Published On: March 22nd, 2026Categories: Iowa News

Where bills on property tax, pipelines and more stand after second fu...

The Iowa State Capitol as seen Jan. 9, 2026. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch)

Following the second “funnel” deadline of the Iowa legislative session, lawmakers often aim to shift their focus from policy to budgeting. But as lawmakers hit week 10 of the 2026 session, it appears agreements have not been reached on some of the top priorities laid out by Republicans at the beginning of…

Continue reading this article at;

https://iowacapitaldispatch.com/2026/03/20/where-bills-on-property-tax-pipelines-and-more-stand-after-second-funnel/

https://iowacapitaldispatch.com/2026/03/20/where-bills-on-property-tax-pipelines-and-more-stand-after-second-funnel/
iowacapitaldispatch.com

Feed Name : Iowa Capital Dispatch

Government + Politics,2026 budget,2026 Iowa legislative session,2026 second funnel,appropriations,appropriations bills,carbon pipeline legislation,eminent domain,eminent domain bill,funnel,funnel week,GOP trifecta,Gov. Kim Reynolds,higher education committee,House Minority Leader Brian Meyer,House Speaker Pat Grassley,Iowa carbon pipeline,Iowa FY 2027 budget,Iowa GOP trifecta,Iowa House Republicans,Iowa Legislature,Iowa Revenue Estimating Conference,Iowa Senate Republicans,Iowa state budget,Iowa State Capitol,pipeline bills,property tax,property tax cut,property tax rollback,Rep. Carter Nordman,Sen. Dan Dawson,Sen. Mike Klimesh,Senate Majority Leader Mike Klimesh,Ways and Means
hashtags : #bills #property #tax #pipelines #stand #fu..

Leave A Comment