What The Vote

A bill to make a technical correction to the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973.

112-s3677 112th Congress Senate Signed into Law
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A bill to make a technical correction to the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973.

Timeline

Sen. Johnson, Tim [D-SD]
Sponsor
Sen. Johnson, Tim [D-SD] (D), SD
Introduced
2012-12-12
Committees
Financial Services Committee
Subjects
Administrative law and regulatory procedures; Disaster relief and insurance; Floods and storm protection; Housing finance and home ownership
Latest Action
Became Public Law No: 112-281.

Bill Activity

House
Passed/agreed to in House: On passage Passed without objection.(text: CR H7528)
Senate
Introduced in the Senate, read twice, considered, read the third time, and passed without amendment by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S7988-7989; text as passed Senate: CR S7989)
Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Insurance, Housing and Community Opportunity.
Committee on Financial Services discharged.
President
Presented to President.
Became Public Law No: 112-281.
Became Public Law No: 112-281.

How a Bill Becomes a Law

The typical path from introduction to law. Every bill's actual journey (above) may skip steps or stop early — most never make it past committee.

  1. 1
    Introduced

    A member files the bill in the House or Senate.

  2. 2
    Committee Review

    Referred to committee for hearings, markup, and a vote to advance it.

  3. 3
    Floor Vote

    The full chamber debates and votes on passage.

  4. 4
    Second Chamber

    If passed, it repeats committee review and a floor vote in the other chamber.

  5. 5
    Resolve Differences

    If the chambers pass different versions, a conference reconciles them.

  6. 6
    Sent to President

    The reconciled bill is enrolled and delivered to the White House.

  7. 7
    Signed or Vetoed

    Becomes law with a signature, or automatically after 10 days.

    ✓ Becomes Law ✗ Vetoed
    Became law here

A veto can still be overridden by a two-thirds vote in both chambers. And once a bill is signed into law, further changes come from new amending legislation — not edits to the original text.

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