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This guidebook from the Legislative Service Commission (LSC) provides an in-depth look at the structure and components of Ohio legislative bills. Learn about the importance of the title, style clause, amending or enacting clause, body, repeal clause, emergency clauses, and uncodified laws. Understand the organization of the Ohio Revised Code and the technical rules to remember when reading a bill.
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Members of the General Assembly rely on the nonpartisan staff of the Legislative Service Commission (LSC) to draft the bills they request. While the drafting work is performed by LSC, members should become familiar with the form and structure of bills in order to have a thorough understanding of the law-making process. Members can learn about the contents of a bill in a variety of ways such as reading bill analyses and fiscal notes or listening to committee testimony and the comments of sponsors, other legislators, and lobbyists. However, there is no substitute for reading the bill itself. When reading a bill, a member may have questions relating to the meaning and clarity of the language. These are often the same questions that cause difficulties in administering the law when the bill is enacted. Occasionally, technical or legal terms are required, but normally the language of a bill should be simple and concise. If the language is not clear, the member should seek clarification.
The Ohio Constitution requires legislation to be drafted in a specific format. The sample bill on the next page (Elements of a Bill) illustrates the major parts of a bill. At the beginning of each bill is a paragraph called the title. The title, which is required by the Ohio Constitution, lists the sections of the Revised Code being amended, enacted, or
Photographed by Robin Stein, LSC Perry’s Victory, Rotunda
repealed. It also states in concise, general terms the subject of the bill. If the bill is an emergency measure, imposes a tax, or makes an appropriation, the title must include that information. The next element in the bill is the style clause, also required by the Ohio Constitution. Each bill must include the clause: “ Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio .” This phrase has no bearing on the substance of the bill, but all bills, even those that only repeal or amend rather than enact sections of the Revised Code, begin with this style clause. The amending or enacting clause and the body of the bill appear in Section 1. The clause lists the Revised Code sections that the bill proposes to amend or enact. The body of the bill immediately follows the list of Revised Code section numbers. The text of each Code section being amended or enacted is printed in its entirety in numerical order. If the sole function of a bill is to repeal sections of the Revised Code, then Section 1 simply lists the sections being repealed. The text of sections being repealed outright — that is eliminated from the Revised Code — is not contained in the bill. All proposed new language in the body of a bill is underlined. Note the word “sixty” in the body of the sample bill. If an entirely new section is being enacted, all the language of the new section is underlined. If existing law is being amended, the new language is underlined while the unchanged current law appears without underlining. If the function of a bill is to remove language from existing law, the words to be removed are stricken through by a horizontal line. Note the stricken word “fifty” in the body of the sample bill. This means that if the bill is enacted, the words stricken through will be deleted from current law. If numerical references or grammatical symbols, such as commas and periods, are being removed, they also will be stricken through in the bill. When a Revised Code section is amended, a new section is in effect created to take its place. The Ohio Constitution requires the repeal of the former section since it no longer exists. This is true even if much of the language of the section is unchanged. Therefore, it is necessary to state somewhere in the bill that the former section is repealed. This is normally done in Section 2 of the bill, otherwise known as the repeal clause. Section 2 contains a list of the section numbers of all existing sections of the Revised Code being repealed as a result of amendments. Outright repeals appear in a separate section of the bill after the repeal clause for sections that are being amended. The sections being repealed outright do not include the word “existing” before the word “section.” Note in Section 2 of the sample bill that “existing section 5748.06” is being repealed as a result of amendments and, in Section 3, “section 5748.07” is being repealed outright. In a bill that does nothing but repeal one or more sections of law outright, the repeal clause becomes Section 1, rather than Section 2.
clause, is usually the last section of a bill, frequently Section 3. The following is an example of an emergency clause: Section 3. This act is hereby declared to be an emergency measure necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, and safety. The reason for this necessity is that its enactment into law at the earliest possible time will prevent a lapse in the payment of benefits to Ohio’s neediest citizens. Therefore, this act shall go into immediate effect. A bill also may stipulate that certain of its sections will become effective on a specific date later than the 91st^ day after it is filed with the Secretary of State. There is no explicit authority for delayed effective dates in the Ohio Constitution. However, since the normal 90-day effective date allows voters to exercise their right of referendum, lengthening the period before which sections of a bill become effective does not interfere with this right of referendum and is presumably permitted by the Constitution. Uncodified Law Emergency clauses and effective date clauses are not the only matters placed in separate sections at the end of a bill. Laws of a special or temporary nature that are not assigned permanent Revised Code section numbers and are therefore called uncodified laws also appear at the end of a bill. The following is an example of an uncodified law: Section 3. Not later than sixty days after the effective date of this act, the Auditor of State shall provide to the Director of Natural Resources a comprehensive audit of all funds, assets, and liabilities of the Department of Administrative Services that are related to the canal lands program. Upon receipt of the audit, the Director shall submit a copy of it to the Director of Budget and Management, who shall request Controlling Board approval to transfer all such funds, assets, and liabilities to the Department of Natural Resources that have not otherwise been transferred to that Department by this act. As with any other statute, an uncodified law is part of the law of Ohio and is filed in the office of the Secretary of State. However, because it is not a law of a general and permanent nature, it does not appear in the statutes in codified form. It should be noted that when uncodified law is enacted, it does not appear in underlined form. Yet, when uncodified language From Bill to Act to Law A bill becomes an act upon completion of action by both houses and signature of the presiding officers. It is then reprinted with the addition of the signature page and the words “An Act” replacing the words “A Bill.” An act becomes law: ▫ Upon signature of the Governor; ▫ If the Governor fails to sign the act or return it with a veto within ten days, excluding Sundays; or ▫ When a Governor’s veto is overridden by a (^3) ⁄ 5 majority vote of the members of each house. Unless a law provides for a tax levy, is an appropriation for current expenses, or contains an emergency clause, it becomes effective on the 91st^ day after being filed with the Secretary of State.
that has already been enacted is amended, changes in the text appear stricken through or underlined just as in codified law. Unlike some other states, Ohio generally does not include legislative findings or statements of intent in legislation. In the rare case that these statements are included in bills, they are included in the Revised Code rather than uncodified law. The Ohio Revised Code The vast majority of the bills considered by the General Assembly seek to amend, enact, or repeal some part of the Ohio Revised Code. Understanding the organization of the Revised Code can therefore improve understanding of a bill. As discussed earlier, statutes are enacted in two forms, codified and uncodified. Laws that are of a general and permanent nature are codified — that is, organized within the structure of the Revised Code. Several sets of the commercially published reproductions of the Revised Code are available for members of the General Assembly to use. In the House, sets are available in the House chamber and the Clerk’s office. In the Senate, sets are available in the Senate chamber, several hearing rooms, the Clerk’s office, and the majority and minority caucus rooms. The LSC library also has sets of the Revised Code available for members to use. In addition, an electronic version can be accessed at the Laws link on the General Assembly’s website (www.legislature.ohio.gov/laws/ohio-codes). The Revised Code in use today began as House Bill 1 of the 100th^ General Assembly. Its enactment in 1953 marked the culmination of a major revision effort aimed at reorganizing and restoring order to an earlier codification of Ohio statutes known as the General Code. The General Code had been in effect since 1910, when it was enacted to replace an even earlier Technical Rules to Remember When Reading a Bill
attempt to reprint each title (normally published as a single book or volume) following each session of the General Assembly. Instead, they annually supplement the material contained in each volume to reflect the changes in law enacted during the preceding year. The publishers provide the supplemental material, or “pocket part,” in a format that is easily slipped into a pocket located at the back of the volume. When the supplemental material for a particular volume of the Revised Code becomes extensive, the publishers either provide a separately bound paperback supplement or reissue the volume entirely. The publishers of the Revised Code also provide their subscribers with the full text of the most recently enacted laws on a monthly basis.
In addition to reproducing the text of Ohio’s codified statutory law, the publishers of the Revised Code provide various research aids, including indexes, annotations to judicial decisions and opinions of the Ohio Attorney General, the legislative history of each section, cross- references to other statutes, court rules, citations to law review articles, and the complete texts of the United States and Ohio Constitutions. As with the sections of the Revised Code, these research aids are regularly updated. Uncodified sections of law also may be included in the relevant volumes, usually as annotations to the Revised Code sections to which they relate. The names or headings that commercial publishers give to Revised Code titles, chapters, and sections are unofficial and not part of the law.
An unannotated version of the Revised Code is available to the public online, free of charge at codes.ohio.gov (also accessible via the Laws link on the General Assembly’s website, www.legislature.ohio.gov/laws/ohio-codes). Over the years, the site was maintained under contract with various commercial legal publishers, most recently Lawriter. Beginning in April 2021, it will be maintained by LSC, which by law has become the official publisher of the online Revised Code and Ohio Administrative Code. The site offers keyword searching.
Titles of the Revised Code General Provisions 1 State Government 3 Counties 5 Townships 7 Municipal Corporations 9 Agriculture-Animals-Fences 11 Financial Institutions 13 Commercial Transactions-Ohio Uniform Commercial Code 15 Conservation of Natural Resources 17 Corporations-Partnerships 19 Courts-Municipal-Mayor’s-County 21 Courts-Probate-Juvenile 23 Courts-Common Pleas 25 Courts-Appellate 27 Courts-General Provisions-Special Remedies 29 Crimes-Procedure 31 Domestic Relations-Children 33 Education-Libraries 35 Elections 37 Health-Safety-Morals 39 Insurance 41 Labor and Industry 43 Liquor 45 Motor Vehicles-Aeronautics-Watercraft 47 Occupations-Professions 49 Public Utilities 51 Public Welfare 53 Real Property 55 Roads-Highways-Bridges 57 Taxation 58 Trusts 59 Veterans-Military Affairs 61 Water Supply-Sanitation-Ditches 63 Workforce Development