After 25+ years of researching New York legislative history, I’ve developed my favorite “go to” source to get started. For anything from 1995 to yesterday, Legislative Retrieval System provides me with the ability to search bills, laws and vetoes. Sponsor, Approval and Veto memoranda are also readily available (and easily searchable).
Perhaps the most unique facet of LRS is the compare function, allowing the user to view a side-by-side comparison of bills introduced. Bills that don’t pass and often reintroduced, with slight but significant changes. LRS “compare” allows me to see what was kept — and what didn’t make the cut!
And then there is the all important “current awareness” function, otherwise known as “alerts.” Many of our members need to closely track the progress of NY State bills. Alerts keep everyone aware of both the small and significant changes that occur in committees as well as when a bill is calendared, vetoed, or chaptered enacted into law.
The New York Law Institute will be closed on Monday, February 17, 2025 in observance of the Presidents’ Day national holiday and will reopen on Tuesday, February 18th at 9:00 AM.
95 years after the 15th Amendment’s ratification, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 promised to enforce the right to vote by eliminating obstacles such as poll taxes, literacy tests, and other bureaucratic restrictions imposed by many Southern state legislatures during the post-Reconstruction period. In 1964, nearly 100 years after the Civil War ended, numerous peaceful…
The New York Law Institute (NYLI), and the New York Legislative Service (NYLS) are pleased to announce a strategic collaboration designed to strengthen access to legislative and legal research. New York Legislative Service (NYLS) is the premier source for customized on-demand New York State and City legislative histories. This partnership will integrate NYLS’s legislative tracking…