Law Standards Act: Difference between revisions

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The '''Law Standards Act''' was proposed by Sandaoguo to codify the way a repeal and proposal of a law is supposed to be done to avoid confusion.
The '''Law Standards Act''' was proposed by Sandaoguo to codify the way a repeal and proposal of a law is supposed to be done to avoid confusion.



Latest revision as of 15:08, 1 May 2024

The Law Standards Act was proposed by Sandaoguo to codify the way a repeal and proposal of a law is supposed to be done to avoid confusion.

The debate can be found here

The vote can be found here

A table is here for convenience:

Aye Nay Abstain
21 4 7

This General Law was passed with 65.63% saying "Aye", 12.50% saying "Nay", and 21.88% saying "Abstain" on 3-5-2017.

The Present Law Standards Act

Law Standards Act

An Act to define the standard of all laws in the Coalition of The South Pacific

1. Scope

(1) All bills, amendments, and repeals brought before the Assembly should be written in a formal and consistent manner

(2) No bill or amendment will be brought to a vote in the Assembly unless it follows the formatting outlined in this Act

2. Formatting of Bills and Amendments

(1) Titles should be bolded and centered.

(2) Subtitles should be italicized and centered.

(3) The following should be observed for articles, sections, and sub-sections:

  • a. Articles should be numbered and bolded.
  • b. Sections should be numbered with parentheses, unless there is only one section without any sub-sections.
  • c. Sub-sections should be lettered with lowercase letters.

(4) Addendums should be numbered and at the bottom of all bills, regardless of where the referenced material is in the bill, and placed in a quote box.

3. Amendments and Repeals

(1) The standard format for an amendment will be to note which law, article, and section is being amended, and to quote only that part of the law.

(2) Additions of words will be formatted in green text.

(3) Subtractions of words will be formatted in red text with a strike-through.

(4) Ellipses will be used to indicate an intentional omission of a whole article, section, or sub-section.

(5) The Chair will not put to vote an amendment that copies an entire law, when only individual parts of the law are being amended.

(6) If a legislator moves to repeal only specific sections of a law, then the amendment procedure must be used.

(7) If a legislator moves to repeal an entire law, the Chair will quote the entire law and note that the entirety of it will be repealed.

4. General Rules

(1) Sections should be written in such a way to reduce wordiness without losing the spirit of the text.

(2) All titled sections should be followed by a line break before starting a new section.

5. Reformatting of Laws and Legislation

(1) For the purpose of this Act, the Chair of the Assembly will bring all previously written laws into compliance with the standards outlined by this Act.

(2) The Chair of the Assembly may bring proposed legislation into compliance with the standards outlined by this Act before bringing it to vote.

(3) The Chair of the Assembly may renumber articles, sections, and sub-sections where appropriate.

Addendum 1 – Example of an Amendment

Amendment to Article IV, Section 7 Wrote:

THE CHARTER OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC

...

IV. THE LOCAL COUNCIL

...

7. The Local Council representative will have the power to cast have an additional weighted block vote worth of one-fifth 20% of all non-abstaining votes cast on bills, not including the block vote, giving them a one-sixth share of the total vote, excluding abstentions. The Chair will calculate how many votes are allotted to the representative at the close of each vote, rounding them to the nearest whole number, and will then add the representative’s total votes to the final tally.

The Original Law Standards Act

Law Standards Act

An Act to define the standard of all laws in the Coalition of The South Pacific

1. Scope

(1) All bills, amendments, and repeals brought before the Assembly should be written in a formal and consistent manner

(2) No bill or amendment will be brought to a vote in the Assembly unless it follows the formatting outlined in this Act

2. Formatting of Bills and Amendments

(1) Titles should be bolded and centered.

(2) Subtitles should be italicized and centered.

(3) The following should be observed for articles, sections, and sub-sections:

  • a. Articles should be numbered and bolded.
  • b. Sections should be numbered with parentheses, unless there is only one section without any sub-sections.
  • c. Sub-sections should be lettered with lowercase letters.

(4) Addendums should be numbered and at the bottom of all bills, regardless of where the referenced material is in the bill, and placed in a quote box.

3. Amendments and Repeals

(1) The standard format for an amendment will be to note which section of a law is being amended, and to quote only that part of the law.

(2) Additions of words will be formatted in green text.

(3) Subtractions of words will be formatted in red text with a strike-through.

(4) The Chair will not put to vote an amendment that copies an entire law, when only individual parts of the law are being amended.

(5) If a legislator moves to repeal only specific sections of a law, then the amendment procedure must be used.

(6) If a legislator moves to repeal an entire law, the Chair will quote the entire law and note that the entirety of it will be repealed.

4. General Rules

(1) Sections should be written in such a way to reduce wordiness without losing the spirit of the text.

(2) All titled sections should be followed by a line break before starting a new section.

5. Reformatting of Laws

For the purpose of this Act, the Chair of Assembly will bring all previously written laws into the standards outlined by this Act

Addendum 1 – Example of an Amendment

Amendment to Article IV, Section 7 Wrote:

7. The Local Council representative will have the power to cast have an additional weighted block vote worth of one-fifth 20% of all non-abstaining votes cast on bills, not including the block vote, giving them a one-sixth share of the total vote, excluding abstentions. The Chair will calculate how many votes are allotted to the representative at the close of each vote, rounding them to the nearest whole number, and will then add the representative’s total votes to the final tally.

Amendments to the Law Standards Act

+Amendment 1=

The Law Standards Act was amended by the Assembly on 5-23-2017.

5. Reformatting of Laws and Legislation

(1) For the purpose of this Act, the Chair of the Assembly will bring all previously written laws into compliance with the standards outlined by this Act.

(2) The Chair of the Assembly may bring proposed legislation into compliance with the standards outlined by this Act before bringing it to vote.

Debate

The debate can be found here

Vote

The vote can be found here

Table

A table is here for convenience:

Aye Nay Abstain
29 0 4

This amendment was passed with 87.88% saying "Aye", 0.00% saying "Nay", and 12.12% saying "Abstain".

Amendment 2

Articles 3, 5, and Addendum 1 of the Law Standards Act was amended on the 2-9-2019.

Law Standards Act

...

3. Amendments and Repeals

(1) The standard format for an amendment will be to note which law, article, and section of a law is being amended, and to quote only that part of the law.

...

(4) Ellipses will be used to indicate an intentional omission of a whole article, section, or sub-section.

...

5. Reformatting of Laws and Legislation

...

(3) The Chair of the Assembly may renumber articles, sections, and sub-sections where appropriate.

...

Addendum 1 – Example of an Amendment


THE CHARTER OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC

...

IV. THE LOCAL COUNCIL

...

7. The Local Council representative will have the power to cast have an additional weighted block vote worth of one-fifth 20% of all non-abstaining votes cast on bills, not including the block vote, giving them a one-sixth share of the total vote, excluding abstentions. The Chair will calculate how many votes are allotted to the representative at the close of each vote, rounding them to the nearest whole number, and will then add the representative’s total votes to the final tally.