 room is called the governor's ceremonial room and this is where he signs bills this is where he presents proclamations this is where students come to learn about the government and how things work here and so this is really where a lot of things happen. So how things work so a bill that starts somewhere else in the house and then it goes to the senate and then it goes wherever and then finally here so right so so let's just play it out let's say there's a bill 123 hb123 and it gets passed by the house to the senate the senate amends it so it's now hb123 sd1 and then it goes back let's just say that's working ends up in the governor's desk but before it gets there that bill has to go through a rigorous departmental review so the attorney general's office has to look at it and make sure that it complies with all legal issues then the department has to look at it to make sure that it complies with all of the directives that the department is working on and that that's there's no conflicts right so once it passes legal review department review then it comes to the governor's desk and the governor then has to decide whether he's going to sign it whether he's going to veto it or whether he'll let it become law without his signature. How does it become law without his signature? If by the appointed date it is neither signed nor vetoed it becomes law without his signature.