A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Votes at a glance: multiple bills on housing, consumer protections and education pass

March 02, 2026 | 2026 Senate, Legislative, Iowa


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Votes at a glance: multiple bills on housing, consumer protections and education pass
The Senate cleared multiple bills on a range of topics in a single session block; most passed unanimously or with large margins. Key outcomes recorded on the floor include:

- House File 23‑49 (disposition of cremated human remains): Sponsor Senator Shipley said the bill vests control of unclaimed cremated remains to the next competent adult after 30 days; passed (roll recorded 44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 21‑46 (sidewalk liability): Sponsor Senator Webster said the bill assigns maintenance and liability for sidewalks to homeowners adjoining the sidewalks and allows cities to charge an administration fee up to $20 plus removal costs; amendment 50‑43 adopted; bill passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 23‑69 (ADU size/historic preservation): Clarifies ADU size calculations and limits local regulation in historic preservation districts unless the commission records reasons; passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 23‑76 (contractor bond): Allows a $50,000 general‑contractor bond valid statewide and clarifies political subdivisions may still require bonds for right‑of‑way work via amendment 50‑44; bill passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 21‑14 (intimidation with a dangerous weapon): Amends Iowa Code section 708.6 to expand scope of the offense; passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 22‑96 (digital financial asset kiosk enforcement): Moves enforcement language into consumer‑fraud statute (Iowa Code section 714.16), preserves AG civil‑penalty authority up to $100,000, and clarifies applicability to civil actions after the effective date; amendment 50‑42 adopted; passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- Senate File 23‑20 (concurrent enrollment): Gives a school superintendent or designee authority to change a student’s concurrent‑enrollment mode; passed (44 ayes, 0 nays).

- House File 2506 (calendar raffles): Substituted for SF 2396; allows delayed prize award notification within one year by licensed qualified organizations; passed (44 ayes, 0 nays); SF 2396 withdrawn.

Several measures were ordered messaged to the other chamber by unanimous consent during the session.

Why it matters: The batch includes technical fixes (digital kiosk enforcement), procedural and administrative changes (contractor bonds, concurrent enrollment), and policy clarifications affecting homeowners and funeral‑service practice. Those bills will proceed to the House or next steps in the legislative process.

What happens next: The Senate declared passage and ordered the measures messaged to the other chamber; further action depends on the receiving chamber and any enrolled‑bill processing.

View the Full Meeting & All Its Details

This article offers just a summary. Unlock complete video, transcripts, and insights as a Founder Member.

Watch full, unedited meeting videos
Search every word spoken in unlimited transcripts
AI summaries & real-time alerts (all government levels)
Permanent access to expanding government content
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee