A bill is typically sent to a committee in the legislative body, such as the House of Representatives or the Senate, for study and review. Committees specialize in specific areas, allowing them to analyze the bill's provisions, hold hearings, and gather expert testimonies. After thorough examination, the committee may recommend the bill for further consideration, amend it, or decide not to advance it.
Bill preparation. The House Member (or the Congressman/woman) prepares and drafts the bill.
yes a bill will be sent to you
1. A bill is introduced 2. The bill is sent to committee 3. The bill reaches the floor 4. The bill is sent to the second house 5. The bill is sent to a conference committee 6. The bill is sent to the governor
Carefully is the adverb in the sentence, "Bill studied the text very carefully."
Study island The bill is sent to the Senate, and if it is approved, it is sent to the President
Harvard university
Computer Science
I was sent a bill from an agency , the bill was from 7 years ago I have never been sent a notice about this bill before now collections has sent a statement to me. Since I have not gotten anything about this before then can I fight this account?
Yes, you have to pay a bill that was sent six months late.
Bill Clinton studied law at Yale, but became a govenor in Arkansas
the bill is sent to the president
Step 1. A bill is thought up by anyone even the president or congress. Step 2. They present their idea to the staff, and the rough draft is refined into a proposed bill Step 3. The bill is then presented in front of other members of congress Step 4. The bill is then studied. Hearings are held and evidence on the bill is gathered and the committee can add or delete things as they please Step 5. The committee then votes on the bill and if it gets approved the bill is then sent to the Senate Step 6. That house votes, if the bill gets 2/3rd's vote it then moves onto another house Step 7. After the bill has been studied once again it is voted on once more and passed to the second house. Step 8. The first house considers any changes that were made. If it approves all inspections the bill is then sent to the President. Step 9. If the house where the bill originated feels they need to change anything or re-write parts before passing it on to the president they may do so. Step 10. It is then sent to the President. If the President signs the bill, it becomes a law. If the President does not approve the bill and he vetoes it, it is sent back to the house it originated in. Step 11. If the bill get's a 2/3rd's vote from the first and second house, the bill becomes a law and overrides the President's veto.