Assembly Standing Committee on Judiciary
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Good morning. Thank you all for being here today. I want to welcome you to the Judiciary Committee meeting. And as a reminder, each side will be allowed two main witnesses, two minutes each. Additional witnesses should state their name and organization only. This allows all authors a fair chance to present their bills and Members of the public an equal chance to have their position reflected in the record. As we proceed with our Bill hearing, I just want to go through the rules.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
I want to so everyone understands our Committee rules to ensure we maintain order and run a fair and efficient hearing, with the goal of hearing as much from the public within the limits of our time. The rules of conduct by Members of the public include no talking or loud noises from the audience. Public comment may be provided only at the designated time and must be limited to your name, organization, and support or opposition of a Bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
No engaging in conduct that disrupts, disturbs, or otherwise impedes the orderly conduct of this hearing. No engaging in personal attacks of Members of this Committee, authors, or staff. Please be aware that violation of these rules may subject you to removal or other enforcement processes. And just as kind of a special order of business, when SB 331 is called, we're going to make a special accommodation for support witness testimony. We received a request to allow one support witness to testify by phone.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
As a General rule, we haven't allowed phone testimony for witnesses, but given the unique circumstances of the witness in this case, the witness is a minor who has expressed concern about their safety and welfare. The Committee has granted this one time exception to the rule. With that, we will begin as a Subcommittee, we do not have an author here, so aye would encourage Senators Umberg, Eggman, Rubio, Durazo, Gonzalez, Smallwood-Cuevas, or Stern to please head over. Welcome, Senator Eggman. You don't even have to sit down. Just walk straight over to the table.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Welcome. You have two matters, SB 43 and SB 267. Let's go ahead and start with SB 43.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Mr. Chair, let me get up here. So and I just like to say good morning to everybody and thank you for hearing this today. Thank the Committee for their work on this and the Chair for his work on this. And also to say this is not one piece of legislation. This is a continuum of care that we've been consistently working on over the last decade. Really trying to I was listening on my way in this morning. Joni Mitchell. Both sides now. And I think we see both sides now.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I think we had a lot of good ideas years and years ago, and I think what we've seen now on our streets and in our system is the result of, at one time, not seeing both sides of everything. And when we passed LPA back in the '60s, it was the right thing to do. It was the best thing to do to not to keep people indefinitely institutionalized at the highest level of care.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But what we do know I was reading an article last night from 1987 where they said we got it wrong. This is not compassionate, that we really didn't think about when we said people shouldn't be in institutions, we didn't think about the supports those institutions provided, the housing supports they provided, the food supports they provided, the wraparound services care they provided. And we just looked at them as an evil and not as something that also provided the care,
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
that if you remove all that, you are left with, I think the results a lot of what we see now. So that's kind of my little preface that this is part of a larger continuum. And as people know, through the last couple of years we have set up a children's backbone for a full continuum of care. We have passed the Care Act. Last year I've worked on providing, gathering more data as it applies to the LPS and the conservatorship.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We have done more on AOT, advanced AOT, I've done that as we've done more on providing people another 30 days before they enter into conservatorship. And then this year a redo of MHSA, both the policy part of it and how we're able to use those resources, and also providing some additional funding to be able to provide more of the village type housing or the housing that heals that we think is so important in treating the most vulnerable of us.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
So fast forward today and we know that our largest state mental hospital right now is our prison system. And we know the majority of folks entering in are at a higher rate, those with untreated mental health issues.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And we know repeatedly, we've heard from people who cycle in and out and have perhaps been on an LPS hold for 30, 40 times before they end up really hurting somebody and then ending up losing all of their ability to make decisions because then they're in state prison and or dead or in jail. Is voluntary the best? Of course it is. No argument. It is always the best.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But as we know, sometimes people reach a state where they're unable to make decisions or they suffer from something called anosognosia, which means they don't even understand that they have a mental health issue going on. So what SB 43 does ahead of you today is updates what it means to be gravely disabled in California. To add what we're actually seeing in time, the ability to be able to provide.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And not just if you can't provide know you're not turning down a shelter bed, but if you cannot provide adequate shelter for yourself, if you cannot provide for your basic needs, if you cannot provide for your medical needs and that results in a continuing of care. This Bill is about a safety net. First and foremost just to really be able to finish this continuum of care that we've been working on for this last decade to update the current laws, also be able to have hearsay.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I know we've had some conversation about that. I thank the Committee for their work and really narrowing what we mean by that. As people know, the court passed some laws a while ago. You can't use that. But we know that in those medical records are the signs and symptoms that people who have dealt with folks for years are able to document for a judge to be able to use that when deciding if somebody is at that point where they should be conserved.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And of course, that is on a long line of continuum of care that we hope fewer and fewer of folks reach the place where we see them as gravely disabled as they are right now. I hope we all agree that the status quo is not okay. We see homelessness, we see death, we see incarceration. Let's work on a better solution.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And with me here today, I have Randall Hagar on behalf of the Psychiatric Physicians Alliance of California and Leanne Dumas from the City of San Francisco working as an attorney in their office. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
First witness.
- Randall Hagar
Person
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee. Randall Hager. I actually wear a couple hats today, not only representing the Psychiatric Physicians Alliance of California and all the psychiatrists who treat people in the LPS system on a daily basis, but I'm also a board member for the Treatment. Advocacy Center in Arlington, Virginia, which works to remove barriers that exist to the treatment of the severely mentally ill. And I'm also a family member with a son with schizophrenia.
- Randall Hagar
Person
So I would like to start by saying that I think that it's important to understand what schizophrenia is, to realize who that person is out there on the street when you see them. Schizophrenia can be a profoundly disabling disorder. It manifests as hallucinations and delusions. People are often really, really cognitively impaired, particularly if they're not treated. And that's what we see on our streets today.
- Randall Hagar
Person
The LPS Act was meant to be a tool for us to be able to treat people who could not take care of themselves. And when they rise to that threshold where their basic human needs are not something that they can address food, clothing, and shelter, as Senator Eggman referenced, then we take care of them. And we take care of them and treat them and support them until they can take care of themselves. And that's really, I think, the nut of the matter here. It is protective.
- Randall Hagar
Person
It's about safety, safety in the community. And so we don't do this willy nilly. There is a presumption in the law that wherever we can, we place people in the community, and only if they're unsafe there, we bring them into acute psychiatric inpatient hospitals. There's also a presumption that if a person can be treated safely using voluntary methods. We do that. And so what you have before you is the LPS and a new definition of great disability, which helps us with those people who cannot help themselves.
- Randall Hagar
Person
I think in your analysis, the example of Mark Rippy is entirely appropriate. It's gone into in some detail, so I won't repeat that. But I will say that in my experience as a family member, I have had a period of five years now where my son had been on the streets. He's now conserved. He's in an institution, and he's been there for two years. That's how bad he got on the streets. He's on a good medication.
- Randall Hagar
Person
We go out on passes and we enjoy our-
- Brian Maienschein
Person
I need you to wrap up.
- Randall Hagar
Person
And so, today, really, I'm asking you to consider the measure before you seen through the eyes of psychiatrists and family members. It's a life saving measure.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chairman. I am Deputy City Attorney Leanne Dumas from the office of San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu. I am here today to express Mr. Chiu's support for this Bill, as well as to say hello from him to his friends and former colleagues here in the Assembly. I also wanted to thank you, Mr. Chairman, for your support of this Bill, this important issue, and your staff who really worked tirelessly in preparation for today.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
The Bill language, as you have before you, really represents significant amendments that were designed to narrowly tailor the effect of this Bill as much as possible while still achieving the goals of the author. And I'm going to focus my comments on the expert testimony aspects of the Bill proposed Section 5122. And the goal here with this language is really to align the way medicine is practiced with the way court receives information about proposed conservatives in conservatorship proceedings.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
The way the law stands now, expert witnesses, doctors are required to provide their expert opinion, but they are not permitted to provide the context, the information on which they base that opinion. And that is not the way medicine is practiced. Certainly, doctors do not operate in a vacuum, thank goodness. They have to consider medical records. They have to consider opinions of other providers, facts about a patient's medical history informing their opinion. And the courts are legally required to consider a patient's medical history as well.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Yet they're not allowed to get that information from the expert witnesses. So this Bill allows the court to have all of the information that it needs in order to render a full, complete, accurate decision in conservatorship proceedings. But it also safeguards patients rights because it is very limited, very specific regarding what sources can be used ensuring that the information being provided by the expert witness is of a credible nature. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you for the witnesses in support name and organization only.
- Paul Yoder
Person
Mr. Chairman and Members Paul Yoder. Here today on behalf of City and County of San Francisco Mayor London Breed, California State Association of Psychiatrists, California Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, City of West Hollywood and the City of Santa Monica, all in support. Urge your aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Christopher Valenica
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members Chris Valencia. On behalf of the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation, in support.
- Jared Maas
Person
Good morning, chair and Members Jared Moss, on behalf of the City of Camarillo and Riverside, in support.
- Melanie Klinkeman
Person
Good morning. Melanie Klinkeman, Member of Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians. I'm a family member and advocate for a daughter who is severely mentally ill and missing.
- Alyssa Silhi
Person
Good morning, Alyssa Silhi on behalf of the cities of Redwood City, Carlsbad and Bakersfield, also in support.
- Alison Monroe
Person
Alison Monroe, Families Advocating for the Seriously Mentally Ill and mother of someone with schizophrenia who AWOLed yesterday and is in danger on the street. I'm so grateful for this Bill. I support it.
- Moira Topp
Person
Moira Topp, on behalf of San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, as well as the Big City Mayors Coalition, which is the coalition of mayors of the 13 largest cities. They are co sponsors of the measure and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kyra Ross
Person
Good morning. Kyra Ross, on behalf of the City of Stockton. Very thankful for all the efforts of the author in strong support of the Bill.
- Caroline Cirrincione
Person
Good morning. Caroline Cirrincione, on behalf of the League of California Cities, in support.
- Josh Tosney
Person
Josh Tosney on behalf of Santa Clara County. We have a support if amended position. We're in the process of updating. We just wanted to thank the author and Committee for the work on the Bill.
- Ross Buckley
Person
Good morning. Ross Buckley, on behalf of Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, in support.
- Megan Subers
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members Meagan Subers, on behalf of the California Professional Firefighters, in support.
- Jason Bryant
Person
Morning, Mr. Chair and Members Jason Bryant, on behalf of the California Downtown Association, in support. Thank you.
- Nicholas Romo
Person
Chair, Members, Nick Romo on behalf of San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, in support.
- Elizabeth Hopper
Person
Elizabeth Kaino Hopper, in strong support because I have a family Member who lives with serious mental illness and substance use disorder who's continuously failed by this law. Thank you.
- Diana Burdick
Person
Diana Burdick, I am a family Member of a severely mentally ill son who I am watching die in the streets. I also am the daughter of my mother who is bipolar, but understands that she's ill and she takes medication. However, when you don't know you're going to die, and that's what's happening to him.
- Teresa Pasquini
Person
Good morning, I'm Teresa Pasquini. I'm an army Member. I'm also a California advocate for the Treatment Advocacy Center. Most importantly, I'm the proud mom of Danny Pasquini and the proud sister of Larry, with an over 50 year history with the LPS system. And thank you, Senator Eggman, and I strongly, strongly support this law. Thank you.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Suzanne Hume, Clean Earth for Kids. Strong support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition or excuse me, in support. Any witnesses in opposition. And while they're coming up here, I'll ask the Clerk to call the role to establish a quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschein. Here. Essayli. Here. Connolly, Dixon. Haney. Kalra. Pacheco. Papan. Reyes. Sanchez. McKinnor.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Okay, witnesses in opposition, up to two minutes each. First witness.
- LaTanya Ri'Chard
Person
Thank you. Chair and Committee. My name is LaTanya Ri'Chard. I am certified peer support specialist, cofounder and Associate Director of Communities Voices, a peer run nonprofit. I have lived experience in mental health and substance use challenges. 20 years ago, I became depressed and made my first appointment with a psychiatrist. I left her office being diagnosed bipolar one and schizophrenic without ever showing symptoms of being either and without ever being tested. The system disproportionately diagnoses, black and brown people with psychotic disorders.
- LaTanya Ri'Chard
Person
I have been given seroquel, thorazine, lithium, saffron, risperidone, to name a few, along with four rounds of unneeded ECT. Because of this, my physical health is shot. I've had my gallbladder removed, develop hypothyroidism, prolactinoma, diabetes and chronic pancreatitis, which needed three surgeries, one of which I almost died. Due to these health problems, I was given narcotic pain medicines and became addicted. I've been involuntarily committed as a black woman in America. I don't want to deal with the police like that.
- LaTanya Ri'Chard
Person
I don't want to have another interaction with the police like that, ever. It was traumatic and unnecessary. I've been in recovery for five years. Building safe housing, affordable housing, providing a good education, jobs and health care can fix the housing problem. Not allowing corporate landlords or out of state developers to build mansions that sit empty for years as tech shelters for the wealthy can go even further to fight the housing crisis. SB 43 terrifies me. It terrifies me to my core.
- LaTanya Ri'Chard
Person
I understand that there are people that need conservatorship, but not listening to others that are experiencing this problem is a very big issue. You guys need to have peers on the board. No one should have to miss years of their life because of the systems or somebody else's failures. Thank you.
- Debra Roth
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. Deb Roth on behalf of Disability Rights California in opposition. I'm also a person who lives with and at times struggles with mental illness. On occasion, I have been sidelined by it. I hid my mental illness for most of my professional career, which includes 12 years as a staff person in this building. Having watched the Legislature consider involuntary treatment legislation over the last two years, I know I made the right choice in not disclosing information about my mental health.
- Debra Roth
Person
I'm also relieved that at times when my young adult son who has a mental health disorder and a developmental disorder, when he displayed disturbing behaviors, we came close to calling 5150 while he was still under 18. And I'm so glad we didn't. I am just so grateful that we didn't do that. We appreciate the author having met with us earlier this year, but as has been the case with all of the major mental health reform proposals, we had no part in shaping the policy.
- Debra Roth
Person
We're tired of hearing that we want to let people die with their rights on. That's not true, and it's insulting, especially to people who have been through mental health challenges, have recovered, or are recovering, and who, based on those experiences and related traumas want to have nothing to do with our mental health system. Turning to the hearsay provision, which we think should be stricken from the Bill entirely, it's helpful to look at why hearsay is generally not allowed. It's not reliable. It's not the best evidence.
- Debra Roth
Person
Our system provides for cross examination of witnesses to test reliability. If a Doctor says a patient is gravely disabled, shouldn't the Doctor have to testify and be subject to cross examination? I understand I couldn't hear the presentation of the author's presentation of the Bill. I understand the city and County of San Francisco supports the provisions that are in the Bill as proposed to be amended. However, San Francisco is not like Contra Costa, which is not like Santa Clara.
- Debra Roth
Person
As I understand it, San Francisco may have said something about the difficulty either getting witnesses or getting medical records. That's not the case in all other counties. Please don't make statewide policy based on how things work in one county.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
I need you to wrap up if.
- Debra Roth
Person
if the goal is to get the medical record in, that can already happen with the business records exception. If the goal is to eliminate the need for doctors to testify, well, if you're about to take away someone's liberty and they have committed no crime, shouldn't the person whose opinion carries the most weight be required to testify? Thank you very much.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in opposition. Name and organization only.
- Rachel Bhagwat
Person
Hi. Rachel Bhagwat on behalf of ACLU California Action and also with respect registering the opposition of Cal Voices and Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance. Thank you.
- Katherine Wolf
Person
Katherine Wolf, Interim Policy Director, and on behalf of the Disabled Students Commission of the Associated Students of the University of California, and with respect also for Human Rights Watch and Los Angeles Community Action Network, in strong opposition.
- Avery Hulog-Vicente
Person
Hello. Avery Hulog-Vicente, California Association of Mental Health Peer Run Organizations, CAMHPRO. We are in strong opposition of this Bill.
- Miya Bray
Person
Miya Bray, Racial and Ethnic Mental Health Disparities Coalition. Also in strong opposition.
- Andrea Rivera
Person
Andrea Rivera on behalf of the California Panethnic Health Network. Regrettably in opposition. Thank you.
- Debra Roth
Person
Linda Nguy with Western Center on Law and Poverty. In opposition.
- Amer Rashid
Person
Amer Rashid with the County Behavioral Health Directors Association of California with strong concerns. Thank you.
- Scott Wetch
Person
Scott Wetch, on behalf of the County of Kern, in respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Danny Thirakul
Person
Danny Thirakul on behalf of Mental Health America of California and the California Youth Empowerment Network. In strong opposition.
- Jolie Onodera
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Jolie Onodera with the California State Association of Counties, also here representing the Rural County Representatives of California, and the Urban Counties of California with a position of concerns. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. I apologize. On behalf of on behalf of Shaw Yoder Antwih Schmelzer & Lange in opposition for Fresno County.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, thank you. Seeing no further opposition, any questions or comments from the Committee? Ms. Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
First of all, Senator, I know you've been working a long time with this and you have a bipartisan working group and I commend your efforts representing a district that has many homeless, mentally ill people. And I've said this publicly many times, they need help and we're not able to help them. And I was particularly taken with your comment that the law that was passed many decades ago did not take into consideration what happens to these people once they've been released from the facility.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And that's really the purpose of my question. Just like AB 109, when all the prisoners were let out of jail, when these people are now in the county or the city's responsibility, what funds are available to help these mean these are already people who are in these counties, in these communities who should be helped.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Right. It's not like we're inventing new people to bring in that. There's no capacity for these are folks who we have been providing through MHSA and through state dollars, county dollars for help. So it is going to be the reprioritization. I mean, people have said we're going to have to reprioritize. And yeah, I think we do really need to reprioritize who we're able to help through the last couple of years.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
As you know, we are on the fifth round now of the bridge funding housing that we have paid for how many billions was that? Five, 6 billion. So we have, the last couple of years, really funded a lot of the infrastructure money through the MHSA grants that will also be for the construction of the village and cottage type housing. So moving away from the institution, but community living for folks with wraparound and I'll let San Francisco speak. We really think that the facilities are there.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We've heard that repeatedly. If we have means to be able to fund those beds, pay for those beds, and with making sure the criteria matches, then we are able to build Medi-Cal and Medi-Care in addition to being able to use some of the MHA Safe fundings just for the direct services, but for the infrastructure of the housing. The buildout that we've been doing, that's what has been in the works for the last five years.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Okay, that's good follow up question. We deal at the local level with facilities that are licensed by the state, but not enforced and managed. Well, our opinion, particularly for sober living, different situation, but there could be some mental illness components. Absolutely. How does the licensing, regulatory aspects and licensing affect this as they are pushed further and more into a quasi institutionalized environment in our communities.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This doesn't deal specifically with housing regulations. I don't know if the deputy attorney wants to be able to talk about this, but I mean, the laws are still the laws. I mean, this is just dealing with what it means to be gravely disabled.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Okay. And just the regulation of them. All right, well, thank you. I'll be supporting this, but in the implementation of it at the local level, I'm going to be sure I understand it. Okay. Thank you very much.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Mr. Essayli.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I appreciate you bringing this and acknowledging there's a big issue out there. And I think you can see there's a desperation for solutions. But I'm honestly torn because I don't know if this is the right solution.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And I know you mentioned there's a lot of people mental health issues in prison, but you're talking about mass institutionalizing the homeless, which with lower due process than what you would get in a criminal court, because you're talking let's be clear about involuntarily committing people. You're going to forcibly assume using police, take them off the streets and put them in a mental hospital. I mean, that's what we're talking about, correct?
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Sir, that's what happens right now.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Well, no, right now, we enforce laws. So right now, you get to go to court, you have due process, you get a jury trial, you get a public defender, you get a right to present evidence to a jury, and they have to find you, beyond a reasonable doubt, guilty.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
You're talking about in the criminal court, right?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Yes -
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I'm talking about are most seriously ill right now. What happens right now if somebody is in crisis on the street?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Yeah, I understand what we're talking about expanding that program to cover basically people who are suffering from, I think, mostly substance abuse issues and doctor, I know you have a lot of experience in this, but there's something called drug induced psychosis.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
That's correct.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And I think the biggest mistake we made as a State of California was passing Prop 47 because you could see a direct correlation between the passage of Prop 47 and the explosion of homelessness on our streets. I was a prosecutor at the local level.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Prop 47 was a disaster because before Prop 47, if someone was arrested and brought to court for drugs, I'm talking about hard drugs, the meth, the heroin, the cocaine, we would give them a choice, and the choice would be you can either go to prison or go to rehab. Nobody went to prison. Everyone went to rehab. It was a mechanism to get people off the street into treatment. And so we had a good system to deal with that. It wasn't until we got rid of it.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
So I commend you for looking for a solution. I'm just struggling if this is the right one. Obviously, you didn't personally pass Prop 47. It's not a criticism of you. It's a state policy issue. So that's what I'm struggling with. But I have a question. So it says you're requesting about $200 million to fund it. We have about 160,000 homeless people on the street. Do we know, like what -
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We're not talking specifically just about homeless people. We are talking about people who are gravely disabled, which is a different thing. People, I think, conflate homelessness with grave disability. And while there are many people who are gravely disabled who are also homeless, everybody who is homeless is not gravely disabled.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
The definition I'm looking at here says that gravely disabled would be defined as persons due to a mental health or substance use disorder, is unable to provide for basic personal needs of food, clothing, or shelter. I think that covers -
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
That's the current law, sir.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
What?
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
That's the current law.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Oh, so you're adding personal safety, necessary medical care. Okay, well, I mean, you're talking about expanding it to cover -
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Personal safety and medical care. That's correct. I am.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Okay. I think most of the cities here are concerned about the homeless. Okay. I just don't know if this is the right solution, but I appreciate you for trying.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Mr. Kalra.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And I want to thank the Senator for her many years of commitment. I think there are a few people in the Legislature that have shown more dedication to those suffering with mental health issues. And especially given your background, I think you have a level of expertise that is definitely beyond what many of us carry and bring into the body. And I think my concerns that were raised when the care court issue came forward are somewhat similar in this case.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
I understand the seriousness of the issue and that at times, our loss can get in the way of the ability to move at the speed that many cities in particular feel is necessary. My major concerns in this case, of course, is expanding the definition and allowing for gravely ill to include anyone that is suffering from substance abuse disorder. I spent a lot of time representing individuals in drug court, and there's no doubt that I think all of us are going to even need more treatment.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And I think that there's been a collective effort as a state with the Legislature, Administration to put more resources there, but we still don't have enough, particularly on both the substance abuse side as well as the housing side for those that are unhoused and suffering at the moment.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And my worry and the expansion is that it's such a broad category of individuals that are suffering from substance abuse disorder that at the moment, it's an impossibility for us to be able to give the kind of care that would be necessary to deal with what they may be suffering through. Another issue just has to do with the hearsay. And I know there were some amendments, I believe, to that.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
But I think one of the questions is given the fact that business records exceptions can be used and what have you, so if you or any of the witnesses want to kind of describe as to what is the problem that is trying to seek, because it's a pretty severe step, major step to take. It's a pretty dramatic, in my opinion, hearsay, any hearsay exception is.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
But in this case, given the fact that the depriving of one's liberty and kind of the forced treatment aspect of it, it's pretty significant. So I don't know any insight on that particular aspect.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Yes, definitely. Thank you for the question. It does sound alarming, especially for the lawyers in the room, to have hearsay be permitted in these types of hearings. There are other areas in the law that are analogous to this that already exist. Juvenile dependency, for example, has this type of hearsay exception and this type of testimony was permitted prior to 2016 in the People v. Sanchez case. When that came out, it really had broad and sweeping effects on many areas of the law.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
And that case is very different from conservatorship cases it focused on. It was a criminal case with a police officer as an expert witness talking about statements from other police officers. That's very different from what we're talking about here. Here. We're talking about medical experts, doctors who are relying on information, medical records that's credible in order to treat patients and courts that are reliant on that information.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And why the exception as opposed to other mechanisms to get that evidence in? Because it certainly does make it easier in a conservatorship hearing to lead to the conclusion of conservatorship, if that's the opinion of the doctor.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
This is. Sorry, to interrupt.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
This is really about oral testimony from an expert witness, not about getting voluminous medical records, paper records introduced as evidence. It is really about an expert's opinion and the expert being able to rely on information that that expert must rely on in order to form an opinion. And really it's about the language of the statute mentions it's for the purpose of an expert testifying in a conservatorship proceeding as to his or her opinion.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
No, please.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And the evidence that's being relied on. However, if that itself isn't reliable, then that can lead question to the conclusions of the expert.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
And the law is narrowly tailored in the Bill language here in order to ensure that the information is only received from a certain class of individuals who are considered reliable, other health practitioners. And there is also a definition provided to ensure that the information is credible in the medical record.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Furthermore, if there's a jury involved, which not always in conservatorship proceedings, but sometimes there is a jury involved, the court is the gatekeeper and is able to have a hearing outside of the presence of a jury that would allow the court to ensure that the evidence that is being discussed is of a credible nature.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And this applies generally, not only if the underlying witness that provided that created the document is unavailable, that's not required.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Correct. It's regarding statements that are made from other healthcare providers in the medical record about a patient.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And healthcare provider is defined?
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Yes, it is.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Pretty broadly.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
It's defined as licensed doctors, social workers and it actually is a definition that already exists in the statute and is used in other areas of the law.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
That could include a paramedic.
- Leanne Dumas
Person
Yes.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
I'm always going to have wariness in terms of expansion of the hearsay rule, especially when it comes to someone's liberty at stake. And then the general we've seen when it comes to kind of forced conservatorships, when the outcome, when there aren't the resources available, it just ends up in incarceration and can certainly be long term. Again, that's not the goal of the author or anyone that's supporting this.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
I get that it's not the underlying purpose of legislation, it's what the outcome is going to be in the real world. And we know that those that are suffering from substance abuse disorder, particularly those that are unhoused, our poorest people of color are people that have been struggling for a very long time.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And we already are seeing even we've seen at least news reports recently of some police departments now that Care court allows for police officers to be the individual that can bring someone in under the system that we have now set up, that they're using this new authority to sweep up the unhoused. And I'm worried that this is just going to further exacerbate that.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Again, not the intention of the legislation or the Governor or the author, but the fact that it's giving that authority in itself allows for this kind of conduct to happen and it's already happening. And so my fear is by further expanding the definition of gravely disabled, it'll further exacerbate, it'll further exacerbate the conditions. Again, that I understand why cities want it, they want streets cleared, but that doesn't necessarily lend itself to the outcome that is the intention of this legislation or other legislation like it.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And so I think it will require all of us to continue monitoring. I know that's something that the author and others have continued to commit, that this is not a one shot thing, it's something that we're going to have to continue to return to. And I do appreciate amendments from the Committee and the authors accepting of those amendments. I do think the amendments have made it better.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
But I'm going to lay off this Bill at this time and see if there's any other movement on some of the issues, including hearsay and the definitions of that kind of broader net of gravely disabled, if any of those are improved upon prior to this reaching Assembly floor. Thank you.
- Randall Hagar
Person
If the chair would indulge me for a second.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
No. There's no question pending, Mr. Haney.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Senator, for your leadership and for continuing to work on this issue and to bring it back. This has been a top priority for the city and county that I represent, as well as many of the cities and counties, especially the big cities, that are struggling with how to support people who are suffering and in need of support and treatment. I live in the Tenderloin.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
I've represented downtown San Francisco for years before coming here, worked on this issue, visited most of our treatment facilities, our hospitals, our psychiatric wards are done ride alongs. And this is a concern that comes up again and again from our medical professionals and public health professionals who are trying to help people. I absolutely understand and agree with the concerns about not incarcerating people. That's not what this is.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
This is trying to get people help and support and treatment who right now we can't medical professionals, any one of us who walk outside, see people that we know need help, and we're not able to help them right now. And when medical professionals and public health professionals, as they are in supporting this Bill, are telling us that they're limited in helping people who need it, I think we need to make a change. We have a paramedic outreach team in San Francisco called EMS Six.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
EMS Six goes out and serves those who are the highest users of 911 in our city. Sometimes these are people who have had 911 calls hundreds of times in a single year. These are folks who and I've sat there in the hospital with the paramedics, with the firefighters, with the doctors talking to them about how they can help these folks and avoid them from continuously being cycled on and off the streets.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
And what they said is, we don't have the authority to hold this person any longer because of the limitations in the law. And if we did, even for 72 hours, it's not always a conservatorship 72 hours. Now we have a 14 day. We have ways that we can hold people for longer to try to connect them to treatment, often voluntary treatment, more often than not voluntary treatment.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
And we right now are not able to do that for many of the people who are most in need and who are most suffering. And we talk about the cost of it.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
There's few things more expensive than continuously picking up the same person again and again and again with our ambulances and fire trucks and multiple people, when if we were able to connect that person to treatment, to housing, to shelter, we would be able to both help them potentially save their lives and save money while we do it. So I think that the work that you've done to address some of the concerns here are important, and I certainly understand the concerns around people's rights.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
I also believe that right now the law as it is is preventing us from helping many of the people who are most in need. And when a medical professional, public health professional is saying if you gave me 72 more hours and the other thing, I would say, on the one hand we're saying there's not enough beds and not enough facilities and all that. That's absolutely true and we need a lot more of that.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
But partly because of that, they're not out there trying to hold every single person unnecessarily. In fact, I think there's a lot more people who they'd like to help. In this case, we're talking about the people who are most in danger and most in need are the only ones that they even have space to hold for a bit longer. Our hospital systems and our treatment facilities are strained to the level that they can't help everyone that they need to.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
So this will allow them to help those who are most in need and have the tools to do so. And there are spaces for them. We need a lot more spaces for more people. But the reality is those Shorter term holds are actually able to connect people if we have a little more time, to voluntary treatment. And in some cases, the most severe cases, a conservatorship is the right approach for people. So I thank you for this.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
I would ask to be added as a coauthor and look forward to continuing to work on this issue with you and to help people in our communities who are sick and who desperately need our care and attention. Thank you.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further questions or comments, I want to thank you for bringing this Bill. I think this is important. As somebody who both created and operated a program, a significant portion of my career working with the chronically homeless, the seriously mentally ill, and began a program in San Diego and then operated it, which was very, very successful, this is important. This is a huge piece of the puzzle. That's important.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
All of us know when we walk down a street and we see somebody on a street corner who's undergoing severe mental crisis, we know they need help. All of us would say that and what's humane and what's not. I would argue that it's not humane to leave that person on the street corner who's in crisis and who needs help because where are they going to go? Well, where do they go now? They go basically one of two places. Jail, which is a terrible place.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The last place you want to send somebody who's in mental crisis is jail. Or they go to a hospital, like an ER, where they don't get help. They are taking up a bed that all of our for services that they're not getting. They're taking up an ER bed that all of our regions need for other emergencies. They're coming back again and again.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The people I worked with, one of the individuals over 300 days a year, went to the ER 300 days a year, took an ambulance, all that, and wasn't getting better or third, they die on the street, which is a terrible result. This will help alleviate that problem. This will help get that individual in to have medical attention. And once that medical attention happens, they can start adjust. It gives them a chance to make huge changes in their life, and we've seen that.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
So I will be supporting this today. I think this is a big step in the right direction to make sure that our cities and our counties can deal with people who really need this help. They're in severe, severe crisis, and this will help them live a more full life. So with that, Senator Eggman, you may close.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much. And thank you all for being here today. I think the Chair summed it up with a lovely close. We're not looking to just take people willy nilly off the streets. We're trying to help the people who need help the most. We're trying to free up our system so we can actually treat people and help get them better versus just triaging them over and over and over and again till they end up dead and in prison.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I'm sorry if the disability rights folks are tired of me hearing me say people are dying with their rights on. We're all tired of seeing it and being a part of it. This is just one more step in the continuum of care. Let's complete it. I ask for your aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Do we have a motion? Motion from Ms. Pacheco. Second from Ms. Sanchez. And for the record, you did accept the amendments.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I did accept the committee amendments.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The motion is do pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschein. Aye. Maienschein aye. Essayli. Not voting. Connolly? Connolly. Aye. Dixon? Dixon, aye. Haney? Haney, aye. Kalra? Not voting. Pacheco? Pacheco, aye. Papan. Papan, aye. Reyes. Sanchez. Sanchez, aye. And McKinnor. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your Bill is out. Thank you.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Ms. Eggman, I believe you have a second Bill.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I'm sorry. Yeah, I got so excited. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Okay. And you're all welcome to be added as a co author of this one, too. This one has to do with credit. And I don't know about the rest of you, but I have pretty good credit. I'm proud of that credit. I'll put my score up against anybody's. But if you need a housing voucher, you may not have good credit. And we shouldn't be surprised.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We should not be surprised if you don't have good credit and you need a housing voucher. And as we know, trying to get people housed in California is one of the most important things. And when folks get that Section Eight voucher, that mental health voucher, whatever it is they know that pays 70% of the rent, but they go to a landlord and the landlord says, let's run a credit check for that last 30%, and you get a terrible credit report.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
That shouldn't be the reason people get turned down. We should expect they have bad credit. This simply says that they have an option to present something else besides just their credit report, pay stub or blast job, something like that. So we took amendments to a verifiable source that they can pay that 30%, they can use that housing voucher. We can help people get housed. And I have with me today Rebecca from NASW and my friend from the Housing Authority.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Mr. Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Rebecca Gonzalez, and I'm here today on behalf of the National Association of Social Workers California Chapter. We represent approximately 9000 professional social workers in California who have a degree from an accredited school of social work. I'm speaking in support of SB. 267. Currently, individuals who are seeking housing are protected by the California Fair Employment and Housing Act, which protects individuals from discrimination. However, having poor credit remains a significant barrier to obtaining a stable housing situation.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
According to research, credit scores are a significant and persistent hindrance to acquiring housing. Credit scores are intricate formulas that may be damaged due to unpaid medical expenses, severe personal predicaments, or bills simply going unpaid because of poverty. Nevertheless, credit reports do not always indicate the complicated reasons for Low credit scores. For example, a person with a poor credit history due to unpaid bills may have poor credit specifically because they choose to prioritize rent over other expenses.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
The report lacks nuance and does not give the full picture about why a person handles debt. Furthermore, a credit score is an indication about what has happened in the past and does not show what the person is now. When an individual has received a housing voucher, they often have connected themselves to other resources. SB 267 will allow more voucher holders an opportunity to secure housing by allowing potential tenants to present proof of their financial capability to make payments.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Essentially, this Bill is about providing a fairer, more accurate picture about where a potential tenant is financially with a hope of allowing these crucial housing vouchers to get more people and families indoors and safe. We urge and aye vote. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Next witness.
- Andrew Dawson
Person
Hello, I'm Andrew Dawson with the California Housing Partnership. We're a private nonprofit that was actually created by the Legislature for increasing the supply of affordable and sustainable homes for Low income Californians. I'm not going to add too much to what was said, but I would say that the use of credit as an indicator of financial responsibility has aggravated the homelessness crisis that we have by preventing Low income Californians from obtaining stable housing.
- Andrew Dawson
Person
I just want to end with a quote that I read in the analysis today, which was this Bill recognizes an emerging truth. Credit history is not a reliable proxy. For ability to pay. With that, I'll end shortly, and I thank you for your time.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in support. Name and organization only.
- Cassandra Mancini
Person
Good morning. Cassie Mancini on behalf of the California School Employees Association. In support.
- Linda Nguy
Person
Good morning. Linda Nguywith Western Center on Law and Poverty. In support.
- Sara Flocks
Person
Sarah Flocks, California Labor Federation. In support.
- Debra Carlton
Person
Deborah Carlton with the California apartment associate. I want to thank the author for taking the amendments. We have removed our opposition. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. See no further. Witnesses in support. Witnesses in opposition.
- Patrick Moran
Person
Members Pat Moran with Aaron Reed and Associates, representing the Southern California Rental Housing Association. We are opposed to the Bill. We do appreciate the amendments the Senator has taken on the Bill. And we do realize that this Bill allows us to use credit reports to determine someone's ability to pay. And it's what we rely on to make that determination. We have to mitigate risk in some way, and this allows us to do that. It may not be perfect, but it's what we have.
- Patrick Moran
Person
We use credit reports regardless of whether or not someone receives a credit voucher or not. I guess the biggest sticking point for us at this point, since she's amended the Bill, is if the applicant chooses to avail themselves of the law, they can provide alternative information to my client to determine whether or not they have an ability to pay the rent. And it allows them a reasonable time to present that information to them.
- Patrick Moran
Person
We just don't know what a reasonable time is while they're cobbling together that information. That unit stays vacant. If that unit stays vacant, my client doesn't collect rent on that unit, a unit that may be vacant because someone was evicted from it, which took six months, which during that time there was no rent being collected for that unit. So for those reasons, we are currently opposed to the Bill. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further waiters in opposition.
- Dean Grafilo
Person
Dean Rafila with capital advocacy on behalf of the California Rental Housing Association. In opposition.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition. Mr. Kalra.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, I'd like to move the Bill. I'm very happy to be a co author on this Bill. As indicated in the prior hearing, credit reports didn't even exist, I think, believe, until 1989. So the sense that this is something that's absolutely mandatory in order to determine someone's ability to pay is just not true.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
It's been used as an additional barrier, especially for Low income families, families that are trying to get we already know how hard we've heard it from some of our colleagues how hard it is to be able to get into a unit with first, last, all that stuff. We have other legislation dealing with that. But as I also mentioned previously, the first home we moved into when we came to this country, my father. Rents out Section Eight and has for decades now.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
He started renting it Section Eight before credit reports existed. And even to this day, when I've asked him, it's like, Is that something you would need? He said, absolutely not. If you think it's easy to get a voucher, it's not. And sometimes you have to wait for years so folks are heavily vetted just to be able to qualify for many of these vouchers.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
There's no need to put an additional barrier, an additional reason to not rent to a family that otherwise deserves to live in the same neighborhoods and communities we do. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Did you have a comment, Mr. Haney?
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Yeah, I would like to be added as a co author. I think there's a very important point in here which I appreciate, which is that sometimes people have prioritized paying rent over other bills. I think that's really important to note. They may have never missed a rental payment, but the other bills have sometimes added up. And credit history, I think, does tend to punish lower income people. And so there are a variety of reasons why people can struggle with their credit history.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
I know I didn't realize until I was later in my 20s when I first looked at my credit report to see that my student loan payments counted against it. And I had bad credit because I had missed Sally May calls. And you don't always pick up. And so there are reasons why people end up having bad credit. And so being able to prove that through other means that they're able to pay their rent is really important. And so I think this is a good Bill and appreciate the work that has been done on it.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Ms. Mckinnor?
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
Yes. I'd also like to be added as a co author. This is a really important Bill. Just quickly. My mother has a best friend that came here and moved from New York to California, and she's an in home care service worker. And during COVID she lost her job and she ended up, within a year, getting one of these vouchers to pay her rent. And by the way, the vouchers helped to pay the rent 70%. Yeah, I don't know why people wouldn't rent to these folks.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
And she really had a hard time finding a place. She has a retirement check. She could pay the rent, but of course, she was struggling. And that is why you have a voucher, is because you're struggling. So this Bill is so important, especially to our seniors and our elder folks. So I really appreciate you for bringing this forward. Thank you, Mr. Kennedy.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second motion. Mr. Kalra. Second for Mr. Haney. With that, Senator may close.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Yeah. Thank you very much, all for the support. I couldn't believe it when I went out to visit one of my housings and they said, you don't take a credit check for someone on the voucher. I go, yes, we do. And it keeps so many people out. So I think this is very common sense. Again, seniors are fastest going into homelessness oftentimes because of things just like this.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And they may have bad credit from sometimes people have to live on their credit cards, but they pay their rent. So I think a common sense measure close that gap. I ask for your aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. The motion is due. Pass the appropriations, Committee. Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschein. Aye. Maienschein. I Essayli. Not voting. Connolly. Connolly. Aye. Dixon. Haney. Haney. Aye. Kalra. Kalra. I Pacheco. Aye. Pacheco. Aye. Papan. Papan. I Reyes. Sanchez. Mckinnor. Mckinnor.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you all.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your Bill is out. Thank you. Senator Dorazo.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Let's start with SB 567, and I know you're presenting for someone else as well after that. So let's start with SB. Five, six, seven thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Good morning, Chair. Appreciate all of you. And the California Homelessness Prevention Act, SB Five, Six, Seven, which will protect many Low income renters from unjust evictions and unreasonable rent increases. These are issues that top the reasons for homelessness. I want to start by thanking the Committee chair very much for working so closely with us, the staff. And there's a series of amendments starting on page 12 to further refine the scope of SB Five, Six, Seven, which I am accepting.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We all know we've been talking about in various ways the State of homelessness and the crisis, how it impacts so many people in our community. It's growing and growing and growing every time there's accounts. We haven't stopped it. The Bill before you has two principal components addressing glaring loopholes with existing provisions that are too vague and difficult to enforce, leaving tenants susceptible to exploitation. SB 567 also provides enforceability for existing protections so tenants are able to defend themselves from unjust evictions through public and private enforcement.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
These disturbing trends of evictions an average of 160,000 households face evictions annually. It is estimated 1.5 million Californians faced evictions during an 2018 study. These trends will continue to worsen if we do not proactively address the root of the problem. 567 provides Californians housing stability and reduces the number of people on the brink of homelessness. With me to testify in support are first, Leonor Godinez leader with Faith in Action East Bay and PICO California. Second, Nidia Soto, attendant from Salinas, California.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Ms. Soto will provide her testimony in Spanish. Mr. Brian Augusta, legislative advocate for the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, will help to translate or no, Giovanna. Okay. I'm sorry. I thought you had another career in... And Mr. Augusta will also be available to answer questions.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. First witness, please.
- Leonor Godinez
Person
Thank you. My name is Leonor Godinez and I'm a leader in Faith in action, East Bay and PICO, California, and a Member of the Social justice ministry at St. Anthony's Church in Oakland. I am a small landlord in Oakland and I support SB Five, Six, Seven, it won't hurt small landlords and will help prevent tenants from unnecessary evictions. I have been a small landlord in Oakland for over 40 years.
- Leonor Godinez
Person
During that time, the City of Oakland implemented rent control, and I have enforced these rent caps in my units. But I know that not all landlords do. And I know that landlords often evict unjustly. SB 6567 closes loopholes in just cause protections and strengthens enforcement. When I retired, I thought a lot about what I wanted to do when I grew up. Right? I wanted to be of service in some way.
- Leonor Godinez
Person
And I determined that for me, when I looked at what was around me, the family core was the essence in society that if the family core is strong and stable, that a child has a better chance of success. But how can you have that success if your housing is unstable? I see five, six, seven as a necessary component in my work of having the core family be stable. Home is sacred. That is why I support SB 567. Thank you for your time.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Nidia Soto
Person
Hi. Good afternoon. My name is Nidia Soto. I am a single mother of three and I live in Salinas, California. I work for the nonprofit BHC that's In Action Council that's in the County of Monterey. In October 2022, my family and my neighbors received an eviction letter from the complex of three apartments where we had been living for 12 years. My neighbors had been there even more, even longer than 12 years. According to the letter, they were planning for electrical and plumbing repairs, and they might have even torn down the apartments. They gave us 60 days. They were two elderly families and my own. We paid $1,297 in rent. Exactly 20 days after moving out, the same apartment was rented to a new family for $2,550.
- Nidia Soto
Person
The owners now rent the other apartments to new families for $801,000 more. Finding a new home was very stressful. Now, 100% of my income goes to pay for a roof for my family. And each month we pay a total of $3,829, almost three times what I was previously paying. The owners really do not touch their hearts when they push families out on the street. Most families have to share housing with two or three families to be able to pay the cost of rent. This harms our children's education and everyone's mental health. We must put a stop to all this. That is really unfair. This is why I ask for you to support this Bill. SB five, six, seven.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Hi. Good afternoon. My name is Nidia Soto. I am a single mother of three and I live in Salinas, California. I work for the nonprofit BHC Action Council that's in the County of Monterey. In October 2022, my family and my neighbors received an eviction letter from the complex of three apartments where we had been living for 12 years. My neighbors had been there even more, even longer than 12 years.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
According to the letter, they were planning for electrical and plumbing repairs, and they might have even torn down the apartments. They gave us 60 days. They were two elderly families and my own. We paid $1,297 in rent. Exactly 20 days after moving out, the same apartment was rented to a new family for $2,550. The owners now rent the other apartments to new families for $801,000 more. Finding a new home was very stressful. Now, 100% of my income goes to pay for a roof for my family.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And each month we pay a total of $3,829, almost three times what I was previously paying. The owners really do not touch their hearts when they push families out on the street. Most families have to share housing with two or three families to be able to pay the cost of rent. This harms our children's education and everyone's mental health. We must put a stop to all this. That is really unfair. This is why I ask for you to support this Bill. SB five, six, seven.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in support. Name and organization only, if any.
- Brian Augusta
Person
Good afternoon, Chair. Brian Augusta on behalf of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation in support.
- Nicole Wordelman
Person
Nicole Wardelman, on behalf of the Children's Partnership, in support.
- Daniel Duarte
Person
Daniel Duarte, San Diego Organizing Project and PICO, California, in support.
- Teresa Perez
Person
My name is Teresa Perez. I'm from San Diego and I'm with San Diego Organizing Project and PICO, and I'm in support of SB 567.
- Charlotte Jones
Person
My name is Charlotte Jones. I'm from San Diego. I'm with the San Diego Organizing Project. I am in support of 567.
- Christine Perez
Person
Good morning. My name is Christy Figueroa Perez, and I'm with the San Diego Organizing Project and been a victim twice of almost losing my home. And I am in support.
- Ashley Mendiola
Person
Hello, my name is Ashley Mendiola. I'm from San Diego, also part of San Diego Organizing Project and PICO, California. And I'm in support.
- Lourdes Varja
Person
Hi. Good morning. My name is Lourdes Varja, San Diego Organizing Project and PICO, California. I'm in support of the SBA five, six, seven. Thank you.
- Laura Estrada
Person
Hello, good morning. My name is Laura Estrada. I am part of San Diego organizing project and PICO, California. And I support this Bill.
- Zairia Ox
Person
Good morning. My name is Zairia Ox. I am with Sacramento Act and PICO. I attend mass at Asobar in Oak Park. And I support this Bill. Thank you.
- Eddie Carmona
Person
Eddie Carmona, on behalf of PICO, California and the Nine Federations in support of SB 567, and a proud co sponsor.
- Patty Shaw
Person
Good morning. My name is Patty Shaw. I'm a Member of Sac Act and PICO, California, and I strongly support 567.
- Edith Pastrano
Person
Good morning, everyone. My name is Edith Pastrano organizer with Acce, also a tenant in support of SB 567.
- Yolanda Flores
Person
Good morning. My name is Yolando Flores. I'm a Member of Acce from Richmond and I support.
- Anna Gonzalez
Person
Anna Gonzalez from Richmond in support.
- Walter Sanchez
Person
Walter Sanchez from San Pablo in support.
- Raul Vasquez
Person
Hi, my name is Raul Vasquez and I'm organizing with ACCE in strong support.
- Blanca Retano
Person
Blanca Retano from Richmond, also in support.
- Irma Beltran
Person
Hi. My name is Irma Beltran. I'm a single mother. This is my daughter. Please help us. She's graduating now. She's one of the future lawyers. Please support SB 567. Please.
- Andrew Dawson
Person
Andrew Dawson, the California Housing Partnership in support.
- Shavana Morales
Person
Shavana Morales with Leadership Council in strong support as well as Catholic Charities and We Are Not invisible in Fresno. Thank you.
- Fatima Iqbal-Zubair
Person
Fatima Iqbal-Zubair with California environmental voters in support.
- Mark Sawyer
Person
Mark Sawyer with PICO, California and Sac Act Housing Federation in support. Thank you.
- Sara Flocks
Person
Sarah Flocks, California Labor Federation, in support.
- Cassie Mancini
Person
Cassie Mancini on behalf of the California School Employees Association and SEIU California in support.
- Linda Nguy
Person
Good morning. Linda Way with Western Center on Law and Poverty, proud co sponsor and supporter. Thank you.
- Paul Yoder
Person
Mr. Chair Members. Paul Yoder, on behalf of the cities of West Hollywood and Santa Monica and also my oldest who's done a lot of work for Ace. Urgent I vote. Thanks.
- Devin Williams
Person
Good morning, everyone. Devin Williams with ACCE Antioch, Contra Costa County in support. Thank you.
- Melvin Willis
Person
Good morning, everyone. Melvin Willis with Richmond ACCE also speaking as an individual Member of the Richmond City Council, District One, and I urge a support vote.
- Archie Brunford
Person
Good morning. Archie Brunford, retired Navy vet, disabled vet, part of VASH in strong support.
- Patricia Yar
Person
Good morning. My name is Patricia Yar. I come from Pittsburgh, California. I'm with ACCE and I represent Contra Costa. I'm in strongly support 567. Thank you.
- Eddie Gums
Person
Eddie Gums, and I'm with ACCE from Antioch. And I'm also with the Black Owned Beauty Supply Association. And we're in strong support.
- James Paul
Person
Good morning. James Michael Paul with the American Federation of State County Municipal Employees, California. In support.
- Kimberly So
Person
Good morning, my name is Kimberly So, and I'm in support. Thank you very much.
- Sheila Sells
Person
Good morning. My name is Sheila Sells. I'm with Sac Act. I'm support.
- Anne Stubbs
Person
Good morning, my name is Anne Stubbs. I'm with Sac Act and I'm support.
- Jay Mitchell
Person
Good morning. My name is Jay Mitchell. I'm with Faith in Action East Bay and PICO in Oakland. And I am here in support of five, six, seven.
- Darryl Alder
Person
Good morning. My name is Darryl Alder II. I am with SacACT and PICO, and I am also in support.
- Anya Lawler
Person
Good morning. Anya Lawler here today on behalf of the Public Interest Law Project, the National Housing Law Project, the Berkeley Rent Board, the Santa Monica Rent Board and Rise Economy. All in support.
- Michael Wharton
Person
Good morning, my name is Michael Wharton, Faith in Action, West Oakland, and in the support of Five, six, seven, thank you.
- Joe Lopez
Person
Good morning. My name is Joe Lopez. I'm a victim of this housing crisis and I'm strongly in support of Five, six, seven, thank you.
- David Sharples
Person
David Sharples of the community group ACCE in support.
- LaTanya Ri'Chard
Person
LaTanya Ri'Chard, Member of ACCE. I am strongly supporting this Bill.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzales, National Association of Social Workers, California Chapter, in support.
- Raquel Mason
Person
Raquel Mason on behalf of the California Environmental Justice Alliance Action in support. Thank you.
- Samuel Jain
Person
Samuel Jain with Disability Rights California. We are in support.
- Mike West
Person
Mike West on behalf of the State Building and Construction Trades Council. Also in support. Thank you.
- Duke Cooney
Person
Duke Cooney, on behalf of ACLU California action in strong support. Thank you, Senator.
- Saa'un Bell
Person
Good morning. Saa'un Bell, Power California Action, and we are in support of 567 thank you.
- Brian Staff
Person
Brian Staff on behalf of United Way Greater LA, in support, thank you.
- Andrés Ramos
Person
Andres Ramos, on behalf of Public Advocates as co sponsors, in strong support, thank you.
- Jocelyn Unknown
Person
Jocelyn with Faith in Action, East Bay and PICO, California. Strong support SB 567.
- Carmen Ramos
Person
Carmen Ramos, Faith in Action, East Bay and PICO, California. And I support SB 567.
- Valeria Ochoa
Person
Hi, everyone. Valeria Ochoa with faith in action, East Bay and PICO, California. And we strongly support SB 567. Thank you.
- Olgarena Unknown
Person
Morning. Olgarena from Salinas, California, from building healthy communities. I support SB. Five, six, seven thank you.
- Melissa Spinosa
Person
Hi, my name is Melissa Spinosa. I'm from Building Healthy Communities, Salinas, California. And we're in full support of SB 567.
- Angela Spinosa
Person
Angela Spinosa from Salinas, California, Building Healthy Communities and strong support.
- Isabel Tejeda
Person
Isabel Tejeda. I'm from Salinas BHC. I support SB 567.
- Francisca Rojo
Person
Good morning. Francisca Rojo from Seaside, California. Support SB 567.
- Andrea Rida
Person
I'm Andrea Rida, I'm from Seaside with BHC and I'm in support of SB 567.
- Chris Logan
Person
Chris Logan, Faith in Action East Bay and PICO, California, supporting SB 567.
- Chris Moreno
Person
Chris Moreno from Oakland, California, in support of SB 567.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Shane Gusman on behalf of the Consumer Attorneys of California in support.
- Mia Gerrero
Person
Hi, my name is hi, my name is Mia Gerrero, and I'm here to support SB 567.
- Anna Renderos
Person
Anna Renderos from Oakland, California. East Bay Faith in Action and PICO, California, supporting SB 567.
- Alba Hernandez
Person
Good morning. Alba Hernandez faith in action, East Bay and PICO, California, in strong support of SB 567.
- Hazel Watson
Person
Hazel Watson from Sacramento Act and PICO in support of SB 567.
- Klima Motaki
Person
My name is Klima Motaki. I'm with Sacramento Act in PICO, California. And I support SB 567.
- Lucero Soto
Person
Lucero Soto with Sacramento Act in PICO, California, in support of SB. Five, six, seven.
- Sydney Alper
Person
Sydney Alper with PICO, California, and as a voter, constituent and chair in Maienshein's district in support of SB five, six, seven.
- Gabby Trejo
Person
Gabby Trejo with Sacramento Act and PICO, California, in support of SB five, six, seven.
- Steve Hong
Person
Reverend Steve Hong, chaplain in hospital with Gospel Imperative. I strongly support SB five, six, seven.
- Kiki Velez
Person
Hi Kiki Velas, a clean buildings advocate with the Natural Resources Defense Council in strong support.
- Sebastian Motelvang
Person
Good morning. My name is Sebastian Motelvang. I support SB, five, six, seven.
- Allison Monroe
Person
Allison Monroe, a renter in Oakland. I support just-cause legislation.
- Robin Unknown
Person
My name is Robin, I support five, six, seven.
- Giovanna Bahardo
Person
Jovana Bahardo, with ACCE in Sacramento in strong support.
- Robert Copeland
Person
Robert Copeland, Member of ACCE and Sacramento Homeless Organized Committee. Strong support.
- Marquita Fraiser
Person
Marquita Fraiser, South Sacramento, strong support.
- Rae Huang
Person
Reverend Rae Chen Huang, representing over 150 organizations across the state with Housing Now coalition in very strong support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in support. Witnesses in opposition. We'll need two chairs there.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. First witness, please.
- Debra Carlton
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chairman and Members. Debra Carlton with the California Apartment Association. Let me start by saying thank you to the Committee for working with us and the author for working with us on amendments. I think we're very close. I think I first want to respect the primary witnesses in support the Bill. And the law was never intended for owners to cheat the system, and I think we fixed that. You have fixed that with the amendments.
- Debra Carlton
Person
I think it's small owners who are primarily affected by the just cause provisions. It's those owners who move into their property who need to or their family because of illness they may have rehab that they need to do because of flooding or water damage, et cetera, that needs the tenants to move out. And it's those owners who may take their homes off the market because they need to sell them because of personal for personal reasons. What we have remaining are concerns with the penalty provisions.
- Debra Carlton
Person
We want to make sure that it's not unjustly imposed upon a small owner who may not have unreasonably affected either. The increase to rent. The California Apartment Association hires an economist to work out the CPI numbers every year because it's not necessarily that easy. So we want to make sure that if a small owner makes a small, minor mistake, so long as it's not malicious or intentional, that they are not exposed to attorneys fees and costs. So we're going to continue to work with the author and the sponsors on those provisions. So thank you very much.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Karim Drissi
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members Karim Drissi. On behalf of the California Association of Realtors here today in opposition to SB 567, I'd like to begin my remarks by thanking both the author and the sponsors for their willingness to work on this measure as it's moved through the legislative process. Also want to thank the chair and the Committee and the tremendous Committee staff for their work on this measure. As evidenced by the extensive analysis, however, we still have concerns with the measure.
- Karim Drissi
Person
In particular, SB 567 provides that if a small housing provider inadvertently miscalculates the rental amount and asks for just $1 more than is permitted in AB 1482, they are then liable for attorneys fees and costs. This, to our way of thinking, will create a cottage industry of unscrupulous attorneys who will then prey upon these small housing providers who inadvertently make these minor miscalculations.
- Karim Drissi
Person
This, in turn, will disproportionately impact seniors as well as Members of other vulnerable populations who are more likely to inadvertently make these minor miscalculations than the rental amount. And so we do align ourselves with the suggestion contained on page 17 of the analysis, which suggests that the author may wish to consider amending the Bill to limit recovery of attorneys fees and costs to a housing provider who acts willfully or with a fraud, oppression or malice. However, at this time, we do respectfully request a no vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you so much. Thank you. Any further witnesses in opposition? Name and organization only, please.
- Katherine Bell Alves
Person
Good morning. Kate Bell on behalf of the California Rental Housing Association and Apartment Association of Greater LA. In opposition.
- Patrick Moran
Person
Mr. Chair Members Pat Moran with Aaron Reed and Associates, representing the Southern California Rental Housing Association. Opposed to the Bill. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition, turning the Committee motion from Mr. Kalra. Second from Mr. Haney. Ms.. Papan.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So as we see here today and we know in our everyday lives we have a critical need for housing, I want to thank the author for making the amendments that you've made to date, because they really did balance. The needs of tenants with what small housing providers really do go through and the constraints that they may have in order to try to keep units on the market. I have some questions.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So on the 51%, I wondered how you came up with the 51%, because in my experience in the real world, there may be a group of, say, four people who aren't related but may invest in a property. They don't want anyone to be a majority owner. So they each own 25%, let's just say. Why is it that one of those folks couldn't allow a family Member to move into a unit should that family Member need the housing or whatever their situation is?
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So there are a lot of people go in and they try to create their own generational wealth by pooling their resources to buy a building. And oftentimes that can be four, can be less than four, more than four, and they don't want anybody to be a majority owner. So maybe you could enlighten me about why 51% is this magic number. Because in the real world of people trying to grow the generation of wealth, sometimes they may not own that much percentage of a building.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, thank you. And I'll ask Mr. Augusta to answer that.
- Brian Augusta
Person
Thank you. And thank you for the question. The short answer is there's not magic to 51, other than it does sort of define who is a majority owner. And part of the reason for having that provision in the Bill is it grows out of experience that local governments have had in implementing a similar owner move in provision.
- Brian Augusta
Person
And in those ordinances, as we do here, our goal is to avoid sort of gaming the system by granting a small ownership interest in the property and then allowing that very small owner to claim the right to own or move in. In the circumstance that you describe of four unrelated people owning the property together, I think maybe there's some conversation to be had about what is the right percentage.
- Brian Augusta
Person
But the reality is that sort of arm's length transaction of four people owning property together is sort of what we're trying to ensure that we don't have this instance where an owner is brought in simply for the purpose of displacing the current tenant. So that's why we landed on 51%.
- Brian Augusta
Person
I'll let the author speak to how she might want to move forward on that question, but I think it's very critical, based on the experience we've seen at the local level, that we not open it up to the ability of a very small minority owner using that provision.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Any further.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
I do have another question. Yeah. I would ask the author if you could take a look at that, because I think in the real world, with people trying to grow their generational wealth, as I said, it may be that you've got four investors. Nobody's got enough money to buy one building. And you don't want anyone to have more control than a majority interest because everybody wants to be equal. So that's kind of what happens in the real world.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So I'd like to see if you could explore that. Then the second question I have relates to if your family Member moves in, they must stay for 12 months, and if not, then you have to offer the property back to the tenant that was displaced. Do I have that right?
- Brian Augusta
Person
Yes.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Okay. And I'm okay with that. Sometimes things happen in people's lives. Like, it may be that the family Member moved in and they got sick and they're a senior and have to move out and need more care, whatever it may be. And I'm just wondering if there's a way of taking into account something that might come up because the family Member wasn't able to stay for 12 months.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
It wasn't like you just moved them in there, wanted to evict the existing tenant, tried to raise the rent, or whatever it may be. Anyway, something to think about because life happens to folks that might have moved in. And it may be that in six months something came up. That's all I'm suggesting. But I appreciate the amendments you made to the Bill, and I will be supporting the Bill today. But please think about the less than 51%.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I will, thank you. And look, all of these, from the very beginning, came from the practitioners, people on the ground who deal with these cases every single day. And we even tried to say, okay, we're not going to change all the laws. What is it that is really going on that contributes the most not here and there. Contributes the most to people getting evicted because hundreds of thousands of people get served with evictions. So we wanted to get the most common practice.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
What was the most common abuse? Not every single one, but with the most common abuse. And this is what we came up with. And I'm sure there'll be other circumstances of individuals who have these situations. Like you said, four people getting together, wanting to invest, but we're trying to address what is the most common and what would be the most impactful on families, especially where they're trying to evict them. So we will definitely look at that. Thank you. Thank you for your support. Appreciate it.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. I have a couple questions and I'll hand it over to my colleagues. First off, when I hear the complaints from the people, what I hear, and I sympathize with them, is that housing in California is unaffordable and it's hard to access. My concern, though, is that we're sort of making the landlords the cause of the problem and the boogeyman. And I don't think that the reason for the high prices and unaffordability is because of landlords.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Landlords are operating in the market that's given to them. So I would just ask Senator, do you think that landlords are the cause of the unaffordability issue? And why are we putting this on their backs to control, capping what they can do with their property, capping how much they can charge? And just why are we regulating landlords and not focusing on the other policy issues behind the cost of housing?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Well, I would love to have one Bill that addresses all the issues that lead to homelessness. I tried to focus on the issues where there is already a laws, these already in place, and how we can better enforce those laws and get rid of those loopholes. That was the whole purpose. It was not to change all the laws. It was frankly, to focus in on where there are loopholes that have contributed to more people getting evictions.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I think their experiences of telling you what they pay in rent is how difficult it is so that if you get evicted and you lose your place, how hard it is to then find another place, how much more difficult it is to find a place that is reasonably priced, how much increase in rent. It's already law. I mean, we're not changing that. We're not blaming. We're not saying all of this is caused by landlords.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We want to fix where there are loopholes and allow these tenants to be able to defend themselves in the case of those loopholes. So we're very, very focused and narrow in what we're trying to do.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
I appreciate that. I know how hard it is, and I have lots of friends and family who struggle to get affordable housing. What I'm saying is that it's caused by the decisions that we make in this building. It's the regulations and the taxes that make it very expensive to build affordable housing. And if we're really serious about providing affordable housing to the public, I would encourage the public that we need to focus on reducing regulations that artificially drive up costs.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Prevailing wages is a big part of that conversation. Limiting construction fees, reforming CQA, it's the government that's adding to the cost of housing and building. And we have to get out of the way and give people options rather than regulating the few rental units that we have, we got to build more and we're the biggest impediment to that. That's my overall concern. But with that I yield. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you, Ms.. Pacheco.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
So I also want to thank the author for taking amendments. I did have a couple of questions. I noticed that one of the amendments that were going to be taken was regarding the definition adding family trusts, which would be revocable and irrevocable trust. But there has to be some relationship sibling, spouse, domestic partner, child, parent, grandparent or grandchild. My concern is this I've encountered situations where you have two individuals that decide not to get married.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
They'll be together for 50 years, 50 plus years and decide not to get married, not to become registered domestic partners. So my concern is we may have a situation where there's an elderly person who was with another person for a significantly long period of time and now they won't be considered as a natural person here if they're to inherit from their partner. So is there any thoughts on possibly expanding it to include maybe not just domestic partners but other people?
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Because sometimes people will live with somebody and their beneficiaries and they may not necessarily be related but maybe in the case of the circumstance that I just explained they're with their partner for a long period of time. Is there any thoughts of that?
- Brian Augusta
Person
Well, thank you for that question. One of the things that I think has been when we worked with the Committee to come up with that definition because we wanted to really define what we were hearing as a family trust, which is all of the creators, the settlers of the trust and the beneficiaries are related to one another. Once we start to drift away from that we start to get into a question about sort of where are the limits of this?
- Brian Augusta
Person
And I would just put it in perspective because I understand the example that you're giving is a rational one. But as we move further away from that, what we're talking about here is the limited situation in which a property owner wants to move a family Member in to the property. That is a very limited situation. Then we have the very limited situation of the relationship between these two parties that created the trust together.
- Brian Augusta
Person
There's probably ways that they could navigate that business relationship if their goal was to move one member's, sibling or not sibling excuse me, offspring or family Member into the unit to restructure it. But just from the perspective of the sponsors, the more we try to kind of account for each of those instances, the further we get away from trying to keep a tight definition of owner move in for those purposes. But I'll let the author respond to sort of how we want to move forward on that issue.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Well, we could look at that. I'm not sure exactly how to fix that, but we'd be glad to look at that. Thank you.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Thank you. And then I also have some of the same concerns that the opposition has. I'm also a real estate broker in my city, and so I have some of the same concerns. And I'm just curious to see if there's any further conversations that are happening to fine tune this Bill.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
It seems like a lot of amendments have already been taken, and it seems like some of the amendments that are being asked for are just a few more amendments. I'm curious to see if there's any dialogue still happening.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We have fine tuned this dozens of times. Fine tuned and fine tuned and fine tuned. I'm always open to hear something else that has been brought up, but we've really tried hard, worked hard, and especially with the help of the chair and the and the Committee who are experts. But we will be open
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
And to the opposition. I'm just curious to see if there are more amendments that can be made to better this. I know you explained that right now, but is there a place where we can actually get to maybe more neutral from opposition? I know the Apartment Association is possibly they see some improvements being made to this Bill, and I'm just curious what your thoughts are.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yeah, we appreciate your input and your questions, and we will, as always, continue to work with the author and the sponsors on refining it as we get to our final destination. But I think the issues you raise are absolutely something we've been working on, and we'll continue to work on that. So thank you. .
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Sir. I want to thank the author for your leadership and the entire coalition that came together around this Bill. I know it's been a long journey already and many, many changes to it, and it started out with a lot of things in it. But I do want to say that what's in front of us now is incredibly important and impactful. I'm one of the five renters in the state Legislature. We started the Renters Caucus this year to be able to work on issues like this.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
And I do think that what is in front of us will have a huge impact on the 17 million plus renters in our state. Many people do not know that laws exist that can protect them. There aren't ways to enforce those laws. There isn't notice requirements. So when we have such an important law like the one that was passed a few years ago, let's make sure that people know about it.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Let's make sure it's enforced, and let's make sure it has meaning for the people who we wanted to protect with it. And this goes such a long way in doing that. I do want to thank the opposition and folks for working collaboratively on this. I think the point that was made about how, in reality we want, of course, everyone who is renting property to follow the law and also know the law themselves.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
And when they're not doing that, the larger set of landlords who are following the law are not well served by that either. And so I think this also helps with landlords to be able to have that really notice that they're providing and clear ways to be able to follow the law and know the law as well. And so I appreciate the work that was done by the Committee and the chair and the amendments that were taken. And thank you for your leadership.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
I know these bills can be very tough, and this is one that will have a big impact, and you've done it in working well with everybody and I think everyone's collaboration and the very large coalition of tenants that have come together and really helped move this this far forward.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
This is a huge victory for the tenant organizations and movement across the state and will do a lot of good to protect people who we want to make sure can just stay in their homes and afford to be there. Thank you.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
Yes. I want to thank the author for this Bill. I really want to thank all the people that showed up, that traveled from all across California to raise their voices and let us know how they feel and what's happening to them out there. That's the real world. The real world are people that can't stay in their homes.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
In my district, we had a 60 unit apartment building where they evicted everybody to do repairs, and then within three months, they moved people back in with triple the rent. And we got to stop. This cannot happen. This Bill is super important for everybody in California. We want to keep people housed. It's so important, you guys, to keep people housed and not have them sleeping on the street. This is inhumane. We cannot get used to and accustomed to walking over people in the street. This is just not right. And we Californians, we deserve better than that. So I just hope I'm asking everyone to support this Bill today. And thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Ms. Reyes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And I also want to thank our author. These bills become more important, especially as you continue to talk about them and you bring in other people who have differing opinions, because that's what makes it a better Bill. But in the end, the purpose remains the same, and that is to protect the renters, to make sure that they are not displaced. We talk about homelessness. The best way to not increase homelessness is to keep people where they are housed.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
The more we do to displace them, the more we're increasing homelessness. And then we talk about, zero, homelessness is such a problem. Well, let's do everything we can to keep people exactly where they are, and let's make sure that those who use these methods, unscrupulous methods, are stopped so that we keep people in their homes, so that we don't talk about homelessness as if it's something we have no control over. This is one way to control it, and that is keeping people in their homes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I think two of the suggestions that were made having to do with the 51%, I think it's a fair thing, and I appreciate your willingness to look at that. I think one possibility is that they all have to be equal partners. So you don't have one that is a 70%, and they bring in somebody to be a 30% partner just to have that 30% partner bring a family Member in. But if they're all equal partners, they all have an equal interest in this.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Equal at 50/50, equal at whatever the number is. But your work on this, not just on this Bill, but on this issue is commendable. And I appreciate all that you've done on this Bill, especially because it's these bills that help California to keep homelessness down. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further comments from the Committee, I want to thank you for this Bill. Very pleased to support this today. I think this is a step in the right direction. I know a lot of work went into it, so I appreciate that. In regards to one of the other issues, too, that I would also add to the author that was raised by the opposition just ask you to continue working on the issue of an inadvertent error.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Obviously, we want to make sure somebody who just makes an honest mistake that's taken care of appropriately. But this is a great step forward for people renting here in California. I agree that it helps make sure our homeless numbers do not increase, and it provides some very valuable protections. So with that, please support it today, and you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. And as one of you mentioned, I want to especially thank the sponsors and the advocates and everyone who's traveled over and over and over again from all over the state. This shows how important it is to them. And I couldn't come up with the kind of language that it takes to make a Bill better and yet still stick to its core mission. So thank you. Everyone gracias, and I urge your support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Okay, we have a motion. The motion is due pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. Ask the Clerk to please call the role.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschein aye. Maienschein aye. Essayli. Essali. No. Connolly. Connolly. Aye Dixon. Haney. Haney. Aye. Kalra. Kalra. Aye. Pacheco. Pacheco. Aye Papan. Reyes. Reyes. Aye. Sanchez. Sanchez. No. Mckinnor. Mckinnor. Aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your Bill is out. Thank you. Mr. Umberg, you'll be next. Ms.. Durazo has one more Bill. Mr. Umberg, you are next. And so, Ms. Durazo, I know you're presenting, so please proceed. And as people exit the room, I just ask you to exit quietly, please. So she may present.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members. I'm here to present SB 399 on behalf of Senator Wahab. I want to start by thanking the committee staff for their work on this bill. SB 399 clarifies that workers have the freedom to decline mandatory meetings or communications where their employer expresses personal views on religious or political matters, including political party or union support or opposition.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
These meetings are often referred to as, quote-unquote, Captive Audience Meetings, because, although not job-related, workers are not permitted to leave or not attend without facing discipline or other adverse action. In many workplaces, employees are at will and can be fired at any time for almost any reason. It gives employers tremendous power to pressure workers to do as they say. Imagine that you are at work and your boss calls you into a mandatory all-staff meeting.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
At the meeting, the boss asks you to vote for a candidate or a proposition that you oppose. You try to leave but are told you will be written up and possibly fired if you leave. This is what workers face on the job. California has long prided itself as a sanctuary for workers, regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, or political leaning.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
It is important that workers are free to go to work without feeling coerced into listening to the political or religious views of their employer against their will. This bill provides exemptions so employers can communicate legally required information essential for workers to fulfill their job duties. Likewise, nothing in SB 399 prevents employers from communicating their personal, political, or religious beliefs to their workers. It simply clarifies they cannot require workers to attend meetings to discuss religious or political matters that are not germane to the work they do. With me in person to testify today are Freddie Frias, a former REI employee, and Shane Gusman, Gusman on behalf of California Teamsters.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
First witness, please.
- Freddie Frias
Person
Thank you so much for listening. Sorry, listening today. My name is Freddie Frias and I worked at REI as a retail sales specialist for a year and a few months. Until about January 31. I worked at the REI store in Berkeley, which was the second REI to unionize. We won recognition of our union in August of 2022. As soon as management found out that we were organizing, they started holding captive audience meetings a few times a day to try and stop our organizing efforts.
- Freddie Frias
Person
They would use different methods for these meetings. Some would be group meetings in the morning with whoever was scheduled to work in the store that day, and some would be private one-on-ones with management spending over an hour walking around the store with us and talking to us about unions. They also used the strategy of bringing in visiting managers to our store. After the unionization effort began, we had more managers than before when we began organizing.
- Freddie Frias
Person
Those floating managers held captive audience meetings while they were at our store while also following around the loudest people on our organizing committee. A personal experience I had was one visiting manager would constantly follow me around, and I had to have several talks with our store manager and other managers before I was able to get her to stop listening in on all of my conversations and reporting them back to upper management.
- Freddie Frias
Person
They would also use scare tactics and try to spread disinformation during these meetings, telling sales associates to ask coworkers who wanted a union to explain exactly what a union pension plan is to try and sow doubt in pro-union associates or saying things that were completely false, like that the union would need to approve any vacation request and also exploiting the daily struggles that workers of color would confide into managers about. The captive audience meetings were also very, very uncomfortable.
- Freddie Frias
Person
It felt like they were mandatory, and it always seemed like managers were reading a script that we had to listen to, either with a small group of people or more often than not by yourself in a cramped office upstairs, or as we were walking away from the stores. This misinformation campaign by management started to work. There are 120 people who work in the Berkeley store.
- Freddie Frias
Person
Once the captive audience meetings started, leaders of the organizing effort, me included, began getting texts from three to four people a day about the misinformation that was being spread. An example being that the union would have to approve vacation requests. We were able to overcome these tactics and win our union, but these captive audience meetings were intimidating to many people and they haven't really stopped. Now they use them for bargaining and attempting to delegitimize the union at our store. In bargaining, they put across a 0% wage proposal over the life of the contract, and then they held captive audience meetings.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
We need you to wrap up, sir.
- Freddie Frias
Person
All right. In other stores in California. I'm here today because other workers shouldn't have to go through what we went through. I'm asking for your support and urging to pass Senate Bill 399. It would prohibit employers from requiring workers like myself to attend these coercive captive audience meetings.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Mr. Chairman, members of the committee, Shane Gusman on behalf of the California Teamsters Public Affairs Council, proud co-sponsor of this bill. Also the Amalgamated Transit Union, UNITE HERE, the machinists, The Utility Workers Union of America, and the Engineers and Scientists of California, all in strong support. A couple quick points. One is this bill is really acknowledgment of the kind of power that an employer wields in the workplace. They don't wield that power fairly all the time.
- Shane Gusman
Person
And you've heard from the previous witness sometimes with respect to these captive audience meetings, it really is degrading to the employee whether it's a religious discussion, discussion about unions, a discussion about politics. It's really not appropriate in the workplace, and it's just as appropriate for the Legislature to put limits on that. Lastly, there's been a lot of talk that there is a First Amendment issue here. There's no First Amendment issue. The employer is free to talk about anything they want to talk about. They just can't discipline the employee for not wanting to be a coerced audience. And there's no First Amendment right to have an audience. We urge your aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in support. Name and organization only. Go ahead.
- Sara Flocks
Person
Mr. Chair Member, Sarah Flocks, California Labor Federation, in support. Here for any questions.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Mike West
Person
Mr. Chair and members. Mike West, on behalf of the State Building and Construction Trades Council, also in support. Thank you.
- Patrick Moran
Person
Mr. Chair and members. Pat Moran with Aaron Reed and Associates, representing the Orange County Employees Association in support. Thank you.
- James Powell
Person
Good morning. James Michael Powell with AFSCME California, in strong support. Thank you.
- Cassandra Mancini
Person
Good morning. Cassie Mancini on behalf of the California School Employees Association. In support.
- Paul Yoder
Person
Mr. Chair and members. Paul Yoder, on behalf of the California Faculty Association, in strong support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in support. Witnesses in opposition.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
First witness.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Courtney Jensen on behalf of CalChamber in opposition to SB 399 as a job-killer Bill. With all due respect to the author and sponsors, this Bill has a much broader impact than those shared. Current labor code already prohibits employers from attempting to coerce or influence employees' political activities, including coercing an employee to vote a certain way, attend a political rally, support or oppose certain legislation, or to vote for or against a union. All of those things are already illegal.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
What this Bill does is open employers up to new PAGA litigation for sharing information regarding broadly defined political matters with employees. Political matters in the Bill is defined as legislation, regulation, elections, political parties, or unionization. This could impact employer speech as simple as a political sign in a restaurant window, hosting a Legislator at a manufacturing facility, sending out a company newsletter expressing support for equal pay legislation, hosting a regulator at a farm to discuss pending pesticide regulation.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Now, if an employee opts out of this type of speech and the employer assigns the worker to a different facility on the day they host a Legislator, can that employee now call that an adverse action ensue? We think yes. As we saw during the COVID-19 pandemic, it is often crucial for employers to be able to communicate with their workers on pending new rules and what it would mean for the workplace.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
The exceptions in this Bill do not allow employer speech unless it is necessary to perform their job duties or required by law. There are many instances of political matter speeches, such as pending COVID regulations or Executive Orders that is important for employers to share with employees that may not be required or necessary for job duties. The practical effect of this Bill will be ending any employer speech involving political matters.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
This will have a significant chilling effect on the speech of employers and also information being provided to employees about issues important to the business or their jobs. If there is legislation pending that would have a positive or negative impact on the business or the workers job security, this is something workers would want to know about. We believe this runs afoul of the First Amendment, as is a content based restriction.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Very quickly, we also believe it is preempted by the National Labor Relations Act as it does allow employers to have meetings regarding union organization. Employers are permitted to hold meetings during union election campaigns to express their views. However, they cannot threaten, punish or promise benefits to employees. For these reasons and others, we respectfully request a no vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Aaron Avery
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. My name is Aaron Avery with the California Special Districts Association, representing a variety of local government employers providing essential services in their communities. I've also been asked to make remarks on behalf of the Rural County Representatives of California. I want to first acknowledge and thank the author for her willingness to meet with us and hear our concerns. However, we remain respectfully opposed because SB 399 is incompatible with the functioning of public employers. Local governments are not typical employers.
- Aaron Avery
Person
Local governments are accountable to the voters and function to develop and implement policy. This may come in the form of self-generated policy and ordinances legislation, as well as legislation coming from the State Legislature, federal government or elsewhere. The broad definition of political matters in this Bill could give rise to the Bill's application in a variety of circumstances which are not the target.
- Aaron Avery
Person
For example, an employee required to attend a City Council or board meeting as a part of their job arguably may be required to attend an employer sponsored meeting at which the employer's opinions about political matters are being shared. Meetings in the form of internal deliberations, analysis, vetting of local rules, or consideration of or implementation of other rules and laws applicable to local governments could also cross the line in some circumstances.
- Aaron Avery
Person
We do not believe that the exemptions in SB 399 are sufficient, and it frankly would be difficult to craft exemptions broad enough to cover all the types of routine government operations that could be caught up in this Bill. Unfortunately, the only way to know the outer bounds of SB 399 is through litigation, the expense of which will be borne by the taxpayer. I also note that local government employees are already afforded significant enforceable protections from antiunion activities under the government code.
- Aaron Avery
Person
We are not aware of these provisions of law failing to protect or vindicate the rights of employees. I again want to thank the author for her time and willingness to meet with us, but today ask for a no vote. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in support name an organization only. I mean opposition. I apologize. I saw you U-turn suddenly and I realized I thought you were giving a second chance. No.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair. Chris Mckayley on behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, in respectful opposition to Senator Wahab's Bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Chris Walker
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair, Members of Committee. Chris Walker on behalf of 300 sheet metal, air conditioning contractors, union contractors across the state in opposition to this Bill.
- Alyssa Silhi
Person
Hi, good morning. Alyssa Silhi, on behalf of the California Association of Recreation and Parks districts, and also on behalf of my colleagues at the California State Association of Counties, the Urban Counties of California, Cal Cities, and Association of California Healthcare Districts. Aligning our comments with our colleagues at CSDA and RCRC in opposition. Thank you.
- Sarah Pollo Moo
Person
Sarah Pollo Moo with California Retailers Association. Respectfully opposed.
- Sabrina Lockhart
Person
Good morning. Sabrina Lockhart with the California Attractions and Parks Association in opposition. Thank you.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
Nick Chiappe on behalf of the California Trucking Association. In opposition. Thank you.
- Katie Davey
Person
Good morning. Katie Davey with the California Restaurant Association in opposition.
- Robert Wilson
Person
Good morning. Robert Wilson, California Credit Union League here in opposition. Thank you.
- Melanie Cuevas
Person
Good morning. Melanie Cuevas, with the California Bankers Association also in opposition. Align our comments with those from the Chamber. Thank you.
- Lawrence Gayden
Person
Lawrence Gayden with the California Manufacturing Technology Association in opposition.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition, questions or comments from the Committee, or a motion? Mr. Essayli?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Let me ask the supporters: what conduct by employers do you have examples of that isn't already illegal? Like what are we trying to do here?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The Bill is very specific in that it would prohibit an employer from taking adverse action. So this does not restrict in any way an employer's ability to communicate their views on political or religious matters, but it would prohibit either taking that adverse action or in some way preventing a worker from being able to do that.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Can you give me a real-life example of an employer doing what you're talking about?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There's an example. So in the case of Trump, Shell Oil held a mandatory rally where workers--
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
In what state?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
In, believe it was in Ohio. In California--
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Pennsylvania. It's Pennsylvania. Do you have any examples in California?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes, in California, during Prop. 22, one of the examples were that drivers had to, before they were able to log in and be able to start their shift to work, they had to watch a yes on Prop. 22 ad and then click to affirm that they had watched the ad before they were allowed to then do their job. That is one example. Another is that we have a number of propositions that are going to be on the ballot that very much affect workers.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And do you think unions do not hold captive audiences? Do you think unions don't force employees to listen to political statements and views and coerce them into political positions? Do you think unions don't threaten employees? Do you think they don't provide misinformation? You don't think they wield power? You don't think they're coercive? So my question is why not have the same rules on the unions, who are engaged in way more political activity than any employer I know in the State of California?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Unions don't employ in under labor law. They are not taking adverse action. This Bill is focused on the adverse action of employers. There's a power dynamic in the workplace. They have the ability to hire, to fire, to discipline and directly impact the livelihood of workers, often low-wage immigrant workers. That's what this Bill is saying, that employers are not going to be able to take that adverse action against an employee who declines to be coerced to listening to an employer's political speech.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It does not stop the employer in any way from saying whatever they want on legislation, on regulations, on anything that is political or religious.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Let me ask the opposition: do unions have any influence over assignments or people's workplaces, in your experience?
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Well, I'll give you this. Under the National Labor Relations Act, when it comes to unionization, there are very clear rules of the road for what employers can and cannot speak about during a unionization process. There are not those same rules during the unionization process for the unions who are attempting to unionize the workers. So there are very clear rules, very specific things that we cannot do. And my understanding is there's no restrictions on the other side.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
To your knowledge, do unions control assignments or do they have any influence at the workplace?
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Over there can be benefits given for things that union workers do with working with their union. So if they go to a City Council meeting or if they go to other things like that, they may get job assignments or be higher in the assignment process and those types of interactions.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
All right, I'll just close with this. Mr. Chair. One thing I know for sure, having been here for six months, unions have way more power in this state than any employer I know. Almost every Bill is sponsored or supported or lobbied by some unions. So the idea that employers are wielding all this political power is not true. Unions are funded almost solely for political influence. They have way more money than any employer. Just look at the politics. Look at the political contributions.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mr. Chair, is this Bill about unions or is this Bill about employers?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
It's about unions.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Hold on, motion. I think that her point is sustained. Mr. Essayli, you're certainly allowed to question on the Bill, but you're moving beyond that by talking about unions in general or legislation in general or every Bill in the Assembly. So if you'd like to ask the author or the author's witnesses or the opposition witness about specifics about the Bill, that's appropriate. Moving beyond that is not appropriate.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Mr. Chair, they brought up the power dynamics of employers. I'm simply rebutting it with the power dynamics of unions. I don't really think much more needs to be said. So with that, I yield, and I'll be opposing this Bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you, Ms. McKinnor.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
Again, I'll thank the author, Senator Wahab, for bringing the Bill up. Thank you also to my seatmate here for helping me to read through the analysis, just to talk about what you just said about unions and dynamic. It is a power dynamic with an employee that's non-union. I'm a union member. I've been a union Member for 30 years. I know this is not on the unions, but unions where I worked, they don't have any influence over where I worked.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
I worked for Department of Social Services. There was no power dynamic there. But when an employer makes an employee watch a film, a Proposition film, or a film on politics, that is abuse of power. And I support this Bill because we cannot have that happening to our employees and our workers in California. And labor has nothing to do with anything like that because they don't control the workplace.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Tina McKinnor
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Any other questions or comments from the Committee? Seeing none, Ms. Reyes, do you have comments or motion?
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I want to thank Senator Wahab. There are issues. There are issues that are brought up by the opposition. And the good thing is that they represent many good employers. And so what they're saying is true and what they question is accurate. But the problem is that we hear from the very employers who are not following what the law already states. And I know that the question was asked and Senator Wahab was not here, and I know that an answer is given.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
But on page nine of the analysis, at the top, it has a number of examples of where coercive audiences were held. These meetings were coerced over employees. Amazon in Marino Valley. In Davis, Pete's Coffee, Google, REI, Apple Stores, all in California. I just wanted to make sure that that was brought up. It has to do with power. And without a doubt, that is what we're talking about. Somebody has power over how much you're going to earn, over whether or not you're going to work there.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And the very examples that are noted here, I can tell you, as a workers' comp attorney, I've heard those from many of my clients when I practice law. I think having that kind of balance, when there is no balance, when there is abuse of power, I think is extremely important. For the opposition, I appreciate that they represent very good employers who are not doing this, but clearly there is an issue and it has to be addressed. And with that, I would move the Bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion from Ms. Reyes. Second from Ms. McKinnor. Thank you very much to the author and I ask you to please close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. For me, this is about democracy in the workplace, and we hope to be able for those employees to all feel safe and protected from the power that is over them. Thank you very much. And I urge an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. I ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein? Maienschein aye. Essayli? Essayli no. Connolly? Connolly aye. Dixon? Haney? Haney aye. Kalra? Pacheco? Papan? Papan aye. Reyes? Reyes aye. Sanchez? Sanchez no. McKinnor? McKinnor aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your Bill is out. Thank you. Thank you, Senator Umberg, who has three bills. I'm going to remind the Committee, both parties have caucus today, so we are through, I believe, the more difficult bills. So hopefully some of these we can pound through pretty quickly, I believe. And I'm going to remind the witnesses, too, it's two minutes or less, too, so we can try to make sure we get through our very busy docket today. With that, Senator, you can start with item 1, SB 35.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much, Mr. Chair. In a note to Senator Durazo, she need not hurry back because when I left, we had 32 bills left in Senate Judiciary. And my apologies to Assemblymember Zbur. I hope he's had his or at least starting to have his Red Bull. All right, so AB SB 35 is simply a CARE court cleanup bill. The CARE courts were conceived in order to respond to the issue of those who have untreated schizophrenia or psychotic disorders that are unhoused.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Since the passage of this bill, Judicial Council has engaged to work to make sure that issues that we're identifying before CARE court becomes operational are both identified and, to the best of our ability, remedied. What this does is it allows subordinate judicial officers to conduct hearings and removes the filing fee from indigent filers. I would urge an aye vote. With me here is Tracy Kenny from Judicial Council to respond to any questions.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Tracy Kenny
Person
Thank you. Tracy Kenny with the Judicial Council. Really appreciate Senator Umberg trying to clarify some of these provisions that the courts who are in Cohort One will be able to implement on October 1. And happy to answer any questions.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Any witnesses in support? Seeing none. Witnesses in opposition? While they're coming up, you accept the amendments?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I do accept the amendments, and I thank Ms. Alison Merrilees for her help and support on the bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in opposition. Please proceed.
- Mary Bernard
Person
My name is Mary Ann Bernard. I am a member of NAMI. I am a member of the Family Advocates for the Severely Mentally Ill, and I am opposed only to what was supposed to be a technical amendment which has actually taken away the discretion from the judiciary to hear from family witnesses. You are allowing severely mentally ill people to witness tamper and it needs to stop. Thank you.
- Melanie Klinkamon
Person
Melanie Klinkamon. I'm an advocate with a severe mentally ill daughter who is missing, also a native person. I would just say ditto on what she's saying. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Alison Monroe
Person
Hello. Alison Monroe, Families Advocating for the Seriously Mentally Ill. I very much support CARE court. I appreciate last year's bill. I do not support these amendments because, as Mary Ann Bernard said, they limit the opportunities of families to tell the story of the person who needs protection. These amendments are.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Name and organization only, please.
- Katherine Wolf
Person
Katherine Wolf, doctoral student in the Sustainability and Health Equity Lab and the Disabled Ecologies Lab at the University of California at Berkeley. Oppose because of the reduction in due process.
- Paul Simmons
Person
Paul Simmons with the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance of California, and we oppose.
- Duke Cooney
Person
Good afternoon. Duke Cooney on behalf of ACLU California Action in opposition. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition, questions or comments from the committee or a motion? Motion from Mr. Haney, second from Ms. Papan. Seeing no questions or comments from the committee. Senator, you may close.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Let me just clarify one point. These amendments nor does the bill in its original form in any way limit the ability for a family member to provide input, to provide testimony, provide information just to make sure that that's clear. Thank you. Urge an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second. Ask the clerk to please call the roll. Motion is do pass as amended to add an urgency clause to the Appropriations Committee.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein. Aye. Maienschein, aye. Essayli. Aye. Essayli, aye. Connolly. Aye. Connolly, aye. Dixon. Haney. Aye. Haney, aye. Kalra. Pacheco. Papan. Aye. Papan, aye. Reyes. Aye. Reyes, aye. Sanchez. Aye. Sanchez, aye. McKinnor. Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your bill is out. Item Number Two, SB 40.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Move the bill.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Motion from Ms. Reyes. Second from Mr. Haney. Assembly Member, please proceed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, thank you very much. I want to clarify a few things. First of all, this bill simply provides that the fees from last year will continue to this year. There is no budget cut. Let me repeat: there is no budget cut. Notwithstanding what the Bar has said, for example, as reported by Senator Hertzberg over the weekend, that when you call to get a bar card and they say, 'oh, I'm sorry, you can't get a bar card because of budget cuts,' that's not accurate, number one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Number two, notwithstanding what the Bench-Bar has been informed that somehow because of budget cuts the JNE Commission can't be fully funded and thus we have judicial vacancies. That's not accurate. Number three, that the Bench-Bar Coalition was informed that the courts are in some way hampered because of state bar budget cuts. That's also not accurate, nor is there to be a reduction in force because of state bar budget cuts. That's not accurate.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
What this bill does do is--besides implementing the same fee as last year--it also increases legislative oversight. It provides for Senate confirmation for the Executive Director and the General Counsel. There's been a great deal of controversy concerning the State Bar. Thank you, Tom Girardi, for providing the revelation as to how much reform is required. We appreciate that.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And I also appreciate the fact that, for example, Ruben Duran, the current Chair of the Board of Trustees, I believe, is providing firm and positive leadership. Bar's heading in the right direction, but for right now, I think that we need to maintain the fee as it was last year and I think we need to provide some additional structure and accountability for the State Bar.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
With that, I urge an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second. The motion is 'do pass as amended.' Ask the Clerk to please--oh, Mr. Essayli.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Thank you. Your bill does more than that, Senator. It includes a provision that says that attorneys now are going to be required to file a bar complaint if they believe another attorney's engaged in treason, sedition, or insurrection. Why is that necessary to put in here?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So a couple of things. One: California is the only state in the union that doesn't have, or at least didn't have until very recently, a requirement that attorneys report other attorneys who are engaged in misconduct. In terms of treason and sedition, well, that's become an issue in the last couple of years with respect to attorneys who facilitate, aid, and abet and even conspire to, for example, overthrow the government.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
They conspire to ensure that there's not a peaceful transition of power, both at the federal level--well, primarily at the federal level. So if an attorney, for example, sees another attorney is, in essence, concocting a legal theory that purports to put the Vice President in a position where the Vice President is the sole arbiter of a national election, that would be treasonous. And so, if a lawyer sees another lawyer doing that, they have a duty to report it to the Bar. Doesn't make it a particular crime.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Okay, I have questions on that because we're talking about lawyers making constitutional arguments in a court of law. I think courts are well equipped to dispense with arguments whether they have merit or not. I'm concerned with the weaponization of the bar complaint system against conservative lawyers--such as John Eastman who's going through it right now--who made a constitutional argument about elected officials violating the Constitution and changing election rules. So I have a question.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
In 2016, there was an attorney named John Birke, B-I-R-K-E, and he filed a restraining order in California to bar all Members of the Electoral College from voting for President Trump. In a motion filed in federal court naming all 538 Members of the Electoral College, he claimed the votes--them voting for Trump would violate the Equal Protection Clause. They also were a number of attorneys who made an argument that Trump is unfit and under foreign influence, and therefore, he should not be confirmed as President.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
So why have none of these attorneys ever suffered a bar complaint or proceeding, and would you report Mr. John Birke as a result of your bill now?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, they probably haven't received a complaint because this wasn't the law previously, but it is the law--I would hope here soon--that if an attorney sees another attorney who is attempting to, for example, thwart the peaceful transition of power, that that attorney would report the attorney. Treason is defined in Federal Code. If not clear enough, I'll be happy to further define it here using the federal definition of treason. Whether or not Mr. Eastman has committed treason or not, that's for others to judge.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
So would you report Mr. Birke?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, I'm not prepared to respond to hypothetical questions, but if Mr. Birke fell within the definition of treason as defined by the United States Code, then, yes, and I was aware of it, yes, I would report him.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Okay. Alright, I'll close with this, Mr. Chair. I just have concerns because a lot of times as lawyers, we oppose actions of the government. For example, there was a big injunction where lawyers oppose the government interfering in free speech and censoring people on social media. I have a concern where if the government says, 'hey, we're acting in the public good, this is for public interest,' and lawyers are challenging this, is this now treasonous to go against your government?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
It was the policy in the United States to have segregation. If you attack those laws, you say, 'those laws are bad, they're unconstitutional,' is that treasonous that you're opposing laws of the government? So I'm just very worried we're going down a slippery slope of controlling what lawyers can argue. I want zealous advocacy. I want creative arguments because that's how we change law in the United States. And so I just have concerns. If you're willing to take that out, I support this, but with that, I can't support it. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Mr. Haney.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Thank you, Senator, for your work on this and certainly agree with a lot of the pieces of this or all of it, but I did want to ask you about your approach on the fees question specifically. I know that the State Bar certainly feels that they're experiencing financial or budgetary hardships, and there's been inflation.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
And there was a State Auditor report noted in the analysis that they believe that there may be some reason to at least have some modest fee increase, maybe not at the level that the Bar is asking for. I wonder, just because you and I haven't spoken about this, I would love to hear your perspective and your thought process and not including a fee increase of any kind in this legislation.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So what is included is the ability for the Bar to use the funds, the proceeds of a sale of the bar building in San Francisco, to provide for operations. If next year, it appears that there's a need for a fee increase, I'll certainly consider that. The tradition is that the Chair of the Assembly Judiciary Committee carry the bill next year.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But for this year, I believe that the Bar needs to focus on discipline, focus on some of the other matters in the state audit report, focus on making sure that money is spent prudently and that as a consequence of the sale of the building, that they'll have additional proceeds to be able to operate, but I personally am not in support of an increase in fees this year.
- Matt Haney
Legislator
Thank you. I appreciate that and just wanted to have that on the record as well and get your thoughts, and again, appreciate your leadership and your thoughtful process with this. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Mr. Connolly.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Thank you, and I appreciate the author's work on this. I'm prepared to support it. I did have a question on the treason piece primarily around what would constitute knowledge and thus a duty to report? I get where you're going with it. We're all aware of the likes of John Eastman, Rudy Giuliani. Let's say I'm a lawyer in California. I'm watching MSNBC. I see them doing their thing. I believe it constitutes undermining democracy or treason. Do I have a duty to report?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So in terms of hypotheticals, if you see a report on MSNBC, I suppose if you believe everything that's on MSNBC, everything is the absolute truth and it's a California lawyer who is advocating what you believe is treason under the federal definition, then, yeah, you would have a duty to report. But my expectation is that every viewer need not accept everything that is promulgated on MSNBC or Fox or any other media outlet.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
However, if you, for example, are a partner with someone who is advocating, in essence, the overthrow of the government, then, yeah, you would have a duty to report. So this is a report to the State Bar. This is not an indictment.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This simply tells the State Bar, 'hey, you may want to look at this,' just like if you as a consequence of both the State Bar's rule, the new rule by the State Bar, if you are aware of, for example, a lawyer who's stealing client trust funds, yes, now, you would have an obligation to report that. Yes.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
I think it could use a little bit more work in tightening that up.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Sure. I'd be happy to--whatever further clarification you'd like to provide, I'll be happy to entertain that.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. And before I go to more Committee comment, I realize I skipped over support and opposition, so we had our witnesses in support. Any further witness--our main witnesses support--any further witnesses in support? Seeing none. Do we have witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. I guess I didn't. I didn't do so bad after all. Well, there you go. Ms. Reyes, then Ms. Pacheco.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I understand that for purposes of the bill, to know means actual knowledge of the fact in question. Licensee's knowledge may be inferred from the circumstances. Is that your understanding, then?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, actual knowledge, yes, it does require actual knowledge. So if you 100 percent believe that everything that is broadcast on TV provides actual knowledge, I suppose that you may have a responsibility, duty to report. I can't imagine that if you heard something on MSNBC and you didn't report it, that that somehow would subject you to discipline.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And the other is, there is still the protection of attorney client privilege. If you acquire this information in an attorney-client relationship, that is not required to be disclosed?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
If your client tells you that they are currently conspiring to overthrow the government, you're not required to report that unless they indicate that they're going to use violent means to do so.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Ms. Pacheco.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Thank you to the author. I share the same concerns as my Colleague, the Assembly Member, and my concern is that the definition might be overly broad, so I feel like it also needs to be fine tuned a little bit more. And so my only concern is the same.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Sure, and again, I'm happy to entertain suggestions beyond the Federal Code as to what treason is.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Ms. Papan.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Is the building sold already, or they're in the process--
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Is what, I'm sorry?
- Diane Papan
Legislator
The building. The San Francisco building. The process--
- Diane Papan
Legislator
It's in the process?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Oh, it's in the process.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Okay. So no fees this year? As a Member of the Bar, I sort of appreciate that. No increase, I meant no increase.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Right.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Right. Right. Right.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
There would be no fees. Yay.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
Okay.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further questions or comments, you may close.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. This is a unique situation where two branches of government have some responsibility for the State Bar. Primary responsibility rests with the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court has the primary responsibility for the regulation and the discipline of Bar Members. We share some of that oversight responsibility more and more. The Supreme Court also has the ability to raise fees should it decide to do so. But this is my attempt, our attempt, to provide for greater accountability to the bar and we are funding the Bar at the same level as last year. I urge an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion. The motion is 'do pass as amended.' Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Aye.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein, aye. Essayli? No. Essayil, no. Connolly? Aye. Connolly, aye. Dixon? Haney? Aye. Haney, aye. Kalra? Pacheco? Aye. Pacheco, aye. Papan? Aye. Papan, aye. Reyes? Aye. Reyes, aye. Sanchez? No. Sanchez, no. McKinnor? Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your bill is out. Right before you go to your next item, Senator, Umberg, I'd like to call on Senators Rubio, Gonzalez, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Stern to please proceed over here, and with that, Senator, you may proceed on your third item, which is SB 71.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and your staff, in particular, Nicholas Lideckey, for their work and your work on this Bill. This is a very modest Bill. This is a very modest Bill. It simply increases small claims jurisdiction from $10,000 to $12,500 limited jurisdiction. Civil cases from $25,000 to $35,000. These levels were established in the mid 1990s. It provides for greater access to justice. My entire legislative career, I've sought to form coalitions, broad, diverse coalitions, and I've done so on this Bill, primarily in opposition. But nevertheless, I urge an I vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Motion from Ms. Pappin. Second. From Ms. Reyes. Witnesses in support, seeing none witnesses in opposition.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
You may proceed up to two minutes.
- Rosemary Shahan
Person
We're part of the unusual coalition. Mr. Chair and Members, I'm Rosemary Shahan, President of Consumers who are Auto Reliability and Safety, and we're respectfully opposing SB 71. We appreciate the improvements that have been made to the bill, but we believe it would still harm vulnerable consumers both by expanding the jurisdiction of limited civil courts without addressing any of their procedural problems, and by making it riskier to bring cases in unlimited civil courts. The analysis states that limited jurisdiction courts provide a forum for resolving minor civil disputes.
- Rosemary Shahan
Person
We take issue with the term 'minor.' Even though inflation has made the cost of goods and services increase dramatically, incomes have remained relatively stagnant. The median annual income in California is roughly 33,000, and according to the Federal Reserve, 37 percent of Americans lack enough money to cover a 4,400 dollar emergency expense. So millions of Californians are struggling to get by, and they can't afford to lose 25,000 or 30,000 dollars in limited civil where the procedures are stacked against them.
- Rosemary Shahan
Person
And according to the analysis, the only supporter of SB 71 is the trade association for the debt collectors. If SB 71 passes, the amount they can extract from consumers would increase significantly, and right now, the vast majority of litigation in small claims and limited civil courts is brought by debt collectors and other business interests against consumers. The procedures are streamlined and lack basic protections, making it difficult for consumers to get discovery to defend and show the truth of the matter.
- Rosemary Shahan
Person
And we agree with the Legal Aid Society of San Diego, which wrote in opposition to SB 71 prior to the most recent amendments, limiting discovery in an even larger number of cases will adversely affect consumers.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
You need to wrap up.
- Rosemary Shahan
Person
Okay. It would also harm consumers with higher amounts at stake by making it riskier that they may not be able to get their attorneys fees if they are not awarded over 35,000. And we respectfully ask for your no vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Megan Varvais
Person
Chair and Members of the Committee, my name is Megan Varvais. I live in Sacramento, and I'm here on behalf of Public Justice, which is a national public interest advocacy organization. We oppose SB 71 and we respectfully ask for a no vote because it will harm consumers. I'm not an attorney, but I have experience as a consumer litigant. When I was a struggling college student, I was a named plaintiff in a class action that addressed the overdraft abuses by Chase Bank.
- Megan Varvais
Person
The bank would routinely hold several days of debit transactions and then manipulate the timing of them and hit accounts with them all at once in an order largest to smallest. This had the effect of draining consumers accounts faster and triggering multiple overdraft fees. In less than a year, while I was unemployed and struggling the most, Chase took over one 1,100 dollars in overdraft fees from my account. This dollar amount is well within the limits of minor civil disputes, but it had a profound effect on my life.
- Megan Varvais
Person
I struggled to pay the fees back as quickly as possible to avoid becoming unbanked. The hierarchy of each unemployment payment was rent, bank fees, and then everything else. To this day, I still get very anxious when I need to log into any financial account. Eventually, after winning in the appellate courts, we won the class action. Chase had to return over 110,000,000 dollars to consumers, and we also won an injunction to stop some of the most predatory, overdraft practices the banks had committed.
- Megan Varvais
Person
Here are some ways that a truncated, streamlined, civil justice process would have negatively affected our case. Without discovery, there would be no way to prove that Chase's practices were widespread. I would not have been able to have the case heard in an appellate court. And without injunctive authority, there would have been nothing to stop Chase from continuing its predatory practices, depriving future customers of that particular benefit.
- Megan Varvais
Person
So the dollar amounts might suggest that the disputes are minor, but the consequences are still pretty major, and at this time, I think more California consumers need and deserve the full protection of the process, not less of them. So we ask for no vote.
- Robert Moutrie
Person
Briefly?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Very briefly
- Robert Moutrie
Person
With the briefest and nicest.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Very briefly.
- Robert Moutrie
Person
Rob Moutrie, California Chamber of Commerce. We are very respectfully opposed. Appreciate much work on this. I want to be very clear: we have different concerns. We do not believe limited courts are unworkable, do not believe they lack basic protections, we are only seeking amendments for small discoveries, such as one additional deposition to match thresholds. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Further witnesses in opposition?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
The biggest barrier--I'm a practicing lawyer, I know the Senator is too--the biggest barrier people have to court is attorneys' fees. It's very expensive to hire an attorney. So by having a modest increase in these limits, it's just going to have more access for people to have access to the court system. So I support this.
- Michael Corbett
Person
Michael Corbett from the California Council of County Law Librarians. We're not opposed to this bill, but we're concerned that it has not yet been amended to protect county law libraries from a revenue loss.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Jaime Huff
Person
Good morning. Jamie Huff with Civil Justice Association of California aligning our comments with that of the Chamber. Thank you.
- Robert Herrell
Person
Robert Herrell with the Consumer Federation of California shockingly aligned with CJAC on this issue.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
We'll thank Mr. Umberg's skill in combining opposition to a bill. Okay, turning over to questions or comments from Committee. Mr. Essayli.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
I, frankly, with all due respect to my friends, do not understand this opposition. It makes no sense to me. You guys are acting like limited civil court is somehow lesser than real court. I mean, it's a judge. There's limited discovery, but you could always get--with good cause, you can get more discovery and you can have more depositions.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
I don't know if you want me as a co-author, but I'm happy to be a co-author and I think it's good for the public. It may not be good for any special interest, but I think it's good for the public to have more access to court. So I strongly support this.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I welcome you as a co-author if you don't think it hurts your reputation too much.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Mr. Connolly.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
I don't want to stand in the way of that. No, I think the bill is getting in a better place with the amendments. I guess I am reacting to the fact that there are some cases in the civil world, they're smaller, but still complex, maybe seeking injunctive relief. The issue here is the discovery limitation, so I am very interested in hearing--I think we heard a little bit from one of the opponents on what would make sense. Is it an additional deposition?
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Is it some tweaking around that? So I would ask just, is that something still under consideration? It does seem limited, given with the increase you are going to see some more complex cases.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm happy to respond. So certainly, as Assembly Member Essayli pointed out, you can always get an additional deposition. You need to go to the court. Here's the reality of the situation. The reality of the situation is that increasingly, it's not the merits that determine the outcome of litigation, it's the resources. And those with more resources can absolutely bury a smaller entity in discovery costs. And so if you, for example, are a small business person and you've ordered widgets and the widgets don't show up, you're done.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You cannot access justice if you have a dispute with a large entity, if you're a consumer and you've just been ripped off by an airlines like we were, you basically are done. You have no recourse. You have no recourse in unlimited because they can simply bury you in discovery immediately. I'll just give you an example from a case that I handled just recently where there were no merits. There were no merits that would indicate that the plaintiff would succeed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The plaintiff simply said, 'we're going to drag you through, quote the discovery slog until you give up.' After three years of litigation, the settlement was a walk away, but the purpose was simply to drive them out of business. And so to the example of a class action that is, to be frank, absurd. 110,000,000 dollar class action would never fall under limited jurisdiction. Would never fall under limited jurisdiction. Maybe there's been a class action in the last 50 years in California that's been filed in limited jurisdiction court. I doubt it, but if there has been, I would welcome that information.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
Let's say like a Lemon Law case.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, a Lemon Law case is different. And certainly in a Lemon Law case, you can file an unlimited jurisdiction and you can file in limited jurisdiction if you so choose. I would guess you'd file an unlimited jurisdiction so that the fees combined with whatever judgment exceed the 35,000 dollars. But as was pointed out, this is a modest, modest increase over the course of the last umpteen years and it simply provides relatively small relief to those who seek justice but can't afford, basically, to fight anybody with greater resources.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further questions or comments from the Committee, do we have a motion? Motion from Mr. Essayli. Okay, so we have a motion. A second. Senator Umberg, you may close.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Urge an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. Ask Clerk to call the roll.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Aye.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein?
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein, aye. Essayil? Aye. Essayli, aye. Connolly? Aye. Connolly, aye. Dixon?Haney? Aye. Haney, aye. Kalra? Pacheco? Aye. Pacheco, aye. Papan? Aye. Papan, aye. Reyes? Aye. Reyes, aye. Sanchez? Not voting. McKinnor? Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your bill is out. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you Mr. Chair and members.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
You bet. We're still waiting on authors. Do I have a motion on the consent agenda? Motion for Ms. Papan. Second from Ms. Reyes. Ask the Clerk to call the role on the consent agenda. Consent agenda includes SB 296, Dodd, SB 303, Allen, SB 868, Wilk.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On consent. Mainshine? Aye. Mainshine aye. Essayli? Aye. Essayli aye. Connolly? Aye. Connolly aye. Dixon? Haney? Aye. Haney aye. Kalra? Pacheco? Aye. Pacheco aye. Papan? Aye. Papan aye. Reyes? Aye. Reyes aye. Sanchez? Aye. Sanchez aye. McKenner? Aye. McKenner aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Consent agenda is out. Ms. Gonzalez, Senator Gonzalez. Welcome. You have two items. I see you have witnesses here. Which item is this then?
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Refinery item.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Which one?
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
The refinery, 674.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
674. Okay, we'll start with that item. 11674. Welcome.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. First, I'd like to begin by thanking the Committee for their hard work and collaboration and accept the Committee's suggestion amendments. Thank you very much. So I'm here to present SB 674, which will recast the refinery fenceline program to close loopholes and ensure the program is consistently implemented.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
The Legislature made a promise to fenceline communities back in 2017 when it passed AB 1647 that refinery pollution flowing into neighborhoods would be adequately monitored and that they would receive real-time alerts when dangerous levels of pollution were detected. However, despite this effort, fenceline communities are still in the dark about the toxins and toxic contents--excuse me--in the air that they breathe.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
To date, fenceline communities in the Bay Area have never received an alert on the emission exceedances that have occurred in their vicinity. On Thanksgiving last year, residents of Contra Costa County woke to find white powder blanketing their neighborhood. When the refinery finally notified the community over three days later, they assured everyone that the powder was harmless. Unfortunately, we know that this powder contained cancer-causing heavy metal compounds, which was unfortunate. Far too long, communities have been overburdened by refinery air pollution.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
SB 674 will ensure that the refineries are more transparent and consistent, requiring that all necessary pollutants are monitored. Fenceline coverage is comprehensive and adequate, real-time alerts are sent, and root cause analysis and corrective action is taken. Testifying in support today I have Erica Martinez with Earthjustice, and Jan Victor Andasan--I always say that incorrectly--with East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. First witness, please.
- Erica Martinez
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Erica Martinez with Earthjustice, which is a co-sponsor of SB 674. 674 makes necessary changes to ensure better compliance with the core pillars of the fenceline monitoring law. The pillars are public health data collection, monitoring, and accountability. While air districts and refineries are indeed different throughout the state, they remain important commonalities that are central to the successful implementation of the law. I will highlight two examples.
- Erica Martinez
Person
It is critical that fenceline programs monitor for the most harmful toxic pollutants. The bill identifies 18 pollutants the program should be tracking based on a 2019 analysis of refinery chemical emissions and health effects. However, the bill also provides a process for an air district to explain why it might exclude one of those pollutants at the local level. Moreover, current law requires air districts to set up a notification system to alert communities when there is an exceedance at a refinery.
- Erica Martinez
Person
We understand additional statutory guidance would be helpful to air districts as they design their notification processes. The bill provides two threshold options that an air district can use in the design and execution of this requirement. In addition, SB 674 leverages the veracity of the data collection with additional auditing and making the data more accessible. Lastly, we continue in discussions with stakeholders, including the opposition, about recasting some definitions in the bill, including questions around auxiliary facilities and refining processes.
- Erica Martinez
Person
We urge your support of this bill and we want to thank the Senator for authoring this bill. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Jan Andasan
Person
Good morning. My name is Jan Victor Andasan. I am a staff and member at East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice where we organize residents in the Long Beach, South Bay, Southeast LA, and East LA community to address industrial pollution affecting predominantly black and brown neighborhoods. Not only do I currently organize and work directly with residents adjacent to refinery operations, but I also grew up next to the now Marathon facility.
- Jan Andasan
Person
Growing up, I thought that these facilities were normal and having respiratory issues like asthma were normal. My brother was born a year after I immigrated to the U.S. and he was born to come out of the womb needing to use a nebulizer to be able to breathe. My family's story is one of many that still happen today, 26 years later, of living in this region. Every day, many residents adjacent to refinery production have to decide what their day will look like.
- Jan Andasan
Person
Does the air feel heavier to breathe? Can I feel my throat close up so instead of walking in the park, I will go to an indoor gym? These are questions I go through every day even when thinking about doing simple errands. We urge you to support this bill because it is not revolutionary. Through this bill, we are simply filling the gaps in fenceline monitoring that needs to occur at all refinery facilities in the state.
- Jan Andasan
Person
This will also fill gaps of monitoring with sites that already have air monitoring. This will allow local residents, like those in LB, Carson, Southeast LA, and Central Valley up and down the state to be equipped to make better decisions in their life. The bill will also allow decision makers to have the data to make more informed policymaking on how to oversee these refinery facilities. Our stories are often told. What does the data look like? How many days did this facility potentially emit?
- Jan Andasan
Person
What were residents exposed to? This bill is about transparency, so refinery emissions over time will be collected and paired with our community narratives, will highlight what truly we are experiencing and what solutions we can create together. Again, I urge you to support this bill and stand alongside refinery community committees. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in support, name and organization only.
- Kiki Valez
Person
Kiki Velez with the Natural Resources Defense Counsel in support. Thanks.
- Isabella Argueta
Person
Isabella Argueta with the Health Officers Association of California in support.
- Noah Whitley
Person
Thank you, chair and members. My name is Noah Whitley, speaking on behalf of the Breast Cancer Prevention Partners and the Clean Seas Lobbying Coalition. In support.
- Fatima Balziwayer
Person
Fatima Balzawayer with California Environmental Voters. In support.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume Clean Earth for Kids. Strong support.
- Ross Buckley
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chairman. Members Ross Buckley, on behalf of South Coast Air Quality Management District. We're supportive amended, but appreciate the conversations.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in support.
- Erica Martinez
Person
Sorry. Erica Martinez, Sacramento Area congregations together in Support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Jasper Lysander
Person
Jasper Lysander. In support. I was born and raised in rural Hawaii and I saw the degradation, so.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in opposition.
- Zachary Leary
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Zach Leary, on behalf of the Western States Petroleum Association, we remain opposed unless amended on SB 674. Really appreciate the work of the Committee. We think it's a good step in the right direction. I think there's a couple of outstanding concerns still related to the Bill. I think some of them were outlined by the supporters had good stakeholder conversations with the author, with the sponsors, with the air districts.
- Zachary Leary
Person
I think the outstanding concerns are major relating to the definition of auxiliary facilities and the definition of refineries. We think those should include either contiguous or adjacent facilities that are under common ownership. And then as it relates to the air monitors themselves. The Bill states that it needs to cover the entire perimeter of the refinery unless it's deemed infeasible. We think that this decision should be made at the local level based on site specific information and geographic location.
- Zachary Leary
Person
Every refinery is different and we think it should be based on necessity and need. And so for those reasons, we remain opposed unless amended.
- Lawrence Gayden
Person
Lawrence Gayden with the California Manufacturers and Technology Association. Respectfully opposed. Thank you.
- Mike Monaghan
Person
Mr. Chair Members. Mike Monaghan. On behalf of the California State Building Trades, we are opposed unless amended and very encouraged by the conversations with the Senator. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in opposition. Name and organization?
- Genesis Tang
Person
May I provide a brief statement?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
No.
- Genesis Tang
Person
Genesis Tank on behalf of World Energy producers of renewable fuels in Southern California and we have a position of opposed unless amended.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Faith Conley
Person
Thank you. Faith Conley with Air Products. We're in an opposed unless amended position, but appreciate the conversations.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition, any questions or comments or motion from the Committee. Motion from Ms. Reyes. Do we have a second 2nd from Mr. Connolly. Ms. Pacheco?
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Hi. So I want to thank the author for working with the opposition. I know amendments have been taken to address some of the concerns that the opposition has had and so I really appreciate that and I'm curious to see if there's going to be continued conversations to fine tune it. It seems like it's an opposed and less amended. So it looks like both sides are working together, but I'm curious to see if you think more conversations can be had.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you very much. Through the chair. Assembly Member? Absolutely. We've continued we actually had a full pronged meeting not too long ago where every stakeholder was at the table, discussing the issues of auxiliary facilities, refining, as the opposition mentioned, and then moving forward. We will continue to have those conversations, of course, but we want to make sure that we uphold the integrity of the Bill, which is at the utmost to ensure that people's air quality gets better, that their health outcomes improve for living next to refineries.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
So that's the utmost intention of the Bill. Thank you.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
And I will be supporting the Bill today, but, of course, I'm looking forward to the continued conversations.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further questions or comments from the Committee, Senator Gonzalez may close.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
I want to thank everybody for coming forward, especially the sponsors, and we'll continue to work on this, as mentioned. And I would just respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you very much.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschien aye. Maienschien aye. Essayli. No. Essayli? No. Connolly. Connolly. aye. Dixon? Haney. Haney. aye Kalra. aye Pacheco. Aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. The motion is due pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Pacheco aye papan. Papan. aye. Reyes. Reyes. aye. Sanchez? No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Sanchez? No. Mckinnor. Mckinnor? Aye. Your Bill is out.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
And if you'll stay seated, Senator Gonzalez, you'll be presenting item 8, SB 487, on behalf of Senate President Pro TEM Atkins. Please proceed.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Okay. Thank you. Mr. Chairman and Members. Again I present SB 487 on behalf of our Senate pro TEM Atkins. Today, this Bill is needed to help providers who provide abortion and gender affirming care to people from out of state from additional sanctions. The aftermath, unfortunately, of the Dobbs decision over ruling Roe not only eliminated 50 years of reproductive freedom, but it also encouraged states to enact their own bans and restrictions, with many passing laws to target providers.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
While many of the states with abortion bans do have limited exceptions, providers are becoming increasingly wary and discouraged from entering the reproductive health field, which is really unfortunate. The purpose of SB 487 is to protect California healthcare providers who are willing to take risks by providing abortion care and gender affirming care in other states from additional sanctions, as well as providers who provide those services in California from people out of state.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
SB 47 is narrowly crafted and in no way limits or restricts all or our usual consumer protections or the ability of the medical program to terminate providers for other non abortion health care reasons. Testifying in support today, I have Dr. Tanya Spiritos, President Elect of the CMA and a practicing OB GYN, and Molly Robeson, the Vice President of Government Affairs, Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, and I respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. First witness.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
Thank you, Chair Maienschein and the Members of this Committee for allowing me to present testimony today. My name is Dr. Tanya Spiritos. I'm a board certified Obstetrician Gynecologist practicing at Stanford Healthcare. I'm here today representing the California Medical Association, which is cosponsoring Senate Bill 487. SB 487 expands protection against civil actions from another state's law being applied to reproductive healthcare Clinicians licensed in California.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
It ensures that California's providers can continue to care for patients without the fear of another state's laws interfering with their ability to serve people in California, whether on Medi-Cal or privately insured. As a physician who provides Reproductive Health Care Services, I can say with certainty that the protections SB 487 provides are of utmost importance. As you all know, we have recently seen unprecedented legislation attacking reproductive rights and gender affirming care throughout the US.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
Since the Dobbs decision was issued, 20 states have enacted total or severe bans on most abortion services. Making it difficult, if not impossible, for people to get health care in their own communities. Patients are forced to delay their care, travel hundreds or thousands of miles, face financial difficulties, and time away from work just to undergo simple and safe medical procedures. My patients come to me with a need for a service I can expertly provide.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
I will never interrogate my patients about their State of origin, and I know my colleagues treat their patients with the same respect. Out of state legislation that threatens our license to practice and credentialing as providers puts California practitioners at risk. Abortion care and gender affirming care are essential health care services. California has already done so much to be a safe haven and destination safe for protecting reproductive freedom. SB 487 builds upon the state's achievements by expanding the protections for its abortion and gender affirming care providers.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
I'm honored to serve my patients, but I can only continue to do this safely with the appropriate protections. Please allow my colleagues and I the peace of mind to focus on the patients sitting in front of us every day and to provide them with the quality health care they deserve. Help us protect access to health care, access to abortion care in California by voting yes on Senate Bill 487. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Next witness, please.
- Molly Robson
Person
Thank you. Molly Robson with Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California. Really just echoing the comments from Dr. Spiritos. SB 487 builds on the progress we made last year to ensure that healthcare providers in our state can provide compassionate and comprehensive care, free of the fear that they're going to be penalized based on another state's hostile laws. Respectfully urge your support on SB 487 today.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in support. Name and organization only.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Can I register support on behalf of the American College of OBGYNs, who's also a co sponsor? Thank you.
- Karen Stout
Person
Hi. Karen Stout. On behalf of the California Nurse Association, as well as Neighbor Approachers California in strong support.
- Brian Sapp
Person
Brian Sapp on behalf of CMTA and E roll. In support. Thank you.
- Monica Miller
Person
Mr. Chairman and members. Monica Miller, on behalf of the California Association of Nurse Anesthetists, CANA. In support. Thank you.
- Tiffany Mathews
Person
Tiffany Matthews, on behalf of Attorney General Rob Bonta. In support. Thank you.
- Bianca Gentile
Person
Bianca Gentile, on behalf of Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis. In support. Thank you.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Priscilla Kudos here on behalf of the California State Association of Psychiatrists. In support.
- Jennifer Chase
Person
Jen Chase from the University of California. In support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further witnesses in support. Witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, questions or comments, can I have a motion? Mr. Kalra?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
I’d like to move the bill and thank the senator and president of Pro TEM on behalf of others.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
We have a motion for Mr. Kalra, second. From Ms. Reyes. Mr. Connolly? I'd also like to be added as a co author.
- Damon Connolly
Legislator
I'd also like to be added as a co author. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Mr. Essayli?
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
Just a quick question. First off, the premise that doctors performing abortion services in California are somehow going to be charged with crimes in other states, it's not a credible argument. That doesn't happen. But what the Bill seeks to do, my understanding is you want to shield doctors who violated the law in other states from being able to continue practicing in California when there are consequences for doing that. So I have concerns about undermining the rule of law in other states, and why should we be protecting people who violate the law in other states if doctors are going to violate the law there? That is a concern to me.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And I'll just say, and if you want to respond, that's fine. I don't consider aborting a baby in the third trimester to be health care unless there's a medical need for the mom. That's barbaric. It's not healthcare. So there should be reasonable restrictions. So if you want to respond to any of that, it's fine. But I reject the premise of the Bill.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
I'll respond to the first part as a physician. There are physicians in California who have dual licensure or more. There's a compact as state medical boards which allows physicians to practice in multiple different states. If I were to spend six months a year in California, six months a year in Utah, there's a possibility that when I provide care in Utah that any action they take against me for having provided gender affirming care could be reported to California State medical board.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
When Medi-Cal, for example, hears that there's an action against me in another state, they would automatically throw me off the medical provider roles, and that therefore, would impact my ability to practice in California for the next six months. This has nothing to do with malpractice. This simply has to do with the provision of care that is legal in California.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
I would not be performing illegal services in Utah, but just in case a patient who came to see me from Utah here in California goes back to Utah, I'm back in the State of Utah. They then seize that opportunity to file a case against me because I happen to suddenly be practicing even though I didn't care for that patient in Utah. You can see that this is a very complicated thing we're not trying to protect physicians who are doing anything illegal.
- Tanya Spirtos
Person
We're simply trying to protect our physicians from unnecessarily having to fight with the medical system to maintain our credentialing in California. In terms of third trimester abortions, that is not part of our discussion today and is rather simplistic, so I will not deign to answer that question.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further questions or comments from the Committee. We have a motion from Mr. Kalra. A second from Ms. Rayes. Senator Gonzalez. You may close.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
I just want to say, on behalf of our Senate Pro TEM Atkins, we respectfully ask for an aye vote. We definitely know that abortion is reproductive health care. So with that respectfully ask for an aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. The motion is due. Pass the appropriations, Committee. Ask the Clerk to call a roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Mainshine? aye. Mainshine aye. Essayli? No. Essayli no. Connolly? Aye. Connolly aye. Dixon? No. Dixon no. Haney? Kalra? Aye. Kalra aye. Pacheco? Aye. Pacheco aye. Papan? Aye. Papan aye. Reyes? Aye. Reyes aye. Sanchez? No.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Sanchez, no. McKinnor?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your bill is out. Thank you. Senator Smallwood-Cuevas, you're up. Item Number Ten: SB 627. And I'd ask Senators Rubio and Stern to please proceed to the Committee. Welcome. You may proceed.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Assembly Members. I'd like to start by thanking the Committee for all of your hard work with my team and drafting these clarifying amendments, and we are happy to accept them. I am pleased to present SB 627, the Displaced Worker Transfer Rights Act, which would require large chain employers with 100 stores or more to give 60 days advance notice to workers of the store that is closing.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
It would additionally grant workers displaced by these closures a right to transfer to available chain stores within 25 miles of the closed location. Store closures can have a devastating effect on workers' financial security and destabilizing impact on our neighborhoods that we call home, as many of these closures disproportionately happen in low income communities of color, compounding the economic and job crises that so many of these residents already face.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Furthermore, the workers who are faced with job loss and need to collect unemployment or utilize other services for financial help because of the economic insecurity, these store closures in the end will cost taxpayer dollars because when workers have no employment, they will need to rely on the state for support to make ends meet and to weather the financial storm.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
SB 627 will help ensure workers lives are not completely upended when they lose their jobs due to store closures because they will have a safety net that will afford them an opportunity to continue to work and to continue to provide for themselves and their families and sustain our communities. With me today to testify in support of this bill is Sara Flocks with the California Labor Federation, the bill sponsor.
- Sara Flocks
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Sara Flocks, California Labor Federation. According to Business Insider, more than 2,200 chain stores are going to be closing across the country in 2023 alone. That means thousands and thousands of workers are going to be laid off and left without a paycheck and a way to make their income. This bill is very simple.
- Sara Flocks
Person
It allows workers at a store that has been closed at a chain that's over 100 locations to transfer when there is an opening at a store in a similar position where they've already been trained.
- Sara Flocks
Person
This bill is based on existing law, the Hospitality Rehire Act, which helped the hospitality industry bounce back from the COVID Pandemic, and it is also in the model of the Paycheck Protection Program, which showed that keeping workers connected to their jobs during economic downturns or layoffs makes good economic sense and protects workers and their families, and so we urge your aye vote.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in support?
- James Agpalo
Person
Good morning. James Michael Agpalo with AFSCME California, in support.
- Samantha Gordon
Person
Good morning. Samantha Gordon with TechEquity Collaborative, in support. Thank you.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
Mariko Yoshihara on behalf of the California Employment Lawyers Association and the California Coalition for Worker Power, in support.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Priscilla Quiroz, here on behalf of the California Faculty Association. Support.
- Suzanne Hume
Person
Suzanne Hume, CleanEarth4Kids, support.
- Eduardo Lopez
Person
Eduardo Lopez, a policy fellow with the Western Center on Law & Poverty here in support of SB 627.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Any further witnesses in support? Seeing none. Witnesses in opposition?
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Good morning. I think we're still morning. Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Courtney Jensen on behalf of California Chamber of Commerce, respectfully in opposition as a job killer bill. We believe this right to recall policy, which started as a COVID-related requirement for the hospitality industry, micromanages the rehire process for affected businesses and creates a problematic permanent statutory scheme that eliminates at-will employment and mandates hiring based on seniority alone.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
The bill broadly impacts chains which could include a multitude of businesses and industries, including retail, restaurants, grocery stores, hotels, hospitals and health care facilities, movie theaters, and more. The broad nature of this bill contains the issues that in 2020 caused Governor Newsom to veto AB 3216, the right to recall bill for the hospitality industry.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
After the veto, the Legislature and Governor came to an agreement in 2021 to institute a narrow law specifically for hospitality workers, which had a sunset and was specifically tied to the COVID-19 Pandemic. That may have been appropriate at that time given the widespread closures related to COVID, but is no longer appropriate or needed today.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Since the passage of the policy in 2021, the requirements have slowed down the hiring process significantly in the hospitality industry, and we believe it will do so in the industries impacted by this bill also. I would also note the penalties for employers who have inadvertently run afoul of this compliance heavy law are also very high. With all the issues with the implementation of this policy in the hospitality industry, we believe this policy should stay as a pandemic-based policy and not expand into new industries. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Katie Davey
Person
Good morning. Katie Davey with the California Restaurant Association. We are in respectful opposition to SB 627. SB 627 requires certain restaurant employers to give specific notice to employees 60 days prior to closing the location. While that may sound simple, in reality, the implementation of a 60 day notice requirement is very complex. There are numerous factors that are part of the equation to determine if and when it makes sense to close a given location.
- Katie Davey
Person
Giving these complexities and variables a rigid 60 day notice rule will likely lead to over-noticing employees and will likely result in noticing employees about a potential store closure when, in some cases, a store may not actually have to close at all. SB 627 also requires employers to offer jobs to employees from closed stores at other stores within 25 miles of the closed store for up to one year. These same employees also have five days to accept or decline the offer.
- Katie Davey
Person
We are concerned this will have the unintended consequence of actually slowing down the hiring process, as it will certainly be possible for one employee to take the full five days to respond to a job offer and then decline the job, forcing another five day waiting period for the next employee in line, illustrating the challenge of this waiting day period. SB 627 does not provide covered employees with an avenue to remove themselves from the list.
- Katie Davey
Person
A restaurant would still be required to contact covered employees on the list and offer them a job even when the covered employee has made it very clear they are not interested in being contacted and have taken another opportunity. We are concerned that this requirement will impact promotional opportunities for current employees. In the event a position is open in a store, it would first have to be offered to a covered employee from a different location prior to an employee being promoted.
- Katie Davey
Person
Prior experience with this kind of prescriptive rehire requirement in the hospitality industry gives us great concern about the restrictive nature of this proposal. For these and other logistical and legal compliance concerns, we are opposed to SB 627.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. For the witnesses in support--excuse me--opposition.
- Julee Malinowski-Ball
Person
Thank you. Julee Melanowski-Ball on behalf of the California Hotel and Lodging Association, in opposition.
- Sarah Moo
Person
Sarah Polo Moo with California Retailers Association. Opposed.
- Lawrence Gayden
Person
Lawrence Gayden with the California Manufacturers & Technology Association, respectfully opposed.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in opposition. Ms. Papan.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
I just did have a question that you raised about the promotional and what happens if you're working at one site, it's your time to move up, but you have to go to the list to get somebody that was maybe a supervisor at the previous location. Is there a way of working that one out? I would feel bad if I was that employee ready to move up and then somebody came in off the list.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Yeah. I want to say we have spent some time looking at this, and this is not about jumping lists. This is about making sure that when a store is closed that there is a way in which those workers end up on a list to be considered for employment at a store that is 25 miles or closer. It does not jump the list. It does not give one group of workers priority over another. It just says that when there is a position available in that store that is within 25 miles, that worker can be considered.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So if it's my time to move up and I'm at that store that remained open, is it that the person who's running that store has to go to the list first or they'll give me my shot to move up?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
No, this bill does not give those workers preference over the existing workers. It provides a way in which those workers can be transferred in seniority on that list for consideration, but it does not allow workers to jump over a list of existing workers to be prioritized over existing workers. And I don't know if you want to add to that.
- Sara Flocks
Person
And also in terms of whether it's someone who's moving up, just like the hospitality recall bill, it has to be the same position. So if you're a barista that's at a Starbucks, you can only be rehired into being a barista. So it's not like if you were the dishwasher, you're going to be hired to be a valet. So it's more of that lateral move versus you're going to be promoted just because there's a supervisor position that's open.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
No. Yeah. My concern was I've been working at the local Starbucks for 10 years. It's my time to become a supervisor. There's an opening, and what does the person that runs that store do? Do they go to the list or they allow me because I put in my time at that particular store and I'm ready to move up? So what you're telling me is I could move up, right? And they would just consider the list, or how does the list play into that scenario? Am I not getting it?
- Sara Flocks
Person
Yeah. If it's a comparable position, if there's a supervisor who's on the transfer list, although then they would transfer in, they would have to be given the offer to take that position.
- Diane Papan
Legislator
So they'd bump me?
- Sara Flocks
Person
If it was an open position, they would be offered that position. Yes.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Any other questions or comments from the Committee? Mr. Kalra?
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and happy to be a co-author on this bill and as was referenced, a prior bill that was vetoed. The rest of that sentence should say, however, a few months later, it was incorporated through budget actions because the Governor did recognize the importance of having these provisions in place during COVID and I think that given the fact that there are still a lot of workers in flux.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And what I believe to be the narrowness of the bill, we're talking about chains of 100 or more stores. These are large corporations that don't make decisions 60 days before they act. They make decisions months or even years before they act.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
So I think giving the respect to the workers of giving them a little bit of time before their life's upended by losing their position, and by giving an opportunity for them within a certain range of mileage to continue in their service to those companies, I think, again, it's about a weighing of interest.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
And I think in this case, the workers are going through far more of a struggle when they lose their jobs than the corporation that is shutting down one site and presumably would need to have some consolidation of work in other sites. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Seeing no further questions or comments from the Committee, do we have a motion? Motion from Ms. Reyes. Second from Mr. Kalra. Senator Smallwood- Cuevas, you may close.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
So I want to say that I've had the unfortunate opportunity of working with workers who have been displaced. When the last Walmart in Crenshaw Boulevard closed, it was pregnant Latina women and Black women who lost their jobs and it took about four years for them to find full time employment when that store closed. We want the workers to be able to weather the storm. Our communities should know when they're going to lose a business and sales tax out of their communities, when that's going to happen.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And those workers, whether they are supervisors, the rank and file cashiers, they should be able to find comparable work at a store if they have seniority, that is in within 25 miles proximity of where the store closure is happening. So this is a common sense bill because at the end of the day, it keeps everyone in our communities working. What we don't want to see is where we saw Starbucks closing up to 300 stores.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
We know what that toll takes on our communities in terms of housing. So many of folks in our district have two and three of these jobs just to make the ends meet, to keep a roof over their heads. When a store closes, that puts them at risk of being homeless. These are the low-wage retail jobs in our communities. These are the workers who can't afford to miss a paycheck.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And so this means that we have to ensure that employers are responsible, that they acknowledge that the workers deserve information, and that they have the opportunity to continue to work where the opportunity is near their home to invest and sustain their community. So I just want to say with that, I enthusiastically ask for your aye vote on this to protect our communities.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion. A second. The motion is 'do pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee.' Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Maienschein? Aye. Maienschein, aye. Essayli? No. Essayli, no. Connolly? Aye. Connolly, aye. Dixon? No. Dixon, no. Haney? Kalra? Aye. Kalra, aye. Pacheco? Not voting. Papan? Aye. Papan, aye. Reyes? Aye. Reyes, aye. Sanchez? No. Sanchez, no. McKinnor?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your bill needs one more. It will remain on call. Thank you. Senator Stern. Item Number 11: SB 795.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Welcome. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Members. Thank you. Presenting USB 795 want to first take a moment to appreciate the work of the chair and the Committee? Accept the amendments. The portion of the Bill before you here today is less so about energy and air conditioning and more about the California Public Records Act. But this Bill at its core is about making sure people get what they pay for when they buy an AC unit, especially when they're in a pinch and are making decisions quickly.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Often jobs are installed in shoddy manner. We know the heat waves are here right now. I just went through it myself and had to get an HVAC unit very quickly. And when it's 110 degrees outside and you've got a newborn baby and old man living with you and so these things get very real very quickly. Unfortunately, in those moments, a lot of people end up getting AC units that aren't installed properly. And so you end up eating a really big bill over time.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
If the way the ducting is done, the way the blower is connected, those things don't work. In fact, it's estimated by Energy Commission and Public Utilities Commission that we're meeting title 24, which is the installation requirements about 15% of the time. And there could be about a 30% savings overall on people's AC bills if we were just doing these jobs right. So that's the context.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
But for purposes here, we want to just clarify that any requests on the CPRA have to be done in accordance with the framework we've laid out here. It's not a sort of all information is accessible. We want to be careful about protecting, say, confidential business information and being clear that those records that could be requested under CPRA aren't necessarily in the format that they were originally submitted to the Energy Commission.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
In other words, you wouldn't have a situation where everyone would know your name and address of what AC unit you bought and track it like that, right? We don't want to undermine people's privacy in those ways and let the CPRA issue be somehow a risk to that. I think the amends here should clarify that issue and hopefully make administration of this program functional and workable and maybe everyone. You should check in your area if you have e-permitting or fast processing for your city or county for these kind of permits, because right now it's a mixed bag.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
In some parts of LA. We have it, in other parts we don't. Ventura County, it's harder in rural areas. So we want to make sure that people are getting good quality work quickly and that the CEC and the PUC have some purview over that.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. First witness.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
So I have Tom Enzo here with Sheet Metal Workers and Kiki Velez with NRDC. And we respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kiki Velez
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Kiki Velez with Natural Resources Defense Council. I'm a clean buildings advocate and I'll speak a little bit more to what this Bill does and the environmental and efficiency and cost benefits of the Bill. So SB 795 addresses issues of code compliance and enforcement to keep this a manageable task. The Bill starts with just HVAC and commercial lighting because these are areas of particular importance where there is a need for increased enforcement.
- Kiki Velez
Person
On the lighting side, many projects are actually getting permits, but the testing and review required by the code to make sure these systems are as efficient as designed is not getting done. In many cases, this Bill will allow local code officials to more easily check that this testing occurs because it will provide access to the database of the required code documentation, which local officials can then review.
- Kiki Velez
Person
On the HVAC side, the big issue is that, particularly in the residential market, as Senator Stern mentioned, many projects aren't getting permitted and inspected at all. We don't know exactly how many because we can't track the installs that don't get permits. But the Energy Commission estimates that as many as 90% of residential HVAC is not permitted. So only 10% approximately are pulling permits. This means that we can't ensure a quality installation or that the ducts are even functional.
- Kiki Velez
Person
And if we don't know where new HVAC is going in, we also don't have an intervention point to make sure that the right equipment is going in, or that the refrigerant from the old AC is being properly disposed of to avoid the huge climate impacts that refrigerants have when leaked into the environment. This Bill provides a simple solution to increasing enforcement. Contractors and distributors will register the equipment sold, which can then be compared to the permit documentation.
- Kiki Velez
Person
So, for example, if a contractor buys 100 heat pumps, but they only pull permits for 10 of them, then the Energy Commission and Contractor State License Board will take note. We believe that active enforcement and penalties probably won't be necessary because just knowing that this data exists will motivate contractors who want to keep their licenses to comply. Thanks. We ask for aye vote.
- Tom Enzo
Person
Great. Thank you, Tom Enzo. On behalf of the California State Pipe Trades Council, the Western states Council of Sheet Metal Workers, and the Statewide Association of International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, as my colleague at NRDC explained, this is a really important Bill for enforcement. It's been an issue that we've been trying to address for 15-20 years. The idea of these databases have been around for about 10 years. It's time to make this happen.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Tom Enzo
Person
But I want to address quickly the Public Records Act issues, want to thank Committee staff for their amendments clarifying that Public Records Act does apply here. But what we do to still protect trade secret information is we state in this Bill existing exemptions within the California Public Records Act, which is that information in the sales registry that provide personal information aggregate manufacturer specific sales data or trade secrets is confidential and not a public record. And that's consistent with existing exemptions.
- Tom Enzo
Person
But we're not changing the Public Records Act. But the Public Record Act does address that issue. We also want to note that the databases don't collect any information that's not already collected by local building departments as required for Energy Code enforcement, which is already publicly available. And that finally, that distributors and retailers and contractors are already required to collect and maintain HVAC equipment sales and installation information for 4 years under the Federal Department of Energy regulations.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in support. Name and organization only.
- Tom Enzo
Person
And these databases will simply enable digitally cross checking this already collected information in order to identify if equipment's been installed without complying with permitting or Energy Commission acceptance test requirements. And with that, I thank you for your time. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
And Senator Stern, you accept the amendments?
- Chris Walker
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair. Members Chris Walker on behalf of the California Association of Sheet Metal Air Conditioning Contractors, in support of the Bill. Thank you.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Yes.
- JB Tanker
Person
JB Tanker, Vice President of State affairs. With the Blue Green Alliance in strong support.
- Tiffany Phan
Person
Chair and Members Tiffany Phan, on behalf of the California Efficiency and Demand Management Council, in support. Want to thank the author as well as his staff and the sponsors for accepting previously an amendment we had suggested. So thank you.
- Tiffany Phan
Person
Suzanne Hume clean Earth for Kids. Strong support.
- Fatima Balziwayer
Person
Fatima Balziwayer with California Environmental Voters in support.
- Ash Kalra
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And thank you, Senator. Happy to move the Bill and oftentimes spoke. Just come in here. Author say it is a simple common sense Bill and sometimes it's not. But this actually is a very simple common sense Bill that I think is long overdue. So thank you for your work on this as well as the sponsors. I'd love to be added as a co author. Motion from Mr. Kalra.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no further witnesses in support. Witnesses in opposition. Seeing none. Mr. Kalra.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Second from Ms. Pappin. Ms.. Reyes, did you have a comment?
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Yes. One question that was asked regarding this is the registry is about the sale of the unit and if the sale is made out of state, is that where it's tracked out of state?
- Tom Enzo
Person
This is just for sales within the state. It doesn't track sales or equipment out of state. So basically, a distributor that sells or retailer that sells in California has to collect that information and put in the database. They already have to collect information as to what contractor they sell it to and where they sell it. So it's just putting information they already collect that applies to this state into a database so it can be cross checked.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And then the contractor that's actually going to install it, are they having to report anything?
- Tom Enzo
Person
The contractor is already required by law to pull the permit and do acceptance test documentation, which includes that information and that's information that goes into the compliance registry, that allows the building officials to know that information that those acceptance tests have been done, but it then also cross checked against the sales registry. So that's how we kind of make that jump from was it sold? And then was it installed as required under law?
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Any further questions or comments from the Committee? Seeing none. We do have a motion and a second. The motion is due. Pass suspended. Appropriations Committee. Senator Stern. You may close.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
We need more tools to make this state cooler, and we hope this is one of them. Get people a better deal in the process. Do appreciate the work of the manufacturers, though, and everyone out there respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion, a second. Ask for a call. Mainshine aye. Mainshine aye. Asali. Asali. No.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Connolly. Connolly. I Dixon. Dixon. No. Haney. Chora. Chora. I Pacheco. Pacheco. I Pappin. Pappin. I Rayes. Rayes. I Sanchez. Sanchez. I Mckinnor. Bill out.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Our final item of the day. Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
I hope you're happy. I see.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
We have a motion and a second, so you're in good shape. With that in mind, Senator Rubio, you may begin.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Okay, thank you. Thank you, Members and chair, for allowing me to present a really important Bill, SB 331, which is critical to strengthen protections for children, victims of domestic violence and families during law proceedings. I want to thank the chair and his Committee for working with us and the staff, of course, and my staff that work so hard on this. This Bill will save lives. I will be accepting the Committee amendments listed on pages nine to 11 on the analysis.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
I also want to commit to continuing to work with stakeholders if there's any outstanding issues. Members, this is a critical Bill that will establish more detailed trainings on domestic violence and child abuse for judicial officers and everyone involved in the family court system.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
It also includes critical reporting requirements to measure programs effectiveness and prohibits counseling that takes place in an unregulated non-clinical setting, counseling that is coercive and threatening, especially to children, counseling that cuts this counseling cuts off children from protective parents, and counseling that exceeds the generally accepted age appropriate length of time. If counseling is ordered, it must follow generally accepted methods. All of these are common sense protections that will continue to ensure that counseling, when ordered, is in the best interest of the child.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
SB 331 is also known as Pique's Law, named after a five-year-old boy who was killed by his father in my district back in April of 2017. I believe Pique's Law not only meets the need of this moment but also gives the voice to over 920 children murdered in our country. They're calling out from their graves, just begging us to do something. The judicial system fails.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
So many of our children, for example, Samia, Samantha, and Samara, all under 13 years old who were murdered last year here in Sacramento, gunned down by their father. He had a history of abuse, had a restraining order, was verbalizing his distress, saying that he wanted to kill himself and harm others. And yet we placed those three little girls in that home to be slaughtered. Pique's mother, Ana Estevez, is here to share her story as well.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
She fought hard in family court to protect her children from an abusive ex-husband and father of Pique. Despite Ana's best efforts, the court refused to stop visitations leading to her son's tragic murder. I also want to highlight that there's currently so many parents out there fighting to keep their children alive. They're trying to protect their children, but yet they get caught up in the system. Some protective parents are ripped away from their children for almost 90 days, and that causes trauma to these children.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Some of you may have heard this particular instance from Santa Cruz, where two children were ripped from their homes in the middle of the night, almost like a kidnapping. Maya and Sebastian, they didn't want to go, and yet they were taken away by strangers in the middle of the night, away from the parent that they loved and cared about, from their safe home to what they called reunification program.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
In a few moments, you will hear from Maya, that 15 year old young lady who will forever be traumatized and who is not with us here today because she's still afraid. She's afraid she will be kidnapped again and potentially murdered. But she's brave enough to be here to give her testimony over the intercom. Again, this Bill aims to protect the best interests of children, victims and family. With me here today to testify is Ana Stevas whose little boy this Bill honors. Pique's mom, Ana Estevez. And also we have Maya, as already mentioned, who will be testifying over the teleconference.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We'll start with the witness that's here. And then we'll go to the intercom system.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
So with that for clarification, this is Ana, and it just will sit here for technical questions that you may Ana.
- Ana Estevez
Person
Okay. Thank you. Good afternoon, Chairman Maienschein and Members of the Committee. I would like to recognize Senator Rubio for her incredible work and ongoing commitment to keeping victims safe from abuse and for leading the efforts in family court reform. I also want to thank the many co-authors from both the Senate and Assembly who courageously support Senate Bill 331, Piqui's Law.
- Ana Estevez
Person
I am here today as a constituent, a mother, a veteran of the United States Army, a former elementary school principal, but most importantly, I am here as an advocate for children who suffer at the hands of an abusive parent. Senate Bill 331 is named after my son, Pique, who was brutally murdered by his father in April of 2017. Pique's father suffocated him in the backseat of his vehicle as my son slept strapped into his car seat after spending the day at Disneyland.
- Ana Estevez
Person
In a recent documentary released about my son's murder, his father described in detail how much my son struggled as he covered Pique's face with the sweater. My ex-husband then drove for 2 hours with Pique's lifeless body and then proceeded to dump him in a heavily wooded area in Santa Barbara County. My son's whereabouts was unknown for 71 days until his father confessed to the murder, which, according to homicide detectives, was his final act of revenge for me wanting a divorce.
- Ana Estevez
Person
During his confession, Pique's father stated I wanted my son to have the best last day of his life. My son was five years old when he took his last breath, and during my divorce proceedings, I fought hard to protect my son. I documented in writing to the court that I feared for our safety, described my ex-husband's erratic and abusive behavior, and provided supporting evidence. I also filed for restraining orders, subpoenaed law enforcement officers to testify, and requested sole custody with supervised visits.
- Ana Estevez
Person
Biki was fearful of his father and repeatedly begged, please don't make me go, Mama. I am still haunted by the thoughts and feelings of betrayal that ran through my little boy's head when I forced him to go. Despite all of my efforts, my pleas were ignored. The restraining orders, sole custody, supervised visits were all denied. The horrendous decisions made by the judges who presided over my case empowered my ex-husband to methodically, plan and execute the murder of my only child.
- Ana Estevez
Person
The provision in this Bill that I would like to address relate to the training programs to be established by the Judicial Council. Training targeted training for judges is not only needed, it is essential. Judges are often assigned to family court without proper training or depth of knowledge needed to make informed decisions related to domestic violence, child abuse and other complex topics in family law.
- Ana Estevez
Person
The first judge who presided over my case was appointed to the bench in 2012 after practicing 28 years of business of complex business litigation in private law firms. Ironically, the second judge also had 28 years of business litigation. Both judges had zero experience in family law but were still assigned to oversee complex family matters and make decisions that ultimately devastated lives. High-quality training has a direct impact on productivity, performance, and effectiveness. It increases an individual's skill set and empowers them to do a good job.
- Ana Estevez
Person
I cannot think of a profession where an individual is not required to complete training prior to a license renewal. In California, physicians are required to complete 50 CME hours every two years to renew their medical license. When I was a teacher, I had to complete 150 hours of professional development every five years to renew my credential.
- Ana Estevez
Person
As an education administrator, I am required to renew both teaching and administrative services credentials, and in addition to that, I'm also required to complete annual training that focuses on child abuse and neglect, suicide prevention, harassment, and implicit bias. Family court is not the venue for On the job training. Asking family law judges to complete training is not an unreasonable request. Complex issues arise daily, and if we are to expect better outcomes, we must ensure judges are well prepared for the heavy lift that awaits them.
- Ana Estevez
Person
My judges were not prepared for the complexities of my divorce case, and as a result of their decisions, many lives were destroyed. My son was brutally murdered by his father. My ex-husband is currently serving 25 years to life in prison for murder. My career as an elementary school principal ended, and ultimately the sentence I received is life without my son.
- Ana Estevez
Person
And the passage of Pique's law will obviously never benefit or protect my son, but it will keep other children safer from violence, and it is the right thing to do. I am no one special. I'm simply a mom who continues to honor and mourn her son. And so I ask each of you to reflect for a moment and ask yourself this question if my child was murdered, what would I expect lawmakers to do to prevent something similar from happening again? And with that, I thank all of you for your time, and I humbly request that you support Pique's law. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. And on behalf of our Committee, thank you for that very difficult testimony. We will now turn to the witness. I spoke about it in the beginning of the meeting. The witness. So we are allowing to testify. So if we could turn to that witness, please. Thank you.
- Maya Laing
Person
Hi. Am I allowed to talk now?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Yeah, go ahead, please.
- Maya Laing
Person
My name is Maya Laing. I'm 16, from Santa Cruz, and we teach children. When an adult harms us, or we are afraid, we should ask for help. When me and my brother had the courage to talk about how our mother abused us, we did that. We asked for help from many adults, including the police and courts. Instead of being protected, we returned over to our abuser. I told my story at court. Forced to confront my abuser, I was treated like a criminal.
- Maya Laing
Person
On October 20, the day after, the court called me a liar, ignored my testimony, and gave full custody from my mother. That night we were violently taken. We were kidnapped. It was a court order, but that does not make it right. We were at my grandmother's house, trying to hide and not be taken. Three large adults we did not know coroned at us. They picked us up by the arms and legs and dragged us to their car.
- Maya Laing
Person
As they tried to wrestle me into the car, my head hit against the car door. I partially lost consciousness and my lips split open. I tried to wrestle free and escape, but they grabbed me and pressed me into the ground. My jeans were pulled down in front of my friends, family, and the police when I was shoved into the car. I was held on the floor of the car until we got onto the freeway.
- Maya Laing
Person
Me and my brother sat in the backseat of the car, sobbing and trying not to let go of each other. After suffering this extreme trauma, it did not end. This was the start of reunification camp. The therapists interrogated us for four days. They threatened us, saying we would be sent to a wilderness camp with no food or blankets until a few cooperated. We learned that to survive, we needed to pretend our abuse never happened.
- Maya Laing
Person
The therapist and our mother called us sociopaths and said we had, quote, false memories. We went seven months with no communication with our father, stepmother, and step-siblings. No one was even allowed to know where we were and we were forced to change our last name and hide our experience from everyone new we met. We ran away from our mother last month. We are now living with our friends.
- Maya Laing
Person
We still aren't allowed to live with our father because of the same court orders and our mother is still trying to capture us and put us through another reunification camp or similar program. This is our family court system and this was deemed in our best interest. I ask you to please vote yes for SB 331. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Further witnesses in support. Name and organization only.
- Priscilla Quiroz
Person
Priscilla Kudos here on behalf of the City of Santa Monica in support.
- Rebecca Ferrell
Person
Hi. Rebecca Ferrell. Orange County clinical social worker for adolescents. In support.
- Corazon Pavela
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Corazon Pavela. I'm from San Diego, California, in support.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Geraldine Sawell
Person
Good afternoon. Geraldine Sawell from San Diego, protective parent and I strongly support SB 331 Pique's Law,
- Tina Swithin
Person
Tina Swithin, on behalf of four different organizations asking for your support of SB 331, One Mom's Battle, Custody Peace Movement of Mothers, and the co-sponsor of Family Court Awareness Month. Thank you.
- Richard Simpson
Person
Richard Simpson with the same four organizations in support. Thank you.
- Kailani Swiven
Person
Kailani Swiven with One Mom's Battle in support.
- Justin Laing
Person
Justin Laing from Santa Cruz, California. Maya's father, in strong support of SB 331.
- Connie Valentine
Person
Connie Valentine, California Protective Parents Association, in strong support.
- Tu Yapu
Person
Tu Yapu from Alameda County Protective Parents, strongly support.
- Julie Holburn
Person
Julie Holburn, protective parent from Newport Beach, California, who just had her children taken after 12 years of sole legal custody. In strong support,
- Carolyn Farrell
Person
Carolyn Farrell, marriage and family therapist in Santa Cruz, California, and grandma Sebastian and Maya Laing.
- Amy Hunter
Person
Amy Hunter, mother of Sophia and Sarah Ruin, murdered by their father in December 2017. In strong support.
- Brenna McNabb
Person
Brenna Gono McNabb a protective parent from Moss Beach, California. In strong support.
- Joan Collins
Person
Joan Collins, domestic violence survivor and protective parents from Menlo Park.
- Jasper Lysander
Person
Jasper Lysander. I escaped Humboldt County and I'm currently residing in San Diego. I'm a protective parent and a survivor and I strongly support this Bill.
- Meredith Stevens
Person
Meredith Stevens from Sacramento. Terrifying that I'm going to have you in a story in support. Thank you.
- Carly Hessel
Person
Carly Hessel. I come to you as a previous member of law enforcement, a current survivor, and current victim of Sacramento County Family Court in support.
- Jamie Amarille
Person
Jamie Amarille. I'm a supportive parent and protective parent I'm sorry and I support Pique's law.
- Renee Blair
Person
Thank you. Renee Blair, from Santa Rosa, California. I'm a protective parent. I'm also an educator, and I'm in strong support of this Bill.
- Cynthia Snooks
Person
Cynthia Snooks from West Covina, and I strongly support this Bill.
- Angela Snooks
Person
Angela Snooks from West Covina, and I support this Bill.
- Michael Goleb
Person
My name is Michael Goleb. I'm the former President and Chief Executive Officer of a firm that I sold for a mid-nine-figure sum a few years ago. I had 1300 employees for about 18 years. Half of them were women, half of them were men. I'd say at least half of all the people who worked for me were divorced. Sir, name and organization only. And are you in support of the Bill? I have a different perspective on it, but, yes, I support it for additional reason.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Motion from Ms. We already have a motion a second. Seeing no further witnesses in support, witnesses in opposition. We need a second. We also need a second chair as well, so we got both at once. We have a motion from Ms. Reyes. A second from Mr. Kalra. First witness, please.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Catherine McWillie. I am a family law divorce professional, and I'm opposed to Pique's law. I've been dealing with family law for over 40 years, 24 years as an LAPD Officer responding to radio calls dealing with divorce and custody. I was also a first responder to child abuse investigations and other specialized units impacted by family law.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
The last 16 years, I have been a custody consultant and divorce coach, specializing in high-conflict cases wherein I conducted threat assessments and safety plans with some of my clients, wearing bulletproof vests to court, and setting up security rooms in their homes for their protection. I pray there is no one else in this room that has experienced the impact of family law that I have. I pray that is the case.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
I still remember where I was standing as the screams of a young mother rang out, as she was told that her two children, 5 and 7, had been murdered by their father pending their divorce. There's a story of a six-year-old child who hung himself on a refrigerator door using his own belt after his parents divorced, and the mother that locked her children in a shed and set it on fire, killing all but one of her children.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
There is no one in this room more than I that wants to support, protect every child and every family member. However well-intended this law is, it will have devastating, unintended consequences beyond your comprehension. The harm and abuse to children and families will increase, not decrease, with the passage of this law, not tenfold, but one hundredfold. I'm not objecting to the training. I'm not objecting to judges becoming more aware of domestic violence.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
What I'm objecting to is the fact that we have children that are going to be more manipulated, put more in the middle, and as their preference becomes known to the court with this law, that that preference will be given to a child. We don't allow children to set their bedtimes. We don't allow children to go.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
I'm going to give you a little bit longer because I gave the proponents a little bit longer, but I would like to ask you to wrap up.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
I will. Okay. There is still time for much of what was written in this law that will help children and families and even the courts dealing with violation of court orders, information that was identified in a bulletin issued by the office of the Juvenile Justice Department in 2001. I urge you to see more, to learn more about how this law could destroy families, not the training, not the domestic violence, but that preference.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
In closing, there will be a time when we look back at family law and wonder how we were ever so barbaric. Because there's no other word for what is happening to children's and families during divorce and custody proceedings that will be made worse by this law because of the outlaw of reunification programs. And just to address one issue hold on the FBI when they locate a child who's been taken by a parent or other family I do need you to wrap up. I'm closing it down
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Okay.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
Is they use reunification programs similar to what's being used in courts.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Catherine McWillie
Person
Thank you.
- Ron Berglas
Person
Next witness. My name is Ron Berglas. As a former mediator in the Sacramento Superior Court, I'm used to listening to very emotional arguments and keeping an open mind for both parties and give them equal time and equal emotional statement. When my 10-year-old daughter told her mother that she wanted to commit suicide, her mother told her to do it at my house because then I could be seen as the bad guy.
- Ron Berglas
Person
Two years later, after my daughter secretly texted me from her mother's house asking if she could live with me and I won back custody in court, she overdosed twice on fentanyl while trying to cope with the trauma her mother inflicted by coercing her to reject me. This Bill specifies that the counseling shall primarily address the rejected parent's contribution to the resistance of the child before ordering the other parent to take steps to improve the child's relationship with the rejected parent.
- Ron Berglas
Person
What steps do you think the other parent might take to improve a relationship that they've systematically destroyed? Come on. What happened to Pique was indeed tragic. I'm sorry, but had nothing to do with remedial therapy. Had a risk violence assessment been conducted on Pique's father by a qualified psychologist? It. Might never have happened.
- Ron Berglas
Person
Nevertheless, they've managed to include the removal of judicial discretion in this Bill, preventing a judge from ordering counseling services to remediate the resistance of a child to connect with the parent seeking custody if the child is transported to the counseling against their will. A resistance proven in court to have been molded and shaped by their abuser. I heard it all the time from my ex. She told me my daughter didn't want to talk to me on the phone or go to my house.
- Ron Berglas
Person
The ex claimed she couldn't do anything about it, that it was what my daughter wanted. How did she do that to my daughter? From the age of two to 12, her mother told her repeatedly that I didn't love her. My daughter told me later that when she protested that it wasn't true, her mom shouted obscenities at her. They are as relentless as this awful Bill.
- Ron Berglas
Person
SB 331 Rubio seeks to hide the other parent from observation, recrimination, and criminal sanction when it has frequently been proven in court that they use coercive control to force their children to reject their other parent. Wrap up. Yeah. Ironically, SB 1141 Rubio passed states that an award of child custody to a party who is engaged in coercive control is detrimental to the best interests of the child. Reject this smokescreen of a Bill, please. Thank you. Further, we're going to conduct the hearing professionally.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Any further witnesses in opposition?
- Jennifer Alley
Person
Good afternoon, I'm Jennifer Alley with the California Psychological Association. We're not opposed to the Bill. We just wanted to recognize that we've been in long multiple-hour conversations with the author sponsor think that the Committee's amendments move the Bill into a much better place than it was and we are looking forward to continuing the conversation. We're trying to balance safety with court action. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Any further witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. We have a motion and we have a second. Any comments from questions, comments from Committee? Mr. Essayli?
- Tracy Kenny
Person
Tracy Kenny. On behalf of the Judicial Council, we're opposed unless amended on separation of powers issues.
- Raul Siegelbaum
Person
Thank you. Raul Siegelbaum. On behalf of self. As this Bill protects a lot of children from abuse, but also sacrifices many other children. Just name an organization only Raul Siegelbaum. Thank you.
- Craig Dunwoody
Person
I'm Craig Dunwoody. I'm a California protective parent and survivor. I'm with protecting everyone from abuse. I strongly oppose a due pass as mended as today, I strongly oppose, amending and thank you.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
To the Senator, thank you for bringing this and providing a voice to victims. It's something we frankly need more of. Up here to Pique's mom. I am so sorry that the system failed. Have seen as a deputy DA, I have seen the system repeatedly fail. Domestic violence victims and child abuse victims all the time. We have to do better.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
We just have to we have so many examples, whether it's Gabriel Fernandez in Los Angeles or the Turpin kids in Riverside County, my county. There's a documentary that just came out about a little girl named Maya and how the state in Florida abused that process as well. There's a lot of complacency incompetence and frankly laziness in our bureaucracies and there's no accountability. And nobody wants to do the hard work of doing the investigations and figuring out what's true and what's not.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And a lot of times the system just defaults to split custody and reunification. I cannot imagine your son being ripped away from you and excluded from you, his protector, and handed over to this animal. This animal who suffocated him with a jacket and threw him in the forest like discarded person, I cannot imagine it.
- Bill Essayli
Legislator
And for us to have a process in this state to provide this reunification treatment, which I never heard of and is frankly barbaric that we'd rip people away from their kids, you can have counseling. We can address the counseling. I'm sure there are professional counselors that will deal with manipulative parents, but this treatment is barbaric. We can't have this. And I hope your ex-husband rots in prison. He rots in hell, and I will support this. I'd like to be a co-author. So thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
We have a motion and a second seeing no further questions or comments from the Committee, Senator Rubio, you may close.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you. And thank you for your comments. And I just want to clear for the know, I think it was stated that this takes discretion from the courts. It does not. The courts still have discretion, but what we're trying to ban is the unregulated practice of ripping a child away from their safe home, their community, their teacher, their friends. I don't believe anybody here thinks it's okay to just disappear from nine months with strangers and be threatened and coerced. So I ask that you please vote on Pique's Law. Thank you.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. We have a motion. A second. The motion is due pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Maienschein aye. Essayi aye. I'd Like to be a co-author Essayli. Connolly aye. Dixon aye. Haney aye. Kalra aye. Pacheco aye. Papan aye. Reyes aye. Sanchez aye. McKinnor aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Your Bill is out.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, everyone.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you. Thank you, everyone. And just I'd ask everybody to please exit quietly as we continue to do the work of the Committee. We are going to do add ons and we have a bell on call. I'd ask people to please exit the room quietly. Thank you. Okay, we will go ahead. We have one matter on call. We're going to do add-ons. I do want to make just a couple of very brief comments. This is our last Committee hearing. I want to thank this Committee.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
This was a lot of excellent work on a lot of very tough issues. And I want to thank the Committee for their attentiveness, for the good work that we all did as a Committee this year. I want to recognize and thank Committee staff Allison, Nick, Manuela, Sharon, Tom, everybody who did so much this year to make this Committee work. So thank you to everybody. And then with that, we'll start with our first Bill that's on call, which is item number 10.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Ten: SB 627, the Smallwood-Cuevas. Ask the Clerk to please open the roll. Call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Haney? Aye. Haney, aye. McKinnor? Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
That bill is out. Now, we're going to start in order with--we'll start with a consent agenda. We'll call the absent Members. Ask the Clerk to please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? Aye. Dixon, aye. Kalra? Consent. Kalra, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number One: SB 35, Umberg.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? Aye. Dixon, aye. Kalra? Not voting. Pacheco? Aye. Pacheco, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Two: SB 40, Umberg.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? No. Dixon, no. Kalra? Aye. Kalra, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Three: SB 43, Eggman.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Reyes? Not voting.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Four: SB 71, Umberg.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? Yes. Dixon, aye. Kalra? Aye. Kalra, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Five: SB 267, Eggman. Escort, call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Reyes? Aye. Reyes, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Six. We have everybody on Item Six. Yeah. Item Number Seven: SB 399, Wahab.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? No. Dixon, no. Kalra? Aye. Kalra, aye. Pacheco? Not voting.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Yeah, I see it here. Item Number Eight: SB 47, Atkins.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Haney? Aye. Haney, aye. McKinnor? Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Item Number Nine: SB 567, Durazo. Ask the Clerk to call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? No. Dixon, no. Papan? Aye--I mean. On SB 567? Yeah, aye. Papan, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Number Ten, Item Ten: SB 627, Smallwood-Cuevas. Ask Clerk to--got everybody? SB 11 or Number 11: SB 674. Ask the Clerk to call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dixon? No. Dixon, no.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
And then Item Number 12: SB 795, Stern. Ask the Clerk to call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Haney? Aye. Haney, aye. McKinnor? Aye. McKinnor, aye.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Oh, yes, and thank you for that. I would like to please thank the Committee Secretaries and also thank the Republican Consultant, Darrell, as well. Thank you all very much. That adjourns today's Judiciary Committee Hearing.
Bill SB 567
Termination of tenancy: no-fault just causes: gross rental rate increases.
View Bill DetailCommittee Action:Passed
Next bill discussion: September 8, 2023
Previous bill discussion: June 28, 2023
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