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West Virginia Senate advances broad slate of bills, including disability communication 'blue envelope' program and public-health measures

West Virginia Senate · March 10, 2026

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Summary

The Senate on March 9 took up numerous bills on second and third reading, approving a range of measures — from a 'blue envelope' program to require scalp-cooling coverage for chemotherapy patients — mostly by unanimous or near-unanimous votes; the chamber also adopted committee amendments to several bills before passing them.

CHARLESTON — The West Virginia Senate on March 9 considered and passed a large number of bills on second and third reading, including public-safety, health, regulatory and administrative measures. Most measures passed with unanimous or near-unanimous votes and were communicated to the House.

Among the bills the Senate passed:

• Senate Bill 467 (house amendment concurred) — Clarifies enforcement and provides an absolute defense for those who later produce evidence they or a passenger are Purple Heart recipients; motion to concur and passage recorded as 34 yays, 0 nays.

• Senate Bill 712 (house amendment concurred) — Authorizes installation of cattle guards on certain public roads with provisions for signage and landowner maintenance; passed 34-0.

• House Bill 40 53 (Blue Envelope program) — Directs State Police to develop a blue envelope to help law enforcement identify drivers with autism spectrum disorder, dementia, or intellectual and developmental disabilities and provide communication guidance; the Senate passed the bill on third reading and transmitted action to the House.

• House Bill 40 89 (preservation of hair during chemotherapy, 'Jessica Huffman Bill') — Requires coverage for scalp cooling systems in health benefit plans issued or renewed on or after Jan. 1, 2027; passed 33 yays, 1 nay, 1 absent.

• House Bill 44 12 (age verification for adults-only content) — Requires reasonable age verification methods for material harmful to minors, with civil liabilities and privacy provisions; passed 34-0.

• House Bill 54 37 / Vape Safety Act (as amended) — Committee strike-and-insert replaced the bill with the contents of a Senate bill and the Senate adopted the amendments and passed the bill, 34-0.

Many other committee substitutes and rule bundles were advanced from second to third reading, and several departmental rule packages and administrative clarifications were adopted by committee amendment before passage. Where roll-call tallies were recorded in the Journal, most measures passed by votes such as 34-0 or 33-1, reflecting broad bipartisan support on the floor that day.

What this means: The Senate moved a busy floor calendar, approving both policy-focused measures (for example, protections for drivers with communication challenges and coverage for chemotherapy-related scalp cooling) and technical or administrative bills; most actions were taken with little floor debate.

Provenance: See transcript entries listing committee reports, third readings, and roll-call tallies beginning with SEG 268 through SEG 1775.