(a)   Any bill may originate in either House of the General Assembly and be
altered, amended or rejected by the other. No bill shall originate in
either House during the last thirty-five calendar days of a regular
session, unless two-thirds of the members elected thereto shall so
determine by yeas and nays, and in addition the two Houses by joint and
similar rule may further regulate the right to introduce bills during
this period. A bill may not become a law until it is read on three
different days of the session in each House, unless two-thirds of the
members elected to the House where such bill is pending determine by
yeas and nays, and no bill shall be read a third time until it shall
have been actually engrossed or printed for a third reading.
  (b)   Each House may adopt by rule a "consent calendar" procedure
permitting bills to be read and voted upon as a single group on first,
second and third readings, provided that the members of each House are
afforded reasonable notice of the bills to be placed upon each
"consent calendar." Upon the objection of any member, any bill in
question shall be removed from the "consent calendar."
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