WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 3211

General Fund; FY2026 appropriation to Town of Bruce for paving and improving town streets.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Ben Suber

Authorizes a FY2026 General Fund appropriation to the Town of Bruce to pave and improve its town streets.

Died In Committee
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 3211

SB 3211 — General Fund; FY2026 appropriation to Town of Bruce for paving and improving town streets

Overview

  • Bill number and title: SB 3211, General Fund; FY2026 appropriation to Town of Bruce for paving and improving town streets.
  • Purpose (as described): To authorize a General Fund appropriation for fiscal year 2026 to the Town of Bruce for paving and improving its town streets.
  • Status: Died in Committee.
  • Introduced: February 26, 2025.
  • Classification/Subject: Bill; appropriations.

What the bill would do

  • The bill would authorize an appropriation from the state General Fund in FY2026 aimed at paving and improving streets in the Town of Bruce.
  • The exact appropriation amount, eligible uses, project scope, disbursement schedule, matching requirements (if any), procurement rules, and reporting requirements are not specified in the summary provided. If enacted, these details would appear in the enacted text of the bill or related fiscal notes.
  • In general, the bill’s core objective is to fund local street paving and improvements within Bruce using General Fund resources.

Who would be affected

  • Primary beneficiary: Town of Bruce and its residents, by potentially improving street conditions and infrastructure.
  • Local contractors and builders: Could participate in paving and related improvement projects (subject to applicable bid and procurement rules).
  • State fiscal context: The appropriation would draw from the state General Fund for FY2026.

Fiscal and timeline notes

  • Fiscal impact: The measure would commit General Fund resources in FY2026. The specific dollar amount and any conditional terms are not provided in the available information.
  • Procedural history:
    • Referred to Appropriations on February 26, 2025.
    • Died in Committee on February 26, 2025 (no further committee or floor action recorded).

Key considerations for readers

  • As the bill did not progress beyond the committee stage, it did not become law. If similar legislation is reintroduced in the future, it could reframe specifics such as funding amount, project eligibility, and reporting obligations.
  • Any prospective analysis should await the bill’s full text or fiscal notes to understand precise allocations, constraints, and oversight mechanisms.

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

Sign in to ask a question.