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Bill

Bill

LC 592

Revise laws property laws.

2025 Regular Session

LC 592 aimed to revise property laws but the draft died in process; no provisions or changes were enacted, leaving property rules unchanged.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 592

Summary of LC 592 — Revise laws property laws

LC 592 is a draft bill titled “Revise laws property laws.” Based on the information provided, the bill did not advance and is recorded as having died in process.

Quick facts

  • Bill Number: LC 592
  • Title: Revise laws property laws
  • Status: Draft Died in Process
  • Introduced: October 21, 2024
  • Classification: bill
  • Subject: PROPERTY

Legislative actions

  • 2024-10-21 — Drafter Assigned
  • 2025-05-20 — Draft Died in Process

Purpose and intent

  • The available information does not include the text or a stated objective beyond the title. The title suggests an intent to revise or reform property-related statutes, but no specific goals, reforms, or problem statements are provided.

Key provisions

  • No substantive provisions are provided in the available record. As a result, there are no identified changes to property law (e.g., definitions, transfer processes, landlord-tenant rules, eminent domain, property taxes, or recording requirements) associated with LC 592.

Potential impact (theoretical, given the lack of text)

  • If enacted, a bill with a broad aim to “revise property laws” could affect:
    • Property owners and buyers, by changing definitions, transfer or disclosure requirements, or related procedures.
    • Tenants and affordable housing policies, if revisions touch lease standards, security deposits, or eviction processes.
    • Real estate developers and lenders, through altered regulatory or recording requirements.
    • Local governments and registries, if changes involve property recording, taxation, or zoning-adjacent provisions.
  • However, without the actual text, these impacts are purely speculative. The final effects would depend on the concrete provisions adopted.

Procedural and timeline context

  • Introduced in October 2024, with drafting completed (Drafter Assigned) in the same period.
  • The bill entered the legislative process but, as of May 20, 2025, the draft died in process, meaning it did not proceed to committee consideration, floor debates, or enactment.
  • If a sponsor chooses to reintroduce, a new drafting process would be required; LC 592 as introduced did not become law.

Next steps for readers

  • To assess potential impacts or changes, monitor any future reintroduction under a new LC number, and review the actual bill text when/if filed.
  • If you represent an affected party (property owners, tenants, developers, or local governments), watch for amendments or new proposals in the property-law area.

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

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