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SGA 9099

In Committee

Senate

ROBERT M. BUGERT

This status may be delayed. See Action History below for the latest updates.

How does a bill become law?
  1. Introduced: The bill is filed and assigned a number.
  2. Committee: A subject-matter committee holds hearings, takes public testimony, and decides whether to advance the bill.
  3. Floor Vote: The full chamber (House or Senate) debates and votes on the bill.
  4. Opposite Chamber: The bill repeats the committee and floor vote process in the other chamber.
  5. Governor: The Governor reviews the bill and decides whether to sign or veto it.
  6. Signed: The bill has been signed into law.
Introduced: January 14, 2025
Last Action: April 10, 2025
Status: S Confirmed

AI Analysis

This analysis was generated by AI and may contain errors. It is not legal advice. Always refer to the official bill text for authoritative information.

This bill formally appoints Robert M. Bugert to the Recreation and Conservation Funding Board for a three-year term. The appointment begins immediately upon signing and runs through the end of 2026.

  • Appoints Robert M. Bugert as a member of the Recreation and Conservation Funding Board
  • Sets his term to begin on January 9, 2024, and end on December 31, 2026
  • Fills a vacancy on the board (implied by the appointment language)

Who is affected

  • Recreation and Conservation Funding Board members and staffThe Recreation and Conservation Funding Board will gain one additional voting member, potentially influencing decisions about which outdoor recreation and conservation projects receive state funding.
Effective: January 9, 2024
Model: Intel/Qwen3-Coder-Next-int4-AutoRoundGenerated: Mar 20, 2026 at 2:03 AM

Who Is Most Affected

Recreation and Conservation Funding Board members and staffMixed Impact

The board oversees allocation of state funds for outdoor recreation, conservation, and land acquisition projects. Adding one voting member may slightly influence funding priorities, but individual board members have equal voting power and the board operates under statutory guidelines and funding formulas—not unilateral discretion—so impact on outcomes is minimal.