US state governments shut down or shut doors in face of coronavirus

Legislative measures are on hold in half the states of the US due to the COVID-19 emergency, with most suspending activity until at least mid-April.

25 states have suspended activity due to concerns over the spread of the coronavirus, with a congressional member in Michigan believed to be the first legislator at state or federal level to die from the virus. A number of states, including Louisiana, Colorado and New Hampshire, have all already extended suspension periods. More with tentative return dates upcoming are expected to follow suit.

Four states Kentucky, Massachusetts, Ohio and Vermont, which had initially been suspended continue to operate relatively normally, though all have instituted some form of social distancing measures. These range from closing public galleries to creating quarantine rooms for legislators reporting symptoms but wishing to attend sessions.

One state – Arkansas – chose to move its legislative session forward from 8th April to 26th March in order to address the impact the virus is having on the state. The session will continue until the legislature “creates a COVID-19 Rainy Day Fund; transfers funds to the COVID-19 Rainy Day Fund; and declares an Emergency”. Legislators are using a basketball arena for meetings in order to adhere to social distancing guidelines.

 

Remote voting

 

It has been argued that more states should look at remote voting measures in order to be able to pass legislation beyond bare bones budget and virus-related measures.

Only two states – Pennsylvania and New Jersey – have utilised such methods to continue regular work. South Dakota also used remote voting to conclude its legislative session.

This approach has been criticised in other states, such as Rhode Island, for limiting the public’s ability to follow the legislative process and for the limitations it places on public testimony and comment.

The lack of time for other measures has already impacted the CBD industry. New York has seemingly shelved cannabis legislation – though the state is looking at remote voting measures.

12 of the remaining states had already adjourned sine die – essentially finished with this legislative session prior to the need to suspend due to coronavirus. Another, North Carolina, does not have any legislative sessions scheduled until 28th April but has suspended committee activities.

Four further states – Texas, Nevada, Montana and North Dakota only meet biannually so do not have any sessions scheduled for 2020.

 

What This Means: With most suspended legislative bodies only confirming closures up to mid-April it is difficult to say what kind of impact the shutdown will have through the year. But with president Donald Trump recently announcing social distancing and other measures being extended until the end of April it seems unlikely many will choose to end their adjournments.

A few have constitutional minimums in terms of number of days in session or pieces of legislation that must be passed with upcoming deadlines – meaning either remote working or resumption in some limited form.

Overall it is safe to say that for the vast majority of US states little other than budget concerns and matters related to the pandemic will be addressed for the foreseeable future. This in turn will cram all remaining proposals into increasingly limited timeframes – leading to prioritisation for the most important items.

Whether those impacting the CBD industry will feature is more difficult to predict. Public health and revenue – both potential areas with a sector interest – are likely to feature as states look to minimise impacts beyond the coronavirus and shore up straitened finances. But whether measures within those categories touch upon hemp/CBD issues will be addressed is still up in the air.

Alabama Suspended until 28th April
Alaska

Recessed instead of adjourned – leaving the door open to reconvening before the session must end 20th May but considered unlikely

Arizona Suspended until 13th April
Arkansas

Special session declared: The 2020 legislative session scheduled to open 8th April was moved forward to 26th March. The session will continue until the legislature “creates a COVID-19 Rainy Day Fund; transfers funds to the COVID-19 Rainy Day Fund; and declares an Emergency.” Apparently using a basketball arena to adhere to social distancing.

California Suspended until 13th April
Colorado Suspension likely to last until at least 13th April
Connecticut

Postponed until 13 April

Delaware

Suspended indefinitely

Florida

Adjourned sine die

Georgia

Adjourned indefinitely

Hawaii

Indefinite suspension

Idaho

Adjourned sine die

Illinois

Cancelling week by week

Indiana

Adjourned sine die

Iowa

Suspended until 15th April

Kansas

Suspended until 27th April with official end of the legislative session slated for 21st May

Kentucky Will reconvene for last two days of session on 14th and 15th April
Louisiana

Suspension expected to be extended to 13th April following a one-day session where any bills wanting to be filed before an evening deadline are read

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Maine

Adjourned sine die

Maryland

Adjourned sine die

Massachusetts

Apparently working regularly in informal sessions so with fewer members present. This has still allowed some legislation through but bigger or more contentious items cannot be done this way

Michigan

Suspension extended indefinitely. What’s thought to be the first death of a congressional member at state or federal level could lead to a more conservative approach

Minnesota

Suspended until 14th April

Mississippi

Reconvening suspended with no new specific date stated

Missouri

Rolling weekly cancellations with session to end 15th May. Special sessions will have to be held for state budget approval but it seems unlikely much else would be addressed

Montana

Biannual legislative sessions so none scheduled in 2020

Nebraska Indefinite suspension affecting petition for cannabis liberalisation
Nevada

Biannual legislative sessions so none scheduled in 2020

New Hampshire

Suspended until 4th May

New Jersey

Working remotely

New Mexico

Adjourned sine die

New York

Suspended until further notice, working on remote voting measuresdefinitely impacting cannabis legalisation measures

North Carolina

Not yet in session; committees suspended

North Dakota

Biannual legislative sessions so none scheduled in 2020

Ohio

Operating relatively normally

Oklahoma

Ongoing suspension must end by last Friday in May according to constitution

Oregon

Adjourned sine die

Pennsylvania

Working remotely

Rhode Island

Suspended until 6th April – request for remote session not looked upon favourably

South Carolina

Week by week decision with indefinite end point – suspension expected to last until at least mid-April

South Dakota Adjourned 30th March after winding up by remote access
Tennessee

Suspended until 1st June

Texas

Biannual legislative sessions so none scheduled in 2020

Utah

Adjourned sine die

Vermont

Back in session after suspension – voting spread out through all available space to adhere to social distancing before moving to a remote voting system

Virginia

Adjourned sine die

Washington

Adjourned sine die

West Virginia

Adjourned sine die

Wisconsin

Cancelled final Senate session of the legislative period which ended 27th March, leaving a number of bills to die. Will hold a special session 20th-21th April limited to specific correction/revision bills, reconciliation bills between the houses, ratification of employee bargaining contracts or ceremonial citations under joint rules. A separate special session or extraordinary session could be called to act on other bills such as those in response to the coronavirus pandemic

Wyoming

Adjourned sine die

– Freddie Dawson CBD-Intel staff

Photo: Piqsels

Freddie Dawson

Senior news editor
Freddie studied at King’s College, London and City University and worked for publications including The Times, The Malay Mail, PathfinderBuzz and Solar Summary before joining the ECigIntelligence team. He has extensive experience in covering fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), manufacturing and technological innovation.