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Heartbreaking new report reveals ongoing hurricane devastation across multiple US states — here's what's happening

Heartbreaking new report reveals ongoing hurricane devastation across multiple US states — here's what's happening

Yahooa day ago

Some communities are still reeling from the devastation that Hurricane Helene brought to North Carolina and other southeastern states in the U.S.
As ABC affiliate WLOS detailed, the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project (ASAP) published a report highlighting the widespread impact of damages caused by Hurricane Helene on farming in Western North Carolina.
About 900 small-scale, family-owned farms that grow food for local markets were the focus of the report, and the findings paint a bleak outlook.
According to the ASAP report, 86% of these farms suffered physical damage, 70% of which reported damage to their land or waterways.
While the report stated that the varying physical damage levels from farm to farm didn't exceed 25% of their operations, these farms were facing an average cleanup and recovery cost of $40,000.
In 2024, the total lost sales per farm averaged $30,000, but that number is estimated to fall only slightly to $28,000 in 2025.
In all, the ASAP report determined that damages and losses accounted for a whopping 88% of the average Western North Carolina farm's gross annual sales.
Hurricane Helene was a Category 4 storm that caused catastrophic damage across multiple states, bringing heavy rains, high winds, extreme flooding, and landslides.
According to the NOAA Office for Coastal Management, "Helene was the deadliest Atlantic hurricane since Maria (2017), and the deadliest to strike the U.S. mainland since Katrina (2005). Helene's total costs were $78.7 billion."
The intensity of Hurricane Helene was fueled by the rising ocean temperatures, which are the result of a warming planet. Human-induced global heating creates more favorable conditions for extreme weather events, making them more frequent and dangerous to areas across the country — including areas that aren't typically prone to them.
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The impact on farming communities could lead to significant economic losses and affect those who depend on agriculture to make a living.
There are organizations and companies working hard to help people become more resilient to extreme weather events. To help, individuals can consider exploring critical climate issues and donating to groups committed to aiding in recovery efforts.
One way to prepare yourself and your home for extreme weather events is by installing solar panels in conjunction with a battery system to avoid losing power during extended grid outages — which can also bring down the cost of energy bills.
If you're interested in adding solar power to your home, EnergySage offers an easy way to compare quotes from vetted local installers and can save customers up to $10,000 on solar installations.
Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.

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Climate disasters inflict outsized harm on pregnant and young families
Climate disasters inflict outsized harm on pregnant and young families

Miami Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Climate disasters inflict outsized harm on pregnant and young families

Climate disasters inflict outsized harm on pregnant and young families The howling winds of a tornado jolted Jelessica Monard awake in the early morning hours last fall. She was five months pregnant with her first child when Hurricane Helene struck her rural Georgian town of Swainsboro. Along with devastating flooding and mudslides, the storm had been spinning up tornadoes throughout the Southeast that morning and knocked out power in her neighborhood. "I opened up the door and I couldn't see my hand," Monard said. "You hear things breaking outside or lifting up and banging into something else." After the storm passed, the power remained out and no one had cell reception. Food spoiled within a few days without refrigeration. "I had a food stamp card and had loaded up the house," Monard said. "I had to throw a lot of that stuff out." Pregnant people and their unborn children face some of the sharpest health risks as atmospheric pollution raises temperatures, fueling more destructive storms, floods, wildfires and other climate disasters. Lower-income families are particularly vulnerable-as are rural communities, which can lack sufficient access to health care even in the best of times. Not having food available exacerbated Monard's pregnancy-induced nausea. And without a phone, she couldn't call for help. "I was hungry, I was pregnant," Monard said. "And then if I wasn't eating enough, I would throw up." To add to her stress, Monard's pregnancy was considered high risk because she'd suffered a pulmonary embolism, or blood clot, in her lung. To monitor the condition, Monard had to travel twice a week from her home in Swainsboro to a medical center in Savannah throughout her pregnancy, about a two-hour round trip. "Things started getting hard with the bills and keeping gas in the car," Monard said. "It was just a whole trickle down spiral." Pregnant people and parents of infants across the American Southeast experienced domino effects like these after Helene cut its ruinous path, destroying homes and businesses, laying waste to infrastructure, knocking out power to millions of homes and killing more than 200 people. Maternal care providers in storm-damaged communities in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia said they've seen an uptick in postpartum depression among their patients. Though anecdotal, these observations are consistent with an emerging body of research indicating that surviving a severe flood catastrophe heightens the risk and severity of maternal mental health struggles, which in turn can impact the health and development of infants. Helene crossed into Georgia from its southern border as a Category 2 hurricane. Before making landfall near Perry, Florida, it had intensified to a Category 4 storm under the influence of warm Gulf waters. A Climate Central forensic analysis showed that such marine heat in the Gulf has become at least six times more likely at that time of year because of the warming effects of greenhouse gas pollution. Even in the best of circumstances, the hormonal and physiological changes that women go through during pregnancy and the months after giving birth can strain mental health. Postpartum depression and other mental health conditions are the most common complication of childbirth, afflicting about 1 in 8 people, only half of whom are diagnosed. These problems are the leading cause of pregnancy-related deaths, and contribute to the extraordinarily high maternal mortality rate in the U.S. During the past decade, the federal government made significant investments in preventing and treating maternal mental health problems. Congress has funded outreach programs, a hotline for struggling parents, and an array of research on the topic. However, recent federal cuts to health care have jeopardized some of those programs. Monard wasn't diagnosed with a mental health disorder as the stressors piled up after the storm, but she became scared for herself and for her baby's well-being. "I just know that if I go down, my baby goes down," Monard said. The toll of survival In August 2005, epidemiologist Emily Harville had just moved to New Orleans for a job at Tulane University when Hurricane Katrina devastated the city. Her graduate research had focused on the impact of stress during the perinatal period-the months before and after giving birth-so in Katrina's aftermath, she began visiting hospitals in New Orleans and Baton Rouge. She and her colleagues ultimately interviewed hundreds of women who were pregnant when Katrina hit or who became pregnant soon thereafter. Many had faced a life-threatening situation, lost a loved one to the storm, or had their property demolished. Those who had suffered at least two serious hardships had a 77% higher rate of postpartum depression and a 268% higher chance of post-traumatic stress disorder than those who had not. Researchers have since found the same phenomenon among pregnant people who survived the 2008 Iowa floods and megastorms in other countries. Other studies have pinpointed developmental and health impacts on children who were in utero during the Iowa floods, 2012 Hurricane Sandy along the eastern seaboard and 2018 Hurricane Michael in Florida. Those results aren't entirely surprising, Harville said. The risk of depression and trauma goes up after a storm no matter who you are, but the effect is stronger in nonwhite women and parents, as well as those with lower socioeconomic statuses; new moms disproportionately fall into those categories. A new mom disabled by depression is not the only one who struggles. "When a mother is depressed, she's less able to bond with and take care of her baby," Harville said. This can affect her infants' development and stymie her ability to care for other children. Since mothers carry a disproportionate amount of the burden of household management, when they are affected by a mental health disorder, she said, "the family doesn't work as well." Perinatal health care practitioners in the hardest-hit parts of the Southeast said they've been watching this phenomenon play out in their communities since Helene. Before the storm, Heather Herman, a perinatal psychiatric nurse practitioner in West Jefferson, North Carolina, already had a full schedule of patients who were navigating depression and other challenges. In the immediate aftermath of the storm, many abruptly stopped reaching out for help. When she finally got ahold of them again, they said their lives were too chaotic to worry about their mental health. Families lost childcare when schools and daycares closed for weeks. Many lost cars to the floods, limiting their transportation options. With so much to repair or replace and lost wages, many families' financial stability faltered. "When there's a storm like this, everybody is going to prioritize basic needs first, that's just part of the human condition," Herman said. "Parents are going to prioritize their kids and put themselves last. Unfortunately, that has a negative impact on the kids as well." In some cases, parents struggled to even feed their infants. Parts of western North Carolina went nearly two months on a boil water notice because the floodwaters had contaminated drinking water. Some parents had no clean water to add to formula, said Katherine Hyde-Hensley, a perinatal psychologist who sees clients in and around Asheville. There are few greater stressors for new parents than not being able to safely feed their infant, she said. Hyde-Hensley said some clients evacuated to homes of friends and family elsewhere, but that didn't protect them from weeks of instability and chaos as they tried to return home. "They were trying to figure out, 'Can I come back?'" Hyde-Hensley said. "'Can I wash bottles? Can I wash dishes? Can I wash diapers? How am I going to bathe my baby?'" Allison Rollans, a doula, childbirth educator, infant specialist, and owner of High Country Doulas, serves clients in eastern Tennessee, northwestern North Carolina, and southwestern Virginia, all of which sustained major damage in the storm. She said many of her clients have yet to fully grasp the stress of what they've lived through. "When you're in it, you're just sort of going through it, you're in survival mode," Rollans said. "It will take years of reflecting on this to see the real impact of it." A warmer world As temperatures rise and as neighborhoods continue to be built and expand in vulnerable places, weather disasters are striking more frequently and with more ferocity. Helene was one of 27 disasters across the U.S. to cause at least $1 billion in damage last year. This number is starkly higher than the long-term average number of billion-dollar weather events since 1980, which is nine. The growing risks are not lost on new parents, said epidemiologist Jennifer Barkin, a professor at Mercer University School of Medicine in Macon, Georgia. Maternal mental health has always been a focus of Barkin's research. Recently, she's begun to focus on the impact of climate disasters. In one study, Barkin's team surveyed 101 postpartum women in Australia about their levels of distress. Unsurprisingly, the more aware the women were of the growing risk of climate catastrophes, and the more vulnerable they expected to be when one struck their community, the higher their rates of anxiety and distress. Days after her team submitted the Australian paper for publication last fall, Helene arrived in southern Georgia. Although the storm didn't hit Barkin's home in Macon directly, it caused widespread flooding and power outages in the rural counties south of town, where Barkin's research team works with pregnant and postpartum women. "I don't think that area had ever seen a storm like that before," Barkin said. "We weren't able to conduct business as usual because [my team] didn't have access to gas or electricity." In the months since, her team interviewed 24 new moms in Georgia, including Monard, about their experiences and their feelings of ongoing safety. Hyde-Hensley said the planet's environmental future has come up again and again in her conversations with clients. Even before the storms, many new parents felt profoundly worried about "what their child is going to have to deal with for the next 60 to 80 years," she said. The storm made that threat tangible, and plunged some into anxiety about future storms. That fear is rational, because stakes get higher as more climate disasters strike a community, Barkin said. "You're more resilient if it's not chronic. When an area is getting flooded over and over, the community can't bounce back the same way," she said. Community comes together after disaster hits "It was pitch black and you couldn't see anything, but all you could hear was the storm, the trees just literally snapping, sounding like popsicle sticks breaking off into the distance," said Allyson Byrd, whose son was three months old when Hurricane Helene hit. "That was such an eerie, kind of an ominous type feeling." Byrd, who has three older children from ages 6 to 9, said the storm took a mental toll on her. Byrd lives with her four children and her parents in her hometown of Swainsboro, Georgia. "It was hard to keep [my children] afloat and myself afloat mentally," she said. Even Byrd's older children were too young to fully understand what was happening, why the lights were out for so long, and why there was nothing else to keep them busy except each other's company. "That was a lot mentally for me to try to balance," Byrd said. "I needed to stay stable myself while keeping the kids mentally stable and not let them see me fall apart." There was also the stress of trying to figure out how to store breast milk at a safe temperature without a working refrigerator. When the storm made landfall in South Georgia, Byrd was trying to make the transition from breast milk to formula with her new baby. But it was hard to locate ice to keep the milk from spoiling. "Once people were able to get some type of cellular service they were making social media posts to get cans of milk from people," Byrd said. Despite the hardship, Byrd said it was encouraging to see her community come together to support each other during the storm. "Economic status and where you stood as far as salary level, all of that just got put in the background," Byrd said. "It didn't matter." Herman, the psychiatric nurse practitioner in West Jefferson, has observed that both giving and receiving this kind of community support has served her clients. "It's so helpful to us, as humans, to be able to extend help to one another, and I think that was protective to people who had that opportunity." Research by Harville's team and others has confirmed that social support can shield pregnant people from the worst mental health outcomes of a disaster. Among other things, Harville's team found that people who had sustained major intangible losses-family stability, feelings of closeness and companionship with loved ones, a daily routine, and time for sleep-suffered far more depression than those whose losses were mainly tangible-cars, homes, possessions, even access to food. This critical support can come from a trusted maternal health provider. After experiencing major floods in Queensland, Australia, a study published in 2018 found women who had a strong and continuous relationship with their midwife throughout the disaster had fewer symptoms of anxiety and depression than those who didn't. Birth doulas, whose roles include helping postpartum mothers meet their emotional and physical needs, may have played a similar role for their clients during and after Helene. "As a birth doula, we have very close contact with our clients personally before labor and after labor," said Emily Bohannon, executive director of the Birth Circle Community, a nonprofit organization aimed at empowering families through efforts like birth preparation classes and postpartum social support in Statesboro, Georgia. When Helene hit, the group amped up their support for families with new babies, organizing a supply drive for clean water, formula, and diapers. The community support was overwhelming; at the end of the drive, the Birth Circle Community ended up with double the amount of items they started with. "Within a week, we were able to get hundreds of items from local people and nonprofits and business owners," Bohannon said. "The day of the supply drive, we had dozens of families show up and get their items that they needed." Social support can also come from public programs. Harville's team compared Katrina-affected pregnant women who had standard prenatal care to those who also received services from Healthy Start New Orleans. Healthy Start, a federal program started in 1991, provides services to families in 115 American communities, from pregnancy until the child reaches 18 months old. Healthy Start outreach workers provide prenatal care and education, help families navigate housing and food services, promote fathers' involvement, and facilitate mental health screenings and referrals. Harville's team found that compared to the women who received standard prenatal care, those in Healthy Start were disproportionately young, low-income, unpartnered, and Black, had suffered worse experiences in the storm, and had more symptoms of depression and post-traumatic stress than their better-resourced peers outside of the program-all factors associated with worse birth outcomes. Through Healthy Start, women received mental health counseling and prenatal education, and their birth outcomes were no different than those of their peers with more resources. Awareness of postpartum depression has exploded over the last decade, said Wendy Davis, president and CEO of Postpartum Support International, a nonprofit that provides support to new parents struggling with their mental health and trains health care professionals on the issue. Compared to 10 years ago, more providers are educated about postpartum depression, some states require insurance companies to cover it, the screening rate has increased, and there are better services for those who suffer. At the end of President Donald Trump's first term, he signed a bill creating the Maternal Mental Health Hotline, whose counselors answer calls and texts 24 hours a day in English and Spanish. The hotline is operated by PSI, whose counselors provide a listening ear, advice, and connections to local therapists and support groups for parents struggling with their mental health. Davis said that use of the hotline has steadily climbed since it launched on Mothers Day 2022, and it now receives thousands of calls and messages every month. Davis said that outreach to the hotline spikes after hurricanes, tornadoes, and forest fires. The Biden-Harris administration also embraced the issue, releasing a blueprint for lowering the country's sky-high levels of maternal mortality, which is highest for Black mothers. It's unclear if these new investments in the wellbeing of young families will remain intact under Trump's second administration, which has pursued sweeping cuts to health services and research. Within weeks of Trump's inauguration, the administration paused the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, an annual survey of maternal and infant health widely considered the gold-standard for maternity mental health data. At the end of March, the entire staff overseeing the survey was placed on administrative leave. The administration has also revoked billions in grants that had already been given to state health departments, including some that had funded maternal mental health services. Research on maternal and infant mortality has also been affected. Much of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Division of Reproductive Health, which studies maternal health, was shuttered, as was its Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities. More than a dozen research centers designed to investigate and improve maternal health were established in 2023 through a $168 million initiative by the National Institutes of Health; the funding of which is now in question. Harville says her current disaster research is not federally funded, but she has other grants she's "keeping a nervous eye on." Healthy Start was among the programs whose funding was briefly suspended by a Trump executive order in January before a federal judge blocked the move. Late last year, some versions of the Republican-proposed House budget bill sought to eliminate funding for Healthy Start. The administration is also reported to be considering deep cuts to Medicaid, which finances at least 42% of all births in the country. Davis said the hotline seems to be safe for now. The federal workers who provided administrative oversight of the Maternal Mental Health Hotline were laid off as part of the Department of Government Efficiency workforce reduction, Davis said, but other agency officials have stepped in to do that work, and the hotline remains operational and well supported. She said PSI's contract was recently reupped for three years, which she hopes will protect them from cuts. But she said it is painful to see other funding setbacks, which could slice into the real progress made on the issue over the last decade. "It's been so promising to see state and health care policy start to focus on this very vulnerable and important time," she said. In February 2025, five months after Hurricane Helene made landfall, the Swainsboro resident, Jelessica Monard, gave birth to a healthy baby girl. With power restored and her fridge back up and running, Monard's fiance visited for several weeks in February and into March, taking time off from his job in New Jersey to help with their daughter. "I could get some sleep. I could pump. I had a schedule," Monard said. "It was easier." This story was produced through a collaboration between Daily Yonder and Climate Central. Climate Central scientist Daniel Gilford contributed data reporting. This story was produced by The Daily Yonder and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. © Stacker Media, LLC.

Opinion - Public safety crisis: Budget cuts may cause US dams to fail
Opinion - Public safety crisis: Budget cuts may cause US dams to fail

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Opinion - Public safety crisis: Budget cuts may cause US dams to fail

Across the nation, dams are deteriorating while the storms pounding against them grow stronger and more frequent. The result: A growing number of disasters and an unacceptable level of flood risk for downstream communities. Lives, homes and livelihoods hang in the balance, even as dam safety oversight and funding are being eliminated in the current Congress. May 31 is National Dam Safety Awareness Day — a moment to remember the people who have died in dam failures and to urge action to ensure no more lives are lost in unnecessary and avoidable catastrophes. It should also be a wake-up call. The threat is not theoretical, it is reality. And the harsh reality is, it is getting worse and our elected leaders have yet to respond. There are more than half a million dams obstructing rivers and streams in all 50 states and in almost every community. Ownership and associated liability in the event of dam-breaks spans private owners, localities, states and the federal government, which controls some of the largest and most dangerous dams. Dams are infrastructure, and infrastructure fails. When dams fail, a wall of water surges downstream, destroying everything in its path. In the U.S. alone, thousands have died from dam failures. Even low head dams — smaller dams that typically have water continuously flowing over the dam crest — can be deadly, having entrapped and drowned 1,400 people in their hydraulic churn over the years. Dam failures are not tragedies of the distant past. Nearly 80 percent of emergency incidents and dam failures have occurred in the last 20 years. In 2019, for example, the Spencer Dam in Nebraska failed during a winter storm and drowned a man. Just last year the Rapidan Dam in Minnesota failed during a flood, swallowing a riverside home. The dam was known to be in a state of disrepair, and the dam owner had been weighing the decision to repair or remove the structure. Hurricane Helene, which dumped an unprecedented amount of rainfall onto the Southeast, pushed dams beyond their limit. Dozens of state-regulated dams failed or were severely damaged in record-breaking flooding. Many others were further degraded — leaving them compromised as the 2025 hurricane season begins. The majority of our nation's dams are beyond their design lifespan. With the average age across the nation surpassing six decades, it should be unsurprising that they were not built to withstand the storm and flood intensities that we are seeing now. Many are accidents just waiting to happen, especially as the funding and staff that maintain or upgrade these antiquated structures are being cut. The U.S. has put far too little investment into fixing this underappreciated public safety crisis, leading the American Society of Civil Engineers to give our dams a grade of D+. And a failing grade may well be around the corner. In the last two years, Congress has made major cuts to dam safety programs at dam-owning agencies and massive cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency National Dam Safety Program funding. This program provides critical support to state dam safety offices and for dam owners voluntarily seeking to repair or remove dams with high hazard potential. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law of 2021 provided an influx of funds, but more than half of those dedicated funds were subsequently cut in the 2024 and 2025 spending bills. Restoring and sustaining sufficient funding and staffing to the FEMA National Dam Safety Program is crucial to addressing the dam safety crisis. Lack of funding will leave communities, regardless of who they voted for, having to pay the price when dams break. At the state level, dam safety offices need the staffing, funding and programmatic infrastructure to hold dam owners responsible for the safety of their dams. Loopholes that allow some dam owners — even those owning high-hazard dams — to avoid safety regulation, must be closed. Unsafe dams that are not serving a critical purpose should be removed, and funding should be made available to support those removals. It is currently estimated that it would cost $165 billion to rehabilitate all non-federal dams. The longer dams are allowed to deteriorate, the higher that price tag grows. However, as the adage goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. More than half of dams on the landscape are obsolete, no longer serving the purpose they were built to provide. An investment to remove them instead of patching them up for another day may be a cost-efficient way of eliminating safety risks and expediently restoring water quality, wildlife habitat and recreational opportunities. Our nation's outdated 20th Century dams are buckling under 21st century weather extremes. They are quickly becoming ticking time bombs without the budget to diffuse them. This is not just an infrastructure issue — it is a public safety emergency. And Congress is on the verge of failing its most basic responsibility: to protect the American people. Members of Congress need to put public safety first and approve dedicated funding for the regular upkeep, rehabilitation and removal of dams. Tom Kiernan is president and CEO of American Rivers. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

New state regulations for vape products to take effect June 1: What to know
New state regulations for vape products to take effect June 1: What to know

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

New state regulations for vape products to take effect June 1: What to know

ALABAMA (WHNT) — The Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board announced that new state regulations regarding vape products are set to go into effect on June 1. HB8, also known as Act 2025-403, designates two specific retail permit types available to businesses for vape products, according to the ABC. They are as follows: ABC Tobacco PermitThe ABC Tobacco Permit authorizes the sale of the products listed below: Tobacco, tobacco products, and/or non-vapor-based alternative nicotine; or E-liquid, electronic nicotine delivery systems, and vapor-based alternative nicotine products that have received a marketing order or other authorization under 21 U.S.C. § 387j(c)(1)(A)(i) NOTE: This means that the product (i) has received an FDA marketing order; (ii) has received an FDA marketing denial order that has been stayed, rescinded, or vacated by a court order or by the FDA itself; or (iii) is subject to a premarket tobacco application that was timely filed and remains under review by the FDA; and (iv) is listed on The ENDS Directory is maintained by the Department of Revenue pursuant to Section 28-11-17.1. Those permittees that sell the above-mentioned products may renew their ABC Tobacco Permit for the 2025-2026 year when renewals begin June 1, 2025. The annual permit fee for an ABC Tobacco Permit is now $150. ABC Specialty Retailer of Electronic Nicotine Delivery System PermitThe ABC Specialty Retailer of Electronic Nicotine Delivery System Permit authorizes the saleof any allowable e-liquids, electronic nicotine delivery systems, and vapor-based alternativeNicotine products that meet the requirements of state and federal law, The annual permit fee for an ABC Specialty Retailer of Electronic Nicotine Delivery System Permit is $1,000.00. Any location that meets the definition of a Specialty Retailer of Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems Permit under 28-11-2(19) must obtain the Specialty Retailer of Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems Permit. These locations must be restricted to those 21 years of age or older and have signs posted indicating the age restriction. All products sold must meet all requirements of state and federal law. Current permit holders will receive official correspondence to the email address on record fromthe Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. Under HB8, convenience stores across the state are only allowed to sell 34 tobacco and menthol-flavored e-cigarette products approved by the FDA. All other flavors — including hundreds currently pending FDA review — will be banned from sale except in age-restricted vape shops where only those 21 and over can enter. Other notions in HB8 include: Banning the sale of vapes in vending machines Increasing penalties for selling vapes to minors under 21 Until the FDA begins to regulate vape products in the U.S., Alabama, as a state, must restrict and prohibit the sale of foreign vape products The State Board of Education shall adopt a model policy for vape awareness, education and prevention programs in public K-12 schools You can read the full enrolled act below. HB8-2025-403Download Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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