Bill
LC 2801
Create a task force to seek efficiency in Montana state government
Creates a Montana state government efficiency task force to study operations and suggest reforms; draft died in process, so no enacted version this session.
Bill
LC 2801
Creates a Montana state government efficiency task force to study operations and suggest reforms; draft died in process, so no enacted version this session.
Status: Draft Died in Process (LC)
Key facts at a glance
- The bill would create a task force charged with seeking efficiency within Montana state government.
- The legislative record for this bill shows a sequence of administrative actions (Drafter Assigned; Draft On Hold) and, later, a status indicating the draft died in process as of May 27, 2025.
Purpose and intent
- Based on the title, the primary objective is to establish a dedicated body (a task force) to study state government operations and identify opportunities to improve efficiency, reduce waste, and potentially streamline processes.
What the bill would do (as indicated by the title and status)
- Create a task force focused on efficiency within Montana state government.
- The exact membership, scope, authority, and reporting requirements are not specified in the provided record. Text detailing how the task force would operate, how long it would exist, what powers it would have, and what recommendations or outcomes would result is not included here.
Common elements typically associated with a task force of this type (not confirmed in the record)
- Composition: likely a mix of legislators, state agency representatives, and external experts or stakeholders.
- Scope: potential review of operations across multiple agencies to identify duplicative functions, procurement practices, IT and back-office processes, and program effectiveness.
- Reporting: a final report with findings and recommended reforms; interim updates may be required during the task force’s work.
- Funding and staffing: provisions for staffing the task force and possible funding for its activities.
- Sunset or renewal: many such commissions include a sunset date or conditions for renewal and continuance.
Who would be affected
- State government agencies and departments, which might undergo review or new implementation steps based on task force recommendations.
- State employees, particularly those involved in affected processes (procurement, administration, IT, program delivery).
- Montana taxpayers and residents, who could benefit from efficiency improvements or face changes in services, depending on task force findings.
Procedural timeline and status notes
- 2024-12-11: Drafter Assigned; Draft On Hold (status at that time).
- 2025-05-27: (LC) Draft Died in Process (indicating the draft did not advance toward enactment).
- Current status: No enacted version; the bill is considered dead in process for the current session.
Significant considerations
- With the draft having died in process, there is no enacted impact unless the measure is reintroduced in a future session with revised language.
- If revived, the bill would need to specify the task force’s composition, authority, funding, timelines, and expected deliverables to ensure clear guidance for lawmakers and affected agencies.
Next steps for readers
- If you are tracking this measure for legislative impact, monitor for any reintroduction or amendments in subsequent sessions.
- For detailed provisions, obtain the full text of LC 2801 from the Montana Legislature’s bill records to review exact language on membership, duties, reporting, and funding.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.