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Bill

Bill

S 511

Prevents unfounded complaints against police officers, peace officers, firefighters, correction officers, and emergency medical service providers from being disclosed or added to personnel records

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Tony Palumbo

Creates Massachusetts Fair Elections: a voluntary public financing program for state legislative candidates, with a state fund and matching public funds for certified candidates.

REFERRED TO INVESTIGATIONS AND GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
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Bill Summary · S 511

Summary — S.511 (Senate Docket No. 368): "An Act relative to fair elections"

Note on source material: The bill text provided to this summary (sponsor: Sen. James B. Eldridge) is titled “An Act relative to fair elections” and inserts a new Chapter 55D into the Massachusetts General Laws establishing a voluntary public campaign-financing system for legislative candidates. This differs from an alternate title you supplied about preventing disclosure of unfounded complaints against public safety personnel. This summary reflects the actual bill text (Chapter 55D / Massachusetts Fair Elections) supplied in the docket.

Purpose

Establish a voluntary public financing option (“Massachusetts Fair Elections”) for candidates for the state Legislature (state senator and state representative). The program creates a publicly held Massachusetts Fair Elections Fund and a certification process for candidates who agree to contribution and expenditure limits in exchange for public matching funds.

Key provisions (selected and specific)

  • Creates Chapter 55D, defining terms and program structure (participant, certified candidate, qualifying contribution, allowable contribution, etc.).
  • Massachusetts Fair Elections Fund: established in the state treasury; donations, returned monies, and legislative appropriations deposited; invested like the state general fund and interest credited to the fund.
  • Allowable contribution cap: total allowable contributions from any individual or political committee to a program participant shall not exceed $100 in the aggregate per election cycle.
  • Qualifying contribution rules:
    • Minimum monetary qualifying contribution: $5.
    • Must be made during the qualifying period and after filing a declaration of intent.
    • Must be accompanied by a form prescribed by the Director of Campaign and Political Finance.
    • For House candidates, qualifying contributors must be registered voters in the candidate’s house district; for Senate candidates, in the candidate’s senate district.
    • Only one allowable contribution by a particular voter to a given participant may count as a qualifying contribution per election cycle.
  • Definitions and timing:
    • “Election cycle” defined as starting 31 days after a regular state election and ending 30 days after the next such election.
    • Primary and general election campaign periods specified.
  • Administrative authority: the Director of Campaign and Political Finance certifies candidates, prescribes forms and regulations, and enforces compliance (including decertification).

Who is affected

  • Primary: candidates for Massachusetts state Legislature who choose to participate.
  • Secondary: small-dollar donors (rules limit qualifying/allowable contributions), political committees, the Director of Campaign and Political Finance, and the state treasury/Fair Elections Fund (and thus state budget appropriations/donations).
  • Voters in districts (qualifying contributions must come from district-registered voters).

Procedural status & timeline (from provided actions)

  • Introduced in Senate: 2025-02-11.
  • Read twice and referred to Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs (01/13/2025 filing noted).
  • Referred to committee on Election Laws (02/27/2025) and to Investigations and Government Operations (dates listed: 01/08/2025).
  • Hearing scheduled: 10/21/2025 (1:00–5:00 PM, Room 222).
  • Other entries: House concurrence noted (02/27/2025) and related study order S2727 (11/17/2025).

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Intends to incentivize small-dollar fundraising and reduce reliance on larger private donors by providing certified candidates with public matching/operational funds.
  • Financial effect depends on appropriations and donations to the Fair Elections Fund; administration requires staffing and regulation by the Director.
  • Eligibility and strict geographic voter-source rules for qualifying contributions may advantage locally rooted campaigns while limiting out-of-district fundraising strategies.
  • Enforcement details (matching formulas, exact public payment amounts, spending caps, decertification grounds, audit processes) are referenced by the chapter structure but are not fully reproduced in the truncated text provided; those will be important for final program design.

If you want, I can: (1) extract and summarize additional sections if you provide the remaining text; (2) compare this program to other states’ public financing models; or (3) draft a one-page explainer for candidates.

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

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