Free subscription to the Capitol Journal keeps you current on legislative and regulatory news.
States Passing Laws to Aid Small Pharmacies States including Colorado ( HB 1094 ), Georgia ( HB 196 ), Indiana ( SB 140 ), Iowa ( SB 383 ) and Montana (HB 740) have passed laws this year setting minimum...
Child labor may evoke Dickensian images of young children in dirty, oversized clothes laboring in dusty, dangerous workshops. But this year legislators in Florida considered a bill ( SB 918 ) that would...
MN Enacts Nation’s First Social Media Warning Label Requirement Minnesota enacted a first-in-the-nation provision ( HB 2 a / SB 6 a ) requiring social media platforms to display mental health warning...
CA to Investigate State Farm over LA Wildfire Claims California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara (D) announced a “market conduct examination” of State Farm over consumer complaints about...
OR Enacts Nation’s Strongest Corporate Health Care Law Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek (D) signed a bill ( SB 951 ) imposing the toughest regulations on private and corporate control of medical practices...
* The views expressed in externally authored materials linked or published on this site do not necessarily reflect the views of LexisNexis Legal & Professional.
The Illinois Bankers Association and other organizations filed a federal lawsuit to block a new Illinois law limiting banks from charging interchange, or “swipe,” fees on tax and tip revenues. The Interchange Fee Prohibition Act is scheduled to take effect on July 1 next year. (CENTER SQUARE)
Washington State Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler (D) has proposed delaying Phase 2 of a recently adopted insurance premium change transparency rule for two years, from June 2027 to June 2029. Phase 1 of the rule, which took effect in June of this year, requires homeowners and auto insurers to disclose to policyholders why their premiums have increased when asked. Phase 2 will require the reasons for premium increases to be included in policy renewals. (INSURANCE JOURNAL)
The U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that insurance carriers can’t be held responsible when banks improperly cash checks made out to two insureds and give the proceeds to just one of them. The federal appeals court’s decision—involving Markel American Insurance Co. and a pair of Florida-based truck-leasing firms—and a similar ruling by a state-level appellate court in Florida in 2022 means insurers in the state are unlikely to face similar lawsuits in the future. (INSURANCE JOURNAL)
—Compiled by SNCJ Managing Editor KOREY CLARK
Visit our webpage to connect with a LexisNexis® State Net® representative and learn how the State Net legislative and regulatory tracking service can help you identify, track, analyze and report on relevant legislative and regulatory developments.