IF YOU THOUGHT the long-delayed budget agreement between the House and Senate meant their feuding was over, think again.

On Friday, the same day the budget compromise first emerged, the House chairs of four joint legislative committees unilaterally initiated votes on a handful of bills that had gone through the hearing process in each of their panels, and urged the members to approve the measures. By most accounts, the bills themselves were not controversial and some of them had even been sponsored by Senate members of the committees.

Nevertheless, the action of the House chairs was interpreted by Senate members as a violation of legislative rules because the decision to poll members of the various committees was taken unilaterally and not with the approval of the Senate chairs.

“The House again shows its flagrant disregard of both agreed upon rules of procedure and basic bicameral cooperation,” said Sen. Becca Rausch of Needham, the Senate chair of the Legislature’s Committee on Environment and Natural Resources.

Rausch said her House co-chair, Rep. Dan Cahill of Lynn, had previously told her the House wouldn’t go along with reporting any bills out of the committee until January, but then reversed course on Friday and scheduled a vote on three bills without consulting with her. One dealt with poisons used to kill rodents, one renamed a bridge in Cambridge, and one dealt with Elm Bank Reservation in Dover. Rausch filed the Elm Bank bill.

Rausch said she had no problem with the bills themselves, but she was irritated by the precedent Cahill attempted to set.

The joint rules of the House and Senate say “all joint standing committees shall schedule committee hearings and executive sessions upon agreement of the chairs.” Senators view executive sessions as being synonymous with committee votes, but it appears the House may not be on board with that interpretation. Cahill could not be reached for comment, but his office released a statement noting the three bills were reported favorably out of the committee by House members, while Senate members did not participate.

Because the 160-member House is so much larger than the 40-member Senate, every joint committee is dominated by House members. Senators say they rely on rules giving their chairs an equal say on hearings and votes to give them some leverage in negotiations over which bills move forward. House members say the rules unfairly give Senate chairs the power to bottle bills up in committee.

House leaders at the start of this session pushed for rules changes moving the individual joint committees toward majority rule, but that effort didn’t get far. In the Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy Committee, where the debate got heated between the two chairs – Sen. Michael Barrett of Lexington and Rep. Jeffrey Roy of Franklin — the panel has split in two, with House and Senate members holding hearings separately.

In mid-June, House Speaker Ron Mariano downplayed the dispute, suggesting it was confined to the one committee, but this most recent action suggests the House is invested in changing the rules and the effort is being coordinated by House leaders.

House Majority Leader Michael Moran said in a statement that the House chairs of four committees – Environment and Natural Resources; Agriculture; Advanced Information Technology, the Internet and Cybersecurity; and Cannabis Policy – polled their members on Friday to get legislation moving.

The legislation that was polled included both House and Senate bills, reported to both chambers, that received public hearings in the spring and early summer, and have since been awaiting legislative action,” he said. “In accordance with our understanding of the rules, the House acted to move these bills through the legislative process as we continue to pursue a productive legislative session.”

Some senators saw the Friday votes as a trap, an attempt by the House to use bills of interest to the senators to establish a precedent for the House chair alone to move bills forward without the Senate chair’s participation. 

Rausch urged her Senate colleagues not to participate in the voting. Sources said two senators serving on the four committees initially voted for the bills before backtracking and withdrawing their votes. The sources said Republican Sen. Ryan Fattman of Sutton cast his vote for a bill he sponsored that was in the Cannabis Policy Committee.

BRUCE MOHL

FROM COMMONWEALTH

In-state tuition in sight for undocumented students: With the $56.2 billion compromise budget through both chambers and headed to Gov. Healey, it looks like smooth sailing for a change to tuition policies for undocumented students. The budget would allow any student, regardless of immigration status, to be eligible for in-state tuition if they meet certain residence and academic achievement standards. Read more. 

OPINION

Credit card fees too high: Peter Brennan, executive director of the New England Convenience Store and Energy Marketers Association, says Congress must rein in the power of Visa and Mastercard to charge excessive fees. Read more.

 

FROM AROUND THE WEB

BEACON HILL

Senate President Karen Spilka said the Senate will take up a gun safety bill in the fall, an issue that has been at the center of a procedural conflict with the House. (Boston Herald)

MUNICIPAL MATTERS  

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu signed an executive order banning the use of fossil fuels in new city-owned buildings or those undergoing major renovations. (Boston Globe)

A Bourne bylaw restricting cannabis dispensary locations from downtown Buzzards Bay, approved by the Planning Board, will be voted on at a special town meeting in November. (Cape Cod Times)

Framingham is the latest municipality to shelter migrants in local hotels, with about 40 asylum seekers housed in the Red Roof lnn on Cochituate Road on Friday. (MetroWest Daily News)

HEALTH/HEALTH CARE

Leominster-based ambulance company MedStar has agreed to pay back $2.6 million in a settlement over allegedly filing false claims with MassHealth. (MassLive)

HOUSING

The state opens a second wellness center at Eastern Nazarene College in Quincy for immigrant residents experiencing homelessness. (GBH)

BUSINESS/ECONOMY

Two unions – AFSCME Council 93 and SENA Local 9158 – have been seeking out Boston Planning and Development Agency staff members as part of unionization drives. The city’s planning arm is in the midst of a controversial overhaul. (Dorchester Reporter)

TRANSPORTATION

East-West rail didn’t make the cut in the state budget passed by the House and Senate on Monday. Without the $12.5 million Gov. Healey sought for work in Palmer and Pittsfield, legislators are looking for alternative avenues to fund the projects. (MassLive)

The Ashland commuter rail station will be closed for several months for repairs. (MetroWest Daily News)

ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT

Roughly $1.8 million is being spent to harden the Franconia Ridge Trail in the White Mountains to protect it from damage caused by overuse and heavy rains. (New Hampshire Public Radio)

Swampscott officials are warning people to stay away from King’s Beach after weekend storms sent more than 1 million gallons of sewage flowing into the area. (Daily Item)

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

Boston Herald columnist Joe Battenfeld says Boston needs a new strategy to tackle gun violence after two fatal shootings on Sunday night. Rev. Eugene Rivers, a leader of anti-violence efforts in the 1990s, says the old strategy of clergy and police partnerships should be the new strategy. (Boston Globe

Questions are being raised about whether Boston’s new Civil Review Board handling police complaints is turning out to be more of a paper tiger than effective watchdog. (Boston Globe)

The man wanted for a hit-and-run that killed a 4-year-old boy in Hyde Park turns himself in. (WBUR)

MEDIA

Two Massachusetts lawmakers want to add a tax onto streaming services to help maintain community access television channels. (Boston Globe