Senate Rules Committee advances seven bills, including measures on record sealing and dietitian licensing

Senate Rules Committee · March 10, 2026

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Summary

The Senate Rules Committee voted unanimously to advance seven bills to the next stage, including HB162 (first-offender sealing at sentencing), HB185 (modernizing dietitian licensing), HB219 (alternative discipline for nurses) and HB1020 (raising district attorney retirement age).

The Senate Rules Committee voted unanimously to advance seven House bills to further consideration after brief presentations and limited discussion. Chairman Brass moved the motion to advance the bills and the chair called, “All in favor, say aye,” before announcing the motion carried unanimously.

The motion covered House Bill 162 (record-sealing changes to the first offender act), House Bill 185 (updates to dietitian and nutritionist licensure), House Bill 219 (an alternative-discipline measure for nurses), House Bill 483 (code enforcement & penalties), House Bill 956 (solid waste trust fund/EPD implementation flexibility), House Bill 1020 (raising the district attorney retirement age from 60 to 65), and House Bill 1199 (revenue code updates). Sponsors gave short presentations on each item earlier in the meeting.

Votes at a glance: HB162 — Sponsor: Representative Hagan. Seeks to seal and restrict first-offender records upon sentencing instead of awaiting completion of sentence; a judge retains authority to unseal for cause. (See committee discussion.)

HB185 — Sponsor: Representative Earhart. Modernizes licensing for dietitians and nutrition professionals, creates two license categories, and allows Georgia to enter a dietitian licensure compact.

HB219 — Sponsor: Representative Stevens. Described as an alternative discipline bill for nurses; committee members had no recorded questions.

HB483 — Described in committee as tightening penalties on code enforcement inspectors and other enforcement-related adjustments.

HB956 — Sponsor commented that the bill gives the EPD director flexibility to implement provisions of the solid waste trust fund.

HB1020 — Sponsor: Representative Reeves. Moves the district attorney retirement age from 60 to 65 in anticipation of related pay/budget adjustments.

HB1199 — Revenue-code update aligning parts of state law with federal rules.

The committee did not record roll-call vote counts in the transcript; the chair characterized the outcome as unanimous. The committee adjourned after the motion.