Citizen Portal

Senate opens with visitor recognitions and a slate of bill introductions

South Carolina Senate · February 25, 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

The session opened with roll call and multiple ceremonial recognitions — guests included a constituent visit, the doctor of the day, Beach Advocates, Bleeding Disorders Association and Farm Bureau guests — followed by a reading of new bills covering tax definitions, litter control, health facility licensure, scholarship programs, and other items; most were referred to appropriate committees.

The South Carolina Senate convened, recorded a quorum, and began the day with a series of ceremonial recognitions before taking up formal business. Senators introduced guests from across the state: Brett Robinson (introduced by the senator from Chester), Dr. Christopher Gross (the day's doctor of the day from Anderson), members of the Bleeding Disorders Association of South Carolina (noted for advocacy, premium assistance programs and serving 46 counties), the South Carolina Farm Bureau "Farmer of the Week" Chris Talley (Talley Farms, Greer), and a delegation from the Treetops Excursion Club (Lancaster County). Senator Khamsin also invited members of the Beach Advocates to the chamber and highlighted the economic importance of beaches to state tourism.

Following introductions, the reading clerk introduced a package of bills and resolutions addressing a range of topics: tax code clarifications (gross proceeds and emergency services IP network purchases), litter control and search-warrant procedures (Judiciary referral), changes to the State Health Facility Licensure Act (Bridal Affairs), a tuition‑gap scholarship proposal (Education), notarial fee increases (Family and Veteran Services), barber licensure technical changes (Labor, Commerce & Industry), U.S.-made iron/steel requirements for public works contracts (Finance), and multiple house bills and concurrent resolutions including a resolution recognizing NASCAR events and recycling initiatives. Each bill was assigned to the appropriate committee for further consideration.

Why it matters: The ceremonial recognitions reflect constituent engagement and advocacy days (e.g., Bleeding Disorders Association legislative day, Beach Advocates). The introduced bills show the breadth of the legislature's technical and policy work this session, and several items — notably the health facility licensure language and tax clarifications — could have substantive downstream effects as they move through committee. The DNR legislative reception was announced for later the same day.

Next steps: Referred bills will be scheduled for subcommittee or committee hearings according to the Senate calendar.