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HB 1645

Chesapeake, City of; amending charter, dates of elections, etc.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Cliff Hayes

Creates a dedicated grant fund (Indiana) to support rural utility infrastructure projects for housing, jobs, and economic development, with rules limiting rate impacts.

Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0009)
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Bill Summary · HB 1645

Note: the document you provided includes multiple, unrelated bills all labeled “HB 1645” from different states. The title and header (City of Philadelphia; contribution to Philadelphia Transit) do not match the substantive text included. Below are clear, separate summaries for each distinct HB 1645 contained in the document, with jurisdiction, purpose, key provisions, affected parties, and available status/timeline. If you need a focused summary for a specific jurisdiction (Philadelphia, Indiana, Arkansas, or Illinois), tell me which one and I’ll expand or tailor the summary.

Indiana — HB 1645 (Rural Utility Infrastructure Grant Fund)

  • Jurisdiction / Citation: Indiana; adds IC 5-28-25.5 (new chapter)
  • Purpose: Create a grant fund to help rural areas obtain utility infrastructure (electricity, natural gas, water, wastewater) needed for residents and economic development.
  • Key provisions:
    • Establishes the Rural Utility Infrastructure Grant Fund (the Fund) administered by the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC).
    • Defines eligible entities: counties, municipalities, persons who are current/prospective utility customers needing new/increased service for economic development or new/expanded facilities, and economic development organizations serving rural areas.
    • Defines “rural area” as unincorporated areas and “small municipalities” (with population/metrics to be set in IEDC rules).
    • Authorizes grants for costs directly related to construction or deployment of utility infrastructure (electric, gas, water, wastewater).
    • Fund sources: gifts, grants, contributions, and other money; invested by Treasurer; money does not revert to state general fund.
    • Grants used for infrastructure that is used by a utility may not be included in a regulated utility’s rate base or otherwise recovered through utility rates.
    • IEDC must adopt implementing rules including application forms, eligibility of expenses, and project prioritization.
  • Who is affected: rural counties and small municipalities, businesses or developers in rural areas, economic development organizations, utilities (project funding cannot be rate‑based).
  • Timeline/status: Bill text lists an effective date of July 1, 2025. (Introduced Jan 21, 2025; referred to Committee on Utilities, Energy and Telecommunications.)

Arkansas — HB 1645 (Microbrewery-Restaurant Private Club Advertising)

  • Jurisdiction / Citation: Arkansas; amends Ark. Code § 3-5-1904(d)(2)
  • Purpose: Clarify/expand what advertising is permitted for microbrewery-restaurant private clubs.
  • Key provisions:
    • Amends existing prohibition exceptions so that allowed advertising includes:
    • Advertisements consisting solely of the club’s name; and
    • Use of social media, websites, or other electronic means to provide consumer information about the club, explicitly including location, events, and menu.
  • Who is affected: microbrewery-restaurant private clubs and their advertising practices; regulators enforcing alcohol advertising rules.
  • Timeline/status: Amendment text dated March 13, 2025; procedural entries indicate the amendment was read and adopted. (Specific final enactment status should be confirmed with Arkansas legislative records.)

Illinois — HB 1645 (Ban on ester formulations of 2,4‑D)

  • Jurisdiction / Citation: Illinois; adds 415 ILCS 60/13.7 to the Illinois Pesticide Act
  • Purpose: Prohibit sale and use of ester formulations of the herbicide 2,4‑dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4‑D).
  • Key provisions:
    • Makes it a violation of the Illinois Pesticide Act to sell or use any product containing ester formulations of 2,4‑D.
  • Who is affected: pesticide manufacturers, distributors, retailers, applicators, and agricultural users in Illinois who use 2,4‑D; potential impacts on crops, weed management practices, and suppliers who rely on ester formulations.
  • Timeline/status: Introduced Jan 28, 2025. The document shows approvals/processing entries including a “Notification that HB1645 is now Act 601” (Apr 14, 2025) and “Approved by Governor” (Mar 28, 2025) — verify with Illinois legislative records for final effective date and any exceptions or implementation rules.

If you want: I can
- verify final enactment and effective dates for a specific jurisdiction,
- produce a one‑page fact sheet for one of these bills (impacts, estimated costs, stakeholders), or
- reconcile which HB 1645 corresponds to the “City of Philadelphia; authorize a contribution to Philadelphia Transit” title if you can provide the correct text or state.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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