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Massachusetts Reducing Risks of Technology Commission Initiative (2020)

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Massachusetts Reducing Risks of Technology Commission Initiative
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Election date
November 3, 2020
Topic
Environment
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
State statute
Origin
Citizens


The Massachusetts Reducing Risks of Technology Commission Initiative (#19-13) was not on the ballot in Massachusetts as an indirect initiated state statute on November 3, 2020.

The measure would have established the Reducing Risks of Technology Commission "to advance the policy of Massachusetts in favor of legislation to reduce or limit risks to human rights from technology and provide for model legislation."[1][2]

Text of measure

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Massachusetts

In Massachusetts, the number of signatures required to qualify an indirect initiated state statute for the ballot is equal to 3.5 percent of the votes cast for governor in the most recent gubernatorial election. No more than one-quarter of the verified signatures on any petition can come from a single county. The process for initiated state statutes in Massachusetts is indirect, which means the legislature has a chance to approve initiatives with successful petitions directly without the measure going to the voters. A first round of signatures equal to 3 percent of the votes cast for governor is required to put an initiative before the legislature. A second round of signatures equal to 0.5 percent of the votes cast for governor in the last election is required to put the measure on the ballot if the legislature rejects or declines to act on a proposed initiated statute. Signatures for initiated statutes in Massachusetts are collected in two circulation periods. The first period runs from the third Wednesday in September to two weeks prior to the first Wednesday in December, a period of nine weeks. If the proposed law is not adopted by the first Wednesday of May, petitioners then have until the first Wednesday of July (eight weeks) to request additional petition forms and submit the second round of signatures.

The requirements to get an initiated state statute certified for the 2020 ballot:

If enough signatures are submitted in the first round, the legislature must act on a successful petition by the first Wednesday of May. The measure only goes on the ballot if the legislature does not pass it and if the second round of signatures is successfully collected.

Details about this initiative

The measure was declined approval for signature gathering on September 4, 2019. Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey's office found that they could not "conclude that the petition is in proper form for submission to the voters because it purports to set internal requirements for legislative deliberation, which may be accomplished only through an amendment to the provisions of the state constitution that vest each chamber of the Legislature with the authority to determine its own internal rules."[3]

See also

External links

Footnotes