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Bill

HB 3803

PESTICIDES-GLYPHOSATE BAN

104th Regular Session Introduced by Joyce Mason

Prohibits distribution, sale, offer for sale, and use of glyphosate and products containing it in Illinois, with Dept. of Agriculture enforcing rules.

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Bill Summary · HB 3803

Summary — HB 3803 (Pesticides — Glyphosate Ban)

Status and timeline
- Bill: HB 3803 — An Act amending the Illinois Pesticide Act (adds 415 ILCS 60/14.5).
- Sponsor: Rep. Joyce Mason. First reading 2/18/2025; enrolled, passed both chambers in May 2025; signed by the Governor 6/20/2025; effective immediately 6/20/2025.
- Current status: Became law; Department of Agriculture may adopt implementing rules.

Purpose / intent
- To prohibit the distribution, sale, offer for sale, and use of glyphosate and products containing glyphosate in Illinois, by adding a new Section 14.5 to the Illinois Pesticide Act.

Key provisions
- New statutory prohibition (415 ILCS 60/14.5):
- “No person shall distribute, sell, offer for sale, or use glyphosate or any products containing glyphosate within this State.”
- Defines “glyphosate” as the synthetic, non‑selective systemic herbicide N‑(phosphonomethyl)glycine with chemical formula C3H8NO5P.
- Rulemaking: Grants the Illinois Department of Agriculture authority to adopt any rules it deems necessary to implement the prohibition.

Scope and who is affected
- Broadly applies to “no person,” which would include manufacturers, distributors, retailers, commercial applicators, landscapers, farms, municipalities, school districts, and residential users.
- Covers both technical-grade glyphosate and formulated products (i.e., finished herbicide products that contain glyphosate as an active ingredient).

Notable omissions / implementation notes
- The statutory text contains no explicit exemptions (for agricultural use, public health, research, or other specific uses).
- The law does not specify enforcement mechanisms or penalties within the text of Section 14.5; enforcement details and implementation specifics are left to the Department of Agriculture’s rulemaking authority.
- Immediate effect upon signature (effective 6/20/2025) means stakeholders must refer to forthcoming Department rules for transition timelines, compliance obligations, and enforcement procedures.

Potential practical impacts (neutral description)
- Removal of glyphosate products from Illinois markets and cessation of their use in the State.
- Commercial and institutional users will need alternative weed-control products and practices; retailers and distributors will need to alter inventories.
- Regulatory guidance from the Department of Agriculture will be critical for compliance, transition timing, and enforcement details.

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

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