Not exact matches
The House will now have to vote
on this latest version so that both chambers pass an
identical bill.
NYPIRG has released its annual review of the state legislative session in Albany, finding this year was among the sessions that saw the least number of legislative agreements as evidenced by
identical bills passing
on the floor of both houses, otherwise known as «same - as» measures.
The law — a version of which was sponsored by Sen. David Valesky, D - Oneida, in the state Senate, and an
identical bill, written by Assemblywoman Francine DelMonte, D - Lewiston, in the Assembly — would allow the state Department of Environmental Conservation to create standards for a legalized crossbow hunting season, as well as allowing the use of one
on private property during any deer hunting season.
Civil servants delicately put together the
bill and insisted
on it being passed in
identical form in each country, out of fear of different states ending up with different monarchs.
The measure (
bill number S. 6893B) is
identical to an Assembly version (
bill number A. 9217B) that was passed by the Assembly
on June 9 by a vote of 132 to 0.
After the conference committee produces a reconciled version of the
bill, the House and Senate vote
on the
bill again, but this time
on a
bill that is
identical in both chambers.
The business - backed, conservative American Legislative Exchange Council has crafted model
bills similar to the one (SB 1718, HB 1191) now
on its way to the Senate floor in Florida; the House approved an
identical measure last week along partisan lines.
Tonight staff for the
bill sponsors said
identical bills would still be introduced in the Senate and House
on Thursday, but they conceded that there was little hope, at least for now, that such measures could succeed.
C - 11 is said to be
identical to
bill C - 32, which was introduced into Parliament in 2010 and died
on the order paper when the federal election was called.
The Native Title Amendment
Bill (No 1) 2010 (Cth), which is almost
identical to the original
Bill, received assent
on 15 December 2010 as the Native Title Report 2010 was in the final stages of preparation.
Some churlish bastard at the Daily Mail said: «it had too far much gratuitous content that only seemed to be there to live up to its
billing» and «worst of all was the excruciating spectacle of Matt Smith and David Tennant meeting each other and struggling to understand their shared identity which was like watching mime artists doing the achingly unfunny
identical mirror mime» and, the ultimate blow: «Bring
on Peter Capaldi.»