WeVote

Bill

Bill

S 5757

Relates to small not-for-profit corporations serving the state

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Cordell Cleare

S 5757 sets procurement rules for small not-for-profits serving the state, outlining eligibility, contract preferences, and reporting to ensure oversight in state contracts.

REFERRED TO PROCUREMENT AND CONTRACTS
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 5757

Summary of S 5757 — Relates to small not-for-profit corporations serving the state

Bill at a Glance

  • Bill Number: S 5757
  • Title: Relates to small not-for-profit corporations serving the state
  • Status: Referred to Procurement and Contracts
  • Introduced: February 28, 2025
  • Sponsor: Cordell Cleare (primary)
  • Related Bills: A 9317 (prior-session), A 5650 (companion)

What the bill aims to do (based on title)

The title suggests the measure concerns small not-for-profit corporations that provide services or support to the state. While the full text isn’t provided here, the bill’s placement in the Procurement and Contracts committee implies it would address how small NPOs participate in state contracting or procurement, and/or establish standards, preferences, or oversight related to such entities.

Key provisions (not yet available in the provided text)

  • The actual statutory text is not included in the briefing. As a result, specific provisions (definitions, eligibility criteria, contract preferences, reporting requirements, bonding/insurance, or compliance obligations) are not enumerated here.
  • In this domain, typical provisions might cover:
    • Eligibility criteria for small not-for-profit contractors serving the state
    • Procurement preferences or set-asides for qualifying NPOs
    • Requirements for reporting, audits, or performance metrics
    • Compliance with state procurement laws and ethical standards
    • Definitions of “small” in terms of organization size, revenue, or staff

Note: The exact provisions, thresholds, and requirements would be found in the bill’s text.

Who would be affected

  • Primary: Small not-for-profit corporations that serve or contract with state agencies.
  • Secondary: State agencies and departments that procure services from such nonprofits; other vendors participating in related procurement processes.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • The bill has been referred to the Procurement and Contracts committee on February 28, 2025.
  • The legislative path typically includes committee hearings, potential amendments, floor votes, and eventual passage by one or both chambers, followed by reconciliation if needed. No further dates are provided in the information available here.

Related context

  • Assembly companion bills: A 9317 (prior-session), A 5650 (companion). These may reflect parallel or related provisions in the Assembly.

Next steps for readers

  • Review the full bill text or committee memo for precise provisions, definitions, and numerical thresholds.
  • Monitor committee actions and floor votes for changes or amendments.
  • If you represent a small not-for-profit or a state procurement official, consider how any potential changes could affect eligibility, bidding, and contract administration.

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

Sign in to ask a question.