Senate Bill 10‑49, presented by a sponsor identified in committee as Senator Wendy Rogers, would change how courts grant spousal maintenance by adding a finite term (sponsor discussion referenced four years) and setting factors for the Supreme Court to consider when issuing guidelines.
Rogers told the committee the intent is to prevent open‑ended lifetime maintenance and to provide a finite period to help a spouse "get back on his or her feet," arguing that four years could be sufficient time to, for example, complete a college degree. Several members questioned that standard during an extended colloquy, noting scenarios in which a long marriage and a jointly built business might leave one spouse without comparable earning power if support stopped after four years. One member asked how the bill differentiates property division from maintenance, and Rogers responded that the change addresses ongoing maintenance, not equitable division of joint business interests.
No public opponents appeared, and the committee moved the bill; the roll call produced five ayes, two nays and two absences, and the chair announced SB 10‑49 was given a pass recommendation.
Why it matters: The bill would change long‑standing practice on spousal maintenance by limiting duration in many cases; committee discussion focused on edge cases—long marriages and business ownership—where a four‑year cap may not reflect financial realities.