Big changes in education, law enforcement, more: New Florida laws go into effect July 1

Industry,

By C. A. Bridges

It's been a roller coaster of a legislative session in Florida this year. Republican-led lawmakers, who have for years been in lockstep with Gov. Ron DeSantis, pushed back on or ignored his requests on some issues, demanded answers for money funneled through his wife Casey's Hope Florida program into fighting constitutional amendments he wanted to stop, and went into overtime working out the state budget.

To focus more fully on that last one, as time ran out in the session, more than 1,300 bills were "indefinitely postponed and withdrawn from consideration."

What new Florida laws take effect on July 1?

Nearly 100 new laws are due to go into effect on July 1, and there at least 80 more on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' desk. To date, he has vetoed HB 6017, a bill that would have lifted some restrictions on medical malpractice lawsuits in the state and ended what has been called Florida's "free kill" law, and HB 317, a bill that would have fined drivers for driving in the left lane.

Here's what's changing, so far. The list does not include some regional or individual relief bills.

SB 56: Geoengineering and Weather Modification Activities

  • What it does:
    • Prohibits geoengineering and weather modification activities
    • Makes releasing chemicals in the atmosphere "for the express purpose of affecting the temperature, weather, climate, or intensity of sunlight" a third-degree felony with jail terms up to five years and fines up to $100,000
    • Requires creation of a helpline where people can report "suspected "suspected geoengineering and weather modification activities"
    • Requires airports to make monthly reports
  • What it means for you: Residents will be able to report chemtrails. No more rain-seeding.

HB 85: Hazardous Walking Conditions

  • What it does: Revises the criteria that determine hazardous walking condition for public school students.
  • What it means for you: Under the law, school districts provide transportation for students up to grade 6 if there are hazardous walking conditions on walkways parallel to the road to and from school, and they work with local governments to address the problem. This bill adds walkways that are along limited access facilities such as highways, freeways, ramps, etc.