Committee of the Whole: hospitals, theft penalties, school attendance and other bills move forward; Hathaway lump‑sum proposal fails

House of Representatives · February 23, 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

In committee of the whole the House reported dozens of Senate files as do‑pass; notable outcomes include approval of hospital bankruptcy authority (SF5), stricter theft repeat‑offense penalties (SF7), lottery debit‑card acceptance (SF24), and the indefinite postponement of Senate File 36 (Hathaway lump‑sum scholarship) after a roll call.

The House resolved into Committee of the Whole and considered a sequence of Senate files on general file. Committees reported recommendations and the chamber debated multiple items; several bills passed out of committee and will return for floor consideration or further processing. Senate File 36, a proposal to allow a lump‑sum disbursement of Hathaway merit scholarships, failed in committee of the whole and was indefinitely postponed.

Notable committee outcomes - Senate File 5 (hospital bankruptcy option): Provides memorial hospitals and hospital districts an option to file chapter 9 bankruptcy under narrow guardrails. Committee discussion emphasized guardrails, trustee votes and restructuring plans; committee recommended do pass. - Senate File 7 (theft amendments): Amends theft penalties, including changes that would make certain repeat thefts felonies sooner (debate focused on whether a third or fifth offense triggers felony status), and gained committee approval after extended floor questions about deterrence and incarceration costs. - Senate File 11 (indigent veteran burials): Adds limited transportation reimbursement (up to $500) to help counties send indigent veterans to veterans’ cemeteries; committee recommended do pass. - Senate File 16 (state lands subleasing): Allows state‑land lessees to sublease and requires notice to the Board of Land Commissioners; committee adopted a technical amendment and recommended do pass as amended. - Senate File 18 (K–12 attendance and part‑time homeschool participation): Clarifies that part‑time homeschool students may participate and be included for partial ADM; an offered committee amendment to address the 10‑day drop rule was withdrawn for further work. - Senate File 24 (Wyoming Lottery: debit card acceptance): Committee recommended do pass; sponsors stressed daily caps and the lottery’s self‑imposed limits and said the lottery would absorb transaction fees. - Senate File 28 (voting machine and testing): Committee amended notices from 2 to 4 days and relaxed the minimum‑attendee language for public testing; committee recommended do pass as amended. - Senate File 36 (Hathaway lump‑sum merit scholarship): After extensive floor discussion about up‑front payments, accountability, and trust‑fund actuarial impacts, the bill failed a standing division and roll‑call and was indefinitely postponed (roll call recorded 3 aye, 51 no, 8 excused).

Why it matters: Committee of the Whole actions move bills through the process and surface implementation questions that may require fixes in the other chamber or in later conference work. The postponement of the Hathaway lump‑sum bill signals concern about financial and policy consequences; other bills with operational impacts (hospital bankruptcy option; theft penalties) drew sustained questioning about downstream costs and administrative readiness.

What to watch next: Several bills reported do‑pass will return to the House calendar for further consideration and to the Senate as part of the bill exchange; the Hathaway lump‑sum proposal is effectively dead for now but related scholarship proposals remain active.