Several laws passed in the 2024 legislative session took effect Monday, establishing new policies and funding sources for education, economic development and the environment.
New fee for retail deliveries
A 50-cent delivery fee passed last year will now be applied to purchases at or over $100 of clothing or personal property subject to a sales tax. The resulting revenue will be allocated across the state for road improvements through a new transportation advancement account.
The $100 threshold for the fee includes all parts of the sale, including shipping charges and other taxes.
Drugs, medical devices, food, utilities like gas and electricity, and certain baby products are not included. Retailers with less than $1,000,000 of retail sales the previous year, and marketplace providers with less than $100,000 of retail sales don’t have to pay the fee.
House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, released a statement Monday protesting the fee.
“Minnesotans will be paying more for their deliveries thanks to Democrats’ new junk delivery fee,” Demuth said. “Minnesota families are already struggling with inflation, and are being hit even harder by the $10 billion in tax and fee increases Democrats passed over the last two years.”
Deepfake technology
A 2023 law criminalizing the use of deepfakes – videos, pictures or audio made with artificial intelligence to appear real — to sway an election has now been updated. Now, if found guilty of using deepfake technology to injure a candidate and influence an election, the law states a candidate must forfeit the nomination or office. The restriction now applies 90 days before a political party nominating convention, or after the absentee voting period has begun prior to a presidential primary, state primary, local primary or special election.
Education policy changes
Indigenous ceremonies, cultural practices and observances will be added to the list of excused religious absences in the next school year. Over the summer break, school districts must also adopt a language access plan with specific procedures on assistance to students and adults speaking a language other than English. Student journalists are now set to receive more free speech protections in school-sponsored media, and school districts must adopt a formal policy for student journalism.