Legislator
Legislator > Mark Lofgren

State Senator
Mark Lofgren
(R) - Iowa
Iowa Senate District 48
In Office - Started: 01/03/2023

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General Capitol Building Address

1007 E. Grand Ave.
Des Moines, IA 50319
Phone: 515-281-3371

Bill Bill Name Summary Progress
SF45 A bill for an act relating to the creation of land redevelopment trusts.(See SF 655.) This bill provides for the establishment of land redevelopment trusts. Division I of the bill authorizes one or more municipalities to establish a land redevelopment trust as a method to return dilapidated, abandoned, blighted, and tax-delinquent properties in their communities to economically productive status. An established land redevelopment trust is a public agency for the purpose of joint exercise of governmental powers, a governmental body for purposes of public meetings requirements of Code chapter 21, and a government body for purposes of public records requirements of Code chapter 22. Land redevelopment trusts are subject to periodic examination by the auditor of state under Code chapter 11. The bill requires the board of directors of a land redevelopment trust to establish bylaws addressing matters necessary to govern the conduct of the land redevelopment trust. Division I of the bill also grants a land redevelopment trust various powers and duties, including the authority to acquire properties through certain procedures, including the purchase of tax sale certificates and the foreclosure of properties acquired at a tax sale if not redeemed. However, the bill explicitly prohibits a land redevelopment trust from possessing or exercising the power of eminent domain. The bill establishes financing procedures that govern land redevelopment trusts, including allowing to be remitted to the land redevelopment trust up to 75 percent of real property taxes collected on a real property conveyed or leased by a land redevelopment trust that remains after the division of taxes for an urban renewal area and exclusive of any amount levied by a school district for five consecutive years after the property is again put on the tax rolls. The bill requires a land redevelopment trust to submit annual reports to the governing body that created the land redevelopment trust. The bill provides procedures for disposing of property that is acquired by the land redevelopment trust. The bill also provides procedures for dissolving a land redevelopment trust. Division II of the bill creates a land redevelopment trust tax sale procedure, which allows a land redevelopment trust to acquire abandoned, blighted, or dilapidated properties through an exclusive tax sale. In order to acquire property through a land redevelopment trust tax sale, the land redevelopment trust shall file a verified statement identifying the parcels for which the land redevelopment trust intends to purchase the tax sale certificates and shall pay the delinquent total amounts due on each parcel before May 15. Upon timely receipt of the land redevelopment trust’s verified statement and payment, the county treasurer shall remove the identified parcels from the regular annual tax sale and place those parcels in the land redevelopment trust tax sale. The land redevelopment trust tax sale shall occur before a public nuisance tax sale. Division III of the bill makes changes throughout the Code to conform with land redevelopment trust procedures established in division I of the bill. In Committee
SF170 A bill for an act relating to the historic preservation tax credit available against the individual and corporate income taxes, the franchise tax, and the insurance premiums tax.(See SF 653.) During the 2022 legislative session, House File 2317 was enacted which gradually reduced the refundability of the historic preservation tax credit commencing with the tax year beginning January 1, 2023, until 75 percent of the credit in excess of tax liability is refundable for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2027. Previously, the tax credit was 100 percent refundable. House File 2317 also enacted a provision preserving existing rights to the tax credit issued, awarded, or allowed prior to January 1, 2023, to reduce the effect House File 2317 had on existing tax credits being awarded. This bill expands the applicability of the preservation of existing rights provision from January 1, 2023, to July 1, 2023, to historic preservation tax credits issued, awarded, or allowed prior to July 1, 2023. In Committee
SF22 A bill for an act relating to the use of an electronic device in a voice-activated or hands-free mode while driving, providing penalties, and making penalties applicable. Effective date: 07/01/2025. AN ACT RELATING TO THE USE OF AN ELECTRONIC DEVICE IN A VOICE-ACTIVATED OR HANDS-FREE MODE WHILE DRIVING, PROVIDING PENALTIES, AND MAKING PENALTIES APPLICABLE. Signed/Enacted/Adopted
SF42 A bill for an act modifying the costs eligible for emergency medical services fund expenditures, and including effective date provisions. Effective date: 03/28/2025. AN ACT MODIFYING THE COSTS ELIGIBLE FOR EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES FUND EXPENDITURES, AND INCLUDING EFFECTIVE DATE PROVISIONS. Signed/Enacted/Adopted
SF139 A bill for an act relating to the redevelopment tax credit program, the nuisance property remediation assistance fund, and assistance for communities to address abandoned buildings. This bill relates to the redevelopment tax credit program, the nuisance property remediation assistance fund, and assistance for communities to address abandoned buildings. Under current law, a redevelopment tax credit may be granted in an amount of 12 percent of a taxpayer’s qualifying investment in a grayfield site, or 15 percent of a taxpayer’s qualifying investment in a grayfield site if the qualifying redevelopment project meets the requirements of a green development. Under the bill, a grayfield site of more than 50,000 square feet that is located in a community with a population of less than 30,000 may be awarded a redevelopment tax credit for a term of two years at the discretion of the board of the Iowa economic development authority (IEDA). Under the bill, the IEDA may use moneys in the nuisance property remediation assistance fund to provide financial assistance, not to exceed $500,000, to cities for the remediation of nuisance properties, abandoned buildings, and other structures of 50,000 square feet. Financial assistance may include loans or forgivable loans with a minimum term of 120 months and a maximum term of 180 months. Twenty-five percent of the loan or forgivable loan shall be forgiven upon successful remediation of the nuisance property. More than 25 percent may be forgiven at the discretion of the director. Successful remediation is determined by the size of the remediation project, the beginning condition of the nuisance property, and if there has been a meaningful change to the nuisance property, such as the nuisance property has been cleared or cleaned, is for sale, has a proposed reuse plan, has been repurposed, or any other meaningful change. Under current law, the groundwater protection fund includes a solid waste account of which not more than $400,000 shall be allocated to the department of natural resources (DNR) for purposes of providing funding assistance to eligible communities to address abandoned buildings by promoting waste abatement, diversion, selective dismantlement of building components, and recycling. Under current law, eligible communities for funding assistance include a city with a population of 5,000 or fewer. Under the bill, eligible communities also include a city with a population between 5,000 and 30,000, for which the DNR may provide funding assistance in an amount equal to $10 per square foot of the abandoned building, not to exceed $1 million. Under the bill, an application for funding assistance may be submitted by any county or municipal government that meets the population requirements of an eligible community, and the abandoned building that is the subject of such application may be owned by any person. In Committee
SF48 A bill for an act relating to the reporting of serious reportable events, and providing penalties.(See SF 581.) This bill relates to the reporting of serious reportable events by facilities including hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, and pregnancy resource centers. The bill requires each facility to report to the director (director) of the department of inspections, appeals, and licensing (DIAL) the occurrence of an applicable serious reportable event described in the bill as soon as is reasonably and practicably possible, but no later than 15 working days after discovery of the event. Reports shall be filed in a format specified by the director of DIAL and shall identify the facility but shall not include any identifying information for any of the health care professionals, facility employees, or patients involved. Serious reportable events include surgical events, product or device events, patient protection events, care management events, environmental events, potential criminal events, and radiologic events detailed in the bill. The bill requires that following the occurrence of a serious reportable event, a facility shall conduct a root cause analysis of the event and shall either implement a corrective action plan or report to the director any reasons for not taking corrective action. The director shall design the serious reportable event reporting system to allow a facility to file the required reports by electronic means and shall encourage a facility to use the electronic filing option when that option is feasible for the facility. The bill provides that serious reportable events under the bill do not constitute child abuse or dependent adult abuse and are excluded from the child abuse and dependent adult abuse reporting requirements, if the facility makes a determination within 24 hours of discovery of the serious reportable event and files the reports required in a timely fashion. A facility that determines a serious reportable event has occurred must inform persons within the facility who are mandatory reporters of child abuse or dependent adult abuse. A mandatory reporter otherwise required to report child abuse or dependent adult abuse is relieved of the duty to report an event the facility determines to be a serious reportable event. The bill does not affect the protections and immunities applicable to reporting of child abuse and dependent adult abuse. Additionally, if a serious reportable event is reported by a facility, no other state agency or licensing board is required to conduct an investigation of or obtain or create investigative data based upon other reports of the same event. Also, if a facility is required to report a serious reportable event pursuant to another state law that meets the requirements for compliance with the bill, DIAL shall recognize the report in lieu of a report made under the bill if DIAL is provided a copy of the report. Reports of serious reportable events made to the director by a professional licensing board; serious reportable event reports, findings of root cause analyses, and corrective action plans filed by a facility under the bill; and records created or obtained by the director in reviewing or investigating the reports, findings, and corrective action plans are confidential records under Code section 22.7. The director shall establish a serious reportable event reporting system requiring certain information as detailed in the bill. The director shall take action relating to serious reportable events as described in the bill. The director may collaborate with the department of health and human services to administer the director’s duties and responsibilities. The bill requires the boards of medicine, physician assistants, nursing, pharmacy, and podiatry to maintain a record of complaints that come to the attention of the respective board and are determined to qualify as serious reportable events. Within 30 working days of making a determination that an event qualifies as a serious reportable event, the respective board shall forward a report of the event to the director. The director shall then forward the report to the facility named in the report and the facility shall determine whether the event has been previously reported and shall notify the director. The bill requires the director to report the list of serious reportable events to the national quality forum. The director shall monitor amendments to the national quality forum’s list of serious reportable events, monitor efforts in other states, and report any modification to the list to the general assembly. In Committee
SF322 A bill for an act establishing completion of a course on American history and civil government as a requirement for the completion of a baccalaureate degree program at a public institution of higher education. This bill requires a public institution of higher education to establish as a requirement for the completion of any baccalaureate degree program that a student complete a survey course in American history and civil government. The requirement begins with the academic year commencing in 2027. The bill provides minimum required subjects that must be taught and documents that students must read as part of the course. The bill defines a public institution of higher education as a regents institution or a community college with respect to any baccalaureate degree program offered by the community college and to any student enrolled in such a program. The bill provides that the course shall be assigned a value of three semester hours of credit and that the course shall fulfill any general education requirement in the social sciences that is a graduation requirement. The bill provides that a student shall not be required to complete the course again if transferring to another public institution of higher education. In Committee
SJR6 A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa by repealing the natural resources and outdoor recreation trust fund, and dedicating a portion of state revenue from sales and use taxes imposed for the benefit of property tax relief. A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Iowa by repealing the natural resources and outdoor recreation trust fund, and dedicating a portion of state revenue from sales and use taxes imposed for the benefit of property tax relief. In Committee
SF320 A bill for an act creating a capital murder offense by establishing the penalty of death for murder in the first degree of a peace officer on duty, and including effective date and applicability provisions. This bill amends the Iowa criminal code to provide for punishment by death for capital murder committed by a person age 18 or older if the trial jury, or the judge if there is no jury, makes specific findings and if the jury believes the defendant should be put to death in a separate penalty proceeding held after the close of the initial trial proceeding. Under the bill, a death sentence could be imposed if the murder would constitute murder in the first degree. The bill provides that in order to receive a sentence of death, the defendant must be at least 18 years of age at the time the murder in the first degree of a peace officer on duty was committed, must not be mentally ill or intellectually disabled, and must have been a major participant in the commission of the crime or must have shown a manifest indifference to human life. The bill amends Code section 707.2, murder in the first degree, to include when a person intentionally kills a peace officer, with knowledge that the person killed is a peace officer. The bill specifies that the attorney general may prosecute all actions and proceedings involving capital murder, when in the attorney general’s judgment the interest of the state requires the attorney general to intervene on behalf of the county attorney, or upon request by the county attorney. If a person is indigent and is charged with capital murder, payment of costs for two attorneys is authorized. The supreme court is required to establish standards for the competency of counsel in death penalty cases. The state public defender is charged with establishing teams of qualified lead and cocounsel for death penalty cases, as well as conducting or sponsoring specialized training programs for attorneys representing persons who may be executed. If a capital murder case proceeds to trial and a notice of intent to seek the death penalty has been filed, in addition to any other defenses that may be presented to the charge, the defendant may raise the issue of intellectual disability or mental illness during the time of filing pretrial motions. Once the evidence is submitted to the jury, the court will instruct the jury, at the defendant’s request, that in considering whether a sentence of death is justified, the race, color, religious beliefs, national origin, sex, or other protected classes under Code chapter 216 of the defendant or of any victim is not to be considered. The supreme court shall collect evidence relating to whether the death sentences imposed are excessive, disproportionate, or imposed under the influence of prejudice at trial, which will be available to litigants. The sentence of death is imposed only when the trier of fact (the jury or the court if the defendant has waived the right to a jury trial) unanimously answers two questions affirmatively: (1) whether aggravating circumstances established beyond a reasonable doubt outweigh any mitigating circumstances that may exist; and (2) whether the defendant should be sentenced to death. Mitigating factors the trier of fact may consider include the following: the defendant was under the influence of an extreme mental or emotional disturbance; the age of the defendant; the defendant’s ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of the conduct due to mental disease but not to a degree to constitute a defense; the defendant has no significant prior criminal history; the defendant was under extreme duress; the defendant did not directly commit the murder; and the defendant’s character or record or the circumstances of the offense. The sentencing proceeding is conducted separately from the finding of guilt or innocence by the same trier of fact. For the sentencing proceeding, the trier of fact (the jury or the court if the defendant has waived the right to have the jury hear the proceedings) is to weigh any aggravating circumstances established beyond a reasonable doubt by the state against any of the enumerated mitigating circumstances that may be presented by the defendant. Evidence of certain juvenile delinquency adjudications is not admissible in any proceeding to determine the sentence. The supreme court shall automatically review a death penalty sentence. The supreme court shall review the trial and judgment separately from the sentencing proceeding. If the supreme court finds error in the sentencing proceeding, the supreme court may remand the case back to district court for a new sentencing hearing. The bill requires the supreme court to examine whether the sentence is excessive or disproportionate to penalties in similar cases. If affirmed by the supreme court, the penalty would be accomplished by lethal injection. The bill requires the board of corrections to adopt rules pertaining to executions, including rules pertaining to the witnessing of executions. A person who is sentenced to death, but who is pregnant when the warrant of execution is issued, is not to be executed until the person is no longer pregnant. The bill also provides a procedure to stay execution of a condemned inmate who becomes insane after conviction but before execution. An employee of the state shall not be required to perform or assist in any execution and shall not be discriminated against for refusing to participate. The bill may include a state mandate as defined in Code section 25B.3. The bill makes inapplicable Code section 25B.2, subsection 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 contains severability provisions, takes effect January 1, 2026, and applies only to offenses committed on or after that date. In Committee
SF325 A bill for an act concerning conflicts of interest involving a county attorney. This bill concerns the duties and responsibilities of county attorneys. The bill adds engaging in the simultaneous representation of the county, the board of supervisors, and any other county official if a conflict of interest exists between the parties and engaging in any other type of legal representation if it creates a conflict of interest with the county to the list of prohibited actions of a county attorney. A majority of a board of supervisors may decide to obtain outside counsel if a dispute exists between the county attorney, the board of supervisors, or any other county official. A board of supervisors may hire outside counsel to decide whether a conflict exists with the county attorney. If outside counsel determines a conflict of interest exists, a district court may review that determination upon request by the county attorney. If a county sheriff reasonably believes that a conflict of interest exists with the county attorney and the board of supervisors refuses to act, the county sheriff may, through notice pleadings, petition a district court for a determination of whether a conflict of interest exists and request a stay on any pending proceedings. The district court shall issue a ruling on the merits within 30 days and may appoint outside counsel to represent the county sheriff or issue any other order in the interest of justice and all court costs and expenses shall by paid by the county. In Committee
SF249 A bill for an act relating to damages incurred due to releases of carbon dioxide from liquefied carbon dioxide pipelines or carbon dioxide facilities and including effective date provisions. This bill relates to damages incurred due to the release of carbon dioxide. The bill grants any person residing, traveling through, or visiting, or owning or leasing property, equipment, or livestock, within a 25-mile radius from the site of a release of carbon dioxide from a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline or carbon dioxide facility standing to bring an action against the owner of a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline or carbon dioxide facility if carbon dioxide is released from a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline or carbon dioxide facility. The bill requires the claim to be filed within one year of the incident occurring. The bill imposes strict liability on the owner for all compensatory and punitive damages. The bill provides that any judgment lien for an action brought under the bill has priority over all other security interests or liens. The bill requires any assets held by an owner involved in bankruptcy or receivership to be held in trust for the benefit of potential carbon dioxide victim judgment lienholders for a period of one year from the owner’s last day of controlling the operations of the liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline or carbon dioxide facility or the owner’s last day of producing carbon dioxide that will be transported through a pipeline or sequestered on the property. The bill is effective upon enactment. In Committee
SF299 A bill for an act establishing the Iowa carbon dioxide disaster relief fund, creating an excise tax, and making appropriations. This bill establishes the Iowa carbon dioxide disaster relief fund (fund). The bill creates the fund in the state treasury under the control of the department of natural resources (DNR). The fund shall consist of moneys deposited into the fund, including moneys collected from the excise tax assessed under the bill and gifts and donations received for the fund. Moneys in the fund are appropriated to DNR to respond to catastrophic events, regardless of size, resulting from the release or failure of a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline, transportation, or storage system, including but not limited to a leakage, rupture, or other hazardous incident. The moneys may be used by the department for immediate disaster response, including containment, emergency response support, or environmental cleanup or long-term recovery, including compensation to victims, rebuilding, and environmental restoration. The fund is financed through an excise tax at a rate determined by the general assembly. The bill imposes the excise tax on the total annual transportation capacity of liquefied carbon dioxide pipelines and storage systems operating within Iowa and the actual amount of liquefied carbon dioxide transported through Iowa annually. The bill requires a minimum of $10 billion to be maintained in the fund in order for any common carrier liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline to transport liquefied carbon dioxide within the state. The bill creates two fiduciary oversight boards, the oversight board and the victim assistance board. The oversight board consists of at least five members appointed to five-year terms by the governor and confirmed by the senate. Expertise in financial relief, public policy, and disaster relief is considered when appointing the members. The members are responsible for maintaining the integrity of the fund, meeting at least quarterly to review the fund and oversee tax revenues and distributions, making recommendations for changes, and acquiring appropriate insurance to protect the fund and victims. The victim assistance board consists of at least seven members, five of which must meet certain qualifications provided in the bill. The members are responsible for ensuring that the fund’s resources are equitably and efficiently distributed to disaster victims, assessing the needs of victims, prioritizing claims, monitoring the recovery progress, advising the oversight board on any adjustments needed in the disaster response process or funding levels, creating and maintaining an on-demand, three-dimensional plume model network to accurately predict movement of a carbon dioxide plume, determining equipment and training required for local first responders, and compensating local first responder units. The bill requires the general assembly to review the operation of the fund every two years to ensure it meets its objectives, adjust the excise tax rate as needed to keep pace with inflation or changing disaster needs, and evaluate the effectiveness of disaster response protocols. The bill allows the oversight board or the victims assistance board to recommend improvements or changes to disaster relief policies. In Committee
SF143 A bill for an act relating to consumer data protection, and including retroactive applicability provisions. This bill relates to consumer data protection. Under Code section 715D.1, “child” is defined as any natural person younger than 13 years of age. Under the bill, “child” is defined as any natural person younger than 18 years of age. The bill expands the definition of “health record” to include, in addition to any record containing related health information, any record containing nonhealth information that is related to health information provided in confidence to a health care provider. The bill expands the definition of “sensitive data” to include health data. “Health data” is defined in the bill. Under the bill, except as it relates to health data, the Code chapter shall not apply to the state or any political subdivision of the state; financial institutions, affiliates of financial institutions, or data subject to Tit. V of the federal Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, 15 U.S.C. §6801 et seq.; persons who are subject to and comply with regulations promulgated pursuant to Tit. II, subtit. F, of the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-191, and Tit. XIII, subtit. D, of the federal Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009, 42 U.S.C. §17921 - 17954; nonprofit organizations; or institutions of higher education. The bill exempts information or data maintained by a public health authority, as defined by HIPAA, from the Code chapter provided the public health authority has received the consumer’s authorization, unless otherwise required by HIPAA. The bill exempts information used only for public health activities and purposes as authorized by HIPAA, provided that the information is de-identified, aggregated, and processed in batches of no less than 100 consumers from the Code chapter. Under the bill, a consumer shall have the right to request to be notified of, or to opt out of, profiling in furtherance of a decision that produces legal or similarly significant effects concerning a consumer. The bill defines “profiling” as any form of automated processing performed on personal data to evaluate, analyze, or predict specific factors related to the economic status, health, personal preferences, interests, reliability, behavior, location, or movements of an individual. Notification to the consumer shall be in plain language and include the type of data subject to profiling, any requirements for a person receiving the consumer’s data to delete or return the data, and the process for a consumer to file a complaint. “Decision that produces legal or similarly significant effects concerning a consumer” is defined in the bill. The bill applies retroactively to January 1, 2025. In Committee
SF15 A bill for an act relating to the license application form for real estate brokers and salespersons.(See SF 314.) This bill relates to the license application form for real estate brokers and salespersons. Under the bill, an application form for a license must allow a person holding a real estate broker license who is applying for a real estate salesperson license, or vice versa, to indicate whether the license being applied for shall become effective upon approval of the application or upon the expiration of the applicant’s current license. In Committee
SF117 A bill for an act relating to the prescribing, ordering, dispensing, and administering authority of pharmacists and practitioners.(See SF 313.) This bill relates to the prescribing, ordering, dispensing, and administering authority of practitioners and pharmacists. The bill prohibits the board of pharmacy and any health-related professional board under Code chapter 147 (general provisions, health-related professions) (boards) that license a pharmacist or practitioner and any employer of a pharmacist or practitioner from restricting the prescribing, ordering, dispensing, or administering authority of a pharmacist or practitioner, consistent with the pharmacist’s or practitioner’s scope of practice, in a way that acts as a deterrent for the pharmacist or practitioner to use a medication or treatment in accordance with the pharmacist’s or practitioner’s best professional judgment. The bill also provides that any restriction by an employer of a pharmacist or practitioner that is prohibited under the bill, whether or not documented by the employer as part of a contract, agreement, or employee handbook, by an amendment to any such document, or by any other means, is unenforceable and shall not be the basis for any disciplinary action by the employer. The bill also provides that a pharmacist or practitioner who uses a medication or treatment in accordance with the pharmacist’s or practitioner’s best professional judgment and consistent with the pharmacist’s or practitioner’s scope of practice under the bill, shall not be subject to licensee discipline. Code section 155A.3 defines “pharmacist” as a person licensed by the board of pharmacy to practice pharmacy; and “practitioner” as a physician, dentist, podiatric physician, prescribing psychologist, veterinarian, optometrist, physician assistant, advanced registered nurse practitioner, or other person licensed or registered to prescribe, distribute, or dispense a prescription drug or device in the course of professional practice in this state or a person licensed by another state in a health field in which, under Iowa law, licensees in this state may legally prescribe drugs. In Committee
SF118 A bill for an act relating to powers and duties applicable to state of disaster emergencies and public health disasters. This bill relates to duties and powers relative to emergency situations including a state of disaster emergency and a public health disaster. The bill amends provisions relating to the proclamation of a state of disaster emergency by the governor under Code chapter 29C (emergency management and security). Current law provides that a state of disaster emergency shall continue for 30 days unless terminated or extended by the governor and that the general assembly, by concurrent resolution when in session or through the legislative council by majority vote if not in session, may rescind the proclamation. Under the bill, a state of disaster emergency shall continue for 60 days unless rescinded, extended, or amended by the general assembly, not the governor, and any initial extension of the proclamation by the general assembly shall not exceed 60 days, and any subsequent extension shall not exceed 60-day increments. The bill also provides that if the general assembly is not in session, the legislative council may, by majority vote, rescind, extend, or amend this proclamation only once and the extension shall not exceed 60 days. As described in the bill, a measure dictated in a state of disaster emergency proclamation shall have certain restrictions relating to constitutional rights, religious rights, patient rights, surveillance, health-related profession licensing and prescribing authority, and disease contraction monitoring. The bill amends the duties of the department of health and human services (HHS or the department) relative to a public health disaster under Code chapter 135 (department of health and human services —— public health). The bill provides that the reasonable measures taken by HHS to prevent the transmission of infectious disease and to ensure that all cases of communicable disease are properly identified, controlled, and treated shall not include requiring identification and monitoring of a person at risk of contracting a contagious or infectious disease through contact with a contagious person or requiring a person to comply with such identification and monitoring efforts. The department may recommend, but not order, physical examinations, testing, and the collection of specimens necessary for the diagnosis and treatment of individuals. An affected individual has the ultimate authority to determine whether to submit to the department’s recommendations, and shall not be subject to undue pressure or compulsion to submit. The department may isolate infected individuals who refuse a physical examination or testing and who pose a danger to the public health. The length of isolation shall not exceed the longest usual incubation period for the specific communicable disease. The department may recommend a vaccine approved by the United States food and drug administration as safe and effective, but not vaccinate or order that individuals be vaccinated against an infectious disease or to prevent the spread of communicable or potentially communicable disease. Prior to administration of a vaccine, an adult or the parent or legal representative of a minor receiving the vaccine shall be provided with the federal vaccine information statement and verbally informed of the known and potential benefits and risks of the vaccine. Vaccination shall not be recommended if it is reasonably likely to lead to serious harm. An affected individual has the ultimate authority to determine whether to submit to the recommended vaccination, and shall not be subject to undue pressure or compulsion to submit. The department may isolate infected individuals. The department may recommend, but not treat or order, individuals infected with disease receive treatment or prophylaxis. Treatment or prophylaxis shall not be recommended if the treatment or prophylaxis is reasonably likely to lead to serious harm. The infected individual has the ultimate authority to determine whether to submit to the recommendation, and shall not be subject to undue pressure or compulsion to submit. The department may isolate individuals infected with disease who are unable or unwilling to undergo treatment or prophylaxis. The department may isolate infected individuals or groups of individuals in accordance with Code chapter 139A (communicable and infectious diseases and poisonings) and the subchapter of Code chapter 135 relating to disaster preparedness. The bill requires the department to provide a link on the department’s internet site for qualified individuals to submit evidence-based information regarding a public health emergency or public health disaster and for members of the public to share their experiences. The department shall adopt rules to administer this provision, including the criteria a qualified individual must meet to participate. The bill provides that the type and length of isolation or quarantine imposed for a specific communicable disease shall be in accordance with rules adopted by the department, and that the length of the isolation or quarantine shall not exceed the longest usual incubation period for the specific communicable disease. Under current law, immunization is not required for enrollment in an elementary or secondary school or licensed child care center if a person, or, if the person is a minor, the minor’s parent or guardian, submits an affidavit stating that the immunization conflicts with the tenets and practices of a recognized religious denomination of which the person or the minor’s parent or guardian is an adherent or member. Under the bill, the submitted affidavit shall be accepted if it states the immunization conflicts with the sincerely held religious beliefs of the person or, if the person is a minor, the beliefs of the minor’s parent or guardian. The bill provides that if a child is exempt from vaccination, the exemption applies during times of emergency or epidemic. In Committee
SF115 A bill for an act relating to human growth and development course enrollment at school districts and to pupil attendance at educational conferences or seminars in which human growth and development information is provided. This bill prohibits a school district from enrolling a pupil in a course of instruction in human growth and development, and from facilitating a pupil’s attendance at an educational conference or seminar that includes information on human growth and development, unless the pupil’s parent or guardian files written informed consent with the appropriate principal. The bill also requires the board of directors of a school district to annually provide to a parent or guardian of a pupil enrolled in the district information about human growth and development that may be provided to pupils at an educational conference or seminar for which the school district facilitates pupil attendance. The bill may include a state mandate as defined in Code section 25B.3. The bill requires that the state cost of any state mandate included in the bill be paid by a school district from state school foundation aid received by the school district under Code section 257.16. The specification is deemed to constitute state compliance with any state mandate funding-related requirements of Code section 25B.2. The inclusion of this specification is intended to reinstate the requirement of political subdivisions to comply with any state mandates included in the bill. In Committee
SF116 A bill for an act relating to obscenity, including the exposure of a minor to an obscene performance and admittance of a minor to a premises with obscene performances, establishing a private civil cause of action, and providing penalties. This bill relates to obscenity, including the exposure of a minor to an obscene performance and admittance of a minor to a premises with obscene performances, and establishes a private civil cause of action. The bill defines “obscene performance” as a visual performance by a person, whether compensated or uncompensated, that exposes the person’s genitals, pubic area, buttocks, or female breast, including prosthetics and artificial sexual organs or substitutes therefor, or involves the person engaging in a sex act, masturbation, excretory function, or sadomasochistic abuse, which the average person, viewing the performance as a whole and applying contemporary community standards with respect to what is suitable to be viewed by minors, would find appeals to the prurient interest and is patently offensive, and the performance taken as a whole lacks serious artistic, literary, political, or scientific value. The bill provides that the office of attorney general or the county attorney of the county in which a violation occurs shall enforce the provisions of Code chapter 728 (obscenity). The bill provides that any person who knowingly exposes a minor to an “obscene performance” is guilty of a public offense and shall upon conviction be guilty of an aggravated misdemeanor. The bill provides that a person who knowingly sells, gives, delivers, or provides a minor who is not a child a pass or admits the minor to premises where an obscene performance is performed is guilty of a serious misdemeanor. A person who knowingly sells, gives, delivers, or provides a child a pass or admits the minor to premises where an obscene performance is performed is guilty of an aggravated misdemeanor. A minor is a person under 18 years of age, and a child is a person under 14 years of age. The bill establishes a private civil cause of action for a parent or guardian of a minor, or a minor upon reaching 18 years of age, to whom obscene material has been knowingly disseminated or exhibited, or who was exposed to an obscene performance. A cause of action may be brought against any person that has knowingly disseminated or exhibited obscene material to the minor or who engaged in or caused or allowed a person to knowingly engage in an obscene performance in the presence of the minor for any of the following remedies: a declaratory judgment; injunctive relief; actual, incidental, and consequential damages; punitive damages, if appropriate; and any other equitable relief that the court deems appropriate. The minimum award of damages shall be $10,000. An action may be commenced by a parent or guardian within two years of a violation. An action for a violation brought by a person who was a minor at the time of a violation shall be found within 10 years after the person upon whom the offense is committed attains 18 years of age. The bill provides that no public institution, public facility, public equipment, or other physical asset that is owned, leased, or controlled by this state or a political subdivision of this state shall be used for a show, exhibition, or performance that includes obscene material or obscene performances. No public institution or facility shall lease, sell, or permit the subleasing of its facilities or property for the purpose of shows, exhibitions, or performances that include obscene material or obscene performances. No public funds made available by the state or a political subdivision of this state that are distributed by an institution, board, commission, department, agency, official, or an employee of the state or political subdivision shall be used for the purpose of shows, exhibitions, or performances that include obscene material or obscene performances. The bill does not apply to obscene materials that are sent or received as part of a law enforcement investigation or are authorized by law to be sent or received. The bill provides that any public officer or employee, or any person acting under color of such office or employment, who knowingly allows a public institution or funds to be used for the purpose of shows, exhibitions, or performances that include obscene material or obscene performances commits a serious misdemeanor. The bill repeals Code section 728.7 (exemptions for public libraries and educational institutions), which provides that nothing in Code chapter 728 prohibits the use of appropriate material for educational purposes in any accredited school, or any public library, or in any educational program in which the minor is participating and nothing in Code chapter 728 prohibits the attendance of minors at an exhibition or display of art works or the use of any materials in any public library. In Committee
SF97 A bill for an act designating the acquisition of certain vehicles or vehicle equipment as a general county purpose. This bill amends the definition of general county purpose to include the acquisition of vehicles or vehicle equipment for a county sheriff, county attorney, county jail facility, county maintenance department, county conservation department, or county public health department. Under Code chapter 331, a county board of supervisors generally must receive the approval of voters at an election in order to contract indebtedness and issue general obligation bonds to carry out a general county purpose. In Committee
SF103 A bill for an act relating to the adoption of the American medical association's code of medical ethics by the board of medicine. This bill requires the board of medicine (board) to adopt rules as necessary to adopt the most recent version of the American medical association’s code of medical ethics. The board shall adopt rules to implement the bill no later than July 1, 2026. In Committee
SF10 A bill for an act relating to special landowner turkey hunting licenses.(See SF 148.) Under current law, one wild turkey license without fee is issued to each owner of a farm unit or to a member of the owner’s family and to the tenant of the farm unit or a member of the tenant’s family for use on that farm unit. A special wild turkey hunting license is valid and may be used during any bow or firearm turkey hunting season. This bill allows a special wild turkey hunting license to be used during any open season using the method of take authorized for use during that season and authorizes the person issued the license to harvest only one turkey. In Committee
SF112 A bill for an act relating to the establishment of a transactional currency based on gold and silver held in a bullion depository approved by the treasurer of state, and providing fees. This bill requires the treasurer of state to issue specie and establish a transactional currency that are usable as legal tender and readily transferable. The bill permits the treasurer of state to contract with a private vendor to perform the treasurer of state’s duties and requires the treasurer of state to exclusively authorize an approved bullion depository as the state’s issuer of specie. The bill requires the treasurer of state to hold all specie and bullion owned or purchased for such purposes in trust for the transactional currency holders and to maintain enough specie or bullion to allow for the redemption of all units of the transactional currency issued. The bill requires the treasurer of state to create an account in the approved bullion depository for all the specie and bullion. Once a person or state pays the treasurer of state for specie or bullion or designates specie or bullion held on account in the depository for being represented by transactional currency and pays a fee, the bill requires the treasurer of state to issue transactional currency to that person or state and to buy specie or bullion in the number of troy ounces of precious metal equal to the number of units of transactional currency issued to the purchaser, deposit the specie or bullion into the pooled depository account for the purchaser, and issue a depository account to the purchaser or update an existing depository account to reflect the purchase. The bill allows a person with transactional currency to redeem the currency for United States dollars, specie, or bullion by presenting the currency to the treasurer of state. To redeem the currency for the person, the bill requires the treasurer of state to sell the equivalent amount of specie or bullion from the pooled depository account and provide the amount received from the sale in United States dollars to the person or to withdraw the specie or bullion from the depository. The bill requires the treasurer of state to determine the value of a unit of transactional currency whenever transactional currency is issued or redeemed and requires that the value of a unit of transactional currency be equal to the appropriate fraction of a troy ounce of gold or silver at the time of that transaction as published by the approved bullion depository. The bill requires that specie and bullion purchased and deposited into the pooled depository account and money received in exchange for transactional currency or for the sale of specie or bullion in response to a request for redemption be held by the treasurer of state outside the state treasury and provides that it is not available for appropriation by the general assembly. The bill allows the treasurer of state to set a fee for issuing or redeeming transactional currency. The treasurer of state retains the fees to administer the bill and cover costs of industry standard merchant fees, with any excess to be deposited in the general fund of the state. In Committee
SF83 A bill for an act relating to deer depredation. This bill relates to deer depredation. The bill directs the department of natural resources to issue deer shooting permits to a landowner who incurs crop, horticultural product, tree, or nursery damage of $1,000 or more due to wild animals. The bill creates a designated deer depredation season from January 11 through January 31. A person possessing a deer depredation license and tag or deer shooting permit may use a rifle with an approved cartridge, a shotgun, a muzzleloader, a handgun, a crossbow, or a bow during the designated season. In Committee
SF136 A bill for an act relating to hazardous liquid pipelines, including the establishment of setbacks and safety regulations, specified utility construction project requirements, pipeline project investor disclosures, voluntary easement negotiation requirements, and provisions for land surveys in connection with hazardous liquid pipeline construction projects, and including effective date and applicability provisions. This bill relates to hazardous liquid pipelines, including the establishment of setbacks and safety regulations, easement requirements for utilities and landowner rights regarding pipeline construction, voluntary easement negotiation requirements, surveys in connection with hazardous liquid pipeline projects, pipeline project investor disclosures, and provisions relating to entry of land. Division I of the bill allows counties to adopt setback and safety requirements for hazardous liquid pipeline projects that exceed the protections afforded in state and federal laws. Division II of the bill provides that the Iowa utilities commission (commission) shall not issue a permit for a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline until the federal pipeline and hazardous materials safety administration provides new rules updating the safety standards for liquefied carbon dioxide pipelines. The bill also provides that the commission shall not grant a permit to construct a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline unless the permit is conditioned upon the pipeline company (company) burying the pipeline with at least eight feet of cover to allow for future drainage and obtaining all other applicable permits, including federal and state regulatory permits, state and local highway and road crossing permits, and local zoning permits. The company must release the results of any plume modeling studies upon applying for a permit that vests the company with the power of eminent domain. The bill requires a company seeking to use eminent domain to first acquire at least 90 percent of the affected parcels and 90 percent of the pipeline project’s total distance through voluntary easements or through preexisting easements. The bill prohibits the commission from granting a company the right of eminent domain for an interstate hazardous liquid pipeline project unless the company first acquires all applicable pipeline construction and zoning permits from the other states the project will be constructed in. The bill allows a landowner to file a complaint with the commission and to notify the relevant county board of supervisors of a violation of land restoration standards. The bill expands the meaning of “landowner” under Code section 479B.20 to include a farm tenant. The bill expands damages that constitute compensable loss under Code section 479B.29 to include soil compaction, damage to soil or water conservation structures, and damage to irrigation or drainage systems, and adds “farm tenant” to the definition of “landowner”. The bill expands the claims a landowner can bring and receive compensation for to include any identifiable compensable loss resulting from pipeline activity. A landowner may file an action for relief in small claims or district court against a company for a violation of Code section 479B.29. The bill modifies the definition of damages for purposes of construction damages under Code section 479B.30 to include compensable losses listed under Code section 479B.29. The bill requires a company applying for a permit and negotiating a voluntary easement to first acquire signed, witnessed, and notarized written permission from an affected landowner. Upon consent being granted, a company or company’s agents shall not exceed two communications per month with a landowner unless the landowner waives the restriction through written permission. Violations of the bill shall be reported to the commission, which shall set a public hearing. If the commission finds a violation has occurred, the commission shall fine the company $1,000 per violation and collect and deliver the amount to the affected landowner. The bill provides an affected landowner a cause of action against a company in violation of the provisions of the bill. The bill provides that a company seeking eminent domain rights shall include investor information in the application for a permit submitted to the commission. The permit application shall include the names and home addresses of all planned pipeline investors and the range of planned investment per investor as indicated in the bill. The bill removes a provision allowing a company to enter upon private land for the purpose of surveying and examining the land by giving 10 days’ written notice to a landowner. Division II of the bill takes effect upon enactment. Division II of the bill applies retroactively to all applications for a permit to construct a pipeline pursuant to Code chapter 479B filed with the commission on or after July 1, 2021. Division II of the bill also applies to permits issued by the commission on or after the effective date of the division. In Committee
SF4 A bill for an act relating to lobbying activities of former or future executive or administrative heads of licensing boards, providing penalties, and making penalties applicable. Under current law, a person who serves as a statewide elected official, the executive or administrative head of an agency of state government, the deputy executive or administrative head of an agency of state government, and a member of the general assembly are prohibited from becoming a lobbyist for two years following the termination of service or employment. This bill also prohibits an executive or administrative head of a licensing board, as defined in Code section 272C.1, from acting as a lobbyist for two years after the termination of the person’s service or employment. Additionally, the bill prohibits a person who was a lobbyist from serving as an executive or administrative head of a licensing board for two years after the person stopped lobbying. Code section 272C.1 includes 32 specifically identified licensing boards. The bill does not prohibit an executive or administrative head of a licensing board from lobbying as the board’s executive director. By operation of law, a person who knowingly and intentionally acts as a lobbyist when prohibited from being a lobbyist is guilty of a serious misdemeanor and may be reprimanded, suspended, or dismissed from the person’s position or otherwise sanctioned. Under the bill, a person who was a lobbyist and then serves as an executive or administrative head of a licensing board when prohibited commits 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. In Committee
SF95 A bill for an act relating to common carriers and including effective date and applicability provisions. This bill defines a common carrier for purposes of Code chapters 6A (eminent domain law) and 6B (procedure under eminent domain) as a commercial enterprise that transports goods or passengers for hire as a public employment. A carrier that transports hazardous liquid only qualifies as a common carrier if the carrier transports for one or more shippers that are unaffiliated with the carrier and will not sell the hazardous liquid to the carrier. The federal energy regulatory commission’s determination on whether a carrier qualifies as a common carrier is controlling. Under current law, when a property owner or an acquiring agency seeks judicial review of an exercise of eminent domain, an acquiring agency must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the definition of public use, public purpose, or public improvement is met. The bill provides that an acquiring agency seeking to use eminent domain pursuant to a grant under Code chapter 479B (hazardous liquid pipelines and storage facilities) must prove by clear and convincing evidence that the exercise of eminent domain meets the definition of a public use, public purpose, or public improvement. The bill takes effect upon enactment and applies to condemnation proceedings for which the application is filed on or after the effective date of the bill. In Committee
SF104 A bill for an act relating to surgical castration for certain sex offenses. This bill relates to surgical castration for certain sex offenses. The bill provides that in addition to any other punishment provided by law, a person who has been convicted of a serious sex offense occurring on or after the effective date of the bill, in which the victim was under the age of 12 at the time of the offense, may be ordered by the court to undergo surgical castration as part of any conditions of release imposed by the court or the board of parole. If a person is placed on probation and is not in confinement at the time of sentencing, the presentence investigation shall include a plan for surgical castration to be performed as soon as is reasonably possible. If the person is in confinement prior to release on probation or parole, surgical castration shall be performed not later than one week prior to the defendant’s release from confinement. An order of the court requiring a person to undergo surgical castration shall be contingent upon a determination by a court-appointed medical expert that the defendant is an appropriate candidate for the procedure and that the procedure is medically appropriate. The bill refers to the definition of “serious sex offense” in Code section 903B.10(3) which provides that a “serious sex offense” means any of the following offenses in which the victim was a child who was, at the time the offense was committed, 12 years of age or younger: sexual abuse in the first degree, in violation of Code section 709.2; sexual abuse in the second degree, in violation of Code section 709.3; sexual abuse in the third degree, in violation of Code section 709.4; lascivious acts with a child, in violation of Code section 709.8; assault with intent, in violation of Code section 709.11; indecent contact with a minor, in violation of Code section 709.12; lascivious conduct with a minor, in violation of Code section 709.14; sexual exploitation, in violation of Code section 709.15; sexual exploitation of a minor, in violation of Code section 728.12(1) and (2); and continuous sexual abuse of a child, in violation of Code section 709.23. In Committee
SF98 A bill for an act relating to discharging firearms on public roadways, and making penalties applicable. This bill prohibits discharging a firearm on a public roadway from within or on a motor vehicle. Under current law, a person is prohibited from shooting a rifle over public waters, public highways, or any railroad right-of-way, and is prohibited from shooting a shotgun with a slug load, a pistol, or a revolver over public roadways. A person who violates the bill is guilty of a simple misdemeanor punishable as a scheduled violation with a fine of $30. In Committee
SF92 A bill for an act relating to the exercise of eminent domain for the construction of hazardous liquid pipelines and including effective date and applicability provisions. This bill relates to a utility's right to condemn agricultural land. The bill provides that the construction of hazardous liquid pipelines for the transportation or transmission of liquefied carbon dioxide is not a public use, public purpose, or public improvement for purposes of condemnation of agricultural land by a utility unless the owner of the agricultural land consents to the condemnation. Under current law, a utility is excluded from the requirement to receive the consent of the owner of agricultural land prior to using eminent domain to condemn the agricultural land for private development purposes. The bill defines a utility as a person or business that provides gas, electricity, communications services, water, or sanitary sewage or storm water drainage disposal to the public for compensation, and also includes waterworks, joint water utilities, rural water districts, cooperative water associations, and electric transmission owners primarily providing service to public utilities. The bill takes effect upon enactment and applies to condemnation proceedings for which the application is filed on or after the effective date of the bill. In Committee
SF44 A bill for an act relating to the historic preservation tax credit available against the individual and corporate income taxes, the franchise tax, and the insurance premiums tax. During the 2022 legislative session, House File 2317 was enacted which gradually reduced the refundability of the historic preservation tax credit commencing with the tax year beginning January 1, 2023, until 75 percent of the credit in excess of tax liability is refundable for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2027. Previously, the tax credit was 100 percent refundable. House File 2317 also enacted a provision preserving existing rights to the tax credit issued, awarded, or allowed prior to January 1, 2023, to reduce the effect House File 2317 had on existing tax credits being awarded. This bill expands the applicability of the preservation of existing rights provision from January 1, 2023, to July 1, 2023, to tax credits issued, awarded, or allowed prior to July 1, 2023. In Committee
SF74 A bill for an act repealing provisions for land surveys in connection with hazardous liquid pipeline construction projects and including effective date provisions. This bill repeals provisions relating to entry for land surveys in connection with hazardous liquid pipeline projects. The bill removes a provision allowing a pipeline company to enter upon private land for the purpose of surveying and examining the land by giving 10 days’ written notice to a landowner. The bill takes effect upon enactment. In Committee
SF7 A bill for an act relating to fishing privileges of disabled veterans, and making penalties applicable. This bill relates to fishing privileges for disabled veterans. Under current law, a resident who served in the armed forces of the United States on federal active duty and who was disabled during that veteran’s military service is eligible to obtain a lifetime fishing license or lifetime hunting and fishing combined license. Under the bill, any person, regardless of whether the person is a resident, who is a disabled veteran may fish without acquiring a fishing license if the person’s disability occurred during the veteran’s military service. A person fishing in such manner shall, upon request of a peace officer, display proof of the person’s veteran status and disability status. A person who fails to provide the necessary documentation is guilty of a simple misdemeanor punishable as a scheduled violation with a fine of $35. A person charged with failing to produce the necessary documentation may avoid conviction if the person produces in court, within a reasonable time, proof of the person’s veteran and disability status. The bill also makes a conforming change to the Code section concerning nonresident paddlefish fishing licenses and tags. In Committee
SF11 A bill for an act relating to regional representation and residency requirements for members of the state transportation commission, and including effective date and applicability provisions. Under current law, the state transportation commission (STC) is charged with developing, coordinating, and annually updating a comprehensive transportation policy and plan for the state, among other duties. This bill requires that for each of the seven regions of the state, as designated by the bill, one member of the STC must be appointed to represent, and must reside in, each region. The bill divides the state into seven regions with each region consisting of certain adjoining counties. The bill provides that a member appointed to represent a region who no longer resides in the region shall be deemed to have resigned from the STC and the vacancy shall be filled as provided by current law. The bill takes effect upon enactment, applies to members of the STC appointed and confirmed on or after the effective date of the bill, and sets forth transition provisions. In Committee
SF13 A bill for an act relating to the duties of insurers under medical malpractice insurance policies. This bill provides that an insurance company insuring a health care provider against professional negligence shall negotiate in good faith all claims presented to the provider. If a claimant offers to settle within the policy limits and the insurer refuses or declines the offer and the claim proceeds to judgment in excess of the policy limit, the insurance company is liable for the full amount regardless of policy limitation. The insurance company has a duty to negotiate a settlement within policy limits if an offer has been made by the claimant at or within the policy limits. If the insurance company fails to do so, the health care provider has a cause of action against the insurance company. In Committee
SF2 A bill for an act relating to the statute of repose in medical malpractice claims. This bill relates to the statute of repose for medical malpractice claims. Under current law, medical malpractice claims are subject to a two-year statute of limitations and six-year statute of repose. A statute of limitations bars the right to bring an accrued action after a specified time, whereas a statute of repose terminates any right of action after a specified time, regardless of whether or not an injury has yet occurred. Specifically, current Code section 614.1(9)(a) requires that medical malpractice claims be brought within two years after the date on which the claimant knew, should have known through the use of reasonable diligence, or received notice in writing of the existence of, the injury or death for which damages are sought in the action, whichever of the dates occurs first. Current Code section 614.1(9)(a) bars actions brought more than six years after the date of the act or omission alleged to have been the cause of the injury or death, but exempts from the statute of repose cases where a foreign object was unintentionally left in the body and caused the injury or death. The bill provides a second exception to the six-year statute of repose. Under the bill, if the cause of the injury or death was concealed from the person by the physician and surgeon, osteopathic physician and surgeon, dentist, podiatric physician, optometrist, pharmacist, chiropractor, physician assistant, nurse, or hospital, or their staff, the six-year statute of repose does not apply. 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: 06/06/2025, 08/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
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: 06/06/2025, 08/01/2025. Shall amendment S–3176 to amendment S–3171 be adopted? 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 Yea
HF767 A bill for an act concerning private sector employee drug testing. (Formerly HSB 26.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF889 A bill for an act relating to government employee paid leave. (Formerly HSB 78.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF876 A bill for an act providing for the disclosure of lead service lines in real estate disclosures and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HF 442.) Effective date: 01/01/2026. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF593 A bill for an act providing for the preparation and filing of a district parcel record that identifies all parcels contained within a drainage or levee district that is part of a county. (Formerly SSB 1178.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
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 Yea
SF607 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers. (Formerly SF 504, SSB 1173.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall amendment S–3186 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF607 A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance taxes on employers. (Formerly SF 504, SSB 1173.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall amendment S–3185 be adopted? 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 amendment S–3184 be adopted? 05/14/2025 Nay
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? 05/14/2025 Yea
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: 06/06/2025, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 01/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Yea
HF979 A bill for an act relating to vehicles operating with a permit for excessive size or weight, and providing fees. (Formerly HF 696, HSB 202.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 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 Yea
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: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Absent
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: 06/06/2025, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2024. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 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? 05/14/2025 Yea
SF654 A bill for an act relating to wildlife, including the treatment of beaver dams, identification for traps, snares, and tree stands, and maximum fur dealer license fees, and making penalties applicable.(Formerly SF 260, SSB 1093.) Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 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? 05/14/2025 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 Absent
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 Senate Appropriations Report 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.) Effective date: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Absent
SF660 A bill for an act relating to sports wagering and tourism, making appropriations, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1240.) Effective date: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/14/2025 Absent
SF660 A bill for an act relating to sports wagering and tourism, making appropriations, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly SSB 1240.) Effective date: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Senate Appropriations Report 05/14/2025 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 bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
HF972 A bill for an act relating to health care including a funding model for the rural health care system; the elimination of several health care-related award, grant, residency, and fellowship programs; establishment of a health care professional incentive program; Medicaid graduate medical education; the health facilities council; and the Iowa health information network, making appropriations, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HF 754, HSB 191.) Contingent effective date, effective Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 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: 06/06/2025, 07/01/2025, 01/01/2026. Applicability date: 01/01/2024, 01/01/2025, 01/01/2026. Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
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: 06/06/2025, 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
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? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF633 A bill for an act relating to forest and fruit-tree reservations by establishing a program fee and including contingent effective date provisions. (Formerly SF 219.) Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 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? 05/13/2025 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 Yea
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: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2023. Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 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? 05/13/2025 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: 06/06/2025, 07/01/2025, 12/31/2025, 01/01/2026. Applicability date: 01/01/2017, 01/01/2025, 01/01/2026. Shall the bill pass? 05/13/2025 Yea
SF658 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 Senate Appropriations Report 05/13/2025 Yea
SF412 A bill for an act relating to property law, including rent, rental agreements, notice requirements, and possession of property. (Formerly SSB 1047.) Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF639 A bill for an act relating to hazardous liquid pipelines, including common carrier requirements, proceedings under the Iowa utilities commission, including commission member attendance at hearings and informational meetings, including allowing certain persons to intervene in such proceedings, including sanctions on intervenors in contested cases, and permit, permit renewal, and operation limitations, and including effective date and applicability provisions. (Formerly HF 240.) Vetoed 6-11-25. Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF639 A bill for an act relating to hazardous liquid pipelines, including common carrier requirements, proceedings under the Iowa utilities commission, including commission member attendance at hearings and informational meetings, including allowing certain persons to intervene in such proceedings, including sanctions on intervenors in contested cases, and permit, permit renewal, and operation limitations, and including effective date and applicability provisions. (Formerly HF 240.) Vetoed 6-11-25. Shall amendment S–3165 to amendment S–3064 be adopted? 05/12/2025 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? 05/12/2025 Nay
HF975 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the economic development authority and the Iowa finance authority including the strategic infrastructure program, brownfield, grayfield, and redevelopment tax credits, community attraction and tourism, vision Iowa, sports tourism marketing, the historic preservation tax credit, homelessness, the title guaranty board, arts and culture, and the Iowa reinvestment Act and including applicability and retroactive applicability provisions. (For Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 Yea
HF975 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the economic development authority and the Iowa finance authority including the strategic infrastructure program, brownfield, grayfield, and redevelopment tax credits, community attraction and tourism, vision Iowa, sports tourism marketing, the historic preservation tax credit, homelessness, the title guaranty board, arts and culture, and the Iowa reinvestment Act and including applicability and retroactive applicability provisions. (For Shall amendment S–3161 be adopted? 05/12/2025 Nay
HF1025 A bill for an act relating to certain state highways not designated as part of the interstate road system, including the operation of implements of husbandry on such highways, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly HF 394.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 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 the bill pass? 05/12/2025 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: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 05/12/2025 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? 05/09/2025 Yea
SF650 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, establishing the Iowa major events and tourism program and fund, and eliminating the sports tourism marketing program and fund, and including effective date provisions.(Formerly SSB 1238.) Senate Appropriations Report 05/06/2025 Yea
SF649 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; family well-being and protection; state-operated specialty care; administration and compliance; tra Senate Appropriations Report 05/06/2025 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. Senate Appropriations Report 05/06/2025 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: 07/01/2025. Senate Appropriations Report 05/06/2025 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. Senate Appropriations Report 05/01/2025 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. Senate Appropriations Report 04/30/2025 Yea
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: 06/11/2025, 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2023. Senate Appropriations Report 04/30/2025 Yea
SF643 A bill for an act relating to certain state highways not designated as part of the interstate road system, including the operation of implements of husbandry on such highways, and including applicability provisions.(Formerly SF 568, SSB 1187.) Senate Appropriations Report 04/30/2025 Yea
HF297 A bill for an act relating to certain emergency services provided by a city. (Formerly HSB 98.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/29/2025 Yea
HF299 A bill for an act relating to the provision of information relating to immunization exemptions. (Formerly HF 34.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/29/2025 Yea
HF530 A bill for an act authorizing a member of the general assembly, judicial officer, attorney general, deputy attorney general, or an assistant attorney general to be issued a professional permit to carry weapons. (Formerly HSB 166.) Shall the bill pass? 04/29/2025 Yea
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? 04/29/2025 Yea
HF865 A bill for an act modifying provisions related to the harassment or bullying of students enrolled in school districts or accredited nonpublic schools. (Formerly HF 149.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/29/2025 Yea
SF616 A bill for an act relating to the rights and obligations of certain state and local government entities in erecting, rebuilding, or repairing partition fences, including the allocation of moneys from accounts in the Iowa resources enhancement and protection fund.(Formerly SF 597, SF 432.) Shall the bill pass? 04/29/2025 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? 04/29/2025 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? 04/29/2025 Yea
SF106 A bill for an act relating to the conveyance of firearms in or on certain vehicles. Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 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? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF175 A bill for an act incorporating provisions related to pregnancy and fetal development into the human growth and development and health curricula provided by school districts, accredited nonpublic schools, charter schools, and innovation zone schools to students enrolled in grades five through twelve. (Formerly SSB 1028.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 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? 04/28/2025 Yea
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? 04/28/2025 Yea
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? 04/28/2025 Yea
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 amendment S–3139 to amendment S–3138 be adopted? 04/28/2025 Nay
SF398 A bill for an act relating to closing costs for a debt secured by an interest in land. (Formerly SSB 1103.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF423 A bill for an act relating to deer hunting, including deer depredation and the purchasing of a youth deer hunting license and tag. (Formerly SF 331.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF491 A bill for an act prohibiting the use of remotely piloted aircraft flying over farm property, and making penalties applicable. (Formerly SSB 1191.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
HF885 A bill for an act relating to deer and wild turkey hunting licenses for disabled veterans. (Formerly HF 692.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
HF835 A bill for an act relating to school personnel training, including by implementing provisions related to emergency care planning, authorizations for assisting, and limitations of liability concerning students with epilepsy or seizure disorder, and requiring the department of education to convene a health care-related training for school personnel work group. (Formerly HF 102.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF573 A bill for an act relating to motor vehicle glass repair, replacement, and insurance, making penalties applicable, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly SSB 1192.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF635 A bill for an act relating to the abatement of property taxes owed on property owned by certain volunteer emergency services providers and including effective date and applicability provisions.(Formerly SF 96.) Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
SF639 A bill for an act creating a specialty business court, and including effective date provisions.(Formerly SF 570, SSB 1203.) Shall the bill pass? 04/28/2025 Yea
HF440 A bill for an act relating to tuition, degree programs, employment, and related matters pertaining to students enrolled at regents institutions. (Formerly HSB 51.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF549 A bill for an act relating to the review of an officer-involved shooting case by a county attorney. (Formerly HF 42.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
SF445 A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations a Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
SF445 A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations a Shall amendment S–3136 be adopted? 04/23/2025 Nay
SF445 A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations a Shall amendment S–3135 be adopted? 04/23/2025 Nay
SF445 A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations a Shall amendment S–3134 be adopted? 04/23/2025 Nay
SF445 A bill for an act relating to early childhood education and care, including by modifying provisions related to the statewide preschool program, the child development coordinating council, programs for at-risk children, the responsibilities of the department of education, the early childhood Iowa initiative, and the state child care assistance program, establishing the child care continuum partnership grants pilot program within the department of health and human services, making appropriations a Shall amendment S–3133 be adopted? 04/23/2025 Nay
HF649 A bill for an act relating to human trafficking including services and prostitution, and making penalties applicable. (Formerly HSB 189.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 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? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF793 A bill for an act relating to fire fighter training and certification. (Formerly HF 265.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 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? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF956 A bill for an act relating to judicial branch administration, including judicial officer residency, judicial officer retirement age, remote proceedings, court reporter supervision and duties, and civil pleadings availability, and including applicability provisions. (Formerly HSB 259.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Applicability date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 Yea
HF994 A bill for an act concerning quarterly reports on and payments of beer barrel and wine gallonage taxes, and including effective date provisions. (Formerly HSB 273.) Effective date: 01/01/2026. Shall the bill pass? 04/23/2025 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? 04/23/2025 Yea
SF640 A bill for an act relating to economic development by establishing the Iowa major events and tourism program and fund, modifying the sports tourism and marketing infrastructure program, and making appropriations.(Formerly SF 621.) Senate Appropriations Report 04/23/2025 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 Senate Appropriations Report 04/23/2025 Yea
SF642 A bill for an act relating to matters under the purview of the economic development authority and the Iowa finance authority including the strategic infrastructure program, brownfield, grayfield, and redevelopment tax credits, community attraction and tourism, vision Iowa, sports tourism marketing, the historic preservation tax credit, homelessness, the title guaranty board, arts and culture, and the Iowa reinvestment Act and including applicability and retroactive applicability provisions.(Form Senate Appropriations Report 04/23/2025 Yea
HF117 A bill for an act establishing the national guard service professional qualification scholarship program. (Formerly HSB 3.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
SF233 A bill for an act relating to the right to try Act. (Formerly SF 56.) Effective date: 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
SF426 A bill for an act relating to strict liability for a person in control of hazardous substances. (Formerly SSB 1041.) Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 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, 07/01/2025. Shall the bill pass? 04/22/2025 Yea
  Committee Position Rank
Detail Iowa Joint Public Retirement Systems Committee 3
Detail Iowa Senate Appropriations Committee 14
Detail Iowa Senate Health and Human Services Committee 10
Detail Iowa Senate Judiciary Committee 11
Detail Iowa Senate Local Government Committee 7
Detail Iowa Senate Transportation Committee 11
Detail Iowa Senate Workforce Committee 7
State District Chamber Party Status Start Date End Date
IA Iowa Senate District 48 Senate Republican In Office 01/03/2023
IA Iowa Senate District 46 Senate Republican Out of Office 01/09/2017 01/16/2024
IA District 91 House Republican Out of Office 01/01/2011 01/16/2024