Florida enacted Senate Bill 56 prohibiting the injection, release, or dispersion of chemicals into the atmosphere within state borders for the express purpose of affecting temperature, weather, climate, or sunlight intensity. The prohibition largely duplicates an existing permit requirement because no permits for atmospheric chemical modification have been applied for or issued. The law increases penalties, including a fine of $100,000 for unlawful atmospheric chemical activity. The law responds to persistent public concerns about chemtrails and directs state agencies to log and investigate citizen reports, creating additional workload for under-resourced state officials while offering lawmakers a statutory assurance to address constituent worries.
Florida Senate Bill 56, passed into law in April of this year, prohibits "the injection, release, or dispersion, by any means, of a chemical, a chemical compound, a substance, or an apparatus into the atmosphere within the borders of Florida for the express purpose of affecting the temperature, weather, climate, or intensity of sunlight." What this law accomplishes, in practical terms, is nothing.
Why have this law? Because Florida is a state full of crazy people. "There are many of us senators who receive concerns and complaints on a regular basis," explained Ileana Garcia, Republican of Miami, who wrote this mess and who is talking here about chemtrails. "There's a lot of skepticism in regards to this, and basically, what I wanted to do with this is try to look for a way to separate fact from fiction."
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