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HB 1973

An Act amending Title 23 (Domestic Relations) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in support matters generally, further providing for paternity; and, in general provisions relating to children and minors, further providing for blood tests to determine paternity.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Rob Kauffman and 2 co-sponsors

Prohibits government funds from contracting with external lobbyists or paying dues to lobbying groups; allows in-house lobbying by government staff only.

Referred to Children & Youth
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Bill Summary · HB 1973

Summary — HB 1973

Note on source documents: The materials provided include multiple, conflicting items (an Arkansas statute amendment, an unrelated Illinois appropriation provision, and a different bill title about student athletic participation). This summary focuses on the principal legislative text in the packet that amends Arkansas law (Ark. Code § 21-8-608) because that text is the clearest substantive provision.

Purpose

To prohibit governmental bodies from using state or local public funds to contract with external lobbyists (including through memberships that fund organizational lobbying) to lobby on the governmental body’s behalf. The measure seeks to limit use of public monies for external lobbying services while allowing governmental employers to hire internal staff to perform lobbying.

Key provisions

  • Adds Ark. Code § 21-8-608 (new).
  • Prohibition: A “governmental body” shall not use state or local funds to enter into a contract with a lobbyist for the purpose of lobbying on behalf of the governmental body. (Subsection (a))
  • Broad interpretation of prohibition: Explicitly includes using public funds to pay membership dues to organizations that engage in lobbying on behalf of the governmental body (for example, paying dues to an association that employs registered lobbyists), where state or local funds are used to pay those dues. (Subsection (b))
  • Exception: The section does not prohibit a governmental body from employing one or more individuals (including registered lobbyists) as employees to engage in lobbying on behalf of the governmental body. In other words, internal staff lobbying funded by the governmental body is allowed. (Subsection (c))

Who is affected

  • State agencies, departments, boards, commissions, school districts, municipalities, counties, and other entities classified as “governmental bodies” under Arkansas law.
  • Trade associations or membership organizations that receive public funds via dues and then employ lobbyists to represent government entities.
  • External lobbying firms and independent contract lobbyists that currently receive public contracts.

Implementation & timeline

  • The bill text is filed as part of the 95th Arkansas General Assembly (introduced Jan 22, 2025).
  • Provided legislative action notes indicate passage and executive approval and list an effective date of September 1, 2025; because the packet contains mixed records, interested parties should confirm enactment and effective date in the official Arkansas legislative database.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Reduces or eliminates use of public funds to retain external lobbyists and may decrease government participation in association-led lobbying efforts paid with public money.
  • Could shift lobbying activity toward hiring in-house staff or reallocating funds.
  • May produce administrative changes (policy revisions, contract termination, review of dues payments).
  • Legal and practical questions could arise about what constitutes a prohibited “contract” or whether certain association activities are sufficiently “on behalf of” a governmental body to trigger the ban — likely requiring agency guidance or judicial interpretation.
  • Entities should audit current contracts and dues payments to assess compliance and adjust budgeting.

If you want, I can: (1) produce suggested compliance steps for a municipal government or school district, or (2) check official legislative records to confirm enactment and the final effective date for the Arkansas version.

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

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