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Bill

Bill

SB 16A

Combatting Illegal Immigration

2025 Special Session A Introduced by Blaise Ingoglia

SB 16A aimed to combat illegal immigration but died after filing; with no text or provisions, it produced no law or enforcement changes.

Died, not introduced
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 16A

Summary of SB 16A — Combatting Illegal Immigration

Overview

  • Bill Number: SB 16A
  • Title: Combatting Illegal Immigration
  • Status: Died, not introduced
  • Introduced: January 26, 2025
  • Classification/Subject: Classified as a bill; subject listed as “and solicitations” (exact scope not defined in available record)

Purpose and Intent

  • The bill’s title indicates an aim to address illegal immigration. However, the available record does not include any text outlining its purposes, definitions, or policy goals beyond the broad stated title.
  • The portion of the subject described as “and solicitations” is not explained in the record, leaving the specific scope and rationale unclear without the bill’s language.

Key Provisions (No text available)

  • There is no publicly available text or summary of provisions attached to this filing. As filed, no substantive provisions, changes to law, funding allocations, or enforcement mechanisms are identifiable from the record provided.

Potential Impact (Contextual, given no text)

  • Without enacted provisions, there would be no changes to law or government programs. If later amended or reintroduced with substantive language, the bill could have affected:
    • State and local law enforcement or immigration enforcement authorities
    • Individuals suspected of unauthorized immigration or related activities
    • Employers or private entities, if the bill imposed any requirements or penalties related to illegal immigration
    • Government budgeting and enforcement resources (if specific funding or mandates were proposed)

Note: Any concrete impact depends entirely on the actual text of the bill, which is not present in the provided record.

Affected Parties and Stakeholders (Speculative)

  • Individuals involved in immigration status scenarios
  • Law enforcement agencies
  • State or local government agencies responsible for enforcement or civil administration
  • Businesses or individuals subject to any enforcement-related requirements (if such provisions were proposed)

Procedural Timeline

  • 2025-01-26: Filed
  • 2025-01-27: Died, not introduced

Status and Next Steps

  • The bill died shortly after filing, before it could be introduced or advance through committees. As such, it did not become law and there are no enacted provisions to implement.
  • If sponsors choose to reintroduce a similar measure in a future session, a new bill would need to undergo the standard introduction, committee referral, and floor consideration process with publicly available text for analysis.

Notes

  • The record provides only the bill’s title, filing date, and an outcome of “died, not introduced.” The lack of substantive text means this summary cannot detail specific provisions, fiscal impacts, or legislative amendments. For a complete understanding, the bill’s actual language and fiscal notes (if any) would need to be reviewed.

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

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