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HB 2912

Relating to accelerated college credit programs; prescribing an effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Paul Evans

Arizona HB 2912 bans wage secrecy and using prior salary in hiring/equal-pay defenses; requires wage-disclosure notices and lets workers sue for damages and reinstatement.

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · HB 2912

Summary — HB 2912 (Introduced 2025)

Note: The document provided appears to combine text from two distinct measures both labeled “HB 2912” from different jurisdictions: (A) an Arizona employment bill addressing wage disclosure and pay history, and (B) an Illinois amendment to the Environmental Protection Act restricting mass releases of lighter‑than‑air balloons. Both are summarized below.

A. Arizona — Wage disclosure / salary‑history and equal‑pay provisions

Purpose
- Prohibits employer practices that keep employee wage information secret, bans salary‑history screening, and strengthens remedies for wage discrimination and equal‑pay claims.

Key provisions
- Adds A.R.S. § 23‑207 (Wage disclosure):
- Employers may not require nondisclosure of an employee’s wage information or require waivers denying the right to disclose wages.
- Employers may not take adverse actions or retaliate for voluntary wage discussions or for asserting rights under the section.
- Employers may not inquire about a prospective employee’s age or prior salary history before making an offer, unless voluntarily disclosed.
- Employers may not screen applicants by prior wage/salary history (including benefits) or seek that history from current/former employers or public records.
- Employers who provide employee handbooks must include notice of these rights.
- Civil penalties: $5,000 for a first violation; +$1,000 for subsequent violations (capped at $10,000).
- Civil liability to affected employees for special damages up to $10,000 plus attorney fees; injunctive relief available.
- Employees may sue for reinstatement, unpaid wages, lost service credits, and expungement of adverse records; class/collective actions permitted for similarly situated employees.
- Amends A.R.S. § 23‑341 (equal wage rates):
- Extends limitation period for actions to one year after employee knows or should have known (was six months).
- Bars employers from using an employee’s prior wage or salary history as a defense in equal‑pay actions.
- Adds A.R.S. § 41‑1469 (state administrative article):
- In wage/salary discrimination actions under state law, prior wage history cannot be used as a defense.

Who is affected
- Employers operating in Arizona, job applicants and current employees, human resources processes, and state enforcement bodies/courts.

Enforcement & remedies
- State civil penalties; private civil actions with monetary damages, attorney fees, injunctive relief, and employment remedies (reinstatement, expungement).

B. Illinois — Environmental Protection Act amendment (balloon releases)

Purpose
- Prohibits large mass releases of helium or other lighter‑than‑air balloons to reduce environmental harm (wildlife impacts, litter, hazards).

Key provisions
- Amends 415 ILCS 5 (Environmental Protection Act) by adding Section 52.15:
- Prohibits knowingly releasing 25 or more helium/lighter‑than‑air balloons into the atmosphere within a 24‑hour period in Illinois, with specific exceptions:
- Releases by institutions of higher education or governmental agencies (or under government contract) for bona fide scientific/meteorological purposes;
- Balloons released indoors that remain indoors;
- Helium balloons necessary for safe operation of a hot air balloon.
- Enforcement/penalties:
- First violation: written warning from the Agency.
- Second violation: civil penalty up to $500.
- Third or subsequent violation: civil penalty up to $1,000.
- Release of up to 25 balloons at one time = single offense; releases over 25 count as separate violations per each 25 balloons.
- Corresponding edits to the statute’s penalty mitigation/aggravation and minimum‑penalty considerations.

Who is affected
- Event organizers, retailers, party planners, institutions (colleges, public agencies), and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (enforcement).

Procedural status (as provided)
- Illinois bill entries: introduced Feb 6, 2025 (Rep. Janet Yang Rohr), first reading Feb 6; assigned to committees; sponsor filings Feb 5.
- Arizona bill entries: introduced Feb 18, 2025; hearings/committee referrals listed (Energy & Environment; Homeland Security, Public Safety & Veterans’ Affairs; Rules Committee); read first time March 19, 2025; status shows Rule 19(a) / re‑referred to Rules Committee.

If you want, I can:
- Produce a single unified explainer focused on one of the two bills (Arizona wage bill or Illinois balloon restriction), or
- Draft a short briefing memo comparing stakeholder impacts and likely enforcement questions for either measure.

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

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