Most times, the conference committee produces a
conference report melding the work of the House and Senate into a final version of the bill. A conference report proposes legislative language as an amendment to the bill committed to conference. The conference report also includes a joint explanatory statement of the conference committee. This statement provides one of the best sources of legislative history on the bill. Chief Justice
William Rehnquist once observed that the joint conference report of both Houses of Congress is considered highly reliable legislative history when interpreting a statute. Once a bill has been passed by a conference committee, it goes directly to the floor of both houses for a vote, and is not open to further amendment. In the first house to consider the conference report, a member may move to recommit the bill to the conference committee. But once the first house has passed the conference report, the conference committee is dissolved, and the second house to act can no longer recommit the bill to conference. Conference reports are privileged. In the Senate, a motion to proceed to a conference report is not debatable, although senators can generally
filibuster the conference report itself. The
Congressional Budget Act of 1974 limits debate on conference reports on
budget resolutions and
budget reconciliation bills to ten hours in the Senate, so senators cannot filibuster those conference reports. The conference report must be approved by both the House and the Senate before the final bill is sent to the president. ==Declining use==