Assembly Standing Committee on Natural Resources
- Luz Rivas
Person
Good afternoon. Welcome to the Assembly Natural Resources Committee Hearing. We have 19 measures on the agenda today. Please note that SB 707 by Newman has been pulled from today's hearing by the author. Two measures are proposed for consent, SB 306 by Caballero and SB 755 by Becker. I believe we have a quorum, so, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Rivas? Here. Rivas, here. Flora? Here. Flora, here. Addis.? Here. Addis, here. Friedman? Hoover? Mathis? Here. Mathis, here. Muratsuchi? Here. Muratsuchi, here. Pellerin? Here. Pellerin, here. Ward? Wood? Here. Wood, here. Zbur? Here. Zbur, here.
- Jim Wood
Person
Second.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, we have a quorum. We have a motion and a second for the consent calendar. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Consent calendars are SB 306: Caballero and SB 755: Becker. Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? Aye. Flora, aye. Addis? Aye. Addis, aye. Friedman? Hoover? Mathis? Aye. Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi? Aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward? Wood? Aye. Wood, Aye. Zbur? Aye. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Consent calendar has nine votes. We'll leave it open for absent Members. Okay, next, we have--we're taking bills in sign in order. Senator Wiener. We're starting with SB 4.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We prefer to start with SB 423, if the Chair is okay with that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I'm okay with that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay. Whenever you're ready.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Chair. Colleagues, I'm here today to present Senate Bill 423 regarding--which is an extension and refinement of Senate Bill 35 which is the law that the Legislature passed and the Governor signed in 2017. Unfortunately, we've been unable to come to full agreement with the Committee on all amendments, but I want to outline for the Committee what I am committed to, and so I'll do that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
First, I have agreed that we will take an amendment relating to the wildfire language in the bill. We will remove that language, and we will replace it with a temporary placeholder intent language with the idea of working over the course of the summer to have refined fire language, engaging experts, departments, stakeholders, the relevant committees, and so forth, and I just want to read that one sentence, which is the following quote.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
'It is the intent of the Legislature to consult with HCD, CAL FIRE, and other appropriate experts and stakeholders to identify whether and or to what extent streamlined ministerial approval projects under this section will apply in high and very high fire hazard severity zones, taking into consideration topographies physical circumstances and uses.' And so that's the wildfire amendment that we would agree to, not the one that's in the analysis. In addition, relating to the coastal zone, the analysis has an amendment to reinstate the full exemption.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm not agreeing to that. However, I want to thank the Chair and the Committee for engaging with some shuttle diplomacy between myself and the Coastal Commission. At the request of the Chair, the Chair asked me to engage with the Coastal Commission after they opposed the bill, which I did. We proposed a compromise. The Coastal Commission then submitted an alternative compromise to the Chair, which the Chair was kind enough to provide to me. We then came back with a modification of the Commission's proposal and I understand that we are very close with a couple of loose ends that I am optimistic we'll be able to resolve.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And the proposal that we've put forward, which is the Coastal Commission's proposal, as modified, would provide the primary aspects of it are that SB 423 would only apply in areas of the coastal zone with a certified local coastal program or a certified land use plan.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It would provide a one year delayed implementation in the coastal zone to the extent to the areas that it does apply. It would exempt the Commission's geographic appellate jurisdiction as defined in Public Resources Code 30603 A1 and 2. It would exempt areas in the coastal zone vulnerable to three feet of sea level rise, as defined by NOAA or by the Ocean Protection Council, whichever calculation the Commission prefers.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It would apply the Coastal Commission's definition of wetlands and prime agricultural land in terms of the exemption that's already in the bill but we would use the Coastal Commission's definition, which is a little bit different than the general definition. In addition, and the Commission did not ask for this but we are including this because I think it's good policy, we would also exempt a 100 foot buffer around wetlands so that no one's building right up to the wetlands line.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The Coastal Commission, I think, would prefer a different level of sea level rise and a different method of calculating. We're happy to have those conversations, and like I said, I'm optimistic we'll reach a resolution on those issues. I also want to note there was a letter or there was concern from the trades and from IBW and so forth about a technical language change that had been made to the 85 foot definition and I've agreed to revert back to the language that was there before the amendment and as I understand, that that assuages the concerns from the trades.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So this bill, having said all that, this bill extends the sunset on SB 35 to 2036. SB 35, Colleagues, has been a successful California housing law. It has streamlined nearly 20,000 new homes in the few years that it's been in effect. Three quarters of those new homes have been below market rate homes. We know, Colleagues, that for decades, California has profoundly underproduced housing. We are short millions of homes.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We are almost dead last 49 out of 50 states in homes per capita and we can see the results every day with people living in cars, with overcrowded housing conditions, with people being pushed out of the Bay Area or LA or other parts of the state, or being pushed out of the state entirely.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This bill, what it does is for cities that are behind on their housing goals, they become streamlined, meaning that if a project complies with local zoning--and this bill does not change zoning--complies with local zoning and with objective standards as enumerated in the bill, then it receives ministerial approval. So approval in months instead of years and years.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We also in this bill--and I want to thank our partners in labor for working intensively with us. While the Coastal Commission and wildfires have dominated the debate in this Committee, in the Senate, it was all about labor standards and I'm proud to say that I want to thank our partners, the carpenters and the laborers, operating engineers, cement masons, SCIU for working with us and also those who were opposed to the bill: building trade and SUBCRAFT, for being willing to work with us and I think we'll be hearing some good news today. So, Colleagues, SB 35 is a successful law.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This bill will extend it and improve it and I respectfully ask for your aye vote. I want to first of all, thank my legislative partner in this endeavor, Assembly Member Wicks, who's been a true leader on housing and the Legislature. So I want to give her an opportunity to speak, and then with us today are Jay Bradshaw, the Executive Officer with the Nor Cal Carpenters Union and Marina Wiant, the Vice President of Government Affairs with the California Housing Consortium.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Thank you, Madam Chair, for letting me co-present as well, and thank you, Committee Members. I know that there were a lot of conversations over the weekend and last week on this bill, and rightfully so.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
This has been one of the most impactful laws on the books in the State of California to actually build affordable housing and I know that every single one of us, when we go back to our districts, the number one thing we hear about in our districts is the housing issue, whether it's homelessness or rent burdened families who are leaving California, we all know that we need more housing and this bill and this law has enabled us to actually solve a problem. So we should extend the sunset on this current law. This is current law that we want to extend the sunset on and getting here hasn't been easy.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I know many of you were around last year and in years prior when we were dealing with the challenges around the very passionate conversations around labor standards that I and the Senator have been a part of as some of you have been, and we've landed in a good place on those. And it hasn't been fun, but we've gotten there and we've got strong support from the Carpenters Union, we have the laborers, the operating engineers supporting this bill.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I believe the trades are removing their opposition. I know IBW, I believe has. That's a huge testament to the work of all of us saying that we can no longer say no to housing. Saying no to housing is no longer an option in California. It can't be. So let's extend the sunset. Let's extend this current law on the books. We can continue to work through some of these issues that I know are important to many of us, but building housing is what we need to do here in California.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
We have a large, diverse coalition of folks who are supporting this bill because they know what is at stake here in California. So, as a principal co-author, as Chair of the Assembly Housing Committee, I stand in strong support of this bill, and I would respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Marina Wiant
Person
Good afternoon. Marina Wiant with the California Housing Consortium. At its very core, SB 35 is about holding communities accountable to their housing plans. If a proposed project is consistent with the general plan, and it's not on protected, environmentally sensitive sites and is consistent with objective design standards, an affordable developer should be able to have the assurance that when they come forward with that project, that there's going to be a path to approval.
- Marina Wiant
Person
And this is why SB 35 has been such a successful tool for affordable housing developers in promoting, in getting their projects approved. As the Senator said, 75 percent of the units that have used SB 35 have been affordable to low and very low income households, and it's particularly powerful in communities with complex approval processes that might be supportive of affordable housing or in communities that are communities of opportunity.
- Marina Wiant
Person
Many of those communities of opportunity are meeting their above moderate income housing goals, and therefore are subject to a 50 percent affordable housing requirement. That's huge, and that's why we're seeing a lot of sites that use this are projects that are 100 percent affordable.
- Marina Wiant
Person
By extending SB 35 sunset date, SB 423 will ensure that our affordable housing providers continue to have access to this streamlined process until 2035 and allow affordable housing developers to plan their pipeline beyond the next two years, which is critical, and we've learned from the past five years of implementation.
- Marina Wiant
Person
We want to make sure that the bill works as well as possible and that's why we have made the tweaks that we've made and that's why I commend the author and the Committee for working so hard and figuring out how do we make sure that the bill can apply in areas that, again, are areas in the state where we're still protecting the environmentally sensitive sites but ensuring that when there is an affordable housing project being proposed that is a mile from the coast but happens to be in the coastal zone, it can still move forward with this process.
- Marina Wiant
Person
SB 423 is critical to helping us close our tremendous affordable housing gap. We have over 1.2 million shortage of homes for California's most low income families and it's time that we ensure that all Californians have access to safe, affordable homes, and for these reasons, I urge your support today. Thank you.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Committee Members. Sorry if my back's kind of to you. Not my preferred, so let me say hi to everyone. Jay Bradshaw, Executive Officer, Nor Cal Carpenters Union. I'm very honored here to represent this broad coalition of labor, particularly talking on behalf of the statewide California Conference of Carpenters also the Operating Engineers, Laborers' Union, Cement Masons in Nor Cal, and Service Employees International Union.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
So wanted to really make it clear this is a labor friendly, labor positive bill, starting there. You know, not going to give you a data dump. A lot of it's already been said but I want to talk a little bit about what the effects are on working class folks. When we talk about we need 2.5 million housing units as fast as possible, we talk about 1.2 to 1.4 million affordable, quote unquote, units needed right away.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
What that actually means for the working class, from our perspective in our state, and why we're in strong support of this and asking you to help us move another solution towards housing, what's happening in housing production in a 90 percent unorganized industry that's 90 percent of the workers in private, residential wood frame construction are unorganized and subjected to what we call is a crime scene of cash pay, tax fraud, and now we're up against cartel-managed workforces, human trafficking, et cetera.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
And it's a tremendous drain on the State of California resource wise, but it is crushing on those construction workers and also has a negative impact on workers who are organized not being able to work in that type of construction. So our strong position here today is to ask for your help, to pull up those workers, help us produce housing across the state, not stand for exclusion in any manner, and move forward together.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
The housing unaffordability crisis for our membership and the membership for unions across the board and workers across the board has created the transportation crisis which is talked about as a super commuter problem, which is really service workers, construction workers it's crushing. It's made childcare unaffordable, et cetera. So just wanted to illuminate those points. It's a lot of important issues. It touches the state statewide, but the workers in housing have been left out for 35 years easily and the production of housing for working class people is not happening anywhere near a scale.
- Jay Bradshaw
Person
It needs to happen. So we say, please give us your strong support today to help workers rise to produce housing at every income level and to bring long term solutions to our state to help build wealth for those who are most at risk right now. It's an honor to be here today. Thank you for your time.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, we're ready for additional witnesses in support. Just a reminder, please just state your name, affiliation, and position on the bill.
- Jim Wood
Person
Let's do the first four rows, please, and we'll sit back down and call the next four.
- Mike Dennis
Person
Mike Dennis, United Way of Greater LA. We support.
- Robert Naylor
Person
Bob Naylor for Fieldstead and Company. That's Howard Ahmanson Jr, an Orange County Philanthropist in support.
- Jan Moran
Person
Jan Moran, Social Justice Alliance of the Interfaith Council of Contra Costa County. Support.
- Daniel Gray
Person
Good afternoon. Daniel Gray, Carpenters Local 2236 in Oakland, full support.
- Dan Branton
Person
Dan Branton, Drywall Lathers Local 9109 right here in Sacramento. Urge your strong support.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
Donita Stromgren, volunteer with California AARP Capital Response Team. Seniors are the largest number of first time homeless due to economic reasons. Ask for your support. Thank you.
- Charles Deffarges
Person
Charles Deffarges with Episcopal Community Services of San Francisco in support.
- April Atkins
Person
April Atkins, business rep, Local 22, strong support.
- Matthew Miller
Person
Matthew Miller, Drywall Lathers Local 9068, Livermore, in strong support.
- Carl Sworns
Person
Carl Sworns with Carpenters Local 35, 751, 180, and 152 in strong support.
- Jaime Minor
Person
Jaime Minor on behalf of Salesforce, headquartered in San Francisco, in support. Thank you.
- Ray Lawson
Person
Ray Lawson, Local 562, Southern California, Long Beach, in strong support.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of Mayor London Breed of San Francisco in support. Thank you.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Madam Chair, Chris Micheli on behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Anthony Lavisse
Person
Anthony Lavisse, Local 2236 out of Oakland, in strong support.
- Brian Ants
Person
Brian Ants, Southwest Carpenters out of Bakersfield, Kern and Mono Counties, in strong support.
- Manley McNinch
Person
Manley McNinch, Southwest Carpenters out of the San Luis Obispo, Santa Maria area of the Central Coast. Strong support.
- Josh Christensen
Person
Josh Christensen from Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters, North LA County. Strong support.
- Kyle Patterson
Person
Kyle Patterson, Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters from South Los Angeles. We are in strong support.
- Daniel Tamm
Person
Reverend Daniel Tamm, Deacon in the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles covering five counties in Southern California, Chair of Interfaith Solidarity Network, and a proud member of the Our Future Los Angeles coalition in strong support.
- Chris Snyder
Person
Chris Snyder, Political Director for the Operating Engineers Local 3, and on behalf of our 40,000 members in Northern California, strong support.
- Diego Hernandez
Person
Diego Hernandez from Laborers Local 261 out of San Francisco. Strong support.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Abram Diaz with the Non-Profit Housing Association of Northern California in support.
- Olegario Guzman
Person
Olegario Guzman, member of LiUNA Local 304. Strong support.
- Star Bradshaw
Person
Star Bradshaw, Oakland resident, strong support.
- Matthew Cremins
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. Matt Cremins here on behalf of the California-Nevada Conference of Operating Engineers. Proud to be here in strong support.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Mahdi Manji with Inner City Law Center, Skid Row's Pro Bono Legal Service Provider in strong support.
- Sean McGarry
Person
Sean McGarry, Carpenters Local 22, San Francisco, in strong support. Thank you.
- Francisco Nunez
Person
Good afternoon, everybody. Francisco Nunez, Laborers Local 304, Alameda County, in strong support.
- Victor De La Torre
Person
Victor De La Torre, Local 261 out of San Francisco, strong support.
- Taryn Sandulyak
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Taryn Sandulyak with Firm Foundation Community Housing in strong support.
- Penny Nixon
Person
Reverend Dr. Penny Nixon, San Mateo County Housing Leadership Council and also Peninsula Interfaith Solidarity Cohort in strong support.
- Ed Evans
Person
Good afternoon. Ed Evans, Carpenters Local 217 in strong support.
- Marisa Lopez
Person
Marisa Lopez, Local 9109 here in Sacramento and strong supporter.
- John Belperio
Person
Good afternoon. My name is John Belperio, Carpenters Local 180 out of Solano County in strong support.
- Traci Stevens
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. I'm Traci Stevens representing the Construction Employers' Association in strong support.
- Seth Howard
Person
My name is Seth Howard, member of Carpenters Local 1789 out of South Lake Tahoe. Strongly support this bill.
- Jose Amador
Person
Good afternoon. Jose Amador, Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters, Whittier, California, and we support. Thank you. Strongly support.
- Victor Mabelli
Person
Hello. My name is Victor Mabelli, President of Local 751 in Santa Rosa. My 1,500 members--all are voting yes on this. Please.
- Omar Cobian
Person
Omar Cobian out of Local 951. Live out of Riverside, California. Please vote yes.
- Steve Harris
Person
Steve Harris, Local 751, Santa Rosa. I'm asking for your support.
- Jimmy Elrod
Person
Good afternoon. Jimmy Elrod with Carpenters Local 951 on behalf of the 6,000 members out of our local. Strongly support. Thank you.
- Jason Martinez
Person
Jason Martinez, Local 701, and voting in favor of it from Fresno, California. Thank you.
- Mitchell Vinciguerra
Person
Mitchell Vinciguerra, Carpenters Local 2236 from Oakland, California. Please vote yes.
- Dan Nuncio
Person
Dan Nuncio, Carpenters Union. Please vote yes. Thank you.
- Onassis McFarlane
Person
Onassis McFarlane in Carpenters Local 180 in Solana County. I urge you to vote yes in the bill. Thanks.
- Dan Watson
Person
Dan Watson, Carpenters Local 1789 out of Truckee, California in support.
- Antonio Vasquez
Person
Antonio Vasquez out of Local 1109 by Visalia. Please vote yes.
- Charles Knauer
Person
Chuck Knauer, Carpenters Local 1599, Redding, California. Please vote yes.
- Brian Baker
Person
Brian Baker, Carpenters Local 1599. Please vote yes.
- Timothy Reyff
Person
Tim Reyff, Carpenters Local 22 field rep. Please vote yes for this measure. Thank you.
- Dan Calamuci
Person
Dan Calamuci, Carpenters Local 22 out of San Francisco. Here in support.
- Juan Dominguez
Person
Juan Dominguez, Local 701 out of Fresno. Please vote yes.
- Carlos Valdez
Person
Carlos Valdez, Local 46, Sacramento. Please vote yes.
- Bryan Shields
Person
Bryan Shields, Local 34 Pile Drivers, Northern 46 county, in support.
- Andrew Dawson
Person
Andrew Dawson with the California Housing Partnership in support.
- Tim Valderrama
Person
Good afternoon. Tim Valderrama with The Weideman Group on behalf of SEIU State Council in support.
- Nico Molina
Person
Nico Molina on behalf of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group in support.
- John Hanna
Person
John Hanna, community college trustee from Orange County and a member of Carpenters Local 714 in support.
- Alonzo Quintana
Person
Alonzo Quintana Drywall Lathers Local 68L in support.
- Pedro Mendez
Person
Pedro Mendez, Carpenters Local 22 in San Francisco in full support. Thanks.
- Juan Espinoza
Person
Good afternoon. Juan Espinoza, Carpenters Local 217 in San Mateo County. Please vote yes.
- Francisco Martinez
Person
Good afternoon. Francisco Martinez Nor Cal Carpenters Union Local 180, Vallejo. Please vote yes.
- Jose Toscano
Person
Jose Toscano, Carpenters Local 713, Alameda County. Please vote yes. Thank you.
- Moises Vieira
Person
Good afternoon. Moises Vieira, Carpenters Local 217, San Mateo County. Please vote yes. Thank you.
- Harvey McCuen
Person
Good afternoon. Harvey Mccuen, Carpenters Local 713, and I support this bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yan, Carpenters Union, in support.
- Ruhama Tereda
Person
Ruhama Tereda, Carpenters Local 713, in support of this bill.
- Michelle Flores
Person
Michelle Flores, Pile Drivers Local 34, and I fully support SB 423.
- Anthony Carroll
Person
Anthony Carroll. I'm with Carpenters Local 22 out of San Francisco. Please vote yes.
- Stephen Gomes
Person
Stephen Gomes. Carpenters Local 9109 out of Sacramento. Vote support yes.
- Andrew Dodkins
Person
Good afternoon. I'm Andrew Dodkins out of Local Carpenters 46. I support this bill. Please vote yes.
- Emilio Trevino
Person
Hello. My name is Emilio Trevino from Local 46, Sacramento. I'm carpenter and I support this bill.
- Arturo Rodriguez
Person
Good afternoon. Arturo Rodriguez Carpenters Local 2236 out of Oakland. Please vote yes.
- Jose Cabrera
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Jose Cabrera. I'm Carpenters Local 405 in San Jose. Please vote yes for this bill.
- Aaron Hadzess
Person
My name is Aaron Hadzess. Carpenters Local 22, San Francisco. Support this bill. Thank you.
- Gerardo Blum
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Gerardo Blum and I am from Oakland, Carpenters Local 2236. Please vote yes on the bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. Isravele, Local 713. Please vote yes.
- Edward Gable
Person
Ed Gable, Millwrights Local 102 in support of this bill.
- Benjamin Lopez
Person
Benjamin Lopez, Carpenters 1109 in Visalia. Please vote yes.
- Christon Arteaga
Person
Good afternoon. Chris Arteaga, Carpenters Local 701, Fresno County, in full support. Thank you.
- Mar Tiaga
Person
Hi. Mar Tiaga, Local 505, Santa Cruz County. Please vote yes.
- Cesar Sanchez
Person
Cesar Sanchez from Oakland. Please vote yes.
- Chad Dutton
Person
Chad Dutton, Local 405, San Jose, California. I urge you to vote yes on this. Thank you.
- Mauricio Chavez
Person
Mauricio Chavez, Oakland, California, Local 713. Please vote yes.
- Sean Hebard
Person
Sean Hebard, Carpenters Local 505, Santa Cruz County, urging your support.
- Jonathan Yeremia
Person
Jonathan Yeremia, Local 34 Pile Drivers, strong support.
- Megan Shumway
Person
Megan Shumway from Sacramento representing Sacramento Area Congregations Together in strong support.
- Beverly Yu
Person
Thank you. Madam Chair Members. Beverly Yu on behalf of State Building Construction Trades Council of California, we have a supportive amended position. We look forward to working with the Committee and appreciate the author's commitment to working with us on skill and training provisions to return back to the May 23 language. Thanks so much.
- Graciela Castillo-Krings
Person
Good morning, madam. Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Gracia Castillo-Krings, here on behalf of one of the sponsors, California YIMBY. Also here on behalf of Silicon Valley at Home Action Fund and also here on behalf of Bay Area Council. Thank you.
- Holly Fraumeni
Person
Holly Fraumeni from any day history is the lighthouse. Public affairs here in support today on behalf of Civic Wells, Spur, Habitat for Humanity, California sandhill Properties, Buckeye Properties and Vildecasa in support.
- Todd David
Person
Good afternoon, Todd David on behalf of the Housing Action Coalition and abundant San Francisco in strong support.
- Norlyn Asprec
Person
Good afternoon, Norlyn Asprec with Axiom Advisors on behalf of Meta in support.
- Ron Rowlett
Person
Good afternoon, madam. Chair Committee Members. My name is Ron Roulette. I'm the political Director for the NorCal Carpenters Union. I still have 200 folks standing out there wanting to come me to this. But out of respect for you, for you all and your time, I'm just going to say, on behalf of the carpenters, operators, laborers, cement, masons, plasters, we ask for a yes vote. Thank you.
- Scott Wetch
Person
Madam Chair Members, Mcweener, Scott, Wedge, on. Behalf of the California State Pipe Trades Council, the State Association of Electrical Workers, The California Coalition of Utility Employees, the Western States Council of Sheet Metal Workers and the Elevator Constructors Union with the Senator's commitment to return the language to its state as it left the Senate. We are agnostic on this Bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, thank you. And thank you to the carpenters that are still outside. We hear you and we appreciate that you are allowing someone to represent your voice in this hearing. Next, we're ready for opposition. Witnesses in opposition. I think if you can move the witnesses in support, we can have you back up here if there are questions. But since we have several people in opposition, just want to make sure they have a seat. Okay. So I'll let you decide who goes first.
- Sean Drake
Person
I'll go. Great. Thank you. Madam Chair and Members. I'm Sean Drake, senior Legislative Analyst for the California Coastal Commission. The Coastal Commission respectfully opposes SB 423 unless it is amended to maintain the Coastal Act in the coastal zone. The Coastal Act does not preclude multifamily housing and affordable housing. It does require that housing be built in ways that would not be vulnerable to sea level rise or block coastal access, among other policies.
- Sean Drake
Person
To that end, we have circulated compromise amendments which are before you, which we have offered over the weekend and which the author referred to. They allow the ministerial process to apply in the coastal zone with modifications to avoid legal climate and resource issues. With these amendments, we're prepared to remove our opposition. I want to use the rest of my time just to address the offer that we heard from the author at the top.
- Sean Drake
Person
One point that we did not hear, just as part of the summary of the latest compromise offer, something that was in the author's previous offers was to in the coastal zone limit application of the build to areas that are already zoned for residential or multifamily. This is important in the coastal zone for protecting existing low cost visitor serving areas.
- Sean Drake
Person
That is, the bike rental shops, the surfing shops, the little restaurants, the things that make the coast enjoyable for everyone to visit, those that live there and those that don't. Without that protection, this Bill would allow for those naturally affordable businesses to be bought out, demolished, and replaced with largely high end housing, with nominal amounts of affordable housing mixed in.
- Sean Drake
Person
We didn't see that in the package, but we understand it to be there, and we would hope that it would be there as part of reaching a resolution. And then I want to respond to a couple of points from the author's latest offer that are simply unworkable. We appreciate the author's offer to retain the exclusion of areas where there is no certified local coastal program. That is important.
- Sean Drake
Person
The author, however, carves out of that exception the bill applying in areas that do have a certified land use plan. That's important because a land use plan is only the first half of a local coastal program and it is the half that is not objective. It has broadly applicable policies. Those are then made specific and objective through the other half of a local coastal program, the implementation plan.
- Sean Drake
Person
If this bill applies in areas that only have a land use plan, all of the policies in that plan will be waived because they are not objective. For that reason, limiting that carve out and retaining the exception of LCP jurisdictions is important. As for the benchmark that we use for excluding areas vulnerable to sea level rise, the Commission is not willing to accept anything under 5ft because when we're looking how long we want structures built today to last, we're looking out to 2100.
- Sean Drake
Person
And the low and moderate projections for sea level rise, looking at state numbers and looking at federal numbers are 5ft or more. We've not heard any science based basis for a three foot benchmark. We would be curious to hear it. But in looking at the data, 5ft is the lowest benchmark that we think is acceptable for ensuring that housing will actually be protected for its useful life and that we're not locating affordable housing in sacrifice zones that will be impacted by sea level rise.
- Sean Drake
Person
And the final point, we appreciate the author's willingness to look beyond the NOAA standard. That is critical because NOAA's sea level rise viewer does not look at bluff erosion, which is going to be how sea level rise manifests in much of the state. However, the proposed addition of the Ocean Protection Council standards is not workable. The Ocean Protection Council doesn't do sea level rise mapping. Their standards are for when sea level rise is going to occur, not where.
- Sean Drake
Person
And so that's not the sort of resource that we would look at. We insist that a best available science standard is the best way to capture our collective intent. It is the phrase used frequently in the law on a number of climate and resource related issues. It allows for us to wholly look at the body of science on the table now and also to take into account evolutions in that science as new resources and tools become available.
- Sean Drake
Person
All of those points are captured in the amendments that have been circulated before you. We hope that the author will reconsider them as we are willing to remove our opposition should they be agreed to. Thank you.
- Laura Walsh
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. Laura Walsh with the Surf Rider Foundation. We are also opposing the Bill unless the full Coastal Commission proposed amendments before you are accepted. Our number one concern is that we as a foundation cannot support bypassing review for sea level rise vulnerability in the State of California. I got my master's at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. I've been working with local governments and state agencies planning for sea level rise ever since.
- Laura Walsh
Person
Local governments are not well equipped to plan for sea level rise. The Coastal Commission is facilitating the use of best available science to keep development out of harm's way while protecting our coastal resources as the mean high tideline moves in. I couldn't agree more that 5ft is a very conservative estimate that anything less would be a loss of our coastline. Additionally, I think the other aspects, the difference between a local coastal program and the lup kind of spells the difference on the effectiveness of this Bill.
- Laura Walsh
Person
We are very concerned that the Bill could act as a Trojan horse that will, instead of solving the problem of affordable housing, instead deregulate qualified housing development along a very thin strip of land that contains some of the nation's most lucrative real estate. Surfrider has 30 years of experience attending almost every Coastal Commission meeting. We feel very confident that this deregulation will contribute to housing interests for multifamily housing that includes ocean views and luxury condominiums.
- Laura Walsh
Person
And we want these amendments to ensure that we're not just selling off the coast to developers and instead ensuring that there is minimum standards of affordable housing that actually result in changed market prices. We do know that in this process, streamlining will to some extent sacrifice the Coastal Commission's ability to uphold the Coastal Act and provide mitigation for lost coastal access, mitigation for erosion caused by armoring of coastal development. We can't afford to lose the Coastal Act again voter approved initiative.
- Laura Walsh
Person
I think the amendments apply the proper jurisdiction so that we're not losing that. And I just want to say, living in San Francisco, working for a nonprofit, I couldn't agree more with the goals of this Bill. We just want it to function properly and we really hope to work together and support the full amendments made by the Coast Commission. Thank you.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members, Peter Papadopoulos with the Mission Economic Development Agency out of San Francisco's Mission District, which works to build equity among Latino and other BIPOC communities through the development of small business workforce and affordable housing. And we appreciate the conversations that are ongoing with the author's office staff that we've had and conversations we have with a number of your staffs.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
We remain in a pose and less amended position along with numerous San Francisco affordable housing developers, tenants'rights groups and Homeless Advocacy Coalitions. And it's for a principal reason that the reason why we wanted to do this handout is we think it is not fully understood what effect this could have across the state, which is after cities across the state have spent upwards of sometimes two years developing their new housing elements in response to the new Rena goals, which touches this very closely.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
This Bill is now based on uniform streamlining and would override a lot of that community planning that just went into those scenarios. Whereas if you look at the map in front of you, this is an example of the San Francisco housing element on the upper left, the TCAC high resource areas are intended for selective streamlining. They're intended for upzoning and streamlining.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
If you look at the map on the upper right, that area is the areas that are intended for community stabilization, prosperity, affordable housing, and some continued market rate housing because those are the areas where we're already building nearly all of the market rate housing.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
And what this Bill does is incentivizes people to stay right in those same low income communities of color with the vast majority of their building overriding their affirmatively furthering fair housing central framework, which is these two top maps known as the Equitable distribution of housing. And it also overrides existing cultural stabilization tools that we've passed.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
And it overrides the toolkit of our housing elements set of stabilization and prosperity tools which are on the back of the map, which you can see apply to the two lower areas as well. Each of these provisions on the back of the maps are overridden or made silent by SB 423 in its current version.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
Now, that to say, number one, we want to say we strongly support the affordable housing component and our agency itself has used it once in the form of SB 35 to build 100% affordable housing project. But if we're allowed to streamline and invert our central affirmatively, furthering fair housing framework of our housing element, we're very concerned about small business displacement on our cultural corridors, tenant price pressures, the demolition of not yet landmarked historic sites, which we're working on.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
So we would ask for your support in looking at some of these amendments that are detailed here and which you have on file, including can we exempt or delay even some of these priority equity geographies? Could we also grant HCD who worked closely on these housing elements? Can their teams be granted the authority to make sure that the affirmatively furthering fair housing frameworks are left intact? That would be something that would be incredibly helpful as well.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
Or we could look at a nuanced approach to the entire Bill, which is maybe we're only market rate streamlining in cities that are trailing their peers and their Rena goals by a prorated 15%. And we understand that that's a proposal that's been put forward by a lot of statewide groups. So those are requests along with, we think, the environmental requests that we've been hearing to ensure that we're not abutting industrial zones seems very reasonable to us.
- Peter Papadopoulos
Person
And we would look for your support with trying to move those amendments forward. And we look forward to continued conversation with the author.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Are there additional witnesses in opposition?
- David Jones
Person
Yes, ma'am, I'm sure. David Jones, on behalf of the town of Truckee, San Marcos, Stockton, and the cities of Marin County in opposition.
- Matt Roman
Person
Good afternoon. Matt Roman, on behalf of the town of Apple Valley and City of Downey in opposition.
- Paul Gonsalves
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Committee Members. Paul Gonsalves, on behalf of the cities of Bellflower, Carson, Gino, Elk Grove, Fairfield, Fontana, Glendora, Indian Wells, Europa Valley, Kerman. Lamarata, Lakewood, Norwalk, Palm Desert, Paramount, Rancho Cordova, Redding Rosemead, Santa Clarita, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Whittier and Wildemar all in respectful opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good evening, Assembly Members. The following organization submitted a letter dated July 3 in respectful opposition to SB 423, unless the Bill is amended to preserve the applicability of the Coastal Act in the coastal zone.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
These Organizations are the Environmental Action Committee of West Marin, the California Coastkeeper Alliance, the Center for Biological Diversity, Stewards of the Arroyo Seco, Orange County Coastkeeper, Community Clean Water Institute, Napa Sierra Club Executive Committee, the Pavunga Wetlands Protectors, Forest Unlimited, Resource Renewal Institute, Sonoma County Conservation Action, SoCal 350 Climate Action, Coastal Lands Action Network, Crenshaw Subway Coalition, Defend Bologna Wetlands, California River Watch, the Environmental Center of San Diego, Protect San Antonio Valley, The Friends, Artists, and Neighbors of Elkhorn Slough, California Coastal Protection Network, Wine and Water Watch, Smith River Alliance Russian River Keeper, Save Sonoma Coast, Coastal Environmental Rights Foundation citizens Preserving Venice, Ocean Conservation Research, Azul, Bologna Wetlands Institute, the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water, Surf Rider Foundation, the Public Trust Alliance, the Turtle Island Restoration Network, Pasadena Audubon Society, the River Project, Sierra Club California, and The Los Cerritos Wetlands Land Trust thank you.
- Sylvia Solis
Person
Sylvia Solis Shaw, on behalf of the City of Beverly Hills, in opposition.
- Alex Lopez
Person
Good afternoon. Alex Lopez and representation of California Environmental Justice Alliance in opposition. Thank you.
- Reina Tello
Person
Good afternoon. Reina Tello with people organizing to demand environmental and economic rights in San Francisco and Communities United for Health and justice. We strongly align with the opposition and we stand with an opposed unless amended. Please, please take the amendments. Thank you.
- Maeli Soto
Person
Good afternoon. Maeli Soto. I'm a future environmental justice attorney, and I oppose unless there's amendments that provide safeguards for our health and environment. Thank you.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Good afternoon. Jennifer Ganata of Communities for a Better environment. We represent communities in Southeast, LA. Wilmington, Los Angeles, Richmond, California and East Oakland. Thank you. Opposition opposed unless amended. Thank you.
- Sheena Cabal
Person
Good afternoon. Sheena Cabal, Los Angeles resident and opposed unless amended, to include environmental and public health safeguards.
- Cammi Martin
Person
Good afternoon. Madam Chair Members, cammie Martin. On behalf of the cities of Concord, Pleasanton, Tracy, Tustin, Mission Viejo, Chino, Hills, Asperia, Fullerton and Placenta, and respectful opposition. Also here on behalf of the cities of Dublin, Livermore, San Ramon, Danville, Pismo Beach, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Del Mar and Half Moon Bay. All in respectful opposition unless amended. To address the concerns listed in their submitted letters. Thank you.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members Erin Woolley on behalf of Sierra Club California, with an opposed unless amended position. Thank you.
- Ethan Nagler
Person
Ethan Nagler, on behalf of the cities of Corona, Rancho Cucamonga, Eastville Rancho, Palace verde and Carlsbad, in respectful opposition.
- Cynthia Castillo
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Cynthia Castillo on behalf of Western Center on Law and Poverty. We submitted a letter of concerns and would like to align our comments with Peter and ensure that there was proper guidelines. Thank you.
- Bret Gladfelty
Person
Good afternoon. Brett Gladfelty, on behalf of the California Surety Federation, we were opposed unless amended, but given the recent amendments, on June 19, we've removed that. So thank you.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume, educational Director and founder of Clean Earth for Kids. In opposition. We echo the comments of the Surf Rider Foundation. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, we'll bring it back to the Committee and we'll start with Assembly Member Ward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. I want to start by maybe reciting some observations that we had talked about in the Housing Committee, which I also sit on, and just commend the author as well for his leadership several years ago and introducing SB 35.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Very difficult sometimes as we think about trying to meet the crisis that we have out there, to deliver on more housing opportunities, much of which actually includes affordable housing as part of the project as well, to realize that when we're having these conversations for state legislation, does it actually produce, and SB 35 has produced. And here we are looking to be able to extend this as well, because when something is working, we want it to work well.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And I think it's also the right time that we talk about making sure that we are looking at any of the reservations that happened at the time of that inaction to make sure that we are reaching as broad of an opportunity zone for this very kind of model. And so where the coastal zone was previously excluded. What is the makeup of that?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
What is the makeup of these communities, much of which are in my region, by the way, to make sure that the same opportunities are afforded there while we are digging into and reflecting in the intent and the respect PCB the voters of what we want to see on our coastal zone, making sure that we have people that are of all socioeconomic income levels, being able to afford to live in the same communities that they work requires us to be able to think about producing the housing models that are going to be able to actually locate them there as well.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And so I had several questions here that I know are really germane to sort of getting clarification and trying to fine tune what's before this Committee here today as we're deciding whether or not to move forward on the Bill and amendments to a Bill for this Committee's consideration. First, I want to go into the question about the Coastal Commission's proposed framework and then your response to that, which I want to sort of maybe start there as a basis. And I didn't know if that's as scripted, something that's been passed out to Committee Members.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, actually, before you hand it out, I want to say this diplomatically. When the Coastal Commission decided to oppose the Bill and we were notified of that, that was in the second House, it was only a month ago or whenever that was. And then we had a whole laundry list of environmental, very respected environmental organizations pile on in opposition who had not met with us ahead of time.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm just going to say that I said that in Housing Committee and I'm going to say it again here today. I want to thank the Surf Rider Foundation for calling my office afterwards to acknowledge that they had not engaged with us before opposing the Bill. After that happened, we immediately I got on a zoom with leadership at the Commission. I talked about, let's try to work this out.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
As I noted after I met with the chair, and the chair said, can you please engage with them and work it out? And I committed to do that. And we promptly sent a proposed compromise, actually several versions of a compromise over our substantive interaction with the Commission in terms of the Commission's proposals have been through the Committee and now today. And so we took the Coastal Commission's proposal and worked off of that proposal instead of off of our proposal, made some modifications.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
They don't like some of those modifications. I am happy to sit and talk directly, my office and the Commission to work it out. And I'm optimistic we'll be able to work it out, but I would prefer that we do that face to face and not through a Committee or not at a Committee hearing.
- Luz Rivas
Person
The Committee makes the decision. And I just want to make sure I called you on we talked on Saturday. I said, look, the Coastal Commission came moved from excluding the coastal zone to something very close to I'm the one that told you, you guys are actually very close, right?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah.
- Luz Rivas
Person
There has been an opportunity. I feel like my team and I made that happen. And that's what a chair and a Committee does. Right? And you can't exclude the Committee. Right. It's our decision. And I just want to make sure that that is clear. And I've been trying to facilitate this, and I just want to make sure that we do make this decision.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
If I may, Madam Chair, I just want to acknowledge I think you're both right. And this happens to us as well when we are dealing with our bills in the second house, and conversations come late, and we figure that out. And you've been very adept at doing that through all of your very difficult pieces of legislation. But I know that our chair is also trying to make sure that there is some ownership of responsibility in this Committee's jurisdiction for the work that we're doing as it passes forward. If you could. Yeah.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. I think, Madam Chair, first of all, as I acknowledge at the beginning, I'm not sure that we would have any of this had you not engaged, which I appreciate that. And it's always the decision of the Committee. What I'm saying is that normally, as an author, and for any of us as authors with bills, if someone has a big issue, you want them to come to you to have an opportunity to work on it before it becomes a public thing.
- Sean Drake
Person
But I'm committed to because I think we are rather close and I think there can be a resolution, and I very much want there to be.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I know that you are, again, so that this is a very important conversation that we're having here today. Do Members of the Committee have the potential amendments that we are in draft form? Because I think that's a good starting point for everybody to be able to see some of the detail that we want to discuss here today. So on the first area of detail, as we're talking about three foot versus five foot, I'm certainly sympathetic.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Based on the science that we have through National Research Council, our own seed agencies, Coastal Commission, that 66 inches, close to 5ft, is sort of the best available science that we have available at the time today that we believe is likely to be the impact of sea level rise by the year 2100.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And so if that is the case and we also have been having very broad conversations about what we want to do in response to that in terms of not just bolstering our seaside infrastructure, but also thinking about putting more structure in harm's way. And if that is an area, three foot versus five foot, I would just be encouraging of the author to think about maybe meeting the Commission and potentially even my interest as well on that.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I don't think in the grand scheme of things, we're talking about a lot of lay of the land if we're looking at a three foot by five versus five foot elevation. But I think it does resolve a fundamental issue that's at play here right now, which is are we going to be encouraging more intense development in an area that is likely to be subject to sea level rise?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I am open to the 5ft, but it also is tied to whether there's a standard to measure that. And the Commission has said they want to use, quote unquote, best Available Science, which is not an objective standard we've suggested NOAA. If there's a different measurable objective standard, we're happy. I'm open to that.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And I agree with you that I guess I wanted to ask the question back to the Commission. A lot of the work that's been done, even some documents that have been adopted by some of my local agencies that have done sea level rise vulnerability assessments using the Ocean Protection Council's guidance, using NOAA as a reference point as well. These do seem to be, to date, good standards that we're looking at. What is the objection today from these? And do you have a superior mapping agency that we could use or consider?
- Sean Drake
Person
I wish I had one. Silver Bullet Assembly Member unfortunately, a singular referral objective standard simply does not exist. I pointed to the deficiencies of the NOAA viewer when I was testifying, talking about how that excludes large areas that are going to be affected by sea level rise.
- Sean Drake
Person
And so just in practice, to use the example that you referred to with local governments that are looking at how sea level rise are going to be impacting their specific jurisdiction, what they do is they take the lay of the landscape in terms of multiple data and policy sources that are out there. They also convene additional information about the specific circumstances of their jurisdiction. What is the geography, what is the geology, what are the oceanic processes where they live.
- Sean Drake
Person
They accumulate all of that together and they come up with what's going to work for them. That is what best available science allows you to do. It doesn't wedge you to one necessarily incomplete resource. There is no one comprehensive, complete resource that's going to work for the whole state. And so Best Available Science allows you to assemble the combination that works for that area and also to take into account evolutions in the science so that this law doesn't become immediately outdated.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So I'm going to say something that's actually going to contradict itself. But on one hand, I agree that by having Best Available Science there as a sort of standard in the statute here, it's too squishy of a definition that how do we actually determine whether or not something applies or it doesn't apply? Who determines what is best available science. I think it opens you up to a lot of interpretation down the road.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And I do like the idea that we could find some kind of metric, agency mapping tool, whatever we can, to be very specific about when this does or does not apply. Hopefully, if this moves forward, that's an area that actually can't be resolved. Because I agree we're close on this on this subject, but I would just caution that we don't use maybe best available science.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
On the other hand, I am nervous that as sea level rise may or may not play itself out and as time goes on, if we are being so specific as to limit ourselves to three foot or five foot, that we could be in even worse case situation here down the road.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And so whether or not there is language as this conversation might continue that allows for flexibility 20 years from now, granted the market might actually determine that flexibility for us because if something were to be so catastrophic, these would not be very amenable properties to development. You wouldn't be able to actually probably secure the resources necessary to be able to and the loans necessary or the insurance necessary to be able to develop. So that might actually take care of itself.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Just things that need to be kind of worked out in ongoing conversation, which leads to the next point. I appreciate and agree very strongly with the need to work out wildfire conversations. I think most of us and myself included with some of my legislation have been very sensitive that we've been not smart about building in areas that are more and more prone and more and more hazardous to dangerous conditions.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And we've seen that manifest itself over the last decade into tens of thousands of homes lost or at risk of loss. And so this does need to be worked out. I would hopefully encourage you to include our chair if this again does move forward in those conversations over the next couple of months, knowing that the interests of this Committee and our very talented staff here need to be able to get this right for the safety of those potential.
- Sean Drake
Person
Absolutely.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay, thank you. And then lastly, this was just brought to my attention this morning again was the amendment that you took on redefining 85 foot applicability. I guess it's interesting because the way that I see it here, you're just kind of clarifying in the amendment that you took in Senate Appropriations, that's 85 foot above with habitable or with residential occupancy. It seems to read the same way to me.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
But the analysis jumps ahead and says that it would only apply to a higher level of intensity of development. Could you clarify?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. So in Senate Appropriations and I want to publicly thank Senate leadership for really engaging and all the various labor parties to try to come up with to broker some peace and. So what we came up with was that one standard up to 85ft, a different standard above 85ft, which tends to correlate with steel construction. It's a different construction type, and I think it's a really good approach.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
What came out of Appropriations as an author amendment when the language that defined 85ft, I think some of our folks felt like that it could be clarified in terms of compliance, conformity with the building code. So the amendment that we took before it even went to Assembly housing what we viewed as just clarifying amendment, the trades and Mr. Wetz's clients did not agree and wanted it to revert back to what came out of Senate Appropriations.
- Sean Drake
Person
In the end, we just decided as a matter of peace on Earth, we can do that because I don't personally think it makes a huge difference one way or the other. And so we decided to revert it back.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I think we're talking about the same thing, which is a technical clarification. I think when you're talking about the intensity or the scale of a building development.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It doesn't change that. It's only about the threshold for which labor standard applies. Because 85ft triggers a different labor standard.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Right?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so this is simply about how do we phrase that sentence that triggers the 85ft. And there was just a dispute about which language it should be. And so we reverted it back in order to not create that kind of, I think, conflict. That wasn't necessary.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I don't know if Mr. Wetch is still in the office, but in the audience as well. I would look forward to maybe in the future, like more clarification, how this actually would change again the framework of a potential development right now, because I see it as one and the same. And if we are subsequently changing language, that is going to also change the agreement that you very carefully negotiated as well. That would be of concern. I'm just not convinced that we've actually changed that. Would you agree?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I can speak to it courtesy of Chair and the Committee. For all intents, it means the same thing. One tracks Cleaves closer to the Uniform building code and the California building codes. I think there was some concern about involving human occupancy or use in it, clarifying so they're more comfortable, which we believe it gets to the same place. The short answer is 85ft and a quarter inch. Your high rise construction, it's going to be usually type one construction.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There are places where there's type one and lower, so maybe that's part of it. But where we're standing, it means exactly the same thing that at 85ft it goes to a higher labor standard.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay, I'm going to explore that a little bit more just to see if there's something that I'm missing in how that actually maybe changes the applicability to different kinds of projects. I don't think that it does, but this issue was raised, and so I'd like to hear a little bit more from that.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
To that end, Madam Chair, if not already, I'd like to make a motion to move this Bill with the inclusion of the author's amendments for purposes of discussion and open it up to the rest of your leisure.
- Sean Drake
Person
The Wildfire? Or sorry.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
The wildfire amendment include your right for the amendments to government code Section 65913.4, as well as the draft amendments here for the intent of the Legislature to consult on wildfire issues. And I will use that as a basis for starting the motion.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I haven't had the chance to talk to in this hearing. I plan to object to those amendments.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay.
- Luz Rivas
Person
And so I'm just being clear about that. We have a list of Members that also want to speak on behalf, want to ask questions.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I'll make a motion which is in order and happy to see how it goes.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We already had a motion from Assembly Member Mathis.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I know.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So under our rules, I'd like to make a substitute motion if it is going to receive a second.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Can you clarify what your motion is exactly?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
To move the Bill forward with the authors drafted amendments as presented today on wildfire intent language, as well as the amended Coastal Commission authors amendments to government code Section 65913.4.
- Sean Drake
Person
I'd rather.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
What? Yeah.
- Devon Mathis
Person
To to clarify, Madam Chair, I rescind my first motion, and I will second Mr. Ward's motion to accept Mr. Weiner's amendments to move the Bill forward.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Language is not in these pages.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Not at this time? Not at this time. We would take this draft as it's.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Currently drafted, then, correct? Because I know the Senator mentioned in the beginning that he was reverting back to the labor language that came out of Senate approach. I'm correct, right? That's not currently the way what's in print right now and the pages that he gave us does not include the labor language. Just want to make sure what we're voting. I want to be clear with everyone what we're voting.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The writing for the labor language, we had been intending to take that in approach. That was, I think, what our plan was, but I don't have a problem taking it at any point in time because we've committed to it.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So the analysis has raised this language. We just discussed this language. So what is your ultimate intent of the Bill?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I am committing that we're reverting that 85 foot language, period, end of story. It doesn't matter to me when it's.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Also, like, as a part of my motion. If the seconder agrees, I would like to accept that as well at this time.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Agreed.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
That's what we have.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Without the labor language with yes. Currently in print. I'm sorry, I missed this.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
No, as in the analysis, the changes in section f shall be reverted to the version prior to the June 19 authors amendments.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's not listed as a Committee among those.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Just want to make sure that we're all very clear on what your motion is, right. From this Committee. I believe that Senator Weiner has committed to reverting to the labor. We discussed this. I have no issue with his commitment on that.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Just with regard to the motion that you made. There's still a lot of Members who want to discuss the Bill. And so I would just request that you keep open the option that we might want to make suggestions or changes so like normal practice. I wouldn't want us to call the question until everyone's had a chance to discuss the Bill and the suggested amendments. Because the Committee we may decide to do something different, right?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Absolutely. I'll be listening.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Thank you.
- Beverly Yu
Person
Okay, next. I have assemblymember Pellerin.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
All right, well, first of all, thank you to the author and the co author for being incredible housing advocates in this state. I definitely support the goal to build affordable housing so people who are working in our communities can't afford to live in our communities. But I do have some concerns with the Bill. First, I want to speak to the importance of making sure the high fire hazard severity zones are accurately referenced in this Bill.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
As you know, the state, especially my district, were severely impacted by the wildfires a couple of years ago, and these are only going to become more intense. So I think if we're going to streamline housing, we need to pay careful attention to make sure that new developments won't be burned out shortly after. And I'd like to see these provisions tightened up. Second, I'm very concerned about setting this precedent for the Coastal Act.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
We need to look at how to meet both state goals of more housing and strong coastal protection in an era of climate change and sea level rise, not pitting these goals against each other. While I appreciate the author's efforts to find a middle ground, I'm not convinced that amending the Coastal Act in this way is the right approach, as this approach doesn't address the restrictions that were enacted in 1981 when the Legislature took Affordable Housing Authority out of the Coastal Act.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
This Bill appears to be focused on market rate multifamily housing, which means more high end development without a strong requirement for workforce and affordable housing. I appreciate the author, the Commission and some of the Members of the Committee were in negotiations over the weekend. Thank you to our chair and your staff for all the work you did. But negotiating major changes to the Coastal Act over the weekend doesn't provide the public an opportunity to review these changes.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
And it was the public who passed this law to protect our California beaches and coastal resources. As far as sea level rise goes, I think the Commission has made the case that there is no objective way to determine statewide what will be safe for the life of a structure without taking multiple factors into account. The Coastal Commission is the agency that has had more direct, real world experience dealing with how to site and design safe development on the coast than any other agency or organization.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
So why we would want to take the best available science and the medium estimates for sea level rise on a question this important greatly concerns me. The Coastal Commission advises and guides most of the local governments in our state on these matters. They also give them grant funds to update their local coastal plans in order to account for sea level rise impacts. As legislators, we should not be quick to substitute our judgment for the expertise of technical planning staff.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
I don't want the burden on my conscience if we pick the wrong number. As Semi Member Ward said earlier, if the Commission says 5ft should be the standard, then that should be based on the best available science at specific factors, at site specific factors. And I defer to them. Earlier this year, I watched parts of my community get destroyed in the atmospheric storms. Sea level rise, flooding, and coastal erosion are not theoretical to me or my community.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
It is a reality and it is very important to me. So as much as I appreciate all the work you're doing, and I am a huge supporter of affordable housing and building more housing in our state, I don't think we should do this at the cost of our coast, which needs our stewardship and protection. So thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assemblymember Marisucci.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. I also want to thank the Senator for and his co author, the chair of the Housing Committee, and the Assembly for their leadership. And I do support building more housing, but like my colleague just stated, not at the expense of protecting our coast. I represent a coastal district of Los Angeles County, and just two days ago, there were, at last count, 12 homes that just collapsed because of land erosion.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And while it's still being investigated, there's a lot of suspicion that this is also related to climate change, that it's related to the torrential rains that we had in our district, like we've had throughout the state, and that these homes were zoned in a residential zone.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And it's my understanding, I'd like to ask the Coastal Commission to confirm this, that part of the Coastal Act the purpose of the Coastal Act is to require all new development to minimize risk to life and property in areas of high geologic hazard, and that neither creates nor contributes to erosion or geologic instability. Is that correct?
- Sean Drake
Person
That's correct, Assembly Member. And I would add that SB One, by Protem Atkins several years ago, doubled down on those policies, adding stronger language to the Coastal Act to that effect.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
So it concerns me deeply that we're even considering a Bill that's going to weaken in the name of building more housing faster. Again, I support not only the building more housing, but also all the jobs, the union jobs, to build more housing. I support those goals, but we should not be pitting building more housing at the expense of protecting our coast. Last time I checked, this is the Natural Resources Committee and not the Housing Committee.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And I want to remind this Committee that the Coastal Act is the the primary tool for us to protect this precious California coastline that we have.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And so I just wanted to make sure that I stated that for the record. Thank you very much Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Addis.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you so much. And before I start, I just want to come back to one of the very first conversations with the author that I ever had when I was still a candidate. And I applauded you for your bravery when it comes to housing. And so I just want to echo that here today and say I applaud the author, the co author, all of the folks who came up from District. I know what it takes to drive up here and really appreciate that.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
But also, this chair and staff and our colleagues, many of us spent hours thinking about this, talking about this, texting, calling one another, trying to figure out where we're at on this, because it's so important. I would say it's so important to myself and to every single Member of this Committee that we get housing right when it comes to the coastal zone. And so I think every one of us has our hearts and our minds in the right place and have been thinking deeply about this.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I also want to say that I absolutely support SB 35. It's a phenomenal Bill. It extended affordable housing. It's done wonderful things for our state. It would be very easy for me to say yes to 423 if the right things were in place, which I don't believe they are at this time. I think we need more time on this to make sure this gets to the place where we can all feel really solid behind it.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And I want to share a little bit of info about my personal story, and then I'll tell you why it's so difficult for me to support this. We raised two kids in the coastal zone in an 800 square foot house as a teacher and a construction worker on those salaries as middle class people. I have a mother in law who would very much like to live in the coastal zone. She does right now, but she's on a three year waiting list for affordable housing.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I have constituents that are coming to me and calling my office and telling me, I'm 80 years old, I can't find housing. Right? These are serious, serious problems for our district. But when I look at this Bill, what this feels like to me is a trickle down approach to affordable housing. What it's saying is if we just build more market rate, we will build enough market rate that eventually prices will come down. And that might be true in some parts of California.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
It very well may be. I don't think that's true in the coastal zone that I represent. Market rate housing. Where I represent is $1.0 million housing. It's $2.4 million housing. It's incredibly expensive market rate housing. And I'm not seeing enough in this Bill to let me know that it's actually not going to be a giveaway to developers that it's actually not going to increase income inequality by relaxing standards for developers.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And I'll get to why those standards are so important to actually increase affordable housing, which really at its crux is what I've been told this Bill is about getting affordable housing into the coastal zone. So I have an issue there.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I would also say I'm incredibly concerned after the February storm excuse me, the January and March storms that we experienced in our district, where we saw absolute destruction of the coast, we saw cliffs falling into the water, we saw 100 year floods that we're being told are going to come now every 30 years. And the homeowners that were most affected were those that have the least amount of resources. And it was devastating for people.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And so I have a lot of concern around Eroding, the Coastal Act that is meant to protect us against floods, against sea level rise, against groundwater incursion, against crumbling bluffs, but also protect public access and increase affordable housing. And I just don't see that in this Bill at this time. I would say a third issue that I have difficulty with is I have a number of areas in my district that would love to build, but they don't have water.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
They're under stop build orders because of water. And I don't see penalizing these areas for not meeting their Rena numbers when the water district is telling them that they can't build. So they are feeling between a rock and a hard space and they're asking for help. They're not asking for more unfunded mandates. They're asking for help to increase water so that they can build.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I will add to this that I also have local electeds telling me, dawn, we're building, we want to build, we're putting money behind affordable housing. We're doing everything I can. And as a Council Member, I personally have a project that's almost done. It's just kind of waiting on a couple of things because of supply chain issues and affordable housing development that is almost done, but we also approved market rate housing.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I do believe that developer is going to make millions and millions of dollars, and I don't believe that developers should have gotten any kind of shortcuts to be able to do that development. And so these things are happening, building is happening. For my particular coastal district, though, these are very difficult issues to say. We should give up the Coastal Act with no guarantee that we're going to get affordable housing from it. So I again want to reiterate my support for SB 35.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I think everything I've said here is no surprise to anybody today, but I think there's some easy solutions, we just haven't gotten there yet. So that's why I'm having such difficulty and probably won't be able to support this today.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member Wood.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. And thank you to the authors for bringing this forward. I supported SB 35. And I think the work that's come of that, I think, has proved its case. I represent 300 miles of coastline, more than any Member in this room. And very little of that land would be subject to this. Very little. And yet we still struggle with housing in those areas that would. And so I have a couple of questions and then a couple more comments.
- Jim Wood
Person
I see in your amendments you mentioned, in lieu of best available science, having Noah be the arbiter of what the appropriate height is. And so I'm going to support you on that and maybe have you consider something in addition to that as well. For me, best available science, I think, could be in the eyes of the interpreter and not necessarily inclusive of all science there.
- Jim Wood
Person
And I would be a little more comfortable if there were organizations named and it doesn't have to just be Noah, but other organizations possibly as well, where there is actually a consensus. I just feel like that best available science could be used by somebody. Let's talk healthcare.
- Jim Wood
Person
Somebody might feel that maybe vaccines or some other health condition, in their mind, the best available science that they have access to could skew the way they looked at I thought healthcare was complicated until we started some of these discussions. So my hat's really off to you. So, anyway, that's my consideration there. I am confused and not unusual, but in the Coastal Commission compromise amendments, there's, the number 1235.
- Jim Wood
Person
It says, in the coastal zone, only partial zone for residential or multifamily will be eligible for this streamlined process. The way I read your Bill, that's what your Bill says. So help me clarify, why are they asking for an amendment when it's already in your Bill? From my interpretation?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. So thank you for that. Assembly Member SB 35 only applies to multi unit residential. Period. That's what the Bill is about. SB 35 does not allow commercial conversion. There are other laws that this Legislature has passed, including two last year, that in some circumstances, SB 35 does not allow for conversion from commercial or anything else to residential. It applies to land where you are allowed to build multi unit residential. So that would be a superfluous amendment because the Bill is already about residential multi unit.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you, because that's the way I was reading it. So I am confused. Can you explain why that amendment, which mimics his language? Because I don't get it.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Happy to. Yeah. The language of this Bill and of SB 35 speaks when it lists out the eligible areas where the streamlining process would take place. It applies to residential zones, applies to mixed use zones, and it contains a reference to the Housing Accountability Act and areas where multifamily housing is allowed under that act, which includes office, retail, commercial, and other lists or other zoning designations.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So, no, this Bill does not involve converting the zoning designation of a site, but it does refer to the Housing Accountability Act, which makes multifamily a permissible use on those other zones.
- Jim Wood
Person
Go ahead.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
First of all, the Housing Accountability Act does not change any zoning. That's a 40 year old law that says you basically can't change the rules in the middle of the game. And if you zone for something, you have to allow people to build to that for housing. I think there has been some confusion because Senate Bill Six, which Legislature passed last year by Senator Caballero, was signed into law, which does allow for conversion from commercial to residential in certain circumstances.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That law refers to SB 35 streamlining. It's a cross reference. But that's not SB 35. In addition, SB Six, as I understand it, has a savings clause. So the Coastal Act still fully applies. And so I just don't agree with that. And I'm stating here that SB 35 and it's our intent, and I think it's what the Bill does, is about residential multi unit. When I say that mixed use, you can have up to one third of the building be non residential.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And that's standard in the Legislature for housing bills.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you. I'm going to move on now. I'm very protective of the coastline. It's a huge part of my district. It's a huge part of what is so important to the people who live there and call it home and those people who come and visit. So I'm very protective of that. So this is a difficult balancing act for this. But I go back to the fact that what you're asking for is in areas that are already zoned for housing. You're not asking to expand zoning. You're already looking at areas that are already zoned for housing. Correct?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That's correct. And if you analyze the entire geography of the coastal zone under what we have currently in print, I'm not even talking about any compromise. What's currently in print in the Bill, our analysis is that 85% of the geography of the coastal zone would still be excluded because it's not zone residential, it's not zone multi unit. It's not infill because the Bill only applies to urbanized infill areas. So the large majority of the coastal zone on the natural is simply not part of this. The amendments, even the ones that we're proposing, exclude even more of the coastal.
- Jim Wood
Person
Am you mentioned. And I'm kind of surprised too, because I know you, and I know how hard you work your bills, that in the Senate, the issues were all around labor. And suddenly in this House, suddenly it became very different. I think had you known that there were going to be objections, I know you would have been working on. So I want to give you the opportunity to continue working on this.
- Jim Wood
Person
What troubles me about the negotiations and the process here is that once the Bill leaves a Committee, the only opportunity the Committee Members, individual Members, will have to engage will be in a subsequent Committee or on the floor. So I'd love for it to come back for us to see the final product, but I don't know that there's no mechanism for that as far as what I'm aware of. But I'm not blaming you for that. It's just the way this has worked out.
- Jim Wood
Person
As I said, I think had you known this was going to be a major issue, you would have begun addressing this when the Bill was introduced. So I appreciate the quandary that you find yourself in and I want to thank you. We've had discussions about the fire zones. I think my community was one of the first to experience absolute catastrophic wildfire. And my concern about the maps and the effects of the maps on how and where housing might be built takes to the next level.
- Jim Wood
Person
There are historic areas in my district that are fire prone, and we've built and then burned and then rebuilt. Maybe at some point it's not appropriate to build again and watch it burn again in the future. So I recognize that CAL FIRE will have recommendations for mitigation and so forth, but that doesn't always consider the fact that there's a funnel there and when a fire gets started, it just moves through there quickly.
- Jim Wood
Person
But the other issue of concern is that and we see just this over the weekend or today, that insurers are now backing away from insuring. We've now had three carriers who are saying they're not going to write new policies. And so for us to authorize and build housing in an area where insurers are not going to insure means that the people who people aren't going to be able to buy that or they're not going to be able to occupy that, and it would be hugely problematic.
- Jim Wood
Person
So that's part of the consideration as we go forward. So I just want to thank you for working with us on that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jim Wood
Person
If you have something else.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The insurance issue, obviously it's a huge one in the wildfire zones. We're even now seeing it outside of wildfire zones for different reasons. Even in San Francisco, we're seeing there's an insurance meltdown happening in terms of homeowners insurance in particular. But it started in the wildfire zones and it's most acute in the wildfire zones, and that affects housing globally.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's a broader issue than any one Bill, but I agree with you that it is a big problem and I pray that it gets fixed because it's impacting a wider and wider swath of California.
- Jim Wood
Person
I think it extends far beyond just wildfire. I think it extends desire to not write policies in the state, period. So that's my interpretation.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm getting calls from my district about that too. Homeowners are getting canceled.
- Jim Wood
Person
I'm going to be supporting your Bill today because I know you're going to continue to work on this and come to a resolution. I just wish there was a mechanism for us all to come back together again and hear that, but I guess it'll be on the floor. So thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I mean, there is I mean, usually the Committee can pull the Bill back or for discussion.
- Jim Wood
Person
Or for discussion.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I'm just talking about a know, as, you know, we can pull it.
- Jim Wood
Person
Well, okay, thank you. I appreciate. Thanks.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
First of all, thank you. I really appreciate the amount of time the author spent with me and folks for the Coastal Commission this weekend, as well as a whole host of folks in your Bill sponsors and folks in the pro housing and pro affordable housing community. And this Bill is a really important one.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And as is the case with bills that tackle important and complicated issues, getting to the right place is complex, and it requires that we do a lot of work to sort of get to the right place. And I think what's sort of shaping my thinking about the Bill is that California has the highest functional poverty rate of any state in the know.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
A lot of people think that the functional poverty rate is one that takes into account the cost of living and the cost of housing and the cost of, you know, it's higher than West Virginia, it's higher than Arkansas, it's higher than a lot of these states that we thumb our noes at. And the reason for that is because the cost of housing in California is so high.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I do think that we need to do everything we can to incentivize and remove the barriers to building more housing and more affordable housing in particular. Of course, this Bill, the thing that's different than SB 35 is that it removes the exemption in the coastal zone. And I've had robust input from every side, more than two sides on that. I've heard from inland cities that I represent and housing advocates arguing that every part of the state should be contributing to solving our housing crisis.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And I agree with that. I've also heard significant concern from the environmental community and the Coastal Commission and the Hillside Federation worried about unintended consequences of this Bill. And contrary to the charged rhetoric that's coming from some of the housing advocates that was directed at me in particular, I think it's important that we move forward understanding that it's really important that we get this right in the coastal zone. I believe that we all share the same goals.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And that is and I think even the most ardent housing advocates want to make sure that housing isn't being built on eroding coastal bluffs or areas that are going to be subject to inundation because of sea level rise. I don't think anyone wants developers to be able to bulldoze sensitive habitat areas or wetlands or riparian corridors. And no one, the housing advocates included, want to take away protections that afford more, that protect public access in the coastal zone. When I look at these two.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I want to say this came from, I think, Senator wiener's office and this that came from the coastal staff. They seem very close to me. I mean, really, we're talking about this one issue related to sea level rise and the 3ft versus the 5ft. My own view about that is that I'd rather have the more protective number in there, but I also think that it does need to be something that's more specific.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I'm hoping that as we move forward, that we will try to get to the more protective number and that we get to something that is more specific. I've looked at the Bill with two objectives advancing housing, including in the coastal zone, but also protecting our most sensitive coastal areas. And I say that the devil's in the details. I spent a lot of time over the weekend thinking through really every bad outcome that could happen with this Bill, including with the exemptions in place.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And I got to say that I think that there were a lot of guardrails that were already in place in the Bill, and I really appreciate the fact that you've moved for even further on those things. There are better protections in the Bill for wetlands and riparian corridors. Appreciate the fact that you've actually moved to the Coastal Commission's definitions for that. And agland the Bill already applies only in infill areas, in fact, has to have development on all three sides.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
It's, I think, a really important improvement that the Bill doesn't apply in appeal jurisdiction of the coastal zone. That's really important because that's what the Coastal Commission needs to protect public access along the coast. And there's a number of other improvements as well that make me comfortable, I think, voting for this today. I do say I do have two really important continuing concerns, and that's related to the wildfire risk. Spent a lot of time with the Hillside Federation.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
That is a really important group in my jurisdiction, and I do not think that the current language in the Bill related to wildfires is protective enough. I'll just sort of say I've shared that with you already. I appreciate the intent language that's being put in, and I appreciate your offer to make sure that folks from the Hillside Federation in particular are included in some of the dialogue with CAL FIRE.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Those areas are ones that if you went to Topanga canyon and you know, the way that the Bill is currently structured, we have an exemption for high and very high risk fire zone areas. But then it's sort of taken back and says unless you're complying essentially with building codes that are applicable in these jurisdictions, doing something like putting on a fire retardant roof or Sprinkler systems is not going to basically protect people from the ingress and egress areas in these areas.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I think it comes down to are there parcels in these areas that are subject to the law we could not figure that out over the weekend. I appreciate all the time you took with that. And that's why I'm comfortable with the intent language. Not that I'm comfortable taking out protections.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I hope that we're going to have very strong protections related to these fire zone areas as well as in the Coastal Commission, where I think we really do need to have the more protective standards with respect to sea level rise. But I know that you share these goals as well. Goals of both making sure we can advance housing and protect our coastal zone adequately. And I trust that you'll do that. And with that, will be supporting the Bill. But really want to make sure that you take seriously these concerns that I think are being raised by me and others that are on the dais today. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Friedman.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Well, I don't want to be redundant with everyone else, but I do want to thank the authors for their work and also their willingness to engage on the issues with many of us over the last several days. And also the sponsors. I think there's actually a lot more agreement, even with people that are opposed than disagreement. It seems to me that the issues are surrounding some of our areas that are the more problematic areas in the state because of climate, quite honestly.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And we've been having a discussion for a number of years in this Committee about are there areas that are just too hazardous to build in? Are there areas in the state that are too risky for people? We had this discussion when I was chair of this Committee about paradise, when one of the Members wanted to expedite rebuilding in that area.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And we had these conversations about, are there areas where we don't want to be encouraging people to move back into and areas where we want them to actually move somewhere that's more defensible? Are there places where we've already had discussions in the state along the coast of trying to get communities to actually start the process of maybe starting to move people inland and to sort of try to dehouse some of the areas that are most vulnerable to sea level.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And a lot of the discussion that I've heard is around those areas. And I do think that we can come to some sort of an agreement. And I think we've certainly been getting closer over the last few days. There's been a suggestion with the high fire severity zones of just exempting them completely out of this Bill. And I'll tell you why I'm not for that. And the reason is because I was representing one community.
- Laura Friedman
Person
That where 100% of the city is in a high fire severity zone. And this is a city that's been very reluctant to add any multifamily housing whatsoever, even though there's also a highway within the city and areas that are, frankly, fairly defensible, that have good ingress and egress. And so the issues where the city has been not wanting the multifamily housing, in my mind, is not really about safety. It's about remaining an exclusive enclave and forcing people to commute into those areas.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And there are areas like that that there should be an objective standard where we can look at them and say the ingress and egress is good. They're far enough away from Chaparral. There are enough infill that we should be able to expedite and streamline housing in those areas even though on the map they are high fire severity zone, as is the rest of the community.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And yet on the other hand there are areas in the same community where you can't get a fire truck up the hills because it's windy and narrow. And so trying to come up with a way where you satisfy the concerns of the very rightful concerns of not creating more building in areas that you can't get people evacuated out of easily that is important and people have raised that as an issue.
- Laura Friedman
Person
But I think a blanket exemption on high fire severity zones with communities that I've represented actually would give communities a pass in allowing multifamily and senior housing which was proposed from areas that are just as offensive as other parts of Los Angeles. So I think that there's more conversation and I agree the process is hard because right now there's only the floor and there's only appropriations and this is really where we'd like to see that work done.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So I don't quite know what to do about that. But I know that your intent is good in terms of the coastal. I think that you guys are so close on language that I can see I'm more comfortable with 5ft than 3ft because I feel like you're splitting the difference. And I don't know that anyone on your side is saying, like, no, it's got to be three and not five.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I also feel like maybe there's a way with this nola question to say NOAA and other best science so that you kind of open the door to having more maybe there's a way of doing that.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I do think that a lot of us here would feel more comfortable passing the Bill out with at least some of these amendments even if we're going to keep working on mean I'm going to allow you to I'm going to ask you what you think in a second but go ahead if you want to jump.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I was going to say I just want to be clear if we can have an objective way of measuring the sea level rise we thought NOAA was a good approach. If the Commission has other objective ways of doing it that aren't sort of a nebulous subjective way of doing it then we would be willing to go to 5ft. But the best available science, I agree with colleagues is just not tight enough.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But if we're able to work that out and make it an objective standard we'd be willing to go to 5.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I think their argument about this being evolving. And I know that there's more than one group that looks at this. I have NASA JPL in my district, they've done a little bit of mapping. So maybe the best available science is a term of art and less squishy than we think that I don't know.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And maybe there's someone who can decide going forward, even if we say best available science as agreed to by the Natural Resources Agency or some group that we think is able to say, yes, that's a group that can do this, or this is not a group that's capable of doing this. I mean, maybe there's something along those lines, but it seems like to say it has to be only one group and one group only, that also seems pretty restrictive.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, we put two groups in and I don't care if there are five. I would be fine with that. I don't have a problem with the Commission being able to choose which standard it is as long as it's objective and verifiable. And so that someone who's building housing can know ahead of time as opposed to it being after the fact, someone just sort of says, well, I think the best available science is this. So that's all we're asking for, so that someone can know ahead of time. So we're flexible in that.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I understand and maybe even adding language like that objective and verifiable. Because I do think, though, that we only have a few more weeks and I think the comfort of the Committee of passing it out of this Committee with some a little bit more in there, even if it's going to be changeable later, I would love to see Coastal Commission be comfortable with the Bill. I think a lot of us would like to see them be comfortable.
- Laura Friedman
Person
They certainly have come to the table with very good offers and they're no longer standing by the let's exempt Coastal Zone Lane, which was their original position. And I feel like they've been moving quite a so I don't feel that you have a group here that's wanting to be opposed, just to be opposed. I think that they're raising legitimate concerns and offering solutions on how to address that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I agree with that and I'm appreciative that they came forward with those. We received them on Saturday and so we've not had it for a long period of time. Again, it is what it is. I understand they were opposed, so I'm not criticizing them on that timing, but the reality is it was received Saturday. We sent ours back, I believe yesterday, if I'm recalling correctly. And so there's just not been a lot of time. But I'm committed to working with the Commission, to trying to get to a place where the Commission is comfortable.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I understand. I'm more comfortable with at least the five foot language for today. Even if that gets changed, I just think that they'll be more comfortable with that. But I understand that there'll be more conversations.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And then one other issue that we spoke about was, I'd like to see your commitment to putting something into the Bill that makes it very clear that whatever the underlying zoning plus the law allows in terms of the number of units is what is allowable that there's not streamlining to where you can put more units on than what the zoning plus whatever other laws like density bonus would allow. And you had told me you were willing to add that going forward.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. So the answer we'll work with you on that. SB 35 only does not change the underlying zoning. Period, end of story. It never has. SB 423 doesn't. However, I know you raised a concern just about making something crystal, crystal clear, and we're willing to work with you on whatever refinement it needs to.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And I understand that that's the understanding that people have had about the Bill. I look through the language, and it's not clear in my mind when I look through. And so I think it's very easy to add a line that clarifies that. And since it's already the intention to not upzone anything through the Bill, I would like your commitment that you're willing to do that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Just to be clear, I think the language does already do that, but I'm happy to make an extra clarification, and we're happy to work with you on that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Wait, as an amendment today?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
What?
- Luz Rivas
Person
As an amendment today?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No, not as amendment.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Because I want to know what we're going to be voting on.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No, not as amendment today. So we've had some conversations, Madam Chair, and I think we think that the Bill is already clear. It doesn't change the zoning.
- Luz Rivas
Person
However, it does upzone, right?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No, it doesn't upzone. It streamlines whatever the existing zoning is. The existing zoning. If it's zoned for 10 units, this Bill does not change it from 10 units. I'm sorry, with something? Was there a joke?
- Laura Friedman
Person
Just to be clear, I believe it's sort of the way it's drafted. Because I know you sent me something about density bonus. But when I looked at the other language, what it seems to say to me, what it literally says is it needs to be a residential property, and then it needs to be more than two units. It doesn't say that the zoning has to be a multifamily zoning that I saw.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Now, I could have been missing it somewhere, but I think that just clarifying that, given that that's the intent, I think that that would certainly make those who have brought this up more comfortable.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Yeah. I agree and I will speak later about my wildfire concerns. And what I've been told over the weekend was this won't override a single family, R1 that are near in the high fire severity zone, but it's not clear in the language. I know the development has to be multifamily, and I've always known that. But if it's zoned R1, then can it be used for more than one unit? Can it be developed?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No. I mean, if there are other laws. But in terms of this law, the answer is no. And it says that it has to be consistent with objective zoning standards. And so this Bill does not change the zoning in any way. Again, this Legislature has passed other laws that do change zoning. No, but this is not one of them.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So the line that you're pointing to says, consistent with objective zoning standards. But again, I think that just making it clear that that means I don't think that should be a difficult thing. And I know that that's not your intent. I'm just asking for a drafting.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Clarification we're happy to do that and we're happy with you. We're happy to work on that clarification yeah.
- Laura Friedman
Person
And just to be clear, I'm going to support the Bill. I would like to see. I think that coming out of this Committee, we're looking to just make sure that we address some of these concerns and tighten it up so that as it goes forward, it does everything that we want without any unintended consequences, where people later are going to come and say, that's not what we voted for, or how could I know?
- Laura Friedman
Person
That what I think what you envision, what I envision, what your sponsors envision, is that infill housing gets streamlined, that communities like the one that I represented, that did block housing and try to ministerially stop housing, can't do that any longer. That when they have something that's zoned for multifamily, they have to allow people to build multifamily. They can't just keep throwing roadblock after roadblock so that they also do their fair share. That's what I want to see.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Part of the incentive to do this is because we need more infill housing to stop people from building in high wildfire zones and in fragile areas. That's the promise of this Bill, that we will get the housing that we need in the places that are the safest to build and the least environmentally sensitive. So that's why I'm supporting the Bill. And that's what I think. That's really the great promise, and we just want to make sure that what it does right.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Since we're on this topic and I will move on to the next speaker. Is there someone from representing the cities that has an opinion on this? Whether this does change the zoning, I'm not sure if anyone is here to address that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay. So next, Assembly Member Friedman, you're done or I just want to make sure.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I'm done, and I may have to run out to go to another Committee. But I will be returning.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I understand. Okay. Assembly Member Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chair, just a quick question before I make some comments for the Coastal Commission on, I guess, just the timing of your opposition and why you didn't engage sooner in the process.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you for that question. The Coastal Commission has been in conversation with the author's office for multiple months on this Bill. We initially offered as our response to this pursuit to find an objective standard, the same sentiment that I'm saying today, which is on sea level rise that just doesn't exist. We're not obfuscating. We're just counseling that that does not exist. And so that is a fraught exercise.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
In response to those meetings which were with the author's staff, we received several additional proposals which attempt to take the same frame, and in doing so, did not resolve that underlying issue that there is not an objective approach for sea level rise. That is why it took some time for these conversations to become substantive as it was recognized.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Part of the reason that it finally did become substantive is because the Coastal Commission moved its position to find more nuanced ways for the streamlining process to take place in the coastal zone. But that does not resolve this issue around being able to find an objective standard to sea level rise, which is why it has continued in discussion to this point.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. I appreciate that. I just want to thank the author for taking on this important know we talk a lot about affordability in our state. And as my colleague from Los Angeles mentioned, we have the highest functional poverty rate in the highest. We also have the second highest unemployment rate. We have the second most expensive state in the nation to live. And at the end of the day, I truly don't believe we'll fix this without additional supply. And my district is building.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I think there's a lot of districts in our state that are building, but we truly need an all hands on deck approach in communities across California to solve our housing affordability crisis. I also strongly believe, as a parent, that this is about our next generation, that we have to make California a place where our kids can afford to live. Where their kids can afford to live. And so I believe that SB 423 helps us do that. And I'm happy to support the Bill today. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Any other questions or comments from Committee Members? Okay, then I would like to start by saying that if I didn't agree with the goals of this Bill, I wouldn't have spent as much time as I did with you and others in the past few last week. I would say we met about two weeks ago in my office to discuss concerns. One of them was wildfire, and one of them was related to the coastal zones. So it's not a surprise, right, that these were issues.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I think I was very clear that those were my concerns. And there's been a lot of discussions about affordable housing, and I would love to see more aggressive, affordable housing targets in this Bill. Regardless if this Bill goes through, my constituents are still not going to be able to afford the housing that's built through this Bill. I represent families that make $30,000 for a family of four, right?
- Luz Rivas
Person
I don't think anything that's built on the coastal zone or wherever is still going to address a family that makes such little in our state. I'm from Los Angeles, the San Fernando valley. I represent a very Low income district, and it's still not going to help, especially when people are saying that, zero, we're not opening the coastal zone. This is not for my constituents at all. But I know that California needs more housing. I don't object to that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I probably wouldn't have heard this Bill if that were the case. But today we were here at the natural resources Committee to hear about the issues related to the resources Committee's jurisdiction, and that includes the coastal zone, the wildfire issues, and others that were raised that are related to environmental justice. You've presented amendments, and like I told you on Saturday morning, I don't want to walk into the Committee and negotiate from the dais because there's multiple papers going around.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Which language it's which is this in here? We're not sure. Something's crossed out. I don't know. I have all these papers on here. I have emails, too, that include more amendments that you didn't present today that I assumed that we had agreed to. And so I feel like that's what happens when we're trying to negotiate here. I've spent a lot of time with you, and I commend you on especially the labor standards.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I think getting all labor that has agreed to this is great for us, for our state. I was happy to hear from you on Saturday morning that you were going back to the language that the trades wanted. I don't know the details of that, but I know that you're committed to that language in a negotiation. I feel that we have to be honest. I never try to trick an author. I only talk to the author and other stakeholders, and I try to bring them together.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I feel like I did that with the Coastal Commission. It was very late Friday night. We were trying to convince them to come closer to you, and I believe that we did that. But now you don't want to take their amendments, right? And so that's where we are there. I was really trying, and I just feel like there's so many amendments going around on pieces of paper that because of that, right now, I'm not able to support the Bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
One of the issues that's very important to me is addressing the wildfire. What I want to do is put in the stronger language, the amendment that's proposed in the analysis and commit to continue talking to you. I told you this already on Saturday. I'm not surprising the author let's put in the amendment and that we commit to continue these discussions just like you want to too.
- Luz Rivas
Person
But for this Committee to be brought in, I feel the stronger amendment allows there's more of a sense of urgency for all the stakeholders to get together and to make sure that a discussion does happen before this Bill is voted on on the floor. We have the whole summer to discuss this. Lots of stakeholders, agencies, my Committee, Committee Members want to be a part of this. This is something that's very important to us.
- Luz Rivas
Person
And I don't want cities, I agree with you, I don't want cities to zone their whole city as a high fire severity zone just so that they won't build and be exclusionary. But in Los Angeles, everyone thinks Los Angeles is dense and just downtown know the San Fernando Valley is surrounded by mountains and we've had several wildfires. And my concern is that we will be developing in a very dangerous area. And I want to be clear on what parameters we will be putting there.
- Luz Rivas
Person
And I feel that this Committee will have a say if we put in that amendment that I had proposed. And the same as you're committing to that we continue this discussion over the summer. Intent language is very weak, you know that. As a Legislator, as a chair, would you do that, right? Put an intent language on something that was very important to you, to your district, to your county, to lots of parts of the state, right?
- Luz Rivas
Person
But I am willing, I don't want it to stay that strong. I want it to be in there so that we're for sure at the table and that there will be a sense of urgency, like I said, to come to a resolution because intent language we spoke, intent to speak, intent to consult. You checked the box if you talked, not if there was a solution. And that's what I'm asking you for today.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Out of respect to this Committee and to myself as a chair, I'm about to go to your Committee to present a Bill after this hearing. And I would be willing to sit down and work with you if you wanted me to take an amendment. And that's what I'm expecting also. But like I said, you have my commitment to continue working and that's what I'm asking for you today. If you take that amendment, I will support today. Yes.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. And we did sit down two weeks ago and I very much appreciated that. We talked about the Coastal Commission and we took your direction and we're going to continue to work on that. So I've introduced, I don't know, 140 bills since I've been in the Legislature, including some very hard ones. I have negotiated and accepted big amendments from chairs. In fact, tomorrow in Mr. Wood's Committee, I'm going to be taking a rather large amendment on a totally unrelated Bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I think I take significant amendments from chairs and negotiate big been, I calculated, I think, four and a half years since I have walked into a Committee without having full agreement with a chair as an author for four and a half years. It's a lot of bills and a lot of committees because it's usually multiple committees per chair. I have come into Committee with five simple words. I think it's five. I accept the Committee's amendments. Right.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I like to say that, and I work very, very hard to make that happen. As chair, I have never, to my recollection, had a fight in my Committee because we've worked it out. And sometimes I, as chair, have given on significant things and I have put bills out of housing Committee that I'll be honest, I have not been in love with.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so it's not something that I take lightly to walk in the Committee and to say respectfully, Madam Chair, there are certain amendments that I cannot take. The wildfire amendment to have a categorical exemption or exclusion from the Bill for these zones would be a massive body blow to this Bill. It's not just a minor amendment. It would be a massive body blow to the Bill. It is not what these maps were intended for, to exclude state housing law.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And it's just not something that I am able to accept. I do think that there is a middle path. I think there is a way to craft this, to take into account that there are certain areas because of the topography that we would all agree are inappropriate to build in while not mass excluding these entire zones. And that's why I think the intent language is a good approach.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And you have my commitment that I very much want to be able to work with you as we move forward. This is not like we're out of Committee and you don't matter. That's not the approach that I would ever take. And so I just want to explain why we're not able to do that. It's not out of disrespect to you as chair or to the Committee. It's because that would be extremely damaging to the Bill, in my opinion and the opinion of our coalition.
- Luz Rivas
Person
No, I don't believe any chair would accept an intent language on something that's very important. Right. And at least I won't. And I hope that you do continue to address this issue, but it's just an intent to speak, to consult. Right. Continue the conversation. This is the policy Committee in the second house, and we have very little time left. And I would like to see a stronger commitment. And if it's not in there. I won't be supporting this Bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Don't do we have a motion and a second? Mr. Ward? Okay. We have a motion from Assembly Member Ward. Second.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. And so to be clear, I appreciate a lot of discussion today. I know we want to let the author have time to close as well. And I just wanted to state on what the motion was is to accept to move the Bill forward with the author's modified amendments as presented in draft form here today to Government code section 65913.4 to paragraph C with the wildfire language. Although if it's okay with the seconder, I would also, in addition to HC CAL FIRE, add the language and the Assembly appropriation, excuse me, the Assembly Natural Resources Committee as a kind of Codified consultant to this conversation as it moves.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Forward over the summertime as well, which may not get you to yes, but addresses, I think, your concern, as you stated. And then as well for the author reverting the labor language, which is on the Committee's analysis on page nine back to the version prior to the June author's amendments.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Madam Chair, if I may ask for a clarification?
- Luz Rivas
Person
Yes, go ahead.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The June 19 amendments had a whole bunch of labor amendments that are not at issue here. There's only the one sentence about the 85ft that was in dispute. So I want to make sure we don't want to revert the other labor amendments because that will cause which is.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Outlined in page nine of the Committee's analysis.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mr. Ward, can you clarify the bringing back using natural resources as, like, a consultant? Can you clarify that?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So the intent language says the Legislature will consult with HCD CAL FIRE. I was proposing to add in the Assembly Natural Resources Committee as well. That gives I think you a stronger seat at the table to guide this already.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I mean, it's a natural resources Bill, but.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Mr. Ward, that's fine, because we're consulting right now through the process.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
If it's not necessary, then I'll just rescind that and reset the motion as originally seconded.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I don't think it's necessary. Okay, so everyone is clear on the motion then, right? Do you want to repeat it just in case? No. Okay. I already know what I'm doing. Okay. Senator, would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. And again, I do want to thank you for, especially over the weekend, our various conversations and for your, as I think I described in my opening, your shuttle diplomacy between us and the Coastal Commission. I am committed to resolving dispute with the Coastal Commission. I do think that Madam Chair, I think because of your efforts, we are rather close on that. And I believe that we will get there.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I wanted to note for the record, I do not have the same coastline that Mr. Wood or Ms. Addis have. I also represent a coastal district. It's a much smaller district in General. We also have climate change problems on our coast as well. And so I am someone who, if you look at my voting record and the bills I'm authoring, and another Bill I'm presenting today, I'm deeply committed to environmental protection and to climate action.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I want to note for the record the problems we're talking about today, the ones we focused on the most, sea level rise and wildfires, why are they happening? Because we're putting too much damn carbon into the air.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And when we don't build dense housing in our communities in places like San Francisco and places like Los Angeles and places like Santa Cruz and so on and so forth, we are forcing people to drive long distances and putting more carbon in the air and making wildfires worse and making sea level rise worse. And it becomes a vicious cycle. And so we need to make sure that we never, in the name of environmental protection, make climate change even worse.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And that is something that California has had a history of doing, saying, we are environmentalists, so we're going to make it impossible to build housing here. We're going to make it impossible to build housing there. We're going to make it possible to build there because there's always a good reason. There's always a reason to say, this particular location, we shouldn't build there because it's too coastal. This is too close to a wildfire area.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This is an area that has had a history of displacement, so we shouldn't build anything there. When you add it all up, it becomes like 85% of the state. I'm making that number up, but a lot of the state is off limits. And then we end up making the problem worse. And more people are living in poverty, and more people are homeless, and more working families are being completely pushed, not just off of the coast, but out of the entire state.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I want to be very, very clear. This Bill I respectfully disagree with any suggestion that this Bill is not about affordable housing. 75% of the homes streamlined under SB 35 have been below market rate. Every single one of the major nonprofit affordable housing consortiums in the State of California is supporting SB 35. The inner city law center, which works with some of the most impoverished human beings in the State of California on Skid Row, is a co sponsor of SB 35.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We actually changed the inclusionary to make it not just Low income, but very Low income. This is a Bill that will accelerate all kinds of housing, including affordable housing and including market rate housing. Because, let's be clear, 90% of Low income Californians live in market rate housing. 90%. 99.0 something. Percent of middle income Californians live in market rate housing. And if we don't build every kind of housing, we are pushing people out. This Bill is an all of the above approach.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I am appreciative for all of the support, I'm appreciative for the constructive engagement, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We have a motion and a second. Secretary, please take the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is do pass as amended to appropriations. Rivas not voting. Flora aye. Addis not voting. Friedman. Hoover aye. Mathis aye. Muratsuchi not voting. Pellerin not voting. Ward aye. Wood aye. Zbur aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That Bill has six votes. We'll hold it open for absent authors.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
So next, we have SB 4 by Senator Wiener. Please go ahead.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
I got hard knuckles.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Alright, Senator, we're ready when you are.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay, thank you. Mr. Vice Chair. Colleagues, I'm here to present Senate Bill 4. In terms of, I want to just acknowledge... In terms of the amendments and the analysis, similar to SB 423, we are proposing the same fire intent language, identical language that was placed in the 423. So that's the same issue in this bill. In terms of the Committee amendment regarding industrial uses, which we received on Friday.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
In the analysis, we have indicated, the Committee, that we believe that there is a middle ground to distinguish between the most noxious industrial uses and other industrial uses, and to go with the Committee's approach to the most noxious categories and with the current bill in print approach for the other industrial categories. And we're looking forward to working with the Chair and her staff on crafting those contours. We are not accepting the remaining amendments in the bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So this bill, colleagues, allows faith institutions and nonprofit colleges to build 100% affordable housing on their land. And this bill is similar to previous bills that we've attempted to pass. Churches, synagogues, mosques, other places of worship have a long history of partnering with nonprofit developers to utilize their surplus land to build affordable homes. However, it is too hard because of various zoning and approval processes. Many of these faith organizations very much want to create affordable housing, and this bill will facilitate that process.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote. With me today to testify are Abram Diaz, the Policy Director with the Nonprofit Housing Association of Northern California, and Regina Banks, the Director of the Lutheran Office of Public Policy.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Thank you, Committee. My name is Abram Diaz, and I'm the Policy Director for the Nonprofit Housing Association of Northern California. As we all know, the shortage of housing has created a desperate crisis for our state and California's families. As large property holders, faith based institutions, and private colleges are in a critical position to help us meet that need. These organizations, as long standing community anchors, have come to us to express their wish to help in addressing our housing and homeless crisis.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Our faith partners see this as an extension of their mission and moral calling. This bill exclusively supports the construction of deed-restricted housing, the kind of affordable housing many of us universally support. The bill has enormous potential to help us build affordable housing for seniors, low-wage workers, people with disabilities, and low-income families. And I'll reiterate, this bill is targeted exclusively at affordable housing.
- Abram Diaz
Person
As was noted in a previous Committee analysis, if we make a conservative presumption that only a quarter of our faith land is developable, at a typical density of about 30 units per acre, these sites could yield nearly 300,000 units of affordable housing. This bill ensures that we apply reasonable streamlining principles so that our religious communities can open their doors to Californians in need. We balance this approach by including strong environmental protections and reasonable density and height limitations.
- Abram Diaz
Person
We want to respect the community and ensure we're supporting affordable housing at the same time. The bill is supported by hundreds of groups from across the state, including labor, equity, business groups, housing groups, various faith leaders, and we all collectively urge your support, and I'm happy to help answer any questions as needed.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Next witness, please.
- Regina Banks
Person
Good afternoon, Committee. My name is Regina Banks, and I serve as the Policy and Legislative Director for the Lutheran Office of Public Policy California, where we lead a community of 400 congregations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America on issues of public policy such as housing and environmental justice. I also serve as the board chair of Lutheran Social Services of Northern California, a nonprofit social service agency focused exclusively on the services that prevent and end homelessness. As a community, we are proud to support SB 4.
- Regina Banks
Person
We are people of faith who feel called by our God to serve our neighbors in need. For some time, congregations, individuals, social agencies, and synods of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America have called attention to the plight of homeless people. Many members have worked with other churches and groups to provide food, shelter, and care, and to study the social causes of homelessness and to advocate for policies that respond to the housing crisis.
- Regina Banks
Person
People in our congregations who are homeless and potentially homeless remind us of the urgency of the situation. And some of our congregations and institutions, blessed with an abundance of space, have attempted to house our neighbors. In fact, I spent the weekend with the pastors of St. Andrew's Lutheran Church in San Diego. Pastor Sarah Sumner Eisenbraun broke down in tears as she told me the trouble her congregation has endured...
- Regina Banks
Person
Attempting to house the vulnerable in her congregation. They have resorted to housing families in the Sunday school room to honor their call to serve their neighbor. We do this work in love, but often encounter unnecessary local regulatory restrictions. Local laws are particularly onerous in some places in the state. Last year, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Chatsworth in Los Angeles County tried to convert nearly two acres of its land to affordable housing and were told by county officials that it would take upwards of three years for clearance.
- Regina Banks
Person
They became discouraged, and rather than wait and struggle with their local government, moved forward with other ministries. And Emmanuel Lutheran Church in San Jose just broke ground on an affordable housing project on their campus after two and a half years of red tape. That project will create new affordable homes for residents referred directly by the County of Santa Clara, an area of tremendous need.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
I can ask you to wrap up your thoughts. Please.
- Regina Banks
Person
It was a protracted and frustrating journey for that congregation and council. Communities of faith such as ours are long standing community anchors and wish to lead in addressing our housing and homeless crisis. We all collectively urge your strong support of Senate Bill 4.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone else in support of SB 4?
- Mike Dennis
Person
Mike Dennis, United Way of Greater LA, in support.
- Robert Naylor
Person
Bob Naylor for Fieldstead and Company. That's Howard Ahmanson Jr., an Orange County philanthropist, in support.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Thank you, Chair and Members. Cliff Berg, here on behalf of the JPAC, the Jewish Public Affairs Committee, in support. Also the LA Jewish Federation, LA Jewish Family Services, San Diego Jewish Family Services, JCRC of San Francisco, AJC of LA. Thank you. Appreciate your consideration.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Good afternoon. Silvia Solis Shaw here on behalf of the City of Los Angeles, the City of Santa Monica, and on behalf of City and County of San Francisco Mayor London. Breed, all in strong support. Thank you.
- Marina Wiant
Person
Marina Wiant with the California Housing Consortium, in support.
- David Azevedo
Person
David Azevedo, AARP California in support.
- Martin Rand
Person
Madam Chair and Members, Rand Martin, here on behalf of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and its Healthy Housing Foundation, in strong support of this bill. Thank you.
- Charles Deffarges
Person
Charles Deffarges with ECS, Episcopal Community Services of San Francisco, in support. Thank you.
- Dan Branton
Person
Dan Branton, Drywall Lathers, Local 9109. I'm out of Sacramento right here, urging your strong support.
- April Atkins
Person
April Atkins, Local 22, San Francisco Carpenters Union. Strong Support.
- Matthew Miller
Person
Matthew Miller, Carpenters, Local 680 in Livermore. Strong support.
- Anthony Levice
Person
Anthony Levice, Carpenters Local 2236 out of Oakland. Strong support.
- Ryan Nance
Person
Ryan Nance, on behalf of over a thousand Carpenters in Kern, Inyo, and Mono Counties, strong support.
- Manley McNinch
Person
Manley McNinch, Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters. Strong support. Thank you.
- Joshua Christensen
Person
Joshua Christensen, Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters, North LA County. Strong support. Thanks.
- Traci Stevens
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members, Traci Stevens, on behalf of the Construction Employers Association, also in strong support.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Madam Chair. Chris Micheli on behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Matthew Cremins
Person
Matt Cremins, California Nevada Conference of Operating Engineers, in strong support.
- Chris Snyder
Person
Chris Snyder with the Operating Engineers Local 3, strong support.
- Rachel Mueller
Person
Rachel Mueller with the WEIDEMAN Group, SEIU in support.
- Diego Hernandez
Person
Laborers Local 261, Diego Hernandez. Here in strong support.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Mahdi Manji with Inner City Law Center, Skid Row's pro bono legal service provider, in strong support. And also in strong support on behalf of the Our Future LA Coalition.
- Victor De La Torre
Person
Good afternoon. Victor De La Torre with Liuna, Local 261 in San Francisco. Strong support.
- Oliguria Guzman
Person
Good afternoon. Oligaria Guzman, LiUNA Local 304. Strong support.
- Penny Nixon
Person
Reverend Penny Nixon, Housing Leadership Council of San Mateo, Peninsula Interfaith Solidarity Cohort, in strong support along with several congregations who want to build affordable housing.
- Omar Cobain
Person
Omar Cobain, on behalf of over 10,000 Carpenters from the Inland Empire, in strong support.
- Savannah Jorgensen
Person
Savannah Jorgensen, Lutheran Social Services of Southern California, in strong support.
- Jan Warren
Person
Jan Warren, Multi-Faith Action Coalition, Contra Costa County. Happy to support.
- Taryn Sandulyak
Person
Hi, I'm Taryn Sandulyak with Firm Foundation Community Housing, in support.
- Francisco Nunez
Person
Francisco Nunez, LIUNA, Laborers 304, Alameda County, Oakland, California, in strong support. Thank you.
- John Hanna
Person
John Hanna with the Southwest Mountain States Regional Council of Carpenters and a 55 year member and parishioner at Holy Family Catholic Church in Orange. Support.
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. Louis Brown, on behalf of the American Council of Engineering Companies California, in support.
- Sean McGarry
Person
Sean McGarry, Carpenters Local 22 in San Francisco, in strong support.
- Carl Sworns
Person
Hi. My name is Carl Sworns, a field representative in the North Bay, in strong support.
- Ed Evans
Person
Afternoon. Ed Evans, Carpenters Local 217, San Mateo County, in strong support.
- Scott Littlehale
Person
Scott Littlehale, Richmond resident and member of Local 152, Carpenters Union representing Contra Costa County, San Joaquin County, and several Central Sierra Nevada Foothill Counties in strong support.
- Jose Amador
Person
Jose Amador, Southwest Maintain States Regional Council of Carpenters, Whittier, California Local 721. Strong support. Thank you.
- Daniel Gregg
Person
Good afternoon. Daniel Gregg, Industrial Carpenters, Local 2236 in Oakland. Full support.
- Richard Burns
Person
Richard Burns, Southwest Mountain States Carpenters, Local 213. Thank you for your support. 100%.
- Megan Shumway
Person
Megan Shumway, representing Sacramento Area Congregations Together, in support of this bill.
- Mirza Lopez
Person
Thank you. Mirza Lopez. Local 919, Sacramento in support.
- Melanie Morelos
Person
Melanie Morelos on behalf of the Green Lightning Institute. In support.
- Norlyn Asprec
Person
Norlyn Asprec on behalf of the California Building Industry Association with a support if amended position. Thank you.
- Corey Smith
Person
Corey Smith on behalf of the Housing Action Coalition, in support.
- Todd David
Person
Todd David and on behalf of Abundance San Francisco in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Gracia Casio Krings on. Behalf of California YIMBY Silicon Valley Action Fund and all home in support.
- Louis Mirante
Person
Louis Mirante, on behalf of the Bay Area Council, in support. Thanks
- Holly Fraumeni
Person
Holly Fraumeni De Jesus with Lighthouse Public Affairs, on behalf of Habitat for Humanity, California Spur, as well as civic well in support.
- Ron Roulette
Person
Hello again. Ron Roulette, Carpenters Union. We have again 200 folks out there would love to come and meet too, but out of respect for the Committee, we're just going to say that's enough, and we hope we get your support. Thank you very much.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you for doing that. Next, do we have any witnesses in opposition?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon, Chair members of the Committee. My name is Sean, the pruitt. I'm with the California Environmental Justice Alliance, or CEJA. CEJA respectfully opposes SB Four unless it is amended to include environmental justice safeguards and equitable public process requirements. This Bill would expand current law to streamline the housing development on religious and nonprofit University land without sufficient protections to safeguard public health and displacement, especially for residents in disadvantaged communities. And we've appreciated our conversations with the author's office and the Bill sponsors to address our concerns. And we really want to thank the chair and the Committee for their work on the amendments and strongly recommend that they be included in the Bill. SB Four, in its current form, does not ensure the sufficient separation between housing projects and potentially polluting uses like industrial facilities, oil and gas, and freeways, which can lead to adverse health effects such as respiratory problems and cancer. Therefore, we would like to see an SB Four, a sufficient setback requirement of housing development from freeways, a sufficient setback requirement of housing development from industrial use, and from oil and gas facilities. We support the build analysis amendments which we believe strengthen SB four. We urge the Senator and the sponsors to accept all of the Committee's proposed amendments that will protect current and future residents health. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Are there additional witnesses in opposition?
- David Jones
Person
Yes, Madam Chair. David Jones on behalf of the City of San Marcos in opposition.
- Ethan Nagler
Person
Ethan Nagler on behalf of the city of Rancho Palos Verdes in respectful opposition.
- Paul Gonsalves
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair. Members of the Committee. Paul Gonsalves, on behalf of the cities of Thousand Oaks, Jurupa Valley, Santa Clarita and Chino, in respectful opposition.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of the City of Beverly Hills in opposition. Thank you.
- Cynthia Castillo
Person
Cynthia Castillo, on behalf of Western Center on Law and Poverty. We have a supportive amended position and are appreciative of the Committee's work on amendments and would support the Bill. With the amendments presented by the Committee. Thank you.
- Tiffany Eng
Person
Tiffany Eng on the behalf of Leadership Council for Justice and Accountability. We're aligning our comments with the California Environmental Justice Alliance. Thank you.
- Reina Tello
Person
Good afternoon again, Reina Tello with Bover and Communities United for Health and Justice. And we certainly align ourselves to CEJA.
- Alex Lopez
Person
Thank you, Alex Lopez, on behalf of Esperanza Community Housing. And we support SEJA's Comment. Thank you
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Jennifer Ganata of Communities for a Better Environment and we support CEJA. Also, I'm doing a too for Stand LA, which is the Stop Neighborhood Oil Drilling in Los Angeles. Thank you
- Sheena Cabal
Person
Sheena Cabal with Physicians for Social Responsibility, Los Angeles. Also on behalf of Stand Together Against Neighborhood Drilling, LA and Redeemer Community Partnership in opposition and aligned with CEJA's comments.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Mayelisoto and I am from Center for Poverty, Race and Environment and I'm in alliance with CEJA's comment. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, we'll bring it to the Committee. Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you Senator Wiener, for being here today. I was wondering if you can explain whether the amendments that you are taking are those that are ones that CEJA has requested. And second, if you can respond to whether or not if they're not in those amendments, whether or not you'll consider setbacks from some of these industrial uses that could have impacts on health.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. So thank you for that. I based it off of the Committee proposed amendments. So, as I indicated at the beginning on the industrial week.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Do you mind repeating which since I absolutely I missed your opening and apologize. I was trying to add on it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It was brilliant, Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
So I'm sorry, I just happened to miss it. Please repeat it. I just want to be clear, it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Was not brilliant, actually.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Which amendment, I hope you say? All amendments. Right.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I indicated that the wildfire issue is the same issue and that we're proposing the exact same intent language. I indicated that on the industrial that we are currently in conversation, I believe, with your Committee because the Committee amendment that came out on Friday lists a number of different types of industrial uses. Some of them we thought the language was not tight enough. But we also had indicated that our approach in the Bill has to do with not allowing it on an adjacent lot to an industrial use. The Committee has suggested a 1200 foot buffer. And my view is that there are for some of the very toxic industrial uses, like a chemical plant, for example. I would support the 1200 foot buffer, but there are other industrial uses that are not particularly noxious. And so we think that the no adjacent lot is the appropriate one. And so it would be a two category approach. I don't think we've resolved that with the Committee yet, but I'm committed to resolving that because I think that the Committee's approach is the correct one for the particularly noxious industrial uses.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I think that's what we sent you. We just haven't heard back. But I'm just trying to understand that then you're accepting the latest one via email, right? We just haven't heard back. And I'm just trying to be clear on what we're voting for because we might be an aligned with Environmental Justice Alliance on some of this.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So we just received that not that long before the hearing. It was tightening up some of the language. We think we're probably close. So I'm committing that we will take an amendment, but I think there's more work to do on that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Do you want to recess?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
If you want to recess so we can talk about that and firming that up? I have no problem with doing that because we're in agreement on that. But I don't think we're there yet.
- Luz Rivas
Person
How about the others? I missed your opening.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. As I've indicated, the freeway one, and I'll explain why we're not accepting and I want to explain on the freeway and the oil piece. So on the freeway piece, after the initial feedback from CEJA and other groups, we put in into the Bill that if you are within 500ft of a freeway, you have to have a certain level of air filtration. We actually took that from the Los Angeles Building Code. So this is what LA uses for housing that's within 500ft of a freeway. So we imported that into this Bill. We don't think it's appropriate to say the Bill cannot apply within 500ft of a freeway because that in parts of Southern California in particular, wipes out huge amount of geography. There are some wealthy areas that would be very much knocked out of the Bill. And I guess it also raises the question that if you are a community that's been impacted by freeways going through your community, does that mean you also don't get affordable housing in your community? And Mr. Diaz perhaps could comment on that more on the oil issue after Mr. Muratsuchi. He was number one. I was number two in carrying the oil setbacks Bill. We worked together on that. Ms. Gonzalez and Ms. Limon finally were able to get it across the finish line. So that's something I've strongly supported, that we should not be enabling drilling oil near schools, homes, et cetera. But the question is this is the opposite direction. If there is oil drilling happening in a neighborhood, does that mean that that community, which has already been deeply impacted often by environmental racism because that's where the oil drilling goes, does that mean they also should not be able to have affordable housing in their community? I think the answer is they should be able to. And so to have that blanket exclusion, we think goes too far.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We have indicated to the chair that we would be open to a smaller circumference, but that circumference would also wipe out a lot of Beverly Hills and Yorba Linda and Huntington Beach and a number of very wealthy cities and so we think it is too broad, but Mr. Diaz may be able to add more.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Yeah, happy to add on for the Committee. I'll note we strongly believe our current language strikes a proper balance between environmental protection and affordable housing creation. The standard, as was noted by the author, is inspired from the City of LA's. Building code, very progressive city that holds very high standards for environmental justice and is very familiar with construction around freeways simply because of the way it's been developed. I'll say also on our end, the air filtration system that we have included is a very high standard, one that a lot of builders of ours are very familiar with. And we know that it protects the best interest of the residents in that community. I myself live at the crossroads of I-5 and highway 50 right next to it. And our community is a bunch of apartments and townhomes, and we have air filtration systems. And this is market rate housing, although it's condos, it's a little bit more affordable for young couples. And it's a standard that we also think works very well in the affordable housing world. And just as a last point, the Bill does include a mandate to complete a phase one environmental assessment, as well as a phase two if warranted, and a requirement that if there's anything found there that is not above board, you have to mitigate to state and federal standards. And we know we pride ourselves on our state standards being very strong. And if I could note just at the end as well, I think in principle we're going to follow, of course, the lead of our author and the Committee, but we really think that affordable housing builders are very risk averse. It costs a lot of money to build affordable housing. As we very much know, these pennies are very precious. We want to ensure what we build is safe and habitable and will last for the full tenure of that building. So we will ensure that everything is safe and above board for our residents and our project managers, and we take that responsibility very seriously.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, Assemblymember Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. So, Senator, I thought finally a Scott Wiener housing Bill that I can vote for.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You voted for once. There was one that you voted for in the past, I remember.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Until I realized that your Bill, I support all affordable housing, great stuff. Building on religious institutions, educational, private educational institutions, land, great stuff. But notwithstanding any local planning or zoning. So they can build whatever they want, regardless of any local zoning or planning.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That overstates it. Respectfully, Assembly Member, what the Bill does what the Bill does is it rezones the land and grants ministerial approval. You can't build whatever you want. There are some significant limitations. The density is governed by what we call the Mullen densities, which are the default baseline densities under state law, which are different from an urban to a suburban to a rural area in terms of the number of homes per acre that's existing state law. And we utilize that in addition, that it's limited in terms of you can go a little bit above the local height limit, but not significantly above. In addition, in terms of the type of non residential use, if you're in a residential area, you can't put like a Starbucks there, but you could put a childcare center. If you're in a commercial or mixed use area, you can put whatever retail the local city's rules allow. So a lot of the Bill does key off of local requirements. But yes, one of the challenges that these particularly religious institutions face is that their land is not even zoned for housing, let alone multi unit. And so the Bill rezones it and then grants approval if they meet all of the requirements.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
So I'm not sure I understand, but I get it that if it's zoned for a church that it's not zoned for residential. That's kind of what you're getting at, right?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Often that's the case, yes.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But I appreciate the Chair's attempt to try to identify at least the concerns raised by the environmental justice groups because I think the basic concept of incompatible land uses being next to each other is to try to protect people from incompatible land uses. And I'm just concerned that, notwithstanding the Chair's attempt that she is not going to be able to foresee and identify every single incompatible land use that your Bill appears to be presenting. For example, going forward, my baseline at this point is going to be that situation in Palos Verdes where those homes collapsed. If a church in Palos Verdes wanted to build homes on a church property that was at risk of collapsing because of land erosion, what would prevent that from happening?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, there's the building code, first of all. And so I think there are General constraints on where you're allowed. In addition, the Bill is also limited to infill with that definition has to be surrounded on at least three sides with development. So if you have a church that's in very isolated rural area where it's like that classic church by itself, surrounded by no other development, that wouldn't be eligible. And so it already because of the infill urbanized area requirement that limits the types of spaces. I don't know if you have more to add on that.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Yeah, I'll just briefly add from the Bill, at least 75% of the perimeter of the site has to adjoin a parcel that's developed with urban uses. And this is residential, commercial, transit oriented. So it's our effort to ensure that we are within the community in a way that's responsible. And as the author mentioned as well, we do have those densities that vary if you're an urban, rural, suburban area. And also the one story above the existing allowed height there too, that was a pretty strong discussion we had with the California Association of Realtors to ensure that we respected a lot of the varying types of communities we have across the state. And we came to agreement around that piece as well, very much in the vein of trying to respect the local community that we're going to try to hopefully partner in and do something that will fit in very well and address the affordable housing needs of the state as a whole.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I appreciate, especially our religious institutions, attempting to be compassionate, to provide to house the unhoused, but it just seems to why not give more deference to local zoning and planning?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We've done that for many years in this realm. It hasn't worked. We hear over and over again from churches, synagogues, et cetera, up and down the state that they gave up. It's not worth it for them to even try because the process for rezoning is so cumbersome, and you may never even be able to get it done because there could be local opposition saying, we don't want affordable housing in our community, we don't want Low income people in our community. And then after the rezoning, you have to get the actual project approved. And that could be the same result if you happened to get it rezoned. And so we wouldn't be doing this Bill if everything were going peachy keen. But it's not, and so that's why we're here.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I was wondering if CEJA had any comment
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, in terms of land uses, it's clear we try to be consistent with bills like AB 2011, bills like the one currently Alvarez is doing, AB 1449. And so, yeah, as CEJA's overall, our whole Members, we agree that we are in support of the Committee's proposed amendments. All of them. We would like to sort of see that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Pellerin.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Thank you. So I love the goal of this Bill. I think it's very important that we're building housing. But I want to echo the concerns of the environmental justice community who requested the amendments that make sure that the affordable housing developments get built on lands that are found to be safe. And building affordable housing in unsafe locations is unjust. And I'm recalling the 10,000 homes that were built around the former Exide battery recycling facility. And we're looking at hundreds of millions of dollars of later, 10 years later, trying to clean up the lead from that property. I'm just curious whether this Bill would have allowed that building to occur. I think that the concerns around freeways, industrial facilities, oil and gas exposure are really legitimate concerns. And so I'm just curious what your thoughts? Are you're not planning on taking those amendments that would do that?
- Abram Diaz
Person
Yeah, I'll defer to the author on the comments on amendments. I'll say in terms of what's in the Bill currently, we were very purposeful in ensuring that we had a phase one assessment included in the Bill. And actually we were having conversations with some of our environmental partners when we added in the phase two assessment as well to the Bill where needed. And that's to ensure that we properly test the site, analyze it, ensure we know what we're getting into so that we're not moving forward with any projects that may prove problematic. And within the Bill itself. We wrote that if there is an issue on the ground per these assessments, which are done across the board and a lot of different times of construction, you have to within the Bill, mitigate to state and federal standards, which I'll say for us here in California, I'm very proud that we have very strong state standards as well. So I think that is a very strong protection. I recognize folks may want to go in different directions too, but that's a protection we feel very strong and very proudly about. And also reiterate affordable housing are very risk averse. It costs a lot of money to do them. We're trying to work on that issue here today and with other bills as well, so we would not waste our own time or any of the public's dollars on a site that's just not going to work. We want to be very safe, very purposeful. And so I'll just mention that for what's in the Bill currently that we think is very strong.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And we think that case by case approach with the phase one and if needed, phase two assessment and the requirement for mitigation is a better approach than saying if you are 350ft from a highway, you're simply not allowed to build the affordable housing under this Bill. We don't think that that's the right approach, respectfully.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
And the requirement for the air filtration systems that's in the Bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We put that in for if you're within 500ft of a highway, you have to have this enhanced air filtration system.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
And if you are a Low income person, what's it cost to run a system like that in your home?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, these tend to be for rentals, so it would be on the operator. It's of the building. It's not like a filtration system per unit, but the building has the filtration system. And so it's building maintenance.
- Abram Diaz
Person
And if I could jump into since the Bill is restricted to 100% affordable housing, deed restricted affordable housing, it should not, to my knowledge, affect the rents of the tenants themselves, since it's a publicly funded, De restricted building. Those rates that are set depending on whether you have a voucher or what kind of setup you have, they're income limited. So on the nonprofit builder side, that's something we operate within and we have to calculate in the formula. So we work with that to fit it into our system. And in terms of the tenant side, they're going to pay what they pay because of what the income they have.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Okay. Assembly Member Flora. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Madam Chair, Senator, I just want to say thank you for bringing this Bill forward. And if there's anything that the last three plus hours have taught us about housing is it's complicated. And if we're looking for reasons not to build, we can find them. I think if we follow that logic all the way through I mean, the earthquake of 19 six in San Francisco, we've never rebuilt there if we followed that logic. But we work with our carpets.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
We work with our trades, we increase our building codes. We fix these issues so we can fix this housing problem. Because if we continue to do nothing, what I know is a definition of insanity is continue to do the same thing over and over again. And we have a faith based community now stepping up, ready to have their part of their property to build housing on. That is something to be commended, and it's something that we should take very, very serious.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
So I am incredibly proud of you for bringing this forward. I'm happy to support it. And these are the kind of solutions I think we need. We talk about housing all the time, and we do very, very little to actually get it done. So thank you for bringing us forward. And I understand that there is a lot of concerns, but I'm more solution based, because if we always look at the glass half empty, we're going to be a problem. So thank you for bringing us forward and thank you for your support on this.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. So I want to support this Bill, and I'm going to propose something to you right now if you have one more Bill to present. And we have 14 bills left. And so we're going to be here for a few hours. And I would like to propose that when you're finished, that you and I and your team, we go out, and I think we can come to something today. These environmental justice concerns are very important to me.
- Luz Rivas
Person
My family did not have a choice on where to live when they came to the United States in the 1950s. We had to live in an area where there was toxic pollution, where lots homes are across the street from these industries that are polluting. Almost every kid in my elementary school had asthma, right? So I can't do this knowing that this is 100% affordable housing and that I'm going to vote to continue this environmental racism.
- Luz Rivas
Person
It's great that the churches or religious institutions are stepping up and want to build affordable housing for communities, and I support that. But I definitely want there to be some parameters, especially since they're 100% affordable. So it's okay to put us anywhere, but not you. I can't do that. But I'm willing to sit down if you said we're close and that you're closed to take an amendment. We're here for a few more hours, probably with 14 bills. And I think we can resolve that today.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm happy to do that, Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, thank you. So for this Bill, then we will delay that the vote and come back to this Bill, and then we will move on to your next Bill. You have one more, right? Okay.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I apologize for one more.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Scott Wiener, Day in Natural Resources. Thank you, Environmental Committee. You know, I and I just want to be clear that I know there is a motion in a second, but we've agreed with the author to continue. Yes, I understand. We've all been working hard on all of these bills. There's 21 bills in this Committee today. Or 19. Right? Sorry, 19. Sorry. All weekend. And lots of Members have been in discussions, and we just want more time.
- Luz Rivas
Person
So next, we're moving to SB 253 by Assemblymember Weiner, his final Bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much. One moment, Madam Chair. Okay. Thank you, Madam Chair. Presenting SB 253. I'm now going to say the magic words. I'm happy to accept the Committee's amendments in addition to the author amendments that are enumerated in the analysis. And we do appreciate the very strong work that the Committee did, and we appreciate those amendments. So, SB 253 is the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It will require all US based companies with over $1.0 billion in annual revenue who do business in California to report their full greenhouse gas emission footprint to the California Air Resources Board. After this disclosure, CARB will be required to contract out a report on these entities in the context of state carbon emission reduction and climate goals. This Bill is about transparency. There are quite a few large corporations who are already doing this. Some of them go beyond what the Bill requires.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And it's time to have more consistency here. We have a growing coalition, including of large corporations, who are now supporting the Bill. And I want to thank them. And I respectfully ask for an ivote. With me today to testify is Christina Wyatt, the Deputy General Counsel and chief sustainability officer at Persephone, and Melanie Morellos, the California Strategy Senior program manager at the Greenlining Institute. Thank you.
- Christina Wyatt
Person
Great. Thank you. Okay, Chair Rivas and Members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. My name is Christina Wyatt and I am Deputy General Counsel and Chief Sustainability Officer at Persephone AI. Persephone is a software firm that enables companies to measure, manage, and report their greenhouse gas emissions accurately and transparently. I'd like to address the feasibility of reporting carbon emissions. Before joining Persephone, I was Senior Counsel for Climate and ESG at the US. Securities and Exchange Commission.
- Christina Wyatt
Person
I came to Persephone because I believe in the power of technology to radically simplify carbon accounting. Carbon accounting is the process of calculating the greenhouse gas emissions associated with company's activities. For example, a company might have trucks that it drives, which would be included in its scope one emissions facilities for which it purchases electricity, which would be included in its scope.
- Christina Wyatt
Person
Two emissions and supplies that it purchases to manufacture its products, which would be included in its scope three emissions technology facilitates the measurement of all three scopes of emissions. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol, the emissions reporting standard used in this Bill uses emissions factors that enable different activities to be boiled down to a common carbon currency. SB 253 is not tied to one version of the greenhouse Gas protocol.
- Christina Wyatt
Person
Rather, as the protocol and the tools companies use to calculate emissions continue to mature, SB 253 will keep pace with them. Software, AI, machine learning and predictive analytics are improving the speed, ease and Fidelity with which we calculate climate data. Keep in mind that climate reporting is happening now. The vast majority of companies already report climate data and countries around the world will require climate reporting. There is no region better suited to drive this in the US. Than California.
- Christina Wyatt
Person
California has a history of forward thinking climate initiatives. It has the reach, scope and venture community that will propel this multi $1.0 trillion green energy transition. Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you and happy to take any questions.
- Melanie Morellos
Person
Chair and Members my name is Melanie Morellos with the Green Lining Institute and we are proud co sponsors of SB 253. We are a nonprofit racial equity organization that works towards a future where communities of color can build wealth, live in healthy places filled with economic opportunity, and are ready to meet the challenges posed by climate change. At Greenlining, we work in collaboration with community based organizations on the front lines of climate change to ensure their concerns and their demands are heard by advocates and policymakers.
- Melanie Morellos
Person
SB 253 is important to us because the effects of GHG emissions in our rapidly changing climate are acutely felt by Low income and communities of color. These communities experience climate related impacts like flooding, wildfires and extreme heat. With less resources to prepare for and withstand climate catastrophes that are becoming more frequent, they are also far more likely to be living in areas exposed to excessive emissions, contributing to poorer health outcomes than wealthier white communities.
- Melanie Morellos
Person
Creating solutions to climate change for Low income communities and communities of color requires unlocking the potential of the private sector to drive meaningful change as well as holding businesses accountable for their impact on the climate. This Bill takes a thoughtful approach to requiring these disclosures. Small businesses and farms will not be burdened with requirements to calculate and report admissions. There will be proxies and other mechanisms in place. Additionally, companies will have until 2027 to report this critical scope three admissions.
- Melanie Morellos
Person
What we do know is that businesses are already calculating this data for scope three admissions and should be well on their way to meeting these requirements before 2027. SB 253 provides a critical path forward for corporations to support California's climate leadership and it will ensure that the public, including investors, policymakers and community residents, would have the critical information on on how our state's biggest companies are contributing to the climate crisis. Thank you and respectfully ask for your Aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, we're ready for additional witnesses. In support.
- John Pruitt
Person
Hello, my name is John Pruitt representing Seha, and we are in support.
- Nick Brokoff
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair. Nick Brokoff from Sacramento Advocates on behalf of Microsoft, in support.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Melissa Romero, California environmental voters, proud co sponsor of the Bill. And I was also asked to pass along the support of the Natural Resources Defense Council and Voices for Progress. Thanks.
- Jan Warren
Person
Jan Warren, interfaith climate action network of Contra Costa County.
- Rachel Mueller
Person
Rachel Mueller with SCIU, in support. Thank you.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Erin Wooley with Sierra Club California, in support.
- Nicole Rivera
Person
Nicole Rivera with the Climate Center, in support.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Sylvia Shaw on behalf of the City and County of San Francisco and on behalf of the California Faculty Association. In support. Thank you.
- Sarah Sachs
Person
Sarah Sachs with Series, proud co sponsor and supporter of this Bill. Also sharing the support of Grove Collaborative ecommerce retail company.
- Cynthia Shallot
Person
Cynthia Shallot for Indivisible California State strong 80 chapters up and down the state.
- Christina Scarring
Person
Christina Scarring with the Center for Biological Diversity and Support.
- Aradna Tripati
Person
Aradna Tripati, I'm a Professor at UCLA and a climate scientist, and I'm in support.
- Jamie Minor
Person
Jamie Minor on behalf of Salesforce, in support. Thank you.
- Megan Chumway
Person
Megan Chumway on behalf of Sacramento Climate Justice Committee, in support. Good evening.
- Isaela Potter
Person
Isaela Gonzalez Potter with the Nature Conservancy, in support.
- Liv Butler
Person
Liv Butler, Californians Against Waste, in support.
- Savannah Jorgensen
Person
Savannah Jorgensen for the lutheran office of public policy in strong support.
- Kim Delphino
Person
Kim Delphino, representing Defenders of Wildlife California, Native Plant Society and Mono Lake Committee in support.
- Robert Copeland
Person
Robert Copeland, California Alliance for retired Americans in support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox climate, Action California Santa Cruz Climate Action Network and Indivisible California Green Team thank you.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant, 1000 grandmothers for future generations and climate reality project San Fernando Valley climate reality Project Los Angeles and 350 Ventura County climate hub in support. Thank you.
- Juliet Alio
Person
I am Juliet Alio, in support. With 350 Sacramento, 350 Bay Area Action and Environmental Working Group, all in support.
- Jonah Bluth
Person
I am Jonah Bluth on behalf of 350 Humbult and I support.
- Syria Lurie
Person
I'm Syria Lurie on behalf of Indivisible, California, and I support
- Martha Turner
Person
Martha Turner Fossil Free California, in strong support. Thank you.
- Stephen King
Person
Stephen King with environment California in strong support.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume, Cleanartforkids.org, strong support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, we're ready for witnesses and opposition.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Madam Chair, Members, is Brady Van England, here on behalf of the California Chamber of Commerce and a broader coalition of affected stakeholders. We remain respectfully opposed to this Bill, as it will actually not lead to the reduction of any emissions and in many ways runs counter to our existing emissions inventory accounting process. Our opposition is based on a couple of key points. First, the objective of the Bill seems to be centered on transparency and to drive down GHG emissions, which indeed is well intended.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
However, the bill's requirements are misaligned and will only generate significant costs with little or nothing to show for in terms of transparency or in terms of emission reductions. Fundamentally, we think this is a misapplication of what is otherwise a useful tool that is used on a voluntary basis. Specifically, we believe this is misaligned because it calls for the use of WRI's GHG protocol, which is designed at a high level and used to support voluntary actions for corporations.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Even WRI itself notes that, quote, scope three emissions may be considered on where boundaries are drawn. End quote. Boundaries in this case simply means what emissions are and not included. This itself seems to be counter to the intent of the Bill, which highlights the need for rigorous accounting, tracking trends and corporate comparisons. On the topic of corporate comparisons, the GHG protocol provides for broad latitude on the calculation of scope three emissions with corporations.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
This in itself could make comparisons between two companies in the same industry irrelevant. WRI itself notes that, quote, since companies have discretion over which categories they choose to report, scope 3 may not lend itself well to comparisons across companies. End quote. This observation by WRI itself seems counter to the intent of the Bill and in direct conflict with the notion of adding transparency when there is direct acknowledgment that any industry trends will be irrelevant because of the ability to select boundaries and where proxies are applied.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Further, the WRI technical Guidance for calculating scope three emissions contains references to dozens of data sources for emissions factors. These emissions factors can contain different numerical values for the same type of activity, resulting in substantial inconsistencies in reported data and again underscores the limited value of using this tool to make corporate comparisons a key concern. That is, this information will be used inappropriately and there aren't safeguards within this Bill to prevent that from happening.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
This notion is further enforced by comments from the author referenced in Committee analysis, which they stated without the same requirements with these corporate entities, California is left without proper information and will need to be able to accurately regulate and reduce these emissions, end quote. First and foremost, these are most certainly not the same requirements as our existing emissions inventory.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
And given the likelihood of double counting and inaccuracies embedded within the data itself, it is troubling that there's already expressed intent to use this data in a way that would inform future climate policy here in California, knowing full well that this data is inherently accurate. Ma'am, I have more, but I'm going to, in respect to where we are.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Give everyone the same amount of time.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
Good evening, Members. Madam Chair rob Spiegel, senior policy Director for the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, also in staunch opposition to Senateville 253. And I want to be clear that environmental sustainability is a priority for California's manufacturing industry, and we are also the leaders in developing products to combat climate change and implement sustainable business practices, and we can provide that relevant and material information about these efforts to appropriate stakeholders.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
However, Senate Bill 253 is a wide ranging mandate for all California companies and beyond to generate pages upon pages of information which will always carry with it inaccuracies, incompleteness and not relevant data or information to our most prominent operations within the State of California. So, depending on the sectors, impacted data does not exist to calculate a comprehensive and complete and accurate accounting of scope three. So for manufacturers, specifically, our scope three considerations will require third party information from thousands of suppliers and millions of customers.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
For Committee, why are customers? Well, because downstream scope three emissions includes the use of our sold products and the end of life treatment of those same purchased products. So as a matter of example, for Committee, imagine if you will, a scope three calculation for a T shirt to accurately calculate the scope three emission. For that T shirt.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
A manufacturer must provide information from multiple parties about the agricultural practices of the cotton fields providing the raw materials, the energy used in the fabric mills and the sewing facilities that assemble the garment and the fuel sources of the vehicles used at each stage of transportation and the choices the customer made regarding how to wash and how to dry the item over the product's. Lifecycle.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
SB 253 is not limited to $1.0 billion companies, but will extend to all other businesses, small, medium and large, that are within a manufacturer's complex supply chain. The Bill calls for reporting at requirements that dramatically exceed California's existing GHG reporting requirements, the requirements that are considered to already be the most comprehensive GHD reporting regulation in the world and having been refined for over a decade.
- Robert Spiegel
Person
As proposed, the Bill will yield reporting data that is highly variable, inconsistent, and include insignificant but undefined certainties, provided in numerous formats that also undermine transparency in this Bill. For these reasons, Members, CMTA is in opposition.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you, thank you. Next, additional witnesses in opposition.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair. Chris Mckayley. On behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce and respectful opposition thank you.
- Izzy Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of the list, I do apologize. Specialty Equipment Market Association TechNet and Pacific Merchant Shipping Association. In opposition. Thank you.
- David Gonzalez
Person
Thank you. Madam Chair Members, David Gonzalez, on behalf of the California life sciences, as well as the truck and engine manufacturers Association, respectfully opposed?
- Bret Gladfelty
Person
Brett Clyde Pelty on behalf of the Associated General Contractors of California and San Diego chapters in respectful opposition.
- Stephanie Estrada
Person
Stephanie Estrada on behalf of San Diego Gas and Electric and Southern California Gas Company, in opposition. Thank you.
- Brian White
Person
Madam Chair Members, Brian White on behalf of Pacific mercen Shipping Association and tenasca respectfully in opposition. Primarily scope three emission provisions.
- Carlos Guterres
Person
Madam Chair Members, Carlos Guterres on behalf of the California Fresh Food Association, American pistachio growers and various other agricultural commodities in opposition. Thank you.
- Joanne Bettencourt
Person
Joanne Bettencourt, on behalf of SIFMA, the securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, in opposition.
- Maddie Munson
Person
Maddie Munson on behalf of the Agricultural Energy Consumers Association and California Poultry Federation, in opposition.
- Jack Yanis
Person
Jack Yanis on behalf of the California Fuels and Convenience Alliance and the Advanced Medical Technology Association and respectful opposition.
- Trisha Garranger
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. Trisha Garranger with Agricultural Council of California, respectfully opposed.
- Chris McLaughlin
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. Chris Mclaughlin, California Cotton Ginners and Growers Association, as well as the Western Agricultural Processors Association. Respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Sarah Moo
Person
Sarah Polo Moo with California Retailers Association. Respectfully opposed.
- Audra Hartmann
Person
Hello. Audra Hartmann on behalf of the California Hotel and Lodging Association, the American Chemistry Council, and then I've also been asked to convey the opposition of the California cement manufacturers. Thank you.
- Melanie Cuevas
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair and Members. Melanie Cuevas with the California Bankers Association in an opposed unless amended position. Thank you.
- Anna Ferreira
Person
Anna Ferreira on behalf of the Wine Institute, in respectful opposition.
- Indera McDonald
Person
Indera Mcdonald on behalf of the California Mortgage Bankers Association, respectfully opposed.
- Zach Larry
Person
Good afternoon. Zach Larry with the Western States Petroleum Association. We're opposed.
- John Moffatt
Person
John Moffatt on behalf of the alliance for Automotive Innovation in opposition.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, we'll bring it back to Committee Members. Assemblymember. Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Thanks, Senator, for this Bill. First, a question for the Chamber. It's my understanding that your primary concern is the double counting and the perception or the misaccounting of the direct. Well, I guess there are three levels of emission transparency, but it's my understanding that the overall intent of the Bill is to try to have some kind of guidance, some kind of data on the overall GHG impact, both direct emissions as well as downstream.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
And it's not meant to be like a precise measurement of how much GHG is emitted by each company and their products. I'm not sure I understand. If we take it as data to be produced with the caveat that there may be double counting of GHG emissions, I don't see a problem with it. But could you.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
No look, personally, and I should say on behalf of the Chamber, we totally agree and we have a lot of Members that actually do this on a voluntary basis.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
And I think, as I tried to convey in my testimony, that they use it as a tool on a voluntary basis where it works for them and it's applied. When you attempt to apply this via mandate, it becomes more challenging, particularly when you have follow on statements suggesting that it's actually going to be used as a tool for climate policy. When we have climate policy, an apparatus through climate.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
The Chamber has been long engaged on climate policy, which is, I'm sure you're aware, Mr. Marasucci, and it conflicts with that in a way that actually just creates noise and doesn't lead us in the right direction. And on top of that, it's inherently inaccurate information that's used on a voluntary basis. And we have long advocated for for you know, throughout this entire process for continuing this in in a voluntary manner. You know, like, what are what are the carrots associated with this? Rather than taking the stick approach. But we're not there.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, but if this data produced from this Bill would give a better sense of which products and which services have the biggest climate impacts without any claim that the data is actually some precise measurement of the amount of greenhouse gas emissions emitted at any stage in manufacturing and distributing and providing and using the product or services. Again, I don't see a problem with that.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Maybe we're just talking. I think I'd love to spend some time and have a deeper conversation about this. With respect to the Chair, I know that she wants to not belabor this anymore and move on. And I certainly respect the questioning, but I think ultimately what we have here is a tool that's used it's effectively trying to use a butter knife to sew on a button. There are better tools to do have here in California.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
We have mandatory reporting requirements through CARB, and then we also have a GHG inventory, two separate tools that have been developed. As my colleague from CMTA said here over 15 years, 800 pages of regulations are incorporated within just that framework as part of the cap and trade regime. And it's a cornerstone of what we do here in California to show that we can do climate policy and also have an industry that fosters and grows. This, unfortunately, is not going to do that. Okay.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
With all due respect to the opposition, Senator, I think this is a very important Bill. Like you said, it's a transparency measure to try to give all of us a better sense of what the climate impact of these products and services are. I would be honored if you would add me as a co author to your Bill, and I second the motion for this.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Would be happy to do so.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments from Committee Members? Seeing none. Would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. First of all, I want to say I've had this unique relationship with the Chamber of Commerce on this Bill for three years now. We've been at this, and even though we have this continuing disagreement, we've actually worked very collaboratively together. When the Chamber has come to us with implementation concerns, we've made amendments to the Bill understanding that we're going to continue to oppose the Bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I do appreciate that open line of communication showing that you don't always have to agree in order to have that dialogue. But I do want to say the opposition is but when I read the letters after three years, it still continues to amaze me a little bit that the opposition continues to say that small suppliers are going to get swept in. That is false. We absolutely put language in that. You can use well established formulas for your small suppliers.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You don't have to go around the world and find every little mom and pop supplier. You can use formulas for that. They then say on the one hand that the Bill is too precise and onerous, but not precise enough. So it's a little bit like a kitchen sink kind of opposition. And the reality is, we are not creating anything new here. We're not recreating the wheel. This is an established methodology that corporations have been using for quite some time, for decades now.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And as the Chamber acknowledges, a lot of them are already doing this. And we want to make sure that we have consistency for these large corporations. And the time is now for California to lead in this area. And I respectfully ask for your vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. I believe we have a motion and a second, right? Second by Muratsuchi secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due. Pass as amended to appropriations. Rivas aye. Flora, No. Addis Aye. Friedman. Hoover. Mathis, No. Muratsuchi, Aye. Pellerin, Aye. Ward, Aye. Wood, Aye. No. Flora? No. Addis. Addis. I. Friedman. Hoover. Mathis. No. Zbur.
- Luz Rivas
Person
The Bill has six votes, six eyes. We'll leave it open for absent. Thank you. So we're done with author number one. This is a sign in order, but aye'm going to name next, we have Newman. After that, Laird, Dodd, Min, Allen. So if you're an author and haven't signed in, please come up and sign in.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So Madam Chair On File item one SB. Four. I would like to rescind my motion until you guys get back from your negotiations.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Next, SB 425 by Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, well, good evening, Madam Chair and Members. Let me first say, I admire your stamina, and I will try to be as brief as possible. So, Members, I'm pleased to present SB 425, which would enhance the consumer rebate for zero-emission pickup trucks under the Clean Vehicle Rebate Project, also known as the CVRP Program, to ensure hardworking Californians can and will participate in our transition to a zero-emission vehicle fleet. As of 2019, there were over 4.7 million pickup trucks on California's roads.
- Josh Newman
Person
The State of California has by far the largest pickup truck population in the country, handling surpassing Texas by over half a million vehicles. And according to data from the California Car Dealers Association, an additional 250,000 new pickups were registered in California last year alone. SB 425 would update the state's existing market incentive, the Clean Vehicle Rebate Project, to make zero-emission pickup trucks more affordable for the hardworking men and women across California whose livelihoods depend upon the use of a capable and reliable pickup truck.
- Josh Newman
Person
Specifically, SB 425 would enhance the consumer rebate provided to purchasers of a Zero Emission Vehicle pickup truck by $2,500, such that most low- and moderate-income households would be entitled to a rebate of up to $10,000, providing additional incentives to drivers of California's fleet of nearly 5 million pickup trucks represents a smart, high yield approach to decarbonizing this sector while supporting the broader goals and systemic health of our clean transportation economy.
- Josh Newman
Person
With me to testify are Rosanna Carvacho on behalf of the California Hydrogen Coalition, and Chris McLaughlin on behalf of the Western Agricultural Process Association. I am respectfully asking for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. First witness, please.
- Rosanna Carvacho Elliott
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members, Rosanna Carvacho Elliott, here on behalf of the California Hydrogen Coalition in support of SB 425. As the Senator mentioned, this Bill is aiming at a population of vehicle owners, pickup trucks, as the analysis also stated, the number of pickup trucks that are sold in this state and the lack of electric vehicle pickup trucks that exist. So both this Bill is technology-neutral.
- Rosanna Carvacho Elliott
Person
Both fuel cell electric vehicles as well as battery electric vehicles will be eligible for this additional incentive through the Clean Vehicle Rebate Program. We think it makes a lot of sense because the individuals that are going to be driving these vehicles a lot of times need to be able to tow. They need to go long distances and don't have the downtime to be able to charge. And that's really where fuel cell electric vehicles can come in and fill that market.
- Rosanna Carvacho Elliott
Person
The Air Board has said we're going to need at least 20% of the vehicles on the road to be fuel cell electric to meet our zero-emission vehicle goals. This is just one thing that the state can do to incentivize this, because as we know, the goal of this program is to bring vehicles to market and to help with offsetting the cost of--the high cost--as these vehicles are coming to market. And this is exactly what SB 425 will do. Again, it is technology-neutral.
- Rosanna Carvacho Elliott
Person
And for these reasons, we respectfully ask for your aye vote tonight. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Chris McLaughlin
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Vice Chair, Members of the Committee. My name is Chris McLaughlin, here today on behalf of the California Cotton Ginners and Growers Association, as well as the Western Agricultural Processors Association, here to testify in support of SB 425 by Senator Newman. Under the Governor's Executive Order and recent actions from the California Air Resources Board specific to the Advanced Clean Cars II regulation as well as the Advanced Clean Fleets regulation, California has set aggressive goals to decarbonize the transportation sector.
- Chris McLaughlin
Person
This includes the requirements that in just three years, one of every three new vehicles sold in California must be zero-emission, reaching 100% by 2035. SB 425 would enhance monetary rebates for zero-emission pickup trucks vital to our industry, and could be an added mechanism to encourage the expansion of renewable-fuel vehicles. Diversity amongst manufacturer type, as well as fuel use, benefits the consumer. SB 425 would make zero-emission vehicles more affordable for our working women and men who need them to feed and clothe not only California, but as well as the world. The AG industry is committed to combating the climate crisis and doing our part to help achieve a sustainable future. We request the Committee's support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support of SB 425? Name and organization, please.
- John Moffatt
Person
John Moffatt on behalf of the alliance for Automotive Innovation in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Audra Hartmann
Person
Audra Hartmann on behalf of the California Electric Transportation Coalition in support, thank you very much.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Anyone in opposition to SB 425? Anyone in opposition?
- Janet Cox
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Janet Cox for Climate Action California 350, Sacramento, and the Climate Reality Project Silicon Valley chapter in opposition. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in opposition to SB 425? Seeing none. Bring it back to the Committee. Any questions given, Mr. Ward?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you. I want to thank the author again for working in the space I know we had time to talk about is a little bit in transportation. And my opinion hasn't moved on that essentially I appreciate that we should be doing more to be able to incentivize, and particularly as we're going to this bigger class, it's just a little bit of a bridge too far for me to know that we are well, first of all, that we have an existing CBRB program.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
If this was growing that pie to be able to encompass more vehicles at greater rates, that's something that I could support. But as it is right now using an existing sort of limited structure and then of that carving out a class of bigger vehicles which are going to be have a market price that are already higher as it is. And then offering those an even greater incentive is something that is just a little counter to my gut of where I want to see incentives go.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I want to incentivize more lower price vehicles to get them more in reach for more Californians. And that's just kind of where I'm at still on this substance. But I appreciate the intent of what you're trying to do here.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any other questions, Mr. Muratsuchi
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. So I have a few questions. According to the Committee analysis, the Bill defines pickup trucks with the gross vehicle weight. Years ago, I had a small Toyota pickup. I was wondering, would a small Toyota pickup be included? Is it A Ford F150?
- Josh Newman
Person
I think it's a class of vehicle that's the upper end. Assembly Member what we're trying to do here is to encourage the adoption of either of fuel cell vehicles or zero emission pickup trucks faster so that that share of the fleet that we need to convert, that's the top end. We're not excluding any of the smaller ones. These are about work trucks.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
So it would include the small pickup trucks.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, thank you.
- Josh Newman
Person
That's correct.
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Any other questions from the Committee? Seeing none, Senator, would you like to close?
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate it. Thank you for your patience. Getting to, you know, what we're trying to do here to Ms. Carvacci's point, is to take into account that there are use cases for drivers that are not easily decarbonized, especially against the very aggressive, ambitious, and worthy goals of the state for decarbonizing our fleet of light-duty vehicles. To Ms. Mcgothan's point, the most sort of underserved area right now are working people, particularly AG.
- Josh Newman
Person
And so that's an area where we want to encourage the adoption of these technologies sooner rather than later. I think we can do that. We're in good shape to hit our goals, so I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much, madam Secretary, please call the role. We need a second.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
The motion is due pass to Appropriations. Rivas, not present; Flora, aye; Addis; aye; Friedman, not present; Hoover, not present; Mathis, aye; Muratsuchi, aye; Pellerin, aye; Ward, no; Wood, aye; Spur, not present.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
The bill is out with 6 votes. We'll leave the vote open for absent members.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
The Bill is out with six votes. We'll leave the roll open for absent Members. Moving on to file item number 12, SB 568.
- Josh Newman
Person
Very good. Madam Chair, Members, thank you for the opportunity to present SB 568, which will require that prior to exporting e-waste abroad, an individual or an entity in California must demonstrate that they have attempted to locate a licensed instate e-waste recycling facility and that the waste could not be managed by an instate covered electronic waste recycler. Globally, less than 20% of e-waste is currently properly recycled, with the remaining 80% ending up either in landfills or improperly recycled.
- Josh Newman
Person
In addition to the adverse health and climate impacts of improper recycling, this also results in a significant loss of scarce and valuable raw materials such as gold, platinum, cobalt, and other rare earth elements. The federal and state governments have identified the securing of domestic supply chains for critical minerals and precious metals as a high economic and national security priority, including the recycling and reprocessing of precious metals.
- Josh Newman
Person
If we can effectively encourage and streamline the processing and recycling of e-waste materials, our state has a unique opportunity to become a global leader in the market for safely reclaiming the rare and valuable minerals contained in e-waste. By requiring an entity in California to demonstrate that they have attempted to locate an in-state e-waste recycling facility prior to export.
- Josh Newman
Person
SB 568 will yield immense long-term economic benefits for the state, while also reducing the likelihood that potentially toxic e-waste materials will find their way to locations abroad with much weaker environmental standards than our own. With me to testify on behalf of this legislation today are Renee St. Dennis, strategy consultant with Camston Wrather, and Liv Butler, a policy associate for Californians Against Waste. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Two minutes apiece, please.
- Renee Dennis
Person
I can do that. Hello, chaired Committee Members. My name is Renee St. Dennis. I serve as the Strategy Advisor to Campston Rather, a printed circuit board recycler in Carlsbad. I'm here today to speak in support of SB 568 because of the growing problem of e-waste. I've been involved in this industry for over 30 years, first at Hewlett Packard, where I built the plant that's in Roseville that I bet many of you are familiar with. Thank you.
- Renee Dennis
Person
And then at Apple, re-doing their whole program. I've seen firsthand the impact that improper disposal of e-waste can have on the global environment and the communities involved in that. By encouraging responsible recycling, California can keep global communities safe while becoming a global leader in the market for scarce minerals, many of which we can derive from unwanted electronics that would otherwise be destined for less desirable disposal. I urge you to support SB 568.
- Renee Dennis
Person
This can spur e-waste recycling innovation in California, advance state and federal priorities, and also position California to assume a key role in creating a truly circular solution for manufacturers looking to source recycled materials. Thank you for your time and consideration in support of this important Bill.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much.
- Liv Butler
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. Liv Butler with Californians Against Waste. The original e-waste program, established in 2003, was primarily geared towards the collection of covered electronic devices. We're now at a point, 20 years later, where we need to shift our attention to meaningful, closed-loop recycling of the materials contained in these devices. Existing law requires entities exporting e-waste to report on the volume and the destination of the waste.
- Liv Butler
Person
SB 568 will require those same entities to report if they are unable to find a certified instate recycler before exporting the e-waste to another country where hazardous and informal recyclings are typically used to extract valuable and reusable materials. Promoting instate recycling will help support reuse efforts while reducing reliance on carbon-intensive extraction of raw materials. We thank the author for his commitment to the issue and respectfully urge your support of SB 568. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone else in support of SB 568? Name an organization. Please.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of the National Stewardship Action Council in support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support of SB 568? Seeing none. Anyone in opposition to SB 568? Opposition? Seeing none. Bring it back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee? Now we're moving. Senator, would you like to close?
- Josh Newman
Person
Such are the advantages of going after Senator Wiener. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due past to appropriations. Rivas, not present. Flora, aye. Addis, aye. Friedman, not present. Hoover, aye. Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward, aye. Wood, aye. Zbur, aye.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Members.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Bill has nine votes. We'll leave it open for absent. Members, I do not see Senator Laird so Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Beautiful.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Ready when you are, sir.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members I'm presenting SB 353, also known as the Bottle Bill 2023. This Bill adds large 100% fruit juice containers over 46oz and vegetable juice containers larger than 16 ounce to the CRV program. Additionally, the Bill allows Cal Recycle to utilize the three-month or 12-month average scrap value when determining the processing payment, whichever is more advantageous to the small businesses that make up much of our recycling center infrastructure here in California.
- Bill Dodd
Person
We estimate this Bill will add approximately 200 million additional plastic, glass and metal containers to our recycling system. Our goal with this Bill is to increase recycling in California. This Bill is support from bottlers and recyclers across the state. Speaking in support of the Bill, we have Mark Murray, Executive Director for the California's Against Waste and Dennis Albiani with the American Beverage Association.
- Bill Dodd
Person
I would like to thank the Committee staff, especially Elizabeth Mcmillan, who worked with my team on this Bill and I think made it a much better Bill. Thank you very much.
- Mark Murray
Person
Mr. Chairman, Members, Mark Murray with the environmental group California's Against Waste. In support of the measure, it does two important things. It helps to support our buyback recycling infrastructure by closing the gap between the cost of recycling and the scrap value, giving greater authority to Cal Recycle, to use real time changes in scrap value to increase payments to the recycling infrastructure. We know that the incentives on containers work. This closes loopholes for containers that should have been in the program. They're now going to be added.
- Mark Murray
Person
So we know this program is working. We're helping recycling centers in a modest way. There's more that we could be doing to support the buyback recycling infrastructure. We have communities in this state where recycling rates are 80% or better. We have other areas of the state, rural Northern California, the entire Bay Area where recycling centers are closed, where recycling rates aren't as high. This Committee has done a great job of providing support for this program over the years.
- Mark Murray
Person
It wouldn't be a horrible idea for this Committee to continue to focus on that and maybe lend a hand in terms of increasing support for buyback recycling centers. Urge an aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
Dennis Albiani on behalf of the American Beverage Association, the Plastic Recycling Corporation of California. Mark did a great job outlining some of the positives. I think one of the things we really need to do is focus on and this Bill does this getting a cleaner stream through the system and helping the buyback program where the majority, I think people don't realize that over 80% of the material comes through buyback programs. So we need to get that system worked through again.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
We have several entities that have committed and companies that have committed to 100% or increasing their post consumer resin. And so we need the bottles back to be able to put them and do it all over again. So we appreciate the time and appreciate the author and support this Bill. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone else in support of SB 353?
- Graciela Castillo-Krings
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members, Graciela Castillo-Krings, here on behalf of Allen Company in strong support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Marc Aprea
Person
Mr. Chair, Members of the Committee, Mark Aprea here on behalf of Republic Services, we respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- John Moffatt
Person
John Moffatt, on behalf of Waste Management. Support.
- Anna Ferrera
Person
Anna Ferreira on behalf of the Wine Institute. We really appreciate the language that was taken on behalf of wines labeled prior to January 1, 2024 and strongly support this Bill.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler, on behalf of Stop Waste and National Stewardship Action Council in support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Aaron Woolley with Sierra Club, California, and also on behalf of NRDC, in support.
- Elena Pierre
Person
Elena Pierre, on behalf of the California Association of Local Conservation Corps and Rethink Waste in support. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. And if we have any Senators that are watching, we would respectfully ask you to come to the Committee room. We're going to need you soon. And we'll go to opposition to SB 353. Opposition to 353. Seeing none. Bring back to the Committee. Any questions from the Committee Members? Seeing none. Senator, would you like to close?
- Bill Dodd
Person
Yeah. Senator Newman's bills has nothing on mine. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
We love that. We have a motion and a second. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due past to appropriations. Rivas, not present. Flora, aye. Addis, aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover, aye. Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward, not present. Wood, aye. Zbur, aye.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Bill is out with nine votes. We'll leave it open for absent members.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
And Senators, we definitely need some authors. And we will take first come, first serve.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Thank you, Members.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
No, the other one.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
All right, colleagues, we have Senator Becker come on up. Presenting SB 48, file item number two. Ready when you are, Senator.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you all. This Bill is about improving the efficiency of our largest buildings. And we're looking at if we're going to look at greenhouse gases, holistically large buildings is a big area. There's lots of room for improvement. Buildings over 50,000 sqft make up only 6% of all commercial buildings but 53% of total space, and they account for 5% of our total greenhouse gases.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
The energy benchmarking data shows us that for large residential buildings built before 2010, the least efficient 20% could cut their energy use in half if they were as good as the top 20% of older buildings. That means saving hundreds of dollars per year on energy bills for tenants in those buildings. One of the challenges is how to balance, when you're dealing with residential buildings, how would it impact housing costs.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And we've gotten extremely helpful input from the housing advocates about these issues, which we've incorporated into this Bill. This Bill requires the CC to prioritizing housing issues as it develops the strategy and make sure that tenant advocates are given a strong voice. Because the issues are complex, this Bill is really a first step calling for the CEC to propose a strategy. Once that strategy is developed, we'll have the opportunity to review it and vote on it.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
But in other areas where we're usually leading the nation here, we're really following. First, New York City did a building performance standard and then other states Colorado, Washington State, Maryland now has done it, and this is our chance to step forward. We do have my witness still here. Thank you for still being here. Paul Matthew, recently retired from Lawrence Berkeley National Lab and an expert on building performance standards.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Two minutes per witness, please.
- Paul Matthew
Person
Sure. Chair and Members of the Committee. Good afternoon. My name is good evening. Almost now. My name is Paul Matthew. I'm a recently retired staff scientist from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where I led our technical work on building performance standards, working with various states Maryland, Washington and five local governments on their plans for building performance standards and building decarbonization. I was also a co author of the ASHRAE Guide on BPS. I should state that my testimony is my own.
- Paul Matthew
Person
I don't represent the Department of Energy, UC, or LBL. With that, I'd like to just amplify Senator Becker's comments with three quick points. First is that I believe building performance standards are absolutely essential to meeting our climate goals because they address existing buildings. 66% of the floor area, commercial building floor area we'll have in 2050 exists today. And those buildings are not being retrofitted at an adequate rate. In fact, some estimates say that it'll take up to 50 years to retrofit every commercial building.
- Paul Matthew
Person
So building performance standards are a way to kind of a forcing function to help move that forward. Second point, building performance standards offer flexibility to owners. They can meet those requirements in whatever way works best for them. And this Bill includes guardrails to protect tenants and avoid increased housing burdens. And finally, I'll just say that this is not some risky new thing. Building performance standards are already emerging as a best practice. 12 states and cities in the country have already passed BPS. They're on the books.
- Paul Matthew
Person
And so to echo Senator Becker's comments, this is an odd case where California has actually been lagging. We've always been leading on building energy efficiency. We're actually lagging and there's a chance to kind of catch up with that. Thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support of SB 48? Name an organization, please.
- Elena Pierre
Person
Elena Pierre, on behalf of the Building Decarbonization Coalition in support. Thanks.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Sylvia Solis Shaw. On behalf of the City of West Hollywood in support.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Erin Woolley, on behalf of Sierra Club California, in support.
- Norland Asbrik
Person
Norland Asbrik on behalf of Rewiring America in support. Thank you.
- Megan Chumway
Person
Megan Chumway, representing the 80 chapters of Indivisible California State Strong, in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Julia Alio
Person
Julia Alio with Sacramento 350 and 350 Bay Area Action in support.
- Jonah Bluth
Person
Jonah Bluth with 350 Humboldt in support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California and the California Indivisible Green Team. Thank you.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol VAD Sant, 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations and also Santa Cruz Climate Action Network and 350 Ventura County Climate Hub. Thank you, all in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you.
- Soria Lourie
Person
Soria Lourie. On behalf of Fossil Free California and Indivisible California in support.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support?
- Laura Dehen
Person
Hi there. Apologies, I was running back, but Laura Dehen, State Director with Environment California, we're also proud to co-sponsor the Bill and we are in strong support because energy, the energy we save is the cleanest energy we can get. So thank you.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support of SB 48? Seeing none. Anyone in opposition to SB 48?
- Karim Drissi
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Vice Chair and Members. Kareem Brisi on behalf of the California Association of Realtors. We do have a respectful opposed, unless amended, position as outlined in our letter and we respectfully request a no vote. Thank you so much.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone else in opposition to SB 48? Seeing none. Bring back to the Committee. Question from the Committee. Mr. Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I'm strongly supported the Bill, but I was wondering if you can respond to I saw that the Realtors were asking that small housing providers be exempt. I wasn't quite sure what that was and wanted to see if you had had conversations with them about what that meant.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Yeah, first of all, they're already exempt. I'm looking at the I think it has to be five. So benchmarking only applies to buildings with 17 plus units and 50,000 sqft overall. So they are exempt. I think there was a concern about does this place an additional burden on tenants. And this was an amendment that was put in as we went along.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And the goal is really just to tell the CEC, hey, CEC, while your building is planned, please don't do anything that adds additional burdens to tenants. So it's not supposed to burden, thus landlords at all.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Is it consistent with the other Bill that they cited as sort of the precedent in their letter or not?
- Josh Becker
Legislator
I'm trying to recall which one. The 1482 Chu Bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Yeah, I think so. Let me see if I can.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
The Bill is not changing any of the rules put in place by AB 1482?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Yeah. So it is consistent with 1482? The exception there?
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Yeah. Not changing any rules. It's just directing the CEC to consider including requirements in a strategy that would protect tenants from eviction and increases in costs. So it is consistent with the true Bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Okay, thank you. I mean, I'm supportive of the Bill if there's ways that we can actually address concerns that are being raised at some of these things without harbing the goals of the Bill. I always like to try to do that, so thank you.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. Yeah. And from the beginning, we've really worked hard, actually. We spent the first year of this process, actually just meeting with folks on the housing side just to really try to address those concerns.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you so much. Any other questions? Senator, would you like to close?
- Josh Becker
Legislator
I appreciate the support. I think our witness said it best. This is a tried and true method of reducing energy in large buildings that gives ultimate flexibility and respectfully requests an aye vote.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you very much, madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due past to appropriations. Rivas, not present. Flora, not voting. Addis, aye Friedman, aye. Hoover, no. Mathis, no. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward, not present. Wood, aye. Zbur, aye.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
The Bill is out with six votes. We'll leave it open for absent Members. And I think your next Bill is SB 420.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. To achieve our goals, we're going to have to build transmission and distribution lines a lot faster to ensure generated clean energy is getting to its destination. This threshold used to be a lot lower. It used to be 50 kilovolts. It got raised up to 200 kilovolts as part of a process that was to happen, I think, in 1994. So this Bill is really to fast track. Move that limit back up to 138 kilovolts.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
This would treat sub transmission infrastructure similar to distribution infrastructure for the purposes of permitting, reducing development costs, and shortening project timelines. All these projects would still be subject to other permits, including those of other state agencies that enforce other environmental protections. Moreover, the Bill exempts projects from this exemption in high impact sites, such as remediated sites, those on undisturbed land, those located on wetland, or with an endangered species. So at the end of the day creating consistency in the ways that low impact transmission lines are permitted is really critical to us meeting our goals. We have two great witnesses here in support, Alex Jackson and Mark Joseph.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you very much. Two minutes per witness, please.
- Mark Joseph
Person
Thank you. Mr. Vice Chair and Members. My name is Mark Joseph. I'm testifying on behalf of the Coalition of California Utility Employees. To meet our climate goals, California needs a lot of work to upgrade the electric grid to support all the new uses coming. And our regulatory process, while perhaps okay for the prior world, is not adapted to our current or the future world of rapidly changing climate. 420 addresses a small slice of that problem. First, some history.
- Mark Joseph
Person
Prior to 1994, when a utility had a project on distribution, subtransmission and transmission up to 200 kilovolts did not require any permits at all from the Public Utilities Commission. In 1994, the Commission lowered the threshold to 50 kilovolts, what we think of as the distribution system. So for the distribution system now there are no permits required at all. Then there are thousands and thousands of these projects every year.
- Mark Joseph
Person
SB 420 would swing the pendulum back partway, just partway, so that some Low impact projects between 50 and 138 kilovolts, what we call subtransmission, would be treated like we treat distribution. The utilities would not require any permits from the PUC, but only for some Low impact projects. It has to be on previously disturbed land or in an urbanized area, or already part of a sequel review for a larger project and not on wetlands, not on a hazardous waste site and not in critical habitat.
- Mark Joseph
Person
The larger projects that don't meet these criteria would continue to get the permits as they get them today. Now, we recognize that this requires balancing of competing interests. We have tried to carve out the Low impact projects that are fundamentally the same as the distribution projects for which we already require no permits. After all, there really is nothing environmentally different between building a substation with a 50 kilovolt transformer and building one with a 66 kilovolt transformer. I certainly couldn't tell the difference by looking.
- Mark Joseph
Person
I bet few of us could. Yet one requires no permits and the other requires full sequa compliance. This modest limited step thank you. This modest limited step would help speed up some of the critical projects we need to reduce the huge climate impacts from things like heavy duty trucking with all of its diesel emissions. Thank you.
- Alex Jackson
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair Members. Alex Jackson with the American Clean Power Association. We are a trade group representing developers of renewable energy projects across multiple technologies onshore wind, offshore wind, solar and storage. I'm not going to repeat my co witness here. I know the hour is late, but I just want to underscore the point that they're making. We are facing a build out of clean energy needs that is unprecedented in our state's history.
- Alex Jackson
Person
Under the governor's recent energy plan, we're looking on the order of 148 gigawatts over the next two decades. That's roughly equivalent to 70 Diablo Canyon nuclear plants. To be able to connect that new generation to load centers, we need to be able to expand and upgrade our transmission system in parallel. Now that is a holistic undertaking and this Legislature, I think, has done some good informational hearings to lay out the scope of that problem.
- Alex Jackson
Person
It's going to require better planning, new approaches to financing workforce development, but one of the barriers that we've encountered is permitting. So as Mr. Joseph outlined and Senator Becker outlined, this proposal is fairly straightforward. It's proposing to raise the current voltage threshold to treat more of the subtransmission system like distribution and put it on a fast track. I would emphasize this is not across the board. It's only for a limited slice of projects that we think are appropriate.
- Alex Jackson
Person
And in that case we just feel like on balance, given the climate crisis, we're facing the risks of delay and taking longer. These lengthy permitting processes outweighs the need for requiring those projects to undergo extensive review. So while fairly limited, we think this Bill will help alleviate delays for projects like subtransmission lines and substations that are absolutely necessary to be able to connect new renewable generation and build out the grid to accommodate the electrification that's coming from EVs and buildings.
- Alex Jackson
Person
And we ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, additional witnesses. In support.
- Adam Smith
Person
Adam Smith, Southern California Edison, in strong support.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Melissa Romero with California Environmental Voters in support and was also asked to pass along the support of Environmental Defense Fund. Thank you.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Brady Van Engelen, California Chamber of Commerce, here in support.
- Voleck Taing
Person
Velek Tang with the Silicon Valley Leadership Group. In support.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Sylvia Solis Shaw on behalf of Advanced Energy United. In support.
- Kara Martinson
Person
Kara Martinson on behalf of the Large Scale Solar Association. In support.
- Genesis Tang
Person
Genesis Tang on behalf of Clea Air Task Force. In Strong support.
- Megan Shumway
Person
Megan Shumway in support of Indivisible California State strong is also in support.
- Audra Hartmann
Person
Audra Hartman on behalf of the California Electric Transportation Coalition and the California Large Energy Consumers Association. In support.
- John Moffatt
Person
John Moffatt on behalf of the American Council of Engineering Companies. In support.
- Jonah Bluth
Person
Jonah Bluth on behalf of 350 Humboldt. In support.
- Julia Alio
Person
Julia Alio on behalf of 350 Sacramento and 350 Bay Area Action. In support.
- Syria Lurie
Person
Syria Lurie on behalf of Indivisible California. In support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California and the California Indivisible Green Team. Thanks.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant for 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations and the Climate Reality Project Silicon Valley and 350 Ventura County Climate Hub all in support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, are there any witnesses in opposition? I see none. Any comments or questions from Committee Members?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Assembly Member Muratsuchi, just real quickly.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Senator, thank you very much. This is also an issue that I'm very much focused on and I appreciate your leadership on this. I understand that there are states. I hate to say it, but Texas.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Appears to have made tremendous progress in expanding their transmission grid much faster than California. And I look forward to continuing this effort to be able to bring all of our renewable energy generation online fast enough so that we can make a difference in the fight against climate change. Would be honored to be added as a co author of your bill. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Wood.
- Jim Wood
Person
A question for either the witnesses or the author. Obviously, we're struggling with challenges, with interconnection, and as you're talking about, this is distribution. How much time do you think this cuts off the process for some of these projects? I know that's a difficult question. We know that the transmission piece permitting for that is seven to 10 years. That's a different animal, obviously, than what we're dealing with here. But are we just nibbling at the edges here, or is this going to have a real impact?
- Mark Joseph
Person
Thank you for the question. Some of them are Wood I would say it's going to have a real impact. It's not going to have a giant impact. There are approximately two dozen of these projects pending at the PUC at any one time. So two dozen projects a year would not have to be there. Now, those projects are critical projects. They're in the in between category, between small distribution and big transmission.
- Mark Joseph
Person
They are important for things like fleet charging depots, which may have a 10 or 20 megawatt demand at any one time that requires upgrading or building a new substation. These are the kinds of projects that would really be most affected by that.
- Jim Wood
Person
Great. Okay, thank you. Appreciate it.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments from Committee Members? Seeing none. Would you like to close?
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Yes, I think we all did good work, and thank you, Chair. And we all did good work with the package that was signed today. And I think as some of the comments that were made, this is kind of another piece of the package. I think there's a possible power package with some other bills that are also moving forward, but this is one piece of it. And respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Do we have a motion? Okay, we have a motion and a second. Sorry I wasn't here. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That Bill has nine votes. We'll leave it open for absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due passed to Utilities and Energy Committee. Rivas, aye. Flora, not present. Addis, aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover, aye. Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward, not present. Wood, aye. Zbur, aye.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, next. We're continuing to go in sign in order, and Senator Laird is next. This is SB 508. Then a second.
- John Laird
Legislator
That's impressive. I was just in an extensive Senate Natural Resources Hearing that just ended while we were all quietly watching the TV of you to know where you were. Thank you.
- John Laird
Legislator
I'm here to present Senate Bill 508, and I appreciate the fact that a motion has been made but let me be really clear because I've had conversations with a lot of you in the last 24 hours and I think it has really crystallized what the issues are and what I want to say because the real issue is that we are having trouble getting people into the legal system for cannabis and the people that have lots of resources can get in, and the people that don't have many resources find obstacles and are having trouble and there are many reasons.
- John Laird
Legislator
In presenting a bill a while ago, waiting, hoping that the hearing would end here, in rev and tax, I sat through a cannabis tax bill to change that because that is one of the issues of many of them to do. And there's been some confusion about this and I want to make it really clear. This bill takes, in essence, doing CEQA twice on the same project and just doing it once and so if there is now a responsible party and a lead agency, it really means there is a lead agency.
- John Laird
Legislator
It means you still go through the review and there have been a lot of concerns raised. One of them is is that there was the deal for no exemptions two years ago. This is not an exemption. You still do environmental review. You do not see the word exemption anywhere in the bill or in the analysis.
- John Laird
Legislator
There's been concern about some problem counties and somehow this is giving them a leg up. Mendocino is one that is named frequently. Well, under the current situation, the state's taking it over, they're the lead agency. This bill would actually not change that situation. It would leave it exactly in place, and there's been concern that somehow we're not willing to work with people. We have taken amendments in environmental quality, and I think some people think that on some of these arguments they can kill the bill, but we have to do something.
- John Laird
Legislator
If we do this a year from now, we have a bunch of people that won't make it into the system and we have to do things to get them there, and there was an issue raised in the analysis, and I'm looking here to find where it is, and that is on page seven of the analysis: 'A concern was raised that it's unclear if the language on page two, line 21, regarding conform to the scope is sufficient. This was raised to us. A suggestion was made by the Committee Staff to change the language to same project to ensure there's a clear and precise meaning.'
- John Laird
Legislator
I agree to that, and if this bill moves out, I'm more than willing to commit to take that amendment so that we resolve that issue, and I think that if you look at who is for and against this bill, one of the interesting things is that it is the small growers. It is the small people. It is the farmers in Big Sur that are in my district and Assembly Member Addis's district that have had trouble getting into the system and they are, ironically, what we have come to refer to as legacy farmers.
- John Laird
Legislator
They've been there for ten, twenty, thirty years and they want to be legal, and we want them to be legal, and we want to remove the obstacles to do that. So given the fact a motion has been made and this is late, I will happily defer to my witnesses in the discussion, but I'm willing to address any concerns that people have and if there are genuine concerns about how to make this better, I'm totally open to them and would continue to work.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you. At the appropriate time, I'll respectfully ask for an aye vote and with me here are two witnesses. The shine retiring Amy Brown is here, and Mark is here as well and they will say who for and what their purpose is.
- Mark Smith
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Mark Smith on behalf of Origins Council. We represent over 800 licensed small, independent cannabis businesses in the rural producing counties throughout California, predominantly the legacy farmers that were just mentioned. We've been engaged with the Legislature on CEQA related cannabis policy issues since our founding. Since that time, provisionally licensed cannabis operators statewide have been facing ongoing licensing insecurity and cyclical existential licensing crisis.
- Mark Smith
Person
An informal survey of our membership which spans five rural counties, members are reporting timelines of weeks to months for DCC to review final documents submitted for the issuance of annual licenses. This documentation includes certified CEQA documentation from local jurisdictions, and in many cases, that CEQA documentation is the only new documentation being considered by DCC. At least half of the operators surveyed are experiencing timelines from four to eight months for DCC to issue annual licenses to active provisionally licensed operators.
- Mark Smith
Person
This is a considerable concern for our organization, given statutory timelines and the sunset related to provisional licensing. As of this afternoon, state data reflects that half of the licensed cannabis businesses in the State of California still have not achieved annual licensure. The state environmental agencies who currently serve as CEQA responsible entities for cannabis cultivation licensing projects and who would continue to do so under this bill have both the capacity and the expertise to do it well.
- Mark Smith
Person
SB 508 proposes an urgently needed efficiency to the state licensing process without undermining environmental review and protections. We respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Amy Brown
Person
Madam Chair, Members of the Committee, Amy Brown on behalf of the City of Long Beach. Want to--for the sake of brevity--we'll be very quick on this. Want to thank Senator Laird for authoring this bill. To date, the city has completed project-specific CEQA documentation for 64 medicinal and/or adult use cannabis businesses including cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, lab testing, and retail. This requires significant staffing capacity and resources.
- Amy Brown
Person
We think that SB 508 would help to foster a more efficient process and streamline the existing dual license process. Ask for you aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thanks. Are there additional witnesses in support? Wait--that's on? Thank you. Can you please repeat it just so that--
- Rand Martin
Person
Sure. Rand Martin on behalf of the Parent Company in very strong support. Thank you.
- Talia D'Amato
Person
Talia D'Amato on behalf of California NORML. We represent consumers as well as STIIIZY, and I've also been asked to read in support from CCIA. Thank you.
- Nicholas Romo
Person
Nick Romo with Cruz Strategies on behalf of the City of Desert Hot Springs in support.
- Sarah Dukett
Person
Sarah Dukett on behalf of the Rural County Representatives of California and the League of California Cities in support.
- Ada Waelder
Person
Ada Waelder on behalf of the California State Association of Counties as well as the County of Monterey in support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, next. Are there witnesses in opposition?
- John Laird
Legislator
Hello, Cory.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good to see you.
- Corey Brown
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. My name is Corey Brown. I'm an attorney with the Resources Legacy Fund. We're a nonprofit environmental group and we were involved in writing many of the environmental protection provisions in Proposition 64. 1st, I'd like to thank Senator Laird for many opportunities we've had over the years to work with him to protect the environment and for his leadership. This is the first time we've ever had to oppose one of his measures. There are four reasons why we urge you to oppose SB 508. As you can see in the paper that we just handed out, Proposition 64 included express provisions that the environment would be protected and that the state was going to ensure that the California Environmental Quality Act would be implemented. That was essentially important because local governments sometimes do a good job sometimes they don't do a good job analyzing and adopting measures to protect the environment. When we crafted the environmental provisions of Proposition 64, the state agency handing out the permits was critical to making sure that the environment was protected. And as my colleague will talk about in a minute, when they serve as a responsible agency, their job is basically to catch gaps in terms of protection and not to duplicate. There are provisions within the law that require them to use the existing CEQA documents that the local governments approve. Unless those documents are so inadequate they can't be used to base the decision on there isn't duplication. There's many provisions in CEQA that protect it. Secondly, in 2021, RLF, along with other organizations, agreed to extend the sequa exemptions for provisional licenses, which were never part of Proposition 64 from eight to nearly 10 years. That's 10 years of CEQA exemptions to give industry a chance to prepare the CEQA documents and do all this work. Part of that carefully negotiated budget trailer Bill, as Mr. Woods was very involved in, was a provision that we asked to be placed into the code that said after this period, there will be no more CEQA exemptions. When we go back to our constituencies and tell them why we agreed to compromises, we have to be able to tell them in confidence that those compromises will be stuck to we've done our part in sticking to the deal. We hope you'll uphold that part as well. The third problem, I should also mention that under the law, the Department of Cannabis Control is the only state entity that can put provisions to protect the environment into the state cannabis licenses and enforce those provisions, which is very critical. If they're not required to be a responsible agency, that's going to be very detrimental to protecting the environment. On the issue whether this is a sequel exemption, the Bill on page two, lines three through seven, says notwithstanding any other law in connection with the issuance of a license pursuant to this division, the Department shall not be required to serve as a responsible agency under CEQA, that is an exemption from CEQA requirements. Finally, SB 508 sets a bad precedent under CEQA. For the last 50 years, all state agencies have been required to protect the environment. This would set the precedent that protecting the environment is optional for a state agency. We think that's a very detrimental precedent to set. The state agencies are very important to protecting any errors or misses that the locals provide. They don't duplicate the local effort, but rather they provide a safeguard to protect our environment and protect our communities. This Bill violates both the express language in Proposition 64 that you have before you, as well as the express language in the 2021 Budget Trailer Bill. For those reasons, we urge you to vote against this Bill. We've offered the author 10 different ideas on how you can help small growers. We're committed to working on that. We've done grants to organizations to help foster a good legal market, and we're in this for the long term. But we think this undermines the very voter protections that the voters adopted in 2016 when they approved Proposition 64. Thank you.
- Kim Delphino
Person
Good evening. My name is Kim Delphino, and I'm here representing Defenders of Wildlife and the California Native Plant Society. Defenders and CNPS are in opposition to SB 508. Respectfully, we do disagree with the premise behind this Bill, which is that Department of Cannabis Control, or DCC, conducts duplicative or wasteful or not value added to the CEQA review process. We believe that Department of Cannabis Control's responsible action as a responsible agency is there for a reason. But SB 508 would eliminate DCC's role as a responsible agency. Therefore, if a local lead agency has failed to identify an environmental impact through the CEQA process, as has happened, DCC would not be able to require the lead agency to revise its CEQA decision. It would also not be able to include, as part of the license requirements, actions to address or minimize environmental harm. The proponents of the Bill say, well, the State Board, Water Board, or the Department of Fish and know they can weigh in as responsible agencies if they're doing permits. But there are cultivation licenses that do move forward that don't require 2081 Endangered Species Act requirements or stream bed alteration requirements, which means that the Department of Fish and Wildlife would be acting only as a trustee agency, and therefore a local lead agency could disregard, and there are examples of when they have disregarded, the Department of Fish and Wildlife's recommendations. For example, in Sonoma County, the county failed to include burrowing owl impacts, even though the Department commented on the project. In Humboldt County, Department found that there were golden eagle impacts, but those impacts were not included. There are multiple other examples of where local lead agencies have ignored sediment flowing into streams, grading problems, air quality problems near schools, and other environmental impacts. And while there are local lead agencies doing a good job there are, unfortunately, many instances where local permitting has failed in their application of CEQA. Therefore, the Department of Cannabis Control's responsible agency authority is not duplicative of local lead agency action and is actually very necessary to ensure that California adheres to its commitments in Prop 64 to protect the environment. And for these reasons, we would urge a no vote on SB 508.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, we're ready for additional witnesses in opposition.
- Alex Leumer
Person
Thank you. Alex Leumer on behalf of the Planning Conservation League, the California Coastal Protection Network, and the Environmental Protection Information Center in opposition.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Good evening. Erin Wooley on behalf of Sierra Club California. In opposition. Thank you.
- Christina Scaringe
Person
Good evening. Christina Scaringe with the Center for Biological Diversity in respectful opposition.
- Kim Besick
Person
Good evening. I'm Kim Besick on behalf of California Trout and Trout Unlimited. And we are in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next. Any questions or comments from Committee Members? Assembly Member Addis, yes.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I just want to thank you for bringing this forward. As you mentioned, I also represent Big Sur and the County of Monterey, and I see this as very important for our small cannabis farmers, as you mentioned, the legacy farmers that really do need our help in terms of staying alive in this situation. So thank you for that.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I wanted to ask you, I'm hearing that it's not duplicative that the state agency does, as a statewide agency, take into consideration issues of environmental protection that a local agency may not bring up. Could you respond to the concern?
- John Laird
Legislator
I think that what's happening in Mendocino with Mendocino is the perfect answer. They have actually taken over as the lead agency when that happens. And I think they are very concerned and want to make sure it's done just it doesn't necessarily have to be done at both levels that extends the process. And I think the key underlying thing here, I could talk about a lot of it, but in my view, it's not accurate to say that this Bill weakens the environmental protections promised within Proposition 64. Nothing changes the substantive environmental protections that are here. CEQA is still in effect. And I think the underlying thing to all this is the fact that it is really increasingly burdensome for the smaller people and that's going to drive them out. And we're having these discussions about trying to have an endless process that is the perfect process, when there is a process that will, in fact, protect the environment in place while lots of people are going to move out of the system and not be able to come into the system. And I think if we were having this discussion a year from now, we'll have a lot of people that will have stepped out of line and a lot of people that will have made the decision to do it illegally because that is more beneficial. And that is something that works for them. And I think that's why you can't separate the fact that this, I don't think, is a weakening with the fact that we have a problem that we have to address. And I did appreciate there was a white paper, but it arrived as we shut down the budget and said, how about doing all these budget things when we've been working on this a year and a half? And anytime in that year and a half, it was like, if these are the budget things you can do to substitute, we would have been advocating. We would have seen how it worked with this. And I think this is really, with regard to making this workable, one of our few options.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, I just want to say, out of my respect for you, Senator, that nothing personal, but I'm not going to be supporting this Bill because frankly, I care more about the environmental groups in opposition to this Bill than the legal cannabis industry. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So thank you, Senator. I appreciate this. I've been really struggling a little bit with this, in part because if the approvals were truly duplicative, then I would give weight to that. I guess what I don't understand about this is what are the approvals that are happening at the local level versus those that are happening at the state level? Because typically the structure under CEQA is that whoever the lead agency is, and it might be the lead agency at the local level, would do a fulsome EIR based on whatever that project is. And I don't know if it's permitting a farm or if it's permitting development on a farm or whatever that might be. And then I assume that the State Department of Cannabis Control then has another discretionary action. And typically, if they're not the lead agency, they would then be a responsible agency, which doesn't mean that they necessarily have to basically completely redo the EIR again, but they would actually either rely on the EIR or supplement it if there's something related to their discretionary action that wasn't studied. So I guess I just don't understand. It just sort of seems like the underlying CEQA review is different, I'm just assuming from what the department's discretionary action is at the state level. So I'm trying to understand sort of this issue about why they're so the same that you can get rid of.
- John Laird
Legislator
Well, I know that you're a CEQA attorney and I'm dancing on dangerous territory going into the weeds, but if you do a mitigated negative declaration and it comes to the State Department and it's inadequate under this Bill, even they can in essence, take control and do the environmental review that wasn't done. This does not remove them from that process. That is why in many ways I'm citing the example of what's happened with Mendocino and the fact that this Bill would not change that situation. What it does is the reality is when you do have a process that is, however, broadly defined, duplicative, where there is a fairly complete additional thing done, then that is what draws out the time and drives people out of the system when the environmental work has been done. And they will look at this and they will make the judgments if it's inadequate, but it just doesn't mean that as a get go, you will have the endless process. And I think we should not confuse endless process with the protections that weren't Proposition 94. It never mandated endless CEQA, it mandated CEQA. And we are still leaving CEQA in place with this Bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I have a great deal of respect for you, but I'm having trouble understanding why this is different than any other case where you have a discretionary action at the local level, which is about one thing, and then a discretionary action that may be somewhat different at the state level. And generally responsible agency would at that point have to determine whether or not the environmental document that was prepared at the local level analyzed the impacts of that discretionary action, and then they could rely on it. And if they didn't, then they'd actually have to do additional analysis. And so if they're exactly the same, all they would
- John Laird
Legislator
I'm not saying they're exactly the same, but there is duplication, and it lengthens the process. And I wish I could have one of the crazy making things that I think everybody experiences at Zidias is when the Administration loves something they're doing and says, no, nobody can come and answer technical questions at the hearing. And I think right now they could deal with your question in a very adequate way of why that's not the case.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I would like to give the opportunity to Ms. Delphino to answer. I believe that Assembly Member Zbur is correct, but I just want to clarify.
- Kim Delphino
Person
Yes, so you're correct. So in this case, the local lead agency would be doing a local approval under their land use authorities, and so you would be doing CEQA on that. And then you're going to the Department of Cannabis Control to receive a cultivation license. And in that case, the Department of Cannabis Control, as a responsible agency, would be reviewing the lead agency's CEQA document. If for some reason they find that document is inadequate, then they can go back to the local lead agency for purposes of the DCC cultivation license, they can go back and know, you're missing some information here, you forgot to put a hydrology piece in here. And then they can incorporate in their license requirements to address some of those very issues. If you take away the responsible agency requirement. And I would say, well, let me just finish what I'm saying here, and then I'll apply it to something else. But if you are saying here, well, DCC, in your issuance of the cultivation license, you have to now rely upon the CEQA document prepared by X County. They now have no ability to go back and say this was inadequate for purposes of issuing. They'll have to rely on it in total. The concern I have here, frankly, is, well, if we pass a Bill like this, what happens maybe next year, where someone comes back and says, we don't really want to have the Department of Fish and Wildlife have to act as a responsible agency when they're issuing a 2081 permit under CISA or a Stream Bed Alteration Agreement? Or what about Department of Toxics when they're issuing a permit related to hazardous waste? The point here is that the responsible agency role is an important role. It's not given out just because we feel like making it's not duplicative. It's important. And because of the license requirements from DCC, we do require them. This was a key part of Prop 64. So you were spot on in the question that you're asking. And this is why I'm saying it's not duplicative.
- John Laird
Legislator
Yeah, I'd like to comment because I think there's a nuance here that is missed in that exchange. And the nuance is that until a determination can be made on the EIR, the Mitigated Negative Declaration, or the NOE by the lead agency, and it's filed with OPR, the Department of Cannabis Control continues to be the responsible agency. So they are the responsible agency until after that is completed. So they have a chance to involve themselves in the front end activities to sort of actually make the determination here that this is going in the way, or they have feedback to do it. It is not as clean as they are removed. They are there as the responsible agency until the first part of the process has been completed.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Go ahead.
- Corey Brown
Person
Thank you, Madam Chairwoman. The actions that Senator Laird just referred to are correct, but the requirement for mitigating those impacts, which is what really matters, comes later in the process, and this takes away that requirement the DCC act to mitigate those problems. I want to mention in terms of a lot of the problems we see are at the local level. In Mr. Woods district with Mendocino County, they had trouble establishing an effective local permitting system. So what's the solution? And we had discussions with industry. We had discussions with the county supervisors. The solution was not to get rid of DCC, but ask DCC to take over the responsibility. Similar type of thing in the City of Los Angeles, where they're adopting more of a ministerial permit system so that DCC will the state will cover more of these issues. Where the dysfunction has happened is really at the local level. DCC has told us when we met with them in March, that when the applicant provides them with the information that's required, they can make a decision in three to four days. Rarely takes them more than a week or two, and that happens about the same time DC is looking at a whole slew of other issues. So it's not necessarily adding time. But what the Bill does is it takes away that requirement to reduce the environmental impacts. It sets a bad precedent in CEQA. That's why we're concerned about it. We want to work with Senator Laird on ways of helping the small growers. And we have lots of ideas and not all of them require budget allocations. But this Bill, unfortunately, goes at the heart, the heart of the structure that voters approved in Proposition 64 and takes away that state safeguard. Not Duplication, but the state safeguard for protecting the environment. And that's why we struggled with having to oppose one of Mr. Leonard's bills because we have such respect for him. But the policy just drove us that we had to protect what the voters approved. We had to keep faith to what the voters said and to the 2021 budget compromise.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay. Any other questions or comments from Committee Members? Okay, seeing none. So I have a question for you. In your opening statement, you mentioned the analysis and there was a concern and you said you would take that as an amendment. I missed what you said, and I. Just wanted to
- John Laird
Legislator
It was suggested in the analysis that we would want to address something in it, an issue that was called out in page seven, and there had been a solution discussed. And the analysis doesn't ask for it, but I'm willing to take that as an amendment to address that issue. That was the summary of it. To be really clear. To repeat what I said in the opening statement, a concern was raised that it's unclear if the language on page two, line 21 regarding conform to the scope is sufficient. This concern was raised to my staff last week and a suggestion was made by the Committee staff to change the language to same project to ensure that there's a clear and precise meaning meeting. We agreed to that informally and then the analysis didn't ask for it. And I'm saying I would agree to that as an amendment to address that issue.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I just want to make sure that the Members know. So number six in the analysis, page seven, you're willing to take that as an amendment?
- John Laird
Legislator
Yes.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay. Just want to make sure all the Committee Members see that. Yeah. I did have concerns and I know we talked on Friday and we've asked some questions of the Department and haven't heard back. And you committed that we would continue working on this that I will be supporting today, but I know we will be continuing our conversations based on what you told me on Friday. Would you like to close?
- John Laird
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I appreciate this discussion and I think the discussion indicates the complexity of what this is. And I will work to make sure if I have any impact, the Department will answer whatever questions you have. And the real issue here to pull together is I mean, Mendocino has mentioned. This Bill would not change the situation with regard to Mendocino, where the Department took responsibility, took the lead agency. And I think that is the right thing to do. But it is really in those cases. And I think in some times, we're trying to design our concerns around whether it's two or three dysfunctional counties, whether in all 58 counties we are driving people out of the system or not allowing them to come in. And I appreciate the fact that people are focused on this. And I will continue to work on this if this Bill moves out of here in a way. Because I think the fact that this continues to move means that there's a serious intent to address this in a good way. And I hope it draws people that have thought they could kill the Bill to want to work together and address these issues within the context of the Bill. I thank you for your comments, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.Ivo so.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We have a motion and a second, secretary, please call the roll. But with the amendment.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due pass as amended to appropriations. Rivas aye. Rivas aye Flora. Flora aye Addis. Addis. Aye Friedman. Friedman. Aye Hoover. Hoover. Aye Mathis. Mathis. Aye Muratsuchi. Muratsuchi not voting. Pellerin. Pellerin. Aye Ward. Ward aye Wood. Wood not voting. Zbur not voting.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That Bill has eight votes. It's out.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chair and Members.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I just want to go over the list that I have of the sign in order. I have men. Alan Cortesi, Padilla, Gonzalez and Stern. If I would have known we were going to be here this late, I would have ordered dinner. So I just want to apologize to the Committee.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Senator Weiner.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Maybe Senator Wiener will buy us dinner, right? I know all of us are here. We're ready when you're ready. This is SB 704, Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
And I do want to congratulate you because I understand you beat Joey Chestnut's record for the most Wiener in one sitting. Good evening, Chair and Members of the Committee. I'm presenting SB 704 which amends the Coastal Act to remove outdated oil and gas policies and adds policies promoting offshore wind energy deployment. The Coastal Act provides for the regulation of development in our state's coastal zone and includes policies to protect environmentally sensitive areas and to address equity concerns and adverse impacts raised by development.
- Dave Min
Person
When the Coastal Act was enacted, a loophole was created that allowed oil and gas development, refineries, and petrochemical facilities to circumvent environmental protection standards otherwise applied to all other projects. This particular loophole, known as the industrial override provision, is severely outdated and continues to perpetuate outdated 1970s era statewide energy goals. 50 years later, we obviously have a different climate, literally, but also in terms of our energy and new oil and gas development, and the promotion of that is inconsistent with the state's efforts to decarbonize the economy and achieve net zero carbon emissions.
- Dave Min
Person
SB 704 closes the industrial override loophole for new oil and gas development, while allowing existing facilities to continue to be repaired and maintained and allowing for low carbon upgrades to refineries. SB 704 takes that heavy thumb off the scale that has been in place for the oil industry's benefit for so long.
- Dave Min
Person
This bill also levels the playing field to ensure that all new oil and gas facilities meet the same standards that are to be approved as other projects, a long overdue and common sense reform. Finally, it promotes offshore wind energy by enacting Coastal Act policies to encourage and facilitate its deployment, ensuring that wind is at the back of our offshore platforms. We've negotiated with opposition and taken amendments. They are now neutral and there is no opposition to the bill. I have Laura Walsh from the Surfrider Foundation to speak in support of the bill.
- Laura Walsh
Person
I'll keep it short. Thank you so much. No opposition and a lot of excitement from the Surfrider Foundation. I'm Laura Walsh. I'm representing Surfrider and also specifically, our South Bay, Long Beach, and North Orange County Chapters. Of course, our North OC Chapter who experienced the impacts of the oil spill, what, two years ago now, and Long Beach and South Bay who are living amongst and on top of some of the largest oil fields in California.
- Laura Walsh
Person
This bill closes an outdated loophole in the Coastal Act that hopefully everyone on the Natural Resources Committee can get behind because these are projects that can cause toxic water, toxic air, and the best we can do is at least mitigate and avoid those impacts like we do for other development. I also just want to quickly speak on behalf of our Humboldt Chapter who's facing a proposal for a natural gas facility on its 1800 acres around the sensitive Humboldt Bay.
- Laura Walsh
Person
This is exactly the kind of thing that will now, through this bill, get Coastal Commission review and avoidance and mitigation through the Coastal Act. So just very appreciative of the author. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, next, additional witnesses in support.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Melissa Romero, California Environmental Voters in support, and was also asked to pass along the support of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Thank you.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors in support. Thank you.
- Christina Scaringe
Person
Christina Scaringe with the Center for Biological Diversity in support.
- Erin Woolley
Person
Erin Woolley on behalf of Sierra Club, California, in support.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Aradhna Tripati. I'm a professor of climate science at UCLA. I'm in support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California, 350 Sacramento, and 350 Humboldt in support. Thank you.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant, 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations, in support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Okay, great. Seeing none. Would you like to close?
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you for all your hard work today, your long work, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Do we have a motion? Okay, we do. We have a motion and a second. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is 'do pass to appropriations.' Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? Not voting. Flora, not voting. Addis? Aye. Addis, aye. Friedman? Aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover? Not voting. Hoover, not voting. Mathis? Muratsuchi? Aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward? Aye. Ward, aye. Wood? Aye. Wood, aye. Zbur? Aye. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That bill has eight votes. We'll leave it open for the absent Member. Next, Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Well, thank you, Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
This is SB 777, whenever you're ready.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you, Members of the Committee. I know you had quite an exciting evening. I want to just thank the Committee for its attention to the bill. I want to accept the amendments. This bill provides some much needed improvements to our plastic bag law that we passed a few years back, about a decade ago. That law requires stores that do provide the thicker plastic bags to do the following, charge at least 10 cents per bag,
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Only sell bags that are designed to be reused and that are recyclable in the state. And until only a few years ago, they had to offer storefront bins for customers to return their unwanted bags for recycling. So after the law took effect, we did see a decrease in the pounds of plastic per person generated as a result of the plastic carryout bags. But as of 2021, that number is actually now higher than before we banned the smaller single use bags.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
So this bill is seeking to get us back on track. First, the bill reinstates the store takeback requirement and includes provisions to ensure the bags are actually recycled at the end of their useful life. Secondly, the bill provides transparency on how stores are spending the money they charge customers for the thick plastic bags. Current law only allows the revenue collected from selling the bags to be used to cover the cost of the bag, the cost of compliance with the law, or fund educational efforts to encourage customers to reuse the bag.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
So this bill requires the big chain retailers to report how they're spending the money, the revenue that they generate from the bags, so that we can understand if these bags are a moneymaker, and if so, what the stores are doing to educate employees and customers to help reduce the waste generated from the bags, per the law. We've also had several stakeholder meetings with folks, lots of conversations with the grocers retailers, trying to find some common ground on how to accurately and effectively report on the data.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
We haven't yet found language that all sides can agree to. I know that we're getting closer and closer. We certainly appreciate the opposition's engagement. We're going to continue working with them to further refine the reporting piece. But today, to speak in support of the bill, I've got Alberto Torrico here with UFCW, Mark Murray from Californians Against Waste to speak in support of the bill and appreciate your attention.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. Alberto Torrico on behalf of the United Food and Commercial Workers Western States Council. I think Senator Allen summarized the bill very well. I just want to highlight the fact that we do think it is a transparency bill, so we can understand how many bags are being purchased, what the cost of those bags are, and what we believe the significant revenue that's being generated off those bags are being used for. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Mark Murray
Person
Madam Chair, Members. Mark Murray with the environmental group Californians Against Waste. This bill is clarifying things that we thought we already had with the original law in terms of a requirement that the bags that are generated get taken back to the stores for recycling. We also thought that we had information about how many bags were being distributed. This is clarifying that as a grocer responsibility.
- Mark Murray
Person
Right now the only information we have about the bags that are being generated is waste characterization studies going through the solid waste afterwards. And as the Senator mentioned, we are now seeing in the waste stream greater poundage of these plastic bags today in 2021 than we saw in 2014. And so we're seeking this additional information from the grocers to tell us what is really going on, how many bags are being generated so that we can do something to reduce the number of bags that are being generated. Urge an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, additional witnesses in support?
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of a short list, I apologize. Solid Waste Association of North America Legislative Task Force, as well as the National Stewardship Action Council, in support. Thank you.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California in support. Thanks.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant, 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations. Also 350 Ventura County, the Climate Hub. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, are there any witnesses in opposition?
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. Louis Brown here today on behalf of the California Grocers Association in opposition to the bill. I helped negotiate, SB 270. The grocers were proud of the opportunity that we took in the lead of that bill in seeing the prohibition on single use plastic bags get out of grocery stores and other related stores in the market.
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
I think what we're seeing right now is a little bit of a COVID hangover, in that during COVID, we did not allow for reusable bags to be brought back into the store because of the health issues that were related to that, not only for consumers, but definitely our clerks. And so we're in agreement with the author of the bill that there are some changes and some cleanup that need to happen.
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
It just happens that, by chance, one of the references in SB 270 was to a public resources code that's sunsetted as it relates to the in store takeback. So a large number of our grocers already do the in store takeback. We think it's important to clarify that and put that mandate back in the law, so that we do start to see that recycling and that closed loop. As the author said, and we have been in negotiations.
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
Our biggest concern is with the reporting elements that are in the bill. We do think that it covers a vast majority of the industry. Still, $2 million is a really low threshold when it comes to total sales. 300 employees, still a very low threshold when you're talking about the chains. We also see this as confidential business information. You can glean additional information from the data that we would be provided by this information. So we're interested in providing some data.
- Louis Brown Jr.
Person
We think it's important because we do want to see the trend show that these bags are going to be used less. But we think there's some different ways to do that, that they should go to Cal Recycle, it should be aggregated data. It should be reported to the Legislature. It should be protected as confidential business information. We hope that we can get to that point with Senator Allen, and we look forward to continued working with him today. But as the bill is in print, we are opposed. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, additional witnesses in opposition.
- Sarah Pollo Moo
Person
Sarah Pollo Moo on behalf of California Retailers Association, respectfully opposed. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, we'll bring it back to the Committee. Questions or comments? Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Senator, I appreciate and I support the basic thrust of the bill. I just was wondering if you could talk about whether you've considered the point made about proprietary and confidential information and whether there's a way of making sure that the reports are sort of being able to be made confidential and then aggregated before they're provided to the public. I'm just wondering if you thought through that and considered it.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
It's been a little point of contention, probably the most significant point of contention. I know that folks from UFCW have some concerns with that, but we're going to try to see if we can thread the needle on this. There are various parts of our sponsorship coalition that have a particular vision, and of course, the grocers have a different vision. This is the needle threading. This is particularly the issue of needle threading we're dealing with. Mr. Torrico, if you want to give your perspective on the issue...
- Alberto Torrico
Person
If I could, through the Chair. Thank you, Senator. As Senator Allen mentioned in his opening statement, there are three appropriate uses for the funds raised from the sale of the bags. First of all, we think there is significant profit from the sale of bags, first. And second, we don't think the money is being used for the purposes appropriated by the statute. Because that's the case, because that's what we're trying to get at. It really defeats the purpose to aggregate all of that data. We don't think breaking the law is proprietary. We don't think it's appropriate to hide behind proprietary information if you're not following the law.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I would just say there's a lot of regulatory schemes where, especially in the environmental space, where you're able to submit information, where there still can be enforced against a particular entity. But the issues related to proprietary information, I just think it's a valid one that deserves some focus. And so I'm supportive of the bill. I think it's an important one and strongly support it. But I'm hoping you'll focus on this and see if there's some way of addressing the issues related to proprietary information.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Mathis.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Thank you, Madam Chairman. Quiet all afternoon. Senator Allen, on this, I know a lot of the concern with going and doing all of this in the first place with plastic bags was to get us off of plastic bags. One thing I haven't seen in your bill, so I'm going to ask you, why aren't we pushing things like paper bags and other things and really actually making an effort on that? Because I don't really see that in there., here.
- Devon Mathis
Person
So I've got to kind of ask, like, okay, I get we're going after companies kind of hiding behind the information and selling more plastic bags in many cases, and some not even having paper as an option. But what are we doing to ensure that paper bags that we know are not going to be an issue?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Yeah, I think ultimately, at its core, this bill is about meeting the original goals of our plastic bag policy, which is real reuse and real recycling. And if that's not happening, then we got to find a better alternative. And of course, paper bags are the alternative. So obviously, there are certain circumstances where a plastic bag is more efficient, more feasible. It's our general feeling that's, okay, as long as there is true reuse and true recycling happening.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
And this bill calls the question. Because I think ultimately we're not meeting the goals that were laid out when we first pursued the policy in the first and... I don't know if you have additional thoughts on that, Mark.
- Mark Murray
Person
Just to say that when we originally adopted the law, recyclable in this state simply meant take back for recycling. We have now updated that definition, thanks to other legislation by Senator Allen, to require that recyclable means it's actually making it into the economic mainstream. I will say that with regard to paper bags, paper bags have always met that test in terms of recyclability, recycled content. Certainly every grocery store in the state. It's up to them in terms of the bags that they choose to provide. I really like the paper bags made of recycled content. Very recyclable, compostable.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Correct. But you sort of liking paper bags and maybe me liking paper bags and other Members of the Committee liking paper bags doesn't put a, hey, maybe stores ought to look maybe more of paper bags and less of plastic. That's all I'm getting at. It would have been an opportunity to put it in the bill. That's all.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Well, I mean, effectively, this bill is going to help make sure that the plastic bag portion of our economy is meeting the SB 54 goals, which is they're going to have to meet the recyclability or reuse standards. To the large extent that they're not, more sustainable alternatives are going to be at the heart of the answer.
- Mark Murray
Person
If they can't meet that standard, if they can't meet that recyclable standard, they will be gone. We know that paper bags can meet the standard. Paper bags are still in the marketplace. Paper bags will always be in the marketplace based on their capability of being closed loop recycled. There's an opportunity for the plastic bags to achieve that, but it's possible they won't get there.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments from Committee Members? I see none. We have a motion from Assembly Member Friedman. I need a second. Second by Assembly Member Zbur. Senator Allen, would you like to close?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I appreciate the good discussion, and I know you've had a lot going on this evening, but this is about meeting the real vision of SB 270 and SB 54. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I just want to clarify. Will you be accepting the Committee amendments?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I missed it if you said it.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Happy to.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. So we have a motion and a second. Secretary, please take the role.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due passed as amended to Appropriations. Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? Addis? Addis, aye. Friedman? Friedman, aye. Hoover? Hoover, not voting. Mathis? Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi? Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Pellerin, aye. Ward? Ward, aye. Wood? Wood, aye. Zbur? Zbur, aye.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thank you, Members, thank you very much. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
How many votes? That bill has nine votes. We'll leave it open for absent Members. We're in the final four. Four more. Next up, Senator Cortese. SB 69.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Move the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We have a motion and a second. Whenever you're ready.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Can do that. It's a very short presentation, I'm happy to say, for all of you and for me. Thank you, Chair and Members. SB 69 adds transparency to the CEQA notification process. Currently, state agencies have an opportunity to shorten the statute of limitations period for CEQA. To do so, they must submit notices of determination or exemption to OPR, Office of Planning and Research. Then OPR posts these notices to the State Clearinghouse website, but for local agencies to benefit from the shorted limitations period, they must submit these notices to the County Clerk of any county a project is in.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The County Clerk will then post these notices on their own website. 58 counties posting to 58 different websites can make it difficult for people to track notices, to say the least. SB 69 would require all public agencies to post these notices to OPR to be posted to the State Clearinghouse website if they want the shortened limitations period.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
This way, all of the notices can be found in one place. The bill is sponsored by the California State Council of Laborers and its labor environmental support, and let me just ask or let you know that with us to testify today is Victoria Yundt with the California State Council of Laborers. And I'll turn it over to her if that's okay.
- Victoria Yundt
Person
Thank you, and thank you for having me here today. I know it's been a very long day for all of you. So good evening. My name is Victoria Yundt. I'm an attorney at LOZEAU and DRURY which is an environmental public interest law firm. I'm here representing the California State Council of Laborers, sponsor of SB 69. The Laborers Union urges you to vote yes on SB 69.
- Victoria Yundt
Person
The laborers participate in environmental review of many construction projects that could affect workers due to air pollution from construction equipment, soil contamination, and other issues. Through CEQA, we can ensure that these issues are mitigated and the project may go forward safely. SB 69 fixes a gap in the CEQA notice laws created by the recent Court of Appeals decision in Alviso v. San Jose, which was a 2021 opinion.
- Victoria Yundt
Person
In that case, a community group properly requested a copy of the Notice of Determination for a project that would convert farmland to industrial uses pursuant to CEQA Section 21167 F. However, the City of San Jose failed to provide the notice of determination or NOD that was requested, and as a result, the community group missed the short 30 day limitations period under CEQA. The Court of Appeal held that even though the city clearly violated CEQA, there was no remedy for this violation. SB 69 fixes this problem.
- Victoria Yundt
Person
It requires agencies within 24 hours to send NODs to the Office of Planning and Research to post publicly on the State Clearinghouse website. By making these minor changes to CEQA Section 21152, it will make it easier on agencies to provide the public with CEQA notice, and it will also make it easier for the public to access NODs from a single government website on the Internet without making any changes to Section 21167. However, SB 69 does not create an open-ended limitations period.
- Victoria Yundt
Person
Even if the agency fails to provide notice to OPR to post on the State Clearinghouse website, any lawsuit must be brought within 180 days of the date of the agency's decision to approve the project. This is the default limitations period that would even apply if no NOD is posted and it provides a backstop. We believe SB 69 resolves a serious problem created by the Alviso v. San Jose decision while balancing the public's need for a reasonable notice against developers and agencies need for finality. We urge you to vote yes on SB 69. Thank you again.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Are there additional witnesses in support?
- Matthew Cremins
Person
Good evening, Madam Chairman and Members. Matt Cremins here on behalf of the California-Nevada Conference of Operating Engineers here today in support. Thank you.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
John L. Pruitt on behalf of SEHA as well as CRPE providing support for SB 69. Thank you.
- Christina Scaringe
Person
Good evening. Christina Scaringe with the Center for Biological Diversity in support.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Melissa Romero, California Environmental Voters, in support.
- John Kennedy
Person
John Kennedy with the Rural Counties. It's been a long process with this bill and with the amends adopted in Committee tonight, we're happy to support. Thank you.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume, CleanEarth4Kids, strong support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, next, are there witnesses in opposition? See none. Questions or comments from Committee--Assembly Member Ward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Senator, for working on this. Just for clarification, a similar issue has come up in my city as well and were this bill to be law going forward, right now, a city has to file with the county, the NOD or the notice of exemption. Is that still a requirement that they file with them or by filing with the state's OPR clearinghouse, does that satisfy the noticing requirements, the filing requirements?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
If they want the shortened limitations period, they have to post to both.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Both still? Okay.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yes.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay. Alright. Good to know. Thank you. Happy to move the bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Pellerin.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Just really quick, there was always confusion in Santa Cruz County because it says in law that the County Clerk gets these notices, but it's actually the Clerk of the Board, and I just think at some point, while we're here, we should try to fix that to make it the appropriate county department.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We're happy to take a look at that. I know you're obviously a subject matter expert.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
I totally missed that before, but now that I see it here, I just want to say something. Thanks.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you for bringing that up.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Assembly Member Ward?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I'll add on to that too, if you're going back and you're looking for some of these, the problem that I had is that when you have a major city that's got a pretty well substantial city clerk's office, they're able to perform functions of a county clerk but are not permitted to be able to do so.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Don't want to expand, obviously, the scope of this bill, but if you are looking around for other areas within this area to improve, having major cities being able to be a recipient of NOD, NOE filings as well, could expedite filing requirements in a major city like mine.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, I'd certainly be happy to work with you on that in the future. Without a doubt.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, any other questions or comments? Okay, so we have a motion and a second. Would you like to close?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Secretary, please take the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is 'do pass as amended to appropriations.' Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? Addis? Aye. Addis, aye. Friedman? Aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover? Aye. Hoover, aye. Mathis? Aye. Mathis, aye. Muratsuchi? Aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward? Aye. Ward, aye. Wood? Aye. Wood, aye. Zbur? Aye. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That bill has ten votes. We'll leave it open for the absent Member. Next, SB 751 by Senator Padilla. Wait, is that SB 619 or--
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
At your discretion, Madam Chair, I have both, so however you'd like to take them, I'm happy to present.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, whichever.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I'll take 751 if that's okay.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, we'll start with 751.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. Good evening. Thanks for your patience. You should be serving coffee in the audience. I'm just saying. As you, Madam Chair and Members well know, matters of solid waste handling and retrieval are issues of environmental health and public health and welfare concern. They are typically enabled through public contracts with public entities, special districts, counties, and cities, with providers, either singular exclusive contracts or multiple contracts based upon a consistent set of standards.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
SB 751 seeks to address a little known but very real residual provision that is often found in these public contracts for waste hauling services, which equate a labor dispute, work slowdown, stoppage, or strike with forced majeure in the contract language. Basically an act of God that is completely unforeseen and uncontrollable. It is our view and the supporters view that this is not, in fact, the case. And it has a very deleterious impact on the public health, safety, and welfare.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Because materially, what it does is go beyond the normal provisions in a contract for these services that the parties typically conclude together to provide for remedies in cases of stoppage or slowdown of work, including liquidated damages. Because of the language specifically exempts the public agency or puts a chilling effect on the public agency's ability to enforce the provisions of the contract by equating a work stoppage, slowdown, or strike with force majeure, it basically paralyzes the public entity.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
This has actually been seen in the real world very recently in the San Diego County region less than a couple of years ago, where in fact, there was a labor dispute with the solid waste handling and hauling services. This resulted in literally public waste and trash being piled up in commercial and residential spaces proposing a tremendous threat to public health, safety, and welfare. 751 would eliminate that language from being provided in these public contracts.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
It also has specific provisions that address, after the fact, credits or refunds by consumers, as well as noticing requirements. My lead witness went home a long time ago, so I think it's just me. And following any additional support, which I hope. I'm happy to answer any questions, Madam Chair.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Any additional witnesses in support? Looks like you have one.
- Geoffrey Neill
Person
Geoff Neal, representing the City of Chula Vista, in support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next, any witnesses in opposition?
- John Moffatt
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. John Moffatt on behalf of Waste Management. We have an opposed unless position on the bill. We've had ongoing conversations with the author's office and appreciate those conversations and hoping that we can continue those and kind of bring this to conclusion here in the very near future. Two issues with the bill. First, the timing on the mandate of when the force majeure would come out and the new provisions would go into the franchise agreement.
- John Moffatt
Person
The bill requires that to occur either when the contract is entered into, when it's brand new, no issues there, or amended. And our concern with the amended language is, what exactly does that mean? Many franchise agreements have pricing sheets that are adopted on an annual basis. Is that an amendment for the purposes of triggering the provisions of the bill? We've kind of gone back and forth on some concepts there.
- John Moffatt
Person
Our preference would be that the provisions of the bill are triggered either when the agreement is new or renewed. It's at that renewal period when a lot of the larger portions, the local government, the waste hauler, will sit down and say, okay, is this working? Is this not working? You'll see some major changes made to the agreement at that time. We think that's an appropriate time to trigger the provisions of the bill.
- John Moffatt
Person
Second part of the bill has four different items that need to be included on a going forward basis in the franchise agreement related to consumers, refunds, et cetera, et cetera. We don't have any issues with those provisions of the bill, but we do think one needs to be added. We think there needs to be a mandate that the hauler and the local government need to come up with an alternative performance plan, an agreement.
- John Moffatt
Person
When a strike occurs, it's very difficult if you're notified of a strike one day to make sure you are out performing the contract as agreed to, running all of the routes, picking everything up the very next day. It takes some time to get alternative workers and others in to cover those routes. And so the bill, as it's currently drafted, doesn't have a provision that allows the local government and the hauler to come up with an alternative performance plan, meaning that, if there's a strike, and you're not picking up the next day, you're subject to fines and penalties under the existing agreement.
- John Moffatt
Person
And so we'd just like to see one provision added there to require that the local government entity and the hauler come up with an alternative performance plan that they agreed to before any fines or penalties or things like that are levied against the hauler for not performing the agreement as it was agreed to. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Additional witnesses in opposition.
- David Creager
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair, Members. David Creager for Waste Connections, aligned with Mr. Moffatt's comments. Thank you.
- Stephanie Morwell
Person
Good evening, Chair and Members. Stephanie Morwell, here on behalf of Recology. Recology does not have an official position on the bill, but we've been having good conversations with the author and his staff and look forward to continuing to work through some of our remaining issues. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next. Any questions or comments from Committee Members? Assembly Member Ward?
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thanks. I want to thank my Senator for working on this and had a chance to kind of review some of the opposition's points, technical that I think that they are. I wondered if you had any thoughts first on why choosing to look at an amendment to a contract period which could happen at any time for any reason as opposed to the renewal and if there's any flexibility in the language that you're thinking about there.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Madam Chair and Assembly Member. Thank you for the question. The answer is yes. There's been dialogue, and I think we've been very clear in that sort of interaction that the intent here with respect to amendment language would be with respect to substantive amendments or substantial amendments we're not talking about...
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
In other words, when there's a meeting of the parties to look at the primary elements of the contract, that would also be an appropriate time, in our view, to look at the substantive provisions in the contract, if, in fact, that's what's being reopened. I think that would be the intent. And we have signaled that. Generally speaking, with respect to requiring an alternative performance plan.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I would just point out that this is not something, in our view, that needs to be mandated, but we're happy to do it, along with the other provisions on notice and on refund or credit. Because typically the point of the bill is such that typically these provisions already are in these either exclusive franchise agreements or distributed franchise agreements. Provisions for agreeing on liquidated damages, on a process for dealing with an alternative provision of service on a temporary basis. A slowdown in work. Those are typically provided.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
The point of the bill is that, in addition to those typical provisions which are left to the parties to conclude and not mandated or prescribed by the state, having the force majeure language be allowed in a public contract, then renders all those other agreements sort of moot because you can have all the plans you want in the statute.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
But if they can invoke a work slowdown or a strike, as an act of God, it basically gives the hauler or the provider some shielding to perform under any circumstances. And most general counsels or city attorneys are loathe to even try to enforce the contract in those situations. So that's the point of the bill. I would say we are working, for the record... We did receive some suggested language from the opposition.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
We did, in fact, respond to that language with some tweaks. We had not heard back. But I would be in agreement that we will continue that dialogue to sort of fine tune this. But I wanted to clarify that.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, and thank you for raising the second point as well. I'd love to see if this moves forward to the floor, any improvements that are able to kind of work on these issues, because I think that's where the implementation is on this bill. And to the extent that things are out of their control that an alternative plan would be able to help, that would be encouraging. And then to your first point, under, I guess, the law or even under this section, who determines what would be a substantial amendment?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I think, first, I would speak to the intent that it be to the primary provisions of the contract, not things that are a minor change to word choice. I mean, something that would have a substantial impact on the performance and consideration provided for by the parties. And I think that as we go forward, we can clarify that in language as what may constitute. The parties can agree.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I think the state can prescribe, perhaps, that you need to have such a plan or that the provision would apply in the case of a substantial amendment. And we can define that typically. And I know that it's defined in many places...
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And referencing something, if it's already defined, that would be helpful for clarification. Thank you.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Wood?
- Jim Wood
Person
Yeah, just a quick question. Comment, I mean. This is an interesting discussion, but I'm curious to the opposition, you said we don't think we can be in a position to hear about, know there's a strike one day and be able to service the next day. It's not like it's a sneak attack. I mean, you kind of know there's problems with negotiations before there's a strike. I understand not wanting to incur penalties and such, but you shouldn't be surprised if things aren't going well. What are you looking for?
- John Moffatt
Person
It's a fair question. I think it's a question of number of drivers, right. As you noted, yes, sometimes these things as they happen, it's slow, it's not surprising. But as part of the performance of these franchise agreements, we are expected to pick up recycling on these days from these neighborhoods, organics on these days, from these neighborhoods, municipal solid waste these days, these neighborhoods. Business is intermingled in there too.
- John Moffatt
Person
And so when, if you do have a strike situation occurring, that doesn't mean we don't pick up anything the next day. But it's a matter of, okay, how do we get drivers from other areas? It takes time to bring in personnel when that actually occurs to be able to get up to speed. You're generally not going to replace one for one. So you need an alternative plan that's worked out with the jurisdiction where you say, okay, we're going to get everything picked up.
- John Moffatt
Person
It's going to be on a little bit different schedule, and there's going to be some delay here just because we're losing 200 folks. And we can replace them immediately or within the next couple of days with 50. We had this situation, Waste Management, we had a strike about two months ago over in the Central Coast area.
- John Moffatt
Person
We were out there picking up two days after. We were fully up to speed and had everything picked up within five to seven days, and the strike was over in nine. And so different companies handle these things different ways. To the Senator's earlier comment about the plan and then force majeure. I think how I envision or how I read the structure of the bill is when this thing comes out of the contract, these things have to go into it.
- John Moffatt
Person
And so that's why we're saying right now, yeah, we're going to have contracts out there that have alternative performance plans already in them. But there are hundreds of different contracts throughout the state, and I don't think we can say with certainty that every contract has one of those plans.
- John Moffatt
Person
So we do think it's important that, if there is a contract where force majeure is coming out, which is what some folks would use in the past to get a little bit of wiggle room on the performance, that there needs to be some performance plan agreed to with the local jurisdiction before. So force majeure comes out, alternative comes in, and everybody knows what the plan is going to be if a strike does occur.
- Jim Wood
Person
Okay.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So thank you for bringing the bill. I think it's a good one and will be supporting it. On the first point, obviously, I think that makes sense. Sounds like you guys are close to defining what kinds of changes to a contract will trigger this. On the second one, I'm just wondering whether or not some of the labor supporters whether you've had any discussions with the labor supporters about this alternative plan.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Typically, yes. And they're aware that already in many, as is the case for the example of the case in the City of Chula Vista, and with the same hauler in portions of the City of San Diego in recent times. There were existing provisions with waste haulers who had collective bargaining groups that were part of their workforce. And there were already provisions in existence in those agreements that addressed this sort of scenario to some degree.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
In the case that I referred to, that I had a front row seat to, some of the things that the opposition articulated just didn't happen. And they didn't happen because of that other problematic language that was then relied upon. In terms of going forward, I would just say that we are completely open to refining that and looking at that and working with all parties, support and opposition, about what that would look like.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I don't want to create any new unintended consequences in looking at an interim performance plan, labor or otherwise. But I think all of us agree that we want to look at scenario, and we would encourage the parties to conclude that great.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you. Appreciate it.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thanks. Next. So we don't have a motion. Motion by Assembly Member Zbur. Second by Assembly Member Wood. Would you like to close?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Secretary, please take the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due past two appropriations. Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? Addis? Addis, aye. Friedman? Friedman, aye. Hoover? Hoover, no. Mathis? Mathis, no. Muratsuchi? Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Pellerin, aye. Ward? Ward, aye. Wood? Wood, aye. Zbur? Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. We'll leave it open for the absent Member. Next is SB 619, also by Senator Padilla.
- Devon Mathis
Person
Motion to move the bill.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Hello, hello, hello.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We have a motion and a second. Whenever you're ready.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I like that. I love Bipartisan. Thank you. All right. I'm also very pleased to present SB 619. I'll try to give the abbreviated version because I know that it's late, but we all know that the State of California has led the nation in setting aggressive GHG reduction goals, conversion goals, to renewable energy. Minor detail with this. Our energy grid is aging and doesn't have the capacity to handle or even meet the goals that we have set for ourselves.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
And the typical time of regulatory approval from the California PUC, which does do great work and works very hard with respect to new, substantial transmission infrastructure, averages over a decade. A couple of cycles ago, this Legislature enacted AB 205, which, with respect to local and interconnection transmission infrastructure, provided an alternative path for those types of projects that met certain SB 100 qualifications so that they could make a filing with the CEC.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
My Bill, SB 619, would create an even wider alternative lane for similarly qualified projects, but would include in that definition, broader, higher load transmission infrastructure in General, and with some very specific provisions, would allow an IOU to submit an application both to the PUC and to the CEC. But the Lead Sequa determinations would be executed by CEC under specific provisions requiring specific actions to deal with mitigating impacts to underserved communities. It would allow them to also opt into this process and have it satisfy those determinations.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
To be clear, this process with the CEC would not in any way diminish the existing authority of the PUC to make the necessary findings around necessity or convenience or to set rates. This is simply providing another way to expedite our ability to get transmission infrastructure approved and entitled and, we hope, built. And I think that's the simplest way I could put it here. And with me is Mark Joseph with the Coalition of California Utility Employees.
- Mark Joseph
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. Mark Joseph with the Coalition of California Utility Employees. SB 420 was about the medium sized projects. This Bill is about the big deal transmission projects that now get, and deserve to get a full Eir and a complete SQL review. This is transmission that we must have to meet our climate goals. Under this Bill, these projects would continue to get exactly the same SQL review as before. The only thing that changes is which agency prepares the Eir.
- Mark Joseph
Person
The way things work now, utility will file an application with the PUC for a permit. The PUC evaluates the need, the cost, and several other factors to determine whether to grant the permit. It also prepares an Eir evaluating the proposed project. What we've seen is that when the PUC prepares an Eir, it can take two, three, four years. Meanwhile, the rest of the PUC's evaluation, the non sequential evaluation, may take 12 months or a little more.
- Mark Joseph
Person
And we've seen that it may take a long time before the Eir is finished. This Bill would instead give the utility the option to use the Energy Commission's AB 205 process, where the Energy Commission would prepare the Eir in nine months and in parallel with the PUC's normal process. Then the Energy Commission would send the Eir over to the PUC.
- Mark Joseph
Person
What we're taking advantage here is the Energy Commission is really good at environmental review of energy projects and we should take advantage of its decades of experience doing that. This way, the PUC can issue its final decision as soon as it finishes the non SQL review. This could save several years overall in getting these needed big deal transmission line projects approved. Again, this does not change the scope of the SQL review at all. It just changes the venue.
- Mark Joseph
Person
This is a Pragmatic Bill that will help get needed transmission projects built years sooner. Thank you and we ask for your support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Additional witnesses in support.
- Adam Smith
Person
Adam Smith, Southern California Edison strong support.
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of Advanced Energy United in support. Thank you.
- Genesis Tang
Person
Genesis Tang on behalf of Clean Air Task Force in strong support.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Brady Van Engelen, California Chamber of Commerce here in support.
- Kara Martinson
Person
Kara Martinson on behalf of the Large Scale Solar Association and American Clean Power. In support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California, in support.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant 1000 grandmothers for future generations in support. And also 350 Ventura County Climate Hub in support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none questions or comments from Committee. Assembly Member Wood.
- Jim Wood
Person
Thank you. Appreciate that this will speed up the transmission piece of that, which is we know is a seven to 10 year process. Does the CEC currently do this? Now as far as do they have the ability to certify these sequa documents or is this a new task we're asking the CEC to do?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
This is an expansion of the types of projects that can qualify for an opt in process that was established under AB 205. So it has existed, the framework exists, but we're expanding what the eligible projects would be that could take advantage of the opt in dual filing process.
- Mark Joseph
Person
I would just add that in terms of expertise, the Energy Commission has been evaluating transmission projects as part of its review of generation projects for many, many decades. So it knows what to do with transmission projects. And this gives it a path for a transmission only project to opt in.
- Jim Wood
Person
That didn't quite answer the question, though. Is this something that they have the ability to do this? You mentioned 205. 205 was a budget Bill. So it wasn't really debated much. It kind of came in as a budget Bill and as such, Late and I'm supporting the Bill. So I'm just trying to understand process here because we're asking the CEC to do a lot of new things. They're supposed to be helping us with gas prices and a whole lot of other things.
- Jim Wood
Person
And so I just want to be sure if we're giving them this authority, that it's actually going to save time because they actually have the people to do this and speed the process up. So that's the gist of where I'm going.
- Mark Joseph
Person
I'll give you the very pragmatic answer. The Energy Commission has an environmental consulting firm that they use for many of their environmental projects which has an annual contract. They're there. They are the flexible additional staffing that is available to the Energy Commission already to do the extra work that we are giving them.
- Jim Wood
Person
Okay. All right, great. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Muratsuchi?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Following up on some questions, I mean, I would imagine the PUC can also contract out with consultants. I mean, why is it that the Energy Commission is going to be faster?
- Mark Joseph
Person
The Energy Commission has a long, long history of doing this. And the Energy Commission now has a statute and a process and regulations adopted to do this in 270 days. The PUC doesn't.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
The 270 days is for the litigation resolving litigation. Is that correct?
- Mark Joseph
Person
It's 270 days to prepare the Eir and 270 days for any subsequent litigation.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. All right. Like I said with Senator Becker's Bill, I share your goal of speeding up this process. Would love to be added as a co author to your Bill.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you, Member. And I would just also add for the Member that the other value here is that you have another avenue that can work concurrently with existing avenues of application. So that in itself accelerates our capacity here.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments? I have just one question. I just want to clarify that you will be taking the amendments and utilities.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Madam Chair. I neglected in my opening statement that to thank the Committee staff that we will be accepting the amendments.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. We have a motion by Assemblymer Mathis second by Assembly Member Addis secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is do pass to Utilities and Energy Committee. Rivas aye. Flora aye. Addis aye. Friedman aye. Hoover aye. Mathis aye. Muratsuchi aye. Pellerin aye. Ward aye. Wood aye. Zbur aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has 11 votes. That's out.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you Madam Chair, Members.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Next Senator Gonzalez with SJR two. Thank you motion and a second whenever you're ready.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
All right, well, basically, I went to Montreal last year, Madam Chair, and I came back, I talked to a tribal leader, and they discussed a nonproliferation treaty. And so it has three tenants: a moratorium on future exploration and drilling, an equitable phase out of all production, and a just global transition to clean energy, which we know is so important in California.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
And with me today, Madam Chair, I have Marjaneh Moini, board Member at Physicians for Social Responsibility in San Francisco, and Dr. Aradna Tripati, a climate science Professor at UCLA. And I respectfully asked for an I vote of SJR two.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and the Members of Committee. My name is Marjaneh Moini. I'm a cancer Doctor and on the board of Physicians for Social Responsibility. Climate change is the greatest health threat we have ever faced. And fossil fuels are the major driver of climate change.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
But also fossil fuels are major source of many pollutants. These pollutants affect our health in every aspect, and these pollutants are generated at every stage, from extraction to processing to transport to burning the fossil fuels. Carbon pollution is not the only deadly product of fossil fuels and carbon capture is not how we can actually end our dependence on fossil fuels.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
The World Health Organization has supported the Fossil Fuel Non Proliferation Treaty because these pollutants are associated with many health threats, with many health conditions, including poor birth outcomes, lung disease, heart disease, autism, dementia and cancer. The California Public Health Scientific Advisory Panel has concluded that the most effective way to protect public health from fossil fuels to actually transition away from fossil fuels and stop fossil fuel process.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
California, where more than 7 million people live within a mile of an operational oil and gas well, must stop the expansion of fossil fuels and must phase out existing operations, starting with the 3200 foot health protective zone to protect the overburdened communities first. Our children deserve a livable future. Please support the Fossil Fuel Nonproliferation Treaty. Thank you. Thank you, chairperson and Members of the Committee. I'm a person who's from California. I grew up in the San Fernando Valley.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
I work at UCLA, and I also direct the Center for Diverse Leadership and Science. I'm also here because I'm a parent with a five month old son. My mom and sister live in the state now. Several years ago, the radio described experiences of young children in Paradise, California who lost their home, their parents, their world. They didn't have the words to express in school and grief counseling. We heard about the health impacts, the insurance meltdown with people not being insured, the burn of increasing rates.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
Mine doubled this year. And what's going to happen in the next three? We're going to have to sell our home and move houses, not selling, the real estate market crashing, farmers losing everything, tourism dropping, billions turning into trillions of loss. Fossil fuels are poisoning everyone. Our major industries, our economy, and the disasters and impacts will only worsen if we fail to take transformative action to phase out fossil fuels.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
As a climate scientist, I can say that the climate emergency was worse than we've imagined in California across the globe. Let's be clear. The extraction, refining and burning of fossil fuels is what's driving the climate emergency. It's 86% of emissions as established by the IPCC, the International Energy Agency, the United Nations and the National Climate Assessment. We have to end new fossil fuel production now. We have to phase out existing pollution and limit global temperatures to the Paris Climate Agreement.
- Marjaneh Moini
Person
Yet fossil fuel producers are planning to extract more than double the fossil fuels by 2030 than is consistent with that one and a half degree C limit. There's no time left to delay. And I commend this Committee for all you've done already. I urge you to endorse the critically important fossil Fuel Non Proliferation Treaty. Please keep building California's leadership with further urgent action to stop new fossil fuels in our state and to phase them out altogether. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Additional witnesses in support.
- Christina Scaringe
Person
Good evening, Christina Scaringe from the Center for Biological Diversity in strong support.
- Siri Lori
Person
Siri Lori on behalf of Indivisible California and Fossil Free California in support
- Juliet Alio
Person
Juliet Alio with 350 Sacramento. Strongly support.
- Jonah Bluth
Person
Jonah Bluth with 350 Bay Area action in support.
- Megan Shumway
Person
I'm Megan Shumway. A retired nurse representing the Last Chance Alliance and Indivisible California State strong in strong support.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California, Santa Cruz Climate Action Network. And I'm so hungry, I think I've forgot the last one. But it's important.
- Carol Sant
Person
Carol Van Sant, 1000 grandmothers for future generations in support. And 350 Ventura County climate hub in support. Thank you for everything.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Good evening. Suzanne Hume. Clean earth for kids. Strong support.
- Jason Feifel
Person
Jason Feifel, parent, Oakland resident, in strong support. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next. Any witnesses in opposition? See none. Questions or comments from the Committee? Seeing none. We have a motion and a second. Would you like to close?
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
I just want to thank our sponsors and we know that last week we just experienced our hottest temperature on record. So for that reason, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Secretary. Please take the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is that the resolution be adopted. Rivas aye. Flora no. Addis aye. Friedman aye. Hoover no. Mathis no. Muratsuchi.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin. Pellerin, aye. Ward. Ward, aye. Wood. Wood, aye. Zbur. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. That is out. Thank you. Next, Senator Stern, SB 261.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I think I'm... I think I'm the last senator standing now. No, one more. Thank you for the motion. So, just at the outset, I want to accept the amendments referenced on page eight of the analysis. And I'll keep this brief. You looked at a companion measure earlier, SB 253. SB 261 looks for not just reporting of greenhouse gas emissions. But for climate risks, for businesses, for folks doing business in California, this is a big deal. We know, we've seen insurance companies all of a sudden, seemingly out of nowhere, decide they can't insure anymore. Well, it's not actually out of nowhere. They were aware of these risks, but those risks weren't required to be disclosed to the people of California. The same is true for all kinds of other companies. We're trying to use some tried and true frameworks that don't say all risks are created equal or have a one-size-fits-all solution, but use industry-tested standards that everyone from Bank of America to Amazon are currently deploying to look at how climate may affect their bottom line and our pocketbooks. So I'm hoping that we can earn your support here today. I'm happy to dig into questions, but I don't want to over talk this. I'll hand it to my lead witnesses here with Ceres and with Enviro Voters. I'm not sure who wants to go first. Sarah. All right, jump on in, Madam Chair.
- Sarah Sachs
Person
Good evening, Chair and Members. Sarah Sachs speaking today on behalf of Ceres, a national nonprofit that has worked for decades with influential investors, major companies and policymakers in California and across the country to build a more sustainable economy. Ceres believes California has an opportunity to set a gold standard on requiring climate-related corporate risk disclosures with SB 261, and we are pleased to support and serve as a sponsor for this bill. The climate crisis poses material financial risk to companies and investors, and systemic risk to financial markets. And it requires urgent action by market stakeholders. This is why last year, more than 500 investors, representing 39 trillion in assets under management, called on governments across the world to strengthen climate disclosure standards, including through mandatory reporting. This is also why thousands of companies support the disclosure of climate risk information or disclose that information themselves, including 92 of the 100 largest public companies in the world. However, the current state of voluntary climate disclosure is inadequate for investors to evaluate the climate risk facing the companies in their portfolio. As the phrase goes, you can't manage what you can't measure. With California soon to be the fourth largest economy in the world, it is well positioned to join the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and over 30 nations and regions in requiring TCFD-aligned disclosures. This is why several major companies above and below the $500 million revenue threshold support this bill, including Microsoft, Patagonia, REI Co-Op, VF Corporation, Sierra Nevada Brewing Company, Growth Collaborative and more. For all of the reasons stated above, Ceres respectfully requests your aye vote on this measure. Thank you for your time and consideration.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Good evening. Melissa Romero, California Environmental Voters here today in strong support of SB 261, which is part of a package of bills that includes also SB 253, which you all heard earlier, the Climate Corporate Accountability Act. If we ignore. The material and financial risk that comes with climate change. We have everything to lose. Financial institutions, investors and companies have a responsibility to understand and anticipate the risks and the opportunities ahead of us. The impacts of the climate crisis can and have destabilized capital markets and are going to lead to serious negative consequences for financial institutions and the economy if we do not plan ahead to anticipate this risk. It is the responsible thing to do for our economy, which we all rely on. And it's critical for the success of a business to disclose their climate risk. Failure to make a disclosure can facilitate poor investment decisions, asset losses, and the continuation of practices that lead to worsening climate change. So passing SB 261 along with SB 253 will put California in the national lead on climate once again. So we urge your aye vote on the bill. Thank you. And I was also asked to pass along support from the Greenlanding Institute, another co-sponsor, as well as the Natural Resources Defense Council in Sierra Club, California.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Additional witnesses in support?
- Isabeau 'Izzy' C. Swindler
Person
Izzy Swindler on behalf of the City and County of San Francisco in support. Thank you.
- Elena Pieri
Person
Elena Pieri speaking this evening on behalf of Grove Collaborative and E-commerce Retail Company in support. Thank you.
- Christina Scaringe
Person
Good evening. Christina Scaringe with the Center for Biological Diversity, in strong support.
- Siri Lori
Person
Siri Lori on behalf of Indivisible California and Fossil Free California in support. Thank you.
- Julia Alio
Person
Julia Alio with 350 Sacramento and 350 Bay Area Action. Thank you. In support.
- Jonah Bluth
Person
Jonah Bluth on behalf of 350 Humboldt in support. Thank you.
- Janet Cox
Person
Janet Cox for Climate Action California, Santa Cruz Climate Action Network and the three... Indivisible California Green Team. Thank you. In strong support. Thank you, Senator Stern, for sticking with this one.
- Carol Van Zandt
Person
Carol Van Zandt, 1000 Grandmothers For The Future Generations, in support. Also Climate Reality Project San Fernando Valley, Climate Reality Project Los Angeles and 350 Ventura County Climate Hub. Thank you so much for everything.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Aradhna Tripati, UCLA's Center for Diverse Leadership in Science, in strong support.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume. Clean Earth for Kids. Strong support.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Next, any witnesses in opposition?
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Madam Chair, members, Brady Van Engelen, California Chamber of Commerce, here in respectful opposition to SB 261 along with a large coalition of other business and trade organizations as well. So our opposition is really keyed on two key points here. First, there is a six significant concern with the lower threshold, as you'll see from the committee analysis, they note that it's at $500 million as opposed to a billion, which is what I think some of the other sponsors have noted from SB 253. That lower threshold creates this weird dynamic where there's parent subsidiary companies, as you know, $500 million for a subsidiary is... there are a lot of parent companies that have holdings and assets that are within the $500 million range. So would these parent and the bill is silent on this. Would these parent companies be the ones that are reporting on behalf of those subsidiaries or in reporting perhaps 1415 times depending on the size of the organization or is that subsidiary going to be reporting in and of itself? The bill is silent on that. There's not a lot of clarity there. So implementation could be challenging based on that notion in and of itself. Separately, TCFD is another component of this bill that it really centers on requiring reporting under the TCFD, which is one of the climate risk disclosure regimes that's out there. Look, we're here in California and the California Chamber of Commerce, we can't dictate what happens at an international level. But I do know the EU and the UK are adopting different climate regimes and different climate reporting mechanisms. In fact, I think the UK actually just adopted it's called the ESRB reporting requirement and we have a lot of companies that are actually reporting under that regime and from what I understand, that regime is actually what's going to subsume the TCFD reporting requirements. So we'd simply just ask that look at actually using reporting metrics rather than codifying a TCFD in statute, because once you codify TCFD in statute, they're going to have to continue reporting on that regardless of what they may have geographical requirements somewhere else. And they're going to continue to have to report on that. But TCFD is going to be in place and be codified, and they're going to have to report on that as well too. So there's a lot of duplication that would occur and we just encourage thinking about that more broadly a holistic approach rather than looking at what we're doing just here in California because these are companies, as the sponsors have said, that have a global footprint. So let's look at this from a broader perspective and think about how we actually can change that from a broader perspective.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Additional witnesses in opposition?
- Joanne Bettencourt
Person
Joanne Bettencourt on behalf of SIFMA, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, in opposition.
- Sarah Pollo Moo
Person
Sarah Pollo Moo with California Retailers Association, respectfully opposed.
- Anna Ferrera
Person
Anna Ferrera with Wine Institute. Respectfully opposed.
- Melanie Cuevas
Person
Melanie Cuevas with the California Bankers Association. Opposed unless amended. Appreciate the conversations we've had so far and looking forward to continuing them. Thank you.
- Zachary Leary
Person
Good evening. Zach Leary with the Western States Petroleum Association. We're opposed.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Now, bringing it back to the committee, questions? I'll start with Assemblymember Ward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Senator, for bringing this forward. It's encouraging that we're doing better on transparency and trying to really monitor what any of our activities, our responsibilities are as it relates to climate emissions under 253. And here making sure that there is an analysis of an entity's risk, perhaps because the hour is late and we've covered a lot of ground here today, and this is important and a little bit groundbreaking. I just wanted to get some clarification because I do have some confusion. When you're talking about establishing what a climate-related risk is, who determines what is a climate-related risk, what goes into the report? And so we heard there's different standards, maybe, for different nations that are also looking at this as a helpful tool. How do we decide here in California or in the U.S. what goes into the definition of a climate-related financial risk?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you for the question. I'll turn to my sponsors if I'm saying this wrong, but the company does is my understanding that you have to make a good faith effort to look at what material risks may be impacting your company. And a company that sells ketchup is going to have very different risks than a company that sells shoes. It's not that there's one reporting entity saying, here's what faces the shoe supply chain for Nike, saying, this is exactly what those risks have to be. It's really how the SEC is currently doing their framework, which is about materiality and whether that threshold is met, will really be based on the efforts of the company.
- Sarah Sachs
Person
Yeah, and I just want to note quickly, the TCFD framework that has been proposed through this bill was developed about five or six years ago by a variety of stakeholders, including those from the business world, and is regarded as the leading global standard. And in fact, the EU and UK regulations that were mentioned actually rely on TCFD as their basis. So TCFD very much is the framework that everyone who's considering a climate risk disclosure framework is looking to and developing any sort of standard. So this bill would build on work that we're seeing globally in terms of the risks. The TCFD framework lays out a variety of options and guidance for how to consider these risks. Typically, they fall into two major categories transition risks, so emerging regulations, technological, legal risks or physical risks so acute, such as wildfires, flood or chronic risks. So drought, water shortage, et cetera.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So is this either or both? If I risk to a company for its assets as it relates to climate impacts, say, if I was a major corporation and I was headquartered in an area prone to sea level rise, I would have to disclose to my shareholders that I've got this risk, and you should take that into account, as far as your investments in this company, or is it the risk to the climate itself? Say I'm a company that produces products that use palm oil, therefore we are destroying rainforests and importing material and that should be accounted or is it both?
- Sarah Sachs
Person
It's the first, so versus risk from climate. It's more the risk to the company itself. And this is very much a strong strategic framework for companies to think through, both in the short term and long term, to think through what chronic risks they're already facing within the state or acute, and how they can think through the financial or planning measures that they need to take, both within the company itself but within the supply chain that could impact the economic state of the business and shareholders in the process.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So I very much will be supportive of this today. I'd be very cautious about how we continue to develop this, especially as it implements and we define this so that there is consistency, because to the extent there's also administrative oversight here and the possibility for a penalty. More importantly, you want to get this right. You want to be consistent between all the companies and the information that's put out there and to have company A believe in good faith that it is trying to evaluate what its risk is. And company B does the same, but has a different analysis and comes up with a different report, a different conclusion that leaves company A more risky, more less apt, maybe for investment, puts them at a disadvantage, maybe competitively for business activity. If they think apples to apples that people are looking at these reports and trying to figure out who is on more solid footing and is worthy of investment, whether it's because that investment is they're on more sound footing sustainably or they're just a more environmentally conscious company and that's who I want to invest in. I think that the definitions are going to matter in the success of this and so please continue to work on that as well.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I will do so. And I would also note just on page seven of the analysis, it's not an actual amendment from the committee but there's a good provision about maybe ARB having a stronger role in helping lay out some of those standards. So that's something we could consider, we're very open to considering going forward, even though it wasn't sort of laid out as a structured amendment, trying to get ARB in the sort of driver's seat and making sure that, say, these international standards are taken into account as well as evolving SEC standards and that we're not sort of just chasing standards.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I think that could be helpful. I'm just saying that if this goes into effect and we're developing this program, that we do so in a way that's very clear for consistency, that everybody is able to play on the same field. It'll be something very new here in California, obviously, possibly a very important tool. But it's important that we get this right so that some are maybe leaders in its implementation, maybe doing it faithfully and rightfully, but not rendering themselves at a disadvantage to others that are trying to skirt around it or delay as this implements.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assemblymember Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Thank you. Along the, Assemblymember Ward's lines. Senator, thank you, first of all, for your ongoing leadership in fighting climate change. You're a global visionary with global stature, and so why wouldn't you want to align your proposal? Mean the chamber is talking about how the EU is going in a different direction. I don't know if it's true or not. I see you're shaking your head, but it seems like it would make sense that we would want to kind of have aligned metrics so that we can compare how California businesses are dealing with what the EU is measuring. And so is that your intent?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Yes, I think that so long as we're not just saying any standard counts and we're sort of saying if it's an international standard, it works for compliance, or if it's any federal standard works, we want to have some of our sort of California quality standards in there. That's why I think the airborne role is important. But we want to say if you're B of A and you're saying we don't do business with anyone who's not disclosing under the ISSB now in Europe, that should be workable, right? Especially to get deeper up their supply chains and those who are taking chances on scope three emissions disclosure. So I would love to work with the chamber if this bill moves forward and sort of try to work through some of those compliance issues as well as the parent subsidiary company issue. I think there's some good guidance within not necessarily TCFD, but within the EU framework emerging that might be somewhere to look to. But, yeah, we want to get things aligned without calling out so many standards that anything could count and then therefore that there's really no rigor to the process. So I think if we can put CARB in the driver's seat and then call out sort of a flexible range of standards here that align with TCFD, I think we'd be in good shape.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay. And last, I know that we've had several people asking about the insurance companies and their exposure to all the climate risk. Is your bill going to say require a State Farm to estimate what is their total climate liability exposure?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
There was a version of the bill last year, been working on this for a few years now, but there was a version that had the insurance industry in it because of actions from the Department of Insurance dealing with that and actually a decision from the insurance industry itself to do that disclosure without us asking. They're not in this bill anymore. So it really is non insurance sector risk.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
All right, thank you very much.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assemblymember Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I think really want to thank you for your leadership on this climate space. I just had one comment, which is I agree with the committee staff's comments about needing more clarification about who's responsible for reporting with the corporate and subsidiary issues. I just think that's a really complicated thing. I'm not quite sure that CARB is the right entity to sort of figure that out. So I think there are probably some others, other agencies at the state that you might want to be working with. But I do think that just an understanding, compliance at the outset, that that's something that deserves some attention. Thank you.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I appreciate you saying that, and I'm sorry if I confuse things. I meant for CARB to have a stronger role in the standards, right? In vetting the rigor of the standards themselves. But I think you're right. I wasn't submitting that CARB would say be the one to decide between subsidiary or parent. I think there's probably a way that we can make some of those decisions ourselves here in the framework and not necessarily defer this. I don't want this to be such a clunky, bureaucratic process. Industry should know what's coming and get on top of this. And so we want to make this easy to comply with. I'll work on that.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'm just wondering if maybe some of this guidance is already out there by looking to the SEC.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
We wish it were. I mean, that's one of the big reasons you have 253 and 261 before you is that the banking industry and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have vigorously lobbied against the SEC's climate disclosure rules. They're actively lobbying Congress, right now, the House Oversight Committee is going after anyone doing ESG disclosure. They're threatening to boycott companies. So it's that sort of aggressive lobbying tactic we've seen from the national banking and securities industries that have forced us into a position where we've got to now jump in because it's causing such uncertainty in the marketplace. We think it's dangerous to the bottom line of our major corporations and the rest of them. So a national fix would be a really good just we can't afford to play the waiting game.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Yeah.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments from committee members? Assemblymember Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I may have missed it, so apologies, but I appreciate some of the comments brought up. I won't repeat anything, but curious if you'd be willing to take an amendment in a future committee addressing or if there's anything in the bill already that you've agreed to addressing situations where reporting entities are already making good faith efforts to comply and kind of what your thoughts are to the opposition's concerns.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
If you look at the most recent amendments made, not suggested by the committee, but the last round of amendments, which is in the penalty provisions, one of the key factors that the airborne has to take into account is whether the violator took good faith measures to comply with the section. So that notion of a sort of good faith threshold or sort of taking your best effort using your best available data, I think we want to encourage folks to take chances like that. We don't want people to submit, say, incomplete or very light or thin reports under this that don't actually seek to go deeper into their supply chains or take chances on that kind of emissions disclosure. We want to encourage that. So we're open to looking at how to encourage good faith, deep diligence on these reports. But we don't want to say sort of subjectively based on what your definition of I took my best effort at it. If we're just leaving it to the companies to sort of self certify, I think that's where we're struggling with how exactly to do that. But we want to try to land on that issue. I'm glad you brought it up and maybe in that provision in the penalty area is something we can sort of pivot from. Right, okay, sure.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And just to the opposition, I didn't know if you had any thoughts on those recent amendments or I'm just trying to get clarity on where you stand on that. So as far as the recent amendments per committee analysis.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Sure.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Also per this idea of making good faith efforts.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
So the good faith effort component, I would note that the penalty provision includes it's up to $500,000. And that's for a report I looked through statute I looked quite at, spent a couple of hours looking through stuff. I was not able to come up with a report that had a $500,000 penalty component associated with it for not filing a report in good faith effort or not in good faith effort. So on the good faith effort component, I'm glad that the author is willing to work with us on that and think about how we can do that. But just kind of coming back to what I said earlier, looking at how we kind of comes back to, one of the things the author noted is that in some states, like in Texas and Florida, they are proactively going over people that are filing ESG reports. They are effectively attacking businesses that are trying to do the exact same thing we're doing here in these California. These companies may not be located in California, but if they do a certain amount of business here, they're going to be subject to them and they're going to have to make business decisions. Unfortunately, whether they want to or not. How they interact with the state in the future is going to come about more often because of these kind of things where a $500,000 penalty is looking them in the barrel. So I think that is something they're going to have to think about because rather than making this compulsory and mandatory. California kind of could lead in this space and actually encourage and create that carrot that moves people in this direction rather than taking a punitive position of, like, you will do this, otherwise you're going to get a $500,000 penalty or up to a 500 I shouldn't say 500, but up to a $500,000 penalty. So how do we foster that growth and continue to foster that? Because people are starting to file TCFD reports. It's not something that happens, but how do you get people to actually disclose this in a way that grows it without actually punitively impacting folks that are trying to do this and then having to suffer the consequences from folks in Texas and Florida. Not to call out states in particular, but I know it's happening there. Thank you, Mr. Zbur. That was a good question.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Any other questions or comments? Okay, we have a motion from Assemblymember Addis. Second. From Assemblymember Pellerin. Would you like to close?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you for the rigorous discussion. Very important piece of legislation. So I'm glad you're kicking the tires on all this. And we want this to become law. We wish we weren't in this position in California to have to pass this bill and that the federal government were taking this action and that Kentucky, Texas, Florida, and all these other states weren't attacking the largest businesses in the world for trying to tackle climate change. But we feel like this is pro business legislation and that ultimately we're going to land a product here that works for big companies in California and beyond. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due, pass as amended to Appropriations. Rivas. Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora. Flora, no. Addis. Addis, aye. Friedman. Friedman, aye. Hoover. Hoover, no. Mathis. No. Mathis, no. Muratsuchi. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin. Pellerin, aye. Ward. Ward, aye. Wood. Wood, aye. Zbur. Aye. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. That bill is out. Okay, next, we are going back to SB 4 by Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Just because you didn't get enough of me before.
- Luz Rivas
Person
We're back.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I had some Chipotle. It was good.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, one more hour with Senator Wiener, and then we will be off to dinner. So just to let the Committee Members know, in case you weren't here when he presented, Senator Wiener presented SB 4. I thought we were close on some of the amendments and we wanted more time and so him and I and others went into a room, and I believe we came to an agreement, and I will let him explain.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Great. Thank you, Madam Chair, and I want to thank you for taking the time. We have, in fact, reached an agreement on the Committee Amendments, and I think they're very solid. I think we were close before, and it was good just to finalize them and the amendments that we're agreeing to, and you can make sure I state it correctly, are first of all that the bill will sunset on January 1st, 3036. So it'll be a 12 year sunset. And then--
- Luz Rivas
Person
3036?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
What did I say? 2026?
- Luz Rivas
Person
You said 3036.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes, can we do that? 3036?
- Luz Rivas
Person
I think the Governor--
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's late. 2036.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
1136. And then in addition, and we have some more work we're going to do on this, but we will change. Right now the bill has an exemption or an exclusion for sites adjacent to an industrial use and the Committee had suggested a 1,200 foot buffer, but what I think we both agreed is there are a range of industrial uses, some of which are quite toxic, say, like a chemical factory, some of which are not like a bespoke furniture assembly store.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so recognizing there's a range, I think the idea is that for industrial uses that require an air board permit which are going to be more likely to be generating pollution where you wouldn't want someone living right on that, we will have the 1,200 foot buffer and then we will have conversations with some of the air boards and then potentially pull out some of those uses because you could have an industrial use that requires an air board permit but is actually not particularly problematic and so the idea would be to revert back to what we have in the bill now, meaning you just can't be on an adjacent parcel.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I hope I stated it correctly, Madam Chair. Oh, and yeah, and then there will be--actually, I'm sorry--there will be three tiers, 1,600 feet, 1,200 feet, and then just not on the adjacent parcel depending on how problematic the pollution is. Again, ranging from the chemical plant down to the completely benign, the coffee roasting plant or something.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I am extremely comfortable with this and I've always--honestly on this bill, when we've talked about the industrial uses, I've always wished that there were more defined categories of different intensities of industrial use, but I think this is extremely reasonable and in the end, I think most affordable housing builders are not going to want to build super close to a plant that actually could cause health impact. So I'm very comfortable with these amendments and again, I appreciate the Chair reaching agreement with us on that, and so those are the two amendments that we're agreeing to.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Okay, we have questions from Committee Members, so Assembly Member Friedman?
- Laura Friedman
Person
Yeah, thank you for your willingness to discuss these issues that I know are important to the Chair. I just wanted to make sure I understand one thing. So if the site itself, is if there's a potential for contamination of the site itself, for instance, so even if the use is gone or long gone, how would somebody make sure that that sort of site is tested under this? Because normally that would be part of the CEQA process.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. So the bill already requires a Phase l, and if necessary, Phase ll Assessment and so we already require sort of testing for--and then it requires appropriate mitigation if some sort of problem--if a toxic is found or something like that. So that's already built into the bill for every project.
- Laura Friedman
Person
Okay, great. Thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Zbur?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Just curious what CEHA thinks of the outcome of the negotiations.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We still have questions in regards to the oil and gas buffers.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Oil and gas are--that's an industrial use?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, inconsistent with the 3,200 feet, how, we...
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I mean, it's, it's an industrial use.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
For us, we would fear this would set a precedent of undermining the 3,200 feet. That's a lot right now.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I disagree, but, you know--
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Muratsuchi?
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I just want to follow up, why would you disagree? I mean, we just passed, we all fought very hard, including you, to establish that 1,300 setback. I know you care about setbacks.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The setback law dictated where--if you are going to drill, where you can do it. This is if we want to build housing, which, unlike drilling for oil is not a negative thing, where can you do that? And so the idea is that for any industrial use--because a chemical plant could also be problematic and that's why we want to have a distance--and so we're treating industrial as one category. Well, subcategories of one category.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But wait, you're saying that if adjacent land use involved oil drilling or production, that your bill would allow for less, a smaller setback than 3,200?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No, I'm sorry. When you said adjacent, we were talking about adjacent parcels.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Yes.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You wouldn't be able to do it on adjacent parcels. Even under the bill that we have in print, for any industrial, you can't be on an adjacent parcel. It has to be separated and now we're saying it could be separated by a lot more than that.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, putting aside the adjacent then, is your amendment proposing an oil drilling setback less than 3,200 feet?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It is an industrial setback, which could be either 1,600 feet, 1,200, or just not on the adjacent parcel, but for any kind of intensive industrial, it would have to be a minimum of 1,600 feet.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
Okay, but I'm talking about oil drilling or production. Is your amendment going to allow for housing less than 3,200 feet from any oil drilling or production?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So, presumably that would be in the 1,600 foot category. I just want to be very clear. There are an enormous number of housing bills that have been passed by this Legislature that have zero buffer from any industrial or anything else. There's only one law I can think of that has anything in that category. Every other housing law passed in the State of California that I'm aware of has no buffer whatsoever.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so, we've taken the position that when you decide where you're going to drill for oil, you need to locate that away from certain uses, but we typically have not taken the approach that you can't build housing in a certain location.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But Senator, I'm sure you can appreciate this. You're asking us to support a bill that's going to undermine the oil drilling setback that we just passed last year and that is currently under litigation. That's going to be the headline.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Someone can say that. I don't think that that makes it true.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
But you're saying that under an industrial use, housing can be built--in your interpretation--1,600 feet from oil drilling or production.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, with a Phase l Environmental Assessment and a Phase ll Environmental Assessment if needed, and mitigation if needed. Yes.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
That seems to be in contradiction to the bill authored by Senator Gonzalez.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I don't agree with that.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
If I may be heard, actually, I'm sorry. My name is Jennifer Ganata. I'm a Senior Staff Attorney at Communities for a Better Environment. Before I was a Senior Staff Attorney, I actually was the youth program organizer in Wilmington. So I wanted to talk a little bit about--I'm sure that Assembly Member Muratsuchi knows about Wilmington and issues that are there and so a lot of our members have talked about what it's like to live next to an oil well.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Even if it's an old oil well, there are emissions and there are factors that are next to it. So if we are building new housing, we are asking through CAHA and through CBE and our different partners who've been supporting this, is to actually have a larger setback because there are a bunch of health issues that occur when you live close to an oil well, even if it's one that has been allegedly capped, there are still emissions that emit and I think that is a lived reality that people get headaches, people feel sick often, and this was our main concern about why we were pushing this to make it more consistent with the bills that we've been working with, and I think for us, that's one of the really big issues.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
I mean, in addition to living near a freeway, in addition to toxic sites and asking for the proper remediation--because I do think that folks who are going to be living in 100 percent affordable housing, they deserve healthy and safe housing as well, and even though we need to figure out ways to prioritize that and not undercut the different laws and protections that we have currently in place.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I agree. I've been trying, right? But, Assembly Member Pellerin.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Okay, so are you willing to work with this opposition to try to come to an agreement here because I agree that, again, building housing in places that are not safe is just not what we want to be doing. We want to build affordable housing for people to live and thrive and not to get sick.
- Abram Diaz
Person
Yeah, well, I'll mention here from the affordable housing perspective, Abram Diaz with NPH of Northern California Affordable Housing Builders; I've had a lot of really productive conversations with the folks here, have concerns, and we've already taken some amendments to address that. That includes the Phase ll mitigation piece as well, some definition around the industrial side, which we're even now developing as well and have had conversations with the Chair and our Committee about it.
- Abram Diaz
Person
I'll go back to what's in the bill currently, which is the assessments and the mitigation, and those are still up to state and federal standards to ensure any housing we build is up to code, and we ensure that we also have local objective design standards. We are going to ensure the housing is safe, and we take that very seriously. As mentioned before, for affordable housing builders, we are very risk adverse.
- Abram Diaz
Person
We value enormously the tenants that we have and the project managers who may live on site and we will build in areas that are safe. And while we're discussing the protections we'll have around vulnerable areas in this bill, and I'm glad we're having those discussions, there's also a whole swath of California where we'll be able to build housing that is affordable and for folks who are in need, and so with all that just being said, we have a lot already in the measure to ensure the housing is built in a safe and affordable manner.
- Abram Diaz
Person
And on the builder side, folks are very attentive to these issues and I recognize the history and a lot of the legacy of what we need to do to do better, and this builds a step in that direction and I feel very confident in saying that.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
I mean, do you understand the concerns that they're raising?
- Abram Diaz
Person
Oh, absolutely.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
This is impacting property that's owned by churches and schools, right?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Nonprofit colleges.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Nonprofit schools. Do we know if any of them are located in or near oil and gas production places?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah. Diocese of LA, Catholic Diocese of LA--Archdiocese of LA, they own, they permit land to AllenCo drilling, and that's an oil company. That's just one area, like, they can easily with this law today, if it was to pass, they could put a house right there. That would allow it.
- Abram Diaz
Person
I think with the assessment and mitigation measures in the bill, you would not be able to put housing in an area that's at risk and I also don't think you'd find an affordable housing builder because you have to be in an 100 percent affordable housing project that would build in a risky site.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And if it's on the same parcel, you couldn't...
- Abram Diaz
Person
And then if it's on the adjacent parcel, as we've been discussing with the setbacks we've set up here, we also will have that distance locked in through the legislation itself.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'm having trouble with this as well. This isn't about not allowing anything ever to be built near these oil sites. It's about by-right development that doesn't go through a CEQA process to protect the public, and so I just think in those circumstances when any affordable developer can sort of come in and can do this sort of by-right, I just have trouble with sort of saying that it's a different standard for when the drilling comes second versus when the housing comes second. There's the same issues from my perspective. So for me, I would encourage you to agree to the setback.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Muratsuchi.
- Al Muratsuchi
Legislator
I just want to add, Senator Wiener, that in case you're wondering that I wouldn't be a vote for your bill anyway, I would support your bill if you take the 3,200 setback because I do not want to pass any bill that is undermining a key part of the climate package that we passed last year that you and I have fought so hard for, and it's my understanding that these other mitigations aren't addressing the health impacts of oil drilling or production that we know travels--all of the public health studies that you and I are very well familiar with--when we're talking about allowing this kind of housing production by-right without any kind of CEQA process, I think at the very least, we should have a 3200 foot setback.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I'm falling asleep. Assembly Member Addis. Yeah.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I mean, I think I want to echo the concern I'm hearing here, but at its core, I don't think I understand why we would sit here and listen to people who are telling us that they get sick and that their communities are getting sick from buildings that are too close and not make this change when you have people on the dais that saying, 'I'm all in if you make this change.' I don't think I understand that what's at the core of why we would have by-right development that could make people sick and there's a very simple way to avoid that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. So, first of all, obviously the Committee is in control here and we're getting a lot of feedback and I appreciate that. We can have a broader conversation of other things that make people sick, like housing instability and homelessness.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Let's not try to hide the ball, though. I mean, let's just address this particular question, please.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm not, but there's been a lot of today like there are other things that make people sick too, and obviously, I carried the 2,500 foot setback bill. I think it was 2,500 when Mr. Muratsuchi--I believe it was 2,500 when he did it. So we were working with 25--I carried that bill. I was actually in the Senate Natural Resources Committee when that bill went down in flames and so it's something that I have absolutely worked on and I understand what the Committee is saying and I think that getting a pretty clear signal here and so if we could just have about two minutes just to step outside.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We had a conversation and agreement with the Chair, but obviously there are other Members of the Committee who are expressing a point of view.
- Luz Rivas
Person
No, I mean the 3,200 foot setback, of course, is something I've always wanted. I put in it as an amendment. I'm trying to get this bill out, right? But I felt alone, right, and now I don't with the 3,200 feet. But this is up to our Committee, right, and this has been one of my priorities too.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I've already talked to you about this in length, right, and so trying to get this bill out, and it's very important to me, but what I'm hearing are Colleagues that are also in support of that and if you want to take some time--but how about we finish with the other Members that want to ask questions or--okay, yeah. Assembly Member Ward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. I know it's getting late, and I encourage that time as well, but we had discussed recently as well, too, and I just wanted to see if you could remind me and Colleagues about the circumstance around, say, the City of Beverly Hills and 3,200 feet.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, there's Beverly Hills, there's Huntington Beach, there's Yorba Linda, there are wealthy cities that will...
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Be exempted.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I don't know if they'll be 100 percent exempted, but they'll be largely exempted from the bill.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I am incredibly sensitive and insightful and cautious about the impact that we have with communities which have been long historically disadvantaged from pollutants and I think the goal again that we are talking about that I was proud to support last year with the oil setbacks is to make sure that we are phasing out these polluting sources from residential neighborhoods.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Doesn't change the fact that they are residential neighborhoods, they are zoned residential, that we want to continue to promote them as residential neighborhoods and I'm nervous that we might be setting something in motion through this bill or through other--as precedent for other bills as well too that are going to preclude a generation of opportunity sites because that hasn't fully sunsetted because those haven't fully yet phased out, but they will.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
We're heading in that direction. I don't want to miss the opportunity sites that we need to have building up more housing sites for their enjoyment for the next 50 or 80 years as those are phasing out.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I can reconcile the two. I want to make sure that everybody understands that we're not just talking though about disadvantaged communities that a 3,200 foot arbitrary setback is going to include, a lot of communities that many find pretty lovely and pretty nice.
- Luz Rivas
Person
This same setback was in AB 2011 last year, a big bill that was signed into law. It's 3,200 feet in AB 2011. So it's not the very first time we've done this, but--
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That's the only one. Long beach would--a huge chunk of Long Beach would be taken out too.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Excluded as well. I encourage the conversation.
- Laura Friedman
Person
So we're not talking with this bill about properties everywhere near all oil. We're talking about specifically properties owned by churches. Those properties in Beverly Hills, those oil rigs are not adjacent to properties owned by churches nor are they owned by churches, to my knowledge. I'm familiar with many of those sites. I don't know if those are--it doesn't sound like those are the sites that are owned by the Archdiocese, but I'm a co-author of this bill. I think it's a good bill; I think its a powerful bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I would be more comfortable with the setback. I think you're talking about not a whole lot of properties and I think that asking to not use this without CEQA review right next to an active oil facility is not unreasonable. That's my perspective. I think even with the review, you still have emissions. If it's an active facility and it's pumping oil as many of these sites it sounds like are, are we really wanting to put affordable housing right adjacent to them? I mean, I think being 3,200 feet away is not an unreasonable request. So that's my opinion as a co-author of this bill.
- Laura Friedman
Person
I mean, I think being 3,200 feet away is not an unreasonable request. So that's my opinion as a co author of this bill.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Assembly Member Flora.
- Heath Flora
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Colleagues, like this is interesting what we got going on here. So we had a bill in front of us in its original intent that for all intents and purposes, we had the votes to get it out four hours ago. There was a conversation that happened outside. We brought it back in with amendments that were agreed on by the Chair and the author. Is that correct?
- Heath Flora
Legislator
So I'm going to make a motion to move the bill which was what was agreed on by the Chair and the author and what was decided outside. It's time for us to move on. This bill is like--we've negotiated this thing at this dais for a long time now and I just think if it was good enough for you out there, for the two of you, then why is it not good enough to bring it back to the Committee and let us vote on the bill that you two agreed on?
- Luz Rivas
Person
No, I understand, Vice Chair Flora. I've been trying to put--I mean, it's in the analysis, this, right, and I've been trying to work with the author. Like I said, why should we--I mean communities of color when I say we--why should 100 percent affordable housing be placed within 3,200 feet of oil and gas? But we just voted, or the Committee just voted--I didn't--on a bill that is going to create market rate housing on the coastal zone which my constituents will never afford, but it's okay for my constituents to live within this buffer zone.
- Luz Rivas
Person
This is hard and I don't want to vote for this this way. We're talking about 1,600 feet, right? I just ask that you reconsider that one. Everything else, we both kind of went the sunset date with other amendments that I wanted, my extensive list. I feel that we came to an agreement, but there's many Committee Members that share that concern too.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So one thing before I get to the bottom line, respectfully, the bill we just voted on did not have a buffer in it. So this is something that we have. Like I said, there was only one other state housing law that has any buffer. There are many that every other one that I'm aware of, except one don't. So I think it's a lot of different housing mills that don't have that buffer. This wouldn't have been the only one.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
With that said, and I appreciate the differing perspectives on this, but with that said, it's pretty clear to me where critical mass on the Committee wants to go and so, as a result, we'll accept the 3,200 buffer and we will work with you to clarify on the other industrial.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. I will go back to supporting the bill with the amendments that you also identified before.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
I'll move with the 3,200.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
I'll second.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Thank you. Would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I think I already closed earlier.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And then I would like to thank the author. Thank you for that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I will say I'm happy to do it. I'm always happy to collaborate. I do want to say I take issue with some of the comments that were made in this hearing which I don't think were fair. I don't mind policy disputes. That's what we're here for, democracy, and I never take that personally but some of the comments I take issue with, so, thank you.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Not sure what you're referring to, but we all want to go home, and we have a motion and a second. Motion by Assembly Member Addis. Second by Assembly Member Pellerin. Just want to be clear: it does include the amendments that you said at the beginning of this plus the 3,200 foot setback. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is do pass as amended to appropriations. Rivas? Aye. Rivas, aye. Flora? No. Flora, no. Addis? Aye. Addis, aye. Friedman? Aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover? Not voting. Hoover, not voting. Mathis? Muratsuchi? Aye. Muratsuchi, aye. Pellerin? Aye. Pellerin, aye. Ward? Aye. Ward, aye. Wood? Aye. Wood, aye. Zbur? Aye. Zbur, aye.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Chair and Committee. And thank you, Senator.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. That Bill is out next. We're not wasting time. We're going to go ahead and add on votes for those Members that were absent. We'll start with SB 48. Becker.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due pass to appropriations. Absent Member Rivas. Rivas, aye. Ward, aye. That Bill has eight votes.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. Absent Member Flora. Flora, aye. That has 11.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That Bill has eight votes. That Bill is out next. SB 69 by Cortese.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That bill has 11 votes. That Bill is out. Next, SB 253. Weiner.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. Chair voting aye. Absent Members Friedman. Friedman, aye. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Sorry, what number?
- Committee Secretary
Person
It's SB 253. No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Hoover, no. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Eight to three. That Bill is out. Next, SB 353. Sorry, 353 was already out. I was right. SB 353. Sorry.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass to Appropriations. Absent Members. Rivas, aye. Ward, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has 9 votes. I can't add late at night, 11 votes. That Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 420. Becker. Motion is due pass to Utilities and Energy. Absent Member Flora. Flora, aye, Ward, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. Absent Members Friedman. Friedman, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has 11 votes. That Bill is out. SB 423. Weiner.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has seven votes. That Bill is out. SB 425. Newman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass to Appropriations. Absent Members Rivas. Rivas, aye. Friedman, aye. Hoover, aye. Zbur, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has 10 votes that Bill is out. SB 568. Newman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion due pass to Appropriations absent Member Rivas. Rivas, aye. Friedman, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has 11 votes that Bill is out. SB 704. Min.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. That Bill is out. SB 751 Padilla.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass to appropriations. Absent Member Mathis.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass to Appropriations. Absent Member Friedman. Friedman, aye. Flora, no. Wood, aye. Okay.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Bill has eight votes. That Bill is out. SB 777. Allen.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due pass as amended to Appropriations. Absent Member Flora. Flora, not voting.
- Luz Rivas
Person
That Bill has eight votes. That Bill is out. Yes, consent.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Consent calendar. Friedman, aye. Hoover, aye. Ward, aye.
- Luz Rivas
Person
Consent Calendar has 11 votes. That Bill is out. Before we adjourn, I just want to thank the Committee Members. This is our last policy hearing.
- Luz Rivas
Person
I want to thank my team, Lawrence, Elizabeth and Paige and Martha, for doing such a great job in getting us through this very long hearing and the whole legislative session up to now. Thank you very much. This meeting is adjourned.
Committee Action:Passed
Next bill discussion: September 14, 2023
Previous bill discussion: March 29, 2023
Speakers
Legislator