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House roundup: committee reports, new bills introduced and administrative rules filed
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Summary
Clerk announcements and committee reports listed multiple bills moved to second reading or referred to committees, Representative Tyrone Carter introduced a bill, and the House received administrative rule filings and an Auditor General report.
The Michigan House of Representatives took a series of procedural steps on the floor, including committee reports recommending bills for passage, the introduction of new bills, receipt of administrative-rule filings and an Auditor General performance audit.
Clerk announcements reported committee recommendations from the House Committee on Transportation Infrastructure and the House Committee on Finance. The clerk read into the record that the committee on transportation infrastructure reported House Bill 4089, House Bill 4351 and House Bill 4845 "without amendment with recommendation the bill passed," and referred those measures to the order of second reading. The committee on finance, Representative Tisdale, chair, reported House Bill 4799 with a recommendation that substitute H-3 be adopted and that the bill passed in committee; it was referred to second reading on the floor.
Representative Tyrone Carter introduced House Bill 5099, described on the floor as "a bill to amend the state convention facility development act." The clerk said the bill would be considered on first reading and referred to the Committee on Economic Competitiveness. The clerk also announced receipt of additional bills and Senate transmittals for the record.
The House received notices from the secretary of state listing administrative-rule filings for the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (Sanitarians Registration General Rules; Accountancy General Rules) and the Board of Midwifery, and a biennial report from the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy on electronic-waste recycling revenue and expenses for fiscal years 2024 and 2025.
The clerk read that the Auditor General submitted a copy of a performance audit on offender registries at the Department of State Police.
The floor calendar also included schedules for committee meetings over the coming days — for example, the House Committee on Health Policy and several oversight subcommittees were listed with dates, times and room numbers.
These floor actions were procedural: committee reports and bill introductions set measures for committee or second-reading consideration; administrative-rule filings and the audit were recorded in the House journal for referral and review.

