Assembly Floor
- Chris Ward
Legislator
The assembly is now in session. Assembly Member Dixon notices the absence of a quorum. Sergeant at Arms prepare. Prepare the chamber and bring in the absent members. The clerk will call the role.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Addis, Aguiar-Curry, Alanis, Alvarez, Arambula Bains, Bauer-Khan, Bennett, Berman, Boerner, Bonta, Bryan, Calderon, Carrillo, Cervantes, Chen, Connolly, Dahle, Davies, Dixon, Essayli, Flora, Mike Fong, Vince Fong, Friedman, Gabriel, Gallagher, Garcia, Gipson, Grayson, Haney, Hart, Holden, Hoover, Irwin, Jackson, Jones-Sawyer, Karla, Lackey, Lee, Lowenthal, Maienschein, Mathis, McCarty, McKinnor, Muratsuchi, Nguyen, Ortega, Pacheco, Papan, Jim Patterson, Joe Patterson, Pellerin, Petrie-Norris, Quirk-Silva, Ramos, Reyes, Luz Rivas, Robert Rivas, Rodriguez, Rubio, Sanchez, Santiago, Shiavo, Soria, Ta, Ting, Valencia, Villapudua, Waldron, Wallis, Ward, Weber, Wicks, Wilson, Wood Zbur, Mr. Speaker.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Members, a quorum is present. We ask that our guests and our visitors in the gallery and in the rear of the chamber to please stand for the day's prayer and pledge. Today's prayer will be offered by our. Assembly Chaplain, Imam Yasir Khan.
- Mohammad Khan
Person
In the name of God, the most gracious, the most merciful gracious god, you are the hope of all creation. Through your love and mercy, you give us life and freedom. You bless us with an abundance of resources. You invite us to faith. We thank you and pray that you will guide us in the work we are assigned to do. Govern our thoughts with liberty and justice for all. Make us mindful of the needs of all people today. We pray for our nation, our state and for this body. Turn our hearts to you that we may serve this day with compassion, justice, courage and peace. Amin.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
We ask that you remain standing as we recite the nation's pledge. Please join Assemblywoman Boerner as she leads us in the flag.
- Tasha Boerner
Legislator
Salute. Ready? Begin. I pledge allegiance to America.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. You may be seated. Reading of the previous day's journal.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Chamber Sacramento Thursday, April 13, 2023. The assembly met at 09:00 a.m. Mr.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Flora seconds that the reading of the previous day's journal be dispensed with presentations and petitions. There are none. Introduction and references of bills will be deferred. Reports of committees will be deemed read and amendments deemed adopted. Messages from the governor. There are none. Messages from the Senate? There are none. Moving to motions and resolutions, the absences for the day. There are no absences for the day. And Majority Reyes. You are recognized for your procedural motions.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Pursuant to Assembly Rule 96, I request unanimous consent to rerefer SB 595 Roth from the Health Committee to the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee and then back to the Health Committee without object.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
That shall be the order. And members are we moving to business? On the Daily file.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
You. We're going to be moving ahead and generally going in file order today. Members, we will begin with file item number 148. This is AB 716. Clerk will read Assembleman Boerner. You may open on the bill.
- Tasha Boerner
Legislator
Mr. Speaker and members, AB 716 quite simply seeks to prevent consumers from being hit with surprise bill bills for ground ambulance service. California already has strong protections in place for surprise medical bills, but there remains a loophole for ground ambulance bills. Under this bill, patients with insurance will only be responsible to pay the in network cost sharing amount. Those without insurance will be charged no more than the medical or Medicare rate for the service, whichever is greater. And this bill will require that absent a contract between an ambulance provider and the insurer or health plan, the health plan or insurer pays the ambulance provider the locally authorized rate, meaning that our local firefighters and paramedics are compensated for the heroic work that they do. The bottom line is that nobody should be wondering if they can afford an ambulance when they have to call for an ambulance. AB 716 is a common sense solution that has received zero, no votes and no opposition. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Boerner. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 54, no zero. The bills pass. Next by Mr. Ta. This is file item 149, AB seven one eight. Clerk will read. Assembly Ta. You may open on the bill.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker. I rise today to present Assembly Bill 718, which would direct the California Department of Veteran Affairs to conduct a study of mental health among women veterans in California. California women veterans face different challenge than their male counterpart. Women veterans are significantly more likely to have experienced military sexual trauma than men, and they are also more likely to experience PTSD and depression at higher rate. Tragically, women veterans also experience higher rate of suicide than civilian women. Despite this, women veterans are not receiving the mental health services they need. Women veterans have been filed to underutilize state benefit and participate in veteran events and organization at lower rate than men. By 2034, women veterans will comprise 15% of the veteran population. California, the state has an obligation to understand the challenge of women veterans face and to identify the factor creating barriers to mental health care. AB 718 ensure that instead of only identifying concerning statistics, the Safe California researching and remedying the root cause are trying mental health challenge facing women veterans. This legislation has no register opposition and has support support recommendation. So I humbly ask for your I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Ta. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Eyes 58, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next. File item 150. Ms. Boerner? This is file item 150, AB. 719. Clerk will read .Assembly Berner, you may open on the bill.
- Tasha Boerner
Legislator
Yes, Mr. Speaker. And members AB. 719 would require medical managed care plans to reimburse public transit operators for non medical transportation and non emergency medical transportation services. These are services that are federally mandated under the Americans with Disabilities Act to provide and include travel to doctors appointments, physical therapy, or other medically necessary services. AB 23 94 of 2016 had the unintended consequence of removing the incentive from medical managed care plans to contract with transit agencies. As a result, medical managed care plans retained funding that should have been used to reimburse public transit agencies for service they were providing to medical clients. AB 719 simply ensures that the public transit agencies are reimbursed for the eligible medical trips by requiring the contract. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Boerner. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on the bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 44, no, zero. The bills pass. Next. This is file item 151, AB 725. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 725 by Assembly Member Lowenthal an relating to firearms.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Lowenthal, you may open on the bill.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, I'm very pleased to present AB. 725, which requires the owner of a firearm, frame or receiver to report the loss or theft of those components to a law enforcement agency so that may be entered into the Department of Justice Automated Firearms System. While frames and receivers are considered firearms for the purposes of registration and licensing, under current law, they are not treated as such when it comes to requirements for reporting lost or stolen firearms. AB 725 closes this loophole by making failure to report a lost or stolen frame or receiver the same infraction as failure to report a firearm.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Lowenthal. Do you know members wishing to address this bill? Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close or will tally the votes. Ayes 42, no's, eight. The bills pass. Next. This is file item 152, AB 732. Clerk will read Assembly Member Mike Fong. You are recognized on the bill.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and members. Assembly Bill 732 strengthens the process for removing firearms from people who aren't allowed to own them due to a criminal conviction. This is one of several bills that I've been working on as a result of the tragic mass shooting in Monterey Park in my district. This will increase the court and prosecuting attorneys roles in ensuring that firearms are turned over at the time of conviction. It will also require increased coordination between the Department of justice and local law enforcement agencies to address the backlog of individuals who may illegally own firearms. Together, these efforts will keep our communities safer. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Fong. Seeing no Members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 62, no, zero bill is passed. Next by Mr. Villpudua. Mr. Villapudua. This is file item 153, AB 748. Clerk will read,
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly bill 748 by Assembly Member Villapudua and others an act related to vessels.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Support. Mr. Villpudua, you may open on the bill.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present AB 748, which would help remove abandoned commercial vessels from our waterways. These vessels are toxic chemicals into our water and harmor our surrounding environment and ecosystem. There is no register opposition and has received a no no votes. I received I asked for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Villapudua. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 62, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next, file item 154, AB 749. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 749 by Assembly River Irwin an act relating to State Government
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And assembly member. Irwin, you may open on the bill.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and members. I rise to present AB 749, which will direct the state agencies to adopt zero trust architecture on state systems. AB 749 will bring California agencies up to speed with actions taken by the federal government in cybersecurity and aligns with the government's cal secure plan. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Irwin. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 67. No, zero bills pass. Next by Miss Rubio. This is file item 155, AB seven five two. Clerk will read
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
Assembly Bill 752 by Assembly Member Blanca Rubio and others and accolade in the transportation rubio, you may open on the bill. Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise to present AP 752, relating to state highways and worker safety. Construction workers engaged in work along roadways and highway faces. Highways face risks not inherent to traditional job sites. These risks are inherent to being exposed to vehicular traffic. Advances in personal electronic technology, especially in the cellular phone space, have led to an unprecedented increase in roadway construction site vehicular intrusions. The three largest causes of fatal accidents are lane departure, speed management and impaired driving. In 2020, over 102,000 work zone crashes were estimated to have occurred, resulting in over 45,000 injuries and 857 fatalities. Between 2013 and 2020, highway construction work zone fatalities increased over 45%. Every injury or death for workers alongside roadways and highways is one too many. Existing law provides that the Department of Transportation has full control of the state highways and authorizes the Department to construct, improve and maintain state highways. Caltrans has identified the use of positive protection devices as an effective strategy to improve work zone safety through the use of positive protection, which will place a physical barrier between the workers and the flow of traffic. This bill will bring an additional layer of safety to highway construction work zones, preventing further intrusions from vehicles into the construction sites. And with that, I ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rubio. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. ayes 67, no zero. The bills pass. Next. This is file item 156. AB seven five three. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 753 by Assembly Member Pappin and others an act realting to water quality and making an appropriation therefore.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Papan, you may open on the bill.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 753 will reform the State Water Board's cleanup and abatement account and ensure that fines paid by water quality violators are sent directly back to the community that was impaired impacted. To be clear, this legislation will not create or increase any fines or fees. It will simply guarantee that existing money is spent in the most effective way possible. AB 753 will ensure that a significant portion of the money from the cleanup and abatement account is invested back into the affected communities. AB 753 has received full bipartisan support in both committees. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Papan. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote requires 54. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 63 no, zeros. Bills pass. Next is file item 157, AB 761. Clerk will read
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Bill 761 by Asembly Member Friedman and others an act relating to transportation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ms. Freedman, you may open on the bill. Sure. Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker and members. We've all heard a lot about the looming transit fiscal cliff. And we know that even before the COVID-19 Pandemic transit ridership numbers were plummeting in the State of California, and across the country. So a lot has been talked about about transits need to adapt, to be better, to meet the riders where they're at, to focus on safety, better route connections, making their service better so that we can save transit. This bill comes out of those conversations. It would be a bill to create a transit task force made up of transit agencies, academics, advocacy groups, labor organizations that all talk about what is the future of transit, how do we make smart investments to really gain riders and make transit a usable asset that's indispensable for everybody? The bill is to support, support and supported by Move La Spur, the Bay Area Council, and Streets for all. It's received unanimous support and I hope it receives that again today. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Freedman. See no members wishing to address this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 66, no zero. The bill is passed. Next is file item 159, AB 775. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly bill 775 by Assembly Member Arambula and others an act relating to state employment
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Arambula, you may open on the bill.
- Joaquin Arambula
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise today to present AB 775, a three year physician registry pilot program at Patton State Hospital in order to secure employment protections and a stronger medical professional workforce. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
You may open on the bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Arambula. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Eyes 53, no's four. The bills pass. Next by Ms. Rivas. This is file item 164 SB 799. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 799 by Assembly Member Luz Rivas and others in accolade in the housing and Assemblywoman Rivas.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. In order to combat homelessness, the state must reform its current approach to issuing funds by enacting meaningful accountability measures, promoting the use of state homelessness funds, and setting state goals to anchor local progress. AB 799 requires the state to take a more direct leadership role while setting statewide goals based on data available state funding, and to streamline administrative burdens on local systems. Counties, big cities, and continuums of care would work together every five years to plan specific actions they will take to reduce homelessness, replacing the action plans that they do individually every year under HAP. Furthermore, the bill ensures that more detailed information is made public to improve transparency and oversight. Lastly, AB 799 requires investments in balanced homeless response systems that promote equitable housing outcomes while maintaining eligible uses. According to the PPIC, homelessness is the top issue that Californians want to see addressed nevertheless, posturing and finger pointing has fed into the frustration that has caused the issue to reach the boiling point that we are at today. AB 799 is consistent with both the comprehensive response that the governor has articulated that he wants to see and the regional planning process outlined by the California State Association of Counties at Home Plan. Members, it's time that we finally address our homelessness crisis at the scale that the public expects from both the state and the local level. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. And seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 68, no zero bills passed. Next. This is file item 165 by Mr. Bennett. AB 809. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 809 by Assembly Member Bennett and Accolade and Salmon and
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Bennett. You may open on the bill.
- Steve Bennett
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, AB 552 will create a regional heavy equipment sharing program for farmers after the purchase of land. Farm equipment is the largest capital investment for small farmers. Large farm equipment is extraordinarily expensive and often used only a few times per year. This equipment sharing program allows farmers to borrow or lease high value equipment from regional centers. There's no opposition to this bill, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bennett. And seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 63, no zero. The bill is passed. Next by Mr. Fong. But Mike Fong. This is file item 166. AB 811. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 811 by Assembly Member Mike Fong an act relating to Community Colleges
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Fong. You may open on the bill.
- Mike Fong
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and members. Assembly Bill 811 expands the number of times a community college student may repeat a course. Current regulations limit the number of times a student may retake a course. One time if they have passed a course, or three if they have failed. Thank you to my colleague from Ventura. The state legislature has worked hard to help students pass a course the first time. However, there are situations when students are unable to complete a course, perhaps due to illness or having to work. Students are prohibited from retaking the course, even at another college in the district. Once they reach the limit, this could result in the student not being able to move forward with their education or even drop out. AB 811 will bring students back to college by giving them opportunities to retake a course. In response to opposition's concerns, I added a five year sunset with a requirement for community colleges to provide data so that we can evaluate the number of students who retake a course and the types of courses they are repeating and also look at additional academic and financial aid counseling. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Fong. And seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 63, no zero. The bill is passed. next is file item 168, AB 815. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 815 by Assembly Member Wood an act relating to healthcare coverage
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Wood, you may open on the bill.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. Provider credentialing poses administrative challenges similar to prior authorization and provider directories. As healthcare providers can be subject to different health plan criteria, AB 815 streamlines the credentialing process for doctors and health plans by creating a board to certify credentialing entities. Rather than waste time on overly burdensome administrative processes, health plans can focus on ensuring its enrollees have access to an adequate network, and providers can focus on providing medical care. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Assembly Member Wood. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 54. Noes, four bills passed. Next file, item 169, AB 818. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 818 by Assembly Member Petrie-Norris an act relating to protective orders
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Petrie-Norris, you may open on the bill.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker and Members, I rise to present Assembly Bill 818, which will strengthen gun and domestic violence restraining orders. Current law in California requires that a person who is subject to a domestic violence or a gun violence restraining order be prohibited from having firearms or ammunition. Unfortunately, in practice, the implementation of these orders has been uneven, ineffective and untimely. This is alarming because it undermines our goal of quickly removing weapons from prohibited persons. We know that every minute of delay is a minute too long. AB 818 will require our law enforcement agencies to designate an officer or officers who is responsible for implementing GVROs and DVROs. This common sense step will help protect our communities and help ensure that persons who are deemed a danger to themselves or others are not able to access and utilize firearms. I respectfully ask for your aye vote on AB 818.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Petrie Norris. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 66, no zero. The bills pass. Next file, item 170. This is AB 821. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 821 by Assembly Member Grayson an act relating to land use.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Grayson, you may open on the bill.
- Timothy Grayson
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 821 will help prevent delays in housing production and help facilitate the much needed housing that this state needs. This bill seeks to address instances where a local jurisdiction's general plan may be inconsistent with the local jurisdiction's zoning ordinances. Local jurisdictions are required by statute to have their general plans and zoning ordinances consistent with each other, but this is not always the case. Currently, if there is an inconsistency, local jurisdictions must amend their zoning ordinances to become consistent with their general plan within a reasonable time. While this is a requirement, there is no defined timeline for what reasonable time is. AB 821 will help bring a clearer timeline to what is considered reasonable. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Grayson. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 64 clerk will open the roll. The roll is closed. Ayes 64 noes one. The bill is passed. T
- Chris Ward
Legislator
You next to file item 171. This is AB 824. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly bill 824 by Assembly Member Calderon and others an act relating to transportation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Calderon, you may open on the bill.
- Lisa Calderon
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Assembly Bill 824 would task CalTrans with developing a strategic plan to increase highway greening with California native plants by at least 10% in urban areas. Low income Californians and communities of color disproportionately inhale high concentrations of air pollution due to their close proximity to highways, where housing is often more affordable, and these communities are more likely to suffer from increased rates of asthma, lung cancer, and premature death. AB 824 supports the state's transition to a sustainable future by mitigating air pollution, promoting the use of native plants, and cooling vulnerable communities near highways. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Calderon, and seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Tally the votes. Ayes 49, no's nine. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item 172, AB 829. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 829 by Assembly Member Waldron an act relating to crime.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Waldron, you may open on the bill.
- Marie Waldron
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise to present AB 829, the Animal Cruelty and Violence Protection Act, which expands the currently required counseling for those convicted of animal abuse, allowing a judge to order a mental health evaluation if necessary. This bill passed the Public Safety Committee with bipartisan support and no no votes. And I respectfully ask your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Waldron. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 67, no, zero. Bill is passed. Next back to Assemblywoman. Rivas. This is file item 173, AB 833.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 833 by Assembly Member Luz Rivas an act relating to state parks.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Ms. Rivas, you may open on the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 833 seeks to build collaboration between the upper and lower Los Angeles River to create a unifying riverwide park plan. AB 833 would require state parks to facilitate collaboration among state and local agencies to create a plan for parks along the entire LA river and its tributaries. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes aye 69, no, zero. The bill is passed next by Mr. Alvarez. This is file item 174, AB 837.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 837 by Assembly Member Alvarez an act relating to land use.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Alvarez, you may open on the bill.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Colleagues, here's the opportunity on AB eight three seven. Today, this bill is over 30 years in the making. The City of Chula Vista when they began the process of bringing a university to the South San Diego region in its general development plan. Since then, it has procured over 300 acres of land and codified this commitment through its sectional planning area. AB 837 proposes a limited exemption to the Surplus Lands Act that enables Tula Vista to initiate the development of this land into a university. We worked extensively with both policy committees to ensure that only this project would qualify. Received unanimous bipartisan support and I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Alvarez. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Tally the votes. aye 69, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item 175, AB 840. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 840 by Assembly Member Addis and others an act relating to Alcoholic beverages
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Addis. You may open on the bill.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 840 creates exceptions to the side house laws for 22 venues on seven CSU campuses. This bill has bipartisan support and no no votes. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 840.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Addis. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 63, no, zero. Bill is passed. next is file item 176, AB 843. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 843 by Assembly Member Juan Carrillo an act relating to public social services.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assemblymember Carrillo You may open on the bill.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and members. I rise today to present AB 843, which seeks to codify regulations to ensure that CalFresh recipients who are victims of electronic theft are eligible to have their benefits replaced in a timely manner. As you may be aware, electronic theft is becoming more and more common, and recipients of public benefit programs are increasingly becoming targets of this form of theft. EBT. Cars like the federal protection and silver features of others electronic cardholds, such as cheap debit cards, leaving low income California is vulnerable to ramp or theft. AB 843 is a timely bill that will ensure low income Californians who are victims of electronic death are able to recover their benefits and are not forced to face hunger. I respectfully urge your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Carrillo. And seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 68 and zero bill is passed. Next is file item 177, AB 847. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 847 by Assembly Member Luz Rivas an act relating to Medi-Cal
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Woman Rivas. You may open on the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise to present AB 847, which will ensure that children face illnesses at home. Specifically, AB 847 would allow young adults who have medical and with pediatric onset conditions to be eligible for hospice care after age 21 so that their services won't go interrupted. This bill has received bipartisan support. I respectfully ask for an I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close or roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 71, no zero bills pass. Next. This is file item 178, AB 849. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 849 by Assembly Member Garcia an act relating to air pollution.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Garcia, you may open on the bill.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues. AB 849 will require the relevant state agencies implement and enforce measures assigned to its community emissions reduction program, also known as SERP, adopted by local air district and the air resources board. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Garcia. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 50, No's. 15, the bills passed. Next. This is file item 179, AB 853. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 853 by Assembly Member Maienschein an act relating to retail grocery stores and retail drug stores
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assembly Member Maienschein. You may open on the bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. In October 2022, Kroger and Albertsons, the first and second largest grocery chains in the nation, announced an unprecedented $25 billion merger for what would be the largest grocery store merger in American history. When mergers like these takes place, it is common to see staffing decline and prices increase, resulting in a direct impact to the quantity, quality and cost of goods available to the public. AB 853 seeks to ensure necessary information is provided for future mergers that can help evaluate the proposed transaction and illuminate any potential consequences of consolidation. I'm working closely with the opposition to narrow the bill in a manner that focuses only on large mergers and exempts small mom and pop stores. We are close to an agreement and plan to take amendments in the Senate. AB 853 provides an informed basis for the legislature, the public and public enforcers to ensure reliable, convenient and safe access to essential goods. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Maienschein and seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 54, no's. 14. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item 180, AB 862. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 862 by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan and others an act relating to county jails
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assemblyman Barrackhan, you may open on the bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 862 is a simple accountability bill that will ensure that we know where our money is going. We spend millions of dollars on county programs that should improve recidivism and drive crimes down. But that money isn't even being spent according to the audits that we've seen. So this bill will require reporting on those funds and ensure we're getting a good return on our investment. I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bauer-Kahan. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 57, no, zero. Bill is passed. Next. Mr. Gabriel, we are going to go back and pick up file item 161. This is AB 787. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 787 by Assembly Member Gabriel an act related to pupil instruction.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Gabriel, you may open on the bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This bill will move us forward on the topic of instruction on digital literacy and citizenship which is important to our democracy. This bill has received bipartisan support, would respectfully request an I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gabriel. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 67, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next is file item 181, AB 863. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 863 by Assembly Aguiar Curry and others an act relating to recycling
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Woman Aguia Curry you may open on the bill.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and colleagues. I rise to present AB. 863, which will improve accountability for care or any other carpet recycling extended responsibility program by increasing civil penalties for violating relevant laws and making repeat offenders ineligible to run this program. The bill will also ensure that 95% of the proceeds are spent in creating jobs in the California recycling industry and provide that a portion of the program revenue is invested in apprenticeship programs for training journey level carpet professionals, proper carpet recycling practices, which will increase the amount of carpet available for recycling. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Aguiar-Curry. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 56, no's four, the bills pass. Next. File item 182. This is AB 867. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 867 by Assemblywomen Friedman an act relating to Public Social Services
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assembly Freedman, you may open on the bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise today to present AB 867 which assists in this successful transition to adulthood of young people exiting foster care. This bill tries to ensure that young people retain access to services and support by clarifying that the court may keep a case open past age 21 if the requirements to terminate jurisdiction have not been satisfactorily met and requiring the county welfare department verifies efforts to ensure that youth have access to relevant programs, services and documents before they exit the system. Members foster youth are our children. We have assumed the responsibility for them as a state and too often we fail them. This bill helps tries to remedy that. I would like to take a moment of personal privilege to thank Sebastian Tenahero, who is our Assembly Fellow who staffed this bill and made it possible. Thanks so much.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Friedman. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes Ayes 66, no zero. The bill is passed next by Dr. Wood. This is file item 184 AB 869.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Clerk will read Assembly Bill 869 by Assembly Member Wood and others an act relating to Hospitals
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Wood. You may open on the bill.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, AB 869 would help a carefully targeted subset of financially distressed small and rural district and district hospitals meet their 2030 seismic safety compliance requirements. The bill requires HKI to provide grants to these hospitals to pay for 2030 seismic upgrades and delay their completion date to 2035 if funds are not available. Financially distressed rural hospitals with an estimated seismic cost of more than a million dollars or 2% of the hospital's revenue, whichever is greater, will not be required to comply with the 2030 seismic requirements until funds are available. The bill also includes a number of district hospitals that are not located in rural areas but are financially distressed as determined by HKI. Additionally, these district hospitals would need to meet at least one of the additional criteria they're located more than 30 minutes or 30 miles from another hospital, they treat an above average number of medical patients, or they have already sought voter approval for financial assistance and the effort was not successful. We are all aware that many hospitals in California are experiencing difficult financial situations, but the hospitals covered by this bill have always faced financial challenges due to the location and the populations they serve. The bill is a targeted approach to preserve a small number of hospitals that are often most often a community's only access to emergency care, and it will certainly close if some seismic relief is not provided. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Assmebly Member Wood, seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote clerk will close the role. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Aye. 63, no, zero. The bills pass. Next is file item 185, AB 875. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 875 by Assembly Member Gabriel an act relating to the Courts.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Gabriel, you may open on this bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I am pleased today to present AB 875 a bill that would require county courts to report more critical data around evictions. Such data will help policymakers, service providers and local jurisdictions better understand eviction and displacement in their communities and allow them to craft more targeted and data informed policies to reduce homelessness. This bill is supported by legal aid organizations, local governments and the California Department Association, and has received unanimous bipartisan supporting committee. With that, I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gabriel. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Tally the votes. Ayes 60, no, zero. The bills pass nexus file item 187, AB 888. Clerk will Read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 888. By Assembly Member Cervantes and others, an act related to Student Financial Aid
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Cervantes, you may open on the bill.
- Sabrina Cervantes
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members currently, individuals seeking asylum must undergo an extensive process before attaining asylum in the United States. In California, the average estimated wait time from the start of a court filing until an asylum hearing is scheduled in federal immigration court is approximately four and a half years. Among these asylum applicants are prospective and current college students wishing to attend a higher education institution here in California, but who are unable to because of the significant costs because of their unique immigration status. Students who are pending Asylies are not eligible for Cal Grant or any other form of state financial aid if they have been in California for less than three years. AB 888 will extend the eligibility for a Cal Grant program to non-citizens who have filed the specific applications for asylum. Students who are seeking asylum would be eligible so long as they possess a valid employment authorization document, a Social Security number if they meet the other applicable eligibility criteria for Cal Grant program. For these reasons, I respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 888.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Cervantes. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 60, no, zero. The bills pass. Next by Assembly Member Bains. This is file item 188 AB 892
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 892 by Assembly Member Bains an relating to health and care facilities.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Bains, you may open on the bill.
- Jasmeet Bains
Legislator
Thank you, speaker members, AB 892 is a district bill which clarifies that the Kern County Hospital Authority is subject to our public transparency laws, including the Brown Act and the California Public Records Act. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Bains. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll, tally the votes. Ayes 50, nose two, the bills pass. Next by Miss Calderon. This is file item 191, AB 904. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 904 by Assembly Member Calderon and others, and act relating to healthcare coverage.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Calderon, you may open on the bill.
- Lisa Calderon
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Assembly Bill 904 requires private health care plans to develop maternal and infant health equity program by 2025. This program seeks to reduce racial inequities in birthing outcomes through the use of doulas. This bill would make California one of the first states to expand access to doula service for people insured through private health plans. I respectfully ask for an I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Calderon. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll, tally the votes. Ayes 55, no zero, the bills pass. Next. This is file item 193, AB 908.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 908 by the Committee on Education an act relating to teacher credentialing and making an appropriation, therefore declaring the urgency there to take effect immediately.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Muratsuchi, you may open on the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. This is an Education Committee bill, non controversial, no opposition, bipartisan support, no, no votes. Respectfully. As for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Very good, Mr. Muratsuchi. Seeing nobody wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll, tally the votes. I 63, no zero on the urgency. Ayes 63, no zero on the measure. Bill passes. This is file next to file item 194, AB 914. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 914 by Assembly Member Friedman and others an act related to electricity.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Friedman, you may open on the bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and Members. California has very bold goals when it comes to climate change. And achieving those goals is going to take a lot of new electricity, going to our EVs, going to our induction stoves, to all those things. But one of the things that we hear a lot from our constituents is what about the grid? Is the grid going to be ready? How do we get our electrical infrastructure up to snuff to handle all of this electricity? Especially at a time when easy projects with no opposition frequently take over two years. And some projects issues can take longer than a decade to get upgrades to utility lines. So my bill, AB 914, would establish a two year time limit from the date the application is submitted for a lead state agency to complete a California Environmental Quality Act secret review and approve or deny an application for an electrical infrastructure project. If a state agency fails to meet this deadline, it would have to submit a report to us, the Legislature, setting forth the reasons why the review was not completed within the time period. By strategically rebuilding and replacing electric lines and other systems infrastructure faster, california can position itself to achieve its climate goals while also improving air quality of disadvantaged communities and reducing the cost of electrification. I would urge an I vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Friedman. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes Aye 64, no, zero. The bill is passed. Nexus is file item 195 AB 934.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 934 by Assembly Member Muratsuchi an act related to teacher credentialing.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Muratsuchi, you may open on the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. Very much. California is facing a teacher workforce crisis. This is part of my package of bills this year to try to address this crisis. This bill calls for a public awareness campaign on how teachers can change lives and change the world. The public information campaign will be designed to explain how people can become teachers, to explain what kind of financial support exists to encourage more of our young college students to become teachers. This has no opposition. Bipartisan support, no, no votes. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Murstsuchi. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Ayes 67, no, zero. The bill is passed. Ms. McKinnor? Next. This is file item 196, AB 937. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 937 by Assembly McKinnor, an act relating to Juveniles
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly McKinnon, you may open on the bill.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
I rise to present AB 937, which will ensure that families separated by the welfare system receive benefits they are entitled to in order to reunify. This bill also extends the reunification timeline from 18 to 24 months for all families who are eligible to receive reunification services. This bill is a woman's caucus priority and has received bipartisan support. I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. McKinnon. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes ayes 65, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item 198, AB 943.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 943 by Assembly Member Kalra an act relating to Corrections
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Kalra, you may open on the bill
- Lisa Calderon
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, AB 943 would require the California Department of Corrections to publish disaggregated prison data with separate ethnicity categories for the major Asian and Pacific Islander groups and indigenous people. Currently, the Department publishes monthly data points on the number of people in their custody with ethnicity divided into only four categories black, White, Hispanic and others. Aggregating such a large and diverse number of ethnicities as one category is problematic for several reasons including perpetuating existing biases and systemic inequities. Additionally, by not giving an accurate account of the ethnic diversity within our prison system, how can we provide all individuals with access to culturally competent in person and reentry programs? Through greater data transparency. AB 943 will break down the other category. To ensure that community and state can better assess the needs of all system impacted people. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Kalra. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll tally.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
The votes, ayes 64, no zero. The bill is passed. Next by Mr. McCarty. This file item 199, AB 959, clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 959 by Assembly McCarthy and applate in the court facilities and making an appropriate, therefore to take effect immediately.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly McCarty, you may open on the bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This is a district bill but also helps my colleague from Modesto in his district, also my colleague from Bieber in Alturas County helps their district as well. Allows four surplus courthouses to be sold by the Judicial Council to begin the process of working to bring about a public good for these surplus government pieces of property, including our courthouse right down here in downtown Sacramento, allowing us to use it for something like housing and address our housing crisis. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Bipartisan support. Ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, Mr. McCarty. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll tally. Votes Aye 61, Ayes 62, no zero on the urgency. I 62, no zero on the measure. Bill passes. Next. This is file item 201, AB 979.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 979 by Assembly Member Alvarez an act relating to long term care.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Alvarez, you may open on the bill.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Colleagues. This is AB 979. As many of you know, family councils are organized groups of family members and friends of long term care facility residents. Family councils are essential to ensuring that family and friends play a critical role in guaranteeing that vulnerable aging populations are receiving the best possible care. As we saw during Lockdowns of the Pandemic painfully displayed the need for modernizing our family council regulations so that they are empowered to fulfill their representative role. So AB 979, this bill modernizes existing family council law so that members can meet and communicate in more efficient ways so that they can operate during a public health emergency. AB. 979 enjoys no opposition, and in fact, we had worked extensively with facilities to ensure that their concerns were addressed. Before this bill was introduced, we have received unanimous bipartisan support, and today I ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Alvarez. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote all those vote who desire to vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will close roll. Tally the votes Ayes 68, noes, zero. The bills pass. Next is file item 203 by Mr. Connolly. File item 998. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 998 by Assembly Member Connolly an act relating to energy.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Connolly. You may open on the bill.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Mr. Speaker and members. AB nine nine eight requires a California Energy Commission to issue a first of its kind report on the operational status of biomass combustion facilities still in operation as of January 1, 2024. The State continues to rely on biomass facilities to process millions of tons of wood waste every year and to generate renewable energy. However, many of these combustion facilities are decades old and are vulnerable to periodic shutdowns. Currently, the CEC has no comprehensive plan to improve these older facilities or respond to events like facility shutdowns. AB 998 will address this issue by requiring the CEC to generate a report identifying opportunities to modernize older biomass facilities, making them cleaner and more efficient. The bill would also require the report to include recommendations related to vulnerable rural areas where combustion biomass facilities may be shut down, including strategies related to local energy generation, processing, wood waste, and job losses. This bill has no opposition. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Connolly. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally votes ayes 69, noes zero. The Bills pass next to Ms. Irwin. This is file item 205, AB 1002. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1002, by Assembly Member Irwin and others an act related to taxation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Irwin, you may open on the bill.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 1002 will create a standalone tax return form for eligible recipients to claim the California Earned Income Tax Credit without needing to file an individual tax return. AB 1002 will reduce existing filing burdens for taxpayers, ultimately putting money back into the pockets of working Californians. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Irwin. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes ayes 69, noes, zero. The bills pass. Next. Ms. McKinnon. This is file item 206, AB 1006.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Clerk will read Assembly Bill 1006 by Assembly Member McKinnor an act relating to older adults
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman McKinnon. You may open on the bill.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
Mr. Speaker and Members, across 21 regional centers. California's Department of Developmental Services 370,000 consumers serviced by 120,000 direct support professionals, families who provide long term care for disabled and elderly loved ones benefit from having access to respite, and importantly, they benefit from having simple ways of getting across to the services. AB 1006 will mandate that the Department of aging partner or contract within its no wrongdoor program with the referral registry that will match Medicaid funded consumer with culturally competent respite providers, maintain a register of vetted and trained respite providers, and work within a consumer directed program entity that will serve as a co employer to respite providers. I respectfully ask for an I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. McKinnor. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 67, no zero. The bills passed. Next. This is file item 209, AB 1016.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1016 by Assembly Member Joan Sawyer and others. an act relating to Pest Control.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Jones Sawyer, you may open on the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present AB 1016, which authorizes the Department of Pesticide Regulations to create a program so that aerial pesticide applicators can train to operate unmanned aerial systems, commonly known as drones, on California farms, vineyards, and nurseries. By authorizing DPR to stand up to a traditionally programmed to safely train FAA licensed drone pilots, AB 1016 will provide drone operators with the prerequisite training and education for the safe incorporation of this important precision agriculture technology. Farmers will be able to save money by potentially applying fewer pesticides to their farms due to the precision nature of the technology and paying for less water and aircraft fuel to apply these pesticides. This bill ensures the technology is integrated into aerial applicator businesses in the safest manner possible. And in response to the bill, Orange Coast Community College announced an Associate Science degree in UAS with an aerial applicator emphasis. Recognizing the workforce development opportunity the bill creates at the intersection of technology and agriculture. This bill has received bipartisan support. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Jones Sawyer and Senator Gallagher, you're recognized on the bill.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I do rise just with concerns on the bill. Obviously, coming from an agricultural area, and we deal pretty extensively with crop dusters and aerial aircraft in applying different inputs to our crops. There is some concern with this going into commercial areas and the impact it could have on safety and other impacts to the crop dusting industry in California, which is a vital part of agriculture in this state. So I guess my request would be that we continue to work through this bill and ensure that those issues are addressed before we start going full scale into having drones that, again could have safety impacts associated with other aircraft flying in the area and ensure that we have a vital agricultural industry that's protected as we go forward here. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Leader Gallagher. Seeing no other members wishing to address this bill, Mr. Jones Sawyer, would you like to close?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And I absolutely agree with my colleague from across the aisle. We will continue to work with the concerns that were raised about safety. It is vitally important that we get this right. That's why we've been working through the community college and working with the aerial industry to make sure that this is safe and sound. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 62. No. Zero. The bills pass. Next by Ms. Pacheco. This is file item 211, AB 1032.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1032 by Assembly Member, Pacheco an act relating to the courts.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Pacheco, you may open on the bill.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mr. Speaker and members. Today I rise to present AB 1032 their current trial. Court Interpreter Employment and Labor Relations Act has not gone far enough in helping recruit and incentivize courts to hire court interpreters as employees rather than independent contractors. Some regions of California have 68% of assignments being completed by independent contractors as recorded in fiscal year 2017-18. AB 1032 would update the trial in court interpreter Employment and Labor Relations Act to ensure a greater recruitment and retention of court interpreters as employees instead of independent contractors. It would also allow court interpreters to receive bonuses and other incentives along with adding provisions to help facilitate cross assignments for borrowing court interpreters across counties to help out our rural areas who have even a greater need. AB 1032 will help the courts function at a higher level and better serve our communities. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Pacheco. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 52. Noes 15. Bills pass. Next. This is file item 212, AB 1042.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1042 by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan an act relating to pesticides.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan, you may open on the bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 1042 is a simple bill that will add to DPR's ability, the ability to make sure that toxic pesticides that are currently not allowed in California are also not allowed on seeds. It is not a ban of anything. It merely gives additional authority to the department. With that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bauer-Kahan. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 44. Noes 18. Bills passed. Next. This is by Mr. Gabriel. File item 214 AB 1053.Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill ten to 53 by Assembly Member Gabriel an act relating to housing.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Gabriel, you may open on the bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I am pleased today to present AB 1053, which will lower financial barriers to the construction of affordable housing by allowing developers to access HCD loan funds during construction. One of the ways that HCD incentivizes affordable housing is by providing deferred loans at interest rates below those offered by private financial institutions. These loans, however, are only available once the construction of union has been completed. This bill makes a common sense change to allow these loans to be distributed during construction, saving millions in interest related costs and freeing up more funds to finance additional affordable housing development. This bill has received unanimous bipartisan support and respectfully request your aye vote.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gabriel. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close or will Italy? The votes I 71, no, zero. The bill is passed. Nexus is file item 215, AB 1054.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1054 by Assembly Berman and others an act related to pupil instruction.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly of Berman. You may open on the bill.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues. California has fallen behind 27 other states when it comes to prioritizing access to computer science education, exacerbating educational inequities, and the diversity gaps in the tech sector. AB 1054 would ensure computer science education for all by requiring school districts and charter schools to adopt a plan for all high schools to offer at least one computer science education course by the 2027-2028 school year. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Berman. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 67, no, zero. The bills pass. Next. Ms. Dr. Weber, this is file item 216, AB 1057.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1057 by Assembly Member Weber and others, an act relating to Public Health
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Weber. You may open on the bill.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Good afternoon, speaker. I rise to present AB 1057, a bill that will codify the existing California Home Visiting Program to support pregnant people and parents with young children who live in communities that face greater risk and barriers to achieving positive maternal and child outcomes. Home visitors and families develop strong relationships and trust through meeting regularly and addressing families needs, including by connecting them to needed community resources and support. There are currently 20 approved evidencebased home visiting models under the Federal Home Visiting Program. However, the California Department of Public Health has only approved three of these models. AB 1057 seeks to expand the number of models that CDPH administers, giving county health departments the flexibility to respond to their community's unique needs. I respectfully ask for your aye vote on AB 1057. Thank you.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Weber. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. ayes 68, no zero. The bills passed nexus is file item 217, AB 1059.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly bill 1059 by Assembly Member Friedman an act relating to product safety.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Friedman. You may open on the bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, members, both federal and state regulations ask that our mattresses be resistant to catching on fire, to flames. And now, several years ago, we banned the use of toxic chemicals in a lot of our mattresses to prevent them from causing unwanted health effects. And unfortunately, a small amount of mattresses, about 13%, contain fiberglass for use as a flame retardant barrier. Now, this fiberglass can be a terrible irritant to skin if there's unintended exposure. It can get into people's lungs. It can cause pulmonary fibrosis. Short term inhalation exposure can cause lung inflammation and bronchitis and fiberglass fibers can cause visual changes, bleeding and scarring if they become embedded in your eye. I think we could all probably say that if given a choice, we don't want fiberglass on our mattresses. But a few manufacturers are still using it, even though we know that there are safe alternatives available. And hopefully that's what you're sleeping on right now. Given the small amount of mattresses on the market that still have fiberglass, AB 1059 would ban the use for all mattresses to protect public health. We also are going to be extending the ban on the flame retardant chemicals so that that doesn't become a default alternative for these same companies, as we know that mattresses are made right now safely, without those same chemicals. I've been working very closely with the International Sleep Products Association since the bill's introduction. They share our goal of getting rid of fiberglass and mattresses, and they also want to avoid unintended consequences. Now, they still have some concerns about the bill, but they're not opposing it. And I intend to continue working with them in the Senate. This bill is sponsored by the Environmental Working Group. And so that we can all sleep better, I would urge an aye vote. Thank you.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you, Ms. Friedman. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 51, No's. 13 bills passed next by Miss Boerner. This is file item 218 AB 1061.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1061 by Assembly Member Boerner an act relating to Telecommunications
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblyman Boerner. You may open on the bill.
- Tasha Boerner
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise to present AB 1061. This bill would require the CPUC to report to the Legislature on the performance of telephone corporations in meeting service quality requirements established by the Commission. The CPUC's existing service quality regulations cover topics such as service restoration after an outage, and other customer service requirements. The CPUC is currently undergoing a rulemaking process now to revise their service quality rules, and this bill will help keep the legislature informed as that process moves forward. No bill. This bill has no listed opposition and no no votes. I respectfully ask for your I vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblywoman Boerner seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 67 knows one. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item 219, AB. 1063.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1063 by Assemblymember Gabriel an act relating to public health.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Gabriel, you may open on the bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues, Assembly Bill 1063 requires the department of public health to officially document the effectiveness of its efforts to enforce nurse staffing ratios in hospitals and healthcare facilities, leading to greater transparency and accountability regarding the impacts of legislation passed in prior years. Colleagues, as many of you know, and particularly something I know as the son of a nurse, ratios are key to protecting both patient safety and our healthcare workforce. And in recent years, we have passed legislation to strengthen those protections. But repeated complaints to the department of public health about enforcing those ratios have too often gone ignored. This bill would provide us with key data, encourage timely and effective enforcement of existing law, and give our health care heroes a voice in the process. This bill has enjoyed bipartisan support, and I would respectfully request your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Gabriel. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 54, noes 14. The bill is passed. Next file, item 220, AB. 1076.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1076 by Assembly Member Baure-Kahan an act relating to business.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan, you may open on the bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and Members, AB. 1076 is an important bill that will protect workers rights as well as innovation here in California. It has no opposition and bipartisan support. I respectfully ask your aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bauer-Kahan seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the vote. I 72. No zero. The bills pass. Next. This file, item 221, AB. 1078.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1078 by Assembly Member Jackson and others an act relating to pupil instruction.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly member Jackson, you may open on the bill.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. AB. 1078 would ask the California department of education to issue guidance to help local education agencies and school personnel manage conversations surrounding race, socioeconomic status, gender identity, expression, and LGBTQ, plus orientations, and how they can review instructional materials to reflect diverse perspectives that are culturally relevant. We've been working closely with the governor's office, the superintendent of public instruction, as well as both chairs of the education committees to continue to work on this. In order to strike the right balance, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Jackson and Assembly Member Hoover, you are recognized on the bill.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise in respectful opposition to this bill. I think these are decisions that are best made by local school districts. I think we need to preserve local control on this issue, and I urge a no vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Hoover. And see no other members wishing to be addressed on this. Mr. Patterson, you're recognized on the bill.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I too rise in opposition of this measure and agree with my colleague, assembly member Hoover. I think this decision is best left up to local governments. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Patterson. And seeing now no other members wishing to be addressed on this bill. Dr. Jackson, anything further to close?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker, members, we all know the conversations that have been happening and the dangerous examples that have been happening all across the state about certain books no longer being allowed, particularly those that talk about the history of people of color and gender. And so it's time for us to make sure that this movement does not take hold into our state. So I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Jackson. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 57, no's. 15. The bills pass. Next. Again, this is file item 222, AB 1079.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1079 by Assembly Member Jackson an act relating to discrimination.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Jackson, you may open on this bill.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker, Members, I rise to present AB 1079, which would create a hate crimes intervention unit within the California Department of Public Health and establish the California Ad Council within the California Civil Rights Department. We know that in 2021, California saw a horrifying surge in hate crimes, reaching numbers unseen since the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11. In 2021, there were 1763 bias events, a 32.6 increase in 2020, the highest number reported since 2021. To halt the growing tide of bigotry, hate and dogmatic ideology, california must go on the offense against hate, xenophobia and racism. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Jackson. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. I 67. No, zero. The bills pass. Next. File item 223, AB 1085.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1085 by Assemblymember Maienschein an act relating to Medi-Cal.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Maienschein You may open on the bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Mr. Maienschein. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 54, no's ten. The bills pass. Next by Ms. Rubio. This is file item 224, AB 1088. Clerk will read.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB. 1085 requires the department of healthcare services to seek any necessary federal approvals for a medical benefit to cover housing support services. Two years ago, DHCS shared an intent to make housing support services a medical benefit for Californians experiencing homelessness. By 2024, AB. 1085 requires the department to begin the process to make this benefit a reality. Thank you. And I respectfully request an aye vote. Thank you
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
Assembly Bill 1088 by Assembly Member Blanca Rubio an act relating to alcoholic beverages.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Rubio, you may open on the bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you Mr. Speaker and members for the opportunity to present AB 1088, which would extend direct to consumer shipping flexibilities for small craft distillers. Through 2024, AB 1088 continues our efforts to support this growing industry. As tasting rooms visits are still down from COVID and unsteady economic and inflation. The additional year under AB. 1088 provides the critical time for tasting rooms to recover from their loss and foot traffic and recoup losses from the pandemic. This is simply an extension of flexibilities previously afforded to these craft distillers. And as such, this measure has no industry opposition. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rubio. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 72, no, zero. The bills pass. Next. This is file item 225, AB 1089.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1089 by Assembly Member Gipson and others an act relating to firearms.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblymember Gipson, you may open on the bill.
- Mike Gipson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present assembly bill 1089, which seeks to ban the sale, purchase, possession, receiving of ghost guns technology. By limiting the use of 3D printers and computerized numerical control, the send the CNC milling machines to state licensed manufacturer. Assembly bill 1089 strengthens the work that we've done even around assembly bill 1621, which redefines the definition of a firearm. California continues to lead the way in terms of preventing gun violence. Yet people still find loopholes in our laws. Our technology has far out exceeded our laws on the books. And this technology limits one the individual's ability to gain access to homemade and untraceable guns. By using a 3D printer or a CNC milling machine, this technology allows individuals to create a semiautomatic weapon which has no serial numbers, no background checks, and waived no background check period or other regulations that provides loopholes. This bill is a thoughtful piece of legislation I respectfully ask for an aye vote on Assembly Bill 1089.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gipson. And Assembly Member Mathis, you're recognized on the bill.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Question to the author
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Without objection.
- Devon Mathis
Person
What else can these machines print?
- Mike Gipson
Legislator
I'll answer that in my close.
- Devon Mathis
Person
My point on this, Members, is by blocking a technology, just because it can print gun parts doesn't mean that it can't print something else that would be useful, something from a medical field, something like glasses or something else. We can't just have a knee jerk reaction and say we're going to block 3D printing because it might be used for making a gun. That's a software issue, not a mechanical issue. Yes, we need to have measures in place to ensure safety to make sure that these things aren't happening. Yes, we need penalties out there, but to block the technology of 3D printing that could be used, say maybe in a rural area or somebody else where there's not access to a supply chain. To print a product that could be useful puts us in a position that we don't need to be in. I think this needs better. Look, I'd be happy to work with the author on this, but we need to make sure that we're not going to take away access and the ability to make things just because we want to block the ability of something else, like guns being in the wrong hands. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Mathis. And Assmblymember Joe Patterson, you're recognized on the bill.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Speaker, I rise respectfully to oppose this measure. It wasn't that long ago that people could actually go on the Internet, order incomplete, lower for a rifle, and complete the process of building it themselves totally legally in the state of California. And so I don't know how many are out there, but thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of legally made firearms are in the possession of people. And if they cause property damage as a result of and in this legislation, we require strict liability that the person has created a criminal offense. And I think that's wrong for people who have legally made their weapon. So I respectfully rise in opposition.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Thank you, Mr. Patterson. And it's a Member Kalra, you're recognized on the bill.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Mr. Speaker, members, I rise in support of AB 1089. I think that the arguments being made are really straw man arguments for a couple of reasons. To the latter argument, it's much different ordering parts that can be traced where you're ordering them from to assemble a kit, some kind of firearm. And even that in itself is something that is quite dangerous to get into the supply chain. But this is very different when you actually have a machine that can replicate that process over and over again. And it's very difficult to trace and to track. And coming from Silicon Valley, there's no doubt that we want to slow down the process of technology when it comes to 3D printing in general. But this legislation is very clearly specific to 3D printing done for the purpose of creating firearms. It's already hard enough for us in California having some of the strongest firearm legislation to be able to keep guns from coming across our state borders. Other states also have that difficulty of being able to track. To add on top of that, another layer of having to track and trace firearms that are being made in people's homes through this process is a step way too far, I think, when it comes to ensuring that our community is safe from gun for violence. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Kalra. And Mr. Muratsuchi. You're recognized on the bill.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you very much. I just want to ask that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle see that this bill is actually supported by law enforcement, by PORAC. They want to make sure that we keep guns out of the hands of criminals. And so I would urge all of you to support this bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Muratsuchi. And seeing no other members wishing to be addressed on this bill. Mr. Gibson, you may close.
- Mike Gipson
Legislator
Thank you very much. Mr. Speaker, members, I appreciate the robust conversation around AB1089 to one of my colleagues who made mention. One, this is relegating it to licensed state manufacturers for one. And two, it doesn't take away the CNC machine itself. We want to make sure that a code that is used in order to do a make a ghost gun, that code is not being given out to individuals. And then secondly, my colleague who made mention about long ago well, let me just talk about long ago here in Sacramento, we had a father who was prohibited from owning a gun because of a domestic violence dispute laws that we created here on this floor two years ago. And a gun was in the home. That gun was taken out. The father made a ghost gun. He had supervised visitation of his three daughters, went to a church in Sacramento and killed his three daughters, the social worker, and then he killed himself. We have too many ghost guns in California to not to do anything, anything at all. It's too many lives that are being lost due to people making these ghost guns that are untraceable that the Department of justice don't even know they exist in California across this nation. The reason, look at all the mass shootings that are taking place not only in California, but across this country. And doing something is not an option. And so this is a thoughtful way to making sure that we have the ability to gain control over the. Technology that exists in California and making sure that our laws has caught up with the technology and making sure that we close every loophole. That what happened. I was in a roll. I mean, you cut me off. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Mike Gipson
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gipson. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 60. No, zero. The bill is passed. Excuse me? Noes. Eight. ayes 60 noes eight. Bill ispassed.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Moving on to item 226 AB 1092. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1092 by Assembly Member Wood an act relating to healthcare.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Dr. Wood, you may open on your bill.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. This bill builds upon my prior legislation AB 595 on health plan mergers to ensure that health plans acquiring a physician group are subject to regulatory review. You this bill also authorizes Department of Managed Healthcare Director to review competition in health systems and to provide this information to the Attorney General. To clarify, this bill does not expand AG authority other than what is an existing law, and merely authorizes the Department of Managed Healthcare to share information with the Attorney General. I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Dr. Wood. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this item, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The Clerk will close the roll. Eyes 50, no's. 16. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number two two seven. AB 1093.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1093 by Assembly Member Jim Patterson an act relating to manufactured homes.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Jim Patterson, you may open on your bill.
- Jim Patterson
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. Members, I rise to present Assembly Bill 1093. This is a bill I know you will struggle with mightily, but please hear me out. I'm asking for your support because this bill will address the issue of inaccurate ownership records for mobile homes in California. This is support. Support. By the way, I'm joking. This bill would require the seller of a mobile home to obtain a tax clearance certificate, which improves the process of for selling mobile homes. By ensuring that the new owner is responsible for the taxes that become due, AB 1093 will reduce confusion and frustration for both the county and the new owner of the mobile home. This bill is enjoyed bipartisan support, has no opposition, and I thank you for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Patterson. Seeing in the hearing no others wishing to speak on this item, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The Clerk will close the roll. ayes 68. No zero. The bill is out. Moving on. Going back to item number 126, AB 599. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 599 by Assembly member Ward an act related to pupil discipline.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Ward, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker. AB 599 restructures how students are punished for possession and use of tobacco products by removing suspension and expulsion requirements. The California Department of Education would develop a model policy for a public health approach for simple drug infractions that can be more easily implemented by administrators. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing no others wishing to speak on this item. The clerk will open the roll. All those votes desire to vote. All those votes who desire to vote, all those votes who desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 68, no, zero, the bill is passed. Moving on to item 143, AB 671. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 671 by Assembly Member Ward an act relating to Housing
- Luz Rivas
Person
And Assembly Member Ward, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you again, Madam Speaker. AB 671 gives the Department of Housing and Community Development the explicit authority to allow community land trusts to build ADUs with cal home funds. This clarification will allow these land trusts to be an effective tool in addressing the state's housing crisis. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those votes who desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. ayes 69, ayes 70 noes one. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 330, AB 302.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 302 by Assembly Member Ward an act related to automated decision systems.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Ward, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker. AB 302 will require the California Department of Technology to conduct a comprehensive inventory of all high risk automated decision systems being used by state agencies. The bill will ensure that Californians have transparency into the government's use of high risk automated decision systems and provide state agencies with the tools to analyze their use of these systems and minimize the risk of discriminatory impacts. I respectfully request your aye vote on AB 302.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those votes who desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 72, noes, zero, the bills pass. Moving on to file item number 229, AB 1110.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1110 by Assembly Arambula an act relating to Public Health.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Dr. Arambula, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker and Members, today I rise to present AB 1110, a bill that will allow will direct California to ensure that future policy and funding decisions address the well being of children by disaggregating the data within adverse childhood experiences. Thank you, members. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. ares 72, no, zero, the bill is passed. Moving on to item number 230, AB 1111. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1111 by Assembly Member Pellerin an act related to cannabis.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Pellerin, you may open on your bill.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Speaker. Members, AB 1111 would provide small and equity cultivators with the opportunity to apply for a Department of Cannabis Control license that would authorize them to vend their products at a licensed state temporary cannabis event. Under existing law, these events must be organized by a cannabis event organizer licensed through the DCC, and each individual event must receive authorization from both state and local government ensuring local control. These events are subject to extensive regulation, including regulations on packaging and labeling, track and trace, and prohibitions on underage sales. Additionally, each of these events must be authorized by the DCC at least 60 days before the event is scheduled to be held. While AB 1111 would most directly impact small and equity cannabis producers, its positive effects would extend to the legal cannabis market as a whole. Sales by craft producers at cannabis events will drive additional sales through licensed distribution and retail outlets. And craft producers selling at cannabis events will have a strong incentive to direct customers to legal retailers where more of their product can be purchased. This bill has received bipartisan support and zero no votes. I respectfully ask for your ayes vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Pellerin. And seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the Clerk will close the roll. Ayes 61. No. Zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number 232, AB 1113. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1113 by Assembly Member McCarty an act relating to pupil instruction and making an appropriation therefore.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member McCarty, you may open on your bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. We all know that after school programs matter. Making a difference for families looking to take care of their kids after school, but also keeping our community safe. Which is why police chiefs and DAs support after school programs long enough is in our high school after school programs, and our teenagers in middle school and high school obviously need our attention too many times are left behind with after school programs. This bill will make sure we have adequate resources for our middle school and high school after school programs. Ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The Clerk will close the roll. Aye 67. No. Aye 69. No. Zero. The bill passed. Moving on to item number two, three, four, AB 1117. The Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1117 by Assembly Member Irwin and others and act relating to hospice agencies.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Irwin, you may open on your bill.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you, Madam speaker, some hospice providers have found a loophole in the law that allows bad actors to defraud the state. AB 1117 addresses this issue by requiring licensees to be certified within twelve months of receipt from the Department of Public Health. As an additional safeguard, licensees must submit patient data to HKI on an ongoing basis. If reporting data ceases, the licensee must forfeit their license. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member. When seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The Clerk will close the roll I 65 no one the bill is passed. Moving on to item number two three five, AB 1121. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1121 by Assembly Haney and act related to public works.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Haney, you may open on your bill.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker and members. The number of contractors who are debarred by cities, counties or other awarding bodies is widely unknown because requirements to publish a list of debarred contractors vary across localities. The inconsistent publishing of this information presents the ability for contractors who have willfully violated labor laws to continue to bid on public works projects in jurisdictions where they haven't been found in violation yet. To ensure transparency and protection of taxpayer dollars, AB 1121 would require awarding agencies of public works contracts to annually post on the Department of Industrial Relations database a list of contractors who are ineligible to bid on a public works contract. It has received unanimous bipartisan support and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, assembly Member Haney. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire the vote. The Clerk will close the roll Ayes 65 no zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number 236 AB 1123. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1123 by Assembly Addis and others an act related to the California State University.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Addis, you may open on your bill.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. Today I rise to present AB 1123, which requires the California State University to grant an employee a leave of absence with pay for one semester of an academic year following the birth of a child, or the adoption or foster care of the child by the employee. Trying to find the right moment to start a family is an unnecessary but common struggle for many Californians. The CSU's Print to Leave policy of 30 working days needs to be updated to reflect today's realities facing the system's. 29,000 coach, counseling, librarian and instructional faculty who are starting or expanding their families. This policy is inadequate, inequitable, and uncompetitive for today's workplace. AB 1123 therefore, creates fair working conditions for employees who are parents rather than penalizing them for their decision to start a family. Last year's version of this bill passed the assembly with bipartisan support, and I ask you to do the same. Today, I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you. Assuming Member Addis seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll all those votes to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll eyes 49 knows five the bill has passed. Moving on to item number 237, AB 1133. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1133 by Assembly Member Shiavo an act relating to firearms.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Shiavo, you may open on your bill.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Thank you. Madam speaker and Members, today I rise to present AB 1133 which establishes a statewide curriculum for concealed carry weapons permit applicants. This will improve and equalize standards to make sure our communities are safer. Less guns on the street is a solution. However, for the 121,000 Californians who have concealed carry weapons, the state must ensure that they're properly trained. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll all those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll I 46, no. 15, the bill is passed. Moving on to item number two three eight, AB 1137. The clerk will read
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Assembly Bill 1137 by Assembly Member Jones Sawyer an act relating to public employment.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Jones Sawyer, you may open on your bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Madam Speaker, I present AB 1137, which ensures fairness in state employment by providing equitable benefits to state supervisors and managers currently excluded. Employees such as state supervisors and managers do not have collective bargaining rights. Legislation is the only way for these employees to access better benefits because they are unable to negotiate with their employers. This bill will provide state supervisors and managers with merit based salary adjustment notifications and premium holiday pay. In doing so, AB 1137 will promote workplace equity for hundreds of state employees across California and ensure that all state employees are compensated fairly. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Jones Sawyer. Seeing and hearing no there is wishing to speak on the bill. The clerk will open the roll. All those vote desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll ayes 53 no six. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number 240, AB 1159. The clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1159 by Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry an act related to greenhouse gases.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry, you may open on your bill.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Good afternoon, Madam Speaker. And members. AB 1159 is simply a cleanup measure to AB 1757 from last year. AB 1757 was enacted as part of the climate package and set a range of targets for reducing greenhouse gassy emissions. The bill contained provisions which were intended to disallow the double counting of GHG reductions and the use of state funding to develop offsets. The provision regarding state funding was ambiguous and has caused confusion among conservation groups, tribes, foresters, and others who have forest sequestration projects and seek state funding for other restoration and conservation efforts. This bill will clear up this confusion and allow nonprofit conservation groups, tribes, and others to continue with certainty to accept state funding for restoration and conservation projects on land with existing forest sequestration projects. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, assembly Member Aguiar-Curry. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. I 69 no. Zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number two. Four one AB 1168 the clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1168 by Assembly Bennett and act related to emergency medical services. Assembly Member Bennett, you may open on your bill.
- Steve Bennett
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Members. This bill remains an important priority for the California professional firefighters, the fire chiefs, and the League of Cities because of concerns about the potential statewide impacts of this original version of the bill. Recent amendments to AB 1168 now only extends the ability to control emergency services to oxnard in my district and continues to clarify that 201 rights are retained until explicitly given up. I want to thank the chair of the Health Committee and the chair of our emergency management committees for their work on this bill. I respectfully ask for an aye vote on this now district only impact bill. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, assembly Member Bennett. Seeing and hearing others, we should speak on this bill. The clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Eyes 59. No. Zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number two. Four two AB 1182. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1182 by assembly Member Petri, Norris and act relaying to energy Assembly Member Petrie Norris. You may open on your bill.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker. Members California is at a pivotal moment of historic public investment to advance our goals on green energy and climate infrastructure. Federal adoption of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021 and the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022 represent a historic, once in a generation opportunity for our nation and for our state. And it is critical that we position California to leverage these dollars. AB 1182 requires GoBiz to take specified actions to align state incentives with federal funds to be awarded in the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to identify opportunities to CoFund grants that meet the state's climate goals, and to collaborate with state agencies to maximize awards to projects for the state. Doing so will help California deliver on our ambitious climate goals, create high quality green jobs, and supercharge our clean energy economy. With that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote on AB 1182.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Petrie Norris. Seeing and hearing no one wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those votes who desire to vote. All those votes who desire to vote. All those votes who desire to vote, the Clerk will close the roll. I 68, no, zero. The bill is passed. We will pass and retain item two, four, five, AB 1228. Moving on to item two four six, AB 1272. The Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1272 by Assembly Member Wood, an act relating to water.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. I rise to present AB 1272, which authorizes the State Water Board to develop principles and guidelines for the diversion and use of water in some of the state's most critical salmon and steelhead bearing watersheds. This bill would advance efforts to update our infrastructure and usage patterns, help water users become more prepared for the extended drought periods, which have become all too familiar. It is past time we start preparing for the next drought before it stops raining. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing others wishing to speak on this bill. The Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The Clerk will the Clerk will close the roll I 53, no, zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number two, four, seven, AB 13 five. The Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1305, item member Gabriel an act relating to carbon offsets.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Speaker. I am pleased today to present AB 1305, which would establish first in the nation transparency standards for the voluntary carbon offset industry. In concept, carbon offsets represent a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions through investments into projects that reduce or offset emissions. Unfortunately, this is not always the case, as recent reports have shown that many offsets fail to achieve any meaningful reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. Currently, there exists no governmental standards or regulations for voluntary offsets, leaving consumers with little confidence that what they are purchasing is actually legitimate. AB 1305 seeks to address this unregulated marketplace by requiring the disclosure of critical data and information regarding offset projects, including how the amount of offset credits was calculated and other information regarding greenhouse gas emission reductions. These disclosures will give consumers the ability to compare and evaluate offsets and give researchers the tools needed to better evaluate these products and determine if they represent genuine greenhouse gas emission reductions. Thank you and respectfully request your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, assembly Member Gabriel, seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 51, no. 14. The bill is passed, and we will pass temporary on item number 248, AB 1306, moving us up to item 250, AB 1322. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1322 by Assembly Member Friedman an act related to pesticides.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Member Freedmen may open on your bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Mr. Speaker and members, today I rise to present AB 1322, which adds difacinone to the existing rodenticide moratorium to better protect wildlife from unintentional rodenicide poisoning, while maintaining exceptions for its use to protect public health, water supplies and agriculture. In 2020, the legislature passed AB 1788 to minimize unintended poisonings from one subset of particularly dangerous rodenticides, second generation anticoagulant rodenticides, placing a moratorium on certain uses until more comprehensive restrictions were developed. Now, despite that implementation, recent evidence from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife suggests that still widespread exposure and deaths to wildlife from Escars and other rodenicides we've all seen this. These are the bobcats and mountain lions that look like they have mange, but are actually suffering from internal hemorrhaging from rat poison that gets out into the environment. One of the reasons is that another subset of rodenicides, being the first generation anticoagulant rodenticides, the fjars contain this ingredient, which is the most frequently detected .... in non target wildlife. These are deadly and very poisonous to wildlife, and there's an unreasonable number of wildlife poisonings. But there's also an unreasonable number of public health incidents with over 3000 human poisonings in 2021, at least 2300 of these involving children under six years old, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers. AB 1322 will place greater restrictions on some of the most dangerous rodenticides, while maintaining short and long term exceptions to protect public health, agriculture and the environment. Members, there's a wide range of safer, more sustainable, and cost effective and very, very effective alternatives to these very dangerous chemicals that don't threaten our children and our wildlife. Thank you. On behalf of the coyotes, mountain lions, bobcats, owls, and other raptors and predators, I would request an aye vote. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, assembly Member Friedman, seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. ayes 46 noes nine. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number two five one, AB 1347. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1347 by Assembly Member Ting an act relating to solid waste.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Ting, you may open on your bill.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. AB 1347 is my skip the slip bill. The bill will require all businesses to ban the use of BPA and BPAs in paper receipts. It also requires businesses with over $25 million in revenue to offer customers an electric receipt sorry, an electronic receipt, a paper receipt, or no receipt. And again, just to reclarify, it's $25 million and over in revenues, which would exempt every small business in this state and then some. The bill does not ban paper receipts or does not infringe upon anybody's right to ask for paper receipt. And it also doesn't infringe upon business ability to provide a paper receipt when they're required to by federal or state law. These receipts nationwide cost 3 million trees, 10 billion gallons of water, and create 302,000,000 pounds of waste. There's a significant environmental impact. We know that many businesses have already moved in this direction, businesses such as Trader Joe's, TJ maxx or CVS. I've known that recently. We've been talking to the gas stations as well as drive throughs who are looking at ways that we can comply with the no receipt or the paper receipt option. We're going to be happy to work with them, and we'll work with them as we hopefully can move this bill into the Senate. Respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 1347.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly member Ting. Assembly member Joe Patterson. You are recognized.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Thank you. I have a question of the author. All right. In Committee, several concerns were raised about preventing organized retail theft and how receipts are used for SNAP recipients. And I think there are amendments from the opposition that would eliminate the opposition. And I was just wondering, you kind of alluded to it a little bit, but if you intend to take a look at those amendments or keep working on this. Thank you.
- Philip Ting
Person
So the amendments that the opposition was looking for was not asking everyone to do the electronic receipt option. At this point, we really want to be consumer first. So if consumers want a paper receipt, if they want no receipt or they want an electronic receipt, we really believe that they should have that option. So obviously, as we discuss with opposition, happy to keep the conversation going. But that was, as of the last discussion, the major item that they were looking for.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill. Assembly Member Ting, would you like to close? The clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Ayes 42, noes 15. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 253, AB 1359. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1359 by Assembly Schiavo an act related to employment.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Schaivo, you may open on your bill.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker and members, today I rise to present AB 1359 as a nurse advocate. I've heard too many times from nurses and healthcare workers about being forced to work sick. One nurse that I spoke to actually worked in the labor and delivery unit where she was still recovering from COVID and her boss was pushing her to come in sick and work with delivering moms and newborn babies. This is unacceptable. We need to make sure that we have safe patient care and that nurses and healthcare workers are allowed the time that they need to be able to recover from illness and also don't bring that into hospitals and endanger patients. And so AB 1359 would supply them with sick days that they deserve and the opportunity to defend their rights and use them. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Seeing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Ayes 42, noes 14. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 254 AB 1370. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1370 by Assembly Member Ta an act relating to economic development.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Ta, you may open in your bill.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you, Madame Speaker. I'm here to present AB 1370, which modernize economic workforce development program for the California Community College. AB 1370 modernized program by bringing it out of the 1990 and into the 2020. California population economy have changed dramatically. Seen a program in ACMAN in 1991. Likewise, the modern economy built on information technology automation and lean technology constantly involved california Committee College provide opportunity to 100% of Californians who seek them including English language learner mid career professional looking to boost their skill and young. Adult looking to transfer to a university career training program must be flexible to adapt to chain in demographic and economy. To ensure California maintain its compatible advantage in the marketplace. AB 1370 is a timely opportunity to modernize economic workforce development program to be more strategic in how dollars are used without adding any new cost, and to renew its focus on student center outcome by counting for the need of employer in common worker and labor market data. I humbly ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Ta and hearing others wishing to speak on this bill. The clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Eyes 59 no, zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 255, AB 1382. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1382 by Assembly Member Quirk-Silva and others and actively into state government.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Quirk Silva. You may open on your bill.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker. AB 1382 requires the California Arts Council to create an interdepartmental advisory group to support state designated cultural districts. We do have 14 in our state. The benefits to state designated cultural districts include technical assistance and branding materials that increase the visibility of local communities and artists. California's strengths lies in the diverse and unique artistic identities of many of our communities, and more deserve the chance to be officially recognized for highlighting the cultural diversity that makes our state truly exceptional. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Clerk silver seeing and here. I know that's for speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those votes who desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, all those vote to desire to vote, the Clerk will close the roll. bill is passed. Moving on to item number 256, AB 1386. The Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1386 by Assembly Gabriel and others an act relating to veterans.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Gabriel, you may open on your bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Speaker. I'm pleased today to present Assembly Bill 1386, which will increase flexibility for much needed supportive housing services for our homeless veterans. Many supportive housing services must currently adhere to stringent eligibility requirements that can leave beds empty, while veterans who desperately need services remain unhoused on our streets. AB 1386 would allow specified supportive housing services for low income veterans to flex their eligibility requirements if an eligible tenant is unable to be located during a good faith search period. This bill ensures our lowest income veterans are given priority on these units, but also that we are delivering housing services to homeless veterans as quickly and as efficiently as possible. This bill has received unanimous bipartisan support, and I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Gabriel. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the Clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the Clerk will close the roll. Ayes 16. No, zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 257, AB 1413. The Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1413 by Assembly Member Ting and others and act relating to homelessness and making an appropriation therefore.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Ting, you may open on your bill.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you. A number of years ago, when the state was starting to grapple with our homelessness crisis, we initiated a program called HAP to give cities, counties, continuous care grant money to deal with the homelessness crisis. That money could have been spent in any number of ways, whether it was permanent supportive housing, whether it was temporary shelter, whether it was services. We've seen that this money has been used very well across the board, but what we need is better metrics and better reporting back. So what we do is we want to make sure there's better accountability. This bill ensures that with HAP as well as with two other homelessness programs, encampment resolutions as well as Family Challenge grants, that we focus on two major metrics. One is how many folks were getting off the streets, and then how many people were actually getting into permanent housing. Additionally, the bill will move three programs, the Interagency Council on Homelessness, from the agency Council on Homelessness to Housing and Community Development. Hopefully to streamline that right now, because HCD is the primary agency to oversee that, that'll hopefully create one agency that will be accountable for homelessness. With that respect for your Aye vote on AB 1413.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Ting. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 64. Noes, zero. The bill is passed. Members, we're going to jump to item 350, AB 610. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 610 by Assembly Member Holden and others an relating to transportation.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Holden, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Holden
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker and Members, for the opportunity to present AB 610. This bill establishes the Student Transit Pass Pilot Program, a grant program for transit agencies designed to fund fairfree transit passes for California students. For students, access to transit is inseparable from their capacity to pursue their education, support themselves and their families, and attain the California dream. AB 610 is a win for our students, our climate, and our transit agencies. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Holden. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 57, no, zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item 352 AB 623. Excuse me, AB 624. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 624 by Assembly Member Grayson an act related to post secondary education.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Grayson, you may open on your bill.
- Timothy Grayson
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Members, AB 624 removes the cost barriers to diagnostic assessments for students with disabilities. Testing accommodations are changes to the regular testing environment and auxiliary AIDS and services that allow individuals with disabilities to demonstrate their true aptitude and achievement level on standardized exams or other tests. In order to qualify for testing accommodations, students must obtain their own medical diagnostic assessments, which can cost upwards of thousands of dollars, creating an unfair economic disparity for students who have disabilities. By removing the cost barrier to diagnostic assessments, all students can thrive and succeed, regardless of their disability. Thank you. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Grayson. Seeing and hearing no those wishing to speak on this bill. The clerk will open the roll. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Ayes 58, noes, zero. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number 353, AB 647. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 647 by some Member Holden an act related to private employment.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Holden, you may open on your bill.
- Chris Holden
Person
Thank you, Madam Speaker. I'm presenting today AB 647. As we know, grocery store employees were among the essential frontline workers, helping our communities receive the resources they needed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite their continued service, many of these workers have become collateral damage in the wake of mega grocery store chain mergers. AB 647 seeks to prevent this by strengthening and expanding statewide grocery worker retention and rehiring laws for stores with 300 or more employees nationwide. This bill will expand grocery worker retention law to include warehouse employees, remove the incentive to prolong a grocery store from reopening to avoid postmerger retention procedures, and provide enforcement provisions that allow for the labor Commissioner to enforce and grant a private right of action for aggrieved employees. AB 647 will protect workers by preventing mass layoffs and ensuring a consistency in food safety and pharmaceutical knowledge within our communities. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Holden. Seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the clerk will open. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. All those vote to desire to vote. The clerk will close the roll. Ayes 41, noes. 14. The bill is passed. Moving on to item number three. Five four, AB 660. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 660 by some Member Irwin an act related to food labeling.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Irwin, you may open on your bill.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Speaker. For too long, Californians have been misled by unclear labels on food. Stores offer products with all sorts of different labels, including expires on best, before, enjoy, buy, Sell, by, just to name a few. These labels consistently mislead and confuse consumers with one study attributing as much as 20% of food waste to these labels. AB 660 would end this confusion. It takes the industry's own adopted standard and requires food items that use date labels to use standard terms best of, used by to indicate quality date of the peak quality of the food, or used by to indicate safety of the food. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Irwin, seeing and hearing no others wishing to speak on this bill, the crook will open the roll. Desire to vote. All those votes who desire to vote. All those votes who desire to vote, the clerk will close the roll. Ayes 46, noes. 14. The bill is passed.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Members. Next, we'll take up file item 355. This is AB 695. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 695 by Simon Pacheco an act relating to juveniles
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Pacheco. You may open on the bill.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Today I rise to present assembly. Bill six nine five. AB 695 would create the Juvenile Detention Facilities Improvement Grant program. The Los Angeles Probation Department's juvenile detention facilities are badly outdated and in need of critical renovations. With almost all of its physical plants in significant dilapidation. Facilities are not adequate to meet the basic state law requirement of a homelike environment, much less meet the current CareFirst and intensive rehabilitation model that juvenile justice requires. It is our responsibility to ensure that every possible effort is made to provide a positive outcome for youth that have been remanded to the care of our probation Department. AB 695 will ensure that our justice involved youth have the tools needed for their rehabilitation. They deserve no less. AB 695 has received bipartisan support and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Pacheco. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally votes. Eyes 58, no zero. The bill is passed. Next by Mr. Lowenthal. This is file item 356, AB 696. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 696 by Senator Lowenthal an act relating to state government
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Lowenthal. You may open on the bill.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I am pleased to present AB 696 the California State Grants and Contracts Modernization Act, which will streamline the way the state engages in contracting grant administration with entities, including nonprofits, by requiring agencies to provide for and accept electronic signatures, electronic transmission of documents and electronic fund transfers. Bill also requires the state library to survey all state agencies administering grants or contracts with eligible entities and report to the legislature on the current extent and nature of electronic management documents associated with grants and contracts with those entities. AB 696, as part of this year's nonprofit bill package, has received unanimous bipartisan support and has no opposition. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Lowenthal. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 65, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next. This is file item Mr. McCarty. 357, AB 714. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 714 by Senator McCarthy and others an related to pupil instruction.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Senator McCarthy, you may open on the bill. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This measure is to help our school districts, our educators and our schools across California help newcomer students. Those are recent arrivals, whether they're refugees or immigrants. We know that their success is our success, whether they go on to college or focus on job training and career readiness. California's diverse state. Our refugees and immigrants are even more diverse. And this will allow our schools and our educators more tools and data to help them succeed. Respectfully ask your ripo. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. McCartney. And seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 65, no, zero. Bills passed. Passed temporarily on file item 358. This is bringing us to Mr. Korea file item 360, AB 744. Clerk will read Assembly Bill 744 by some Member Juan Korea and others and actively in data and analytics. And Assembly Member Korea, you may open on the bill. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, I rise today to present Assembly Bill 744, which seeks to improve the consistency of transportation data. Too often, important decisions in transportation are made with data that's out of date, incomplete, or both. By authorizing the California Transportation Commission to establish best practices in the acquisition of data modeling and analytics software tools, planners will know what's effective and what is not. As a former city planner, I see this as a crucial step in supporting the state's sustainable transportation, congestion management, affordable housing, efficient land use, air quality, and climate change strategies and goals. I respectfully ask for your I vote. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Koreo. And seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. I 64, no, zero. The bills passed next by assembly member Sanchez. This is file item 361, AB 746. Clerk will read Assembly Bill 746 by summer sanchez. And attribute a student financial aid. And assembly member Sanchez, you may open on the bill.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 746 would help our higher education institutions more fully utilize the funding allocated for the Learning Alignment employment program, which was intended to expand student access to meaningful career development programs. Amendments taken in Appropriations Committee have removed all opposition to this bill. I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Sanchez. And seeing no members wishing excuse me, Mr. Gallagher, you are recognized on the bill.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The author. I know this isn't your first bill, but I think it's your third bill. But I was really struck that you are changing the education code. Specifically section 69954 here. I was wondering if to fully get at what you're trying to do, if we should also change the education code 69964 as well, so that we have a complete coverage of all the programs here.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
I will address those in my close. Thank you.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
I'm glad you'll address that in the close. But if you'd be willing to take that as a friendly amendment and then we can move your bill to second reading and we could take it up later, if that's okay with you.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
I will address those in my close. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no other members wishing to be addressed on this bill, ms. Sanchez, you may close.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
I respectfully ask your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Sanchez. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 61, no, zero. The bills passed. Next. This is file item 764. Excuse me. File item 363, AB 764. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 764 by Asemmblyman Bryan and others an act relating to elections
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Bryan, you may open on the bill.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Four years ago, the legislator adopted the Fair Maps Act, resulting in a more transparent participatory local redistricting process in 2021 and 2022. There's a lot to celebrate, but there's still some more work to do. What this bill does is make some changes, increasing participatory community engagement in the redistricting process, and also make sure that we prioritize communities of interest over incumbency. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bryan. And seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll tally the votes and the roll is closed. Ayes 47, no. 15. The bill is passed. We will go back to Ms. Carrillo. This is file item 248, AB 1306. Clerk will read Assembly Bill 13o6 by Assemblymemeber Carrillo and others an act relating to state government and Assemblymember Carrillo. You may open on the bill.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I am proud to present AB 1306, the Harmonizing our Measures of Equality or Home Act. This bill will ensure that immigrant Californians are not excluded from recent criminal justice and compassionate release reforms passed by the Legislature in recent years. The Legislature has recognized that over incarceration hurts our state and our communities, and we've given individuals who've received harsh sentences as young people the opportunity to earn parole. The Legislature has recognized that there should be avenues for those whose convictions were tainted by racial bias or those who were convicted under statutes that we have reformed. The Legislature has also recognized the need to give justice impacted individuals the dignity to live out their final days with their loved ones and with adequate access to medical care. As a state, we have recognized those needs. But immigrant Californians are arbitrarily left out for no reason other than they were born somewhere else. It is also important to recognize that the word immigrant is not synonymous with undocumented. There are individuals with permanent residency, refugee or asylum status and countless other definitions who are now being double punished after they have received and earned parole. Our state prison system turns them over to Immigration Customs Enforcement for a double punishment, indefinite incarceration, and immigration detention, which is a sentence that was never handed down by a criminal court or a judge. This arbitrary double punishment is served in facilities beyond California state oversight, where abuses are well documented, and when there is no right to legal counsel or to bail. The Home Act AB 1306 will end the double punishment of immigrants whose convictions are the subject of criminal justice reforms already signed into law. The Home Act also brings to light a dual system of justice that is unequal, that treats immigrants as less than that perpetuates perpetuates a bad immigrant narrative and invalidates the decision of the parole board entrusted with the decision making on an individual's rehabilitation and ability to restart their lives. Members, it was never the intention of the legislature, whether it's the assembly or the Senate or the Governor himself, to pass criminal justice reform policies that exclude immigrants. That is not who we are as this body. And with that, I respectfully request and aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Carrillo. And Assembly Member. Essayli, you're recognized on the bill.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Speaker, I rise in opposition to this bill. There's so much wrong with this bill, I don't even know where to begin. It is not double punishment to deport a murderer from our country. If you are not a citizen and you commit a serious crime, the consequences of committing that crime is and does include deportation. I am the son of immigrants. Both my parents immigrated to this country. You don't have a right to be here. It is a privilege to be in the United States of America. I think it's a privilege a lot of us take for granted. But if you come here and you violate our laws, you kill people, you harm people, you shoot people, you do not have a right to be protected from immigration proceedings. And I object to the narrative of this whole bill. That is double punishment. It is about public safety, and we should be removing those individuals to keep our public safe. And so I hope that you will oppose this. It is wrong. It is wrong to protect criminals from these administrative proceedings. Where is the second chance for their victims? They had someone testify at this bill who killed two people. Where's the second chance for the two people he killed? Where's their humanity? Where's their compassion? Not a word given to them. We have to get back to public safety. I rise in opposition. I ask you to support me. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Essayli and Assemblywoman McKinnor, you're recognized on the bill.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
I rise in support of this bill. Speaker and Members, we already know that black people are disproportionately targeted at all points of our justice system. At the point of arrest in the courts and while incarcerated. When black immigrants who have served their time are found eligible for release and are voluntarily handed to Ice in California, we amplify the racism already present in our justice system. Immigration and custom enforcement is widely known for their human right abuses, and black immigrants face the brunt of this abuse. While immigrants from Africa or the Caribbean make up about 4% of people in Ice detention from 2012 to 2017, they represented 24% of all solitary confinement lockups over that time. Black immigrants are also significantly more likely to be targeted for deportation. While 7% of noncitizens in the US. Are black, they make up a full 20% of those facing deportation on criminal grounds. And that happens despite there being no evidence that black immigrants commit crime at greater rates than other immigrants are US. Citizens. Even under this administration, the bond for Haiti immigrants is 54% higher than the rate of other immigrants in detention. Instead of this cycle of violence on black immigrants or double punishment, the Home Act takes an important step towards racial justice. By breaking cycles of violence and allowing immigrants to come home if they qualify for a number of existing reforms. Colleagues do not miss the opportunity to reunite and protect black families and communities. I urge you to vote aye on AB 1306. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. McKinnor and Assembly Member Gallagher, you are recognized on the bill.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members. And I just want to say that this is continuing this sanctuary state policy that is very dangerous and has led to the deaths of far too many people in this state. Now, earlier, my colleague from Los Angeles brought up this detestable shooting here in Sacramento. Done with the ghost gun. It's true. Conveniently left out of that story was that this was also a man who was not supposed to be in this country, was an illegal immigrant, had overstayed his visa, and just the week before had been arrested and was in Merced County jail, where they were prohibited by this law that we are expanding from. Even talking to Ice, who had requested to be notified if he was to be released. They were never notified. He went out and killed those three young daughters in a Sacramento church. So if we're going to talk about policies that help stop these tragic events from happening, this is another one that should be reformed that we should be talking about. We are talking about serious crimes here. We're not talking about misdemeanors. We're talking about murders. It's not the first time that that's happened. A few years back, Sacramento county deputy killed by someone who was not supposed to be here, had been deported, allowed back into the country. Kate Steinley, walking down the piers in San Francisco, killed by an illegal immigrant who was allowed to come back into this country in a policy of sanctuary that said, don't talk to Ice. We cannot continue this type of policy. And if you do, more people are going to die. This shouldn't be taken lightly and we should be thinking about reforming this policy, not expanding it. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Leader Gallagher and Assembly Member Kalra, you're recognized on the bill.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I rise in support of AB 1306 and will reject the fear based arguments that are constantly made, especially those that cast a negative light on our immigrant communities. We know the data shows that immigrants, both documented and undocumented, commit crimes at a lesser rate, and that's what the facts bear. And more significantly, this bill is not releasing anyone that's not found suitable for release. It's a narrow scope that individuals in certain categories would have to go through a parole hearing and are deemed safe to be released into society. That's the job of the criminal justice system to decide. If the federal government then wants to do proceedings on immigration at whatever point after an individual's release, so be it. But we're not here to do the job of the federal government, by the way, at a great cost to the state without the federal government at all having to reimburse the state. Our role here is to protect the public safety of Californians, and we do that by abiding by the recommendations of those that are recommended for parole and for release. If someone's arrested and convicted of a crime and they're sentenced to do a certain amount of time for that crime and then they're deemed suitable for release, that is what keeps our communities safe. And if individuals want to pull one anecdotal case or the other to strike fear into people rather than looking the actual facts of what's happening in our communities, that's our prerogative to do. But it's our job to pass good policy. And it is not good policy for us to have to, at our cost, cooperate with the federal government on immigration proceedings that they haven't even deemed or something they're going to follow through on. They just want us to tell them, anytime happens to be an individual, happens to be undocumented. That's not our role to do. We've already seen what's happened. What has happened when the federal government has overstepped their balance into our communities. And the bottom line is the individuals that have been recommended for release, that's not me saying it or the author saying it. That's our parole boards that are indicating that they're safe to be released into our community. And it's at that point that we need to provide the resources to ensure that they have everything that they need to be successful in contributing members of our society. It's not our role to unilaterally just send them over to the federal government for proceedings. That's the role of the federal government to do. And we need to keep that separated. And so I urge our colleagues to vote aye on AB 1306 and not get caught up in the fear mongering. Every time we have any bill involving involving criminal justice, we get this fear mongering. That's what got us in this mess to begin with, becoming the incarceration capital of the world. It's also what's got us in a mess of having our immigrant community targeted as if somehow they're more dangerous than the rest of the community, which is patently false. So I urge your support for AB 1306
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Kalra. And Assemblywoman Ortega, you're recognized on the bill.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Thank you, members, speaker, I rise in support of AB 1306. As many of you know, my parents brought me to this country as an illegal immigrant. At four years old, my mother crossed the border looking for the An American Dream with a four year old, a three year old, and a six month old. And I stand here today as a California Assembly member because of that sacrifice, because she led and thought about what it would be like for her family to come to this beautiful state. I also stand in support because for the last eight years, or in our previous presidential election, every day on television, I had to hear our President of the United States call my father a criminal, call my mother a rapist, call my aunts and uncles dangerous. It is because of this that I decided to sit here and stand here and speak up in support of AB 1306. We cannot allow us to continue the fear mongering that led to those words impacting not just my family, but hundreds of other immigrants who live in the state of California. Again, we have an ethical and moral obligation as state leaders to protect all of our constituents, regardless of status. I support and ask for your urgent aye vote for AB 1306.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Ortega. And seeing no other members wishing to be recognized on this bill, Assemblywoman Carrillo, you may close.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. This has been a three year process to get us to the Home Act to AB 1306. I want to thank all of the members that have been engaged on this policy related to both criminal justice and immigration reform. I also want to thank all of the advocates whose very lives are inflicted upon every day by the decisions that we made. Those advocates, some of which are also justice impacted individuals who I will say this, are rehabilitated. And one other R word, redemption. We talk a lot about what it means to have redemption, to have a second chance, to have an opportunity. Rehabilitation is also part of the California Departments of Corrections and Rehabilitation. I want to thank the corrections officers who I have spoken with for the past three years, who invest their time and their lives every day for the betterment of individuals currently incarcerated. A lot of them know and have seen firsthand redemption and rehabilitation. And when we've talked about this bill, they say there is no difference between someone who came from another country who grew up here and committed a crime and somebody born in the United States who committed the same crime. The person that was born in California or in the United States that commits a crime gets an opportunity to return home. Yet the immigrant who grew up here, but maybe as a permanent resident, does not get that same benefit that we have all passed as laws and have been signed by the governor of this state. I do not believe in a California that creates a dual system of justice that treats immigrants less than less human and any less Californian than any one of us in this body right now. I also want to give thanks to the families that have been impacted, the families that are survivors, the families that are also in support of this bill, who also understand that if a crime was committed, if a judge passed a sentence, if that sentence was served, if the parole board made a decision that that individual is rehabilitated to be able to restart their lives. That is the compact that we have as a society. Anything less is not justice. Anything that does not follow that allows for a double punishment of an individual simply because they are an immigrant. That is not the California that I want us to have moving forward. I want to make sure that California has one system of justice that treats everyone the same, regardless of where they were born. This is a much more narrow bill than the previous versions of this policy aligning to criminal justice reforms that have already been signed into law. And I will state again that it was never the intention of the legislature to pass criminal justice reform policies that exclude immigrants. It was never the intention of the legislature to exclude immigrants. And we will not stand here and continue to uphold a dual system of justice that treats immigrants differently. And with that, I respectfully request an aye vote on AB 1306. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 50, no. 17. The bills pass. Next, Mr. Holden, we will be moving on to file item 364. This is AB 776. The clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 776 by some member Holden and others in Activating Transportation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Holden, you may open on the bill.
- Chris Holden
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, today I rise to present Assembly Bill 776. It creates a process at the Department of Transportation to identify appropriate locations of signs to recognize tribal lands along Route 210 and consider renaming the 210 Freeway the Southern California Native American Freeway. This bill seeks to acknowledge the land and the people whom the land belongs to. Los Angeles county is home to the largest concentration of persons of any part American Indian descent in the United States. The 210 Freeway begins in Silmar district of Los Angeles and travels east to the city of Redlands in San Bernardino. AB 776 is a bill that encourages the state of California to think critically about ways to increase the visibility of our Native American brothers and sisters by creating a state process to identify tribal boundaries. With that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Holden. And Assemblywoman Rivas you're recognized on the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I want to thank the author for bringing this measure to our floor. I represent communities that are along the 210 freeway in Los Angeles and I'm happy to support this bill today. Thank you so much.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. Seeing no other members wishing to be recognized, mr. Holden, anything further to close? Very well. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 63, no, zero. Bill is passed next by Mr. Maienschein . This is file item 365, AB 781. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 781 by Assembly Member Maienschein an act relating to emergency services
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Maienschein . You may open on the bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 781 requires local governments to designate emergency shelters, warning centers, and cooling centers that are able to accommodate peoples with pets. This bill has no opposition as received bipartisan support. I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Maienschein. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 63, no, zero. The bills passed next by Mr. Berman. This is file item 366, AB 789. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 789 by Assembly Berman and others an act related to student financial aid
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblymember Berman, you may open on the bill.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues. I rise to present AB 789, a bill to ensure that more California students are able to keep their financial aid and achieve their higher education dreams, despite the critical role played by financial aid and college achievement. Data shows that sizable numbers of underrepresented students lose access to financial aid due to satisfactory academic progress standards. AB 789 would establish a common set of standards for satisfactory academic progress, including appeals to ensure that all California students are provided with the flexibility currently allowed under federal law. I respectfully ask for aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Berman. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 60, no, zero. The Bills pass next by Dr. Weber. This is file item 368, AB 798. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 798 by Assembly Member Weber an act related to female general mutation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Dr. Weber, you may open on the bill.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present AB 798 this bill strengthens our laws to hold anyone accountable who subjects any child to female genital mutilation. The practice of female genital mutilation, or FGM, is recognized internationally as a human rights violation and as an extreme form of gender based violence. FGM is a procedure that involves partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for nonmedical reasons. These procedures are carried out on young girls ranging in age from birth to teens, and are generally done on the grounds of religion and cultural beliefs around femininity, modesty safeguarding, virginity, beauty, marriage, worthiness, and family honor. I have personally come across this in my profession as a physician and have seen firsthand how the practice leaves young girls and women with lifelong health problems and psychological trauma. AB 798 will expand the definition of FGM to that of the World Health Organization to ensure that includes all types of FGM. It will allow for any evidence that an individual transported a minor out of the state for the purposes of FGM, to be used as circumstantial evidence under our current FGM law or other criminal sections as child abuse. Under AB 798, religion or cultural custom will not be a criminal defense for anyone participating in any type of FGM. And lastly, this bill will also make it easier for medical professionals and all mandated reporters to know that FGM is child abuse, and it should be reported despite the parent or guardians facilitating it for their daughter. Ending FGM will require a multisexual approach that pulls in physicians, advocates, survivors and elected officials. This bill has bipartisan support and no opposition. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Assembly member Weber. And seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 68, no zero. The bill is passed. Members, a brief announcement. You have dispensed with 100 bills today. Well done. Can't stop. Won't stop. Moving on to file item 370, AB 835. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 835 by Assembly Member Lee and others an act relating to fire protection
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Lee. You may open on this bill.
- Alex Lee
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, please present our 101st bill of the day. This bill will help bring this bill will direct the state fire Marshal to research standards for single stairway, multi unit residential buildings and submit a report to relevant stakeholders. This kind of building is very common in Europe where generally modern safety features like sprinklers are also required in most new buildings in America, and demonstrate. Better safety results in additional staircases. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Lee. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 63. No. Zero. The bill is passed.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
We are going to go to Miss Papan. This is file item 36, AB 893. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 893 by Assembly Member Pappen an act relating to passenger vehicles
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblymember Papan, you may open on this bill.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 893 will require peer to peer platforms to obtain a permit prior to facilitating transactions at an air at an airport and end the taxpayer subsidization of their operations. There's been quite a bit of discussion regarding what this bill will do and whom this bill will affect. First, I want to address the concerns raised regarding the bill language that ride sharing is reasonably similar to rental car. I have communicated to members and the stakeholders that I will strike this language in the next policy committee. Let me be clear, this bill will not force a permit process on airports and will not interfere with current airport contracts with ridesharing programs. I've worked closely with the Airports Council since the beginning of the session, and not one airport has objected to the language in this bill. This bill does, however, require these platforms to comply with airport regulations. This is critical because for several years, personal vehicle sharing platforms have ignored airport authority and continue to operate at airports as they please. Unpermitted sharing of vehicle at airports has led to a myriad of issues, including vehicles left abandoned or waiting at terminal areas for lengthy periods of time, increased traffic congestion, and a loss of revenue. Revenue which is critical to ensure that public airports are not a drain on the taxpayers. Additionally, AB 893, as in print, addresses additional gaps in current law by requiring these vehicle sharing platforms to adhere to transparent price disclosure regulations and require that they contribute to California's tourism marketing programs. Lastly, I want to acknowledge that I've been working closely with all stakeholders, including the CEO of Turo. Also, I will be narrowing the bill in scope in the Senate, which will bring one of the ride sharing entities on in support of the bill. Peer to peer rental car rental services represent a dynamic innovation in the market and airports want their business but can no longer get a free ride, can no longer allow them to get a free ride, and avoid paying their fair share. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Papan and a Assembly Member Essayli you're recognized on the bill.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I've been closely following this bill since it came to the Judiciary Committee earlier this year. Initially, I abstained from supporting the bill to make sure that we were protecting our innovative economy as well as our consumers. There are many important elements to this bill, though, such as the potential for legislative certainty for peer to peer car sharing companies, particularly concerning airport operations. The largest peer to peer car sharing company has expressed support for obtaining permits at airports. I agree and believe peer to peer car sharing should not bear the burden of fees supporting airport rental infrastructure they do not use. I know this is one of the many points the author is working hard to address. I understand there are concerns with the current language of the bill and the potential unintended consequences, but I'm confident that my colleague from San Mateo is committed to addressing them. I do want to acknowledge and thank the author for all her hard work and for the amendments she's already committed to taking in the Senate. I look forward to those additional amendments with engagement from all stakeholders and to see a fair playing field for all business. I'll be supporting the bill today and I look forward to the continued hard work on this issue. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Essayli. And seeing no other members wishing to speak on this bill, Ms. Papan, anything further to close?
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Peer to peer providers should contribute, like all of their companies, if they utilize public access to make a profit. No more free rides. I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 49, no zero. The bill is passed. Next, we are going to move to Miss Chiavo. This is file item 32, AB 1631. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1631 by Assembly MemberShiavo and others an act related to water resources.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Shiavo, you're recognized on the bill.
- Pilar Schiavo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. This is a really important district bill for us. 30 years ago, the city of Santa Clarita was only three years old and there has been a pending permit on an aggregate mine for those 30 years. This bill simply says that after 30 years, if a permit has been pending, that there's an opportunity to go to the state water board and for the public to have input again. As we know, after 30 years in the city of Santa Clarita, water needs have changed significantly. And we think this is an important, common sense solution for not only our community, but any other communities that are faced with something that is pending for 30 years from its inception. Respectfully ask for your I vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Shiavo. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote all those vote who desire to vote will close. Or we'll tally the votes. Ayes 41 Noes13. The bills pass. Next, by Miss Irwin, we will take a file item 109. This is AB 531. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 531 by Assembly Member Irwin and others an act related to veterans housing by providing funds necessary therefore, an election of insurance and sale of bonds in the state of California and the handling of disposition of those funds.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Irwin, you may open on the bill.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. In 2014, California voters approved Proposition 41 to create the Veteran Housing and Homeless Prevention Program, known as VHHP. However, nearly all the funding has been depleted from this highly successful program. AB. 531 addresses this by reenacting, by enacting the Veteran Housing and Homeless Prevention Bond Act. This bill would ask voters to authorize the issuance of bonds to provide additional funding for the construction of affordable multifamily housing with supportive services for veterans. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Irwin. And seeing no members wishing to address the bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes ayes 69, noes, zero. The bill is passed. We are back on file with Mr. Berman. This is file item 371, AB. 841. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 841 by Assemblymember Berman and others an act relating to energy
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assemblymember Berman. You may open on the bill.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
AB 841 is a key first step for California to push the transition of our industrial sectors to zero emission by tasking the California Energy Commission with preparing an industrial heat electrification roadmap on or before January 1, 2025. This report will provide critical information for the state to continue in our efforts to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Berman. See no members wishing to speak on this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes ayes 62, noes, zero. The bill is passed. Next. This is by Mr. Valencia. File item 372, AB. 860. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 860 by Assembly Member Valencia and others, an act relating to state government
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Mr. Valencia, you may open on the bill.
- Avelino Valencia
Legislator
When I started, Mr. Speaker and Members, AB. 860 will support our state's equity and access goals by reducing the effort and expenses associated with applying for and receiving state funds pursuant to very small grants for nonprofits. This bill will reasonably limit what information administrators may ask for grant from grant recipients and encourages streamlined information. AB. 60 has no opposition and has bipartisan support. I respectfully ask for an aye vote gracias.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Valencia. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the wall. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes I 62, no, zero. The bills pass. Next. File item 374, AB. 866. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 866 by Senator Blanca Rubio and act related to food and assistance
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblywoman Rubio, you may open on the bill.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members for the opportunity to present AB. 866. This measure continues the states and specifically this body's efforts to prevent food insecurity in our most vulnerable populations. AB 866 ensures that foster youth 18 to 21 years of age do not lose CalFresh benefits due to supplemental payments they receive while participating in supervised independent living placements. This is a simple fix for a population the state is critically invested in. I am thankful to many of the members present here today who have tirelessly advocated to ensure the best continuum of support for our foster youth. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rubio. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 60, noes, zero. The bill is passed next by Mr. Haney. This is file item 375, AB 871. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 871 by Assembly Member Haney an act relating to safety and employment
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assembly Haney. You may open on the bill.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 871 will ensure that standards and safety measures required for commercial elevators are also in place for private residential elevators inside the home. Currently in California, only commercial elevators are subject to post installation safety inspections. Additionally, these elevators are subject to annual inspections by Cal OSHA elevator unit inspectors. Private residence elevators which are not regularly inspected, are more likely to have crucial safety system errors, increasing the likelihood of severe injury or death. This bill would ensure that private residence elevators meet the same rigorous safety standards and inspections as commercial elevators. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Haney. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Eyes 52. Nose five. Bill is passed. Next item. File item 376, AB 881. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 881 by Summer Ting an act relating to jury duty
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblyman Ting. You may open on the bill.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 881 expands upon a previous pilot bill I did to increase jury pay for criminal cases from $15 every day to $100. The bill will be piloted in San Francisco, Alameda, kern los Angeles and Monterey. What we found in the first few years of our San Francisco pilot is that we are always promised a jury of our peers, but we don't always get the same diversity, because, quite simply, many working families can't afford to be on a jury because they have to go to work. So because we increased the supplement to $100, we found a much more diverse jury pool in terms of income as well as in terms of diversity. This made a very big difference. We want to expand this to four other counties, Alameda, Kern, LA, and Monterey. Respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 881.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Ting. Seeing no members wishing to be recognized on this bill. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 54 and noes three. The bills pass. Next. Mr. Mathis. File item 377 AB 883. Clerk will read
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Bill 883 by Senator Mathis and others and attribute business licenses.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Mathis, you may open on the bill.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 883 will require state agencies to expedite the applications of active duty service members who are enrolled in the Department of Defense Skilled Bridge Program. What this simply does is, in the military, we have a different skills that are useful and there's different licenses within the state. The program helps them get those licenses. We're just making sure that they're able to apply six months before they're in time of service. So as they come back to civilian life, they've already got their licenses and they're good to go. With that, I ask you for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Mathis. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 63. No, zero. The bill is passed, passed temporarily on 378. Bring us to Mr. Jones. Sawyer. File item 379, AB 912. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 912 by Assembly Member Jones Sawyer and others an act relating to youth
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Jones.Sawyer, you may open on the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present AB 912. The Strategic Antiviolence Funding Efforts Act or Safe Act, rather than returning to the general fund, is imperative that the cost savings from prison closures are kept within the legislature's crime prevention budget and reinvested into effective strategies that further reduce crime and violence. In order to effectively enhance public safety and health, we must ensure that we are investing in programs with a proven track record of keeping our communities safer and providing critical health support. As such, the Safe Act is a comprehensive measure that will fund programs to reduce violence and crime, avert youth from the criminal justice system, reduce youth PTSD symptoms and mental illnesses, and provide life saving resources to all of our constituents. The Safe Act has received bipartisan support, has support recommendations from both caucuses and no registered opposition. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Jones Sawyer seeing no members. Mr. Alanis, you're recognized on the bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Just want to say thank you to the author, also proud co author of this bill. We need to do more about our youth. We need to do more on the front end. And I think that's what this bill will do. So thank you again.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Alanis. If there's nothing further to close, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 59, no, zero. The bill is passed back to Mr. Ting. This is file item 381, AB 932. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 932 by Assembly Member Ting an act relating to land use
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Assembly Ting, you may open on the bill. Thank you.
- Philip Ting
Person
AB 932 requires that Cal HFA provide a report on its ADU grant program by January 1, 2025. ADU's have been one of our success stories in terms of increasing housing supply in this state, offering some modest housing in many, many communities, as well as its ability to increase housing supply for a very, very critical resource. With that respect ask for an aye vote on AB 932.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Ting. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 61, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next by Mr. Connolly. File item 382, AB 935. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 935 by Senator Connolly an act relating to tobacco sales.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Connolly, you may open on the bill.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. In 2022, 63% of California voters via Prop. 31, uphilled Senate Bill 793 prohibiting tobacco retailers from selling most flavored tobacco products. Despite the overwhelming support from voters to ratify SB 793, flavored tobacco products continue to be sold in many stores across the state, which allows many teenagers to continue accessing these dangerous products. AB 935 will explicitly authorize the California Department of Public Health and the Attorney General to enforce the flavored tobacco ban pursuant to Business and Professions Code, section 22 955, also known as the Stop Tobacco Access to Kids or Steak Act. Consistent with other tobacco enforcement efforts. AB 935 will also replace the subdivision from the Health and Safety Code, which makes violation of SB 793 a misdemeanor and criminal penalty. Instead, pursuant to the Stake Act, it will become a civil penalty to retailers, their agents, or their employees who are in violation. We anticipate the cost of implementation will be minor and absorbable. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Connolly, and seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Eyes 50. Does eleven the bills passed. Get Mr. Connelly. This is file item 383, AB 953. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 953 by summer. Connolly and others an act related to Coastal Resources
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Connelly, you may open on this bill.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Thank you again, Mr. Speaker. Colleagues. AB 953 requires the Ocean Protection Council to create a statewide voluntary vessel speed reduction and sustainable shipping program for the California coast. The primary objective of this program is to reduce air pollution the risk of fatal vessel strikes on whales and harmful underwater acoustic impacts. This bill would codify and build upon the existing local vessel speed reduction programs. This bill has received no, no votes and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Connolly. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 64, no zero. The bills pass. Next by Mr. Santiago. This is file item 384, AB 958. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 958 by Senator Santiago and others an act relating to prisons
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And a. Senator Santiago, you may open on the bill.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This bill restores incarcerated person right the visitation and establishes a minimum of three days a week for visitations. This bill strikes the balance between maintaining meaningful connections and public safety by outlining visiting procedures that are consistent with CDRC's own regulations. Respectfully ask for an eye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Santiago. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on the bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 45, nose ten bills pass. Next. This is file item 385, AB 962. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 962 by Senator Vince Fong and others an act relating identification cards
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Senate member Vince Fong, you may open on this bill.
- Vince Fong
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. This bill exempts the low income DMV ID card application and renewable fee from annual inflation adjustments to deliver needed financial relief to low income Californians. This bill has enjoyed unanimous support and has no opposition. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Fong. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 70, no zero. The bills pass. Next. This is file item 386, AB 970. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 970 by Assembly Member Rivas and act relating to insurance.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Rivas, you may open on the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. California's most vulnerable communities disproportionately suffer from the impacts of climate change. Inclement weather, such as atmospheric storms or extreme heat events, brings the potential for the loss of life and property. And oftentimes low income individuals, homeowners renters and small businesses have the most to lose because they don't have the resources, such as insurance, to financially recuperate. AB 970 rectifies this by closing insurance protection gaps to ensure that communities have the tools for resiliency in future weather events. AB 970 is sponsored by insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara. I respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 66, no zero. The bill is passed. Next by Mr. Maienschein. This is file item 387, AB 972. Clerk will read
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Assembly Bill 972. By Assembly Member Maienchein an act relating local government.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Maienschein, you may open on the bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. AB 972 streamlines local government assistance resources so that every community has the same opportunity to compete for date funding. Smaller, underresourced cities and counties are at a disadvantage when applying for competitive grants, as they typically lack the technical expertise, resources and experience. This bill requires the Office of Planning and Research to convene a working group with the eventual goal of creating a streamlined process that allows local governments to apply for multiple grant programs using only one application. I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Maienschein. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes Ayes 69, no, zero. The bills pass. Next by Mr. Gipson. This is file item 389, AB 997. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 997 by Assembly Member Gipson an act relating to exonoration
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and assembly. Member Gibson, you may open on this bill.
- Mike Gipson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. Members, I rise to present Assembly Bill nine nine seven, which seeks to provide long term health mental health services for exonerated exonerated exonerated individuals through the California Victims Compensation. This bill have received bipartisan support and in the Public Safety Committee was on consent. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gipson. Seeing no members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes ayes 68, no, zero bills passed. Next, back to Mr. Alvarez. This is file item 390, AB1005. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1005 by Sememor Alvarez an act related to In Home Supportive Services.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Mr. Alvarez, you may open on this bill.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I appreciate the opportunity to present to all of you AB 1005 today. If any of you have ever cared for someone with a terminal diagnosis, this bill might be of interest to you. Someone with a terminal diagnosis is facing a really challenging moment, and sometimes they need a family or friend to help care for them during these moments. Recognizing this difficulty, the state offers resources and support to ensure that patients end of life care makes them as comfortable as possible, including IHSS Caregiver Services. However, despite having radically different lifetime expectations, terminal and nonterminal patients are put through the same process to receive those services. AB 1005 helps resolve this by creating an expedited process to become an IHSS recipient for patients that are eligible to receive a terminal diagnosis. Specifically, this bill, upon diagnosis, requires that the diagnosing doctor provide information regarding the IHS program, an application to receive services, and the opportunity for their application to be expedited by the county. It also requires that counties expedite the application to the extent feasible. AB 1005 seeks to ensure that those who receive terminal diagnosis are eligible for IHSS. Services are given priority so that the process does not outlive them as often as the case today. By no means is AB 1005 a finished product. We will continue to work, and we have throughout the entire process with all stakeholders to refine the language so that the bill actually accomplishes what it intends without affecting or creating unnecessary burdens on healthcare providers, counties, or workers. Thank you for your time, and I respectfully ask for your Aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Alvarez. And seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote all those vote who desire to vote all.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will close roll, tally the votes. Ayes 65, no, zero. Bill is passed. We're going to go back to Mr. McCarthy and pick up file item 378, AB 897. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 897 by Assembly Member McCarty and others, an act relating to school employees
- Chris Ward
Legislator
and Mr. McCarty, you may open on this bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. We all have adult education programs in our districts we know make a big difference helping people learn English, get job skills, better lives. The key of that is the teachers. But too many adult education teachers don't have secure status in their jobs. There's a dual process for tenureship for regular teachers and adult education instructors. This would get rid of that and make sure that teachers are teachers under the California law, and make sure that adult educators are valued in our great state of California. Ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Ms. Calderon, you may open on this bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. McCarty. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 48, no, seven. The bill is passed. Back on file. Miss Calderon file. Item 391, AB 1015. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1015 by some Member Calderon and others an act relating to children's health.
- Lisa Calderon
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Assembly Bill 1015 would create a statewide diaper and white distribution program and administered by the Department of Social Services to serve low income families with infants and toddlers. Diapers are the fourth greatest cost burden impacting one in three families in the United States. AB 1015 would expand an existing diaper bank program to all counties addressing the unmet need facing California's low income families. This bill is a legislative women's caucus priority. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Calderon. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the wall. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye 66, no zero. The Bills pass next to Miss Aguar Curry. This is file item 392, AB 1024. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1024 by Assembly Member Aguiar Curry an act relating to water
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Aguiar Curry, you may open on this bill.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Good afternoon, chair and members. Today I'm proud to present AB 1024. This bill streamlines the process for a farm or vineyard owner to obtain a permit to divert water into a small irrigation pond. This process protects vulnerable fish populations like salmon by keeping water in the stream during spawning season. This process also provides farmers with a reliable source of water during low stream flow months. However, very few people apply because the current permit registration process is extremely time consuming and overburdens them. AB 1024 addresses this problem by helping to streamline the application process. There is no opposition and no no's votes. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Miss Aguiar Curry. And seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 67, no, zero. The bill is passed. Next, Mr. Jim Patterson. This is file item 393, AB 1065. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1065 by Assembly Member Jim Patterson an act related to communications.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Mr. Patterson, you may open on this bill.
- Jim Patterson
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, members, I am presenting Assembly Bill 1065, which makes wireless broadband projects eligible for state grants that fund broadband deployment to connect unserved households. Now, we in the Legislature, we all have the same shared goal of connecting as many households as possible with broadband Internet. And so, under the right conditions, fixed wireless can provide high speed broadband connections faster, cheaper, and more efficiently than fiber, particularly in areas where fiber is very, very expensive to deliver. But to be clear, fiber technology would still be given preference, and wireless technology would be required to meet the same service standards as fiber. This bill is enjoyed bipartisan support, and I ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Patterson. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Aye. 63, no, zero. The bill's passed. Next. This is file item 394 by Dr. Weber. AB 1138. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1138 by Assembly Member Weber and others an act related to postsecondary education.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And assembly. Member Weber, you may open on this bill.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, today I rise to present AB 1138. AB 1138 will require CSU and UC campuses to contract with local rape crisis centers or to provide students confidential transportation to and from local Safe or SART exam centers to administer the safe kit. In the event of a sexual assault, the first form of care a patient typically receives is medical care. Whenever possible, the patient should receive it from a licensed sexual assault examiner at a rape crisis center, hospital or clinic. There, they can perform the forensic exam, address any physical injuries, perform testing, and provide preventative care. This bill will allow for students who have been either victims of sexual assault to get the support and health care they need without having to worry about how they will get there. This bill has bipartisan support and no opposition. And I respectfully ask your aye vote on AB 1138. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Dr. Weber. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 71, no. Zero. The bills pass. Next by Miss Quirk Silva. This is file item 397, AB 1175. Clerk will read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1175 by Assembly Member Quirk Silva and others, an act related to outdoor advertising
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Ms. Quirk Silva. You may open on this bill.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. Today I present AB 1175, which would allow cities and counties a one year opportunity window to apply for a five year extension for on premises signs in redevelopment areas from the California Department of Transportation. With the sunset date of this original bill now passed, it's essential to acknowledge that signs and redevelopment areas still hold relevance for local communities and government funding. Considering the prolonged recovery from the pandemic, my bill provides additional time for local governments to safeguard their general fund tax revenue, supporting vital community programs and services our constituents rely on. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Clerk Silva. And seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 68, no, zero. The bill's passed next by Ms. Rivas. This is file item 398 AB 1178. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1178 by Assembly Member Rivas an act related to school nutrition
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Rivas. You may open on the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. AB 1178 seeks to combat household hunger by providing parents or caregivers access to the summer meal program. Currently, the Federal Summer Food Service Program mandates that only children 18 and younger are eligible to receive free reimbursable meals. This program does not allow for parents or caregivers to receive a meal. If these students are experiencing homelessness or are living on the brink of homelessness, it is likely that everyone in their household are food insecure and experiencing hunger. AB 1178 seeks to create a state funded summer meal program for parents or caregivers whose children utilize the Federal Summer program to receive a summer meal. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. Seeing no members wishing to address this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote. Clerk will close the role, tally the votes. Ayes: 63. Nos: one. The bills pass.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Next, this is file item 399, AB 1185. Clerk will read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly bill 1185 by Assembly Member Gabriel and others, and after laying the state government.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblyman Gabriel, you may open on the bill.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I'm pleased today to present AB 1185. This is a Jewish Caucus priority bill that would strengthen the California Nonprofit Security Grant Program, which has provided security enhancements to nonprofit organizations at risk of hate motivated violence. This program has provided grants to organization up and down the state. And this program would remove barriers, this bill would remove barriers to make sure that all eligible organizations are able to apply. This bill has no opposition. Would respectfully request an aye vote on AB 1185.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gabriel and Assembly Member Zbur, you're recognized on the bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I rise in strong support of Assembly Bill 1185. This program is an incredibly important one to many nonprofits in my community who face extreme risks from hate based violence and has also been something that's been really important to Planned Parenthood, which is an organization on whose board I serve. So I urge an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Zbur. Seeing no other members wishing to address this bill, if there's Mr. Bryan you're recognized on the bill.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Got to love the seat. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I too rise in strong support. Like my colleague on the west side, I have seen the tangible and real impact of these security grants for our nonprofits, for our houses of worship, for Planned Parenthood and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bryan. If there's no other members wishing to be addressed on the bill. Mr. Gabriel, anything further to close?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Just want to thank my colleagues from the other part of Los Angeles. This is a program that has benefited so many of our diverse communities all across the state. Irrespective of ideology, irrespective of religious background. This program has traditionally enjoyed unanimous bipartisan support. Would respectfully request an aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. I 68, no zero. The bill is passed. Next. Mr. Hart. This is file item 400, AB 1197. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1197 by Assemblymember Hart an act relating to agricultural lands
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assemblymember Hart. You may open on the bill.
- Gregg Hart
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise to present AB 1197, a measure to support California's small family farms. AB 1197 will for the first time define local food producers and increase state resources to identify where local food produce is grown and sold. I'm pleased to have reached an agreement with the opposition and will be amending the bill in the Senate to move them to neutral. I respectfully urge your support on a measure to support local food producers.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Hart. Seeing no Members wishing to be addressed on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 57, no's two, the bills pass. Next. This is file item 402, AB 1248. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1248 by Assemblymember Bryan and others an act related to elections
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Assembly Member Bryan you may open on this bill.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Colleagues, we have been piecemealing the independent redistricting process county by county, across the state. I know I have chaired the elections committee the last two years. One thing is for certain independent redistricting commissions have shown to be the most impactful way for communities to get involved in participating in the lines drawings. The line drawings. We shouldn't be drawing our own lines. That's why the state has an independent process. This bill sets the guardrails that will allow for local jurisdictions, the largest local jurisdictions, to draw for themselves or to design for themselves what a local independent redistricting process should look like by 2030. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bryan, and Assemblywoman Davies you're recognized on the bill.
- Laurie Davies
Legislator
Thank you Mr. Chair. I have a question for the author.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Without objection.
- Laurie Davies
Legislator
Thank you. Under the State Redistricting Commission, the membership is made up of equal members from all political parties. Can you explain how this commission would be made up? Thank you.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I'll address that in my close.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Very well. Seeing no other members wishing to be addressed on this bill, Mr. Bryan, you may close.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Yeah. I don't believe that it's the role of government to come top down and tell locals what to do on the independent redistricting process. I believe that a grassroots, community-based process in each community, to design an independent commission by 2030 is the way to do this. So I haven't prescribed how the commission should look across the state. Each community is nuanced. The communities know that nuance. I trust for them to design it for themselves by 2030. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bryan. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Eyes. 55 no. 17 bills pass next by Mr. Bryan. Excuse me, Mr. Berman. This is file item 403, AB 1263. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1263 by the Committee on Business and Professions an relating to Vehicles.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Mr. Berman, you may open on this bill.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues. AB 1263 extends the sunset date for the Bureau of Automotive Repair until January 1, 2028 and makes additional technical changes, statutory improvements, and policy reforms in response to issues raised during the Bureau's sunset review oversight process. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Berman. Seeing no members wishing to speak on this bill, clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote. All those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close roll. Tally the votes. ayes 70, noes zero. The bill is passed. We are moving back on file to item 338. This is AB 460. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 460 by Assembly Member Bauer Kahan an act relating to water
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblywoman Bauer-Kahan you may open on this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise to present AB 460. About a year and a half ago, I became Chair of the Water Committee. My mom said, Why would anyone want that job? Well, I wanted it because I understood how important water was to the state of California. I'd never done much water policy, though, so I dove in to learning and researching what our state's needs were, what our future looked like, and what climate change would hold for the state of California. I'm going to be honest with you members. I didn't sleep much in that first month after I became chair of water parks and wildlife, because our future is really, really frightening. In 24 years, the scientists at our national labs predict we will have no more snowmelt. For those of you that understand california's water, you understand that is a giant portion of california's water supply that will not be here in 24 years. I learned about the good work that came before us, the straight groundwater management act, the bravery that our colleagues took to pass that bill and make sure that our groundwater was protected. And let me tell you what I also learned, which is across the west, we are in the best position in our groundwater management because of the bravery of our colleagues that came before us. Across the west, foreign interests are buying up land and pumping ad nauseam and selling that water and harming communities. In California, we haven't seen as much of that because of the good laws that people have passed. And so I learned that we needed to start to look to the future. We needed to start to think about what it meant to manage california's water resources in a future that will only contain many more droughts. And in these briefings that I had on our future, I was told that I should feel relieved that we'd have flooding like we had this year. Flooding that as many of you cost us lives and communities. That was the good news. And so I've taken upon myself to learn and to start to work, to start to work towards a future where our water is managed in a sustainable and meaningful way. And so I took this actually very small step in water management. This is an enforcement bill. It's very simple, you guys. I know people have made much of this bill, but all it does is say you got to follow the law. And if you don't, we're going to act immediately to stop you from stealing water that's not yours. And we're going to fine you in ways that actually cost you money to make sure our public good, our water is managed in a good way. I know you've heard from some folks who worry that I'm going to punish people who are legally using water. That is not my intent, nor will I do that. I continue to have productive conversations with those who are worried about this bill to make sure we narrow it, to actually ensure those who are illegally stealing water don't, but to ensure that our water agencies, who every day support us with the water we need to drink to bathe, can do the work we need them to do. So I will continue to work to ensure there's due process. People have said I don't like judicial review. I'm a lawyer. I love courts. I love due process. I will make sure it's there. I'll make sure that the bill is narrow enough that it doesn't bring those legal diverters into play. They should continue to do their job. But for every one of our water districts, there is water coming from somewhere else. And there are people who want to take that water that doesn't belong to them. And that hurts all of us. So we must have the tools in our toolbox to stop them immediately and to find them where necessary. We do a lot of bills on this floor, you guys, but our laws are not meaningful unless we enforce them. And so that is what this bill does. It enforces the law as it stands today. So I respectfully ask for you to join me in building the future California needs so that my kids and your grandkids have the water they need to be sustained. I wear this necklace today that my daughter gave me because I knew we'd be voting on a lot of bills and to remind me that the work we do here is for them. It is to make sure they have the water they need. And that's why I brought this bill forward. I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- James Ramos
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Today I rise in support of AB 460. Since time immemorial, tribes in the state of California have called California home and understand that we are connected to the world around us. And each ecosystem is connected to another holistic watershed management and is the key of restoring abundant salmon runs, ensuring healthy forests, and combating global climate change. A term that we need to get familiar with is resource tribes. Resource tribes still live off the land and still have cultural connections to the animals and the different waterways. In the state of California, in August of last year, individuals intentionally turned on their pumps despite being under curtailment orders from the waterboard. This reduction to one of the most critical salmon tributaries to the Klamath River in the height of summer during a declared drought, was lethal to the salmon in the river and the Yurok tribe and their cultural activities. With AB 460, we can look to ensure that critical water supplies will be maintained. This bill proposes modest, common sense reforms and would enable the state water board to take limited short term actions to enforcing existing laws to prevent irreparable harm to our tribal communities and resource tribes that still live off the land. I urge your support and your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bauer Kahan. And Assembly Member Ramos, you're recognized on this bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Ramos and Assemblywoman Pellerin, you're recognized on this bill.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Hi. Thank you to the author for bringing this bill forward. I do have some concerns with it that we've discussed, and my water districts do as well. I applaud your boldness and courage for bringing this forward. And water policy in the State of California does need our time and attention. And I'm hoping, based on your promise, that we're going to give it that time and attention that it's going to need moving forward. And I look forward to working with you and resolving those concerns of the opposition. So today, I'll be voting to move it forward to keep those talks happening still.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thanks. Thank you, Ms. Pellerin. And Assembly Member of Vince Fong, you're recognized on the bill.
- Vince Fong
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, I rise in respectful opposition to AB 460, which will completely overhaul California's water rights system, thus putting an end to family farming in our state, which is my fear. This bill is an overreach, giving the Water Board new powers to stop legal diversion by water right holders. On top of this, this bill also limits the legal recourse of someone who does have legitimate water rights. The bill denies a water rights holder the right to challenge the Board's actions in court. We do not want the Water Board or any other government agency to act without having to answer to the judicial branch of any government. This bill will make our water supplies across the state extremely unreliable and threatens our ability to grow food, which is what we do in the Central Valley. Cutting off local water agencies from reliable water supplies will make it more difficult to provide needed things, such as new housing, which we desperately need. This bill is incomplete at this moment, and it poses a threat to our water system as we know it, and it will undermine the state's progress towards restoration of the Delta building housing supporting our agricultural and rural communities. Members, I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Fong and Mr. Mathis, you are recognized on this bill.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I, too, as the Vice Chairman of Water Parks and Wildlife, stand in opposition to this bill. Permission to read from the bill itself without objection. So when we pull up the bill analysis, we look at this. It says this bill would authorize the Board to issue on its own motion or upon the petition of an interested party. Interested party? Could be any group. Could be a group that doesn't like farmers. It could be a group that doesn't like what's happening with the water next door. It could be anybody. An interested group. An interim relief order to divert or user of water injunctive proceedings to apply or enforce specified provisions of the law related to water rights and quality. The bill would provide that the person or entity that violates any interim relief order issued by the Board would be liable to the Board for a civil penalty. Now, I think all of us are okay if somebody's not playing by the rules. Absolutely. The fines need to be higher. This case was brought forward because one knucklehead decided they'd work it into their overhead to be a violator, and that's not okay. And that's why we're here and that's why we're having the debate. So, yes, we do need to increase penalties and go after bad actors. That part of it I think all of us would agree with. However, when we get down here into existing law authorizes any party aggrieved by any decision or order of the State's Water Resources Control Board, no later than 30 days from the date of final action by the board, the file petitioner for writ or mandate or judicial review of the decision or order existing law requires a court exercise. The independent look, I can go on and on. What it does in common language is it means if somebody goes after you and says you're not using your water right, you are then in court against the state, against the board. How is that a fair and equal playing field? How does that work? If you are a small mom and pop farmer or somebody else or from a share crop family or something like that, it completely sets the scales against you where anybody else can come out. One of these interested groups, we don't like what they're doing. Now the waterboard is going to come after you, tell you you can't use the water your family may have been using for 100 years. No, you don't get to do that. And now you have to fight the Water Board yourself. How is that right? To my dear colleague bringing up the native people, our native people, my tribe, Tuli River has been fighting in federal court for water rights for decades. How is this fair to then push this to our small mom and pop farmers, to have to fight potentially for decades in state court against the State Water Board? This is an overreach. Yes, we need to go after bad actors. Absolutely. But if we go forward with this, we have to make sure that there are protections for small family farmers, that we're going after the bad guys, but that there are protections because there's no way in hell these guys can fight against the waterboard on their own. I ask for a no vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Mathis, Assembly Member Flora you are recognized on this bill.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I rise in opposition to AB 460. And when this bill was originally we talked about it, I thought it was a good bill. I thought it was going in the right direction where I know, but it was a different bill. Okay, if it was a different bill, then I don't like this one as well. Okay, but here's the thing with this bill. Just get them all out of the way. Just one big opposition speech. What we are concerned about, though, honestly, is when we came from the Midwest or from north Dakota into California, there was a thing called 1914 water rights. And that is something that AG in the Central Valley, farmers in the Central Valley hold dear. Their very existence depends on their ability to maintain those pre 1914 water rights, and they will go fight to the end to make sure that those stay in place. If you remember, in 2017, when we all first few of us got here, Assembly Member Adam Gray from Merced went to war constantly with the Water Board. We had community hearings over water every single week up and down the state. And the Water Board, for all due respect to them, completely dismissed everything. When we talk about flows and salmon and all of these things. Modesto Irrigation District TID Turlock Irrigation District my local irrigation funded millions, tens of millions of dollars on environmental studies to prove their point on flows and what would make salmon more popular in our area. And it was completely dismissed. So when a bill like this comes before us and gives the Water Board just absolute authority to be the judge and jury as it relates to private water rights, it is a big ask. And I'm scared of that because they have never, ever just been open and honest. They have an agenda, and it is an agenda of a significant bureaucracy of unelected people. So I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Flora and Assembly Member Zbur, you're recognized on the bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, members, I rise in support of AB 338. I too had some concerns. I had a long conversation with the author from Arinda this morning, and she acknowledges that she is focused on making sure that this bill is narrowed, that the concerns related to due process are addressed. And I am confident, based on my conversation with her, that desire is genuine. This is an incredibly complicated area and we have a problem that the author is rightfully trying to address. I know she's going to continue working on it in the other House. We will have an opportunity to vote on this again because it will come back for concurrence. And I think we need to give the author and the environment and our kids and the AG industry the opportunity to allow this bill to be worked on more and make the progress that we need for the state. So ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Zbur and Assembly Member Alanis; you're recognized on the bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I too rise in opposition to this, even though I respect the author, also the chair of a board or committee that I am on. I really fear this bill is devastating to the Central Valley and to the mountain regions. I fear it will harm our local economies and our local farmers. I fear it will harm some of the poorest areas of our state, and it will harm working class folks who are far too often forgotten by this. Body and this legislature. This will harm our agricultural industry and make groceries even more expensive at the back end when working class folks go to the store. This bill goes too far, despite the state's intent, and I fear it will go far more than that, and it will do more harm than it will do good. I respectfully ask for your No vote. Thank you.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I think it does bear a little bit of background that what this bill addresses is legal, law abiding water rights holders. That's who it addresses and who are legal, law abiding water rights holders in the states. Yeah, it's farmer st, but it's your water districts throughout the state of California that provide you with clean, safe drinking water. And what the problem? The central problem with this bill is it creates uncertainty for everyone in this state when it comes to their water. Why? We already have a process for curtailment it's, a process through the waterboard that does involve due process, that does involve the ability to go to that waterboard and make your case. It's a much more involved process. There's also the issue of water rights adjudications. Those process usually go through a court because it requires you to look at evidence. It requires you to look at historical water usage, how much water that a basin can bear, that's getting that water. It's a very involved process that requires time and deliberation and what many people are saying across this state, and I want people to be clear, this is not just people in the Central Valley farm groups. It's your water districts, water districts in Los Angeles, water districts in San Diego, water districts in the desert, in the Inland Empire. Water that your constituents rely upon will now go through a much more abbreviated process that is brought about not by the board itself, but by anybody that wants to petition the water board and curtail those rights and gives you a much more limited process. And that is what people have told the author is the problem. And they have requested in this House amendments to address those problems. And what the author is saying today is, well, I haven't taken those amendments, but I'll work on those things in the next House. Now, I trust the author. I believe she has good intent. But our job is to vote on the bill that's before you and your constituents are going to look at what does the bill say that's in front of you, not what it might become in the Senate, which, by the way, you have no control over. And that's the fundamental problem. Let's talk about what it doesn't do, because I agree we need enforcement when it comes to water. There are a lot of people out there who do not have water rights, who are stealing your and my water every day. A big group of those folks are cartel backed marijuana growers in remote parts of the state that every day are stealing your water, are polluting your streams. And the water board is doing absolutely nothing about it or very little about it. Very little. And the trickle that comes down those streams after they've illegally diverted your water and nobody's done anything about it, then you the water rights holder. You get held accountable. You're the one that gets fined. You're the one that faces this limited process on your water rights. Meanwhile, there's nothing in this bill, nothing. Not one word about those illegal diverters who don't have water rights, who are taking your water. That's a big problem for me, because, you know, my folks do follow the law. And last year, they went through the existing process that exists today, and they got their water rights curtailed in some places to 0%. And 200,000 acres of land was fallowed last year in my district. Cracked ground with nothing growing on it. That means you don't have food. That means the world is not getting food that it needs. We follow the law. Curtailments happen now, and they hurt 30 seconds through the existing process. And we're talking about making that process even less accountable, because who makes the decision? It's not you and me. It's not the elected people of the state. It's an unelected water board that now gets to make that decision with limited information on a short time period, with very little due process. That's not good policy, folks, to not punish people who are actually doing illegal diversions every day and robbing us of water, and to punish law abiding people who've already faced some of the toughest cutbacks that the state's ever seen at a time when we have the largest snowpack, that we've ever seen in California history. Please don't pass this bill. I know. I like the author too. But don't pass this bill in its current form without making the changes that are necessary to make this good policy. I beg you, members, don't do that. Don't cast your water rights in uncertainty and put your communities at risk. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Alanis. And seeing no other members sorry, Mr. Gallagher, you're recognized on the bill.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Gallagher. Seeing no further members wishing to speak on this bill, Ms. Bauer Kahan, you may close.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I want to thank you for the robust debate. I know that water policy isn't easy. It's not easy politically. It's not easy to understand either. Water law is really, really complicated. And so let me just clarify a couple of things. This doesn't change the curtailment process at all. That happens in times of drought, under emergency orders, under separate policy. This is about enforcement. I want to debunk a couple of things. You heard that they can't challenge it in court. That's patently false. In fact, in the Judiciary Committee, we added an amendment to explicitly say they could go to court when really there was already code section that said they could go to court. But we wanted it to be extra clear that you could go to court same day to get judicial review immediately. So also a lot has been said about how this is going to end housing. The Assembly Member from Oakland is a co author on the bill and feels confident that as much as she loves housing, it will not end housing because this is about stopping illegal diverters from stealing water, which is what this is about. If you were following the law, this bill should not touch you. And to say I didn't take amendments, that's not fair. We took significant limiting amendments in appropriations. We had heard from the opposition that their biggest concern was that the public trust doctrine was too broad and too expansive and that that would be the way that this bill would be overutilized. So I took out the public trust doctrine in approach. It's not in the bill anymore. Now they've moved the goalpost, and I'm willing to continue to work with them. But I did that. I did that because I didn't want to bring those people into the bill. That was how they told me they would be brought into the bill. I removed it today. They said they have a list of ways. I said, send me the list. They've yet to do so, but I look forward to seeing that in my inbox. So I just want to be really clear that this bill is about enforcement of people who are stealing our water. And every single one of us, as I said, depends on water that comes from somewhere else. And if that water gets stolen, as our colleague said, then we have less water. And in times of severe drought which are coming I know we had a great year this year, guys, but it's going to be back next year. We cannot allow people to take water that does not belong to them, and this will allow us to stop that. It is that simple. I appreciate so many of the people who are opposing the bill saying they respect me. Thanks, guys. That was nice. And I hope that's because in my four plus years here, I've proven to all of you that I work really hard, that I want to get this stuff right. But I care deeply about our future, and that's what this bill is about. I just want to remind you that in closing, I want to thank our colleague from San Bernardino. Hope I didn't get that wrong for speaking up for the tribes. As many of you know, native people in California, they don't have water rights. They've fought for decades to try to get access to water, and they're standing behind this because they know what a precious resource this is. In our informational hearing on the issue, one of our native Californians spoke about how the native people manage water and at the end, somebody got up in public comment and said, I had a whole speech planned, but why don't we just give the water back to the native people who knew how to manage it, right? And it's so critical that what it means is to have everybody in the state following the rules. It's not so complicated. And if we do, if we all follow the rules and the legal diverters, take what they're lawfully allowed to have, and we stop the people from illegally stealing the water. And if you want to expand the bill to make sure we cover more illegal diverters, I welcome that conversation. Then we will be in a better place in the future. And our communities depend on that. There are a million Californians today that don't have drinking water. Low income communities, tribal communities. So we got to make sure that water makes it to our communities that need it and that we do that in a way that is lawful. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll all those vote who desire to vote all those vote who desire to vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay. Clerk will clerk will close a roll, tally the votes. Ayes 41, noes 18. The bill is passed. Next we will go to Ms. Wicks. This is file item 405 AB 1337. Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1337 by Assembly Member Wicks an act related to water.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Wicks you may open on bill.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members. I have another water bill for you. AB 1337 is at its heart a very straightforward bill because I believe in fairness. And this bill asks us, do we believe water is a public good? Should it be governed as a public good? Before California passed the Water Commission Act of 1913, our state's water rights system was fundamentally exclusionary, reflecting pioneer values. It was textbook discrimination with indigenous people and Californians of color literally forbidden from owning the land that was necessary to attain the water right. But that was the law. And in 1914, we began regulating our water supply in a more comprehensive fashion. Our laws evolved and our values evolved. And yet, more than 100 years later, those who inherited pre 1914 water rights still claimed that simply because they were first in time, they're first in line, and their water should not be regulated by a state appointed body during times of shortage. The simple fact is they have inherited a legal right that is long overdue for modest reforms. The state Water Resource Control Board currently has the ability to curtail post 1914 water rights holders about two thirds of the water that we use in the state in order to balance legitimate demands from residents, agricultural business and the environmental needs. In 2015, the board asserted that statute gives it the authority to apply the same rules to pre 1914 water rights holders. But it was sued, and last year the 6th District Court of Appeals cited against them. But in the ruling, the court said, quote whether this approach to water rights in California represents sound policy in a time of increasing water scarcity is a question for the legislature. AB 1337 takes up this question fundamentally, do we believe that all water right holders should play by the same set of rules? That is the question that is before us today. The scope of this bill is nothing radical. In plain English, it means that in times of shortage made increasingly severe because of climate change, all water rights holders would fall under the same rules. And we've taken amendments in this bill to put forth a robust rulemaking process to help answer some of the lingering questions around when would curtailment be triggered. That is roughly an 18 month process following the Administrative Procedures Act, which is public, and all stakeholders can be a part of that process. And let me say, we have had many conversations, and we will continue to have a lot of conversations on this bill. I will meet with anyone who's interested AG our cities, the environmental community, our urban needs. I want to get this bill right. And I've been working on this bill with our chair who just presented her bill and carry the same sense of passion that fundamentally, this is a precious commodity. Our water is a precious commodity, and we know that and we're feeling it more and more every year. And we have to have one regulatory system that we all play by the same set of rules. And I don't want to do anything to create unintended consequences, but I believe this bill strikes the right balance and tackles a tough issue ahead of us, which is water. And I know my colleague who just presented also shared that she was wearing a necklace that reminds her of her daughter. I always wear the bracelets that my daughter makes me. Because this is why we're doing this. To think about the future generations and what we are leaving for them and how California can continue to be stewards of our land and have great agricultural production and balance our increasing urban needs and ensure we have the housing that we need and all of the competing interests that come into water policy. So with that, I would respectfully ask for an aye vote so we can continue those conversations forward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Wicks, and as some member, Vince Fong, you're recognized on the bill.
- Vince Fong
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, members, I rise in opposition to this bill. For us in the central valley, water is life. My neighbors, my friends, our livelihoods and our economy is based on adequate and reliable water supply. I don't come to this discussion and this debate lightly. I respect the author. But this has tremendous consequences, not only for us in the central valley, but for all of us across the state of California. Due to the state's lack of investment in water storage and infrastructure, our water supply goes through extreme booms and busts. We've seen this for the past seven years. I've been in the legislature. Of course we've seen that even before that. And this bill threatens to lead to extreme mismanagement of a water supply. It would allow the state water board to stop legal diversions of water rights holders during any water year, even a year like this, where California has been blessed with rainwall, with rainfall. This is not proper management under this bill and is, in fact, an overreach of state authority. Curtailment of legal water diversions is a tool of last resort that is applied during drought stricken years because depriving our communities of water has significant detrimental ramifications to our communities. We've all lived through that. California's and as mentioned by my colleague from ripen, California's, senior water rights holders are the backbone of the very voluntary agreements that allow for habitat restoration projects across the state, especially in the delta. Giving the water board the ability to act so aggressively even in wet years where we have more water than our current infrastructure can handle, will have disastrous consequences. It will make it much more expensive and impractical for our water agencies to invest in new water infrastructure, further exposing our communities to even greater risks of flooding and putting our drinking water supply at risk of contamination. Expanding the board's ability will greatly impact our water reliability, our environmental goals and security, and our water infrastructure. Members, listen to your water districts. Their task, their mission, their only goal is to provide our communities and our homes and our businesses with adequate water. This disrupts their ability to do that. And speed is not our friend. Sometimes we need to pump the brakes and listen to the stakeholders and take things slow. We don't need to rush and throw our entire water rights system out the window for something when we need to take the time to get it right. Members, I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Fong. And seeing no other members wishing to speak on this bill. Ms. Wicks, you may close. Okay, now I see, Mr. Bennett, you're recognized on this bill, and we got one more back here.
- Steve Bennett
Legislator
My apologies for not having it up sooner, Mr. Speaker and members, I'd just like to reduce this to the essence of this bill and that is that many other western states when they realized that the first in line I mean, the first in time is first in line was not a practical way to allocate water in a modern state. It was worked back in the days of the miners coming here, et cetera. And it was a way that we settled disputes. But as we become a state with nearly 40 million people and a modern society and climate change and droughts that are so severe that the state water board actually cut allocations to 5% at the end of the drought about a year and a half ago, you just can't have a system like we have right now. These other states recognize that these preexisting water rights needed to have some regulation, and they incorporated and gave their regulatory agencies the authority to regulate these pre 1914 rights. However they were identified in their state. We simply have not done that in California. We have not given our regulatory agency the authority to do that. So when the State Water Board, in a really difficult time, tries to say, we need to make some change to how water is moving through the delta, the courts have said this might be a very good idea, but you simply don't have the authority. The state of California has never granted that authority. And so all that this bill does at its essence is grant that authority to the Water Board so that people that have this right are regulated still as a priority. But we have some way of regulating them and not simply say, well, we can't do anything with those people. And everybody else has to deal with the regulatory environment, but they cannot be regulated. So with that I respectfully appreciate the challenge of trying to explain this water bill that the author has been going through. But really ask this is the moment people in California are asking us to update our water laws to common sense rules. It makes common sense to let the state water board have some regulatory ability here as we move forward. I respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Bennett and Assembly Member Ramos, you're recognized on this bill.
- James Ramos
Legislator
Well, thank you, Mr. Speaker. I also rise in support of AB 1337. The Karuk tribe has worked tirelessly for many years to restore and protect water quality in the Klamath Basin. In 2021, the tribe filed a formal petition with the state asking for curtailment of water use in their lands to prevent the extinction of vital cultural resource. The California cohost salmon and the chinook salmon. Again, this is a resource tribe, a resource tribe that goes back to time immemorial, that looks at the way the culture comes together, be able to come together with cultural festivities to keep balance within the tribe's existence. These are areas when we talk about water is life. It was water and life to the very first people here in the state of California. This is what we're talking about. There is federal protections for other different things, but yet tribes in the state of California have to go to federal court to get their rights back that was taken from them prior. Today I rise in support of this bill and the other bill because those voices need to be at the table to ensure that cultural activities still move forward here in the state of California. I keep using the term a resource tribe. Those tribes are tribes that still live off of the land and the animals and the waters that are in their areas. That's what this is about. Today. We stand together here in this legislative body to not only talk about tribal issues when it comes to gaming, but we've had hearings on water where we know that some tribes aren't getting adequate water, safe drinking water here in the state of California. Today. We could stand for this bill and vote in support of it to make sure that that voice is at the table. We talk about penalties. It took over 18 months for those penalties to come forward when land and water was taken away. We need to make sure that the people of this state, the first people time immemorial where water truly is life still has a voice in this legislature. I urge your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Ramos. And Assembly Member Mathis, you're recognized on the bill.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Water, water everywhere, not a drop to drink. That's kind of the problem. When I first got elected, my home east side, Portoville, California was the epicenter of the drought. This year, same town flooded. We have the return of Tulare lake. Sorry. It's not Tulare Lake. It is Tuli after the Tuli Yokut people. What this bill does, I've heard it from all kinds of fun, different perspectives. What this really does is removes everything you all know about water as it stands. Every voluntary agreement, the hardstaking processes of doing that, it takes that all away and it gives it to an unelected board members. You're giving your power to govern away to a bunch of bureaucrats. How are you going to explain that to your people? How are you going to explain that when, after we go from a flood year to a drought year, your people don't get water because the board decided it was more important for water to go to another city because they have a higher population? What's going to happen to your people, your district, when the triage of water takes place that this bill sets up? That's what I'm worried about. That's the future I'm worried about because I'm a poor rural area. We had to cut deals in the city of Kettleman last year to get water from Mojave. And it wasn't directly from Mojave over. It was Mojave had a water rights that they were in abundance at the time. That where they were able to voluntarily agree and negotiate a deal to get water to somewhere else. This bill takes that away. The ability to negotiate that we have the ability as a body to govern. We have the ability to hand that power away to the bureaucrats. I've seen it time and again, and it doesn't get any easier. I got to ask, do you all realize that water is the only place where you have to pay 100% of the bill for your water? Right? You got to pay 100% of it. And yet they can turn around. The board can give you a 0% allocation. Nowhere else in business do you pay 100% and got to wait for bureaucrats to find out what percentage you're going to get back for ROI. And now we're going to give them the whole say. Think about that. Think about the fact that if you worked for something, your family worked for something, however right or wrong, we might debate on how they got to it. But to take that away, to take that hard work, that ancestry away as far as the tribal side, it really scares me because, yes, there are federal protections for our tribes, but what does that mean for the tribes, for everybody? When the state gets to decide we're literally relinquishing every little bit of power, what does that do for us with Colorado River and the voluntary agreements we have with Colorado in those decisions? Where does that put us? Where does that put la? Where does that put San Diego? This bill fundamentally removes every agreement we have and makes us start from scratch. I ask you all not to do that. Let's not start from scratch. We can do better. Vote no.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Mathis. And Assembly Member of Baurer Kahan you're recognized on the bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, I rise in support of AB 1337, but I, more than anything, just wanted to clarify that this bill doesn't change the fact that we will have curtailments. We will go into drought, we will not have enough water like we have in the past few years, and we will have to figure out how to manage that resource in a way that works for the state with not enough. All of us wish that weren't true. I think that we agree on. We wish we always had enough. But that's not the reality we live in every day. And it's the reality that's going to face us more and more as climate change progresses. And so what will happen is one of two things. And I think it's really important that you listen to our colleague from San Bernardino, because in 1914, native Californians were not considered people, so they have no pre 1914 rights, despite the fact that at one time all the water was actually theirs. And so we decide that this one category of people don't have to be subject to these rules when we have to have them. But other folks, well, they'll have to take bigger cuts because we've taken all these people out of the equation. So the question isn't do we do cuts? The question is do we all partake again with those senior water rights holders taking a much smaller cut, but allowing for the juniors to get a share? Hopefully if we have enough. And I just want to highlight one thing because La was mentioned. One of the things I learned when I became water chair, which maybe everybody doesn't know on this floor, is that Metropolitan Water District, which serves half of California, they have 20 million ratepayers, has one of the most junior water rights in the state. Which is a really fascinating thing if you think about how our water system functions. They have to serve 20 million Californians and they are piecing it together because they don't benefit from these senior water rights. And so that's the reality we're living under. And in order for us to function, we need everyone to be playing and it will still be done with seniority, as it was prior to the court decision that made this possible. This was how it was done. The bill is actually the status quo. And then the court said we don't know if they have the legal authority to do this, so we're clarifying that. So this bill is not rocket science, it's merely allowing the board to do what they've always done in times of drought. Let us all play by the same rules, allow for people to get water that need it. Because our priority here should be that every Californian has access to safe and affordable drinking water. And I want to thank the author for bringing this bill and for fighting so hard to make sure everybody's playing by the same rules and the native Californians who weren't considered people are considered in this whole process. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you Ms. Bauer Kahan and Assembly Member Jim Patterson you're recognized on the bill.
- Jim Patterson
Person
Thank you members. Look, I have to rise in opposition but I think we're missing something very, very important here. You may have the power to do this, but in doing so, you are going to upset years of adjudicated property based water rights, voluntary use of water over a long period of time. Those who have those rights by adjudication, by property based water rights, by mutual agreements, by litigation that has vested significant property rights to that water that if you take it away, you're going to have really serious legal difficulties. And if you think we have an unsure or unfair water distribution system, wait until this creates the kind of litigation that you haven't seen before. And if you think that the senior water rights holders if you think those who have negotiated if you think those that have property based water rights are simply going to lay down and let you take their water rights, and the property rights that go with it. I don't think you understand the consequences of what basically is using the power of government not to rearrange how things are done, but significantly penalize financially hurt and hurt by right of taking away rights. You got to think about that because this is going to open a floodgate of litigations like you've never seen before. And I don't think that's what we want. There's a better way to do this, but I don't think it's a wholesale re adjustment of long standing, settled water rights based on all kinds of agreements and litigation and property based water rights and all of that. So look, I'm going to vote against this. I hope that others will vote against this as well. But if this is passed and signed and goes into law, the courts are going to be jammed for a long, long time as those who have those property based water rights, those adjudicated water rights, they're going to be in court saying although you might have had the power, you did not have the right. And that's going to be something that I think is going to be very costly, very time consuming and will actually slow down trying to do some of the things that we're trying to do in order to adjust water delivery. In other sets of circumstances. Be wary of how far you use your power when you are attacking legal water rights, constitutionally based water rights, property based water rights. You can't just willy nilly take those rights away. You're going to be forced to demonstrate that in a court of law that you can do this beware this is headed for all kinds of litigation.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Patterson. And Leader Gallagher, you're recognized on the bill.
- James Gallagher
Legislator
This is very important, but I will be brief. I won't bring those points up that I already made on the last bill, although they all apply the same to this bill. But I think another thing to point out that is important is this bill is much more expansive than the previous bill. And it will apply not just in drought, but in any water year. As the previous author stated before, usually curtailments happen in a drought year. This will allow curtailments in any year, and it affects all water rights holders throughout the state. And yes, that means all of the urban parts of this state who very much rely on those water rights, they need the certainty of those water rights to ensure that they can provide sustainable water resources to the entire state. So, again, this would substantially upend our water system in the state and make it much more unreliable, something I think that we've all faced all too clearly here in the last few years. And so I would please ask that you not pass this bill today. It needs a lot more work and ask for your no vote on the legislation. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Leader Gallagher. And now, seeing no other members wishing to speak on this bill, Ms. Wicks, you may close.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and colleagues, for the robust conversation. Some of the comments made in opposition make this bill sound very, very scary. So let me just respond to some of the critique and the criticism of the bill, and I again appreciate that dialogue. A couple of things. One, nothing in this bill stops voluntary agreements. So voluntary agreements that exist, by the way, within the two thirds of the water rights holders that are post-1914 still will exist. This will just bring the pre-1914 people into compliance. Those voluntary agreements can continue. Secondly, many other western states have done what we are trying to do. It hasn't resulted in years and years of litigation. It means it's a more organized and regulatory environment for water, which again, is our most precious commodity. Third thing is senior water rights holders will still be the last to be curtailed. No one's losing their water rights here. We're not upending the entire system and starting from scratch. We're making some modest reforms to bring about more compliance. Fourth, the Colorado River is actually managed federally. And so as we've read from a lot of those negotiations, that is done significantly, a lot of those negotiations are done above our pay grade here in the state legislature. This applies to when there's times of shortage, that we need to be more thoughtful about the regulation with regard to water. And that's the whole point of it. This bill fundamentally will create more certainty for all water rights holders and create the same set of rules so that we can all live by that. That is what this bill does. I admit it needs more work. I have yet to write a bill that doesn't get amended significantly in the other house. I think all of us have experienced that. I am open to suggestion. I'm open to narrowing language or more definitions or all of the things that we do as we go through this process. I expect robust conversation. I will meet with water agencies. I will meet with agricultural interests, I will meet with environmentalists, with those that are planning our urban water needs. I love it when people come to me with actual language so that we can look at it and determine if that's something that we should take within this bill. But we do have to move this conversation forward. And that is what the legislative process is for. To continue to have public conversations about important plexing issues that plague our communities. And water is one of those that we have to tackle. We're going to have to tackle it one way or another. I heard comments about let's put the brakes on this. Well guess what? Climate change is here. And so we have to do something about that. And water is one of the most important things that we have for life. So I ask you to let us continue to have those conversations. Let's move this bill over to the senate. I welcome more dialogue, but let's keep moving this bill and I would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote, all those vote who desire to vote, clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. Ayes 44. Nose 19. The bill is passed. Next members, we're going to be taking up a series of bills for purpose of amendments. We'll go back to file item four. This is AB 499 by ms. Rivas for purpose of amendments.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 499 with amendments by Assembly Member Luz Rivas
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Rivas, you may open on the amendments.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you Mr. Speaker and members, I rise for purposes amendments to AB 499. The amendments clarify project labor agreement guidelines when la metro uses job order contracting for small maintenance and repair projects. This bill has received bipartisan support. Respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Rivas. If there's no objection, we'll take a voice vote on the amendments. All those in favor say aye. All those nay. The ayes have it. Amendments are adopted, the bills out to print and back on file. Next, back to Ms. Wicks who will bring up file item eleven. This is AB 1119 for purpose of amendments.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1119 with amendments by Assembly Member Wicks.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assemblymember Wicks, you may open on the amendments.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you Mr. Speaker and Members, amendments to AB 1119 reflect continuing negotiations with stakeholders. And once adopted, the California Bankers Association, the California Community Banking Network, and the California Financial Services association will all remove their opposition to the bill. Respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you Ms. Wicks and Mr. Flora on the amendments.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. We oppose these amendments, ask for a roll call vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Very good. Seeing nobody else wishing to speak on the amendments there's a roll call vote requested. Clerk will open the roll. All those vote who desire to vote on the amendments, Clerk will close the roll. Tally the votes. ayes 52, nose 18. The amendments are adopted. The bill is out to print and back on file again. Ms. Wicks, this is file item 16 AB 886 for amendments.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 886 with amendments by Assembly Member Wicks
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And Ms. Wicks. You may open on the amendments.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker and members, the amendments on AB 886 I am presenting today to address a number of concerns raised by Members of the Privacy and Judiciary Committee and also reflect the input of various stakeholders including representatives of ethnic media and union guilds representing journalists throughout the state. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Wicks. Seeing no members wishing to speak on the amendments without objection, we'll take a voice vote on the amendments. All those in favor say aye. All those opposed say nay. The ayes have it. The amendments are adopted. The bill is out to print and back on file. Moving forward to Ms. Bonta. This is file item 288, AB 1604 for amendments.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Clerk will read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1604 with amendments by Assembly Member Bonta
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Assembly Member Bonta, you may open on the amendments.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Member, I rise to present amendments to AB 1604. My office has worked with the opposition in good faith on these amendments which address many of the concerns raised related to bond financing. I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Ms. Bonta. Seeing no members wishing to speak on these amendments without objection we'll take a voice vote on these amendments. All those in favor say aye. All those opposing, the ayes have it. Amendments are adopted. The bill is out to print and back on file. Moving to announcements, the session schedule is as follows wednesday, May 31, we have floor session at 10:00 a.m.. All other items remaining will be passed and retained. All motions shall be continued. Seeing and hearing no further business, I'm ready to entertain a motion to adjourn. Ms. Reyes moves Mr. Flores seconds that this House stands adjourned until tomorrow, May 31, at 10:00 a.m.. The quorum call is lifted. Any vote changes to the Rostrom.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Assembly Member Maienschein file item 225, AB 1089 no to aye.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Vote change. Assembly Member Maienschein Assembly Bill 1089 no to aye.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Assembly Member Nguyen vote change AB 1248 from aye to not voting
- Committee Secretary
Person
Vote change Assembly Member Nguyen Assembly bill 1248, aye to not voting.
- Freddie Rodriguez
Person
Assembly Member Freddie Rodriguez. AB 958 from aye to not voting.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez. Assembly Bill 958, aye to not voting.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Assemblymember Papan. Changing vote on AB 1117. From no to yes. From no to aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Vote change. Assemblymember Papan. Assembly Bill 1117. No to aye.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
File number 212 AB 1042. From aye to not voting.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Vote change. Assembly Member Garcia. Assembly Bill 1042. aye to not voting.
- Cecilia Aguiar-Curry
Legislator
Assembly member Aguiar-Curry. Vote change. AB 1061. From no to aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Vote change. Assembly member Aguiar-Curry. Assembly bill 1061. No to aye.
Bill AB 863
Carpet recycling: carpet stewardship organizations: fines: succession: procedure.
View Bill DetailCommittee Action:Passed
Next bill discussion: July 5, 2023
Previous bill discussion: March 27, 2023
Speakers
Legislator