• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bitterroot Star

Bitterroot Valley's best source for local news!

  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Classifieds
    • Buildings
    • Farm & Garden
    • For Rent
    • For Sale
    • Free
    • Help Wanted
    • Real Estate
    • Sales/Auctions
    • Services
  • Legal Notices
  • Obituaries
  • Calendar
  • Services
    • Letter to the Editor
    • Place Classified Ad
    • Submit a Press Release
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
  • Subscribe

12 Days of Christmas, legislative edition

January 1, 2024 by Guest Post

by Sen. Jason Ellsworth, R-Hamilton, President, Montana Senate

We’re all familiar with the Christmas carol “The Twelve Days of Christmas.” In recognition of the holiday season, I’d like to share some of the good work your state lawmakers accomplished in the legislative session at the beginning of the year, in a shortened format of the song. 

Without further ado, here are the Twelve Days of Christmas, Legislative Edition. The Legislature passed: 

TWELVE major infrastructure and investment bills (SBs 536 and 294, HBs 267, 6, 424, 883, 817, 569, 332, 355, 479, and 856). These included investments in roads and bridges, water and irrigation systems, wildfire fighting, the state prison, law enforcement pensions, teacher health insurance, and more. 

ELEVEN education-related bills, other than charter schools, to benefit students and teachers (SBs 373 and 444, HBs 15, 588, 245, 408, 393, 587, 203, 257, and 214). These bills increased education funding, incentivized raising starting teacher pay, increased trades education, helped special needs students, and increased flexibility in learning at work-based programs, online, or in a different district, among other reforms. 

TEN energy and natural resources bills, ranging from regulatory relief to lowering timber taxes to building electric transmission capability to opposing the removal of hydropower dams (SBs 557, 3, 208, 228, and 274, HBs 971, 114, and 576, SJs 10 and 16). 

NINE election bills (SBs 117, 197, 254, 93, and 498, HBs 173, 196, 335, and 712). These new laws strengthen the integrity of our elections by banning outside money in election administration, increasing post-election auditing, banning election machines from connecting to the internet, cleaning up voter lists, and more. We also passed NINE pro-housing bills dealing with zoning and infrastructure, and NINE additional housing red tape relief bills. 

EIGHT bills to benefit our active duty military members, their families, and veterans, among which are a 50% tax exemption on retirement pay and pay increases for National Guard pilots fighting wildfires. Those bills are SBs 104, 40, 221, and HBs 583, 336, 63, 427, and 81. 

SEVEN pro-life bills, including legislation to ban taxpayer funding of abortions, protect viable unborn children, and more. SB 154 and HBs 862, 544, 937, 575, 625, and 721 are the bill numbers. 

SIX each of pro-family and pro-firearm bills. The pro-family bills (SB 339 and HBs 225, 200, 556, 187, and 213) assist in adoption, increase access to childcare, and more. The pro-gun bills (SBs 359 and 423 and HBs 356, 584, 631, and 674) restrict government from infringing on Second Amendment rights, prohibit the backdoor financial tracking of gun sales, and help in preventing firearm suicides. 

FIVE tough-on-crime bills to make our communities safer. SBs 38, 265, 491, and 13, as well as HB 112, crack down on sex trafficking, human trafficking, and sexual predators, and more. 

FOUR bills to protect Montanans’ privacy in the age of technology. SB 397 restricts the government’s use of facial recognition technology. SB 384 protects Montanans’ online data and SB 351 protects our genetic data. SB 325 creates special protections for electronic communications between spouses. 

THREE bills that provided nearly $900 million in property tax and income tax rebates to Montanans, up to $3,850 per family (HBs 192, 222, and 816). Those are just the one-time tax relief bills, several other bills provided hundreds of millions more in permanent tax cuts on income, property, business equipment, and more. 

TWO bills that allow different models of charter schools to be created in Montana, expanding educational options for students (HBs 562 and 549). 

ONE bill that strengthened the ethical requirements in state law for both legislators and judges (HB 412). It’s not often that you hear about politicians mandating stricter ethics for themselves, but that’s exactly what your Republican Legislature did this year. 

Those 102 bills make up the Legislative 12 Days of Christmas. In the holiday spirit, all are meant to protect our rights, strengthen families, make our communities safer, improve our children’s futures, and make life more affordable. 

 

Share this:

Filed Under: Opinion

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sue says

    January 4, 2024 at 8:38 AM

    Your THREE bills meant to reduce our taxes…. your $675 rebate didn’t come close to paying for the massive increase in my property tax bill this year. But by all means, keep lowering the tax rate for the rich (i.e. YOU) while making us middle class bear the state’s financial burdens.

Primary Sidebar

Search This Website

Search this website…

Local Info

  • Bitterroot Chamber of Commerce
  • Ravalli County
  • Ravalli County Economic Development Authority
  • City of Hamilton
  • Town of Stevensville
  • Town of Darby
  • Bitterroot Public Library
  • North Valley Public Library
  • Stevensville Community Foundation
  • Ravalli County Council on Aging
  • Bitterroot Producers Directory
  • Ravalli County Schools
  • Real Estate
  • Montana Works

Like us

Read our e-edition!

Montana Info

  • Montana Ski Report
  • Montana Fish, Wildlife, & Parks
  • National Parks in Montana
  • Montana Wildfires – INCIWEB
  • US Forest Service – Missoula
  • Firewise USA
  • Recreation.gov

Check Road Conditions

Road Conditions

Footer

Services

  • Place Classified Ad
  • Submit a Press Release
  • Letter to the Editor
  • Submit an Event
  • Subscribe
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Our location:

PO Box 133

115 W. 3rd Street
Stevensville, MT  59870
Phone: (406) 777-3928
Fax: (406) 777-4265

Archives – May 2011 to Present

Archives Prior to May 2011

Click here for archives prior to May 2011.

The Bitterroot Star Newspaper Co: ISSN 1050-8724 (Print) ISSN 2994-0273 (Online)
Copyright © 2026 · Bitterroot Star · Maintenance · Site by Linda Lancaster at Bitterroot Web Designs