The Arizona Senate advanced a group of bills on Feb. 16, 2026, taking final votes on items covering workforce reporting, health-care enrollment rules, regulation of physician assistants and changes affecting the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
Key outcomes
- SB 10 56 (vacant positions reporting): Passed on third reading; final roll call recorded 17 ayes, 12 nays, 1 not voting. Opponents warned automatic position eliminations could weaken agency responses and hurt rural services.
- SB 12 36 / House Bill 27 96 (AHCCCS presumptive eligibility / enrollment verification): Committee amendments and a Kavanaugh substitute were adopted; the bill was reported do pass as amended and placed for third reading. Opponents said the measure narrows presumptive eligibility and could harm low-income families, children, seniors and people with disabilities.
- SB 12 38 / House Bill 2,190 (Arizona Regulatory Board of Physician Assistants): Floor amendments to make conforming changes were adopted and the bill was reported as amended; the House substitute was later placed on third reading and passed.
- HB 2,206 / related SNAP error-rate measures: The Senate substituted the House version and debated provisions that require the Department of Economic Security to reduce an administrative 'error rate' to specified thresholds; sponsors argued pressure and penalties are needed to avoid large federal funding losses, while opponents warned penalties could harm program administration and recipients. The Senate passed the House substitute on a recorded vote (system closed with 17 ayes, 12 nays, 1 not voting).
- HB 2,396 (SNAP purchase restrictions / waiver): After substitution for the Senate bill, the measure passed on third reading (17 ayes, 12 nays, 1 not voting). Opponents said limiting allowable purchases risks harming children and rural residents who lack access to full grocery stores.
Other actions
- SB 11 89 (campaign expenditures) passed with a recorded vote of 27 ayes, 2 nays, 1 not voting.
- The Senate adopted a Valley Fever awareness proclamation and recognized guests including scouts and visiting physicians. The chamber also unanimously adopted House Concurrent Resolution 2055 (a death resolution) and observed a moment of silence.
What’s next: The Secretary was instructed to record actions and transmit passed bills to the House for consideration; the Senate adjourned until Feb. 17.