Ven. Gen 10th, 2025

    Taylor Swift performs onstage for the opening night of The Eras Tour at State Farm Stadium on March 17, 2023, in Glendale, Ariz.

Kevin Winter/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management

Kevin Winter/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management

Across the country, the new year will usher in thousands of new state laws. At least 20 states increase statewide minimum wage starting Jan. 1 — the highest in Washington state at $16.66 an hour, followed by California at $16.50. Kentucky becomes the latest state to legalize medical marijuana and several states, including Delaware, tighten gun control. Here are other significant state laws taking effect Jan 1. Taylor Swift ticket meltdown spurs industry changes Minnesota is the latest state to increase transparency when purchasing tickets to concerts, sporting events and other large-scale events. “The Ticketing Fairness Act” will require “all-in pricing” to ensure ticket buyers know the total cost of a ticket upfront. The law bans deceptive advertising and speculative pricing. The bill’s sponsor, Democratic state Rep. Kelly Moeller, says the inspiration for the bill came from her experience in trying to secure tickets for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Minneapolis last summer, widely viewed as a Ticketmaster fiasco. Sponsor Message

The Minnesota law also bans bot services from buying tickets to drive up costs. Gov. Tim Walz signed the bill over the summer. It follows similar legislation signed into law by Maryland Gov. Wes Moore. Kids under 14 banned from social media A Florida law that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts, and limits 14 and 15-year-olds to accounts authorized by their parents, takes effect Wednesday. However, Social media companies may not immediately kick those kids off their platforms. Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody agreed in November not to enforce the law while litigation is ongoing. In October, parties filed a lawsuit against the Florida law saying that some states have “taken it upon themselves to restrict minors’ access to constitutionally protected speech.” As NPR has reported, states like Florida may look to Australia to see how that country’s new social media ban for kids under 16 shakes out. California toughens penalties for retail and drug crimes California Democrats and Republicans alike say they felt pressure this year to pass a slate of new laws to stiffen penalties for retail theft and drug-related crimes. Together, the laws make it easier to aggregate similar crimes in charges, even across jurisdictions. They also make it a crime to break into a car, even if it’s unlocked. Democrats proposed many of the new crime laws after Proposition 36 made it to the ballot. That measure strengthened penalties for drug and theft-related crimes and increased treatment requirements. It passed in Novem   

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