WeVote

Bill

Bill

SR 106

A Resolution honoring the Super Bowl LIX Champions, the 2025 Philadelphia Eagles, and recognizing the Philadelphia Eagles as one of the greatest football teams ever to represent this Commonwealth on the field.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Dave Argall and 27 co-sponsors

Senate Resolution 106 approves most temporary and pending Idaho rules from four agencies, disapproves two specific subsections, and lets one electrical board docket become effectiv

Introduced and adopted
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SR 106

Summary — Senate Resolution No. 106 (Idaho, 2025)

Note on document inconsistency
- The packet provided included multiple, mixed items and an initial title ("Commend Mississippi coaches selected for 'Tomorrow's 25 Coaching Fellowship'") that does not match the actual resolution text. This summary describes the resolution whose text and legislative history are present: Idaho Senate Resolution No. 106 (First Regular Session, Sixty‑eighth Legislature, 2025), concerning legislative review of temporary and pending administrative rules.

Purpose

SR 106 documents the Senate’s review and disposition of temporary and pending administrative rules submitted under the Administrative Procedure Act. It states that the Senate Commerce and Human Resources Committee reviewed rules from four Idaho agencies and approves them except for specified narrow exceptions. It also identifies one pending rule docket to become effective upon sine die.

Key provisions / actions

  • Cites authority: Section 67‑5291, Idaho Code (committee review of temporary/pending rules).
  • Confirms the Senate Commerce and Human Resources Committee reviewed temporary and pending rules adopted by:
    • Idaho Department of Labor
    • Idaho Industrial Commission
    • Idaho Department of Insurance
    • Division of Occupational and Professional Licenses
  • Approves “all” such temporary and pending rules submitted for review during the 2025 session, with two specific exceptions (only the listed subsections are disapproved):
    1. IDAPA 09.01.35 — Idaho Department of Labor, Unemployment Insurance Tax Administration Rules, Docket No. 09‑0135‑2401, Section 011, Subsection 07 (not approved).
    2. IDAPA 24.37.01 — Division of Occupational and Professional Licenses, Rules of the Idaho Real Estate Commission, Docket No. 24‑3701‑2401, Section 150, Subsection 02.a (not approved).
  • Directs that pending docket IDAPA 24.39.10 (Rules of the Idaho Electrical Board, Docket No. 24‑3910‑2402) become effective upon sine die of the First Regular Session.

Who is affected

  • The named state agencies and their regulated constituencies:
    • Employers and payroll administrators (Unemployment Insurance Tax rules)
    • Real estate licensees (Real Estate Commission rules)
    • Electrical trades and licensees (Idaho Electrical Board)
    • Parties regulated by the Industrial Commission and Department of Insurance
  • The action is primarily procedural/ministerial: it confirms committee review and either approves or excepts specific rule language, which affects whether those temporary/pending rules may take final effect as submitted.

Fiscal impact

  • Fiscal note: No appreciable General Fund impact. Only minimal administrative expense anticipated to promulgate any changes to applicable rule dockets. Contact listed: Senator Brian Lenney.

Procedural / timeline highlights

  • Introduced/received in the Senate: February 2025 (multiple entries show introduction 02/14/2025).
  • Read & adopted by the Senate: recorded as adopted (third reading adopted 38–0 on 03/27/2025; multiple read/adopted entries through Feb–May 2025).
  • Reported enrolled and enrolled: May 14, 2025; signed by Senate President and filed with Secretary of State (April–May 2025 entries reflect enrollment and filing).
  • Committee review performed by: Senate Commerce and Human Resources Committee (per the resolution text).

Practical effect

SR 106 is a legislative resolution certifying committee review of agency temporary/pending rules, approving them broadly while explicitly disapproving two narrow subsections and allowing one pending electrical board docket to take effect on sine die. The resolution has no substantive policy changes itself but determines whether specific administrative rules proceed to final effect.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.