From minimum wage hikes to a ban on gas-powered leaf blowers, these new laws take effect in 2022
As Americans navigated government and private sector mandates about masking and vaccinations, elected leaders also worked to change other aspects of everyday life, enacting laws that affect everything from public school curriculum to legal recreational pot.
With 2022 upon us, here are some of the new laws that went into effect January 1.
The Empire State’s hike — along with those in California, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island — is part of scheduled raises to reach $15-per-hour minimums, according to a report from Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory US, which provides finance, compliance and regulatory information.
States also increased rates because of previously approved legislation or ballot initiatives, and other state-mandated wage increases — in places like Arizona, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, Ohio, South Dakota, Vermont and Washington — are due to automatic cost-of-living adjustments that are based on inflation.
Missouri voters passed a proposition in 2018 that gradually increases the statewide minimum wage to $12 over five years. Michigan, New Mexico and Virginia adopted similar legislation with $12 goals.
Surprise medical bills
The federal ban — which Congress approved in late 2020 — prohibits most unexpected medical charges from out-of-network providers and will apply to about 10 million bills a year, according to federal estimates.
It protects patients when they receive emergency care or scheduled treatment from doctors and hospitals that are not in their insurance networks and that they did not choose. Consumers are responsible only for their in-network cost-sharing in these situations.
School curriculum
Alcohol and recreational cannabis
Californians of legal drinking age had something else to cheer to at midnight: several more years of to-go alcohol sales.
And in Montana, residents 21 and older will be allowed to purchase cannabis for recreational use in some counties starting Saturday.
The law applies only to counties that approved a 2020 ballot initiative related to recreational cannabis use.
Environment
As policymakers have discussed humans’ impact on the environment, some mundane things were caught in the crosshairs.
For residents of Washington, DC, it’s gas-powered leaf blowers.
CNN’s Shawna Mizell and Tami Luhby contributed to this report.
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