preference to a United States product or a product produced by a business based in the United States. This bill requires a state agency to purchase American-made products and materials from American-based businesses if it is possible to do so. In Committee
HF687 A bill for an act relating to projects involving state moneys or tax credits. Under current law, the department of administrative services must give preference to purchasing American-made products and purchases from American-based businesses if the life cycle costs are comparable to those of products sold by foreign businesses. In addition, as a condition of receiving an annual appropriation relating to state government administration and regulation, an entity receiving the appropriation must give first preference when purchasing a product to an Iowa product or a product produced by an Iowa-based business, and second preference to a United States product or a product produced by a business based in the United States. This bill requires that a contract for a project funded with state moneys or tax credits must include a provision requiring only products and materials manufactured in the United States be purchased for the project if it is possible to do so. In Committee
HF538 A bill for an act relating to employment of persons with disabilities. This bill provides that in order to ensure full participation in the social and economic life of Iowa by persons with disabilities, it is declared to be the policy of the state that competitive and integrated employment shall be considered the first and preferred option when serving persons with disabilities who are of working age to obtain employment. The bill specifies this policy applies to programs and services that provide services and support to help obtain employment for persons with disabilities. The bill directs all state agencies to follow this policy and ensure that it is effectively implemented in their programs and services. The bill shall not be construed to require any employer to give preference to hiring persons with disabilities. The bill prohibits an employer from paying an employee less than the minimum wage provided in Code chapter 91D pursuant to 29 U.S.C. §214(c) on or after July 1, 2026. U.S.C. §214(c) is a provision of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act that authorizes persons with disabilities to be employed for less than the federal minimum wage in certain circumstances. The bill directs the department of inspections, appeals, and licensing to engage in outreach to make employers of persons with disabilities in Iowa aware of the prohibition. The prohibition does not apply to a nonprofit organization operating a sheltered workshop as otherwise provided by law. This exception to the prohibition is repealed July 1, 2027. In Committee
HF489 A bill for an act providing a standing appropriation for pediatric cancer research at the university of Iowa hospitals and clinics. This bill provides a standing appropriation from the general fund of the state to the state board of regents each fiscal year in a dollar amount equal to the population of the state on July 1 of the same fiscal year, to be used for pediatric cancer research at the university of Iowa hospitals and clinics. The bill requires the board of regents to report to the governor and the general assembly by October 1 of each year on the expenditure of the moneys in the prior fiscal year. In Committee
HF426 A bill for an act relating to the provision of durable medical equipment to Medicaid recipients with a permanent disability. This bill relates to Medicaid recipients with a permanent disability and the provision of durable medical equipment. The bill directs the department of health and human services to contractually require a Medicaid managed care organization to continue to approve coverage for durable medical equipment for which a Medicaid recipient has previously been approved, if the Medicaid recipient has a permanent disability as described in the bill and if there has been no significant change in the Medicaid recipient’s condition. In Committee
HF425 A bill for an act relating to reimbursement for the repair of complex rehabilitation technology under the Medicaid program. This bill provides that under both Medicaid managed care and fee-for-service administration of the Medicaid program, the department of health and human services shall not require provision of a prescription or prior authorization for reimbursement of a provider for the repair of complex rehabilitation equipment, if the complex rehabilitation technology was previously prescribed and reimbursed under the Medicaid program. The bill defines “complex rehabilitation technology” for the purposes of the bill. In Committee
HF427 A bill for an act providing for Medicaid coverage of power standing device equipment on power wheelchairs for Medicaid recipients with a permanent physical disability. This bill requires the department of health and human services to require all Medicaid managed care organizations contracting with the department, upon the request of a Medicaid recipient, to cover the costs of power standing device equipment on power wheelchairs as reasonable and medically necessary for the recipient’s independence, function, health, and well-being, if the Medicaid recipient has a permanent physical disability. The bill defines “power standing device equipment” for the purposes of the bill. In Committee
HF435 A bill for an act creating a deduction available against the individual income tax for gross rent paid by a taxpayer, and including applicability provisions. This bill creates a deduction available against the individual income tax for gross rent paid at arm’s length by a taxpayer for the right of occupancy of a homestead or manufactured or mobile home, including the rent for land occupied by the manufactured or mobile home not to exceed one acre. The bill applies to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2026. In Committee
HF424 A bill for an act relating to the establishment of the work without worry program under the medical assistance program for employed individuals with disabilities, and including effective date provisions. This bill relates to the work without worry program under the medical assistance program for employed individuals with disabilities. The bill defines “countable income” (income) and “disability”. The bill establishes a work without worry program (program) under the medical assistance program to be administered by the department of health and human services (HHS). The program shall provide employed individuals with disabilities access to health care coverage under the medical assistance program as well as long-term services and supports and community-based services for which the individual qualifies. The bill requires HHS to make every effort to coordinate benefits with health care coverage provided by the employer of an individual receiving program benefits. Under current law, to be eligible for the Medicaid for employed people with disabilities program (MEPD program), an individual with disabilities must not exceed the individual or couple resource limits, or the monthly household income limits. The program eliminates these eligibility requirements. The bill provides eligibility criteria for the program. The bill prohibits HHS from adopting a rule for program eligiblity based on an individual’s income or resources, a resource test or limit, or an individual’s receipt of federal disability benefits. An individual receiving supplemental security income shall be automatically eligible for the program and is not required to submit an application. An individual participating in the program may be eligible for and receive other health care coverage as described in the bill. If an individual receives such coverage and pays a copayment or premium, the individual does not have to pay a program premium (premium). The bill requires that the monthly premium equal 6 percent of an individual’s verified income, rounded down to the nearest whole dollar. An individual shall report any change in the individual’s income to HHS and shall pay a premium any month program coverage is provided as detailed in the bill. HHS shall create a six-month grace period to provide continuous program coverage to an individual who temporarily loses employment or suffers a health crisis that prevents the individual from continuing employment. The individual shall be required to continue to pay the premium during the six-month grace period. HHS may terminate an individual’s program coverage for failure to pay four consecutive months of premiums. The bill requires HHS to adopt rules to administer the bill. The bill requires HHS to submit any waiver request or state plan amendment to the federal centers for Medicare and Medicaid services as necessary to create the program. The bill requires any individual participating in the MEPD program to be transferred to and enrolled in the program. The bill is effective upon enactment. In Committee
HF368 A bill for an act relating to water quality standards, including by providing for the regulation of animal feeding operations, providing penalties, and making penalties applicable. BACKGROUND —— STATE LAW. This bill amends provisions regulating animal feeding operations (AFOs) in which agricultural animals are confined and fed and maintained for 45 days or more in any 12-month period, and includes all structures used for the storage of manure from animals in the operation and the discharge of manure or effluent originating from the AFO (Code chapters 459 and 459A). The regulations are administered and enforced by the department of natural resources (DNR) including the environmental protection commission (EPC). State law recognizes several types of AFOs, including confinement feeding operations (CFOs) in which animals are housed (confined) under roof (Code chapter 459). Special provisions govern open feedlots where animals are kept in unroofed or partially roofed structures (Code chapter 459A). In both cases, natural vegetation is not available to feed the animals. In Iowa, a CFO is subject to both air and water protection statutes and rules. Under water quality regulations, the owner or operator of an AFO may be required to obtain authorization from DNR to do business. The authorization takes the form of a construction permit for a CFO (Code section 459.304) or an open feedlot operation (Code section 459A.205) or a manure management plan for a CFO (Code section 459.312) or nutrient management plan for an open feedlot operation (Code section 459A.208). The EPC may by rule require the owner or operator of a CFO to install a water pollution monitoring system as part of an unformed (dirt or clay) manure storage structure (Code section 459.311). The level of regulation sometimes depends upon a formula that calculates the degree to which the AFO presents a threat to water quality measured by: (1) the type of animals maintained and (2) the number of animals maintained. For example, a construction permit is required for a CFO that has an animal unit capacity (AUC) of at least 1,000 animal units (AUs) (Code section 459.303) and each head of butcher or breeding swine weighing more than 55 pounds is assigned a special equivalency factor of 0.4 animal units (Code section 459.102) (0.4 AU x 1,000 AUC = 400 head of such swine). BACKGROUND —— FEDERAL LAW. AFOs are also regulated under federal law by the environmental protection agency (EPA) that administers and enforces the national pollutant discharge elimination system (NPDES) program pursuant to the federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972 (33 U.S.C. ch. 26, as amended, and 40 C.F.R. pts. 122 and 412). EPA contracts with DNR to administer and enforce the NPDES program. Under the NPDES program, AFOs are referred to as concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs). A CAFO is classified by its own formula that also factors the type and number of animals kept. The regulations apply to large, medium, and small CAFOs. For example, a small CAFO includes less than 750 head of swine weighing 55 or more pounds, a medium CAFO includes between 750 and 2,499 head, and a large CAFO includes 2,500 or more head. BACKGROUND —— STATE AND FEDERAL REGULATION. The purpose of both state and federal regulation is to prevent manure or effluent from contaminating groundwater and surface water. In compliance with federal law, manure from a CAFO cannot be disposed (discharged) in a manner that will cause surface water or groundwater pollution (Code section 459.311). A CAFO must retain all manure between periods of disposal (i.e., land application). An open feedlot must install structures that filter manure and effluent runoff (Code section 459A.401). However, in all cases involving the treatment of wastewater, and the discharge of manure and effluent originating from an AFO, rules adopted by the EPC can be no more stringent than federal law (Code sections 455B.173, 459.311, and 459A.401). BILL’S PROVISIONS. The bill rewrites the definition of an animal feeding operation based on federal law. It changes the term “medium concentrated animal feeding operation” to “medium animal feeding operation” without changing the meaning. The bill eliminates the provision that prevents EPC rules regulating wastewater, or manure or effluent originating from an AFO, from being more stringent than federal law. The bill provides that statutes regulating AFOs are minimum requirements, and that the EPC is to adopt permitting requirements by rule under the NPDES program, including for those AFOs classified as medium and large CAFOs under federal law. The EPC rules may exceed applicable federal standards applying to a medium or large CAFO. In addition, the owner or operator of a medium or large CAFO must conduct effluent monitoring of pollutants discharged to navigable waters through the groundwater. The owner or operator must report the collected data to DNR which must publish it on its internet site and submit an annual report to the EPA. CIVIL PENALTIES. Compliance with a statutory regulation includes compliance with a rule adopted by DNR (Code section 459.103). A person violating a water quality regulation under Code chapter 459 is subject to the administrative assessment of a civil penalty by DNR of not more than $10,000 or a judicial assessment of a civil penalty of $5,000 (Code sections 455B.109, 455B.191, and 459.603). Currently, a person violating a water quality regulation applying to an open feedlot is subject to the judicially assessed civil penalty (Code section 459A.502). The bill also provides that the person is subject to the administratively assessed civil penalty. In Committee
HF408 A bill for an act providing an appropriation to eliminate the current waiting lists for the Medicaid home and community-based services waivers. This bill appropriates from the general fund of the state to the department of health and human services for FY 2025-2026 an amount sufficient, as calculated by the Medicaid forecasting group, to eliminate the waiting lists as of June 30, 2025, for the Medicaid home and community-based services waivers. The amount appropriated and the number of individuals eliminated from the waiting lists shall be included in the first forecasting report published in the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2025. In Committee
HF405 A bill for an act relating to insurance coverage for prescription insulin drugs. This bill relates to prescription insulin drugs and coverage by policies, contracts, or plans providing for third-party payment or prepayment of health or medical expenses that provide coverage for prescription drugs. The bill requires a policy, contract, or plan providing for third-party payment or prepayment of health or medical expenses that provides coverage for prescription drugs to cap the total amount of cost-sharing that a covered person is required to pay per prescription filled of an insulin drug to an amount not more than $25 for an up to 31-day supply of at least one type of rapid-acting prescription insulin drugs, short-acting prescription insulin drugs, intermediate-acting prescription insulin drugs, or long-acting prescription insulin drugs. “Prescription insulin drug” is defined in the bill as a prescription drug that contains insulin, is used to treat diabetes, has been prescribed as medically necessary by a covered person’s health care professional, and is a benefit covered by a covered person’s policy, contract, or plan. The bill defines “cost-sharing” as any coverage limit, copayment, coinsurance, deductible, or other out-of-pocket expense imposed on a covered person. The bill does not prohibit a policy, contract, or plan providing for third-party payment or prepayment of health or medical expenses from reducing a covered person’s cost-sharing to less than $25 for up to a 31-day supply of a prescription insulin drug. The bill applies to third-party payment provider contracts, policies, or plans delivered, issued for delivery, continued, or renewed in this state on or after January 1, 2026, by the third-party payment providers enumerated in the bill. The bill specifies the types of specialized health-related insurance which are not subject to the coverage requirements of the bill. The commissioner of insurance may adopt rules to administer the requirements of the bill. In Committee
HF349 A bill for an act relating to the state minimum hourly wage. This bill increases the state minimum hourly wage to $13.50 as of July 1, 2025. The bill strikes the state minimum hourly wage for employees employed for less than 90 days; such employees would instead earn the state minimum hourly wage. In Committee
HF351 A bill for an act removing psilocybin and psilocyn from the list of substances classified as schedule I controlled substances under Iowa's uniform controlled substances Act. This bill removes psilocybin and psilocyn from the list of substances classified as schedule I controlled substances under Iowa’s uniform controlled substances Act (Code chapter 124). Under Code section 124.203, a substance that has a high potential for abuse and has no accepted medical use in treatment in the United States or lacks accepted safety for use in treatment under medical supervision may be classified as a schedule I controlled substance under Code chapter 124. In Committee
HF323 A bill for an act relating to enclosed structures on private docks and required insurance. This bill relates to enclosed structures on private docks and a requirement to maintain liability insurance for the dock on which the structure is constructed. The bill allows a person with a valid dock site permit and hoist or slip assignment to build an enclosed structure if the enclosed structure is constructed with rust-resistant materials, meets building code, material, and size requirements, and is used to protect a hoist or a slip and not for certain other purposes. The bill requires an owner of a dock to carry liability insurance with a minimum per occurrence coverage of $1 million for the dock with an enclosed structure constructed pursuant to the bill. The owner shall be liable for any damages caused by private dock and enclosed structure. In Committee
HF286 A bill for an act limiting campaign contributions to political committees, and making penalties applicable. This bill imposes campaign contribution limits for political committees. In an election campaign cycle, a person shall not contribute more than $5,000 to a political committee, and a political committee shall not accept more than $5,000 from a person. A person who violates the bill is subject to penalties pursuant to Code section 68B.32D. A person who willfully violates the bill is guilty of a serious misdemeanor (Code section 68A.701). A serious misdemeanor is punishable by confinement for no more than one year and a fine of at least $430 but not more than $2,560. A variety of civil remedies are also available in Code section 68B.32D for a violation of Code chapter 68A or rules of the ethics and campaign disclosure board, ranging from a reprimand to a civil penalty of not more than $2,000. In Committee
HF290 A bill for an act providing for the registration of eligible electors upon review of electronic records received from state agencies, and including effective date provisions. This bill provides for the registration of eligible electors upon review of electronic records received from state agencies. The bill allows for registration of eligible electors to vote following review of electronic records received from driver’s license and nonoperator’s identification card applications by county commissioners of registration (county auditors). The bill requires that the office of driver services of the department of transportation transmit to the state registrar of voters (the secretary of state) electronic records containing the legal name, age, residence, and citizenship information for, and the electronic signature of, each person submitting an application for a driver’s license or nonoperator’s identification card, or any renewal application. Current Code section 321.182 requires that an application for a license or card include an applicant’s full name, signature, current mailing address, current residential address, date of birth, social security number, and other information. Under current administrative rules of the state department of transportation, an applicant for a license or card is required to provide proof of lawful status in the United States. Also under current administrative rules, a person’s signature for a driver’s license or nonoperator’s identification card application is required to be captured electronically. Under current law, a county treasurer’s office participating in county issuance of driver’s licenses is required to participate in voter registration to the same extent as a license facility of the state department of transportation. The bill requires the state registrar of voters to transmit the electronic records and electronic signatures to the county commissioner of registration of the county where the person resides. The bill requires that the county commissioner review the electronic record and any other relevant information to determine if a person is an eligible elector. If the county commissioner determines a person to be an eligible elector and the person is not registered to vote in the county, the county commissioner is required to notify the person of the separate processes to decline to register to vote or to declare a political party affiliation. If a notified person fails to decline voter registration within 21 days after the county commissioner issued the notification, the bill provides that the electronic record and electronic signature shall constitute a completed voter registration form for that person and the bill requires the county commissioner to register the person to vote in that county and send the person an acknowledgment as required by current law. The bill prohibits a county commissioner from adding a person’s name to a voter registration list until at least 21 days after the commissioner has issued notification to the person. The bill requires that a county commissioner send an acknowledgment of registration within seven business days of registering a person under the bill. The bill also provides that the electronic record and electronic signature of a person who does not qualify as an eligible elector does not constitute a completed voter registration form. Under the bill, such a person submitting an application for a license or card will not be subject to charges for voter registration fraud under Code section 39A.2 for submitting such an application. The bill also grants the state voter registration commission the authority to adopt rules to administer and interpret the provisions of the bill relating to voter registration at motor vehicle driver’s license stations. If interpretive rulemaking authority is clearly vested in the discretion of an agency by statute, the applicable judicial standard of review is whether the rules constitute an irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable interpretation of law by the agency (Code section 17A.19(10)(l)). If interpretive rulemaking authority is not clearly vested in the discretion of an agency, the applicable judicial standard of review is whether the rules constitute an erroneous interpretation of law (Code section 17A.19(10)(c)). The bill makes changes to current law related to address confidentiality program participants under Code chapter 9E by requiring the state registrar to adopt rules for administration of registration for those participants. The bill maintains current law to allow for submission of a paper voter registration form through driver’s license offices. The bill specifies that a requirement that separate registration forms be signed by each individual registrant only applies to paper registration forms. Under the bill, driver’s license offices are required to transmit voter registration forms to the appropriate county commissioner and to transmit all electronic records and electronic signatures to the state registrar of voters. Under current law, the state registrar of voters is required to establish rules regulating transmission of voter registration forms from driver’s license stations and voter registration agencies. Under the bill, such rules are required to be established by the state commission. The bill also allows for automatic voter registration to be completed based upon information received from voter registration agencies, including, under the bill, the department of education and other state offices that collect personal information sufficient to complete a voter registration application. The bill provides that the state voter registration commission, in consultation with the department of transportation and voter registration agencies, may adopt emergency rules to implement the provisions of the bill. The bill may include a state mandate as defined in Code section 25B.3. The bill makes inapplicable Code section 25B.2(3), which would relieve a political subdivision from complying with a state mandate if funding for the cost of the state mandate is not provided or specified. Therefore, political subdivisions are required to comply with any state mandate included in the bill. The bill takes effect upon enactment. In Committee
HF287 A bill for an act making election day a legal public holiday. This bill makes the day of the general election, the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each even-numbered year, a legal public holiday. The bill also makes election day a paid holiday for state employees. In Committee
HF289 A bill for an act transferring the division of vocational rehabilitation services from the department of workforce development to the department of education. This bill transfers the division of vocational rehabilitation services from the department of workforce development to the department of education. The division of vocational rehabilitation services is responsible for, among other things, administering legislation enacted pursuant to the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 in this state, administering the use of funds provided by the federal government and this state for the vocational rehabilitation of individuals with disabilities, assisting in the development of training agencies for the vocational rehabilitation of individuals with disabilities, helping to secure the rehabilitation of individuals with significant disabilities, providing rehabilitation services to individuals with significant disabilities who are homebound, and administering the entrepreneurs with disabilities program. Current law establishes the division of vocational rehabilitation services within the department of workforce development. The bill transfers the division of vocational rehabilitation services from the department of workforce development to the department of education. The bill makes conforming changes, including changes related to the membership of the Iowa workforce development board and the Iowa autism council. In Committee
HF281 A bill for an act repealing provisions of law concerning rights relating to labor organization membership. This bill repeals provisions of law relating to a person’s right to work at the person’s chosen occupation because of membership in or refusal to join a labor organization; a prohibition on employers refusing employment to a person because of membership in or refusal to join a labor organization; a prohibition on persons, employers, or labor organizations entering into a contract to exclude a person from employment because of membership in or refusal to join a labor organization; a prohibition on persons, employers, or labor organizations requiring a person to pay labor organization dues as a condition of employment; and a prohibition on persons, employers, or labor organizations deducting labor organization dues from an employee’s wages unless the employer has first been presented with an individual written order signed by the employee. In Committee
HF288 A bill for an act limiting campaign contributions, and making penalties applicable. This bill imposes campaign contribution limits on candidates for public office that are identical to those set forth in federal campaign finance regulations. A person who willfully violates the bill is, pursuant to Code section 68A.701, guilty of a serious misdemeanor. A serious misdemeanor is punishable by confinement for no more than one year and a fine of at least $430 but not more than $2,560. A variety of civil remedies are also available in Code section 68B.32D for a violation of the bill, ranging from a reprimand to a civil penalty of not more than $2,000. In Committee
HF291 A bill for an act reducing annual motor vehicle registration fees and annual registration plate fees for disabled veterans. This bill reduces the annual motor vehicle registration fee for a disabled veteran by a percentage equal to the veteran’s service-related disability rating, as determined by the United States department of veterans affairs, for one vehicle owned by the disabled veteran. The bill also reduces the annual fee due on special or personalized registration plates for the vehicle, if any, by the same percentage. In Committee
HF276 A bill for an act creating a study committee to consider the establishment of a state training school for females under the age of eighteen. This bill directs the department of health and human services (HHS) to convene a study committee to meet during the 2025 legislative interim to examine the feasibility of establishing a state training school for females under the age of 18. The bill requires the committee, at a minimum, to examine issues relating to costs, potential locations for the school, potential programs to be offered, and estimated timelines for the school to become operational. The bill requires the membership of the committee to consist of, at a minimum, a representative from HHS, a representative from the state training school at Eldora, a children’s behavioral health specialist with expertise related to females under 18 years of age, an educator with experience teaching females under 18 years of age with behavioral health issues, and an expert with knowledge of providing transitional services to children leaving long-term placement in juvenile correction facilities. The bill requires the study committee to submit a report of the committee’s findings and recommendations to the general assembly and to the governor no later than December 15, 2025. In Committee
HF251 A bill for an act requiring the state board of education to publish information related to nonpublic schools that are accredited by an approved independent accrediting agency. This bill requires the state board of education to publish information related to nonpublic schools that are accredited by an approved independent accrediting agency. Under current law, nonpublic schools in Iowa may be accredited by the department of education (DE) or by an independent accrediting agency that has been approved by DE. Also under current law, the state board of education is required to publish a list of the approved independent accrediting agencies on DE’s internet site. The bill requires the list to include each nonpublic school that is accredited by an approved independent accrediting agency, a description of the educational standards that the approved independent accrediting agency required the nonpublic school to meet in order to attain accreditation, and any amendments or waivers to the educational standards that each school received. The state board is required to update the list annually. In Committee
HF199 A bill for an act repealing the education savings account program. The education savings account program is a program that provides funds to pupils who attend nonpublic schools to pay for qualified educational expenses including but not limited to tuition, tutoring or cognitive skill training fees, educational therapy costs, software expenses, and expenses related to course materials. For school years beginning on or after July 1, 2025, each student eligible to enroll in kindergarten through grade 12 is eligible for the education savings account program. This bill repeals the education savings account program and makes conforming changes. In Committee
HF152 A bill for an act relating to the federal summer electronic benefits transfer for children program, making an appropriation, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. This bill relates to the summer electronic benefits transfer (EBT) for children program made permanent by federal law under the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, administered by the United States department of agriculture (USDA) food and nutrition service. The bill includes findings relating to food insecurity in the state including that it is estimated that approximately 240,000 children would be eligible to receive benefits under the summer EBT for children program; that when Iowans are struggling financially, they are more likely to buy less expensive foods, high in calories and low in nutritional value; and that the summer EBT for children program would provide an estimated $29 million to address the food insecurity crisis which not only feeds children but stimulates local economic activity. The bill requires the department of health and human services (HHS), in coordination with the department of education, to immediately upon the effective date of the bill submit a letter of intent to apply for and participate in the summer EBT program for children during summer 2025, to coordinate with the USDA to develop a successful management and administration plan for the summer EBT program for children, and to submit the plan to the USDA by February 15, 2025. The bill appropriates from the general fund of the state to HHS for fiscal year 2024-2025 a sufficient amount to cover the costs of administering the summer EBT program for children during summer 2025. The bill takes effect upon enactment and is retroactively applicable to July 1, 2024. In Committee
HJR5 A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa relating to citizen initiatives to amend the Constitution of the State of Iowa and the Iowa Code and referendums to approve certain bills passed by the general assembly. A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa relating to citizen initiatives to amend the Constitution of the State of Iowa and the Iowa Code and referendums to approve certain bills passed by the general assembly. In Committee
HF111 A bill for an act creating an advanced registered nurse practitioner preceptor tax credit available against the individual income tax, and including applicability provisions. This bill creates an advanced registered nurse practitioner preceptor tax credit available against the individual income tax. The bill defines preceptor to mean an advanced registered nurse practitioner who is currently licensed as a registered nurse under Code chapter 152 or Code chapter 152E, and who is licensed by the board as an advanced registered nurse practitioner. The bill defines clinical preceptorship to mean a mentoring experience under the direction of a nursing program where a preceptor is used to provide a clinical learning experience for a student who is a resident enrolled in the nursing program. In order to be eligible for the tax credit under the bill, a preceptor must provide uncompensated instruction and supervision during a clinical preceptorship, be employed at the clinical facility where the preceptorship occurs, be selected by the nursing program in collaboration with the clinical facility to participate in the clinical preceptorship, and have at least one year of experience in the preceptor role. The amount of the tax credit equals $500 per clinical preceptorship where at least 100 hours of clinical learning experience is provided, not to exceed $2,000 in the aggregate. Any credit in excess of the tax liability is not refundable and shall not be credited to a following tax year or carried back to a previous tax year. The bill requires the preceptor to accurately document the student’s experience including the name of the student, the name of the nursing program, the hours of supervision, and the year of the student’s expected graduation. The department of revenue is required to adopt rules to administer the bill. The bill applies to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2026. In Committee
Bill Bill Name Motion Vote Date Vote
HF189 A bill for an act relating to the eligibility of students enrolled in nonpublic schools to compete in extracurricular interscholastic athletic contests or competitions provided by public schools, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HF 1.) Effective date: Enactment, 08/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
HF711 A bill for an act relating to the practice of barbering and cosmetology arts and sciences, including establishment training programs, schools of barbering and cosmetology arts and sciences, and course of study. (Formerly HF 49.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
SF607 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers. (Formerly SF 504, SSB 1173.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
SF612 A bill for an act relating to state and local taxation and regulations by changing certain tax credits, cigarette and tobacco-related regulations, and certain city budget certification deadlines, providing for penalties, and including retroactive applicability and effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1153.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Applicability date: 01/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Absent
SF615 A bill for an act relating to work requirements for the Iowa health and wellness plan, public assistance programs, an information technology fund, the public assistance modernization fund, and the Medicaid for employed people with disabilities program, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SF 599, SF 363.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
SF615 A bill for an act relating to work requirements for the Iowa health and wellness plan, public assistance programs, an information technology fund, the public assistance modernization fund, and the Medicaid for employed people with disabilities program, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SF 599, SF 363.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Shall the House concur in the Senate amendment H–1342? 05/14/2025 Nay
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1320? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1319? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1318? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall amendment H–1323 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall amendment H–1322 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF980 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers.(Formerly HSB 315.) Shall amendment H–1321 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF1002 A bill for an act authorizing length of service award programs for volunteer fire fighters, volunteer emergency medical care providers, and reserve peace officers, and making appropriations. (Formerly HF 755, HSB 197.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Absent
SF644 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the justice system, providing for properly related matters including indigent defense and representation, the corrections capital reinvestment fund, and a corrections federal receipts fund, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1232.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Applicability date: 07/01/2023 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
HF1039 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations from the rebuild Iowa infrastructure fund and technology reinvestment fund, providing for related matters including county payment for district court furnishings, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 334.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
HF1038 A bill for an act relating to the opioid settlement fund, making appropriations and disbursements, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly HSB 331.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2024. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF648 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the judicial branch including judicial officer salaries and interpreter or translator fees, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1233.) Effective date: 06/20/2025, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF657 A bill for an act related to state taxation and finance and other related matters, by creating, modifying, and eliminating tax credits and tax incentive programs, providing for penalties, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1205.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025, 12/31/2025, 01/01/2026 Applicability date: 01/01/2017, 01/01/2025, 01/01/2026 Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Nay
SF657 A bill for an act related to state taxation and finance and other related matters, by creating, modifying, and eliminating tax credits and tax incentive programs, providing for penalties, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1205.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025, 12/31/2025, 01/01/2026 Applicability date: 01/01/2017, 01/01/2025, 01/01/2026 Shall amendment H–1351 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF659 A bill for an act relating to state government and finances, including by making, modifying, limiting, or reducing appropriations, distributions, or transfers; authorizing expenditure of unappropriated moneys in special funds; providing for properly related matters including crystalline polymorph psilocybin, medical residency and fellowship positions, state membership in the Iowa individual health benefit reinsurance association, student abuse by school employees, modified supplemental amounts f Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF660 A bill for an act relating to sports wagering and tourism, making appropriations, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1240.) Contingent effective date, effective 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF856 A bill for an act prohibiting public entities from engaging in certain activities relating to diversity, equity, and inclusion, creating a private cause of action, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 155.) Effective date: 05/27/2025, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Nay
HF890 A bill for an act relating to education, including by modifying provisions related to community college and department of education reporting requirements, the national board certification pilot project, employees of the Iowa educational services for the blind and visually impaired program or the Iowa school for the deaf, and the employment contracts between community colleges and community college instructors, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 43.) Effective date: Enactment Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF628 A bill for an act relating to transportation and other infrastructure-related appropriations to the department of transportation, including allocation and use of moneys from the road use tax fund, the primary road fund, and the statutory allocations fund. (Formerly SSB 1219.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF626 A bill for an act relating to federal moneys and regulations, including the appropriation of federal moneys made available from federal block grants and other nonstate sources, the allocation of portions of federal block grants, the procedures if federal moneys or federal block grants are more or less than anticipated, and the authorization of certain city regulations when required under federal law, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1216.) Effe Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF641 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the department of health and human services, including administrative services organizations, child foster care, child and dependent adult abuse, internal audit and examination information, and the region incentive fund in the mental health and disability services regional service fund, health maintenance organization's premium tax, and making appropriations and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF645 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations for the economic development of the state, including to the economic development authority, Iowa finance authority, department of workforce development, and the state board of regents and certain regents institutions, and extending the repeal date for the housing renewal pilot program. (Formerly SSB 1236.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Nay
SF646 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations involving state government entities associated with agriculture, natural resources, and environmental protection. (Formerly SSB 1230.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Nay
SF646 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations involving state government entities associated with agriculture, natural resources, and environmental protection. (Formerly SSB 1230.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall amendment H–1338 be adopted? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF646 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations involving state government entities associated with agriculture, natural resources, and environmental protection. (Formerly SSB 1230.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall amendment H–1337 be adopted? 05/13/2025 Yea
HF1040 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations for the economic development of the state, including to the economic development authority, Iowa finance authority, department of workforce development, and state board of regents and certain regents institutions, and eliminating the repeal of the housing renewal pilot program.(Formerly HSB 336.) Shall amendment H–1293 be adopted? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF647 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the education system, including the funding and operation of the department for the blind, department of education, and state board of regents, and including contingent effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1231.) Effective Date: Conditional, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Nay
SF647 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the education system, including the funding and operation of the department for the blind, department of education, and state board of regents, and including contingent effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1231.) Effective Date: Conditional, 07/01/2025. Shall amendment H–1345 be adopted? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF647 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the education system, including the funding and operation of the department for the blind, department of education, and state board of regents, and including contingent effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1231.) Effective Date: Conditional, 07/01/2025. Shall amendment H–1344 be adopted? 05/13/2025 Nay
HF1044 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations for state government administration and regulation, including the department of administrative services, auditor of state, ethics and campaign disclosure board, offices of governor and lieutenant governor, department of inspections, appeals, and licensing, department of insurance and financial services, department of management, Iowa public employees' retirement system, public information board, department of revenue, secretary of state, tr Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1336? 05/13/2025 Yea
HF1044 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations for state government administration and regulation, including the department of administrative services, auditor of state, ethics and campaign disclosure board, offices of governor and lieutenant governor, department of inspections, appeals, and licensing, department of insurance and financial services, department of management, Iowa public employees' retirement system, public information board, department of revenue, secretary of state, tr Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
HF1049 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the department of veterans affairs and the department of health and human services, and related provisions and appropriations, including aging and disability services; behavioral health, public health, community access and eligibility; the medical assistance program, state supplementary assistance, Hawki, and other health-related programs; sex reassignment surgeries or associated procedures; family well-being and protection; state-operat Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1334? 05/13/2025 Yea
HF1049 A bill for an act relating to and making appropriations to the department of veterans affairs and the department of health and human services, and related provisions and appropriations, including aging and disability services; behavioral health, public health, community access and eligibility; the medical assistance program, state supplementary assistance, Hawki, and other health-related programs; sex reassignment surgeries or associated procedures; family well-being and protection; state-operat Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Nay
SF253 A bill for an act creating a lifetime fur harvester license for disabled veterans. (Formerly SSB 1079.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
SF303 A bill for an act relating to county and city regulation of consumer fireworks. (Formerly SSB 1104.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1313? 05/12/2025 Nay
SF303 A bill for an act relating to county and city regulation of consumer fireworks. (Formerly SSB 1104.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Nay
SF383 A bill for an act relating to pharmacy benefits managers, pharmacies, prescription drugs, and pharmacy services administrative organizations, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1074.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Applicability date: 07/01/2025 Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1324? 05/12/2025 Nay
SF383 A bill for an act relating to pharmacy benefits managers, pharmacies, prescription drugs, and pharmacy services administrative organizations, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1074.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Applicability date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF593 A bill for an act relating to groundwater hazard statement requirements.(See HF 825.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
SF449 A bill for an act relating to digital financial asset transaction kiosks and including penalties, and effective date and applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1142.) Effective date: 05/19/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Nay
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall amendment H–1317 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall amendment H–1316 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall amendment H–1305 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall amendment H–1304 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF974 A bill for an act relating to vehicle registration plates, including registration plate frames and Gadsden flag special registration plates, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 525, HSB 144.) Shall amendment H–1303 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF985 A bill for an act relating to services provided by the secretary of state, providing fees, and making appropriations.(Formerly HF 198, HSB 17.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1017 A bill for an act relating to the applicability of actions of certain international organizations.(Formerly HSB 233.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1026 A bill for an act relating to the adoption tax credit available against the individual income tax, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions.(Formerly HF 965.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1033 A bill for an act making a rural water district a designated exempt entity for purposes of the sales and use tax.(Formerly HSB 226.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1034 A bill for an act providing for an individual income tax credit for the purchase of firearm safety devices and including retroactive and other applicability provisions.(Formerly HF 132.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1036 A bill for an act relating to human trafficking, including screening children, civil statutes of limitations, an annual stakeholder meeting and report, depositions of victims, restitution, restorative facilities and protective services, and investigation and prosecution, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HF 908, HF 452.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF1037 A bill for an act modifying economic development provisions relating to housing and residential development in urban renewal areas.(Formerly HF 617.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
SF297 A bill for an act relating to contracts entered into by state agencies and including applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1090.) Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Nay
HF395 A bill for an act relating to approved courses of instruction for school bus drivers, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 107.) Effective date: 01/01/2026 Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Nay
SF314 A bill for an act relating to the license application form for real estate brokers and salespersons, and brokerage agreement requirements. (Formerly SF 15.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
SF462 A bill for an act relating to weapons, including mandatory minimum sentences relating to the control, possession, receipt, or transportation of a firearm or offensive weapon by a felon, and the sharing of identifying information of persons prohibited from acquiring a pistol or revolver by court order, and providing penalties. (Formerly SSB 1125.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1242? 05/08/2025 Nay
SF462 A bill for an act relating to weapons, including mandatory minimum sentences relating to the control, possession, receipt, or transportation of a firearm or offensive weapon by a felon, and the sharing of identifying information of persons prohibited from acquiring a pistol or revolver by court order, and providing penalties. (Formerly SSB 1125.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
SF462 A bill for an act relating to weapons, including mandatory minimum sentences relating to the control, possession, receipt, or transportation of a firearm or offensive weapon by a felon, and the sharing of identifying information of persons prohibited from acquiring a pistol or revolver by court order, and providing penalties. (Formerly SSB 1125.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall amendment H–1242 be adopted? 05/08/2025 Yea
HF787 A bill for an act relating to education, including by modifying provisions related to the calculation of the teacher salary supplement district cost per pupil, teacher preparation requirements, out-of-state placement of certain specified students requiring special education, the duties of the department of education, and minimum teacher salaries, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 147.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
HF933 A bill for an act relating to pediatric palliative care centers, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 267.) Effective date: 05/27/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
SF608 A bill for an act regulating the marketing of grain, by providing for fees paid by grain dealers and warehouse operators into the grain depositors and sellers indemnity fund, and the payment of claims to reimburse sellers and depositors for losses covered by the fund, and including effective date and applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1131.) Effective date: 05/27/2025, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 10/24/2022. Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
HF976 A bill for an act relating to the administration of the tax by the department of revenue by modifying provisions related to personal income, property, sales and use, motor fuel, and inheritance taxes, changing tax expenditure reviews, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly HSB 89.) Effective date: Enactment, 07/01/2025, 01/01/2026. Applicability date: 01/01/2024, 01/01/2025, 01/01/2026. Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
HF1013 A bill for an act establishing a partial exemption on property taxes for certain residential properties sold in disaster areas.(Formerly HF 565.) Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
SF632 A bill for an act providing for programs and regulations related to agriculture, including crop production, animal health, and agricultural processing, providing for powers and duties of the department of agriculture and land stewardship, providing fees, and providing penalties. (Formerly SF 522, SSB 1160.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 05/08/2025 Yea
HF472 A bill for an act creating a special motion for expedited relief in actions involving the exercise of the right of freedom of speech and of the press, the right to assemble and petition, and the right of association, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly HSB 116.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF644 A bill for an act relating to the delegation of custodial rights and duties with respect to a child. (Formerly HF 374.) Effective Date: Conditional. Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF710 A bill for an act relating to roofs on private docks and required insurance. (Formerly HSB 163.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF862 A bill for an act relating to the representation of boards of supervisors and county officials by outside counsel, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HF 414.) Effective date: 05/19/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Nay
SF565 A bill for an act providing for the continuation of health insurance in certain circumstances for the surviving spouse and each surviving child of employees of the state of Iowa and including retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1039.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 01/01/2024. Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF986 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the department of insurance and financial services, the utilities commission, and the department of transportation, including financial literacy and exploitation, tax confidentiality, health insurance rates, health savings accounts, insurer withdrawals, property insurance, service contracts, the Iowa individual health benefit reinsurance association, and the Iowa cemetery Act, motor vehicle financial liability coverage, and including pen Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF1023 A bill for an act relating to benefits and contributions for members of the Iowa public employees' retirement system who are employed in a protection occupation.(Formerly HF 967, HSB 265.) Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF1022 A bill for an act exempting the sale of laundry soap or detergent from the sales tax.(Formerly HF 963.) Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF1028 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the department of management, making appropriations, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly HF 756, HSB 72.) Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF1032 A bill for an act creating a grocer reinvestment program, a local produce processing grant program, and a grocer reinvestment and local food processing fund under the purview of the economic development authority, and modifying the local food and farm program. (Formerly HF 550, HF 59.) Shall the bill pass? 04/24/2025 Yea
HF1032 A bill for an act creating a grocer reinvestment program, a local produce processing grant program, and a grocer reinvestment and local food processing fund under the purview of the economic development authority, and modifying the local food and farm program. (Formerly HF 550, HF 59.) Shall amendment H–1283 be adopted? 04/24/2025 Yea
SF146 A bill for an act relating to the use or creation of bots to purchase event tickets on the internet, and providing civil penalties. (Formerly SF 49.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
SF150 A bill for an act relating to sexual exploitation of a minor, and making penalties applicable. (Formerly SF 32.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF706 A bill for an act relating to open meetings and open records, providing penalties, and making penalties applicable. (Formerly HF 416.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF991 A bill for an act placing assessment limitations for property tax purposes on commercial child care facilities, and including effective date, applicability, and retroactive applicability provisions.(Formerly HSB 316.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1010 A bill for an act providing for an annual authorization fee to be collected by the college student aid commission from certain postsecondary educational institutions not subject to registration with the commission.(Formerly HF 772, HSB 48.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1007 A bill for an act relating to the disposition of collected criminal case fines and establishing a victim restitution fund.(Formerly HSB 319.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1007 A bill for an act relating to the disposition of collected criminal case fines and establishing a victim restitution fund.(Formerly HSB 319.) Shall amendment H–1280 be adopted? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1019 A bill for an act exempting the sale of toilet paper from the sales tax.(Formerly HF 964.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1021 A bill for an act exempting the sale of dietary supplements from the sales tax.(Formerly HF 966.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1020 A bill for an act modifying the child and dependent care credit available against the individual income tax, and including retroactive applicability provisions.(Formerly HF 962.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF1027 A bill for an act relating to radon by establishing radon mitigation requirements, creating a radon mitigation system tax credit available against the individual and corporate income taxes, and including retroactive applicability provisions. (Formerly HF 211.) Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF303 A bill for an act relating to prior authorization and utilization review organizations. (Formerly HSB 19.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
SF288 A bill for an act relating to students who are pregnant or who recently gave birth who attend state institutions of higher education governed by the board of regents and community colleges. (Formerly SF 12.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1251? 04/22/2025 Yea
SF288 A bill for an act relating to students who are pregnant or who recently gave birth who attend state institutions of higher education governed by the board of regents and community colleges. (Formerly SF 12.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
HF516 A bill for an act relating to medical residency and fellowship positions, including priority for admission to the university of Iowa's colleges of medicine and dentistry, and hospitals and clinics. (Formerly HF 137.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Nay
SF474 A bill for an act relating to services and support for youth, including treatment, physical assessments, and behavioral health evaluations for youth involved in juvenile delinquency and child in need of assistance proceedings; the licensing and certification of certain residential facilities; the provision of home and community-based services and habilitation services to certain youth by residential programs; administration and supervision of juvenile court services; and the suspension of Hawki Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
HF977 A bill for an act relating to the expansion of the ground emergency medical transportation program.(Formerly HF 941, HSB 249.) Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
HF988 A bill for an act creating a catastrophic savings account and modifying individual income taxes for account holders and including applicability provisions.(Formerly HF 622, HSB 149.) Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
HF1002 A bill for an act authorizing length of service award programs for volunteer fire fighters, volunteer emergency medical care providers, and reserve peace officers, and making appropriations. (Formerly HF 755, HSB 197.) Effective date: 07/01/2025 Shall the rules be suspended to consider amendment H–1272? 04/22/2025 Yea
  Committee Position Rank
Detail Iowa House Health and Human Services Committee 18
Detail Iowa House Natural Resources Committee 20
Detail Iowa House State Government Committee 18
Detail Iowa House Veterans Affairs Committee 16
Detail Iowa Joint Health Policy Oversight Committee 5
State District Chamber Party Status Start Date End Date
IA Iowa House District 020 House Democrat In Office 01/01/2023