2011 House Bill 4110 / Public Act 169

Ban partial birth abortion

Introduced in the House

Jan. 20, 2011

Introduced by Rep. Ben Glardon (R-85)

To authorize sentencing guidelines for the “partial birth abortion” ban proposed by House Bill 4109.

Referred to the Committee on Families, Children and Seniors

June 21, 2011

Reported without amendment

Without amendment and with the recommendation that the bill pass.

Sept. 20, 2011

Amendment offered by Rep. Kevin Daley (R-82)

To establish that if passed the bill will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2012.

The amendment passed by voice vote

Amendment offered by Rep. Kate Segal (D-62)

To tie-bar the bill a series of Democratic bills that would, among other things, impose new contraceptive, infertility treatment, and pap smear coverage insurance mandates, mandate additional sex education classes in schools, impose new "crisis pregnancy center" regulations, create a state morning-after pill PR campaign, and more. See House Bills 4805 to 4814. "Tie bar" means this bills can't become law unless those ones also become law.

The amendment failed by voice vote

Sept. 21, 2011

Passed in the House 75 to 33 (details)

Received in the Senate

Sept. 22, 2011

Referred to the Committee on Judiciary

Sept. 28, 2011

Reported without amendment

With the recommendation that the bill pass.

Passed in the Senate 29 to 9 (details)

To authorize sentencing guidelines for the “partial birth abortion” ban proposed by Senate Bill 160.

Oct. 4, 2011

Motion to reconsider by Sen. Arlan Meekhof (R-30)

The vote by which the bill was passed.

The motion passed by voice vote

Received

Amendment offered by Sen. Arlan Meekhof (R-30)

To clarify that the sentencing guidelines accompany the actual partial birth abortion ban in Senate Bill 160.

The amendment passed by voice vote

Passed in the Senate 29 to 9 (details)

To authorize sentencing guidelines for the “partial birth abortion” ban proposed by Senate Bill 160.

Received in the House

Oct. 4, 2011

Passed in the House 75 to 34 (details)

To concur with the Senate-passed version of the bill.

Signed by Gov. Rick Snyder

Oct. 11, 2011