This week at the

General Assembly

 

STATE HOUSE — Here are the highlights from news and events that took place in the General Assembly this week. For more information on any of these items visit http://www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease

 

§  House passes Shekarchi legislation for emergency housing options

The House of Representatives passed legislation (2025-H 5100A) sponsored by Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23, Warwick) to enable cities and towns to allow for temporary emergency housing structures, Supportive and Versatile Emergency units (“SAVE units”), for people experiencing homelessness during severe weather and/or natural or man-made disasters. The bill now heads to the Senate, where Sen. Jacob E. Bissaillon (D-Dist. 1, Providence) has introduced the legislation (2025-S 0501).

Click here to see news release

 

§  House OKs ban on PFAS chemicals in firefighters’ gear
The House of Representatives approved legislation sponsored by Rep. June S. Speakman (D-Dist. 68, Warren, Bristol) to prohibit the manufacture, sale or distribution of any firefighting personal protective equipment containing intentionally added PFAS chemicals in Rhode Island beginning Jan. 1, 2027. The bill (2025-H 5019) now goes to the Senate, where Sen. Walter S. Felag Jr. (D-Dist. 10, Warren, Bristol, Tiverton) is sponsoring its Senate companion (2025-S 0241).
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§  House OKs Fellela bill that would require AEDs on golf courses
The House of Representatives approved the David Casey Act (2025-H 5083A) introduced by Rep. Deborah A. Fellela (D-Dist. 43, Johnston) that would mandate automatic external defibrillators on public and private golf courses. The measure now moves to the Senate, where similar legislation (2025-S 0475) has been introduced by Sen. Andrew R. Dimitri (D-Dist. 25, Johnston).
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§  Legislation would permit public utilities to purchase clean nuclear power
Sen. David P. Tikoian (D-Dist. 22, Smithfield, Lincoln, North Providence) and Rep. Joseph J. Solomon Jr. (D-Dist. 22, Warwick) have introduced legislation (2025-S 0318, 2025-H 5575) that would allow public utilities that provide electric and gas distribution to purchase clean, safe nuclear power at a competitive cost from out-of-state facilities.
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§  Bill would acknowledge grief in lawsuits regarding negligent death of pets
Rep. Thomas E. Noret (D-Dist. 25, Coventry, West Warwick) and Rep. Jon D. Brien (I-Dist. 49, Woonsocket, North Smithfield) have introduced a bill (2025-H 5926) that would create a cause of action for the intentional or negligent injury or death of a pet.
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§  Healthy School Meals for All Act introduced
Rep. Justine Caldwell (D-Dist. 30, East Greenwich, West Greenwich) and Sen. Lammis J. Vargas (D-Dist. 28, Cranston, Providence) have introduced the Healthy School Meals for All Act (2025-H 57422025-S 0430) to provide all public-school students access to breakfast and lunch at no cost, regardless of family income, to ensure they are fed and prepared to learn.
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§  Ujifusa, Stewart bills would lower prescription and Medicaid costs
Legislation filed by Sen. Linda L. Ujifusa (D-Dist. 11, Portsmouth, Bristol) and Rep. Jennifer A. Stewart (D-Dist. 59, Pawtucket) would curb the harmful activities of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), private corporations that work on behalf of insurers and make enormous profits as middlemen, driving up prescription costs. The bills (2025-S 01732025-H 5498, 2025-S 01172025-H 5463) would ban PBMs from engaging in “spread pricing,” wherein they charge health plans and payers more for a prescription drug than what they reimburse to the pharmacy — and then keep the difference or “spread.”
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  • Boylan, McKenney bill would keep guns out of hands of hate crime perpetrators
    Rep. Jennifer Boylan (D-Dist. 66, Barrington, East Providence) and Sen. Mark McKenney (D-Dist. 30, Warwick) have introduced legislation (2025-H 56522025-S 0530) to reduce gun violence by prohibiting those sentenced to a hate crime from purchasing and possessing guns.

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  • Gu, Carson introduce bill to set liability standards for artificial intelligence
    Sen. Victoria Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestown, South Kingstown) and Rep. Lauren H. Carson (D-Dist. 75, Newport) are sponsoring legislation (2025-S 03582025-H 5224) to ensure that victims of accidental harm caused by artificial intelligence systems have legal recourse.

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  • Murray, Furtado introduce bill to address mental health crisis in schools
    Chairwoman of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee Melissa Murray (D-Dist. 24, Woonsocket, North Smithfield) and Rep. Jenni A. Furtado (D-Dist. 64, East Providence, Pawtucket) have introduced legislation (2025-S 02562025-H 5532) to provide additional support to schools to fund mental and behavioral health support for students.

Click here to see news release.

 

  • Legislators, advocates rally in support of freedom to read

Rep. David Morales (D-Dist. 7, Providence) and Sen. Mark McKenney (D-Dist. 30, Warwick) were joined by the Rhode Island Library Association, the American Library Association, the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island and local authors and advocates at a State House event Thursday to call for the passage of legislation (2025-H 5726, 2025-S 0238) to protect libraries and their patrons from partisan or doctrinal book-banning efforts.

Click here to see news release.                                              

President Trump will leave tonight for a multi-day trip to Asia. The trip includes a high-stakes sit-down with Chinese President Xi Jinping [[ she jeen-peeng ]] in South Korea. China and the U.S. have been involved in a trade standoff since Trump took office for the second time        The U.S.'s largest aircraft carrier is headed to the Caribbean as strikes on drug boats continue. The Pentagon said Secretary of War Pete Hegseth ordered the USS Gerald R. Ford to the Caribbean to help "dismantle Transnational Criminal Organizations and counter narco-terrorism in defense of the homeland." This comes as the U.S. carried out an overnight strike on an alleged Tren de Aragua drug boat that killed all six people on board.        Polling monitors will be sent to California and New Jersey by the Justice Department ahead of elections in those states. Attorney General Pam Bondi said, "Transparency at the polls translates into faith in the electoral process." California will vote on Proposition 50, a measure that aims to redraw the state's congressional map. Meanwhile, New Jersey will elect a new governor.        Meteorologists are explaining why the U.S. mainland haven't been hit by hurricanes so far this season. Experts say it's because the high pressure system behind the steering mechanism for the storms is weak this season. It also has to do with the storms forming further east of the U.S.        The American Heart Association is updating its CPR guidelines. Experts say the update to the life-saving technique reflects a troubling reality in the U.S. -- the growing opioid epidemic. The new guidelines offer ways of recognizing opioid overdose and how to administer the drug naloxone to reverse its effects.        This weekend's box office is expected to be topped by the anime film "Chainsaw Man - The Movie: Reze Arc." It made three-point-four-million-dollars from Thursday previews last night and is expected to bring in between eleven and 15-million-dollars in its debut. Elsewhere, "Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere" made 850-thousand-dollars and is targeting eight to 12-million this weekend.