Senate approves Windham County pilot governance council after failed bid to add statewide accountability amendment
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The Senate passed S255 creating a Windham County pilot law‑enforcement governance council. A proposed non‑germane amendment to expand accountability measures statewide and alter effective‑date contingencies failed after floor debate and a failed rule‑suspension vote.
The Senate passed S255, which establishes a pilot law enforcement governance council in Windham County, after floor debate about an amendment that would have expanded accountability measures statewide.
A senator from Addison circulated an amendment that, according to the sponsor's floor explanation, removed contingent effective dates and provisions addressing federal contracts and added enhanced reporting requirements: reporting to multiple committees, to the Department of Sheriffs and state's attorneys, to the auditor, and a provision suspending a sheriff's salary if imprisoned. The sponsor said the draft removes two provisions of concern and narrows the change to increased reporting and accountability.
A brief recess was taken for committee consideration; the majority of the committee reported that they did not support adopting the amendment. A senator from Windsor said she had been one of the split votes in the committee and would support the amendment because of the need for broader sheriff accountability in light of concerns about a Windsor County sheriff.
A junior senator from Addison raised a point of order arguing the amendment was not germane to the underlying bill. The presiding officer ruled the amendment not germane, explaining that the amendment would expand the scope of the bill from a focused pilot program in one area to a statewide expansion affecting all sheriffs.
Senator from Windsor moved to suspend rules to permit consideration of the non‑germane amendment. That motion prompted extended floor debate: several senators warned that using an alternate vote to make a non‑germane issue germane sets a precedent by which bills could be expanded beyond their original purpose. The motion to suspend the rules failed (the chair announced "the nays do have it").
After the failed suspension motion, the Senate proceeded to third reading of S255 as presented on the calendar and voted to pass the bill. The transcript records voice votes and chair announcements rather than roll‑call tallies.
The transcript records robust debate over process and scope during the attempt to add the Addison amendment; proponents framed it as an accountability measure, while opponents and the chair framed it as an expansion beyond the bill's original pilot scope.
