Bill
SR 63
Confirm governor's appointee for the board of veterans' affairs
Confirms the governor’s appointee to the State Board of Veterans’ Affairs, enabling them to participate in board meetings, votes, and duties.
Bill
SR 63
Confirms the governor’s appointee to the State Board of Veterans’ Affairs, enabling them to participate in board meetings, votes, and duties.
Status summary
- Bill number: SR 63 (Senate Resolution)
- Title (as provided): Confirm governor’s appointee for the Board of Veterans’ Affairs
- Classification: Resolution (confirmation)
- Subject areas: Legislature; Military Affairs / Veterans
- Key procedural dates (from file metadata):
- Introduced / received by Secretary of the Senate: August 27, 2025
- Read & adopted (Senate): September 4, 2025 (vote recorded in Journal)
- Reported enrolled: September 4, 2025
- Current status in file: Filed with Secretary of State
Purpose and intent
- The resolution’s stated purpose is to provide the Senate’s formal approval (confirmation) of a governor’s nominee to serve on the State Board of Veterans’ Affairs. Confirmation resolutions are the means by which the legislative chamber gives consent required for certain gubernatorial appointments.
Key provisions (what the resolution does)
- Confirms the governor’s appointee to the Board of Veterans’ Affairs (the provided materials do not include the appointee’s name or biographical details).
- Upon adoption and enrollment, the resolution completes the Senate’s consent step so the appointee may assume duties authorized for board members under state law.
Who and what would be affected
- The appointee — enabling them to assume the confirmed seat on the Board of Veterans’ Affairs.
- The State Board of Veterans’ Affairs — the composition and potential voting balance of the board may change depending on the appointee’s background and priorities.
- Veterans, veteran service organizations, and state agencies that interact with the board could be affected indirectly by the appointee’s participation in policy advice, program oversight, or resource allocation recommendations.
Expected impact
- Procedural/administrative: completes a required legislative consent step, allowing the appointee to participate in board meetings, votes, and duties.
- Policy: any substantive impact depends on the appointee’s perspectives, expertise, and priorities (e.g., benefits administration, veterans’ health and housing programs). The resolution itself does not change statutory powers or create new programs.
Procedural notes and timeline
- This is a chamber resolution (not a statute) used to confirm an executive appointment.
- According to the file metadata, the Senate read and adopted the resolution and it was reported enrolled; the enrolled resolution is typically transmitted to the Secretary of State or otherwise entered into the legislative record.
- The provided document set contains multiple unrelated drafts titled “SR 63” from different states/topics; the actual confirmation text and the appointee’s identity were not included in the materials supplied.
Caveats / recommended next steps
- The materials you provided mix several unrelated “SR 63” documents (different states and subjects). The confirmation resolution’s full text and the appointee’s name are not present in the file excerpt.
- To confirm precise details (name of appointee, term length, statutory reference for appointment, any required qualifications), consult the enrolled resolution on the Secretary of State’s website or the Senate Journal for the date the vote was recorded, or contact the Senate Clerk’s office for the final enrolled text.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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