logo
On final day of session, Gov. Abbott vetoes Botox patient safety bill filed after KXAN investigation

On final day of session, Gov. Abbott vetoes Botox patient safety bill filed after KXAN investigation

Yahoo02-06-2025
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed legislation which aimed to enhance Botox patient safety and transparency Monday, calling the measure 'unnecessary and overly-burdensome' for business in Texas.
Senate Bill 378 would have prohibited barbers, cosmetologists and estheticians from administering Botox and other injectables unless they were licensed or authorized to give the shots. The measure would also have given the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation more disciplinary authority over those professionals.
'The passage of SB 378 is a critical step that protects the public from unqualified individuals administering potentially dangerous injections. This common-sense legislation ensures cosmetologists and barbers are not performing injections without proper physician supervision,' the bill's author, Sen. Charles Schwertner, R-Georgetown, explained after the measure was sent to the governor on May 21. KXAN has reached out to Schwertner's office for comment after the veto.
'Texas should be removing barriers for small businesses and occupational licensees,' Senate Secretary Patsy Spaw said on the chamber floor Monday, reading the governor's written words verbatim. 'Senate Bill 378 by Schwertner does just the opposite by, among other things, prohibiting a licensed cosmetologist or barber from 'making an incision into the dermis, layer of a person's skin.' Barbers who nick a customer's neck during a straight razor shave should not fear the loss of their licenses as we work to make government more efficient and less intrusive for Texans and businesses.'
While most of the governor's vetoes will be delivered after the session, SB 378's passage timeline required him to take action sooner or the bill would have gone into law without his signature. It is his first veto of a Senate bill this session.
'I disapprove of this bill,' Abbott wrote to Senators before sine die, the official end of the session. 'Since you remain gathered in regular session and continue to conduct formal business, I am delivering this disapproval message directly to you along with the unsigned official enrolled copy of the bill.'
Schwertner told lawmakers earlier in the session there have been increased reports of 'Botox parties' which include unauthorized and unsafe injections to friends and family without proper supervision.
RELATED: 'Botox party' bill heads to governor
Schwertner previously shared with KXAN investigators that, by law, estheticians and cosmetologists can only perform injections, including Botox, under the authority of a physician. He added that while the Texas Medical Board has disciplinary authority over physicians who are authorizing the injections, there is no oversight when it comes to professionals including estheticians or cosmetologists who could be in violation.
During a House committee hearing in April, lawmakers received nearly 50 written comments from many Texas estheticians and injectors opposing the legislation and sharing concerns about their businesses being impacted.
KXAN INVESTIGATION: Backroom Botox a 'wild west' in Texas
Patient protection advocates have been pushing for oversight in the growing industry. The legislation was filed after a KXAN investigation uncovered that anyone in Texas can become certified to do injections, including Botox. KXAN's 'Backroom Botox' investigation highlighted medical concerns after a Botox treatment led to an emergency in the back room of a local boutique in Dublin, a city north of Austin.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sen. Eric Barlow announces run for Wyoming governor
Sen. Eric Barlow announces run for Wyoming governor

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Sen. Eric Barlow announces run for Wyoming governor

CHEYENNE — State Sen. Eric Barlow, R-Gillette, announced his bid for governor of Wyoming on Tuesday in Wright. Barlow served in the Wyoming House of Representatives for five consecutive terms from 2013 to 2022 before he began his first Senate term in 2023. He was Speaker of the House in 2021 and 2022, and currently chairs the Senate Labor, Health and Social Services Committee and the Mental Health and Vulnerable Adults Task Force, as well as serving on the Select Committee on Tribal Relations. Unlike some other candidates, his candidacy is not rooted in specific priorities or policies, he said. Rather, he would serve as a voice responding to his constituents' needs, whether that be Wyoming energy independence, rural health access or water infrastructure. 'I love Wyoming. I love her honest, hardworking people whose grit and independent spirit make our beloved state so great,' Barlow said in a prepared statement. 'Kelly and I have been blessed to raise our children, Kate and Graham, here. I want the next generations to have even greater opportunities and a future here in Wyoming.' According to his campaign website, Barlow's approach to public service is to 'show up, listen and get the job done.' 'My approach has always been to listen, learn and do the work,' Barlow said in the statement. 'Wyoming deserves leaders who show up, who do the work, and who get results. That's what I've done — and that's exactly the kind of governor I will be.' Sen. Eric Barlow, R-Gillette (2025) Sen. Eric Barlow, R-Gillette He is a fourth-generation Wyomingite who was born and raised in Campbell County on his family's ranch. After graduating from Campbell County High School in 1984, Barlow joined the U.S. military and served in the Marine Corps. Following his military service, he went to school in Colorado and earned his Ph.D. in veterinary medicine. While he and his wife were both in school, their two children were born. The family moved to Newcastle, where Barlow practiced as a veterinarian before ending up in Gillette two years later. His practice primarily focuses on caring for cattle, sheep and bison. When Barlow's father passed away, he and Kelly took charge of the family ranch in Campbell County, where they raised their two children, with Kelly primarily homeschooling them. Eric Barlow was appointed to the Wyoming Livestock Board in 2006 and served for six years before seeking election to the Wyoming House of Representatives. Together, they now raise cattle, sheep and yak on the family ranch. As an elected official, Barlow said he has supported energy independence, property tax reductions, access to health care and private property rights. 'I am a leader who stands firmly on sound, conservative principles and who will fiercely defend your rights, including the Second Amendment and sanctity of life. As your next governor, I will protect your private property rights, safeguard our public lands, and keep Washington, D.C., out of Wyoming's business,' he said in the statement. The 2026 race for Wyoming governor is still relatively uncrowded. So far, only two other candidates have announced a bid for the state's top elected seat: Brent Bien, a Republican from Cody who ran unsuccessfully in the 2022 GOP primary, and Joseph Kibler, a Republican from Cheyenne who runs a web development and marketing company. Former U.S. Senate candidate Reid Rasner, who lost by a wide margin in the 2024 Republican primaries to Sen. John Barrasso and who has ambitions to purchase TikTok, has filed a campaign finance account for governor but has yet to announce his candidacy. The other key players at the moment are the incumbent, Gov. Mark Gordon, who would have to challenge existing term limits to seek a third consecutive term; first-term Secretary of State Chuck Gray, who also is a former state legislator; and U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, who was elected to a second two-year term last November. None have made formal announcements of their intentions. In 2013, the Wyoming Supreme Court ruled that term limits on the top elected positions in the state were unconstitutional, but omitted the governor's terms from the ruling. This means Gordon could seek to amend the Constitution in a court challenge if he wanted to seek a third term. It is unclear whether that challenge would be successful, and he had not indicated any intention to do so at the time of publication. In July, Gray released an internal poll of how he would fare if he sought election to the seat of governor or the state's sole seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Though he has not announced if or which seat he would seek, he indicated it is likely dependent on what Hageman does. Hageman has not yet indicated whether she will seek reelection to a third term in the U.S. House next year or make a run for governor.

Husted 'surprised' by reports of U.S. Senate challenge from Sherrod Brown
Husted 'surprised' by reports of U.S. Senate challenge from Sherrod Brown

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Husted 'surprised' by reports of U.S. Senate challenge from Sherrod Brown

Aug. 13—Republican U.S. Sen. Jon Husted of Ohio, at a Dayton-area event on Wednesday, reacted to reports that he'll face former longtime U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, in the 2026 election. "Look, I don't know who's gonna run. Maybe he'll run, maybe he won't. But I will say that it surprised me, honestly," Husted told reporters during an event at Sinclair Community College. "I mean, what are we, 14 months, 16 months away from the election? He just lost one ten months ago." There's been plenty of talk about Brown, one of the state's only Democrats with considerable name recognition, since he lost his bid for a fourth term in the U.S. Senate to Ohio Republican Bernie Moreno in November 2024. Brown lost that election by 3.6 percentage points in an election where President Donald Trump won the state by more than 11 points. The overperformance helped paint Brown as a viable gubernatorial candidate to challenge presumed GOP nominee Vivek Ramaswamy. Instead, recent reports from the Cleveland Plain Dealer and others indicate that Brown has decided to try to reclaim a spot in the U.S. Senate — the seat Husted currently holds. Husted, who was appointed by Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine to serve out the remainder of a Senate term originally won by Vice President JD Vance, shrugged off the idea of a Brown challenge, noting that he'd rather not talk politics. "Let's get some work done. Let's focus on actually solving problems at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and Sinclair Community College and those places before we start talking politics," Husted said. "But, if he chooses to run, he's been around for 50 years in elected office. They spent $300 million on him just ten months ago, and he lost. So, we'll see." ------ For more stories like this, sign up for our Ohio Politics newsletter. It's free, curated, and delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday evening. Avery Kreemer can be reached at 614-981-1422, on X, via email, or you can drop him a comment/tip with the survey below.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store