§ 15.5. Reenactments of existing law.
(a) Use. Reenactments of existing statutes are used to:
(1) Continue in effect a statute that is about to expire.
(2) Extend the statute to a new agency or set of circumstances.
(3) Cure a defect in an existing statute, such as a failure to give notice in the title of a provision of the statute.
(4) Harmonize the language of amendments of the same provision of a statute so as to make it less confusing.
(b) Form. The form of a reenactment is the same as that for an amendment, with the exception that the recital is is reenacted instead of is amended. If a reenactment includes a change in the provision being reenacted, the recital is, is reenacted and amended.
(c) Original enactments. Another form of reenactment, not designated as such, is the setting up in the form of original legislation the provisions of an existing statute or a number of statutes. In these cases, the statute or statutes to be incorporated in the new bill are always specifically cited for repeal either absolutely or to the extent which they are covered by the new enactment.
No part of the information on this site may be reproduced for profit or sold for profit.
This material has been drawn directly from the official Pennsylvania Code full text database. Due to the limitations of HTML or differences in display capabilities of different browsers, this version may differ slightly from the official printed version.