Rep. Amy Grant (R-42) sponsored two bills in the second quarter of 2019, six less than the average Illinois state representative, and was added as a co-sponsor on 33 bills, 14 less than the average, according to a DuPage Policy Journal analysis of data made available by the Illinois General Assembly.
During the second quarter, 117 representatives sponsored legislation, with Rep. Jay Hoffman (D-113) sponsoring the most with 36 bills. There were 120 representatives that co-sponsored legislation, with Rep. Elizabeth Hernandez (D-24) co-sponsoring 129 bills, more than any other representative.
When a bill is introduced to the House, the clerk reads the bill title before the House and it is automatically referred to the Rules Committee. If the Rules Committee thinks that the bill merits further consideration, it is assigned to another committee. If the committee reports favorably on the bill to the House, or if the committee has been discharged with respect to the bill, the bill will be ready for its second reading before the House.
According to House rules, a bill can be passed only after the House clerk has read the bill before the House on three separate days. However, many bills are introduced as shell bills in order to circumvent the rule requiring three readings before they can be passed. These shell bills, which are far more common in Illinois than in other states, are created with the purpose of beginning the often lengthy process of passing a new piece of legislation. But since they would only make trivial or meaningless changes in the law in the form that they initially appear, they are either left to die or are later changed to something more substantive that can be rushed to passage without bothering with procedure. This has the unfortunate effect of leading to laws that may not have been debated or discussed sufficiently.
Representatives that sponsor an inordinately large number of bills are often sponsoring many shell bills.
The following table shows the bills that Grant sponsored in the second quarter.
LICENSE PLATES-MOTORCYCLES
The following table shows the bills to which Grant was added as a co-sponsor in the second quarter.
Rep. Tony McCombie (R-71); Sen. Brian W. Stewart (R-45)
CRIM CODE-AGG BAT-EMPLOYEES
Rep. Darren Bailey (R-109)
Rep. Norine K. Hammond (R-93); Sen. Jil Tracy (R-47)
VEH CD-TEXTING BODILY HARM
Rep. David McSweeney (R-52)
VEH CD-REPEAL REDLIGHT CAMERAS
Rep. Thomas M. Bennett (R-106); Sen. Scott M. Bennett (D-52)
AUTHORIZED ELECTRONIC MONITOR
Rep. Michael P. McAuliffe (R-20)
JUSSIE ACT-FILM TAX CREDIT
Rep. Deanne M. Mazzochi (R-47)
PROTECT ORDER-MURDER VICTIMS
OPIOID OVERDOSE REDUCTION
Rep. Keith R. Wheeler (R-50)
STATE POLICE-FOID REVOCATION
Rep. Allen Skillicorn (R-66)
REPEAL REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH ACT
US CONST-ART V-APPLICATION
Rep. Michael T. Marron (R-104)
Rep. Thomas Morrison (R-54)
CON AMEND-TAX-2/3RDS VOTE
Rep. Chris Miller (R-110)
Rep. David McSweeney (R-52)
Rep. Charles Meier (R-108)
Rep. Margo McDermed (R-37)
EARLY CHILDHOOD ED CRISIS
Sen. Donald P. DeWitte (R-33)
PROP TX-LESSEE-LIABLE-PAYMENT
Sen. Thomas Cullerton (D-23); Rep. Diane Pappas (D-45)
HOTEL OCCUPATION & USE REVENUE
Sen. Chuck Weaver (R-37); Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-60)
PRISONER ACCESS JOB WEBSITES
Sen. Suzy Glowiak (D-24); Rep. Natalie A. Manley (D-98)
ALZHEIMER'S-ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Rep. Mary Edly-Allen (D-51)
Sen. John G. Mulroe (D-10); Rep. Robert Rita (D-28)
Sen. John G. Mulroe (D-10)
TOBACCO PRODUCTS COMPLIANCE
Sen. Neil Anderson (R-36)
LICENSE PLATES-MOTORCYCLES
Sen. Neil Anderson (R-36)
LICENSE PLATES-MOTORCYCLES
Rep. Anna Moeller (D-43); Sen. Iris Y. Martinez (D-20)
HOME BIRTH CRISIS COMMITTEE
Sen. Donald P. DeWitte (R-33)
PTELL-AGGREGATE EXTENSION BASE
Sen. Dan McConchie (R-26); Rep. Margo McDermed (R-37)
TRACK-SEXUAL ASSAULT EVIDENCE
Sen. Emil Jones, III (D-14); Rep. André Thapedi (D-32)
COMPLETE COUNT COMMISSION
HOTEL CASINO EMPLOYEE SAFETY