Action by which one house agrees to a proposal or action that the other chamber has approved.
The act of agreeing with position statements formulated by another League or Leagues.
Term used when one house agrees to a proposal of the other house.
Agreement with a committee report, including the conclusions or recommendations it contains.
One house approving a bill as amended in the opposite house. If the author is unwilling to move the bill as amended by the other house, the author requests "nonconcurrence" in the bill and asks for the formation of a conference committee.
When the House and Senate pass the same version of a bill.
If a bill is changed by one chamber after it has already been approved by the other, it must go back to the chamber in which it originated for approval, i.e. "concurrence".
agreement by League members or boards with a position reached by another League, a resource committee or task force.
When one House agrees to amendments adopted by the other House, the action is known as concurrence.
Action taken by one legislative house when it accepts the amendment or amendments adopted by the other legislative house.
action in which one body approves or adopts a proposal or action taken by the other house.
Agreement between the two chambers.
Agreement by one house of the General Assembly to an amendment added by the other house. Also, adoption of a joint resolution originating in the other house.
Agreement. See letter of concurrence.
When one chamber agrees with an amendment the other chamber placed on a bill.
Agreement by one house to aproposal or action taken in the other house.
Agreement with a statement or position when extensive research has already been done by another League, making it unnecessary for further in-depth study.
When a measure is passed in one house, it is sent to the other for concurrence (agreement, passage). A bill must pass both houses in identical form to become law.
If the second house has amended the bill (e.g., the Senate has amended a House bill), the first house can vote to accept those amendments. If this happens, both houses are said to be in concurrence.
Agreement; typically, between the chambers.
Agreement by one branch with an action originating in the other branch.
One house "accepts" the actions of the other house.
A measure that has passed one house is sent to the second house for agreement or concurrence. The second house may concur or may refuse to concur.