Week Five: The end of the Beginning of the 2020 Iowa General Assembly

This content was published prior to the combination of Dentons Davis Brown. Learn more about Dentons Davis Brown.

At the close of the first third of the 15-week legislative session, bills are being sent to the Governor for her signature, the House and Senate have each passed their respective education funding level bills, the Governor’s priorities are moving through the legislative process, and the first funnel deadline is next Friday, February 21. By next Friday, any policy bill that has not made it out of a committee is no longer eligible for debate this session otherwise known as “dead.”

Subcommittees

This week saw significant subcommittees scheduled – 236 compared to 12 during week one.

2020 Iowa Legislature Subcommittees

Significant Bills Sent to the Governor

SF 2144 Supplemental Appropriations $333,000 to the Department of Human Services (DHS) for Glenwood and $21 million to Homeland Security/ Emergency Management for flood recovery Passed the House 100-0; Passed the Senate 48-0
SF 2164 Transportation Equity
Appropriates an additional $7.253 million for school transportation costs. Passed the House 98-1; Passed the Senate 48-0

Proposed Education Funding Levels

Currently, the House Republicans and Governor want a 2.5% increase at about  $3.395 billion. The Senate Republicans are asking for a 2.1% increase which is about $3.376 billion.

Iowa Caucus Update

While we might be first in the nation, we are not the first to have results finalized this year as that honor goes to New Hampshire.  Despite not being completely done with the recount, Troy Price announced this week that he is stepping down as the chair of the Iowa Democratic Party and Rep. Mark Smith has announced that he will run for the chair position.  Rep. Smith has most recently served as the House Minority Leader.

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Sydney J. Gangestad

About Sydney J. Gangestad

Sydney is an attorney and lobbyist with over seven years of public policy experience. In her various policy roles, she has developed a fundamental understanding of the legislative process and a non-partisan and bi-partisan approach to lobbying to help advance clients’ legislative agendas.

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Tim R. Coonan

About Tim R. Coonan

Tim Coonan is a lawyer with a fundamental understanding of the legislative process and a proven track record of success, regardless of which party is control. He is Chair of the Dentons Davis Brown Government Relations Department with over 15 years of lobbying experience before the Iowa Legislature and executive branch agencies and nearly 25 years of public policy experience including three years doing policy work in Washington D.C. with Williams and Jensen PLLC.

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