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Bill

Bill

SB 1108

Service Oklahoma; registration of aircraft; transferring collection and apportionment duties to Service Oklahoma. Effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Dell Kerbs

Prohibits paying petition circulators by signature or per sheet and requires compensation to be hourly.

Becomes law without Governor's signature 05/12/2025
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 1108

SB 1108 — Summary (Petition circulator compensation; require hourly pay)

Status / Timing
- Sponsor: Sen. Jeremy Moss (Senate versions); companion HB(s) exist.
- Introduced in Senate: Nov. 13, 2024 (Substitute language adopted). Passed the Senate (Substitute S‑3) on Dec. 11, 2024. Referred to Committee on Elections (next procedural step for further consideration).
- Statutory target: Amendments to the Michigan Election Law (1954 PA 116, MCL 168.1 et seq.). Proposed new sections cited in various drafts: MCL 168.483b, 168.544g, 168.590i, and 168.957a.

Purpose and intent
- To remove a payment incentive that critics say encourages signature fraud or misrepresentation by petition circulators. The bill prohibits paying circulators a fixed amount per signature or per completed signature sheet and instead requires hourly compensation for paid circulators.

Key provisions
- Prohibition on per-signature (and per‑sheet) pay:
- An individual employed to circulate (collect) signatures for petitions, nominating petitions, qualifying petitions, or recall petitions may not be paid a fixed rate or amount tied to each petition signature collected or each completed petition signature sheet.
- Hourly pay requirement:
- If a circulator is paid, compensation must be on an hourly basis for time worked.
- Scope:
- The ban and hourly-pay requirement are applied in substitute drafts to multiple petition contexts: general initiative/referendum petitions (sec. 482), nominating petitions, qualifying petitions for unaffiliated candidates, and recall petitions (proposed new sections referenced above in the Michigan Election Law).
- Relation to other bills:
- SB 1108 was considered alongside companion measures (SB 1109 and SB 1110) that address circulator conduct and petition form/validation rules (e.g., requiring circulators to read the petition summary, changing signature‑counting rules, and standardizing petition forms).

Who is affected
- Petition circulators (paid workers) — prohibition on per-signature pay and requirement to be paid hourly.
- Petition sponsors, campaigns, political committees, and signature-gathering vendors — operational and payroll practices must change; potential increase in labor costs or administrative complexity.
- Candidates, ballot initiative sponsors, and recall organizers — potential effects on signature‑gathering strategies, vendor contracts, and overall cost/timing of signature drives.
- Election officials and the Board of State Canvassers — may interact with companion bills changing petition forms and validation procedures.

Enforcement, penalties, and fiscal impact
- SB 1108 text focuses on compensation requirements; enforcement mechanisms and penalties are not detailed in the core provision (other related bills in the package address compliance and penalties for circulator misconduct).
- Nonpartisan fiscal analyses attached to the package indicate no fiscal impact on state or local government; however, sponsors and petitioning groups may incur higher costs to comply (hourly wages, payroll tracking).

Rationale / Context
- Supporters cite the 2022 Michigan nominating petition controversy (large numbers of fraudulent signatures) as motivating the change — the bill aims to reduce incentives for misconduct by removing per‑signature pay and encouraging accountable, documented work hours.
- Potential tradeoffs include higher costs for petition campaigns and possible reductions in the pool of paid circulators or shifts to volunteer-driven collection.

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

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