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Bill

Bill

AB 1111

Relating to: a public health campaign for prevention of tobacco and electronic cigarette use, grants to organizations working on youth vaping and cessation services, and making an appropriation. (FE)

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Margaret Arney and 8 co-sponsors

Establishes a statewide tobacco and e-cigarette prevention campaign and grants to groups for youth vaping prevention and cessation, funded by an appropriation.

Failed to pass pursuant to Senate Joint Resolution 1
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Bill Summary · AB 1111

Summary of Assembly Bill 1111 (Session 2025, Wisconsin)

1) Purpose and Intent

  • AB 1111 relates to establishing a public health campaign to prevent tobacco and electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use, providing grants to organizations that work on youth vaping prevention and cessation services, and making an appropriation to support these efforts.
  • The bill is categorized as a public health initiative focused on reducing youth tobacco and e-cigarette use through education, prevention campaigns, and targeted funding to community organizations.

2) Key Provisions and Changes

  • Public Health Campaign

    • Establishment or funding of a statewide public health campaign aimed at preventing tobacco and e-cigarette use.
    • Campaign likely designed to address youth vaping specifically, with messaging and outreach strategies to deter initiation and promote cessation resources.
  • Grants to Organizations

    • Provision of grants to organizations (likely nonprofits, health departments, or other eligible entities) that work on:
    • Youth vaping prevention programs
    • Cessation services (targeted at youth or the general population, with emphasis on youth)
    • Grants may support educational activities, school-based programs, community outreach, and access to cessation resources.
  • Appropriation

    • The bill includes an appropriation to fund the campaign and grant programs.
    • Specific dollar amounts, funding streams, or fiscal years are not provided in the available materials, but it implies a direct state allocation to support these activities.

3) Who and What Is Affected

  • Target Population
    • Wisconsin youths and young adults at risk of or currently using tobacco products or e-cigarettes.
    • Communities and schools implementing prevention programs.
  • Affected Entities
    • State government agencies responsible for public health and health promotion (e.g., Wisconsin Department of Health Services).
    • Nonprofit and community-based organizations applying for and receiving grant funding.
    • Educational institutions and youth-serving programs implementing prevention and cessation efforts.

4) Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Legislative Status
    • Introduced by a bipartisan group of representatives with multiple co-sponsors; has been referred to the Committee on Health, Aging and Long-Term Care.
    • Action history indicates introduction and committee referral in March 2026.
  • Co-sponsors
    • Notable bipartisan and cross-chamber co-sponsorship, signaling broad legislative interest.
  • Next Steps (typical)
    • If advanced by the committee, the bill would proceed to floor debates, potential amendments, and votes in the assembly and senate.
    • Upon passage, it would move to the governor for signature or veto. If signed, the appropriation and programmatic provisions would be implemented according to the bill’s specified timelines and administrative rules.

5) Notes and Context

  • The materials do not specify exact funding amounts, grant caps, or programmatic benchmarks (e.g., target reductions in youth tobacco use, duration of campaigns, or reporting requirements).
  • As a FE (Fiscal Effect) bill, the primary fiscal impact concerns the appropriation and ongoing funding for the public health campaign and grants.
  • No lobbying principal reported active in this session, though the bill has several co-sponsors from both chambers.

If you’d like, I can:
- Draft a more detailed section-by-section outline if the full bill text becomes available.
- Add a comparison to existing Wisconsin public health campaigns on tobacco prevention.
- Create a brief FAQ for the public explaining who can apply for grants and how funded campaigns will be evaluated.

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

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