seriesNo,seriesEntityName,seriesTitle,seriesDateRange,seriesArrangement,seriesDescription,seriesTotRetentDesc,seriesPrimaryClassCode,seriesExtentDesc 4076,Lieutenant Governor,Legislative bills,1896-,"Chronological by legislative session, thereunder alphabetical by document type and numeric by bill number if applicable.","These final copies of bills\, memorials\, and resolutions approved by the House and Senate and filed with the Secretary of State (or Lieutenant Governor) enact the laws of the state of Utah. They serve as a basis for governmental policy and action. This series includes bills signed into law by the governor\, those which became law without the governor's signature\, those vetoed by the governor after the legislature was out of normal session\, and those vetoed but overridden by the legislature. Though the bills which become law are published as part of the Laws of Utah\, this series documents signatures and approval by the governor; this series also documents veto messages for bills rejected. Bills in the broad sense refers to bills\, resolutions\, memorials\, etc. Inthe narrow sense they are those documents legislators desire to have made into a Utah law. Memorials are generally pleadings for federal action\, usually to the U._S._Congress. Resolutions are position statements which do not have the weight of law. Bills have always gone for the governor's approval or veto. Simple resolutions and memorials must only pass the originating chamber\, but are still filed here. Concurrent and joint memorials and resolutions are filed here as well. Those terms have switched over the years\, but after 1921 the term concurrent came to mean one approved by both chambers with the governor concurring while joint means one passed by both chambers butwhich does not require the governor's signature.",Permanent. Retain until administrative need ends,Public,4.00 cubic feet 147 microfilm reels