A draft law to ban Chemtrails is considered by the Senate in Florida this week. Governor Ron Desantis (PBUH) supports the bill, with the aim of preventing what he calls “weather modification”.
“People have a lot of great ideas that they can enter and put things in the air to prevent the sun and save us from climate change,” says Desantis. “We do not play that game in Florida.”
Draft
SB-56 It is the “Chemtrails”. Under the sponsorship of Senator Elena Garcia (PBUH). It suggests a ban on “injection, release, or dispersion, by any means of chemicals, chemical compound, material, or device in the air within the limits of this condition for an explicit purpose is to influence temperature, weather, climate or severity of sunlight.”
The FDEP Environmental Protection Department will create a population system to submit reports with FDEP to investigate “suspected geological engineering activities”.

“Many members of the Senate receive concerns and complaints regularly regarding these condensation paths, also nicknamed Chemtrails“There is a lot of doubts,” says Garcia.
The bill version is very different
While the Senate version of the draft law calls for a complete ban, with heavy fines and possible imprisonment, Home version Do not seek a ban at all.
Instead, the house is aimed at the fine of operators who are “Cheptrailing” without a license. This bill also comes with less fines. Any person working without a license, or who lies in his request, will only be imposed on a second degree misdemeanor and a rate of $ 10,000.

The Senate’s version seeks to obtain a complete ban, which will strike violators with a third -class crime with a fine of $ 100,000.
“The House of Representatives in Florida softened the Senator Garcia’s legislation, and they will actually write down geological engineering and weather modification,” says Desantis.
If the new law is passed, it will affect July 1.