Arizona House passes multiple bills on Feb. 6; consumer, education and agriculture measures among those approved

Arizona House of Representatives · February 9, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

On Feb. 6 the Arizona House approved several bills on third reading — including HB 20‑10 (consumer notice for digital licenses), HB 21‑32 (drug offense amendments), HB 21‑55 (Arizona Beef Council continuation), HB 23‑10 (employment relationship rules), and HB 23‑95 (school fitness incentive) — with vote tallies recorded on the floor and the measures ordered conveyed to the Senate.

The Arizona House voted on a series of third‑reading measures on Feb. 6, approving multiple bills and instructing the clerk to convey each passed bill to the Senate.

Representative Kupfer, sponsor of House Bill 20‑10, described the measure as a consumer‑protection bill that requires sellers of digital licenses to disclose that buyers are purchasing a license (not permanent ownership). Kupfer said the bill responds to instances where digital products were modified without notice after purchase; the House passed HB 20‑10 by a recorded vote of 59 ayes, 0 nays, 1 not voting.

Other bills passed on third reading with recorded tallies in the transcript: HB 21‑32 (drug offenses amendments) passed 59–0–1 after sponsors said the measure helps law enforcement pursue mid‑level dealers; HB 21‑55 (Arizona Beef Council continuation) passed 57–2–1 after sponsors emphasized the council’s industry‑funded structure; HB 23‑10 (employment‑relationship clarification) and HB 23‑95 (education fitness‑program incentives) each passed 59–0–1 per the clerk’s floor record.

A handful of other committee‑reported bills were referred for engrossing during the Committee of the Whole report. Several members used their time to explain votes and to thank stakeholders; the session concluded with announcements and adjournment until Feb. 10, 2026.

Note on transcript irregularities: one vote‑tally line for a bill earlier in the record appears garbled in the transcript; when a tally was unclear the article reports only the passage and referral action rather than asserting a specific numeric count.