94th Illinois General Assembly explained

94th Illinois General Assembly
Term Start:2005
Term End:2007
Chamber1 Leader1:Emil Jones, Democrat
Chamber1 Leader2 Type:President pro tempore
Chamber2 Leader1:Michael J. Madigan, Democrat
Website:Official site

The 94th Illinois General Assembly, consisting of the Illinois Senate and the Illinois House of Representatives, existed from January 12, 2005[1] to January 9, 2007[2] during the first two years of Rod Blagojevich's second term as governor. The General Assembly met at the Illinois State Capitol.

During the 94th General Assembly, the Senate was in session for 119 legislative days,[2] and the House was in session for 143 legislative days.[3] There were no special sessions.

All 118 members of the House, and 23 of the 59 members of the Senate,[1] were elected in the 2004 election. The apportionment of seats was based on the 2000 census. Both chambers had a Democratic majority.

The 94th General Assembly was followed by the 95th General Assembly in January 2007.

Legislation

The 94th General Assembly enacted a total of 1,113 bills into law.[4]

Early in the session, the General Assembly passed an amendment to the Illinois Human Rights Act to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.[5] The governor signed the amendment into law on January 21, 2005.[5]

Prompted by a series of high-profile dog bite incidents, in 2006 the legislature passed three measures imposing penalties on the owners of dangerous dogs or those involved in dog fighting.[6] Among these was the first law in the country to prohibit certain felons, including those convicted of forcible felonies, from owning dogs that have not been spayed or neutered.[7] The governor signed all three measures into law on May 31, 2006.[6]

The Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act was signed into law on November 16, 2005, and took effect on January 15, 2006.[8] The MPCA required that people present identification in order to purchase cold medication that contains pseudoephedrine (Sudafed, Tylenol Cold and Claritin D), which could be used to produce methamphetamine.[9]

In 2006, the legislature passed an amendment to the Illinois Minimum Wage Law that allowed employees to receive punitive damages when they sue an employer for unpaid wages.[10] This change was brought on by a 2005 Illinois Court of Appeals ruling that punitive damages were only available in cases brought by the state Department of Labor.[10] The same bill also amended the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act to restore a penalty of 1% per day for employers who fail to pay wages due after receiving a demand from the Department of Labor.[11] The bill was signed into law on July 14, 2006.[11]

Senate

Under the 1970 Illinois Constitution, the Illinois Senate has 59 members, who serve overlapping two- and four-year terms. Thirty votes are required for a majority, and 36 votes (or 60%) are required to override a veto or propose a constitutional amendment.

Of the 23 members elected in the 2004 election, 20 were elected to four-year terms, and three were elected to two-year terms.[1]

Three new members joined the chamber at the outset: two by election and one (Kwame Raoul) by appointment to fill the seat of Barack Obama, who had been elected to the US Senate.[12] Five members who had previously been appointed were elected in 2006 for the first time.[12] The remaining 51 members were returning incumbents, either re-elected or continuing the second half of a four-year term.[12]

Senate leadership

Position Name Party District
President of the SenateEmil JonesDemocratic14
Majority LeaderDebbie HalvorsonDemocratic57
Minority LeaderFrank WatsonRepublican51

Party composition

The Senate of the 94th General Assembly consisted of 31 Democrats, 27 Republicans, and one Independent.[13] One seat changed from Democratic to Republican hands in the 2004 Illinois Senate election, reducing the Democratic majority in the preceding 93rd Senate by one.

The independent Senator, James T. Meeks of Chicago, caucused with the Democrats.[1] He had been elected in 2002 on the Honesty and Integrity Party ticket.[1]

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party31
Republican Party27
Independent1
Total
59

State senators

House

The Illinois House has 118 members who are elected every two years. The composition of the 94th House reflects the results of the 2004 election, in which three seats changed from Democratic to Republican, and two seats changed from Republican to Democratic, resulting in a reduced 65 - 53 Democratic majority.[14] Seven new members joined the chamber, and nine who had previously been appointed to fill vacancies were elected for the first time.[15] 102 House incumbents were re-elected.[15]

House leadership

Position Name Party District
22
Democratic 25
84

Party composition

The 94th House consisted of 65 Democrats and 53 Republicans.[16]

AffiliationMembers
Democratic Party65
Republican Party53
Total118

State representatives

See also

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senate Journal . 2022-06-05 . 2005-01-12 .
  2. Web site: Senate Journal . 2022-06-05 . 2007-01-09 .
  3. Web site: House Journal . 2022-06-05 . 2007-01-09 .
  4. Web site: 94th General Assembly Public Acts . State of Illinois . 2022-06-05.
  5. Web site: Illinois Bans Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation . 2022-06-05 . Jackson Lewis . 2015-05-22 . On January 21, 2005, Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich signed an amendment to the Illinois Human Rights Act that will prohibit discrimination on the basis of an individual's sexual orientation. .
  6. Nigel Graham . Illinois Passes New Laws in Response to Dog Attacks . 12 . Loyola Public Interest Law Reporter . 42–45 . 2006 . PDF . 2022-06-05.
  7. Web site: Gov. Blagojevich signs legislation toughening penalties against owners of vicious dogs that endanger the public . 2022-06-05 . Illinois.gov . 2006-05-31 . House Bill 2946, sponsored by State Rep. Jerry Mitchell (R-Sterling) and State Sen. William Haine (D-Alton), prohibits felons convicted of forcible felonies, felonies under the Humane Care for Animals Act, Class 3 felonies under the Illinois Controlled Substances and Cannabis Act, Class 3 felonies under the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, and felonies under the Deadly Weapons Statue from owning a dog that has not been spayed or neutered..
  8. Web site: 720 ILCS 648/Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act . 2022-01-16 . www.ilga.gov.
  9. Book: Decker . John F. . Illinois Criminal Law Student Edition . Kopacz . Christopher . 2012-07-05 . LexisNexis . 978-0-327-17691-6 . en.
  10. Web site: New Illinois Legislation Expands Punitive Damages in Wage Actions . 2022-06-05 . Ogletree Deakins . 2006-07-17 . Both the Illinois Senate and House recently passed Senate Bill 2339, and Gov. Blagojevich signed the bill into law on July 14, 2006. The bill amends the Illinois Minimum Wage Law by providing for an employer’s liability for punitive damages in all cases where wages have been underpaid. .
  11. Web site: 2006-07-27 . Recent Amendments to the Illinois Minimum Wage Law and Wage Payment and Collection Act . Holland & Knight . Phillip M. Schreiber .
  12. News: 94th General Assembly Senate Members . 10–11 . 18 . 2 . First Reading . Illinois General Assembly Legislative Reference Unit . November 2004 . 2022-06-05.
  13. Web site: Illinois State Senators: 94th General Assembly . 2022-06-05 . Illinois General Assembly.
  14. News: Democratic Lead Narrows Slightly . 1 . 18 . 2 . Illinois General Assembly Legislative Reference Unit . November 2004 . 2022-06-05.
  15. News: 94th General Assembly House Members . First Reading . 8–9 . 18 . 2 . Illinois General Assembly Legislative Reference Unit . November 2004 . 2022-06-05.
  16. Web site: Illinois State Representatives: 94th General Assembly. 2022-06-05 .