Session of 1998
House Concurrent Resolution No. 5056
By Representative Spangler
4-3
9
A PROPOSITION to amend the constitution of the
state of Kansas, by
10 revising article 2
thereof, relating to the legislative branch of state
11 government.
12
13 \ih,1\Be it resolved by the Legislature
of the State of Kansas, two-thirds of the
14 members elected (or appointed) and
qualified to the House of Repre-
15 sentatives and two-thirds of the members
elected (or appointed) and
16 qualified to the Senate concurring
therein:
17 Section 1. The following
proposition to amend the constitution of the
18 state of Kansas shall be submitted to the
qualified electors of the state
19 for their approval or rejection: Article 2
of the constitution of the state of
20 Kansas shall be revised to read as
follows:
21
``Article 2. -- LEGISLATIVE
22
``§ 1. Legislative power. (a)
The legislative power of this state
23 shall be vested in a
house of representatives and senate. The pro-
24 visions of this
subsection shall expire on January 8, 2001.
25 (b) On
and after January 8, 2001, the legislative power of this
26 state shall be
vested in a legislature consisting of one chamber. All
27 authority vested by
the constitution or laws of the state in the senate,
28 house of
representatives, or joint session thereof, insofar as
appli-
29 cable, shall be and
hereby is vested in a legislature of one chamber.
30 (c) On
and after January 8, 2001, the provisions of this subsec-
31 tion shall govern
all references to the legislature and legislative bod-
32 ies. All provisions
in the constitution and laws of the state relating
33 to the legislature,
the senate, the house of representatives, joint ses-
34 sions of the senate
and house of representatives shall, if applicable,
35 apply and mean the
legislature of one chamber and members thereof
36 provided for in
this section.
37 (d) On
and after January 8, 2001, the p_30\ofisions of this
subsec-
38 tion shall govern
all references to legislative officers. All references
39 to the clerk of the
house of representatives or to the secretary of the
40 senate shall mean,
when applicable, the clerk of the legislature of
41 one chamber. All
references to speaker of the house of representa-
42 tives and president
of the senate shall mean speaker of the legisla-
43 ture.
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1
(e) On and after January 8, 2001, the provisions of
this subsec-
2 tion shall
govern all constitutional references to legislative bodies.
3 Whenever any
provision of the constitution requires submission of
4 any matter
to, or action by, the house of representatives, the senate,
5 or joint
session thereof, of the members of either bodies or both
6 bodies, it
shall, after January 8, 2001, be construed to mean the
7 legislature
provided for in this section.
8
``§ 2. Senators and
representatives. Legislators. (a) The
number
9 of
representatives and senators shall be regulated by law, but
shall
10 not exceed one
hundred twenty-five 125 representatives and
forty
11 40 senators.
Representatives and senators shall be elected from sin-
12 gle-member districts
prescribed by law. Representatives shall be
13 elected for two year
terms. Senators shall be elected for four year
14 terms. The terms of
representatives and senators shall commence
15 on the second Monday
of January of the year following election.
16 The provisions of
this subsection shall expire on January 8, 2001.
17 (b) On
and after January 8, 2001, the number of legislators shall
18 be regulated by
law, but shall not exceed 75 members. Legislators
19 shall be elected
from single-member districts prescribed by law. At
20 the general
election to be held in November 2000, and each Novem-
21 ber each four years
thereafter, all members of the legislature shall
22 be elected for a
term of four years with the manner of such election
23 to be determined by
law. The terms of legislators shall begin on the
24 second Monday of
January of the year following election.``
25
``§ 8. Organization and sessions.
(a) The legislature shall
26 meet in regular
session annually commencing on the second Mon-
27 day in January, and
all sessions shall be held at the state capital. The
28 duration of regular
sessions held in even-numbered years shall not
29 exceed ninety calendar
days. Such sessions may be extended beyond
30 ninety calendar days
by an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the
31 members elected to
each house the legislature. Bills and
concurrent
32 resolutions under
consideration by the legislature upon adjourn-
33 ment of a regular
session held in an odd-numbered year may be
34 considered at the next
succeeding regular session held in an even-
35 numbered year, as if
there had been no such adjournment.
36 (b) The
legislature shall be organized concurrently with the terms
37 of representatives
except that the senate shall remain organized
38 during the terms of
senators. The president of the senate shall pre-
39 side over the senate,
and the speaker of the house of representatives
40 shall preside over the
house of representatives. A majority of the
41 members then elected
(or appointed) and qualified of the house of
42 representatives or the
senate shall constitute a quorum of that
43 house. Neither house,
without the consent of the other, shall ad-
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1 journ for more
than two days, Sundays excepted. Each house shall
2 elect its
presiding officer and determine the rules of its proceedings,
3 except that the
two houses may adopt joint rules on certain matters
4 and provide for
the manner of change thereof. Each house shall
5 provide for the
expulsion or censure of members in appropriate
6 cases. Each
house shall be the judge of elections, returns and qual-
7 ifications of
its own members. The provisions of this subsection shall
8 expire on
January 8, 2001.
9
(c) On and after January 8, 2001, the speaker of the
legislature
10 shall preside over
the legislature. A majority of the members of the
11 legislature then
elected (or appointed) and qualified shall constitute
12 a quorum. The
legislature shall determine the rules of its proceed-
13 ings and be the
judge of elections, returns and qualifications of its
14 members. The
legislature shall elect its presiding officers and pro-
15 vide for the
expulsion or censure of its members in appropriate
16 cases.
17
``§ 9. Vacancies in legislature. All
vacancies occurring in ei-
18 ther
house the legislature shall be filled as provided
by law.
19
``§ 10. Journals. Each
house The legislature shall publish a
20 journal of its
proceedings. The affirmative and negative votes upon
21 the final passage of
every bill and every concurrent resolution for
22 amendment of this
constitution or ratification of an amendment to
23 the Constitution of
the United States shall be entered in the journal.
24 Any member of
either house may make written protest against any
25 act or resolution, and
the same shall be entered in the journal with-
26 out delay or
alteration.
27
``§ 13. Majority for passage of bills.
A majority of the mem-
28 bers then elected (or
appointed) and qualified of each house in
the
29 legislature,
voting in the affirmative, shall be necessary to pass any
30 bill. Two-thirds (2/3)
of the members then elected (or appointed)
31 and qualified
in each house in the legislature, voting in
the affir-
32 mative, shall be
necessary to ratify any amendment to the Consti-
33 tution of the United
States or to make any application for congress
34 to call a convention
for proposing amendments to the Constitution
35 of the United
States.
36
``§ 14. Approval of bills; vetoes. (a)
Within ten days after pas-
37 sage, every bill shall
be signed by the presiding officers and pre-
38 sented to the
governor. If the governor approves a bill, he shall sign
39 it. If the governor
does not approve a bill, the governor shall veto
40 it by returning the
bill, with a veto message of the objections, to the
41 house of
origin of the bill legislature. Whenever a veto
message is
42 so received, the
message shall be entered in the journal and in not
43 more than thirty
calendar days (excluding the day received), the
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1 house of
origin legislature shall reconsider the bill. If
two-thirds of
2 the members then
elected (or appointed) and qualified shall vote
3 to pass the
bill, it shall be sent, with the veto message, to the
other
4 house,
which shall in not more than thirty calendar days
(excluding
5 the day
received) also reconsider the bill, and if approved by
two-
6 thirds
of the members then elected (or appointed) and qualified,
it
7 shall become a
law, notwithstanding the governor's veto.
8 If any
bill shall not be returned within ten calendar days (exclud-
9 ing the day
presented) after it shall have been presented to the
10 governor, it shall
become a law in like manner as if it had been
11 signed by the
governor.
12 (b) If any
bill presented to the governor contains several items
13 of appropriation of
money, one or more of such items may be dis-
14 approved by the
governor while the other portion of the bill is ap-
15 proved by the
governor. In case the governor does so disapprove,
16 a veto message of the
governor stating the item or items disap-
17 proved, and the
reasons therefor, shall be appended to the bill at
18 the time it is signed,
and the bill shall be returned with the veto
19 message to the house
of origin of the bill. Whenever a veto message
20 is so received, the
message shall be entered in the journal and, in
21 not more than
thirty 30 calendar days, the house
of origin legislature
22 shall reconsider the
items of the bill which have been disapproved.
23 If two-thirds of the
members then elected (or appointed) and qual-
24 ified shall vote to
approve any item disapproved by the governor,
25 the bill, with
the veto message, shall be sent to the other house,
26 which shall in
not more than thirty calendar days also reconsider
27 each such item
so approved by the house of origin, and if approved
28 by two-thirds
of all the members then elected (or appointed) and
29
qualified, any such item shall take effect and
become a part of the
30 bill.
31
``§ 15. Requirements before bill
passed. No bill shall be
32 passed on the day that
it is introduced, unless in case of emergency
33 declared by two-thirds
of the members present in the house where
34 a bill is
pending legislature.
35
``§ 27. Impeachment. (a) The
house of representatives shall
36 have the sole power to
impeach. All impeachments shall be tried
37 by the senate; and
when sitting for that purpose, the senators shall
38 take an oath to do
justice according to the law and the evidence.
39 No person shall be
convicted without the concurrence of two-thirds
40 of the senators then
elected (or appointed) and qualified. The pro-
41 visions of this
subsection shall expire on January 8, 2001.
42 (b) The
legislature shall have the sole power of impeachment,
43 but two-thirds of
the legislators elected (or appointed) and qualified
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1 must concur
before a person may be convicted. When the legislature
2 is sitting
for the purpose of impeachment, the legislators shall take
3 an oath to do
justice according to the law and the evidence.''
4 Sec. 2. The
following statement shall be printed on the ballot with
5 the amendment as a whole:
6
``Explanatory statement. The purposes of this
amendment is to:
7 (1) Change the
structure of the legislature from two legislative
8 branches to one
branch; (2) to decrease the maximum number of
9 legislators from
165 to 75 members; (3) to create four year terms
10 for all legislators;
(4) to amend the legislative article to reflect the
11 change in the
structure of the legislature from two legislative
12 branches to one
legislative branch.
13 ``A vote for
this amendment would change the structure of the
14 legislature from two
legislative branches to one branch, decrease
15 the maximum number of
legislators to 75 members and amend the
16 legislative article of
the constitution to reflect the change in the
17 structure of the
legislature.
18 ``A vote against
this amendment would continue the present
19 structure of the
legislature, continue the maximum number of leg-
20 islators at 165,
continue the terms of representatives at two years
21 and terms of senators
at four years and continue the provisions of
22 article 2 which refer
to two separate branches of the legislature.''
23 Sec. 3. This
resolution, if approved by two-thirds of the members
24 elected (or appointed) and qualified to the
House of Representatives and
25 two-thirds of the members elected (or
appointed) and qualified to the
26 Senate, shall be entered on the journals,
together with the yeas and nays.
27 The secretary of state shall cause this
resolution to be published as pro-
28 vided by law and shall cause the proposed
amendment to be submitted
29 to the electors of the state at the general
election in the year 1998 unless
30 a special election is called at a sooner
date by concurrent resolution of
31 the legislature, in which case it shall be
submitted to the electors of the
32 state at the special election.
33