Senate Floor
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, the the Senate will come to order. The Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta. Ashby. Atkins. Becker. Blakespear. Bradford. Caballero. Cortese. Dahle. Dodd. Durazo. Eggman. Glazer. Gonzalez. Grove. Hurtado. Jones. Laird. Limon. McGuire. Menjivar. Min. Newman. Nguyen. Niello. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla. Portantino. Roth. Rubio. Seyarto. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern. Umberg. Wahab. Wiener. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
A quorum is present, Members. With the Members and our guests beyond the rail and in the gallery, please rise. We will be led in prayer this afternoon by our chaplain, Sister Michelle Gorman after which, please remain standing for the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag.
- Michelle Gorman
Person
Loving and merciful God, today we thank You for the dedication and endurance of our legislators and staff members. At the end of this session, we ask Your blessing on each one as we pray in the words of the poet, Jan Richardson: blessed are you who bear the light in unbearable times, who testify to its endurance amid the unendurable, who bear witness to its persistence when everything is in shadow and grief.
- Michelle Gorman
Person
Blessed are you in whom the light lives in whom the brightness blazes. Your heart a chapel, an altar where in the deepest night can be seen the fire that shines forth in you, in unaccountable faith, in stubborn hope, in love that illumines every broken thing it finds. And so may God bless you and keep you. May God's face shine upon you and be gracious to you. May God look upon you kindly and give you peace. Amen.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, please place your hand over your heart and join me in the pledge. 'I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.'
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, Sister Gorman is not always here when the clock strikes midnight and we end our session. And so let's take a moment to give a warm thank you to her for all the wonderful prayers. We so appreciate the perspective that you bring to the work of the Senate and your diligence in being here almost every day to start our Senate session. So we're very grateful. Thank you. Members, without objection, the Senate rules will be suspended to allow for guests on our floor.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Privileges of the floor; there are none. Messages from the Governor will be deemed read. Messages from the Assembly will be deemed read. Reports of Committee will be deemed read and amendments adopted. We're going to move next to motions, resolutions, and notices. Without objection, the Senate journals for September 11th, 2023 through September 14th, 2023 will be approved as corrected by the Minute Clerk. Pursuant to Senate Rule 2910, the following bills are referred to the Committee on Rules. File Item Number two, AB 1017. File Item Number three, AB 1122.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I want to be able to recognize any Member who wishes to move a measure to the inactive file. Does any Member want to be recognized to do such a thing? Okay. We're going to move next to consideration of the daily file, second reading file. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 126, 1017, 1122.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So let me give you a little bit of the rundown of the day. We've had such a good week and we're in the final stretch. I'm going to try to give you the preview of bills that are coming up ahead so everyone can be prepared. There is going to be some rotation between Assembly bills and Senate bills, so expect that. But our whips on the floor will try to keep you informed and as I will about bills that are coming up.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We are going to start the morning with two ACAs, ACA 13 and ACA 1, followed by Assembly Bill 980--excuse me, yeah, it's not listed on here--we'll go to Assembly Bill 799, File Item 12. So those are the first three bills up. Once we finish with those, we're going to go to ABs and then based on timestamps, we may go back and forth to ABs and SBs in coordination with the Assembly. So that is the order of business for this afternoon and into this evening.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Alright, Members, little switch in drivers up here. And I believe we're going to start off with our presiding officer today. So I'm going to step up. So everyone have their seatbelts on, trays in the locked and upright position, and we're going to start with File Item 109, ACA 13.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The Clerk will read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Constitutional Amendment 13 by Assembly Member Ward in act relating to voting.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Madam President. On behalf of Assembly Member Ward--we've got the sound effects just in time--ACA 13 is a measure that asks one simple question: If a measure is proposed to raise a voter threshold to greater than a majority, shouldn't the same proportion of voters be in agreement? That's the simple question that this measure asks.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Currently, under California law, any ballot measure approved by a majority of voters could selectively require a future ballot measure to pass with a supermajority of the vote. ACA 13, which is called the Protect and Retain the Majority Vote Act, would retain the majority vote requirement for passage of state and local initiatives by requiring any statewide initiative seeking to increase a threshold to also be approved by the same higher threshold it is proposing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
With a pattern of abuse of our initiative process to use a lower threshold to set a higher threshold for future voters and worse, using this tactic to extract legislative actions for special interests, the time is right for the Legislature to reflect a protection afforded in the Oregon Constitution since 1998 and adopt ACA 13 to send to the voters, to give the voters the choice to give the voters their consideration.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Now, the success of these tactics mean that in future elections, questions are decided through the veto pattern of a minority, not the will of a majority. This, my friends, is inherently undemocratic. This measure has been characterized as eminently sensible, and it's very basic. If a measure proposes to raise a voter threshold to greater than a majority, then it should achieve the same vote threshold that it proposes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We often see this issue paired with revenue questions, and make no mistake, raising the voter threshold for local government without the same level of support of voters jeopardizes their ability to deliver essential services, including funding for schools, public safety, homelessness, and housing. But it's not just about a revenue question. Some of you may recall Ohio Issue 1. It attempted to raise thresholds to thwart a question on reproductive rights. Supermajority votes for local housing policy or citing shelters for homeless individuals have been floated.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Really, any subject could come up. This measure will protect and retain the majority vote of these important questions. It also provides clarity for the rights of local government to submit an advisory vote to the voters subject to a majority vote to provide feedback on their priorities as they see fit. And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote on ACA 13.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Seyarto, you are recognized.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Madam President. I rise in opposition to ACA 13. Very simply, if you look beyond all of it, what this is about is raising taxes, is making it easier to raise taxes, and specifically those taxes that come in the form of on your property tax bill, in assessments, through bonds, et cetera, et cetera. The reason the voters chose this two-thirds threshold before is because they wanted to make raising taxes very hard.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They wanted to make it very hard because way back in the day, it was not hard at all. What happened was you wound up with a runaway tax structure, especially on your property taxes, and that was eroding the ability of people on fixed incomes, especially seniors, to stay in their homes because their property taxes were going up so fast and so much without restraint that finally somebody stepped in and did something about that, and that somebody was Howard Jarvis.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I was fortunate enough to be hanging out with my grandfather, and I got to watch Howard Jarvis during the initial meetings of Prop 13, and I got to see why they were doing it and the struggles that property owners were having with every year. First that one year, they get a property tax bill for 500 dollars, and then the next year, it's 1,100 dollars. That kind of runaway taxation drives people not only out of their houses, but out of the state. So the taxpayers passed this initiative.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And ever since that day, there's been time after time where people are trying to take a bite out of that. They tried to do it all at once, but that failed. Taxpayers recognized that, 'you know what, they're trying to get rid of our taxpayer protections offered by Prop 13.' If communities want to raise taxes, some of those can go through this process. And guess what? A lot of them did. And a lot of them were able to pass school bonds.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They were able to pass all of these things. But what happened after that is why this is, again, people are very hesitant to pass this. They're very hesitant now. And the reason is because they weren't getting the bang for their buck. When we raised up their taxes, all they really got was everybody comes to the trough, takes their slice of the pie, and the taxpayers don't get what they thought they were going to get out of their bond.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Sometimes these projects would go on and on and on forever because they're searching for other money to bring in to finish a project because they got done spending all their money on all the other stuff. When people came in and recognized, 'we got a 30 million dollar bond, let's go get our slice,' if you don't give taxpayers their bang for the buck, they're not going to approve your tax. Now you say, 'you know what? It's 51 percent. Majority rules.'
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
The problem is, the way we structure our ballot language, most people won't get past the initial sentence. And if that sentence says what this one does, I forgot during the introduction what it was called, but it makes them think that, 'hey, I'm protecting my 51 percent.'
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
It doesn't make them think, 'hey, I'm protecting our 66 percent that we need to make it hard for our state leaders to put something on ballot to raise our taxes or our communities or our school district or our water district, whatever it may be.' And when you're talking about communities, communities can still do, they can still raise taxes on a 51 percent. Well, 50 percent plus one. They do that through a process and they put on a sales tax measure. It just can't be specific as a general tax.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And a lot of cities have done that. And a lot of cities, especially coming out of a pandemic or just going into the pandemic, coming out of a recession, that's how they got a lot of their things done. That's how they caught up on roads. Because we don't send them enough of our road money. We spend our road money on something else. So folks, don't make this into what it's not. This is all about being able to make it easier to raise taxes on our citizens.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And if you want to go back to your districts and tell your citizens this is what we're going to do, and if you buy into this, next comes all of the ballot measures where we try to fool you into the 51 percent by saying 'this is a Safe Communities and Schools Act.' And next thing you know, crime is out of control. That's what we're afraid of. That's what citizens are afraid of. That's what I used to be afraid of.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But now I can come up here and help spread the message that if that doesn't change, if we don't become more responsible with the money we have, and if we don't start being really careful about passing a bond and then not giving people their money's worth, like the bullet train, all of that leads to the distrust that our communities have. And you know what? We deserve it because we keep doing it over and over again.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So I will not be supporting this, and I won't be supporting the other one. I will shorten my speech for the next one that comes up. But it's not a speech, folks. I'm not reading this off of anything. This is me telling all of you why people are so ticked off. Tax Freedom Day is about, it used to be just for federal taxes, used to be April 17th. Well, it's floating around at the end of April for your federal taxes.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If you add up all of your taxes that you pay, it's going to be floating around 55 percent, which means somewhere around July is when you stop working for the government and you start working for your family. That's what people are ticked about. It needs to go backwards, not forwards. If we can't fix what we've got going on in California with the 300 billion dollars a year that they are shoveling into our coffers, there's something wrong with what we're doing.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We need to look at that really hard, and we need to fix that before we start trying to trick them into doing something that ultimately is detrimental for them. So I urge you to vote no on this. I hope my colleagues will join me. If not, I hope you can explain that to your constituents. Thank you.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam President. I rise in strong support of ACA 13, which is long overdue. I think it's really important to focus on what ACA 13 does. I know in the next measure, we will have a discussion about changing an existing rule. ACA 13 does not change any existing rules. It doesn't go back retroactively and change anything.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
What it does is it says for the individuals and organizations that are trying to make it impossible for our school districts and our cities and our counties and our water districts and so on and so forth, to make it impossible for them to actually fund critical community needs. For these organizations that are trying to kneecap local government's ability to fund basic services: fire, police, having enough fire stations, having water systems that are not poisoning people, having transportation systems where people can actually get around.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
They're trying to make it impossible for local government to actually fund these not optional, but essential services. And they've been doing it for a long time, and they're trying again with the constant threats of saying everything has to be two-thirds, everything is two-thirds. And they want to do it so that we can continue down the road of 34 percent of people vetoing the ability of 66 percent of people to make a democratic decision.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's so antidemocratic and they are trying to go further and further down that road, so that, for example, when California used to have one of the best funded K through 12 education systems in the country and then we fell into the 40s and we're trying to claw out of that and we're finally making progress, and they want to drag us right back down because they don't believe in government. They don't believe in public services and we need to make clear that if you are seeking to do this, you should have to meet that threshold too. It is common sense. It's a great idea and an urgent aye vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Senator Atkins, you are recognized.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Madam President. Colleagues, I rise also in support of ACA 13. I want to thank my Assembly Member and I want to thank the floor manager today for bringing this forward. California's progress is under threat. Across the country, we're seeing the initiative process being used to limit the voice of voters, including a recent attempt in another state to raise vote thresholds to attack reproductive health care and other issues that fractions are trying to wrest from the hands of voters.
- Toni Atkins
Person
We should assume it's only a matter of time before those same attempts are made here in California. And to be blunt, to be very blunt, we are here today because of very few special interests led by the California Business Roundtable have qualified a measure, have qualified a measure that wants to change the rules to their benefit. The California Business Roundtable's measure seeks to increase voter thresholds and limit the voice of California voters.
- Toni Atkins
Person
They want to further empower a minority of voters so they can eliminate critical services that Californians rely on, including defunding police, fire services--that will be the result--and cutting money for key housing affordability and homelessness prevention programs. Make no mistake. They want to fundamentally alter the foundations of our government, bring it to a halt, and stop our progress. We're here today because voters should be given the opportunity to decide if they want to protect their majority vote before another threat can further diminish that right.
- Toni Atkins
Person
It's that simple. Colleagues, ACA 13 does not impact Prop 13. That's a red herring. That's a myth of a message. It doesn't raise taxes or any of the other claims made by opponents. ACA 13 asked voters if they want to protect the majority vote. Plain and simple. It asked if they think the Business Roundtables measure should play by the same rules that they want to impose on other measures. Let's let the voters, the people of California, decide. I ask for your support and your aye vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Jones, you are recognized.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Madam President. As our colleague from Riverside I think asked, 'how much is enough? How much of all of our hard-earned money and our constituents hard-earned money is enough for government to take? When can we go to our constituents and say we got enough?' I would argue last year when we had 100 billion dollar surplus, the government had too much. And now we're in the point of having a 33 billion dollar deficit projected.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
We don't even know what that's going to be until after October 15th because of the delay in tax filing. So I'm rising today in opposition to ACA 13 for a couple of reasons. The measure would wrongly require higher voter approval threshold for citizen-approved ballot measures--initiatives--that seek to protect taxpayers from further tax invasion from the government. A similar measure was recently defeated by the voters in Ohio when politicians attempted to change the rules governing ballot measures to affect outcomes.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Their measures sought to create voter limitations on the ballot by increasing the threshold for voters to amend the Constitution. Elected officials across the nation, including Governor Newsom, rightly opposed the Ohio measure and its abuse of the initiative process. What did President Joe Biden have to say about the effort to change voter threshold in Ohio? He strongly rejected it and called it, quote, 'a blatant attempt to weaken voters' voices.' And that is spot on for this very eerily measure in front of us today.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
ACA 13 undermines initiative process and undermines the voice of California voters, while creating an uneven playing field that favors greedy tax increases, more money for the government. Importantly, it jeopardizes the critical taxpayer protections provided by Prop 13, Proposition 13. ACA 13 would make it difficult to nearly impossible for Californians to impose new limitations on taxation. California families pay some of the highest taxes in the nation.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This Legislature should not be attacking efforts that seek to protect taxpayers and reduce the cost of living in our state when so many are struggling to make ends meet and a large number of Californians every single day wake up in the morning thinking about, is this the day I leave California? And that should really shake us all to the core that so many Californians are having that thought. My family moved to California in 1978. My dad was a home builder in Colorado.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
He owned his own business. We came to California on vacation for two weeks. While we were here, he put in a job application for eight different jobs. He was willing to give up his business in Colorado to work for somebody else in California. And as a result of those eight job applications, he got ten job offers because California was the Golden State. California was the land of opportunity. California was where everybody in America wanted to live. And measures like this cause people to wake up every morning wondering, is this the day I leave? I ask for a no vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Senator Roth, you are recognized.
- Richard Roth
Person
That requires a viable transportation system and we have no transit. Buses from Riverside County don't easily get into Los Angeles County and you certainly can't get the last mile to your job. Rail is almost nonexistent except for limited lines at limited times. And so we depend on concrete freeways to move people from housing to jobs.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Madam President. You know, I represent the other part of Riverside County. And for years, Riverside County has been the land of opportunity where housing has been expensive on the coasts. Riverside County and counties just like it in the inland parts of the state have built housing so that people can afford to live, workers can afford to own a home for their families.
- Richard Roth
Person
Unfortunately, as you've heard me speak on the floor before, the jobs--typically because of our state policies and the subsidies we provide--are located in the urban coastal areas and so those folks who choose to have a home in an affordable area, such as the area that I'm privileged to represent, have to drive long distances, some as much as two, two and a half, and in some cases three hours to get to the west side of LA to work at the job so they can afford the homes out where we live.
- Richard Roth
Person
Now, as a state, we've adopted a policy that we in this body and the one in the Green Zone have voted on and the Governor has certainly insisted on, of reducing vehicle miles traveled. That's in our policy. We probably may get a bill dealing with that today, again. What that means is anytime you add housing, and we have a lot of housing to add in Riverside County as a result of Reena, you add vehicle miles traveled.
- Richard Roth
Person
Unfortunately, the California Transportation Commission and those bodies that approve funds are essentially prohibited from approving any new transportation project that adds vehicle miles travel. So what does that do--I'm going to get to the point--what does that do for those of us down in Riverside County? It means we depend on local transportation measures to fund transportation improvement projects. And we have since the 1970s.
- Richard Roth
Person
As a matter of fact, Riverside County, as I recall, was the first county in the State of California to do a local transportation measure, Measure A, and got it passed. Well, the reality of that, we know from history and from polling, is we cannot get a local transportation measure by and through the hoop at a two-thirds vote majority. Two- thirds vote. What this ACA 13 does, and maybe in Southwestern County, they don't have transportation needs, but I'll tell you this, what this measure does is counteracts a proposal that will require a two-thirds vote to get a local transportation measure passed.
- Richard Roth
Person
So I'm supporting ACA 13 because it will allow us to continue to get and to move local transportation measures through the electorate at a 50 percent plus one vote. Measures that the constituents need in order to move from the housing that we direct us to build for them to the jobs that we locate in areas that are not convenient to the housing. So I want you to think about that as you cast your vote on this measure.
- Richard Roth
Person
It has nothing to do with Prop 13, but there's certainly been a lot of calls on Prop 13, and the opponents to this ACA have sufficiently riled up the electorate that I think we're up to 500 or 600 calls in my office talking about Proposition 13. Well, I have no interest in disturbing Proposition 13. As a matter of fact, it keeps my 83-year-old mother-in-law in her house, which is good. So I'll be supporting the measure and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I hope she's able to stay. Senator Glazer--I see no other mics up--Senator Glazer, would you like to close?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Yes, thank you, Madam President. Members. Let me thank the good supportive comments from the Senators from San Diego and San Francisco and Riverside. And let me also thank the opposition Senators from Murrieta and San Diego for their engagement in this conversation here today. A couple things I want to say about property taxes and also about accountability, which the Senator from Murrieta brought up. On property taxes, the Senate insisted on two amendments to this measure, both printed in the bill itself.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The first one is an intent language at the start of the bill where it says, 'the provisions of this measure are not intended to reverse or invalidate provisions of the Constitution in effect before January 1st, 2024, including the provisions of Proposition 13 of 1978.' I don't know how you can be clearer that this measure itself will do nothing to affect Proposition 13.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And then in the measure itself, another amendment was inserted by the Senate that makes it clear that this section, meaning the provisions of this bill, apply to all statewide initiative measures submitted to the electors on or after January 1st, 2024. It makes it clear in two places. This has nothing to do with a previous initiative, certainly Proposition 13. I was around for Proposition 13 and it was about property taxes being too high and putting limitations on property taxes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This measure has nothing to do with Proposition 13 and property taxes. Nothing at all. Let me speak to this issue of accountability because I know that we all want to see oversight and accountability with all the taxes that are paid in our city and our state, our county, our special districts. That's a legitimate issue, and it's a legitimate issue for the voters to engage in in any future measure that's on the ballot dealing with taxes. Certainly no one, I don't think, would disagree with that.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And the choices can be made locally and the accountability can be made locally. This measure does nothing to change any of those desires to have that kind of accountability and oversight. But I want to stress this as I conclude, which is that, look, there are a lot of significant needs out there in our communities. Many of the folks who spoke earlier mentioned some of those. But this measure isn't even about that.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It's about a trick that's played on the voters in the state and jurisdictions where they say, hey, we just need a majority vote, but we're going to impose a two-thirds vote on a measure in the future. It's to eliminate that trickery that has occurred in our state, going forward so that voters can be dealt with in a straightforward way. It's what we all strive for in the work that we do. Honesty, transparency, directness, straightforwardness.
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's what we need to build trust in our government, build trust in our future. This measure does exactly that. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The Clerk will call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood- Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Archuleta? Hurtado? Newman?
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The author moves the call. Oh, I'm sorry. Ayes: 28, noes: nine. The measure passes. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, Members, we're going to move ahead to File Item 108. File Item 108. This is ACA 1. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Constitutional Amendment 1 by Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry in act relating to local finance.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener is the floor manager. Senator Weiner, the floor is yours.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. President. I rise as a principal co-author to present Assembly Constitutional Amendment One on behalf of Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry. ACA 1 simply asks voters if they would like to lower the threshold, the vote threshold, for local affordable housing and infrastructure projects from two-thirds to a 55 percent supermajority, which is what we currently enacted or have for school bonds. ACA 1 does not increase taxes. It does not even change the law.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It simply permits local governments who have lost critical tools like redevelopment to place before local voters a local measure to address the myriad of public infrastructure challenges that cities, counties, and special districts are facing today. ACA 1 is optional. If a local government does not want to propose a measure to their voters, they don't have to do it. ACA 1 includes historic and unprecedented accountability measures to protect voters and ensure fiscal accountability, transparency, and oversight.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Colleagues, our communities are in dire need of affordable and supportive housing. They are unable to address critical infrastructure projects that have endured decades of neglect. They're unable to adequately support their fire and police and other public safety departments. And, of course, as we all know, the number of unhoused people on the street keeps rising.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The best way to solve these problems is to empower local communities who are in the best position to determine what their community needs and what they are willing to pay to support those needs. I want to note that the author, Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry, will be submitting a letter to the Journal memorializing her commitment to work with the California Association of Realtors and other stakeholders on various accountability measures over the recess, and she has committed to doing that. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Discussion and debate. I see microphones up from Senator Jones, Senator Min, Senator Seyarto. We'll begin with Senator Jones and then Senator Rubio.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I rise in opposition to ACA 1. As has been previously stated, Californians pay some of the highest taxes in the nation. Just this year alone, the Legislature--this year, this is an unbelievable statistic to me, actually--this year, this Legislature, the Assembly, and the Senate, proposed 200 billion dollars in new taxes on the backs of Californians. ACA 1 aims to make the burden of taxes even higher.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This measure wrongly chips away at critical taxpayer protections by making it easier for politicians and special interests to raise taxes at the local level. Part of our fight to fix California is taking a strong stance against measures that will set us backwards. If this bill moves forward to the ballot, I implore the voters to not buy the sham argument of housing and infrastructure in support of this bill.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
As such, I will be strongly opposing this bill, and ask you to protect all taxpayers and oppose this measure as well. I ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Jones. Next up, Senator Min, followed by Senator Seyarto and Rubio.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Your tuxedo looks fabulous. I voted for ACA 13 because after looking closely at it, I determined that it really did not impact Prop 13 directly, and I dismissed the arguments against it.
- Dave Min
Person
I will be voting no on this particular measure because it does go after Prop 13 and I think substantially changes that. And I think my constituents face a high tax burden and one that we should not be exacerbating, so I will be voting no on this and just wanted to explain my reasoning.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in opposition to this measure, and I do have a question for the floor manager, if he would be so kind.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener, will you take a question? He says yes, so go ahead, sir.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So in this measure, it says it's taking sales and use tax and making that 55 percent. So for cities, sales and use tax, you can raise with a 50 percent. Does that mean the 50 percent is now no longer eligible, and that has to be 55? In other words, does it raise what's currently available to cities to raise taxes from a 50 percent simple majority up to 55?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The tax portion of ACA 1 is about special dedicated taxes, not about general taxes. Special taxes usually today require two-thirds. It would be 55 percent. And again, this is for public infrastructure projects.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
General taxes for cities can also be used for all of the things that you had described before, and that's a 50 percent threshold right now. And that's a tool that they have to address those issues of fire, police, infrastructure, and all of that. It goes into the General Fund, and from there, they make decisions about what is the priority in their communities. So I just want to make sure it doesn't affect that. And you're giving us the assurance that it does not.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto, speaking to the Chair, is that a question or just a statement?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I just asked the question again.
- Steven Glazer
Person
You asked the same question again? Okay.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Just confirming.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This is about special dedicated taxes. We know that frequently, voters like--in terms of accountability--like to know where the money is going, and they like it when money is lockboxed for new fire stations or affordable housing or whatever the case may be, and right now, you often need a two-thirds vote to do that, and that's what this is about. A general tax is not affected by this measure.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Understood. With my comments, please?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Yeah, you can go ahead.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. So this is an attack on the Prop 13 protections that communities installed, as I have stated before, and I'm not going to repeat that part. But one thing I am going to repeat, not repeat, but I'm going to bring up here is all of our efforts seem to be going into the low income, affordable, and what's really entry level housing.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But in the meanwhile, we have done nothing to fix the regulatory process in the last 35 years that is still burdening the rest of the housing market. So essentially what we're doing is we're locking everybody into affordable, their only house, the only house they can afford, which is going to be one of the affordable houses or the entry level homes. They have nothing to move into. That's why you see the housing market is not going down while interest rates have gone up a lot.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
There is nowhere for people to go. There is nowhere for young people to move up to so they can raise their family. And where they're going to move up to is out of the state. We need to fix the problems that we have in spending here in California, not try to make it easier to use the one solution that everybody likes, that, 'hey, we'll just raise taxes. We'll just take a little more, take another chunk out of those taxpayers' year.' So I appreciate the Senator from Orange County standing up and recognizing this for what it is, and I ask for a no vote. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I have microphones up from Senator Rubio, Skinner, Caballero, Niello, and Dahle. We get next with Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen of the Senate. Today I rise in strong support and as a proud co-author of ACA 1. This is a good government bill that gives power to the voters and ensures that the majority of their voices is heard. This bill is about local jobs, local investments, and local control. I think every Member on the floor can agree that we need to build more housing and we need to improve our infrastructure.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
As the good Senator from Riverside stated, we have so much housing need and yet we don't have funding to take care of the roads and everything else that we need to take care of. ACA 1 simply gives the voters that ability to decide for themselves on the ballot. Do they want this? It's up to them, not up to us. We want to make it easier for them to raise funding for housing and infrastructure, and again, it's absolutely optional.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
And because I held myself as a strong proponent of local control, this gives them the control. It's about local control and local needs. They decide what they need and hopefully their constituents, the residents, agree or disagree, and that's completely up to them. ACA 1 also includes significant guardrails to protect voters and hold their leaders accountable. So I understand this is really difficult because everyone envisions taxes, but it is specialized to the needs of our communities and right now our local communities are struggling.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
And we're not trying to impose anything on them. We're just saying you decide what you need. What do your residents need? What services can you boost? And this is all about our cities, our communities, and them controlling what they want for themselves. And with that, I ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Rubio. Senator Skinner, the floor is yours.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mr. President, Members. I find this discussion fascinating because I keep hearing some of the opponents indicate that by our vote on this measure, we're raising taxes or we're imposing the raising of taxes. That is not what ACA 1 does. ACA 1, as my colleague who just spoke made clear, and as our floor manager made clear, it allows us to put on the ballot a measure that allows voters to choose how they want to proceed. So it is literally only empowering our voters.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And if our voters decide that they want the current system that we have, they will have the ability to do that with this measure. So I just wanted to make clear that this is not imposing. This is putting a measure on the ballot that allows the voters to choose whether they want to change that threshold. And I think our voters, they cannot choose to do so unless we give them this option or unless we put it on the ballot, so I think it is an appropriate thing for us to do. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Skinner. Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Mr. President and Members, let me start off by saying I'm going to support ACA 1 today, but there are some really important technical issues that need to be addressed. And I want to thank the Committee on Governance and Finance staff for their help to identify--to help me identify--the issues that we need to focus on.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And I also want to thank the author who has agreed to file a letter to the Journal, as has been articulated earlier and outlining what specifically these issues are. But I wanted to talk about them today because some of them are just really technical issues. The ACA would lower the voter threshold for local taxes and bonds that fund affordable housing or public infrastructure.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And the public infrastructure language is very broad, and so there need to be some guardrails around it so that it's very specific and we don't end up with situations where cities or counties, local entities that can do these kinds of measures take advantage of the situation and put money into things that might not be appropriate. Also, the current definition of taxes and bonds is very broad, and it needs to be tighter and more specific.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Again, technical issues that could have been addressed had there been the time to do the double refer that I think would have been helpful. Also, some of the purposes that are listed on the measure could also be financed through Mello-Roos developer fees or benefit assessments. And the reason this becomes important is these are already structures that are in place for local government to be able to pay for things and those who benefit directly from the new infrastructure should have to pay the cost, not the general taxpayers or the homeowners who pay the bonds with higher property taxes.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So we think that also needs to be tightened up a little bit. Issues that were raised with what constitutes affordable housing, there have been issues raised about that. It goes up to 150 percent of the AMI and there's some concern that have been raised and the author has agreed to meet with and to discuss what might be the appropriate definition, what might some of the narrowing of that particular issue, and finally, actually, I think there's two more finallies.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The measure doesn't define parcel tax. Again, easy definition. The definition that we use for parcel tax in other instances have important safeguards which have exemptions for seniors and SSI recipients.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So if we're going to use parcel tax the way that we normally do, they should have the guardrails to ensure that those safeguards for seniors and SSI recipients are maintained. And then finally, there may be an issue about accountability measures with the audit. The report goes to the State Auditor, but that may not say what exactly the State Auditor is supposed to do with it, and local government also has to post the audit publicly on their website in order to be able to notify the public.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
This is all about transparency. We want to make sure that happens as well. So with those, I'm going to be supporting the bill today. I think it's a really important measure that helps local government achieve some of the goals that they have and allows them to go out to the voters, have a discussion about this, and if the voters believe that this is a good use of an amendment, then they'll support it. So I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Caballero, and it's nice to have you back with us.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I see microphones up from Senator Niello, Dahle, Stern, and Nguyen. Begin next with Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. And might I offer you look real snappy today. I rise in opposition to this bill. I grant the point of my colleague from Berkeley. This bill does not raise taxes. That's correct. But it does make it easier to raise taxes, does leave it in the voters' hands. But there are good reasons why there are supermajority requirements on some tax measures.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
My colleague from San Francisco made the comment in his presentation of the bill that taxes designated to a specific purpose are easier to pass. That's right. That means, to the contrary, general taxes that can be used on anything are harder for voters to vote on. So it only makes good policy and tax setting sense that there would be a higher threshold for tax for special purpose taxes. That's why that was initiated in the first place.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
The other issue regarding a supermajority is that with regard to parcel taxes, property taxes or the approval of bonds that end up being paid by parcel taxes, not all taxpayers are property owners. And it's the exercise of that old phrase: 'don't tax me, don't tax thee. Go tax that guy behind the tree.' It's very easy to impose taxes on somebody else and that's the reason for the supermajority that's required on property-based assessments. Now the question is this is still a supermajority, but it's only five percent.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
The existing is two-thirds. And I would suggest that for the protection of taxpayers and for the protection of this state with regard to taxes being one of the highest taxed states in the country that it would only make sense to defeat this measure and maintain the existing supermajority on those taxes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. I too, rise in opposition. I'm going to be really short and to the point. The reason we have a housing problem in California is because this Legislature has passed all kinds of laws that make it very difficult for housing, number one. Number two, this bill is a direct impact on Proposition 13. This is a parcel fee. That's what this is. Prop 13 capped that and allowed you.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I want to just make, the last comment I want to make, the great Senator from Riverside who was concerned about his mother-in-law losing her home, he should be more concerned if he votes for this because eventually it'll get down to where she's going to be losing, her property taxes can go up if this kind of legislation is passed. I urge a no vote on ACA 1.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Dahle. Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Members. I think there's been a sort of presumption in this discussion, at least from the opposition that somehow citizens are capable of being duped, that they won't be able to figure out what's going on here, that they're not smart enough to know how this is going to work. I think there's sort of a cynicism wrapped in that argument that I just don't share. But I think the bill indulges that point and says 'let's be skeptical.'
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Let's not just say, let government say 'trust us,' but let's have citizens oversee government. And not just citizens, but independent auditors. So for the first time in what I understand our state's history at a local level, we will have independent audits annually--city, county, special districts--on any of the funds slated for expenditure here.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
And not just that independent audit but then submitted to the California State Auditor, and not just to the California State Auditor but also made public, and not just made public but overseen by a Citizens Oversight Commission that has to be constituted by real people who may not--don't have a lobbyist, who are just taxpayers and average citizens, and they're actually given financial training to go do that oversight so they can think for themselves too. All those stage gates are brand new innovations in law.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I truly see this as a taxpayer protection measure as much as it is an infrastructure and growth measure. This is to me how we should be making policy when it comes to taxes and empowering citizens and not always just trusting ourselves or affirming what we think is efficient. So I think this should satisfy both the fiscal skeptics and those who want to build, and they're actually one and the same. We can do both. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Nguyen.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in opposition of ACA 1. This is a direct attack on Prop 13. It's a direct attack on those who are hanging by the thread to keep owning their home. I represent--90 percent of my district is in Orange County. We've had, throughout the years, there are areas--and even in Orange County our voters have approved tax increases--and there are areas where they've said enough is enough.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
The current system works and it works because it allows people who don't own a home to eventually reach that American Dream. Allowing this to move forward, all we're saying is, 'those of you who own a home or those of who you want to own a home, you're never going to get there.' Owning a home in California today is very difficult, if not impossible. For most people, for our children and next generation, it's a pipeline dream now. It's not there anymore.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And more partial tax, one after another gets onto the property tax. And remember, not every voter who's going to be voting on these measures are property tax owners. So it's always easier to again, like my colleague from Sacramento stated, 'it's always easier to have that other person pay for the tax and not yourself.' I understand the need for infrastructure, the need for housing. We pay the highest gas taxes in the nation.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Just this week I've asked us to suspend the gas tax just by dollar and it was rejected on this floor. That gas tax was promised to the voters it would go to infrastructure. Now we're also allowing it to now have individual cities and counties that option as well. When is enough is enough? And so I'm asking you, as you're casting your vote today, to think about the future generation. Is owning a home possible anymore?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And currently, those who own a home, are they going to start losing the home once this passes? So I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The last microphone up. Senator Alvarado-Gil.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I will keep my comments short as well. I just wanted to acknowledge that I will not be able to support today ACA 1. I really wrestled with this mainly due to the fact that I represent thirteen counties and I have a wide variety of opposition and support on this issue.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
But what I will say is that although I listen to my constituents and I hear them on everything that they're saying, there's one piece for me that I have to underscore, and that's hypocrisy. So for me, even in today's Senate, for us to pass this vote, we're not simply going to weigh on the simple majority. We are going to require at least over 67 percent of the legislators here today to pass this.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
So if we are asking for standards to be weakened or lessened for our jurisdictions and for our voters, our constituents, why are we not holding ourselves to those same standards? In fact, in our bylaws, there are some votes that we cannot pass without over 87 percent of a majority. So for those reasons, and for the reasons that I'm keeping my constituents in mind with this, I'm not going to vote for today and for many of the reasons that were already spoken today. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. I see a microphone up from Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Madam President. In deep respect for my colleague from Stock and I will make this very, very brief, I just want to tell you, there's an article in the Sacramento Bee this morning that talks about how affordable housing in this state is 670,000 dollars. I can't afford a 670,000 dollar home, and I think the homeless people on our streets can't afford a 670,000 dollar home. And if you ask people in this state, 670,000 dollars for a home is on the high end price, especially in my district.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Allstate, State Farm, Geico, and other insurance companies are moving out of this state. They can't get the rate increases and the things that they need from the Department of Insurance. We have a huge insurance problem, and even if you could own a home for 670,000 dollars, you would have to pay cash for it because you wouldn't get a mortgage company to finance a loan if you couldn't insure the property, and insurance is very difficult to get in this state.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Talk about the FAIR Plan, but who can afford that? You could just put your 2,000, 3,000 dollars a month you have on insurance, put in a savings account, and in a few years, you'd be able to pay off your home. It's just ridiculous that policies out of this building continue to increase the cost of living and then to pass a burden on to taxpayers to let them increase taxes on individuals who really can't afford those tax increases where we become highest poverty rate in the state.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
We were just labeled that again this morning. We retained that title for another year. And again, it's because of policies that passed out of this building. Please forgive me, my colleague from Stockton, for speaking so long. I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. All debate having ceased, Senator Wiener, would you like to close this debate?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
There you go. Yes. Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, colleagues, for this debate. I just want to briefly say something about housing, which I know a little something about. We've actually done to my colleague from Murrieta, we've done quite a bit of work using the regulatory obstacles to building housing. And my counterpart in the Assembly is here, and we work very hard on that. And I want to thank the Senator for Murrieta, for his vote yesterday on a Bill that did exactly that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But we also know that public investment in housing is critical. And California, with support of the federal government, used to invest dramatically in housing for Low income people. It stopped a few decades ago, and that's when homelessness started to explode. And so we should empower our communities to invest in housing to reduce homelessness, to stabilize working class and Low income families in their homes. But fundamentally, ACA one is about democracy, and it's about whether we should have anything close to majority rule.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's about whether we think it's fair and appropriate. And a good result when 64% of people in a high fire hazard zone, when 64% of people vote in favor of a measure to Fund new fire stations, 64% that's usually any of us would be thrilled to get 64% in our reelection. We would think that that is a voter mandate. But that's a failure in California because of the absurd two thirds vote. And that's why the firefighters are one of the co sponsors of this Bill. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min no. Newman. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Glazer aye. Newman.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to 10, the measure passes. Members, we're going to move next to file item 12. This is Senate Bill 799. Following that, we're going to move back to the Assembly third reading, beginning at file item 85, 89 and 90. So we're going to start next on file item number 12. SB 799 by Senator Portantino.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 799 by Senator Portantino an act relating to unemployment compensation and making an appropriation therefore.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. And Members, I rise to present SB 799, which would provide Unemployment Insurance to striking workers. Let me be clear. Those striking workers would have to be on strike for two weeks before being eligible. Between 2012 and 2022, only two strikes lasted beyond two weeks, representing a very small fraction of the overall number of people who file for Unemployment Insurance.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
That's significant because people have raised legitimate concerns about the Fund itself. And the impact on that Fund would be very minor relative to this Bill, but the impact to the individual on strike would be significant. We have seen rhetoric out there where people say, well, when people lose their house, lose their apartment, not be able to put food on their table, they'll be more malleable at the bargaining table. That's an untenable conversation. We want people to be respected.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
We want people to be able to pay their rent. We want people to be able to put food on their table during a strike or not during a strike. It's the right thing to do. We see significant unrest in today's labor market. Why? Because the economy is changing. Business models are changing. We're coming out of COVID We have this significant unrest that has manifested itself in writer strikes, in hotel worker strikes, in public employee strikes, both city and county strikes, in hospitals, nurses frontline, healthcare workers.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Why is there unrest? Because the models are changing. But the conversation and the worker dignity protections haven't changed to meet that new model. It's happening now. So let's inject a modicum of stability into the conversation, a modicum of decency and respect for that striking worker. And again, the conversations around the Fund are legitimate. And this conversation over SB 799 has actually put the Fund at the forefront of the conversation. And so we're going to deal with that piece as well going forward.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And I think that's the appropriate thing to do. But let's remember, when somebody goes on strike, it's not a romantic thing. It's hard on that family. I remember my own mother in law talking about my father in law's strike a decade after the strike, about the impact it had on the family. It was hard for them to get over it. It was hard for them to go through it. We should provide Unemployment Insurance for those striking workers beyond two weeks and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. I am surprised that we even have a Bill of this magnitude here in these chambers. I don't know how many of you do a payroll, I'm assuming not very many, a private payroll every two weeks. But I do. I want to give you a little history about unemployment. As somebody who actually worked for a business and got laid off and had bills to pay, unemployment was there for me.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Unfortunately, since I've been a business owner, my employees have never had to use unemployment. But I pay into unemployment in our business. And in 2008, we had the Great Recession. President Obama extended unemployment benefits up to 90 weeks. Now, there's a Fund that we all pay into, the employer pays into. It's called unemployment tax.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And that Fund was raised to pay back to make sure our Fund was full because we borrowed money from the federal government to issue those unemployment checks for up to 90 weeks, typically was six weeks that you were able to get unemployment benefits. 2015, we finally got our Fund back, paid off to the federal government loan that we had. And then COVID came and we had the whole nation unemployed. And in California, we had unemployment problems we knew about in 2008, didn't fix it.
- Brian Dahle
Person
The Department is ran so poorly in California that we had people in prison getting unemployment. And now the Fund is $30 billion in debt. 30 billion. And now who pays for that? If you don't have employees, you don't pay for that. But if you have employees, you pay for that. That's me, my wife, and our business that pays for that. And the thousands of businesses in California that pay for that unemployment Fund and unemployment is great. It's there for you when you actually lose your job.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But this Bill, what does it do? It allows somebody who has a job, has a job to go on strike and get an unemployment claim or get unemployment benefits. That's not what unemployment was made for. It was made for people who actually lost their jobs, not for people to go on strike. So essentially, the business owner, myself, would be paying a worker to go on strike to negotiate against me. Think about that. This is the most crazy thing I've ever seen.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I can't even get my head around the logic of why we're here even having this discussion. This is a labor dispute, not an unemployment dispute. No wonder the California people in business have named this as a job killer. It's totally a job killer. There's no way that you can come up with a logical reason to give somebody unemployment who has a job, who decides to go on strike.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Members, I mentioned earlier when we had the budget, about the fact that there wasn't one thing in the budget that helped a California business stay in California. Not one thing. I have not seen a Bill in the six or 700 bills that we've seen last couple of days that helps me stay in business in California. Not one. Plenty of bills that raise my electricity rates come after unemployment. This Bill many other bills that hurt my business.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I compete against businesses outside of California, and they're shipping products into California cheaper than I can provide that product. Here in California, you cannot have a strong public sector unless you have a strong private sector. And Members, businesses are leaving California because of pieces of legislation like this. Why don't for once, we do something to keep a business in California that lays the golden egg that raises the $300 million we spend every year. Members, this is a horrible Bill. This is a bad idea.
- Brian Dahle
Person
This is going to hurt California businesses. Every one of those little small businesses in your community is going to be hammered by this if their people go on strike. Let's not set a precedent in California and take the money that business owners pay and use it to pay employees of theirs to strike against them. I urge a no vote on this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I have Senator Jones, followed by Senator Becker and Senator Neelo. Senator Jones, the floor is yours.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I also rise in opposition to SB 799 for two reasons. First, I am concerned about anything that will add to our UI Fund and add taxes for California's employers. As has been very eloquently described by our previous speaker. California employers are already going to see tax increases in the next 10 years. And as we presently sit at around an $18 billion debt, I cannot support a Bill that's going to add to that debt, Members. Think about that.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
We owe the federal government already today, we owe the federal government $18 billion of Unemployment Insurance that we have to pay back. We don't get to just write it off. I've heard some of my colleagues mention that.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I'm about to do an, "Are you kidding me here?" I've heard some of my colleagues mention that the UI Fund debt is already so large, how much could this Bill really matter by adding to it? But having a lot of debt does not make more debt any less wrong. I would propose that we'd have our former colleague, Senator Waikowski, come back and do a bankruptcy lesson for us all. I cannot support a Bill that will add debt for employers who are completely uninvolved in the strikes.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Second, I am concerned about the EDD's ability to even do this right now. We have all discussed at length EDD's failings during the pandemic and heard from our constituents about them as well. And I know every single one of you got calls from your constituents about how poorly EDD was doing processing unemployment during the pandemic. My office alone processed over 4000 constituents requests for help with Unemployment Insurance through the EDD, and I know you did as well.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
EDD is presently trying to straighten out its systems and get things right. And I can't support adding more difficulty to that plate at a time when they, truly unemployed, are struggling for their benefits. I've heard several of our Democratic colleagues from this floor share with me that they have concerns about this Bill.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
So I hope that as a result of your considering this over the week, the points that are being made from people that are directly affected by this, knowing that the EDD isn't prepared to handle this, and understanding that we owe the federal government $18 billion in debt, that you will join me in voting no. Thank you very much.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Jones. Next up, Senator Becker, followed by Senator Niello and Senator Seyarto.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. There is a real need to support striking workers, almost often the most vulnerable Californians among us who simply are asking for living wages and safe working conditions. Many of us have been on a picket line. We know it's not glorious and we know it's a lot of hard work. My mom was a union negotiating team and no one wants to go on strike. As our good friend said, nobody wants to go on strike.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
I did spend my first two years here in the Legislature on the JLAC Committee, the Joint Legislative Audit Committee where we worked on EDD and raised a lot of concerns with the Unemployment Insurance Fund and the damage that we did to that Fund during COVID So I do wish there was better data to understand this and how will impact our UI Fund and to look and see how the models in New York and New Jersey are working.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And before we take this step but I am inclined to support our workers. But one thing is clear we are in desperate need of unemployment reform and I hope we can start that conversation at earnest in the fall. I, for one, am very willing to engage in that conversation. I've talked to some folks in both sides who I think are willing to do it but that is clear going forward. I hope we have that conversation in the fall.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you Senator Becker. Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I had put my mic down because my points were kind of already made but my friend from Bakersfield inspired me to redundancy. But the fundamental point of the problem with this Bill is that it turns the Unemployment Insurance benefit system on its head and by virtue of that it makes no sense.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
So it was stated that the cost will not be significant but the consequence to the striking worker is. Well, first of all, Unemployment Insurance was intended was imposed to take care of people who lost their job through no fault of their own. That's not what's going on in a strike that's, number one, turned on its head. Another issue is that my colleague from Bieber complained that in a situation like that he could be compensating an employee for negotiating against him.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
That's bad enough, but it gets worse. He also mentioned small businesses that are going to be small businesses whose contribution to the Unemployment Insurance Fund is going to be increased just by these additional costs. We're already, however many billions in debt and trying to make that up. We should have had more in the budget this year about that. But I digress. But the problem is smaller businesses, businesses of five or 10 employees.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I would suggest that the cost to them of these increased contributions to Unemployment Insurance is not insignificant and they are merely innocent bystanders to a strike that might be going on a thousand miles away from them. I urge you no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto followed by Senator Roth and Senator Grove. Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in opposition to SB 799. As stated before, getting laid off is a not voluntary thing to do. Nobody signs up to get laid off. And that's what unemployment is for. Quitting your job is a voluntary thing that unemployment does not cover when you quit your job. Going on strike is also a voluntary thing, and that's not what unemployment is meant for.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But if you look at the negotiating dynamics that this causes is essentially what you're doing is you're putting the thumb on the scale. And I understand why, but really you're taking the incentive of the worker to come off strike and get back to work. The worker has a stake in those negotiations, and so does the employer. And if we're taking the incentive away from one or the other, that creates an imbalance in the negotiating process.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And when that happens, you don't have a win win negotiation result at the end. You have a win lose that serves to weaken our businesses. It serves to disincentivize people from even doing business in California, and it hurts our small businesses. So I urge you to vote no on this measure and stop trying to put the thumb on the scales. Allow our collective bargaining processes to work out there. That's what we gave them the opportunity to do.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We can't keep running back to us to fix the problem because they don't want to do the collective bargaining process. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Seyarto. Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. You know, having practiced in this in related areas as a lawyer for many, many years before this gig, I thought I'd try to set the record straight with respect to the current status of the Unemployment Insurance Fund and Employers' obligations with respect to that, because we certainly need to separate the current state and condition of the Fund from this particular know. Frankly, you'd need a pandemic sized layoff to create a similar situation with respect to the UI Fund.
- Richard Roth
Person
Now, it's true that the employers in this state will have their quarterly Unemployment Insurance premiums rise to pay off that significant pandemic related debt absent some infusion of cash from the state or cash from somewhere else.
- Richard Roth
Person
And you can certainly debate the wisdom of this Bill from a policy perspective because there certainly are issues with regard to that since we were somewhat changing the rules that have been in place in the nation since 1935 with the passage of the National Labor Relations Act and the dynamic between labor and management with respect to collective bargaining.
- Richard Roth
Person
But as to a particular or specific employer and a strike, the layoff will only impact that employer's quarterly UI contributions or the UI account, perhaps if the number of strikers associated with that particular employer is high vis a vis the workforce, or if the employer's prior layoff experience is significant. But the current State of the Unemployment Insurance Fund and whether we owe 17 billion or 18 billion or $20 billion is not particularly relevant to this Bill. So I thought I'd let you know that I will be supporting the Bill today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Roth, Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in opposition of SB 799 colleagues. Being an employer like my colleague from Bieber, without us in the employment industry, like employers in the state, in the employers in your district, whether they're small or large, you would not have one dime, one penny to spend in this capital. And I know you guys all say I pay taxes too. Yeah.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
But the original money that came from small business or businesses that create jobs in this state came to this capital, which pays for the things that we allocate resources for and that pay, our paychecks, our staff's paychecks. It's not like government generates that money. Businesses generate that money that's collected either by payroll tax, property tax fees, permits to build a building. I mean, it's almost $14,000 for permits, just even before you put a nail in the first two X four that goes down.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
So all of it is done or provided to the State of California. Every penny generated comes from a business you can know, like, you know, I pay taxes, but the check you get from the State of California was originated from a business who sent their resources up here for you all to spend by trust Fund is overdrafted. Like my colleague from Bieber said, it's overdrafted. It was overdrafted in the past and it took us, I think, seven years to pay it off.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And now you have an unfunded liability. This is just an extension of a tax. And people don't call it that. And it's a retroactive tax. And the reason why I say that is, two years ago, we priced a product in a competitive market and we said, in my business, this is what we're going to charge for this product. The same way my colleague from Bieber, in a competitive market, probably prices his grain or his seed.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And then two years go by and we paid on our taxes for our employees prior to the two years going by, the 6.9% on the first $7,000 that's earned by the employees, this is 100% employer funded. No contribution comes from the employees in any way, shape, or form for Unemployment Insurance.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
It's set up like my colleague from Riverside, Murrieta, said, that it was to ensure that employers came with good faith so that if somebody lost their job without having a fault of their own that their compensation would be covered for a period of time so that they could be taken care of while they look for another job.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The UI Trust Fund after you've priced your product and you've covered FICA, Federal Food and City, EDD Workers Comp Liability, and a myriad of other things that we have to protect for in order to give somebody a job so they can provide for their family, we price that at the rate for Unemployment Insurance for that particular year. Then you fast forward two years and you have an unfunded liability on this UI Fund.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Now, instead of getting a food attack reduction for your taxes that you would have had paid a year before or two years before for this employee that you calculated the percentage of your profit on to run your business and pay your taxes, you are now going to have to pay an additional tax. We're going to have to pay off every employer in the State of California is going to have to pay off this $18 to $30 billion.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
There's no number out there yet, but $18 to $30 billion that is generated from a two year ago price structure, if that makes sense. So this is a retroactive tax on businesses. And businesses are already struggling in this state. They were shut down during COVID Thank God. The Governor made a statement the other day that said that he wished he would have done things differently. I don't know if letting business stay open would be one of them, but I would hope it would have.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
So I just think that continuing to tax our businesses specifically when the employers have zero contribution and skin in the game for a tax that is 100% employer funded and letting those employers draw down those benefits for the opposite of what the unemployment tax the unemployment tax was originated for, so that it wasn't for no fault of our own. It's a choice to go on strike.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And I agree wholeheartedly with my colleague from Bieber that you're just going to be paying your employees to bargain against you, which puts you at a complete, whole disadvantage in this bargaining situation. And frankly, colleagues, I'm going to say it I think many people are thinking about it: the fourth branch of government in this Capitol building has a little bit too much power this year, and I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. I have Senator Padilla, followed by Senator Durazo. Senator Padilla.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. President. I rise in support, and I was not planning to rise and speak to the matter. However, I think it's important in this debate that a couple of the assertions being made by our distinguished colleagues go answered first and foremost to one of our colleagues here. I think it's absolutely appropriate and correct to remember that we need to distinguish the policy question before this body from the fundamental deficiencies in the structure of UI and the system itself.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
That is something we will need to grapple with regardless. And I think that that's an important fact to call out. Again, there may even ultimately be questions as to whether this is the appropriate vehicle to address the legitimate question before us.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
But as a matter of public policy, the real question this Bill presents is whether or not it is fair and equitable to allow folks who work hard, who are exercising their rights under the laws of this nation, in this state who are exercising their collective bargaining rights to avail themselves of UI in these circumstances. I would think that, as we do with many bills in this body, we have to weigh the competing legitimate values that we're posed with all the time.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
And I think when we do that here, we have to come to the conclusion that the answer to that is yes. And it should be a resounding yes. Mr. President and colleagues, the assertion that I want to dress myself to is to remind us all that almost in every situation when workers exercise their right to strike, the power dynamic is almost never in favor of the workers. It is in favor of the employer. That is why we have the National Labor Relations Act. That is why we have a body of laws that protect workers in this state. This one should be added. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Padilla, Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. I think for colleagues who are making a statement about this would be an incentive for working people to go out and stay out. Really has no basis in reality. I don't know how many people here have either gone out on strike or been involved in a strike, but it is a very, very difficult decision to do it's when you really believe to sacrifice your income that will be coming into your family to take care of your family, because something very serious is at stake.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Either the wages they're threatening to cut, the wages they're threatening to cut, health care, threatening to cut a pension, something that would justify the sacrifice of giving up their income, the thumb on the scale already exists. And when people make that very difficult decision, it's really not a free decision. It's what they absolutely have to do. UI benefits are a safety net for people. They don't take it lightly. It's not going to incentivize anyone.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The amount that they get would be so small, it barely would cover providing food for their family. And yes, the UI spurs economic activity and generates revenue for small businesses. I've seen it. I know it. That's in reality, what happens. It recycles funding into that community. The UI program has existed primarily to help stabilize local economy when working people are out of work. And it's up to us to add to that definition of being out of work.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The human right that working people have to be able to collectively bargain and say, I need something better for me and my families. I strongly urge and aye vote thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Durazo. Any further Senator wish to be heard on this matter? Seeing no further microphones up, Senator Portantino, you may close this debate.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mr. President and colleagues. I appreciate the robust conversation that we've had and the comments on both sides. Clearly, as articulated by my colleague from Riverside. The Fund is a separate issue from the policy. And to speak specifically to the policy, this is a change. But I would take exception to the notion that every worker is faced.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
The decision is taken out of the hands of every worker, because fundamentally, that's what's changed in our economy today. When AI comes in and replaces a worker, that worker isn't choosing to be replaced. So it's a valid conversation for that worker to say, what's my role going forward? If you're contemplating an AI replacement for me, that's a valid conversation. As a business model changes, it affects the worker.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And so what this does is provide a little bit of security and safety for that worker during that difficult decision. And as my colleague from Los Angeles mentioned, it was intended to help local economies by providing a modicum of income to that family on strike so they can survive. And so that's what's at stake here. This is a moment in time where the marketplace has changed significantly and we should look at how we function, our laws to meet those changes.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And so that's why I chose to author this Bill, because of this moment in time coming out of the pandemic and embracing that unrest with a solution that we can make to help people is worthy of an aye vote. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote today. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, Secretary please call the roll.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd no. Durazo aye. Eggman no. Glazer no. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Becker aye. Bradford aye. Newman. Rubio aye. Umberg aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please call the absentees one last time.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Newman.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Members, we're going to now move to the Assembly bills on our floor. They begin at file item 858-589-9091. Floor authors for those are choa bog Dodd of Robrado Gill. So we begin with Assembly Bill 988, file item 85. Secretary, please read
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 to 12, the measure passes.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Assembly Bill 988 by Assembly Member Mathis and acquire to mental health
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Senator Ochoa-Bogh the floor is yours.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Mr. President and Members, Assembly Bill 988 would require in any entity seeking funds from the 988 Safe Suicide Behavioral Health Crisis Service Fund to report the number of individuals who have identified as veterans or active military personnel in its annual expenditure and outcome report. The Bill will provide data about how California's veterans are faring and whether they are aware of available resources. I strongly support data gathering because, armed with facts, government entities will be better able to help the veteran population.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
With mental health issues and hopefully slow the current veteran suicide crisis. The Bill passed through both houses with no no votes. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Any discussion on this matter, Senator Archuleta?
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I stand as the chair of the Military and Veterans Committee to say this is so very, very important for our nation, for our State of California, who we love and support our veterans. And I think we realize that friends and family who have men and women serving, they've come back from Iraq and Afghanistan are right now with PTSD and they're falling every single day to suicide.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And some of the bills that my colleague from San Francisco has put upon us to help with the drug enforcement, some way to help these veterans, I applaud that. And AB 988 surely goes in that direction to acknowledge the number of suicides that are happening to our veterans. And I urge an aye vote.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Archuleta. Anyone else wishes to speak on this? Seeing none. Senator Ochoa Bogh may close.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Normally, this would be eligible for unanimous roll call, but we have not established one yet, so hope we might do it right here. So, secretary, please call the roll
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen, Aye. Alvarado-Gil, Aye. Archuletta, Aye. Ashby, Aye. Atkins, Aye. Becker, Aye. Blakespear, Aye. Bradford, Aye. Caballaro, Aye. Cortese, Aye. Dahle, Aye. Dodd, Aye. Durazo, Aye. Eggman, Aye. Glazer, Aye. Gonzalez, Aye. Grove, Aye. Hurtado, Aye. Jones, Aye. Laird, Aye. Limon, Aye. McGuire, Aye. Menjivar, Aye. Min, Aye. Newman, Aye. Nguyen, Aye. Niello, Aye. Ochoa Bogh, Aye. Padilla, Aye. Portantino, Aye. Roth, Aye. Rubio, Seyarto, Aye. Skinner, Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas, Aye. Stern, Aye. Umberg, Aye. Wahab, Aye. Wiener, Aye. Wilk Aye.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
On a vote of 40 to zero, the measure passes and we have established our unanimous roll call. Next up, Members, is file item 89. This is Assembly Bill 1065. The floor manager is Senator Dodd. Secretary, please read
- Roger Niello
Legislator
please call the absent Members?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Rubio aye.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1065 by Assembly Member Jim Patterson, ENaC relating to communications.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mr. President and members, I rise to present Assembly Bill 1065, which makes wireless broadband projects eligible for state grants that fund broadband deployment to connect unserved households. This bill has enjoyed bipartisan support, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing none. This is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 40, no zero. The measure passes. There's an objection, case. Sorry, I missed that. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Cortese. Aye. Dahle. Aye. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. No. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. No. Grove. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. Aye. Laird. Aye. Limon. McGuire. Menjivar. Min. Aye. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. Niello. Aye. Ochoa Bogh. Aye. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. Aye. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Wilk. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Caballero. No. Limon. McGuire. Menjivar. Nguyen. Aye. Skinner. Wiener. Aye. Ashby. Aye to no. Stern. Aye to no. Menjivar, no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're going to call the role one last time, please. Everyone's attention. Secretary, please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Limon. McGuire. Skinner.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to six, the measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we'd appreciate it if you would remain here in the Senate chambers. We have just a minute or two of some organizational work to do and then we'll be back with our file. Members, just another couple of minutes and we'll be ready to go again and we will begin. We'll continue with our file. This would be File Item number 90. 91, 92, 93, 94 is our plan. There are some time stamped bills that we're going to be taking up in the three o'clock hour, and so it'll take us a little bit out of order and we'll let you know when that happens.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, Members, we're going to return to our work here on the Senate Floor. We're going to begin--resume--File Item 90. This is Assembly Bill 88. Floor manager is Senator Alvarado-Gil. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 88 by Assembly Member Sanchez in act relating to crime victims.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Alvarado-Gil.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present Assembly Bill 88 on behalf of Assemblymember Sanchez. This Bill will help crime victims their next Akin and family Members meaningfully exercise their right to attend parole and resentencing hearings. This is a great measure that has received bipartisan support and I respectfully ask. For an Aye vote.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
any discussion or debate on this matter, seeing none this is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Seeing no objections, ayes 40, no zero, the measure passes. We're going to skip for the moment file item 91 and move to file item 92. This is Assembly Bill 1420 by Assembly Member Berman. Secretary, please read
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1420 by Assembly Member Berman and act relating to Firearms.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Senator Blake Spear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you. President and colleagues. AB 1420 ensures the Department of Justice has the authority to inspect and write citations for any violations related to the sale, transfer and storage of firearms. California has some of the most unwaveringly strong firearms laws in the nation and these laws save lives. Having these laws is sensationally important, but equally important is ensuring that they are industriously enforced. For these reasons, I spiritedly urge an aye vote. Thank you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Blakespear, discussion on this matter? I see a microphone from Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you. I was actually prepared to support this Bill, but the emails are going to be sent to the Department of Justice. And just recently, a couple of years ago, the Department of Justice let out everybody's confidential information who had a concealed carry in California. And for that reason, I won't be able to support this Bill. I'm worried that same type of confidential information will be exposed again.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Any further discussion on this legislation, Senator Alvarado Gill, you may close. zero, excuse me, Senator Blakespear, you're the floor manager, you may close.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen, Aye. Alvarado-Gil, Aye. Archuletta, Aye. Ashby, Aye. Atkins, Aye. Becker, Blakespear, Aye. Bradford, Aye. Caballaro, Aye. Cortese, Aye. Dahle, No. Dodd, Aye. Durazo, Aye. Eggman, Glazer, Aye. Gonzalez, Aye. Grove, No. Hurtado, Aye. Jones, No. Laird, Aye. Limon, Aye. McGuire, Aye. Menjivar, Aye. Min, Aye. Newman, Aye. Nguyen, Niello, No. Ochoa Bogh, Aye. Padilla, Aye. Portantino, Roth, Aye. Rubio, Aye. Seyarto, No. Skinner, Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas, Aye. Stern, Aye. Umberg, Wahab, Aye. Wiener, Aye. Wilk Aye.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Please call the absent memebers.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Becker, Aye. Eggman, Aye. Nguyen. Portantino. Umberg, Aye.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Senator Durazo, the floor is yours.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
On a vote of 33 to five to measure passes, we're going to move next to file item 93, Assembly Bill 1317. Secretary, please read
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1317 by Assembly Member Wendy Carillo an act relating to tenancy.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. AB 1370... 1317 will require property owners of new multifamily apartments across 10 counties to lease parking as a separate and optional expense. Commonly referred to as unbundled parking. Tenants deserve the flexibility to pay for the number of parking spots they need, and not through the cost of their rent, subsidize the cost of parking spaces for others, especially when carless tenants are often the poorest amongst us. Unbud bundled parking decreases carbon emissions and vehicle miles traveled while increasing transit ridership and providing tenants with a discount on their rent. Moreover, unbundling parking can free up spaces that other residents need, reducing pressure for a scarce amenity. This bill is well-tailored and cost-effective to alleviate the state's dual housing and climate crisis, all while giving tenants greater flexibility and promoting equity. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for your vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I see microphones up from Senators Ashby, Dahle and Wiener. We'll begin with Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you. Colleagues, I think the premise of this bill is a good one. The idea that the author brought forward, and we talked about it in one of the committees is that if you uncouple parking with the cost of an apartment, that you may reduce the cost of apartments. But I will just say this to you that may or may not necessarily be true. And while I think it would be a good study, the real problem with this bill is that it selects 10 counties, including my own, and says that it is a pilot project. However, there is no end date and there is no report back. So in perpetuity, we would be making one set of rules for 10 counties and a different set of rules for 48 other counties without having the opportunity to come back and see if it works. And since it includes my county, I'm going to vote no today, and I urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. My comments go right along, sort of with my colleague from Sacramento. This includes Shasta County, where we do not have mass transit. It's a very rural county in California. And I actually went to the author and said, "Why are you including my county?" It doesn't make sense for my county, where we have... you know, if you unbundle the parking, that's how you pay for parking. Part of that is part of the parking when you build. And she said, "Because I want to have a diverse package of counties." Not because it made sense, but because she wanted to have a diverse package of counties. So I too cannot support this bill because it includes a county that is very rural, and maybe it works in San Francisco and Los Angeles and maybe even here in Sacramento, I don't know. But it surely doesn't work in Shasta County and the author was unable to take it out. So I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in support of AB 1317 and thank the author for bringing this important measure forward. This is honestly about choice, about a resident's choice about whether or not they want to pay for parking. If they want to pay for parking, they can pay for parking. But if it's not unbundled, then they're being forced to pay for parking even if they don't have a car, even if they don't want to. And it raises their housing costs, and that undermines the individual choice of a resident to decide whether they want to pay for parking, which can be very expensive. This is not some sort of radical departure. Nearly half of new apartments are already unbundling their parking. This is a trend and this will help facilitate that trend. Unbundled parking has long been implemented not just in San Francisco, but other cities. The UCLA Center for Sustainable Communities estimates nearly a 6% reduction in future vehicle miles traveled based on that policy. UCLA also found that households that do not have... that have forced parking, that's not unbundled, drive nearly 4,000 miles more than folks who live in places with unbundled parking. They spend more on gas, they emit more carbon emissions than other households. And again, they don't even have the choice to unbundle that parking. This is a climate-friendly measure and it is about the choice of these residents. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion on this measure? Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Question of the floor manager.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener, will you take a question? Senator Durazo, how about you? Would you take a question?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Senator Wiener will take it for you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Perhaps I just ask you, Mr. President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Perhaps you may, but no, I think there's a yes there by the floor managers. Senator Niello, please ask your question.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, through the president. I'm wondering if the author of the bill talked to the counties selected in the bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo, do you have an answer to that?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Mr. President, I don't have an answer to that, I'm sorry.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Well, on my time, I suspect the answer to the question is no. And in addressing a comment of my colleague from San Francisco, this is not about choice. Maybe individually, but before that happens. The counties involved here, I submit, had absolutely no choice whatsoever in being involved in this pilot, which is really a one-size-fits-all for every county on the list, and I was told that she was looking for a diverse list of counties. And that, by definition, means that a one-size-fits-all is not going to work very well. What works well in Sacramento is not necessarily going to work well in Lassen County. So this isn't about choice. Secondly, I have never, ever, have you? Seen a pilot program that has no data collection and no end to it. I really think this is very poorly thought-out policy. I urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. Any further discussion or debate? Senator Eggman.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I just wanted to make a point. Somebody asked the question if anybody was consulted about which counties were included. I would like to say I represent two of the counties and I was not ever asked.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, any further discussion or debate? Seeing none. Senator Durazo, you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. I also want to just add, in terms of the application, it's new construction of 16 units or more. And with all of, thank you, colleagues, for your comments, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. No. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Caballero. No. Cortese. Aye. Dahle. No. Dodd. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. No. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. No. Hurtado. Jones. No. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Newman. Nguyen. No. Niello. No. Ochoa Bogh. No. Padilla. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Rubio. Seyarto. No. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Dodd. Hurtado. Min. Aye. Newman. No. Padilla. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Bradford. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Call the role one more time. Did you get it? Please call the roll one more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dodd. Aye. Hurtado. Padilla. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Vote of 27 to 12. The measure passes. We're going to take another short pause. Members, please stay here in the chambers. Members, on behalf of pro tem Atkins, we want to welcome a former pro tem to the senate. The senate welcomes back Sacramento Mayor, former pro tem Daryl Steinberg.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're going to now shift gears just slightly. We're going to move to File Item 100 and File Item 13. So, can get ready at your places for both of those. File Item 100 and then File Item 13. I want to make sure that the floor manager for File Item 100 is ready to go. She appears to be, so the secretary, please read. This is Assembly Bill 531 by Assembly Member Irwin. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 531 by Assembly Member Irwin in act relating to behavioral health by providing the funds necessary, therefore through an election for the issuance and sale of bonds of the State of California and for the handling and disposition of those funds.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Eggman, just a moment, please. Can we ask Members to please return to their seats, please? Members, could I ask you to please return to your seats? Senator Eggman, thank you for your patience. The floor is yours.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. President. I am very proud today to present on behalf of Assembly Member Irwin, AB 531, which is part of the reason Senator Steinberg is here. And I'll talk more about that on the next bill I present.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But this bill is going to provide--we've all talked a lot about our need to do more for housing, our need to do more for homelessness, our need to do more for those suffering from severe and persistent mental health, those who are suffering more from substance abuse.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And our veterans, as we know, we have been--we had a moment of silence for 911 recently, and we know basically since then, our country has been, our people have been involved in conflicts overseas, and they continue to come home with wounds that are still open and bleeding and sometimes those are in their minds just because of the traumas that they signed that check for us to go to defend our democracy in other parts of the world, to fight for freedom, and when they come back, they should be able to have the respect and the dignity of having a roof over their head.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This bond will go to the voters. Let the voters decide if they want to invest 6.38 billion dollars into housing. Housing for homeless, housing for the mentally ill, housing for those with substance abuse, housing for children and families, and housing for our veterans.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This is an incredibly important program and incredibly a part of all the work, and I want to say again, all the work we have all done together in this chamber, in this capitol for the last couple of years, really trying to streamline our mental--like address the crisis that we see before us. So one of the things that we know is that there is not enough for housing.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And we're going to talk more about how we're going to reuse the money that we currently have in our Behavioral Health Services system, but we also want to talk about the need to have more funding for housing. As we all know, when we decided to do LPS way back when, and we said, we're closing the hospitals and everyone's going to live in the lowest restrictive level of care, that's still incredibly important.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And that is part of the tenets of this bill, that people should live in the lowest restricted level of care, but we also need to be sure that we have that continuum of care that we promised Californians decades ago. We promised them decades ago. We're going to move people out of state hospitals.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We're going to let them go, and we're going to have housing in the communities, like villages and cottages and places where people can live and thrive close to their own homes and their own families so they don't have to--as we all know, you hear about somebody needing a bed somewhere, they have to leave that county. They have to go six counties over to be able to find a bed appropriate for somebody to be able to have a place to stay.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Our emergency rooms are backed up. How many times have we talked about hospitals and emergency rooms and our public safety officers? That's because there's not a place to move people once they come in. I hope there's nobody in this chamber that thinks the status quo is okay, what we see when we're walking around. This week, I've been staying in Sacramento. I had the occasion to walk by one gentleman three different times, laying in the same place in the sidewalk.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I stopped yet last night just to make sure he was still alive because you can't tell sometimes. You just can't tell. That should break every single person's heart. And again, these are the most vulnerable amongst us folks. These aren't the people who are living high on the hog anywhere. These are people who are chronically homeless, chronically mentally ill, and people we need to be able to get out of our hospitals, out of our jails, out of our prisons, and back into our communities.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
So as you all know, I have a lot of passion about this issue. And the new bond funding will be used to construct, acquire, rehabilitate, more than 10,000 new treatment beds and supportive housing units, as well as new sites to serve more than 100,000 people annually. That is going to be 4.4 billion for community-based clinical care based on the success of our existing behavioral health program that we did a couple of years ago, altogether, the BHCIP Program.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This includes an additional 1.5 billion for local governments to apply for. We heard a lot from counties and cities and our Tribes, so this will be just for them. Cities, counties, and Tribal entities will have a guarantee for at least this amount of the bond. They're still eligible for the rest of it, but this 1.5 is set aside especially for them.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thirty million just for Tribes, and another 2 billion in the form of another program that we've developed and that has worked and that is our Homekey program. And this includes the 1.65 billion set aside for the veterans housing. And again, I hope you all have new home key programs that have been going up in your communities that are specifically for veterans because I know I do.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
So we've talked about the need to be able to do this, the need to be able to have the resources for the housing, our communities to be able--our cities and our counties have been begging for this kind of support. And again, we're going to talk about how we're going to redo the Behavioral Health Services Act in a minute. But this is an incredibly important piece to actually have places for beds, for treatments, for facilities for those in desperate need.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Help me, help the Administration, and a huge thanks to former Senator Steinberg, Mayor Steinberg, the Administration, for helping envision this whole process to be able to have this to go before the voters on the March ballot to see if they too agree that this is one of the most important things that we can do as Californians.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Eggman. Discussion and debate. I see a microphone up from Senator Jones and Senator Blakespear. Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. I strongly agree with the floor jockey's arguments in favor of this expenditure, this spending, and the work that we need to do in this area of healthcare in California. Unfortunately, I disagree with the avenue in which we're doing that here today, going into debt and doing bond financing. Last year alone, as has already been stated several times on this floor, that California had a 100 billion dollar surplus.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
At that point in time, California Senate Republicans jumped on this opportunity to make meaningful investments in our state. We called for a ten percent spending of the surplus, ten million dollars on mental health infrastructure. We could already be moving down the road on this spending and this infrastructure and this so important services that we're talking about this morning. Unfortunately, the majority party and the Governor ignored our calls to tackle this issue through responsible budgeting. Fast forward to today.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
California has a 32 billion dollar budget deficit just in one year. 132,000,000,000 dollar swing from positive to negative. Ladies and gentlemen, most households and most businesses that size of a swing would wipe them out, bankrupt them. They would be done. Even worse, we are expected to be in budget deficits through 2027. Four more years of budget deficits in the State of California and now AB 531, asking Californians to take out a loan to fund this program.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
No matter how crucial this program is, we must find another way to address the issue that does not pour, make the state go further into debt. We should not be funding anything with completely irresponsible budgeting schemes at this time or anytime. I ask for a no vote on AB 531, and let's find another way to finance this much needed infrastructure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Jones. Senator Francinita, Senator Blakespear, the floor is yours.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you. I rise today in support of this. I came up to Sacramento nine months ago expecting that we would be spending every week talking about the crisis of homelessness on our streets. And the reality is that up here, we articulate every number of crises, and we are all dealing with so many different things, and there are competing priorities. But the homelessness crisis is so acute in this state that we absolutely need to invest in the solutions.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
This bond is not anywhere near the scope of what we're going to need to actually eliminate encampments on our city streets and provide homes for people who desperately need them. But this is at least something. And the reality of the mental health and drug addiction, alcohol addiction, the problems that people are facing who are living unsheltered on our streets is just so extreme that we have to invest in the solutions.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
So I think all of us know and believe that the situation with homelessness is unacceptable and that the status quo is unacceptable. And we have to realize and grapple with the fact that it will not self-resolve. There's very much a hope and almost a myth that if we just let things continue on, this will self-resolve, and it won't. We just see that it's getting worse every single month.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
So I strongly urge my colleagues to support this, and I urge us to do more than this this year and next year and working with the Governor's Office so that we can return to a time when nearly everyone lived inside, that it was functionally zero people at the level of homelessness. That should be our goal in this state. And with 170,000 people living unsheltered, and that growing every month, we are just nowhere close to that. So I strongly urge an aye vote here.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Blakespear. I see microphones up from Senators Niello, Roth, Stern, and Ashby. Next up, Senator Niello. I see you, Senator Grove.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. This is a frustrating issue for me. A year and nine or ten months ago when I recognized that redistricting gave me an opportunity to come back to the Legislature, I really wondered if I wanted to. And I talked to a lot of people and thought about it long and hard. But there's one reason why I decided I wanted to get back in the mix and I discussed this with my colleague from Stockton early on. It is the issue of homelessness.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I think it's the most urgent, crucial problem facing the State of California. And I was on the sidelines because I still follow the process on the sidelines, watching what was being done to try to cure the problem of homelessness. I've said several times before that we spent five years spending 20 billion dollars and the numbers got worse. In my opinion, our approach to homelessness was fundamentally flawed and we knew all along that we had a tremendous shortage in mental health beds in the State of California.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And that's why, when I first saw the Governor propose this bond a few months ago, thought to myself, we just realize now that this is crucial enough that we need to borrow almost five billion dollars to solve that problem when in the last five years, we could have solved that problem, not just with the ten million dollars mentioned before, but one billion dollars a year in those five years would have been virtually budget dust. And we could have financed this.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
We could have the money now to deploy it now and not have to borrow it. I have to support the comments of our minority leader relative to finding another way to do this. I know we have deficits, but we also have choices. A budget is just a series of many, many choices. What is the most serious problem facing the State of California today? Again, I believe it's homelessness. Providing mental health beds is part of that.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
That should be a top priority for our budget, even if we have a deficit. And regrettably, I can't support the bond measure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. You know, unfortunately, there's no amount of annual budget surplus that will be sufficient to address our mental health needs in this great State of California. Down where I come from, since 2019, using General Fund money, that budget surplus that folks have been talking about, Riverside County has constructed over 580 community and residential mental health and substance abuse beds. Over 580. More than any of the counties in total in the State of California and yet there is a need for more. Much, much more.
- Richard Roth
Person
Our emergency departments in Riverside County are completely clogged, completely clogged largely by those who are in the emergency departments with severe mental illness. Our emergency departments have become our psychiatric hospitals. Our emergency room physicians are our psychiatrists and psychologists. The situation is untenable and we still have the same 77 acute care mental health inpatient psychiatric beds, including only 12 for adolescents and no beds for pediatrics that we have had for years and years and years, and those beds are completely full all of the time with a waiting list just like a hotel to get in for treatment.
- Richard Roth
Person
We can't wait for the next budget surplus to roll around the corner to help us address, not only in Riverside County, but in the other counties of this state, to address our needs for mental health beds of all kinds, but specifically including acute care inpatient mental health. Bond financing is the only option. It is a necessity, and I urge an aye vote on this measure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern, followed by Senator Ashby and Grove. Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. It sort of feels like coming to the end of a giant journey where I didn't even have to steer the ship or put my oars in the water. Ever since this author took the reins from the mayor and all the giants around here, it's been happening.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
And since our Governor decided to engage in the way he has with the life he's had in cities around this state and all around this country, this ship is moving, and things are going to change, and this bill will save people's lives, but it will also change how it feels to live in California. There are obviously a lot of other things that we need to do in this state to make this all work. This is a bond. This is about beds.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
This is about built places that are not the street. But we know we've got to get CalAIM reform done, and we've got to get MHSA reform done, and we've got to get care courts implemented, and we've got to look at conservatorships, and we've got to look at our prisons and the pipeline from our prison system right onto our street. That's the one I just want to touch on for a second.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
It's a bad moment in your life when you have to pray for someone you love to get arrested. That's a really bad place. And yet that's what parents and partners have to do every single day in this state because they can't find their loved one and they don't know what happened to their life, and they got to hope they come in the system somehow, and if that's the way, that's it.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
But what's happening right now is people get pulled in through that part of the system, and they get spit right back out. And especially the people who are severely mentally ill. Give you a statistic. Last year in Los Angeles County, 1,640 people who have severe mental illness and had committed a misdemeanor had their cases dismissed, and they left the system.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
There are a lot of services in Los Angeles to pick those people up, but there is a disconnect where people, five humans a day who have decompensated in some of the worst places on earth say, 'well, case dismissed, and we've done our duty. You've been under our wardship during the pendency or trial, and now you're free to take some services. We'd really like you to get into some housing, but you're free to go.'
- Henry Stern
Legislator
And what people do when they're schizophrenic or they have had a psychotic break or left their Abilify medication and got it stolen or lost or just lost an ID card, those decisions to enter care don't happen. And those are the people who are dying on our streets every day, and we've all seen it. I know this author, and I know this Governor, and I even know all the teams.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Everyone in this Senate, everyone in this Legislature, everyone in California walks by somebody and sees them in a spot where we've trained ourselves to look away because it's just too hard, but it has to stop. And this is both a moral crisis, but at a fiscal level if you want to justify this. Our prisons should not be where we deliver care. And the way we recycle people through will save taxpayers billions of dollars over time.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Billions of dollars that is basically just a recycling system for an immoral and ignorant and depraved kind of poverty that we're bigger than. I appreciate the author. I appreciate the Governor and what the speaker have done here. Our pro tem, thank you. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I too, want to extend my adoration for the author to bring this forward. I know that she worked on this in her military career and also in her private life. I live up here, like all of us do, four days a week, and I live off of the 50. And when I come in off of the 50 down 12th Street by Loaves and Fishes, I pass at minimum 40 to 50 people out on the streets every day. That's minimum.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I drive those streets when it's raining. I drive those streets when it's 110 degrees in the early morning or even evening hours. And to be honest with you, Colleagues, it's cruel. It is absolutely cruel. We are the State of California and we treat those people like, I mean, I bet they get treated worse than individuals in a third-world country.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I have a friend of mine, Darlene Denison, she is a State Farm agent and she promised her mother that she would always take care of her brother, and she has spent years trying to keep him off the street. And she finally was somewhat successful. She's been successful on and off. A month here, a month there, on and a month, off a month. And she finally got him an apartment and got him settled in and got him back on medication.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And we're talking about not people that have a desire. Some of those people out there, Colleagues, I'll be honest with you, they just need to get a damn job and go back to work and stop holding the sign and do that kind of stuff, but we're not talking about those people. We're talking about chronically ill, homeless people that they're not going to get a job. They're just not. Let's just be real. A lot of them are not going to get a job.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And frankly, a lot of them are not going to live a long time. Based on their lifestyle and how they live, they estimate that their lifestyle is three to five years. That's the research that Darlene has done. So back to Darlene's brother. She promised her mom she gets him a housing. He leaves housing.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And only somebody who is mentally ill or has a problem would leave a perfectly good apartment and go live in two stairs down to a flat area in the back of a grocery store on the cement, no blankets, no coverage, no nothing. And I was talking to her the other day, and she's starting a nonprofit because she did get him an apartment, but he doesn't like his neighbors, and his neighbors definitely don't like him. And there's no sense of community.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And I'm so proud of Kern County and putting together a facility that will house 12, not a lot, but 12 tiny little homes and a barbecue area in the center with a park where people like this that have community around them can be successful until, frankly, they leave this world. These aren't people that--I have a lot of people say they should, need to get a job. Well, some of them do. But these people, they can't. We're talking about a specific piece of population.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I'm not trying to be destitute. I'm just saying, it's just a reality. I would encourage--because you guys know I'm a person of faith--I would encourage you to work with an organization called CityServe. CityServe works with government agencies all around the world, Ukraine, all around the United States, in different countries, and they have contracts, and they have mitigated and reduced cost to house these individuals because they could provide you with furniture, with towels, and everything you can get at Costco, a Walmart, and it's all free.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And unlike contracts that you sign with normal government agencies or agencies, I think it's a three or four line contract that says if they give you this product, you can't sell, barter, or trade it. You have to give it to the person that you're trying to help. What's beautiful about this is--and I'm just saying what's really good about this is--that sometimes you want to just create dignity for these people, too.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And I believe this nonprofit has a heart for these people, and they want to create dignity. So when they give them housing, or you have housing that's provided, they don't just go, here's towels for your kitchen. They sit down with the individual and it's like, what color do you want your kitchen? And I remember this guy could hardly talk, and I'm not making fun of him, but he goes, 'well-woe.' And they said yellow. And he said yes.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And so everything yellow is in that kitchen, and he thinks it reminds him of sunshine. And that gave him dignity for the three years that he survived off the street in that little apartment. So I realized that, and I'm right with my colleague, the minority leader, you guys waste a hell of a lot of money, and we tell you no all the time, but sometimes you just got to suck it up and do the right thing. And so I respectfully ask for an aye vote on this.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto, followed by Senator Skinner.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. So I feel like this discussion has been turned into a 'people who agree that there's an issue and people who don't agree that there's an issue.' But that's not what this discussion is about. This discussion is all of us agree that there's an issue and it needs to be addressed. And from a financial perspective, how are we going to address that? We've known that this has been a problem. We've even dedicated money before to solve the problem.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We spent 20 billion dollars on housing solutions that some of it got spent in some areas where it worked, as my colleague from Riverside was pointing out. When you give counties the ability to do what's right for their area and be able to respond to the problem in a way that helps their area and breaks the problem down into smaller portions so that it's actually workable, that works. What this discussion today is about is doing another bond.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We have approximately 106,000,000,000 dollars in bonded indebtedness already, and that translates into about 6 billion dollars of interest a year. And although this is a smaller amount of all the bonds that have been suggested this year, one of the things that really concerns me is that instead of 20 billion dollars with little to show for it a few years later, what if we spend five billion dollars and the only thing we have to show for it in five or six years or seven years is an interest payment that we have to continue to make on the bond?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
That's what concerns me. And while we talk about deficits of 32, 35 billion dollars, remember our budget is set right now at somewhere around 310,000,000,000 dollars. That's a hell of a lot more than we had five years ago. And yet we've had opportunity after opportunity to invest money up front in solving this crisis.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And so that's the approach. That's the responsible approach from a fiscal perspective that we should be taking. We shouldn't have to wait for an election. We shouldn't have to do any of that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We should be putting this money into the budget and spending this money to do exactly all of the things that this bond would be doing so that we could get it on the ground, get it up and running, and not have all the stuff that had to get attached to this bond during the negotiations for it. But we chose not to. So what we choose to do and what we choose not to do makes the difference.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I choose not to support bonds until, number one, we start whittling down some of our bonded indebtedness so my kids don't have to pay for it all, but number two, when we have the opportunity, when we have the amount of money that people send to us through their current tax system, they work through July--remember, they work through July to pay for all this stuff--but then we don't use it for the things we need the most. That's called setting priorities.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We need to set our priorities better. I don't want to look at this in five years and say, 'hey, here's your interest payment. I don't know where the hell all the other money went.' This is a huge problem, probably one of the biggest problems in the State of California, and yet it has not been a priority. We need to make it a priority for our regular budget, not incurred debt. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Skinner, followed by Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mr. President, Members. Some of you may have noticed that I have not voted on most of the tax expenditures that even ones that I would normally support this year or the last couple of years. And that's my role as Budget Chair when we have to be smart about our money. And that's what a lot of our colleagues are speaking to.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And I was in the Legislature and on the Budget Committee when we were in the middle of the recession and we had to make incredibly painful cuts. So I appreciate the concern about indebtedness. However, there are some times when our need is so great and where bonds are an entirely appropriate expenditure. Now, the number of bonds that were before us, and they are not all yet passed, right, but we have got a lot that are in play. There are too many.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
They are. But this one is essential. This one is essential. And I want to especially thank my colleague from Stockton for her dedication within this issue for so long, and the author, and many others, and our former colleague from San Jose who had the Mental Health Caucus. And we talk about people that are either on the streets or such severe mental illness. But I'll just tell a very brief personal story. My brother, who is bipolar and has a substance use disorder but can at times be very functional.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And I think many of us know people like that. But when he is unhoused is when his condition really deteriorates. Fortunately, I was able to house him for a while. Now he is very temporarily housed, but he is at least functional enough to be applying to housing. But he has been applying to housing that would meet his needs. He has been submitting applications for three years now, three years, and he has not yet found a place.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And it's not because he was denied or somebody sent him something and he didn't respond. No, it's because there haven't been available. He's been put on waiting lists. And while right now he's pretty functional. My concern, and I think is everybody's, is that if he is unhoused for any period of time, he will not be functional and then he will not even apply. So there has to be more of this housing. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. I was not prepared to speak, but I'm going to speak on this really quick, because homelessness and everything of this sort has been a concern for me and for my district from the get go. And I came to this body in 2020 in hopes to be part of the solution. Based on conversations that I had with stakeholders in my district as well as having the blessed opportunity to sit in public safety, to sit in various committees, I've learned quite a bit about the concerns and the issues that we have.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
It's one of the reasons why--and noticing the surplus that we've had in the past couple of years--understanding that we have spent about 20 billion dollars this year, up in the past three, four years, dealing with homelessness. I introduced legislation back in 2022, SB 1298, that would address the mental health bed capacity by expanding it, asking to utilize some of our surplus 1 billion dollars a year, every year.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I want to thank this body, because with unanimous bipartisan support, it passed this House and it died in appropriations in the Assembly. In 2023, again, I introduced SB 65, which was the investment in essential mental health capacity, asking this time for 1 billion dollars of our budget to be allocated for that purpose, for the next three years, limiting it. It's about priorities. It's about priorities, and we've had had the money. We just haven't allocated it. We haven't chosen to do that.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
This body, the Senate, has supported both of my bills, and for that, I am so grateful to my colleagues. But I want to make sure that we understand that we've had the money. We've had the desire and the will in this Senate killed in the Assembly not to move this forward. We've had the money. It's about in priorities. And even though I haven't supported any of these bonds today, I am going to support this one.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I'm doing it in good faith, because there is a need in California. And even though we haven't done it and even though this Republican has put forth policy and legislation in hopes that we could address it, since we've had 20 billion dollars to address homelessness and we haven't done anything about the infrastructure part of it, I'm going to support this bill today in hopes that California will see it as a priority and we can move forward on it. And for that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, I see Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I wanted to comment on a couple of items that have come up in the debate, and the first one is on the service side. Years ago, I ran an aid service agency and one of the things we did is work with people that were on the streets that had some dual diagnosis, whether it was mental health or drug.
- John Laird
Legislator
And one of the hardest things was we would be out there with street workers and we would risk trying to help them, and this trust would be built and they would be ready for treatment, whether it was mental health or addiction. And there wasn't anything available. And we have heard discussion about waiting lists that's not a time when waiting lists are a relevant thing. You get somebody's trust, they make a decision to go, that's not something that holds for the life of being on a waiting list.
- John Laird
Legislator
And so on the service side, delivering this is very important. Making the difference that's in this is very important. But I wanted to speak to the financing issues that have come up because I had the misfortune to be the Budget Chair for a number of years, during the Schwarzenegger years, where California just plunged into debt, and we're talking about debt here.
- John Laird
Legislator
And I'm telling you, there was a 15 billion dollar bond issued just to do expenses. Once that was done, you were done. We were stuck with 15 billion dollars that went on. There was one year where the twelfth payroll of the state that was due on June 30th was moved to July 1st so that we could save one-twelfth of the state payroll and pay it in the next year. And then Jerry Brown becomes Governor, and there were like 400 funds that had been borrowed from.
- John Laird
Legislator
He attacked the wall of debt and he made sure that every one of those funds was paid back. He reset that monthly payroll from July 1st back to June 30th so that we could get back on track. We paid off the 15 billion dollars of debt for expenses that were long gone and did everything to wipe out that debt. And so right now, on the debt score, we are more solvent than we have been in 20 years.
- John Laird
Legislator
And the rule of thumb is--and I heard numbers tossed out earlier in the debate--the rule of thumb is that your borrowing in bonds should always be the high end, should be between five to six percent of the General Fund. That is a level of acceptable investment. If this bond is sent out today and approved by the voters, we will be well within that acceptable limit of debt. And so the question should be the policy question about whether we need to do this.
- John Laird
Legislator
And I think many Senators have made the comments on the urgency and the difference this will make. And so this is sound financially and is just incredibly necessary on the program side. I urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Laird. I see a final microphone up on the floor. Pro Tem Atkins. Pro Tem Atkins, the floor is yours.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I'm particularly pleased, of course, that the former pro tem and the mayor of Sacramento is here today. When I came here thirteen years ago, it was to work on housing and homelessness. And I saw him as a real mentor, someone who had worked on housing as a person in local government. I was thrilled with the work that he was doing here to support local communities, to have resources for housing.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And then the Mental Health Services Act was incredible for those of us working on the streets trying to help homeless folks. My colleague from Stockton and I talk all the time about how is it that we have been here for this number of years and yet this intractable problem still faces us? It's heartbreaking. If we can't do something about this, I just don't know who can. But I believe we can. And I know the good assemblywoman is waiting patiently for us to move this along.
- Toni Atkins
Person
So I just want to make a couple of points. One: bonding is what we've always done to build housing in this state under Republican governors and Democratic governors. It is a tool that we use to do this work. California, like states across this country, we have an issue around housing affordability, and it is impacting significantly. not just our most vulnerable and poor folks and working, struggling, working Californians, it is impacting folks with mental health issues, our returning veterans, on and on and on.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Two groups recently--I just welcomed the California Psychological Association to San Diego for their conference in San Diego last Friday. And when I mentioned the fact that I know the biggest struggle you have working with some of your clients is that they need stable housing, and I saw heads shaking like you couldn't believe. It is a huge issue for mental health to be able to find housing for individuals.
- Toni Atkins
Person
This particular measure and this bond focuses on yet another stakeholders groups, group that has reached out to us: hospitals. The Hospital Association talking about behavioral health beds, not having nearly enough. The numbers have already been given. So they're telling us what they need us to do and how they need us to move forward. They're asking. And yes, we have invested a lot in housing. We have invested a lot in housing. We've invested in homelessness. But we've got to be intentional and focused.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And this particular measure gives us a roadmap for what we intend and need to accomplish and produce. We have the ability to do oversight and accountability. It's within our purview to do that. And I think we should. I also want to commend the Governor because the pandemic has made all of this worse. The housing issue, homelessness, behavioral health, the early childhood initiative that we have passed and put money into that is being implemented.
- Toni Atkins
Person
All these things together have to get us a step and a step and a step further to get the youngest possible folks, our young kids help as soon as possible to keep from having situations where our loved ones end up with bipolar disorder and then end up self-medicating and making it more and more complicated as is my family story with a young man. So all of these efforts combined are really going to help this item.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And I am so glad to see that there will be bipartisan support for this because I think it is the right thing to do at this time. I commend the floor manager and certainly the author and please ask for your support on AB 531.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Atkins. We've heard from thirteen Senators on this debate. Anything further? Seeing no microphones up. Senator Eggman we'll turn to you to close the debate.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thirteen has always been my lucky number, sir. I want to thank everybody who spoke on this issue. As we can see, this has a lot of passion for many of us. It impacts all of us. I know nobody goes home to their districts and they don't hear about this issue. We've spent as a budget sub three Chair last year and as a Member this year. We've spent over 12 billion dollars in the last couple of years on mental health issues and homelessness, and it's not enough, right, because a lot of that is one time funding.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And I understand we might like to have an ongoing one billion dollars, but, which isn't responsible, not knowing what the rise and falls of budgets are going to do. So we've done all we can with one time money. When we had it, we put it out. And I'm pretty sure all of you have new programs that have popped up in your districts that came from that funding, that BHCIP funding, that Homekey funding, all of those programs.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But this is another part that actually deals with the mental health component of it because a lot of that that was just for homelessness, it's also for the mental health folks. And we'll talk a little bit more about the services, but before, there wasn't a good way to be able to pay to have people in housing. So this, coupled with 362--I'm going to talk about in a couple of minutes--provides the infrastructure, and then it also provides 326.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And then--I got a little Dyslexia, I told you about that--and then it also provides the ability to pay for that and with the services that wrap around it. And as my one colleague talked about, it's best just to have locals figure it out. This is what this does. This provides for locals to pull it down, put within their communities, to be able to make dignity for every single person, to be able to have a chance to get off the streets.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I had a health crisis in my house this summer. I needed some help with my daughter. My sister happened to be going to Europe, and she took my 15-year-old daughter with her. And when she came back, I said, 'what are some of the things you noticed?' And she said, 'Mom, I noticed that people don't watch their back there like they do here.'
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
It's so sad to me to be able to have my child because of the violence we have on the streets because what we see constantly having to watch her back. And I've taught her that, you know, I've taught her that you check out your surroundings all the time. Other countries don't have to do that because they have more humanity about how they treat people and to be able to provide things within their community.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And when I talk about the people who are going to get housing and going to get treatment, let's also not forget about their families. The person that the Senator from Bakersfield talked about, area, talked about, there are families who are desperate for us to be able to provide resources for people to have safe places to live near their families. Let's keep the promises that people made to Californians a long time ago. Better late than never. I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'll debate having ceased on Assembly Bill 531. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Dahle?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nguyen. Niello.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 to two. The measure carries measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, Members, we're going to move next to file item 13. This is SB 326 by Senator Eggman secretary, please read Senate Bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 326 by Senator Eggman an act relating to to behavioral health and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Eggman.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. President. And we all think you look lovely up there today in that Tux. We think it should be a thing. SB 326 is back for concurrence and there was a lot of amendments made because it still needed a lot of work, right? It has to be a collaborative process. We all have to go forward together. I want to give a huge thanks to the Administration for so much leaning into this.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We've never had an Administration really focus and prioritize these issues like this Administration has in this Governor. I want to thank the initial author of the Mental Health Services Act, Senator Steinberg, who is here with us in the chamber today. Wouldn't we all like to be able to come back on a moment in our life 20 years later and be able to redo it? I know I would. And that's what this is about.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
It's about we did this 20 years ago and our entire world has changed in the last 20 years. So it's time to change the way we think about funding behavioral health. We know initially, when this was initially passed, there were well over 20% of our population who were uninsured. Now we know that is a closer to 5%. There are so many more things that we can Bill for now that we couldn't before.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
With the advent of our Children and Youth Behavioral Initiative, with our Care Act, with Calam and all these other things, we are reimagining how we do mental health treatment and how we work with our counties, how we work with our cities. I'm sure you've all heard from your big city mayors or your counties about this issue that this is one of the most important things we can do.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
So now that housing that we're going to build in the communities, we have to be able to provide for people to be there for subsidies, for paying rent, for paying for those treatment beds, for being able to provide for the services that are needed. That's why now 30% of the money is going to be able to go. We're going to provide flexibility.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But to be able to provide for those services, we're also going to have another about a 30% be able to be used for that whole person care. We know that's one of the most effective things we can do, and that's the kind of things we have to do. And the other 30% for services, for innovation, especially around our children and early intervention, we know one of the best things we can do is to intervene with early psychosis. Right?
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
If we can have statewide programs that are evidence based and able for smaller counties like way up north in the hinterlands, to be able to pull things off the shelf that we know are evidence based and work, we can get so much earlier. Start on being able to help our young people. It's time to readjust how we use our Behavioral Health Services Act. And we also need to talk about those with substance abuse.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We have excluded that unless you have a dual diagnosis as part of our Behavioral health services, our mental health services. That's why we're changing the name to Behavioral Health Services. We know that psychosis, we know that the kind of drugs we're seeing on our street now is deadly and creates the same kind of organicity in the brain as a mental health condition has. So we should be able to treat them as well. This is the right thing to do.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This is the right time to do it. And I am so, again, so grateful for all the help that came together, all the collaboration. Initially, we had children's groups against it. We've been able to work with folks. We've had communities of color who are afraid about losing a lot of the money. We've been able to work with people. Is it perfect? Nothing's perfect.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
But the good news when to send this to the voters, they get to decide on the structure, but people will be able to come back and tinker here or there as we see going forward. This is not a one and done, it's when it's changed the structure. But we will be able to come back and make adjustments as needed through this Legislature. I'll be gone.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
A lot of you will still be here and be able to make sure that this is going exactly the way it's supposed to be. I also talk about the really enhanced and increased oversight and accountability, really being able to look at how all of our dollars are spent and what is the outcome on that, so we can make adjustments as needed. It's not just a report. We're actually looking at the numbers and deciding then how the resources will be spent.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This is a monumental, necessary thing to do. A lot of people have come to the table on this, and I think it's just the right time, the right place. Let's get this done.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Egman. I have microphones up from Senator Ashby and Senator Grove. Senator Ashby, the floor is yours.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I wanted to rise today to say a couple of things. We do a lot of important work on this floor, and I've seen so many amazing things, just even in my first year. But this moment is particularly special. I don't think this happens very often. You need the stars to really align. You have the perfect Senator to author this. Perfect. Your experiences, both personal and professional, lead you to a place where you understand this better than almost anyone.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And the only person I can think of who might know it better than you is also standing in this room and is someone that I care about so deeply the mayor of my city the former pro TEM of these chambers and the Senator for whom I get to follow in his footsteps my mayor, Daryl Steinberg.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And also in the back of the room helping with this issue is a Member of the governor's Administration, Dana Williamson whose personal life experiences and incredible professional experiences have also led us to this moment. The three of you have brought the State of California to a place where I believe we have hope for a problem that everyone is trying to solve for a problem that for those of us who've just come from local office have been trying to solve.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
We're taking a resource already in play one that Senator Steinberg put in place and modernizing it with what you know, Senator Egman and with the support of the Administration we're ready for California to really tackle this problem. And I've been waiting for weeks to have this opportunity. This is really special for me. And I know you said you won't be here but if it's the will of the voters, I will be.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And you have my word that when you're ready to come back and be a part of this conversation again in years to come I can't wait to stand here with you then too. And I thank very much my mayor and my friend Dana Williamson for their part. And I urge and aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Next up, Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I briefly rise in support of SB 326 if you have like the author said, it's not a perfect Bill but we don't have the ability to vote on perfect bills unless you're talking about my Bill that got out of here yesterday. A perfect Bill. We don't have the opportunity to vote on perfect bills very often. But overwhelmingly, if you have problems with this Bill overwhelmingly whole person care should exceed any doubt or any reservation that you have.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Dr. Mindy at Good Samaritan Hospital met with me and he goes, we have this problem. And she's like, zero, my gosh. Every time we treat somebody, they come in and we have to treat them for chronic illness and most of them are homeless. And then they've got this big, huge, gaping wound on their arm that's gushing out, pus. But they can't treat that because they're not authorized to do so because they're a mental health facility. But doctors oath first do no harm, right?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And they treat the wound care and they do wound care and they treat to get them stationary so that they can move them to another facility or a hospital or urgent care but is authorized to treat this. So just the idea that somebody who is qualified that has a medical license and pass the boards can provide. Whole person care is the most beneficial piece of this piece of legislation.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And when you deal with the chronic homeless and the disease and the dysentery and all the things that are on the street that our homeless population deals with, I think this is a great Bill, a great start. I, too, like my colleague from Stockton will be gone, but hopefully when she said there's a little tinkering, hopefully nobody from the far right or far left get a hold of this Bill.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I just pray that you guys just keep moving forward and addressing the issues that need to be taken care of to eliminate or at least reduce the serious issues that we have with homelessness in our state. We've wasted, like I said on the previous Bill, a lot of money. And we need to stop spending that money on stuff that doesn't work in the real world. We set goals and have measurable goals that we meet or exceed.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And if you don't meet those goals, then you have a meeting and you change direction. So I would ask that we look at this piece of legislation for what it is. Like my colleague said, it's not perfect, but overwhelmingly, the whole person care is the reason why I'm supporting this Bill. And I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove, Senator Nguyen, followed by Senator Neelo.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I, too, rise to support SB three, two, six. And I want to thank the author, her patient, her willingness to continue to tweak and work the Bill to the very end is so greatly appreciated across the state, because she's right. Most of us would love to look back 20 years ago and maybe tweak a little bit here and there, and we have that very opportunity today. There are things in the previous Bill that doesn't work today, and we could do better.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And this Bill, actually, it's not perfect, but it is where we need to be at this moment in time to help our mental health and our homelessness population. And it's something that I care for and worked on dearly in the last several years being up here. Those are the issues that everybody in my district, and even if you, I would assume everybody on this floor hears from your constituent about this very issue and the homelessness issue that's across the state.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And so I thank you, and I thank all those who've been involved moving this forward, and I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Neelo.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. When I spoke before, I talked about my concern about homelessness and that being really the issue to drive me to come back to this institution. And I talked about watching from the sidelines what's been done over the last several years. In my opinion, there's been much too much of a top down approach programmatically to homelessness.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
30 some programs initiated at the state level only one of which really provides flexible funding to counties and an indescribable reluctance of the Governor to commit more than a budget year's worth of funding to counties. Those things concern me. And in this Bill, there is still a bit of a top down approach and some restrictions on counties that concerns me. But we've acknowledged a couple of speakers already. This isn't perfect, and frankly, I'm not sure we deal with perfection here. We deal with what we can.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
We have 120 legislators with 120 different viewpoints on various issues. I will support this Bill because I want to be part of the solution. My colleague from Sacramento said acknowledged, well, maybe you won't be here, but she will be. Well, she and I came in together and voters willing, on one more election, she and I will go out together and I will be here. And I'd very much like to be part of the solution. I urge and aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President, Members, I wasn't going to speak, but I don't want to miss this opportunity to just say thank you to my good friend from Stockton, who has educated me beyond words on this issue. My district looks a lot different than most everybody's district. We have very small rural communities in the 15 counties that I represent. But I will tell you, when I drive home, I go through the town of Bernie, and there are people on the streets in Bernie, California, which is crazy.
- Brian Dahle
Person
It doesn't make sense. Never in my life had we seen that until the last maybe 10 years. Now, yes, in Shasta, we're highly populated cities, absolutely. But all throughout my district, as I travel my district, these are young people, they're old people, they're veterans. And I just want to say again, this isn't perfect, but it's good.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I'm going to support this piece of legislation and knowing that the commitment that the Senator from Stockton has made and her passion is why I would not miss this opportunity. Now, on the previous one, my district never votes for bonds. Zero. aye voted for the Prop water bond, and my district voted against it. And I got chastised for that for a long time, but I thought it was the right thing to do.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But in this case, I want to support this Bill, and I appreciate the hard work of my good friend from Stockton.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Dahle, any further conversations from Members? Any further debates? Seeing none. Senator Eggman. You may close.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. President. And again, I want to thank the Administration. I want to thank Mayor Steinberg and all of my colleagues, and especially those who I've been with since 2012. And we've been talking about all these things. And just to say we're talking about the entire continuum of care. That's what we keep talking about, right? We can't just fix one little part and then, whoops. There goes something else.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
We have been able to work last year with carecourt, with Cal Am, with the youth behavioral things. And I'm very happy to say while we've been in here, the Assembly passed my conservatorship grave disability overwhelmingly over there, too. Another piece. So we can help those who are getting ready to fall off the cliff, but we have to have a place for them to move down to back into the community, back to home.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
When my staff and I got together at the beginning of in December last year and we talked about what could we really do with the coalition, the coalition of mayors and the psychiatric community and the human services community and the Administration, we came up with a wish list, a dream list altogether. Members, we are going to make all of those dreams come true, not just for us, but for Californians, to give us back a little bit of hope and dignity. And I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Eggman. All debate having ceased. Secretary please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen, Aye. Alvarado-Gil, Archuletta, Aye. Ashby, Aye. Atkins, Aye. Becker, Aye. Blakespear, Aye. Bradford, Caballaro, Aye. Cortese, Aye. Dahle, Aye. Dodd, Aye. Durazo, Aye. Eggman, Aye. Glazer, Aye. Gonzalez, Aye. Grove, Aye. Hurtado, Aye. Jones, Aye. Laird, Aye. Limon, Aye. McGuire, Aye. Menjivar, Aye. Min, Aye. Newman, Aye. Nguyen, Aye. Niello, Aye. Ochoa Bogh, Aye. Padilla, Aye. Portantino, Aye. Roth, Aye. Rubio, Aye. Seyarto, Aye. Skinner, Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas, Aye. Stern, Aye. Umberg, Aye. Wahab, Aye. Wiener, Aye. Wilk Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I Wilk I please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado Gill Aye. Bradford Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's a vote of 40 to zero on the urgency. 40 to zero. And the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Congratulations, Senator Egman Members, I want to appreciate on behalf of our leadership, the wonderful work that we've done this afternoon. We've dealt with some very consequential bills in a very productive and sincere manner. I want to offer you, if you want a few minute break, maybe a 510 minutes break, if that would be of interest to Members seeing no objection. We'll do that.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We ask that you do stay here in the Capitol for that brief break, and we'll see you in a few minutes. Okay, Members, if I can get your attention. Mr. Umberg, will you do the go ahead, bang it a couple times. He always wanted to do that. It's like a secret wish. Members, come on back into the chambers here. We're going to have a little bit of a switch. We're going to do concurrence items now.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So I want to make sure everybody's attentive so their bills could actually get to the governor's desk, potentially. We're going to begin on file item six, and from there we're going to go six, seven, eight, nine, ten. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. So these are authors Ochoa Bogh, Caballero, Niello, Seyarto, Jones on deck. Okay, so we'll begin with file item number six. This is SB 722.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 722 by Senator Ochoa Bogh an act relating to daycare facilities.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And I want to remind this author and all the authors to come that this is about Assembly amendments. Members, hit that one more time. This is about Assembly amendments, not the whole Bill and main Bill. And finally, we do have Members off the floor, so we're going to go through the roll only once. Only once, and then everything will go on call. All right, with that, Senator Ochoa Bogh, the floor is yours.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members, SB 722 is back in concurrence. Assembly amendments delete the civil action protection and authorize a licensed child daycare facility that submits to DSS a completed IMSP, this is for Senator from Santa Cruz, using the template form to enroll a child prior to approval of the plan. The Bill has no opposition and passed the Assembly at 77 to zero vote. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh moves the call. By the way, Members, if you need a table for two tonight, please let me know. All right, we're going to move to file item number seven. This is SB 890 Committee on Governance and Finance.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 890 by the Senate Committee on Governance and Finance. An act relates to taxation to take effect immediately, tax levy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero, nice to have you back in the chambers.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I appreciate it. Mr. President, SB 890 is the Senate Governance and Finance Committee's annual property tax omnibus Bill. Assembly amendments make two technical changes. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this Committee Bill seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero moves a call. Going to move next to file item eight. This is SB 264 by Senator Niello. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 264 by Senator Niello. And accolating to taxation to take effect immediately. Tax levy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, SB 264 merely extends the sunset date of an existing disaster loss tax deduction enablement. The amendments in the assembly were simply technical and clarifying. There are no no votes and no opposition to this measure. I respectfully ask and aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this? I think your remarks Senator Niello broke the system, so we're going to have to reboot it. So just hold on a second. Members, we're just correcting a technical glitch and we'll be right back with you. Please stay here. Please stay at your desks.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, the secretary is going to call the roll on file item eight. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Niello moves the call. Members, we're next going to go to file item 9, 10, 14 and 15. That's Seyarto, Jones, Becker and Menjivar. We'll begin next with file item nine. This is SB 613 by Senator Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 613 by Senator Seyarto and accolating to solid waste.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto, the floor is yours.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. And members, please move to the edge of your seats. I am here to present SB 613 on concurrence. 613 is regarding organic waste recycling and simply clarifies an exemption for a small special district in my area. Amendments in the assembly were technical and clarifying. SB 613 has passed every committee with full bipartisan support, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Any discussion or debate on this measure? See no discussion or debate. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Dahle. Aye. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. Aye. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Aye. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. Aye. Niello. Aye. Ochoa Bogh. Aye. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. Aye. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Blakespear aye to no.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Blakespear aye to no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto moves a call. Members, we're going to move next to file item 10. This is SB 844 by Senator Jones. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 844 by Senator Jones, and accolating to alcoholic beverages and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I rise to present SB 844, which clarifies existing law for the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The assembly graciously added some amendments to simply add an urgency clause. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Senators, any discussion or debate on this matter? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Dalhe. Aye. Todd. Aye. Durazo. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. Aye. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. Aye. Niello. Aye. Ochoa Bogh. Aye. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. Aye. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. Aye. Grove. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones moves the call. Next up is SB 582 by Senator Becker. File item 14. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 582 by Senator Becker an act relating to healthcare.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. This Bill is designed to protect healthcare providers, including small doctors practices and community clinics from price gouging by their technology vendors. The amendments in the Assembly reflect feedback from industry stakeholders, resolve a chapter in conflict, and add cleanup language. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any discussion? See none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker moves a call. Members, here's where we're going to go next 15. File item 15, 16, 17, 18. That's Menjivar up next on deck, Newman in the hole for those who follow baseball. Stern and followed by Laird. So we'll begin with file item 15, SB 635 by Senator Menjivar.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 635 by Senator Menjivar, an act relating to healthcare coverage.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Menjivar, the floor is yours.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues, I'm rising to present to you SB 635 the Let California Kids Hear Act. Currently, right now, as a new parent with a Bill that passed years ago, your child, your newborn child, will get screened. However, that's as far as the services go. If you're told that your child is hard of hearing, deaf, you are not covered to purchase those hearing aids that range, on average, $3,000.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So we're having right now is parents going out of pocket to purchase these necessary items for children's developmental needs. The SB 65 is looking to mandate insurance coverage for youth up to 21 years old. Previously, a colleague in the Assembly attempted this Bill and was pulled back in an attempt to do this through the Department, a program that has ineffectually been addressing the needs of our children in California. This program has had $16 million poured into it.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And with that money, we have only served about 200 kids out of the over 7000 children who are eligible for this program. Respectfully ask for an aye vote to ensure that California kids can hear.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion or debate on this issue. Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in support of SB 635. I think the most important thing that we need to learn here is, like I said earlier, that as a business owner, you put a plan in place, you do a root cause analysis, you monitor that plan, you set goals. And if you don't achieve those goals, then you meet again and you change the course of the direction of where you're going in order to achieve the goals.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I know I said a lot in that that was, I don't want to say irrelevant to the Bill, but basically, like my colleague said, $16 million was allocated to this program and a defunct state agency or a state organization basically served 200 kids. We're going to use that money to reroute it, make sure these other 7000 kids get the ability to hear. It will reduce the cost on the opposite end.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
When you have kids that can hear and learn at an earlier age instead of going back when they're seven, 8, 9, 10, sometimes 11 years old, and try to retrain individuals and service them with the things that they missed growing up because they couldn't hear, it would save a tremendous amount of money. I think it's a good program. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion or debate. Senator Nguyen?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I, too also rise in support of SB 635. I want to thank the author because this is what government should be, is looking at a problem and then bring it and moving it so that we can actually help these children. Previously, this week, I talked about vision and eye care for children. It's also very necessary for these children because a lot of these children we can help and prevent long term damage to their ears and hearing.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And so this is actually a good Bill and the right Bill to do. And this is on behalf of all those children, thousands of children that needs our help. And so I thank the author for bringing this forward. I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion or debate? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Excuse me, Senator Dahle, I didn't see you over there.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Well, you'll hopefully be able to hear me on this Bill. Actually, somebody who is hearing impaired. I have my hearing aids in right now and today's technology is really awesome. By Bluetooth, I can turn it down, and so when my seatmate is out of control, I just very simply turn it down.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But I want to thank the author for bringing this forward from somebody who is actually hearing impaired and has a son who is hearing impaired and was born that way, and we didn't realize it till later on and have a nephew who is severely hearing impaired and sometimes the parents don't catch it. And for disadvantaged folks who are and Low income people who don't have the ability to.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I'm going to tell you, the school system's, hearing things are not like what I got at the audiologist that really can connect with your ears. So I want to thank the author for bringing this forward. I think it's going to help a lot of really disadvantaged folks get hearing aids and be able to learn and that's the thing at the young age, you miss so much when you can't hear.
- Brian Dahle
Person
It was so horrible during COVID when we had our mask on and with your glasses and with hearing aids not being able to see people's mouths. You will be surprised if you're hearing impaired, how much you read lips and don't realize it. So I want to just thank the author. I'm super happy this Bill is here. I have no idea why our caucus has a nun on it, but anyway, support the Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Want to give Senator Grove a point of personal privilege if she wants to.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I do appreciate that. If I wasn't my colleague from Bieber's seatmate, he wouldn't have some of the great ideas that he listened to to bring to the floor with the arguments that he presents to you or the support comments that he presents.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It's a point of personal privilege, right?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Happy to yield a point of personal privilege. Okay. Any further discussion on the Bill? Further discussion seeing none. Senator Menjivar, you get the opportunity to close.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Yes, sir.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you so much to my three colleagues that stood up in support of this. I'm not sure why we haven't been able to pass this. We are behind close to 30 states that have already implemented this. Let's be the next one. Thank you. And respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house now, I believe. So. We're going to call the roll a second time. Secretary please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Durazo.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Alright, we'll put the matter. Senator Menjivar moves the call. Members, we're going to move next to file item 16. This is SB 386 by Senator Newman. Secretary please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 386 by Senator Newman in acquitting to elections.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise today to present SB 386, which is back on concurrence and which intelligently makes various non controversial fixes to California's election code. Amendments taken in the Assembly were technical and clarifying. I am respectfully asking for your aye vote today.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Any further discussion on this legislation? Any discussion on these amendments? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortezz? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glaser? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. Maguire? Aye. Menjavar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Wen? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portsntino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Weiner? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman moves the call. Next up is file item 17 SB 539 by Senator Stern. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 539 by Senator Stern and accolating to the Sepulveda Basin.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you very much. Members, this returns for the assembly with amendments on the findings and declarations and some clarifying amendments. I'll just say very briefly, San Fernando Valley is a very hot place. There's not a lot of places to go to find any respite. Sepulveda Basin is in the heart of the San Fernando Valley, and right now it's not utilized. It has huge potential to bring equity and some source of coolness and calm to our valley. And we think it also can be a source of water infrastructure going forward. So we're hoping the Department of Water Resources and other partners engage City of LA and the county without respectfully ask your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any member wish to comment on this legislation? Seeing none. It's eligible for unanimous roll call. Members, without objection. Ayes 40, no zero. The measure passed. The amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to move to motions and resolutions. I see Senator Laird, does not, no. I see, Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. And Members, I request permission to submit a letter to the Journal relative to SB 50, no. 509. Without objection.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Lamont.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. I'm requesting to move file item 69, SB 639 to the inactive file.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
I rise to submit a letter to the Journal on SB 306.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So noted. Senator Atkins.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to submit a letter to the Journal on my Bill, SB 519. The letter has been approved by both sides of the aisle.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. So noted. Any other motions or resolutions? Members, we're going to move a little round on the file here. We're going to move to Assembly third reading file item 87. File item 87. This is Assembly Bill 309. By Assembly Member Lee. Give you all a moment to get organized. Floor Manager is Senator Wiener, and we're doing this to coordinate with activity and actions in the Assembly so people are aware. Okay, everyone seems to be prepared. So if the Secretary would please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 309 by Assembly Member Lee an act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener, the floor is yours.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much. Mr. President, colleagues, SB 309, which I'm presenting on behalf of Assembly Member Lee, will create the social housing program for California within the Department of General Services. It will identify and develop up to three social housing projects on state owned surplus land. Social housing is publicly backed, affordable at a variety of income levels, and financially self sustaining in the US. Montgomery County, Maryland, is building social housing. Seattle recently passed a ballot measure to do so as well.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Other states, like Hawaii, New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, have introduced social housing bills. This is a trend, a good trend for the future as we tackle our housing crisis with diverse strategies. Social housing has a demonstrated track record of success around the world. And countries that have strong social housing programs tend to have much more housing stability and lower rates of homelessness.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Social housing leads with a philosophy of universality, meaning that people within a wide range of income levels are eligible to live in these homes. So this is about mixed income housing by building off the work our state is already doing to address the housing crisis. Social housing will complement this work by serving as another tool that the state can use. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members want to ask everyone to keep their conversations quiet or back of the room so we can give respect to all of our colleagues who are speaking. All right, discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate. See? No microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta. Ashby. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth. Rubio. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta. Ashby aye. Bradford aye. Glazer. Hurtado no. Mcguire aye. Roth. Rubio aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members one last time.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Archuleta. Glazer. Roth.
- John Laird
Legislator
Senator Weiner moves a call. Members, we're going to take a 45 minutes dinner break. We're asking that you please do not leave the Capitol. All of the Members need to remain here for dinner and not return to your offices. Senator Dahle, what purposes do you rise?
- Brian Dahle
Person
I would just like to rise for personal preference, Mr. President. I have an employee who's been in the Capitol for some time, Melanie Bryant, who's my scheduler, who's going to retire at the end of the end of the month. I just want to wish her well and thank her for her service to the district, First Senate District. Thank you.
- John Laird
Legislator
We thank her for her service. Alright, to see no other microphones up, but we're planning to start promptly at 06:00 p.m. Members, so dinner break until then.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to lift the calls. We're going to lift calls, Members. So you want to lift one call. Everybody should be at their desk. We're going to lift the call on file item 87. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Archuleta. Glazer. Roth.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 to 10, that measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to lift the call on file item one. Excuse me. All right, Members, we're going to move back to Assembly third reading. We're going to begin with file item 104. This is Assembly Bill 389 by Ramos floor managed by Ochoa Bogh. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 389 by Assembly Member Ramos an act relating to Native American repatriation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, as co author, I'm pleased to present AB 389, which requires the California State University to adopt policies and procedures to implement the Federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 and its 2001 California counterpart, and to ensure that campus committees utilize these policies.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
It also requires that the members of Native American tribes make up the majority of the members on the system wide and campus based committees, and prohibits the use of Native American human remains or cultural items for purposes of teaching or research. AB 389 is supported by multiple tribes and the CSU system. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1228 by Assembly Member Holden in acquitting to employment. Senator Limon, the floor is yours.
- John Laird
Legislator
Members, any discussion on this legislation? Any discussion? Seeing none. This measure is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 40, no zero. The measure passes. We're moving next to file item 105. This is Assembly Bill 1228 by Assembly Member Holden. Secretary, please read.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you Mr. President and colleagues. Today I rise to present AB 1228 on behalf of Assemblymember Holden. The recent amendments create a path forward to resolve employer concerns around the content of last year's AB 257 while preserving fast foods workers hard fought efforts to secure a seat at the table to raise labor standards. Upon the withdrawal of the referendum against last year's legislation, AB 1228 will raise the statewide minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 an hour in April of 2024.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thereafter, the Council may establish minimum wages for fast food restaurant employees that take effect on an annual basis and may increase by no more than 3.5%. The Council may elect to set minimum wage standards that vary by region. The Council created by AB 1228 will still develop minimum fast food restaurant employment standards, including standards on wages and working conditions.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
This Bill ensures that there is equal representation on the Council between the fast food restaurant industry and the franchisee or restaurant owner, as well as fast food employees and employee advocates. The author and sponsors have committed to continue to work through technical amendments to address concerns raised by Unite here further clarifying exempted workers, including those at public recreational spaces. This Bill has the support of SCIU, the National Restaurant Association, and the International Franchise Association. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this matter? Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. And thank you to my colleague. This Bill shows how powerful it can be when workers, advocates, business owners, and industry leaders come together to uplift the dignity of work. Millions of workers and their families, now and in the future, will be uplifted. About a third of California's 40 million people live in poverty or near poverty. Our siblings in this industry work full time and often more than one job.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
These wage increases are meaningful and will immediately impact their lives and benefit communities. SEIU and Unite Here also reached an agreement, as my colleagues said, for future technical changes. The agreement will include important amendments for fast food restaurants located in hotels, event centers, stadiums, airports, theme parks, museums, corporate campuses, and gambling establishments. There will also be amendments for restaurants located on state lands, such as port districts, parks, and piers.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Members of the Senate and Assembly have agreed to work with the stakeholders to get these changes done as soon as possible next year, with the commitment of the speaker and our own Senate President Pro TEM. Thank you, Madam Pro TEM, for your leadership colleagues. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, I rise in opposition to AB 1228, and I just want to make one comment. It may be dubbed a Happy Meal, but when you get the price for that meal, you're going to be scared. I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion, see no mics up. Secretary, excuse me, Senator Limon, you may close.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil aye. Caballero aye. Hurtado aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes 32, noes eight. The measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 50. Members file item 50. This is Senate Bill 105. Senate Bill 105 by Senator Skinner. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 105 by Senator Skinner an act relating to the state budget and making an appropriation, therefore, to take effect immediately. Budget Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, SB 105 amends and makes technical corrections to the budget acts of 2022 and 2023. Specifically, SB 105 makes corresponding changes to the bill we just voted on. SB 1228 and as part of that agreement, SB 105 removes 3 million provided to the Department of Industrial Relations to resume the operations of the Industrial Welfare Commission. It also makes corrections to enable California to access American Rescue Plan Act funding for after-school and summer programs, and provides the Energy Commission with spending authority for about 102 million in federal grant funds. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion on the measure? Seeing no microphones up, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Alvarado-Gil, aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Dahle. No. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. No. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. No. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. No. Niello. No. Ochoa Bogh. No. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. No. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent member.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Min. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Vote of 32 to eight. The measure passes. All right, members, we're going to now continue with the assembly third reading. Here's the order of things as we expect going forward. We're going to start with file item 94, 95, 96, 97, 98. Those are authors Floor Managers Durazo, Ashby, Dodd, Seyarto and Rubio. We'll begin with file item 94. This is Assembly Bill 1734. By Assemblymember Joan Sawyer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1734 by Assembly Member Joan Sawyer an act relating to local government.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Pleased to present AB 1734, which will empower the City of Los Angeles with a necessary tool to expedite affordable housing production. The rules under the Surplus Land Act are disturbingly a barrier to utilizing publicly owned property for homelessness relief. Negotiating deals often prolongs the process, and many projects rarely come to fruition. AB 1743. I'm sorry.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
34 amends the SLA to allow pro housing local jurisdictions with a population of over two and a half million compliant with state housing law to quickly dispose of stateowned property to develop emergency shelters and transitional supportive or affordable housing. Under this Bill, local agencies who meet the criteria could dispose of surplus land in less than six months. Half the time it can take today. This Bill has received bipartisan support. I urge and ask for your Ivote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members discussion on this measure. Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Niello aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero. The measure passes. Next up is file item 95 AB 1207 by Assembly Member Irwin. Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Assembly Bill 127 by Assembly Member Irwin an act relating to cannabis.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Good evening, Mr. President. Today I rise to present AB 1207 on behalf of Assembly Member Irwin. When Prop 64 was passed in 2016, there was a distinct promise to California voters that the legislation of recreational cannabis would not come at the expense of our children. But we have not kept that promise. Poison Control Center calls due to pediatric cannabis exposures have drastically increased. Children have consumed cannabis products that they confuse with traditional foods and candies.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Due to packaging that specifically markets to young people, we cannot continue to allow California's cannabis market to manufacture, package and sell products with features that are attractive to children. AB 1207 addresses these increasing pediatric cannabis exposures by codifying and strengthening regulations on what makes a cannabis product attractive to children. Amendments taken last week on the Senate Floor have removed provisions of the Bill relating to advertising. AB 1207 strikes a balance. I urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any debate on this legislation? Any debate? Seeing none, secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman no. Glazer aye. Gonzalez. Grove. Hurtado aye. Jones. Laird. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar. Min aye. Newman. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab. Wiener no. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil no. Bradford. Caballero no. Dahle no. Gonzalez. Grove no. Jones. Laird aye. Menjivar aye. Newman. Nguyen aye. Ochoa bogh. Padilla. Seyarto. Skinner aye to no. Wahab no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 23 to 10, the measure passes. Moving on to file item 96, Assembly Bill 50 by Assembly Member Wood. Secretary, please read Assembly Bill 50. By Assembly Member wood and acquaintance to public utilities. Senator Dodd, you're the floor manager for this measure. It has been read. The floor is yours. This measure is eligible for unanimous roll call.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'm sorry, Senator Dodd, the floor is yours.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mr. President, Members, I rise to present AB 50 on behalf of Assembly Member Wood. As many of us know, California is facing some serious challenges in the transition to a fully electric grid. AB seeks to address these challenges by holding underperforming utilities accountable and requiring all large electrical utilities to talk with local governments about capacity constraints on the grid. I respectfully ask your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
I thank you. I just want to rise briefly because some of you know I have a very similar measure. Just wanted to say I'm very supportive of this measure, and this is a complementary approach to SB 410. And I want to thank the author staff of the governor's office in making sure that these efforts complement each other.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
It's absolutely critical that we hold PG&E accountable, and it's probably one of the single biggest barriers preventing California from meeting its climate and housing goals at the moment is the under forecasting of interconnection projects and actually getting all those projects connected to the grid. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Any further discussion? Seeing none. Senator Dodd, you want to close on this? That supportive comment.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This measure is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 40, noes zero. The measure passes. We're going to next go to file item 97, 98, 102 is the order going forward. File item 97 is Assembly Bill 297 by Assembly Member Fong. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 297 by Assembly Member Vince Fong an act relating to fire prevention.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present AB 297 on behalf of Assemblymember Vince Fong. Assembly Bill 297 simply extends a sunset of the advanced payment of fire prevention grant program allocations from 2024 to 2034. To start wildfire prevention projects, communities must often use their own funds to buy critical equipment or supplies in advance, essentially taking a loan from CAL FIRE until their fire prevention grant funding arrives.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Advanced payments from CAL FIRE have provided flexibility to local agencies and organizations to implement critical wildfire prevention projects. AB 297 bridges the wildfire prevention goals of the state with the readiness of the locals to harden their communities by extending the sunset of this authority for advanced payments from 2024 to 2034. AB 297 has enjoyed unanimous support and has no opposition. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Seeing none. It's eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40, nos zero. The measure passes. Moving on to file item 98. This is Assembly Bill 829 by Assemblymember Waldron. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 829 by Assemblymember Waldron and accolading to crime.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, today I rise to present AB 829, the Animal Cruelty and Violence Prevention Act. This Bill expands the currently required counseling for those convicted of animal abuse. Law enforcement, animal welfare groups, and mental health professionals have long been concerned that current penalties for animal cruelty cases do not do enough to address the root causes of violent crimes towards animals.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
And this Bill is aimed at addressing that. Recent amendments eased the concerns raised by the California public defenders, and they are now neutral on the Bill. Thank you and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing none. This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40, nos zero. The measure passes. We're going to move on to file item 102. This is Assembly Bill 436 by Assemblymember Alvarez. Floor manager's prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 436 by Assemblymember Alvarez and accolading to vehicles.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
President, today I rise to present AB 436 by Assemblymember Alvarez. A bipartisan supported Bill. This Bill will highlight the role of cruising by creating community, expressing love for art, and bringing unity. This Bill will remove the discriminatory cruising bans. Cruising has roots in post-war Southern California, where Mexican Americans made an art form out of car customization and turned to driving as a means of socializing and community organizing. Historically, cruising is a historic part of culture for many multicultural communities.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
For decades, there's been a negative stigma that this culture, chicano culture, equals gang culture and violence, which is so far from the truth. Members, those who are part of the cruising community are fellow teachers, small business owners, lawyers, family members, et cetera. However, most importantly, they are proud community members that invest back to their communities. They do so by hosting family friendly events, fundraisers, and supporting their local businesses.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Let's remember that those with classic cars are not trying to ruin their cars they spend thousands of dollars in their lives trying to build. It is time people cruise without the fear of being stopped or judged, because cruising is not a crime. Even with this Bill, cities will still have authority to uphold other statutes that address the concerns expressed by some in the opposition. Lastly, I would like to thank all those cruisers, everyone who has paved the way for this moment. Thank you, Members, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll. Excuse me. Pardon me. Excuse me. Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. So I just want to make sure I can explain my vote here, because this is important to me, and I want to second what was just said by my good friend. Cruising is not a crime. It's not the cruising that becomes a crime. It's what other people do when there is cruising going on in the community.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
This, to me, and let me just say that having spent 15 years in local government and having it address this issue in local government and having it be resolved years later means to me that it works. Local government should have the ability to set time and place limitations and to make sure that traffic is moving during a cruising time. Is this a fun activity? Absolutely. Do you get to see the greatest cars in the world, people that love their vehicles? Absolutely.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
But local government also needs to have the ability to make sure that people are safe. And when we had problems, we had to stop the cruising. And when later that problem disappeared, it could be reinstated again without any problem. So I voted no on Committee. I'm going to be consistent with that vote. It's hard, because when people make this an ethnic issue, then it looks like I'm not following the group there. But in reality, to me this has to do with local government.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And do we give them the responsibility to make public health and safety decisions for their community? I think we should. So I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further comments, discussion, debate on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. No. Cortese. Aye. Dahle. Aye. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. No. Jones, aye. Jones, no to aye. Laird. Aye. Limon. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. No. Niello. Ochoa Bogh. Aye. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. No. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern. Umberg. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Atkins. Glazer. Limon. Aye. Min. Niello. Roth. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Umberg. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to three, the measure passes. Members, here's the lineup for the next three items. We're going to go to file item 107, then 99, and then 91. So we'll go next to file item 107. This is Assembly Bill 1373 by Assemblymember Garcia. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1373 by Assemblymember Garcia and accolading to energy.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Making an appropriation, therefore, and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. I rise to present 1373. This is a historically important clean energy Bill. We have never done anything like this before, but we know that in order to move towards 100% clean energy, we have to have a more diverse set of resources, especially resources that complement daytime solar and help make sure we have clean, reliable 24/7 clean energy. Many of you know that's been a focus a lot of my legislation, 24/7 clean energy.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
This Bill is an important step for supporting the kinds of diverse clean resources we need to get to 24/7. Offshore wind, of course, maybe also new forms of enhanced geothermal, and long duration energy storage. Many of these technologies require large investments with long and complex development times. And it's difficult and risky for even one utility or one CCA to make a large enough purchase to get these projects financed and built.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And that's where a central procurement mechanism comes in and is crucial for providing some certainty and for making progress. I believe we've struck the right balance in this Bill. It doesn't limit central procurement to one specific technology and places guardrails, so central procurement can only be used for things that really can't be handled otherwise. It rules out using it to procure from gas plants or any fossil fuel resources and applies only to resources with a lead time of at least five years.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Central procurement will create the most cost effective way of procuring these resources, given these projects will take advantage of state backed financing with lower interest rates. The Joint Agency report California's Master Plan for Clean Energy estimates 10 gigawatts of offshore wind in the state's portfolio will save ratepayers 1 billion per year compared to alternative resource mixes. We also need to rapidly expand transmission capacity to deliver these new clean resources.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
As we've talked about in the last few weeks, this Bill will speed up transmission planning by shortening a duplicative review by the PUC of whether a transmission line is needed and whether it's in the public interest even after it's been approved by Cal ISO. This Bill also makes sure investments into clean energy resources are paired with significant high road worker protections and assurances for workers throughout the entire supply chain. It includes investments into environmental monitoring and identifying future mitigation for any impacts offshore wind could have.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
I'm very proud to support this legislation. Grateful for the author and the work of the pro tem's staff and the Senate Energy Committee who worked industriously on this policy proposal throughout the last few months. These changes will accelerate the state's transition away from dirty patchwork solutions such as relying on current once through cooling plants as part of the Strategic Reliability Reserve and move us toward 100% clean and reliable electricity grid. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I have Senators Dahle and Padilla. Begin with Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I respectfully ask for no vote on AB 1373. I just want to lay out here what's really happening. Central procurement is something that is going to be new to California. It's going to allow DWR, Department of Water Resources, the ability to be able to lay a tax or a fee on every single ratepayer in California. Now, why do we need that? Or what does this Bill do?
- Brian Dahle
Person
It allows them to tax every single ratepayer and then take that money and developed offshore wind and geothermal, those two only. It excludes combustion, which is biomass, which is carbon capture, which is our opportunities for hydrogen, forestry reduction.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And so this Bill basically diverts our authority to be able to regulate, it's giving it to an agency, Department of Water Resources, all in the guise of doing offshore wind, which there's going to be a Bill coming up a little bit later by Senator McGuire, I think it's two something. But that Bill is going to march forward with offshore wind. California by 2035, you will not be able to buy a combustible engine car in California. That means we are going to need 25 gigawatts.
- Brian Dahle
Person
That's 25,000 megawatts just for that part of the sector. Members, you know who's left behind here are the ratepayers and the disadvantaged folks we talk about every day on this floor who will not be able to afford their energy, not to mention the thousands of businesses in California that are strapped at a higher rate than the residential rate. If you own a business or a manufacturing company, you are charged higher than the residential rate.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Again, California is losing thousands of companies and thousands of jobs and it's policies like this one that aren't very well thought-out. We are marching forward 100% to go renewable, and we're using offshore wind and geothermal to do the job. It's tens of thousands of megawatts, which Diablo Canyon, about 6000, we're talking about 40 of those plants, in the next few years. 2035 is not very far from here.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So, Members, I just cannot stand and not speak towards the ratepayers of California who already pay 70% higher electricity rates than anybody in the nation. Not to mention, we're not going to be using hydrogen anytime soon, which is something we desperately need for heavy-use trucks to move our freight around. So for those reason, Members, and for standing up for the ratepayer in California, every single ratepayer, doesn't matter if you're in SMUD here in Sacramento or you're in PG&E, Southern California Edison.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Those are the people who are supporting this. Why? Because they know they're going to be able to increase their rates and make a huge profit off the backs of every ratepayer in California. Members, I urge a no vote on AB 1373, in harmony with all the ratepayers and disadvantaged folks in California.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up, Senator Padilla, followed by Senator Hurtado.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you very much. Mr. President. I rise in support of AB 1373. Our future is dependent upon the transition to clean energy, but that transition is only going to be successful. In order to achieve that success, we need a greater share of reliability and demand, not dependent upon just sun or wind, but such as geothermal energy, hardening our grid and increasing access to clean energy, which this Bill does advance, is essential to avoiding blackouts, delivering cost effective energy to all Californians.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
This measure will enhance reliability, protect our economy and our constituents. For that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues, I wasn't going to speak on this today, but I'm compelled to express my concerns here. And I'll be frank, the Department of Water Resources does not get high marks in my book. I'm not certain a Bill further empowering them merits a high vote here today. As many of you know, earlier this year, our state's independent auditor released a report critical of DWR's water management practices.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Given the findings of the audit, I'm not comfortable giving DWR the ability to be a central procurement entity and have authority over future energy resources. And as the Senate Floor analysis points to in regards to AB 1373, DWR was criticized for procuring energy resources during the 2000 energy crisis. And I know this is a little bit of a different situation, we're talking about clean energy, but it just seems to me like it's the same play here.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
And that resulted in ratepayers having to shoulder the cost for over two decades on their energy bills. From overinflated prices on energy, water, and the biggest land purchases, to allowing an unaccountable department to experiment with large-scale resource procurement. I have concerns about how ratepayers will again be impacted by DWR's role in their day-to-day energy use. My concerns with DWR make it difficult to see an upside to the role in this piece of legislation.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
In the meantime, I really hope that in the near future there isn't an audit report in the future of DWR's resistance to oversight managing emerging clean energy. I sincerely appreciate the author's efforts and respectfully for the reasons I stated, I will be staying off this Bill today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Rather than support of this legislation, I share some of the concerns from my colleague from Sanger here about Department of Water Resources in the lead solely. I'm comfortable with this Bill because the Energy Commission and their vision is really what's driving this process and the planning that goes behind it. I see DWR as more of the buyer but not necessarily the one in charge of the mission.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I have a lot of confidence in the Energy Commission's ability to set out a clean energy reliability pathway. But we're going to have to do oversight and we're going to have to keep an eye on them. But I really believe this Bill is well crafted and most importantly, it'll save ratepayers money. It's not going to make IOUs or the municipal utilities do this buying. We are going to get bargain power here that is clean and I think it's good for California. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Senator Becker. You may close.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. I appreciate all the comments. Just want to address a few things. This has actually been in the works for five years so I would say this is very well thought-out. People have contemplated using this mechanism and now is really the time for reasons I'll mention quickly. But first, a couple of things. The resources eligible under this Bill, again they have to be necessary to meet the clean energy targets five-year development time and not sufficiently under contract already by load serving entities.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
So, this Bill does not limit utilities' ability to procure in any way biomass or hydrogen or CCS. We want utilities to do their core job of buying and selling power to the customers. This is really for resources that would be difficult for one entity to procure. And in that regard that's why it's really about lowering costs because if the State is there as the offtaker then we're going to get lower rates on building that, building say offshore wind, which is critical for our future.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
So that's why the estimate, as I mentioned in our clean energy plan, is actually this will save $1.0 billion over time. So I appreciate discussion, I think this is really important step forward as we look to add those resources. Again, offshore wind is perfectly inversely correlated with solar and onshore wind. We need things that are ramping up in that 5 to 9 p.m. when solar is going down and sometimes onshore wind is going down.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
So, these are really important to our future, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Dahle. No. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. No. Hurtado. No. Jones. No. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Aye. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. No. Niello. No. Ochoa Bogh. No. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. No. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil. No. Roth.
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's 29, 10 on the urgency. 29, 10 on the measure. Passes.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
We're going to move next to file item 99, followed by file item 91. File item 99 is Assembly Bill 918 by Assembly Member Garcia. Floor manager Senator Padilla. He's ready. Secretary please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 918 by Assembly Member Garcia and act relating to healthcare districts and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Senator Padilla.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present AB 918 by Assembly Member Garcia, which establishes the Imperial Valley Healthcare District in the County of Imperial. The purpose of the district is to consolidate and coordinate medical services to improve access to health care and cost saving benefits for rural and medically underserved communities in the Imperial Valley. The creation of this healthcare district will allow for better coordination of medical services and increased medical and Medicare reimbursements, resulting in cost savings in the millions.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
This Bill will help ensure that these hospitals can keep their doors open and continue providing crucial medical services to the already underserved residents of the Imperial county. This Bill has no opposition and has received no no votes. I respectfully ask your aye vote Members.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I just want to take a minute to thank the author as well as the floor manager for their incredible work on this case. This is a situation where a number of hospitals in the Imperial Valley were at risk of closing, and the work that was done on this ensures that these hospitals stay open, that there's a good management team, that it's a partnership between all the different healthcare organizations. And I would urge yes vote today.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Any further discussion or debate? Seeing none, this is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40. No zero, on the urgency. ayes.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
40, no zero on the Bill. Okay, Members, little switcheroo here. Going to go to file item 91 AB 17. I'm sorry. File 91 AB 1741 by Assembly Member Waldron being presented by Senator Glazer. Clerk will read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Assembly Bill 1741 by Assembly Member Waldron an act relating to healing arts.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Madam President, Members, on behalf of Assembly Member Waldron, this measure addresses the clinical laboratory workforce shortage. It allows qualified unlicensed personnel to conduct certain tasks under the supervision of a licensed professional in order for laboratories to meet high testing demand while maintaining access to accurate care. These changes will improve testing capacity, create new jobs in the industry. It was most recently amended to add a definition of assistance within the laboratory setting.
- Steven Glazer
Person
After ongoing conversations with DPH, the Bill simply implements a recommendation from the Department of Public Health to address the critical workforce shortage and testing labs. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much. This is eligible for a unanimous roll call. If there are no objections. Seeing one. Clerk will call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespeare? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Just call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Durazo. Padilla. Smallwood-Cuevas. Gonzalez. I don't know.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
That is 36 ayes, one no. The measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're next going to go back to concurrence items. Unfinished business. We're going to begin on file item 18, followed by 19, 20, 21, 22, and 23. So we're beginning on 18.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is Senate Bill 544 by Senator Laird. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 544 by Senator Laird, an act relating to state government.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much. This Bill relates to Bagley-Keene requirements on state boards and commissions. When this Bill left this House, it basically took what the Governor had in his Pandemic Executive order and put it into statute. There were major amendments in the Assembly to address the issues that people raised about people being in person, people with disabilities being able to participate, remote participation by the public being allowed.
- John Laird
Legislator
So what the amendments do is they give a board and Commission the option to accept the existing Bagley Keen and just run off the way it always was. Or if they want remote participation, it requires that there be a quorum at one location. It preserves Member safety by removing the requirement that Members post private addresses on the agenda and would provide public access or provide public access to the Administration. And if the board chooses this option, they also must follow certain guardrails.
- John Laird
Legislator
They must allow remote public comment. Allow public comment to be submitted at any time. Require on camera for people participating remotely unless there's poor Internet. Require remote Members to announce when someone else over 18 years old is in the room with them, and it requires the board to recess if there's a technological disruption that cuts off public access.
- John Laird
Legislator
Additionally, advisory boards that do not have rulemaking or decision making authority would continue to be able to do the remote meetings with on camera requirements and remote public comment. And this Bill would sunset in 2026. So we would have two years to assess if this works.
- John Laird
Legislator
This will allow the remote participation by people with disabilities. It will require a majority in one place for a quorum. It will make sure that Bagley Keane starts to move a little with the technology that exists. Since Bagley Keen was adopted and we have responded to significant amendments that were requested, it passed the Assembly with 50 votes. I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Becker? Blakespeare? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? Ochoa Bogh? Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Becker. Aye. Caballero. No. Dahle. No. Durazo. Aye. Grove. No. Jones. No. Nguyen. Niello. Ochoa Bogh. Seyarto. Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to five, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving next to file item 19, this is Senate Bill 671 by Senator Portantino. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 671 by Senator Portantino an act relating to school safety.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mr. President and Members, SB 671 is back on concurrence. The Assembly amendments address chaptering out issues, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Members, any discussion debate on this measure scene none is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Without objection is 40, no zero. The Assembly. Amendments are concurred. In moving next to file item 20, this is SB 681 by Senator Allen.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 681 by Senator Allen, an act relating to the Political Reform Act of 1974.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thanks so much. This Bill is back in concurrent shortens, the time that Political Reform Act bills need to be in their final form. Amendments to the Assembly include a request by the FPPC to bring back the length of time back up to eight days, and the Commission is now supporting the Bill. I respectfully ask for an vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespeare? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the measure passes. Moving next to file item 21, SB 723 by Senator Durazo. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 723 by Senator Durazo an act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present SB 723 back from concurrence. This pandemic that we went through has profoundly impacted the tourism industry. The primary reason for this Bill, Assembly amendments delete the permanent extension of these rehiring rights for hospitality workers and instead extends these rights by one additional year. After recent amendments, most of the opposition has moved to neutral. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Becker? Aye. Blakespeare? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No. Dodd? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the measure passes. Members, we're going to continue with unfinished business. Our plan is to go file item 22 through file item 27, so you can look ahead and be prepared. We'll begin now with file item 22, SB 806.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 806 by Senator Archuleta an act relating to public safety.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present Senate Bill 806, which is back on concurrence. Senate Bill 806 is a cleanup to last year's Senate Bill 1111, the Rick's Best Safety Act, which requires large trash containers that are placed on roads and curbside to have reflective marketing on each side. This Bill is received by partisan support, has no opposition. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this item? It's eligible for a unanimous roll call, without objections. Ayes 40. No zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 23. This is SB 35 by Senator Umberg.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 35 by Senator Umberg an act relating to courts and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues, is the Care Court cleanup Bill has technical amendments. Urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none, this is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 24, SB 10 by Senator Cortese.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 10 by Senator Cortese and acquiring to pupil health.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to present SB 10, also known as Melanie's Law, named in honor of Melanie Ramos, a teenager that died of fentanyl poisoning in her school bathroom. Assembly cost saving amendments remove a state working group, provide technical clarifications, and address chaptering out conflicts. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Scene nine. It's eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 25. This is SB 19 by Senator Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 19 by Senator Seyarto an act relating to controlled substances.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I'm here to present SB 19, which creates the Fentanyl Misuse and Overdose Prevention Task Force, which is back on concurrence. Amendments in the Assembly conform the language of this Bill to AB 33. I'm thankful for the collaboration of Assembly Member Baines and look forward to the creation of the Fentanyl Task Force. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. It's eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 26, SB 747 by Senator Caballero. She's prepared.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 747 by Senator Caballero an act relating to local government.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members, I rise to present SB 747, which is back on concurrence. The Bill proposes comprehensive changes to the Surplus Land Act, which governs how local agencies dispose of property they no longer need. The amendments taken in the Assembly reflect a compromise with AB 480 by Assemblymember Ting.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Both bills strengthen the Surplus Land Act to address loopholes and facilitate implementation. The amendments are the product of hours of collaborative discussions, and resulted in the removal of opposition by almost everyone. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion? Seeing no microphones up, this is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 27, SB 770 by Senator Wiener.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 770 by Senator Wiener an act relating to healthcare.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues, SB 770 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments delete the requirement to create a waiver development workgroup, and instead use a stakeholder process to further develop the waiver framework, establish dates for completing the waiver framework, and make other minor clarifying changes. The Bill is sponsored by the Healthy California Now Coalition, supported by a long list of labor and health organizations and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion on this measure. Discussion on this measure. Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Glazer. Hurtado.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to pass on file item 28 because our hardworking majority leader will come back to that. We're going to next move to file item 29 through file item 39 so you can look ahead. First up is file item 29, SB 814 by Senator Roth.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Secretary please read Senate Bill 814 by Senator Roth an act relating to professions and vocations.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. This is the sunset Bill for the Bureau of Household Goods and Services. Back on concurrence, Assembly amendments updated the date of the Fund merger for funds the Bureau administers, authorized Bureau licensees to be LLCs, and made various other changes to improve efficiency. Ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure seeing none, it's eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes 40, noes, zero. The Assembly. Amendments are concurred. In.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up is file item 30, SB 847 by Senator Dahle. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 847 by Senator Dahle an act relating to vehicles.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Members, this is the helmet Bill that I want to thank all the Members that helped me get it out of this House by 21 votes. I know it's a support support today, but I want to just talk about the amendments. The amendments do send it to, allows the California High Patrol to actually certify a helmet that would meet the Turban and Pac definition. And for those reasons, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this matter? Discussion on this matter? Seeing none, I don't show it's eligible for unanimous roll call, so we're going to secretary please call the role.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear no. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd. Durazo aye. Eggman. Glazer aye. Gonzalez no. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon. McGuire. Menjivar. Min. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener no. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Just a moment, please. Please call the absent Members, and then we'll give a pause for anyone to change votes. Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dodd aye. Eggman. Limon. Mcguire. Menjivar aye. Min no. Nguyen aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla. Stern.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Durazo aye to no. Eggman aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Going once, going twice. On a vote of 31 to five, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 31, this is Assembly Bill 848 by Senator Rubio.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 848 by Senator Rubio in act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, today I rise to present SB 848. This bill is back in concurrence with bipartisan support. This bill will fundamentally change the way we view the grieving process for reproductive loss. On behalf of many of the families who will have time to grieve now and heal after a loss, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this matter? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Dodd? Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? Ochoa Bogh? Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dahle? Dodd? Aye. Grove? Aye. Jones? Nguyen? Niello? Ochoa Bogh? Seyarto?
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 34 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to File Item 32 by Senator Laird. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 857 by Senator Laird an act relating to pupils.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much. This is the Bill that sets up the Advisory Task Force on LGBTQ pupil needs. Amendments in the Assembly incorporate feedback from the Governor's office and the State Board of Education to clarify the task force's objective and to ensure that the Department of Education can administer the Bill. It passed the Assembly 66 to zero. I respectfully request an aye vote on the amendments.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Laird.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this matter? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Hurtado aye. Jones. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Jones. Mcguire aye. Nguyen. Niello. Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 36 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 33, SB 872 by Senator Min. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 872 by Senator Min in act relating to pupil instructions.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 872 requires the Department of Education to publish an annual report of public school enrollment information to better aggregate class data, class size data. Assembly amendments are clarifying and technical. Ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this matter? Any discussion or debate? This measure is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes: 40, noes: zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next two measures are by Senator Becker.
- Steven Glazer
Person
First one up is File Item 34, SB 48. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 48 by Senator Becker in act relating to energy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. This is SB 48. This is the bill tackling emissions from large buildings. It's about 20 million metric tons a year of CO2 from large buildings in our state. The changes in the Assembly add objectives that the CC must consider when developing a strategy for this bill, including objectives related to preventing displacement or increases in total costs for tenants. The changes also give the CC more discretion to work with organizations representing underresourced communities. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any discussion? Senator Grove?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Respectfully rise in opposition. If you're worried about CO2 emissions, just one ship coming from Russia would save us about 120,000,000 metric tons of carbon emissions in the global atmosphere. This bill is minuscule compared to that, and it's bad policy, so respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing none. Senator Becker, you may close.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. Despite those comments on Russia, I will say that, again, I just want to say that commercial buildings over 50,000 square feet make up the majority of emissions from buildings in California. This is the way--actually, nationally, around building performance standard--this is the way nationally everyone's moving to reduce those emissions, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Laird? Aye. Portantino? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. File Item 35, SB 49 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 49 by Senator Becker in act relating to energy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. SB 49 is back. The bill now does not focus on the canopy part of the bill and is really focused on an underutilized asset. This is the right of ways along highways that can be used for solar development and for power transmission. One study recently said three gigawatts just in three counties of Southern California are available for this, and the amendments require Caltrans to evaluate the issues and policies around this. The changes also delete all the bill's findings and declarations. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this piece of legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing none. This is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Without objection, ayes: 40, noes: zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to File Item 36, SB 76 by Senator Wiener. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 76 by Senator Wiener in act relating to alcoholic beverages.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. President and colleagues, SB 76 is back on concurrence. The Bill has enjoyed broad bipartisan support, passing off this floor on consent, the Assembly with 79 votes. The Assembly amendments limit the Bill to city and County of San Francisco, apply entertainment zones to events already permitted by ABC, and enable type 90 music venue licenses licensees to serve alcohol at private events at their venue that do not involve entertainment. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Weiner, any further discussion on this legislation? Senator Dahle, question of the author. Senator Weiner, will you accept a question from Senator Dolly?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Happy to.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I just was wondering, does this Bill allow them to serve alcohol past 02:00 A.M.?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
No.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Okay, good. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Are there any further discussion on this measure? It is eligible for a unanimous roll call without objection. There is an objection. Okay.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Becker aye. Min. Nguyen.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 38 to zero, the Assembly Amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 37. This is SB 81 by Senator Skinner. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 81 by Senator Skinner in act relating to parole.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner, the floor is yours.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mr. President, Members. SB 81 is back on concurrence. It implements recommendations made by the LAO in the LAO's 2022-23 report on the parole hearing process. The amendments taken in the Assembly significantly narrow the scope of the bill and leave in two key provisions. First, clarifying that when a court exercises its existing authority for reviewing a parole board decision, the court must uphold the parole board's denial if the person remains a danger to others.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
If the court, however, determines that the case needs further review, the court's authority is only to return the decision to the parole board. SB 81 does not override decisions made by the parole board. It retains the authority of the parole board, and the only remedy allowed under SB 81 to the court is to return the case to the parole board for further review. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion on this legislation? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Member.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Hurtado? Roth?
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to File Item 38. This is SB 97 by Senator Wiener. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 97 by Senator Wiener in act relating to criminal procedure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues. SB 97, the Righting Wrongful Convictions Act is back from the Senate. Back from the Assembly. Assembly amendments were technical in nature. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing none, it's eligible for unanimous roll call without objection, ayes 40, noes, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving next to file item 39 by Senator Dodd. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 271 by Senator Dodd an act relating to powered wheelchairs.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mr. President, Members, SB 271 is back on concurrence, amendments taken in the Assembly fortuitously address concerns raised by the opposition, and clarify issues related to prior authorization and reoccurring prescriptions with a four year sunset period. I respectfully ask your aye vote any.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion on this legislation. Any further discussion? This measure is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection, ayes 40, noes, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to pass on file item 40 and 41. We'll come back to those we're going to begin again on file item 42 and go through that. We're going to go to file item 49, 42 through 49 so authors can be prepared. We're going to begin now with file item 42. Senate Bill 323 by Senator Portentino.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 323 by Senator Portantino an act relating to pupils.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. SB 323 is back on concurrence with chaptering out amendments and clarifying language around school safety procedures and with students with disabilities, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? It is eligible for a unanimous roll call without objections ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 43 by Senator Rubio. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 331 by Senator Rubio an act relating to child custody.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, today I rise as a proud author of SB 331, which is back on concurrence amendments taken in the Assembly address opposition's concerns, removing section 3190 and removing language on expert witness testimony. This Bill will do so much for children. Finally, also, it clarifies that family courts are prohibited from ordering reunification treatments known as camps that are ripping children away from their safe environments, friends, families and belongings.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Peaky's law is named after a five year old boy who was killed by his father in my district. And after fighting for two years, his mother, Anna Stevis, is here today. She pleaded with the courts that her child was in danger and they would not listen. So I want to take a moment to recognize Anna, who's here with us in the gallery. She took a horrific tragedy and turned it into a life mission to keep children safe across California.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
But she wasn't able to do that for her own son. Anna is a dear friend of mine, and she's been fighting this fight with me for a long, long time. Peaky deserves justice, and today Peak is here with us in an urn to see this to the end. Thank you for your continued commitment, Anna. We love you. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Rubio. Any discussion? Any further discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Jones aye. Niello.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to continue now on File Item 44. Let me note that we have a Member off the floor, so we're going to go through the roll call once and then put it on call, okay? So people are aware of that. Next up is File Item 44 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 485 by Senator Becker in act relating to elections.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. This bill expands existing protections under law for officers conducting an election or canvas to apply to other groups that are at risk for harassment, namely temporary election workers and remote voters. Democracy depends on our fair election system, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion on this legislation? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla. Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members. Oh, excuse me. We're going to move a call on that. That's Senator Becker moves a call. We're going to move next to File Item 45. This is SB 531 by Ochoa Bogh. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 531 by Senator Ochoa Bogh in act relating to pupil safety and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Mr. President, Members, SB 531 is back on concurrence. The amendments taken in the Assembly seek to correct an unintended consequence of AB 130, a 2021 budget bill which affected all LEAs, but requiring student work experience program partners to conduct the criminal background checks on every single employee working at the same job location as a student. With the number of work experience opportunities severely reduced, students who want to work need to apply for a student work permit and find employment at a business that is not required to adhere to employee background check requirements.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
SB 531 will encourage community businesses back into the partnership with the LEAs [local education agencies] as long as a business meets certain background check requirements and parents and guardians consent to the student's workplace environment. Student safety remains a top priority.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
SB 531 will simply increase the number of work experience opportunities available to students while ensuring that there are necessary safeguards in place to protect students in the workplace. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion on this legislation? Senator Padilla, is that your microphone up there or no? It's not. Okay, thank you. Alright, seeing none, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh moves a call. We'll move next to File Item 46 by Senator Roth. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 816 by Senator Roth in act relating to professions and vocations and making an appropriation therefore.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. This is the BNP Sunset Cleanup Bill back from concurrence. The Assembly amendments include necessary revenue adjustments in order to fund special fund licensing entities within the Department of Consumer Affairs, and extended the sunset date for a required fee and collection of additional information for specified waymasters license applicants. Request an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Further discussion on this legislation? Any further discussions? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dahle, aye to no. Grove, no. Nguyen, no. Alvarado-Gil, no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth moves the call. We'll move next to File Item 47 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 420 by Senator Becker in act relating to electricity.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Evening, Members. I rise to present the second version of SB 420. This bill now creates consistent, fast-tracked approvals for low-impact, small transmission lines by reverting an existing exemption threshold. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion? Seeing no microphones up, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker moves a call. Excuse me? Okay, we'll get it on the return. Senator Becker moved a call on that bill. Next up is File Item 48 by Senator Bradford. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 429 by Senator Bradford in act relating to transportation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford, the floor is yours.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 429 modernizes the current vehicle inspection requirements for transportation network companies and drivers by authorizing them to utilize a remote or virtual inspection. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this item? Any discussion on this legislation? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Grove? Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? McGuire? Menjivar? Aye. Min? Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Wiener? Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator--Cortese aye to no.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Cortese, aye to no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford moves a call.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Next up, Members. And we're going to go now, just to let you know who's coming up, our Senator Glazer, and then Becker, and then Nguyen, and then Dodd. All on deck here. Ready? File Item 49, SB 33. Clerk will read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 33 by Senator Glazer in act relating to commercial financing.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Madam President. SB 33 was amended in the Assembly to codify a safe harbor for commercial finance providers who disclose an estimated APR to small business borrowers. With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Seeing no Members wishing to be recognized. Clerk, call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Senator Glazer moves the call.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to move next to File Item 51. This is a Senate Measure 362 by Senator Becker. He's prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 362 by Senator Becker in act relating to data brokers.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, I rise to present SB 362, the California Delete Act, which will finally allow for consumers to exercise their deletion rights when it comes to data brokers who have thousands of pieces of information on every one of us. The Assembly amendments allow data brokers to retain certain kinds of information--HIPAA, security and fraud prevention data--and inform consumers about what a deletion request means.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
With SB 362, Californians will be able to go online in one portal and request that data brokers delete any personal information, such as geolocation data, women's reproductive health data, purchase data, all the data that they have. This bill will help Californians actually exercise the right to delete their information from data brokers and protect our right to privacy. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Becker. Discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? We still have Members off the floor, so we're going to go through the roll call just once. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker moves the call. Members, we're going to begin with File Item 52. We're going to go to File Item 52 through File Item 59. So look ahead, see if your measure's coming up on the track. So we'll start with File Item 52, Senate Bill 369 by Senator Nguyen.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 369 by Senator Nguyen in act relating to pupil instruction.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Nguyen.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to--Senate Bill 369 is back on concurrence from the Assembly. I just want to thank my colleague from Long Beach for working with us on this bill for this whole year, and it's been quite interesting. And so I thank her for her patience and also thanking her staff as well. This bill is back, and it's back from--the amendments taken in Assembly are just clarifying technical nature, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion or debate? Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I, too, just want to thank my colleague from Orange County. Together, we were ensuring that this curriculum is built in a way that really reflects a lot of our API community, the Vietnamese community, and the Cambodian experience as well. With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Any further discussion or debate? Senator Nguyen, you want to close?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Very good. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Nguyen moves a call. Up next, File Item 53 by Senator Dodd. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 387 by Senator Dodd in act relating to state property.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mr. President, Members. Amendments taken in the Assembly address the chaptering issues. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this matter? Any further discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Aye. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd moves the call. Next up, File Item 54 by Senator Limon. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 401 by Senator Limon an act relating to financial institutions.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. SB 401 is back from the Assembly on concurrence. Assembly amendments include a delayed implementation date, an increase in permissible fees to address opposition's concerns, the addition of contingent enactments language that the Bill is tied to Assembly Member Grayson's broader efforts to license crypto companies. Rules for crypto kiosks are sorely needed to protect consumers from fraud and predatory fees. I respectfully ask you to join me and the California Police Chief Association in supporting SB 401.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Lamont, any discussion or debate on this legislation any discussion or debate seeing nonsecretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon moves the call. Next up, file item 55 by Senator Weiner. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 407 by Senator Weiner an act relating to foster care.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Weiner.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Colleagues, SB 407 is back on concurrence. This Bill strengthens protections for our most vulnerable youth by ensuring they are not placed in hostile anti LGBTQ homes. Assembly amendments make technical and cost saving changes, require caregiving training that is affirmative of sexual orientation, gender identity, ethnicity, race, and mental or physical disabilities, and it removes the proposed Department of Social Services monitoring requirement. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this legislation? Any further discussion on this legislation? See none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Weiner moves a call. Moving next to file item 56 by Senator Newman. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 444 by Senator Newman an act relating to community colleges.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise present SB 44 back on concurrence, which will codify the mathematics, Engineering and science achievement, or Mesa model into California's education code, thereby encouraging the expansion of Mesa programs directed at identifying and elevating students affected by social, economic, and educational disadvantages. Amendments taken to the Assembly Appropriations Committee address the fiscal concerns. On behalf of myself, my staff wrote this. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman moves the call. File item 57, SB 452 by Senator Blakespear. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 452 by Senator Blakespear in act relating to firearms.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Colleagues. SB 452 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments are narrowing in nature and are the product of conversations with the Department of Justice and the Administration to afford appropriate flexibility in implementation. I urge your concurrence in these amendments. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Blakespear. Any further discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Eligible for unanimous roll call. Just kidding. I was just making sure that Senator Wilk was still awake over there. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Rubio? Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear moves the call. Members, just to give you a heads up of our future tonight, we have about a little more than a dozen or so concurrence measures that we're going to go through, and then we're going to take a break as we wait for the measures to come over from the Assembly. So we're making good progress, appreciate everyone's cooperation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I don't know if everybody's gotten quieter because they're tired or excited or I'm not sure which, but we appreciate it up here, the decorum in the Senate Floor. So we're going to move next to file item 58. This is a Bill by Senator Becker.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 474 by Senator Becker an act relating to prisons.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 474 is back on concurrence. This Bill limits markups for items sold in prison canteen stores, including food, hygiene products, health supplements and stationery, among other items. Amendments in the Assembly limit the markup 35% from before up to 300% until January 1, 2028. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further comments or discussions on this issue? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker moves the call. Members, after we complete file item 59, we're going to go file item 61 through 63 and then 65 through 69. I'll look ahead. Next up, legislation by Senator Stern. File item 59.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 779 by Senator Stern in act relating to clinics.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, our community clinics provide critical services to those in need, and we think that this bill is going to be very helpful to improving services for the community through data and through improvements to our system to make sure that both the citizens receiving these outcomes, but also the new Healthcare Office of Information is going to be able to understand trends so we can get ahead of things and not have clinics opening and closing on a dime, not leaving people behind, and really empowering them to do the life saving work that they do.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
I know that there are some out who still have concerns about this legislation--especially amongst some of the community clinics--that this reporting will somehow put them at risk, that some of the data that they collect will be too hard to achieve, especially when it comes to issues like patient privacy. We worked with the Administration, however, and ensured that privacy protections are now nested under the broader statutory mandate so no individuals' or clinics' data will be disclosed to the public.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
There will be aggregated data that we think will put them on better standing. That said, I am committed to working on these new reporting requirements, and if those still in opposition are up for it, we're glad to extend a four week deadline to give them more time to complete their requirements. I don't know if that'll actually remove their opposition from this legislation, but I'm willing to make that commitment on the floor here regardless, but I think this is important legislation and I would respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Stern. Discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Ashby? Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Durazo? Eggman? Glazer? No. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird?Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern moves a call. Next up, File Item 61. File Item 61 by Senator Blakespear. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 482 by Senator Blakespear an act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you, President and colleagues. SB 391 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments complement HCD's ongoing efforts to provide capitalized operating subsidy reserves to supportive housing projects that are competitively selected through the multifamily housing program supernofa process. With that. I urge your concurrence in the Assembly amendment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Blakespear. Just to clarify, this is Senate Bill 482. Is that the right one you have there?
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
In fact, that's not.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, let's redo. No problem. It's happened to all of us at least once, some of us multiple times. So we'll begin again. This is Senate Bill 482 by Senator Blakespear. Let's have the Clerk read it again. We'll open the discussion.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 482 by Senator Blakespear an act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I'm only prepared for 428, not 482.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, we'll pass on file temporarily, and you can get that organized. Okay, we're going to move next to file item 62 by Senator Limon.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 496 by Senator Limon an act relating to healthcare coverage.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. President and colleagues. Assembly amendments make technical and clarifying changes to ensure implementation by DHCS. This is related to biomarker testing, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion and debate on this measure? Any further discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon moves the call. We're going to move back, I believe, to file item 61. This is SB 482 by Senator Blakespear.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 42 by Senator Blakespear in act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you, President and Colleagues. This is SB 482, and I will now repeat the same thing that I said before which is that 'Assembly amendments complement HCD's ongoing efforts to provide capitalized operating subsidy reserves to supportive housing projects competitively selected through the Multifamily Housing Program's supernova process.'
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
With that, I urge your concurrence in the Assembly amendments. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. I think you read it a lot better the second time. Alright, Members, discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Aye. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Aye. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear moves a call. We're going to now check and see if Senator Durazo is here and ready. Alright, this is File Item 63 SB 52 by Senator Durazo. She is prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 52 by Senator Durazo in act relating to elections.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members. SB 52 is back from the Assembly for concurrence. Assembly amendments align SB 52 with AB 1248 to modify the size, selection process and requirements of independent redistricting commissions proposed by the Bill. The amendments also provide that this Bill becomes operative if AB 1248 is enacted and becomes effective on or before January 1, 2024. SB 52 will provide for a fair, transparent, and unbiased City Council redistricting process. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Durazo, any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing no microphones up. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo moves the call. We're going to move next. Members, file item 65. We're going to go 65 through 70, so look ahead. File item 65 by Senator Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 520 by Senator Seyarto. An act relating to taxation to take effect immediately. Tax levy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I'm here to present SB 520 with clarifying. The Board of Equalization Guidance on primary residence tax exemption amendments in the Assembly were technical and clarifying. To address Department of Finance concerns, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, sir. Is there any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto moves the call. Moving on to file item 66 by Senator Caballero. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 565 by Senator Caballero in act relating to taxation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 565 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments address chaptering issues and add a five-year sunset date. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this legislation? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood- Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero moves the call. Next up, File Item 67 by Senator Ashby. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 578 by Senator Ashby an act relating to juveniles.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mr President. Rise to concurrent Assembly amendments to SB 578, which is a harm reduction Bill that requires the courts to consider the trauma that a child will experience as a result of removal from parental care, and weigh that harm against the potential risk of nonremoval Assembly amendments.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Clarify the intent of the Bill by adding material to be included in the Social Workers report, modifying factors that the court must consider in its order relating to less disruptive alternatives to removal, and addresses chaptering conflicts. SB 578 has no opposition, has enjoyed bipartisan support, and is supported by the Juvenile Court judges. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ashby moves a call. Moving next to File Item 68. This is SB 628 by Senator Hurtado. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 628 by Senator Hurtado in act relating to food access.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 628 is back on concurrence. The amendments taken in the Assembly remove the reporting requirements. This bill has had bipartisan support, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Hurtado. Any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Dahle? Aye. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye. Nguyen, aye. Cortese, aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado moves a call. Members, File Item 69 was moved to the inactive file, so we're going to move next to File Item 70, SB 641 by Senator Roth.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please read
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 641 by Senator Roth an act relating to public health.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. This Naloxone Bill is back on concurrence with amendments that save costs by ensuring that distributors ship directly to the program applicants, please vote aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth moves the call. Next up, file 71. File item 71 by Senator Bradford. Secretary please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 661 by Senator Bradford an act related to collegiate athletics.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 661 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments remove division three schools from consideration. I respectfully ask for aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this measure? Any further discussion? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the roll. One more time.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, that measure--excuse me. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to File Item 72 by Senator Bradford. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 842 by Senator Bradford an act relating to energy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 842 is back on concurrence. It just allows the Department of Industrial Relations to list organizations that the Energy Commission must consult with in order to develop regulations related to scheduling and rescheduling of maintenance of refineries. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate. Yes, Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise unfortunately, with concerns about this Bill. It was a very late gut and amend, which always makes me skeptical, inherently when we avoid process and Policy Committee. This Bill did not get heard before Senate Policy Committee, which I think is inherently a problem here. But the Bill doesn't just require consulting with stakeholders.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
If you read the full text of the Bill, it also requires that the new regulators that we empowered under our price gouging legislation earlier this year, SB One X Two, with regulatory authority to make sure that the oil companies stop messing with retail gasoline and oil refining markets and putting consumers over a bear. So the Bill reads and permission to read, Mr. President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
One sentence: the Commission shall consult with labor and industry stakeholders, which is a good thing, I think, and aim to avoid any other market impacts or costs. The point of our oil price gouging regulations is to have market impacts, is to stop the market from being manipulated.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
The concern here is that if there are creative lawyers out there who want to go litigate this issue, I don't want them throwing a wrench in the gears of our newly empowered Department of Industrial Relations in this Administration and overseeing an oil industry that I just don't trust when it comes to oil markets. So I think we do need to make market impact. I share some deep skepticism about this very late language, and for that reason, I'm opposing this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, other discussion or debate on this legislation? Discussion or debate. Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I have to rise with concerns about this Bill as well. Usually we Reserve a last minute gut amend for a urgent policy matter. And I'm just not sure that I understand the urgency or importance here. Just trying to understand what problem needs to be solved. I have great respect for our energy chair, but I would have preferred if this item had gone through the policy process so we can understand it.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
There's just a concern about the language being vague that my colleague from Los Angeles just mentioned. And again, I didn't see this Bill till this morning. So just concerned, it may all be fine but it's, again, something that just didn't go through the process here. And I just personally don't understand the urgency why this would have to be a very last minute gut and amend.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And since it is an important thing that we all collectively spent many, many months on working on this price gouging law, I don't know why we would push through a piece here at the end to alter it. That, again, is vague that I'm not sure we understand that hasn't gone through the policy process. And that's my concern here today. And that's why I will not be supporting this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Other discussion or debate. Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. We just spent all week doing last minute changes that nobody had a chance to look at. I trust that the Energy Chair is doing what he feels and what is a good measure for us to vote on tonight. I will be supporting it. If we are concerned about the new regulations, well, why aren't they doing anything? Because right now our gas is high. So where's the Calvary? So this isn't working.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And I appreciate the efforts of the Chair of Energy to ensure that we have something that actually works in the real world. So therefore, I will be supporting.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Just stand and rise in support of this Bill. And regarding my colleagues comments regarding gas prices and gas gouging, I had the opportunity to go to my granddaughter's rodeo in Bishop this last weekend. I took 395 over. I don't know whose district it is, but it's gorgeous. Beautiful mountains, streams running by the freeway on 395.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And I got to the bottom of the pass when I went over the pass and there was a sign that says 5 miles to Nevada, $3.98 a gallon, and 8 miles to I think it was like Wheeler or something like that. And it was $7 a gallon for gas in California. I chose to go north out of my way for that miles to save that price.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The price issue is here in California based on policies that are sent out of this building, not in any other state in the nation. It doesn't have to do with our gas companies, our oil companies. It's the policies that come out of this building. Respectfully ask for an aye vote for the energy chairs Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Alvarado-Gil, followed by Senator Dahle.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
I rise as the proud representative of Senate District Four, the area of highway 395, which my colleague from Bakersfield so gloriously identified as one of the most wonderful areas of California. And I urge support, an aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Alvarado-Gil. Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I won't debate on whose district's the most beautiful, but I will debate this Bill. Members, the author of this Bill is asking exactly what we saw last year. This Bill allows the CEC to manage the shutdowns, for refineries, for the ability to be able to make sure we have a steady supply of fuel. What happened last year, they scheduled others. We put them off because fuel prices were high.
- Brian Dahle
Person
This Bill is actually requiring or asking the CEC to manage that so we don't end up in a situation where we have higher prices than we already have. That's what this Bill does. There is an urgency for it because they have to shut down and maintenance these refineries.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And if they do them all at the same time, or if they're put off that's ability for spiking, which did happen last year, and the Governor came and said, we got to have AB one X special session to go after oil refineries, which was created by the ability not to be able to shut down and do exactly what this Bill is trying to do. For those reasons, I will be supporting the Chairman's Bill of Energy. And I think this is a great Bill. Why would we not want to make sure that we don't have them all shut down at the same time? I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any Member wanted to be heard on this measure before we end of the debate. All right, we're going to provide an opportunity for Senator Bradford to have the closing argument here.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. And I want to appreciate the folks who lent their voice to this discussion. This Bill was heard yesterday. An Energy Commission, as well as my colleagues from San Jose's Bill was heard an Energy Commission Committee yesterday. And this is a common sense measure similar to what we experienced 20 years ago during the energy crisis. And I think I'm the only person who worked for a utility during that time.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Part of the reason was generation going offline just unexpectedly and doing maintenance when they typically didn't do maintenance. We want to make sure the same thing doesn't happen with our refineries, that they just arbitrarily take them offline. So we want to make sure that there's clear consultation and collaborative effort with the CEC and all the other agencies to make sure when we take them down, it's for maintenance at a time that will not impact gas prices here in California. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker. Blakespear. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez. Grove aye. Hurtado. Jones aye. Laird. Limon. McGuire. Menjivar. Min. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern no. Umberg aye. Wahab. Wiener. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to go through the roll one more time and then it's going to go on call. We're going to go through the roll one more time and then it's going to go on call. We have a Member off the floor. Secretary please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen. Alvarado-Gil aye. Becker no. Blakespear. Cortese. Durazo aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez no. Hurtado. Laird. Limon. Mcguire aye. Menjivar no. Min. Portantino aye. Skinner. Wahab. Wiener no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford moves the call. We're going to move next to file item 73. This is SB 627. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 627 by Senator Smallwood-Cuevas in act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator, the floor is yours.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Colleagues. I am proud to present SB 627, the Displaced Worker Transfer Rights Act, which will require large chain employers with 100 stores or more to give 60 days advance notice to workers of the store that it's closing. Amendments taken in the Assembly specify that nothing in this bill requires employers to displace or fail to promote workers to comply, protecting incumbent workers as well.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
SB 627 will ensure workers have a safety net and that their lives aren't completely upended when they lose their job due to a store closure. I thank you for your time, and I humbly ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Discussion or debate, Members? Discussion or debate on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? No. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas moves a call. Moving on to File Item 74 SB 665 by Senator Allen. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 665 by Senator Allen in act relating to solid waste.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Members, this bill will convene a working group of relevant state agencies to develop a framework for evaluating plastic alternatives as they're introduced onto the market. It will also inform efforts to ensure the materials are properly managed. Assembly amendments were technical. They clarify the public participation process to ensure robust stakeholder engagement. This measure has enjoyed wide bipartisan support, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing no microphones up, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Caballero? Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Hurtado? Jones? Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? Niello? Ochoa Bogh? Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen moves the call. Next up, File Item 75 by Senator Bradford.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 673 by Senator Bradford in accolading to emergency services.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you. SB 673 is back on concurrence. Amendments taken in Assembly provide CHP with additional flexibility in issuing I have any alert consistent with other emergency alerts I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford moves a call. Members, let me just mention we have four sets of four ayes trying to see all the microphones on the floor. We're doing our best. If you think we haven't seen you, please wave around. When people are walking on the floor, they do it at times. Block microphones, and we don't want that. So please make sure we can see you so you can be properly recognized. Okay, we're going to move next to file item 76.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is SB 686 by Senator Durazo. Secretary, please read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 686 by Senator Durazo in accolade to domestic workers.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. For too long, the workers, the women that we entrust to care for our loved ones in our homes have been marginalized and dehumanized by an intentional exclusion from our workplace health and safety laws. This Bill will ensure that privately paid domestic workers have health and safety protections available to them, as we have to all other workers. Assembly amendments remove an assistance program that was not funded in this budget cycle. They also delayed implementation of the Bill to January 1, 2025.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
This measure is unopposed and enjoyed bipartisan support in the Assembly. It is time we recognize the full humanity of these women. I ask for your concurrence with Assembly amendments.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members. Discussion or debate? Discussion or debate? I see a microphone up. Senator Durazo? No. Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Question of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Would the author take a question?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yes.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Did the Assembly amendments remove the Department of Industrial Relations and other state agencies being able to enter into a private residence without a warrant? Just curious. I don't know that was ever discussed. This is a completely different thing, a different issue of providing the protections, especially the prevention of health and safety accidents or issues that could come up in the workplace. Thank you. On my own time. It's obviously that CalOSHA is the in charge of making sure that those work protections are in place.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
CalOSHA can enter into any work site at any time without notice. And making your homes a work site under this piece of legislation, I think, will allow CalOSHA and the Department of Industrial Relations to walk into your private home to address the health and safety concerns that the state might have with you employing an individual. And I think all of our constituents would be very upset at the fact that we would support a Bill like this respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion? Any further discussion? Senator Roth.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. I'm sorry.
- Richard Roth
Person
Just to clarify that point, I used. To work in this area. Unless it's changed, you can deny CalOSHA permission to enter your facility. They can then go and get an Administrative warrant to enter your facility. So, just to set the record straight on that
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Roth. Any further discussions, comments, debate on this measure? All right. Seeing no microphones up, Senator Durazo, you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you to my colleague from Riverside for that clarification. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear. Bradford aye. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo moves a call. Next up is file item 77, SB 695 by Senator Gonzalez. She's prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 695 by Senator Gonzalez in accolading to Transportation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. And Members, Assembly amendments to SB 695 delay implementation for the annual reporting and make other minor and conforming changes. At the request of the implementing agencies, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Gonzalez. Any further discussion on this measure? Any further discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino. Roth aye. Rubio. Seyarto aye. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Gonzalez moves a call. Next up is file item 78 by Senator Bradford.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary please read Senate Bill 700 by Senator Bradford and acquisition to employment discrimination.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 700 is back on concurrence. Amendments taken in the Assembly make technical and clarifying changes requested by the Civil Rights Department. I ask for aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any further discussion on this measure? Any further discussion? Seeing none. Secretary please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we have a full house now. So we're going to call the roll one more time and then close it. Secretary, please call the absent Members
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado-Gil aye. Hurtado. Nguyen no. Rubio.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred. In moving on to file item 79 by Senator Stern. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 717 by Senator Stern in accolade to mental health services.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Complex Bill for me to present here. It is my own Bill, but I am frustrated with the position I'm in here. We passed some path-breaking and visionary mental health legislation earlier, including a bond and some reforms that will do so much to help those who are being not just left behind, but sent from our prisons to our streets with severe mental illness and without treatment. I gave you a statistic earlier, I'll just repeat it again.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
1,640 misdemeanors who were found incompetent to stand trial because of severe mental illness were dismissed from their charges last year in LA. And they are now somewhere out on the streets. We don't know if they're housed. We don't know if they're alive. We don't know where they are. This Bill simply asked where are they now?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
And that county jails need to talk to county mental health offices to make sure that people are given opportunities to find housing and services before they're just processed through the jail system and sent back to the streets. Five people a day right now. Psychotic affective disorders, schizophrenia, severe addiction issues untreated back on the streets. This is a behavioral health crisis on an epic scale. This Bill simply asked counties attempt to maintain contact with these individuals when their cases are dismissed.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
The county behavioral health offices, though, said it would be too complicated. They were worried that they weren't going to be able to maintain contact. How on earth would we hand the contact information of someone who's in prison to the other Department that handles mental health services? These are obviously solvable problems and that trapping in bureaucracy that kind of one hand doesn't talk to the other is making our streets unsafe.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
And even worse, it's turning people who are prisoners into people who are unhoused with severe mental illness. This Bill is now basically just an intent Bill says make these people a top priority. I hope those other bills we passed earlier assert that and make that priority possible. But I think it was not too much to ask that as a Legislature, we asked our counties to step up and have the jail system talk to the mental health system and not let people fall through the cracks.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
We'll be coming back next year to solve this issue. You'll see the full Bill back before you. I hope we can get all your support. Unfortunately, these amendments were added in Assembly Appropriations Committee. I decided to move the Bill anyways because I wanted to tell you what happened and I want to tell you how many hundreds and thousands of people are being sent from a prison to street pipeline that has to be broken.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
So I'll ask for your Ivo tonight, but I would also ask that you help solve this issue with our local governments, especially now that we're sending billions more down their way. We have to get this done. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Stern, any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? It is eligible for a unanimous roll call without objection. ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item 80. This is SB 751 by Senator Padilla. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Three Senate Bill 751 by Senator Padilla in accolade to franchise agreements.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Padilla. And Members, can we get quiet in the chambers here so we can hear the author?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. President. I rise as SB 751 is back on concurrence. The amendments taken in the Assembly restrict the bill's provisions to new or substantially amended franchise agreements, apply the bill's provisions to charter cities, and make other technical and clarifying changes. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion on this legislation. Senator Dahle..
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Question of the author, please.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Will the author take a question?
- Brian Dahle
Person
Okay, thank you. When we were in a Committee in the Senate, you had talked about taking some amendments on performance plan versus I'm not an attorney, so help me out. To major force force majeure. Excuse me. And so what happened in the assemblies? I don't believe those amendments were taken. So can you explain what happened for me please.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Yes.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Mr. President, to my distinguished colleague? Absolutely happy to do that. What we agreed to in Committee was to continue working with the stakeholders. Subsequent to Committee, there was dialogue with the stakeholders about the possibility of taking those amendments, which we tried to work up for them. There was a breakdown in communication in terms of unresponsiveness, frankly, after we developed some of that language.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Subsequent to that, we continued, as we did indicate in Committee, that we would work with all of the stakeholders, and that meant all of the stakeholders on all sides of the issue. And there was continued and further discussion around whether we could get a universal support around language that would require parties in future contracts for franchise agreements to include to mandate that they include a contingency plan. We weren't able to get support for that from everyone.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
So we continued to move the Bill, which I would due respect, characterize as part of the normal evolutionary process of a Bill. That said to that point, I would also point out that with respect to contingency plans that corporate waste haulers as corporate entities need or possess that doesn't have to be prescribed in this Bill because most of these corporate entities already have those plans as operators. They have plans to deal with contingencies scenarios wherein there may be a work stoppage or a slowdown.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I have a follow up to that answer. So my concern is that if we have a strike or a shutdown, I don't want garbage on the street, is what I'm trying to say, in a more direct manner when we have the sit downs. And that was what we heard in Committee was the ability to be able to make sure that the garbage still got picked up. And so, again, this is out of my realm of technical expertise.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I want to just make sure that the garbage is going to get picked up and that we're not going to be coming back because all the waste haulers are opposing this Bill right now, or at least the ones that talk to me because those amendments weren't taken care of in the Assembly.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Mr. President, I don't think that was in the form of a question, so I think that's a form of a comment.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Well, no. Is the garbage going to be picked up or is it going to be left on the street? That's the question I have sorry, Mr.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Do you take a question?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Yeah, I'll attempt. Mr. President, broadly speaking, our argument with respect to bringing the legislation has always been and our position is and the analysis is that the private waste haulers already have an obligation, even in the event of a work stoppage or slowdown or a strike, to perform under the provisions of a waste hauler franchise. Typically, those provisions are other elements of the franchise agreement an agreement of liquidated damages excuse me, it's late other administrative provisions to collaborate around contingency.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
The point being is these private haulers are obligated under the franchises to perform even in the event of a work stoppage. And so we view it as sort of a red herring to want that mandated in this particular Bill with respect to future contracts. The whole point of the Bill was to remove what we characterized as a very clever off ramp, the force majeure language that snuck its way into some of these franchise agreements that equated a work slowdown or a labor action or a strike with an act of God or an unforeseeable circumstance.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
And the effect that that had in communities on the ground and to public health and safety was that in the event of a labor dispute or a strike, even though other provisions of the agreement allowed a city or a county or a public agency to enforce the contract. These haulers were then able to rely on that force majeure language and prevent a city or municipality from enforcing any provision in the contract.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
So it acted as a very clever way to prevent enforcement, even during the time that there was a work slowdown or strike. And the effect that had on the public health and welfare was the trash piled up for days and weeks, sometimes close to a month. So the purpose of the Bill was to remove that as an off ramp and to allow that not to be used as a sort of a clever way to avoid enforcement under those conditions.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
The reason it's clever is that these waste haulers, typically in these franchise agreements, already have contingency plans internal to their operations as to what to do in the event of these circumstances. And so that would be my answer as to why we've crafted the Bill this way. I don't want to replace one clever off ramp with another that would ultimately prevent a city or a special district from enforcing the franchise agreement.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you for that comment. Now, on my own time, I just want to say that this is an area where I don't have a lot of expertise other than doing franchises. As a county supervisor, we didn't have the striking, but laws have changed, obviously. Maybe they'll want to draw unemployment and go on strike here after this seven, nine, nine gets signed into law. But my point is that during the Committee we had, I thought, some agreement on moving forward to take care of these issues.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I'm going to lay off the Bill because I'm not positive of what's really going on here. And I'm concerned that we may have the ability for a gamesmanship of contracts in the future. And we could possibly have people go on strike and have garbage on our streets, which would be devastating to not only the homeless around California, which we have a lot of, but also just the public health disaster of having the ability to go to strike. So for those reasons, I'll be laying off the Bill today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, Members, any further conversation, questions, discussion? Debate? Seeing no microphones up. Senator Padilla, would you like to close?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Just respectfully request and aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle. Dodd. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer no. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Orht. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dahle no. Dodd. Ochoa Bogh no. Roth.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 28 to 10, the Assembly Amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to move now to a few items that we passed earlier. File item 11, 28, 60, and 64. They're all to be presented by the authors. Senator McGuire. We'll begin with file item 11. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 601 by Senator McGuire in academics, professions and vocations.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator McGuire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you so much, Mr. President. On 601 amendments taken, the Assembly specify that contractor violations and disasters are subject to maximum fines. Allowable would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ever is any discussion or debate on this measure. This is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objection ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Move next to file item 28. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 791 by Senator McGuire. Enact relating to post-secondary education.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Mcguire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Mr. President, technical amendments taken in the Assembly reflect the Fair Chance Act would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections. Ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 60. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 18 by Senator McGuire in acquiring the housing.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Mr. President, technical amendments taken to this Bill remove an exemption to the Administrative Procedures Act. One of the more exciting would respect we ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator McGuire, any discussion or debate on this matter? Seeing none. This is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objection, ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 64. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 500 by Senator McGuire in accolading to Fish and Wildlife.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator McGuire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you so much, Mr. President. This is the joint committees on Fisheries and Aquaculture Annual Omnibus Bill. The amendments taken the Assembly clean up the code section for live bait fish and incorporate chaptering out issues I'm sure Erwin would be happy about that. Would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure discussion or debate, it is eligible for unanimous roll call. See no objections. ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to take a short five-minute break. There'll be a couple of supplemental files coming your way for new Members you can check with the older Members, know what you're going to experience there. And then we're going to come back and also finish up our Assembly Bills that are still on our floor.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So five minute break. Members, please stay here in the Capitol grounds Capitol building and I'll see you in a few minutes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We want to invite all the Senators to come back to the Senate Floor so we can complete our work. Senators, can we ask all Senators to come back to the floor so we can complete our work? Members, we'll have the Senate come back into session, please. Everybody can take their seat. Let me give you the run of the show here as we finish up our evening. We're going to start our evening session here with the final four Assembly bills. Final four Assembly bills.
- Steven Glazer
Person
There are file numbers 101, number 1, 103, and 106. Those are the final four Assembly bills. Then we're going to go to two supplemental files which will incorporate all of our Senate bills that have come back from the Assembly. Two supplemental files. We will have an opportunity to go to motions and resolutions. God bless you. We will have an opportunity to go to motions and resolutions later this evening. So that's our run of show to finish up our work tonight.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, so we're going to begin with final four Assembly bills on our floor. First, it's file item 101.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 647 by Assemblymember Holden in accolade to private employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members. Tonight I'm presenting AB 647 on behalf of Assemblymember Holden AB 647 simply seeks to strengthen and expand statewide grocery worker retention laws. There were some floor amendments to conform language to SB 725 and expand upon definitions accepted. Several amendments at the request of the Administration, we maintained the right private right of action, adding in a right to cure with precedence in the waste management provision of the law.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Section code 1075, AB 647 will protect workers by preventing mass layoffs and ensuring consistency in food safety and pharmaceutical knowledge within our communities. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senators, discussion or debate on this legislation? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. We do have a full house, so we will go through the roll twice and close it out. So Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear. Bradford aye. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd no. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer no. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Blakespear. Caballero. Rubio aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 to 11, the measure passes. We'll move next to file item one. This is AB 126. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 126 by Assemblymember Reyes in accolading to the air pollution and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Floor manager on this measure is Senator Gonzalez. We're just doing a technical change here. Why don't we reread the for what purpose? You rise, Senator. Parliamentary inquiry, sir, I believe this item is on second reading. Sir, the Senate rules were suspended on the 11 September to move it to third reading. Okay. That relates to this Bill. At least that's what I'm being informed of.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay. All right, we're going to reread the measure before turning to the Floor manager, the Secretary. Please read the measure.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 126 by Assemblymember Reyes in accolading to the air pollution and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members, I proudly rise today to present AB 126, which will reauthorize and modernize the clean transportation program, the Air Quality Improvement Program, and the enhanced fleet modernization for an additional 11 years. This Bill is a three party agreement on the extension of these critical programs. And the recent amendments represent a very hard fought compromise that engaged dozens of stakeholders.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
And Members I'd like to personally thank our joint author, Assemblymember Eloise Reyes, as well as my incredible colleagues from Berkeley and Fullerton, our Senate leadership, as well as our Assembly leadership, and many of the staff Members from my office and across the Houses that have really fought to ensure that we got to this deal. Specifically, AB 126 will do the following it'll prioritize hydrogen vehicle refueling infrastructure through a dedicated funding carve out of at least 15% support funding for the deployment of heavy and medium-duty vehicles.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Fill gaps in light duty vehicle charging infrastructure and require that 50% of the funds be spent on projects that directly benefit residents of disadvantaged and low-income communities. This will ensure our state's most impactful and transformative programs do not cease to exist. And also ensure that, of course, that we are always developing the zero-emission markets, leveraging billions of dollars in private sector investment, and of course, doing it for the communities that deserve it the most. On behalf of Assemblymember Rryes and myself, we respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 126.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Gonzalez. I see microphones up from Senators Newman, Wiener, and Archuleta. We'll begin with Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise in support of this Bill. As my colleague from Long Beach mentioned, this was indeed hard fought, and I want to thank my colleague and the author for their willingness to compromise. When the reauthorization of the CTP or Clean Transportation Program was first proposed, several of my colleagues and stakeholders had serious concerns on the proposed elimination of dedicated funding for light duty hydrogen fueling stations.
- Josh Newman
Person
As I stated then, the objective assessment of CARB Scoping report and other studies affirms that if we're going to achieve the ambitious goals set out for the decarbonization of California's transportation sector, there have to be balanced investments in each of the two types of zero emissions vehicle technology battery, electric vehicles, and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. These are the only 20 emission vehicle technologies currently available to us. Both have specific advantages that appeal to different segments of California's diverse driving population.
- Josh Newman
Person
In order to get close to a fully zero-emission vehicle fleet, especially on the time I set out, we're going to need both of these platforms. And so I am very grateful to all of the participants that we came down to a compromise which does maintain funding for both platforms and I'd argue in a balanced way. And so that's true. And so as with any compromise, the terms here weren't they're not ideal and I think hard-fought is perhaps an understatement.
- Josh Newman
Person
It was both an exhaustive and exhausting process to get there. But let me also add it's important to remember that what we're doing here by extending the Clean Transportation Programs is we're extending a tax and a tax that's applied to vehicle license fees paid by all California drivers.
- Josh Newman
Person
If we're going to do that, it's incumbent upon us to make sure that not only is the purpose of the tax clear and justifiable, which I believe it is, especially under the current terms, but that the benefits of that tax extend to the broadest share of Californians possible and that so including hydrogen. And the driving public that's going to need hydrogen does exactly that.
- Josh Newman
Person
So I'd like to thank the Transportation Committee Chair, the Pro-TEM and her staff, the authors, as well as my colleagues in the Assembly for the extensive work that everyone put into this Bill to getting us to the language we have before us today. And with that, I respectfully urge an aye vote for this measure. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. So I rise. I'll be voting for this Bill today. I want to thank the Senator from Long Beach and the Assembly Member for their hard work. These programs are unbelievably important in investing in a clean energy future and really focusing investment on lower income communities so that we are really spreading this benefit to everyone.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I acknowledge that the author and the authors have worked diligently to ensure that investments from the programs extended by this legislation, including the Clean Transportation Program, they've worked hard to ensure that these investments are not precluded from being made in the Bay Area. In Bay Area communities that may not fall under the specific disadvantaged communities definition but still face major, often devastating cost pressures.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Poverty in the Bay Area sometimes looks a little bit different than in other parts of the state because of the very high cost of living throughout the region. There are state formulas that are very biased against Low income communities in the Bay Area.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I understand that the authors plan to submit a letter to the Journal clarifying that the Bill text was not intended to require communities to meet both the disadvantaged community definition and also meet the Low income community definition in order to qualify for investments from the program.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I look forward to engaging in work to ensure that the definition of Low income is clarified by the appropriate body if needed to avoid potential geographic bias against the Bay Area in the direction of such investments, I will be voting aye. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Weiner. Next up, Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I rise today and as co-author of the Assembly Bill 126 and as chair of the Select Committee on Hydrogen Energy in support of reauthorizing the clean energy transportation program, it is so important that we realize that we are not going to meet our goals unless we include every conceivable thing that we can put together to save our environment. And enhancing hydrogen and making part of that treasure chest that I call clean energy. I think this is the way to go.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
But I think this is something that's so special because so many people poured their hearts and souls into it. So I would like to, of course, take time out once again to thank everyone who's involved in the Bill and the author and especially our chair and the Pro-TEM for bringing us all together and getting us all to realize if we're going to realize the zero-emission energy program in the future, we've got to include hydrogen. And for these reasons and many others, I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Archuleta, any further discussion on this measure? Senator Niello?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I appreciate all the positive comments on the floor but allow me to dissent a bit, particularly with regard to my colleague from Fullerton talking about hydrogen. The fact of the matter is this reduces the investment in hydrogen beginning to look like picking winners and losers.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And the fee increase, or the fee is an 11 and a half year extension of a fee that will be largely imposed upon people who drive fossil fuel vehicles and this money goes entirely to infrastructure and the like that will not benefit them whatsoever. There's no nexus of the imposition of the fee and the people that pay it and the benefit that they don't get. So I would urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion or debate on this measure? Seeing none. Senator Gonzalez. You may close.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you. I want to thank all of my colleagues, my colleagues from Pico Rivera and my colleagues from Fullerton as well as San Francisco, as well as from the Sacramento area too. I would say that this Bill is just not just economical in terms of the outcomes, the positive outcomes.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
It's really the environmental impacts that many of our communities will be facing by this decarbonization and the investments, the great investments that will be done in the industries of the transportation sector that will really be a great benefit to all Californians. Hydrogen doesn't we've had language in there that said no less than 15%, meaning that of course, if there's more investments in hydrogen above and beyond 15%. Well, then great.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
But the goal of this Bill was always to decarbonize, to ensure that we are focusing on our most underserved communities. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. WIlk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The measure passes 30 to 8. 30 to 8 on the urgency. 30 to 8 on the measure. There you go. Members, we're going to move to file item 103, Assembly Bill 96 by Assemblymember Kalra.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Assembly Bill 96 by Assemblymember Kalra in accolade to public important employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. And Members. AB 96 would require public transit agencies to notify transit unions of their intention to procure or deploy autonomous transit vehicle technology at least 10 months prior. Nothing in the Bill would prohibit the use of or prevent a transit agency from exploring autonomous technology. Instead, AB 96 rightfully recognizes these technologies often come with impacts on the existing workforce that should be reviewed. I respectfully ask for an aye vote to restore and protect transit workers'voice in the implementation of job replacing technology. Thank you
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Glazer. Limon aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the measure passes. Next up, file item 106, AB 1290, 112 91, by Assemblymember McCarty. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1291 by Assemblymember McCarty and acquisition to public post-secondary education.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman?
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise on behalf of Assemblymember McCarty to present AB 1291, which will incorporate the University of California into the associate degree for transfer or ADT program, thereby more effectively aligning all three public higher education systems with one transfer pathway, which is simpler for students.
- Josh Newman
Person
AB 1291, formerly AB 1749, was heard in the policy and fiscal committees of both houses, and its current form is the result of a negotiated agreement between the Senate, the Assembly, the governor's office, and the UC office of the President. AB 1291 will require that by academic year 2026-27 UCLA is to pick eight majors to participate in the ADT program with 12 majors, including four STEM majors, by the year 2028-2029.
- Josh Newman
Person
The Bill also requires that by the 2028-29 academic year, at least five total UC campuses will each pick 12 majors to participate in the ADT program. The Bill is intended to deliberately and collaboratively transition the UC into the ADT program and includes intent language that ADT pathways will eventually be accepted across the whole of the UC system.
- Josh Newman
Person
In doing so, AB 1291 will align the UC system with our other two public higher education systems the community colleges and the CSU who are already participating in the ADT program. The author believes this Bill in its current form is now materially better than it was previously during the legislative process since the UC has come fully to the table and vetted and approved its provisions. Moreover, the amendments taken have led UC to remove their opposition to the Bill. The need for this legislation was long overdue.
- Josh Newman
Person
This is, as the author points out, a historic Bill as provided for by AB 1291. Utilizing the ADT as a system wide pathway to admission to UC schools is a critical next step in reimagining the transfer process across all three higher ed systems to ultimately be more student centered and in so doing yield substantially better outcomes over time, thereby not only assisting students, but benefiting the UC and the state as a whole. On behalf of Assemblymember Cardi, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Newman. Does any Member want to be recognized on this measure? Any discussions? Seeing none. This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Seeing no objection ayes 48, no zero the measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, you should have on your desks a supplemental file number one. Supplemental file number one. This will be our guide for the next few minutes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, Members, we're going to begin at File, Supplemental File 110. Supplemental File 110. This is SB 43 by Senator Eggman. And just a reminder that the debate should be on the amendments rather than the bill and the main bill. So with that, Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 43 by Senator Eggman in act relating to mental health.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Eggman.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. President. SB 43 is back with amendments after celebrating another overwhelmingly bipartisan vote. The amendments strike the language regarding a risk of future harm, narrow the application of the hearsay exemption, require the collection of additional data regarding the changes to the gravely disabled definition, and allow the counties a flexibility to delay implementation for up to two years. And I would ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Seeing no discussion. This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Okay, seeing no objection. Seeing no objection to unanimous roll call, ayes: 40, noes: zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Alright, moving next to File Item 111 by Senator Min. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 241 by Senator Min in act relating to firearms.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 241 is back on concurrence, requires firearm dealers and their employees to annually complete a training course provided by the California Department of Justice. Assembly amendments delay implementation at a training requirement, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote on concurrence.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? No. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Newman? Min, aye. Newman, aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Member.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Roth?
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to ten, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to File Item 112 by Senator Stern, Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 302 by Senator Stern in act relating to healthcare facilities.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you very much--thank you, Mr. President.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. This Bill is back on concurrence. The Assembly amendments would add protections in for hospitals as well as patients in making sure that folks who are older than 65 with chronic illnesses still are allowed to use cannabis just like everyone else in this state. We shouldn't have one set of rules for everyone under 65 who can use recreational cannabis.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
But then if you have, say, ASL, or if you have dementia and your Doctor wants you to take it, if you're at a nursing home, or if you're at in home care, you can't do that right now. People are dying in pain as a result, and they're living in pain as well. So this Bill will change that. It's had no no votes. Respectfully ask for aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate. It is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections, ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Senator Stern, do you have an announcement to make, there? You're recognized. I will move back to motions and resolutions. Senator Stern?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Yes. On the previous item, I want to submit a letter to the Journal in SB 302. It's been approved by both sides in the Administration.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So noted. Thank you. Alright, we're going to move back to Assembly--unfinished business--excuse me. This is File Item 113 by Senator Wahab. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 555 by Senator Wahab in act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahab, the floor is yours.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. SB 555 is back from the Assembly for a concurrence vote. I've worked closely with the Department of Housing and Community Development to address their concerns. We narrowed the bill to direct HCD to study pathways to acquiring or producing the much needed 1.4 million stable, affordable housing units identified by the Reena assessment. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion or debate on this issue? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? No. Skinner? Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil? No. Archuleta? Aye. Hurtado? Skinner? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving forward to File Item 114 by Senator Caballero. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 684 by Senator Caballero in act relating to land use.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and Members, I rise to present SB Six and 184, which is back on concurrence amendments taken in the Assembly narrow the Bill to parcel zone for multifamily development and reflect negotiations with local government and housing stakeholders. The Bill has enjoyed bipartisan support, has no no votes, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh aye. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Discussion or debate on this issue? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil aye. Glazer. Nguyen. Seyarto. Wilk. Glazer aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 37 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move next to file item 115 by Senator Archuleta. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 757 by Senator Archuleta an act relating to transportation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Today I'm presenting Senate Bill 757 back on concurrence to ensure that all rail workers who are transported between work sites are transported with proper permitting and insurance. Amendments adopted in the Assembly strike provisions of this bill that required a crew transportation operator to specifically obtain a 'Z' permit from the California Public Utilities Commission and instead now allows the Commission to determine the appropriate permit category. This bill has no opposition. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion or debate on this matter? Discussion or debate? Seeing no microphones up, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Aye. Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? No. Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Glazer? Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? No. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? No. Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? No. Ochoa Bogh? No. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Seyarto? No. Skinner? Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Eggman? Glazer? Rubio? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to File Item 116, Senator Caballero. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 800 by Senator Caballero in act relating to aviation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Mr. President and Members, I rise to present SB 800 for concurrence the amendments taken in the Assembly, update the name of the advisory panel and change the membership. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this matter, any Member wishing to be recognized, seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll. Excuse me. This is eligible for unanimous consent, seeing no objections, ayes 40s, noes, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We'll move on to file item 117 by Senator Roth. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 815 by Senator Roth an act relating to healing arts.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Senators, I have one of your perennial favorites back on concurrence: the Medical Board of California sunset bill, round two. Assembly amendments decreased the amount of physician and surgeon fees, removed provisions establishing a Public Majority Board membership, maintained the Board's current evidentiary standard, updated the types of felony convictions that lead to specified action by the Board, updated postgraduate licensure provisions, included various updates to resolve chaptering conflicts with other pending bills, and made various other conforming changes. I'd ask you to vote your conscience. Just make sure I get 21 votes. Thanks.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright. Senator Grove, you want to be heard on this matter?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Question for the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Roth, will you take a question?
- Richard Roth
Person
I will certainly try.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Senator, if I read this correctly, does the bill selectively repeal Section 2270 of the Business and Professions Code, which designates the misinformation or disinformation of COVID-19 data, unprofessional conduct for doctors? Since AB 2098 Low just passed last year on a party line vote, I was wondering if you could explain why this language is very discreetly placed in this bill and why it's needed.
- Richard Roth
Person
I have no idea. If you can give me the section and I can get the bill, I'm happy to talk to you about that if you want to put this on hold for a while.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
So, just to clarify, on number line 18 of the analysis, this bill actually repeals and the amendments repeal a section of code which is the Low Bill on 2098, which was passed last year by unanimous--or excuse me--by a party line vote. So, temporarily, on my own time, I just want to point out that Republicans on this floor, unwaveringly and articulately, I might add, warned the majority party that AB 2098 shamefully violated the doctor's free speech rights, but the majority and the Governor went ahead knowingly and, frankly, ineptly passed this speech restriction law.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Earlier this week, Governor Gavin Newsom said in an interview that he would have taken a less bureaucratically approach given what he knows now about the pandemic. 'I wishfully and enthusiastically hope that he signs this bill and overturns this unconstitutional ban on free speech.'
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And I hope you all understand and the majority appreciates the fact that free speech means that tolerating those who disagree with you because most of the time they're historically right. Graciously asking for an aye vote on this bill, and for all of you paying attention, that was 13 useful words for you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alright, further conversations, discussion or debate? Members, any further discussion or debate? Seeing none. Senator Roth, you may close.
- Richard Roth
Person
I have absolutely no idea how to respond to that, since I couldn't even catch the reference to the bill, but happy to do it offline. As I said, vote your conscience, feel free to vote no. Just make sure I get 21 votes at the end of the process. Thanks.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen? Aye. Alvarado-Gil? Archuleta? Aye. Ashby? Aye. Atkins? Aye. Becker? Aye. Blakespear? Aye. Bradford? Aye. Caballero? Aye. Cortese? Aye. Dahle? Dodd? Aye. Durazo? Aye. Eggman? Aye. Glazer? Aye. Gonzalez? Aye. Grove? Aye. Hurtado? Aye. Jones? Laird? Aye. Limon? Aye. McGuire? Aye. Menjivar? Aye. Min? Aye. Newman? Aye. Nguyen? No. Niello? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Padilla? Aye. Portantino? Aye. Roth? Aye. Rubio? Aye. Seyarto? Skinner? Aye. Smallwood- Cuevas? Aye. Stern? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wahab? Aye. Wiener? Aye. Wilk? Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil? Dahle? Jones? Seyarto?
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 to one, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Congratulations, Senator Roth. Members, we're going to move to File 118. File Item 118 by Senator Dodd. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 353 by Senator Dodd in act relating to beverage containers, making an appropriation therefore, and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mr. President, Members, I'm presenting SB 387. Amendments taken in the Assembly address chaptering issues. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this matter? Any discussions on this legislation?Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove. Hurtado aye. Jones aye. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Dahle no. Grove. Ochoa Bogh. Grove no. Portantino aye. Ochoa bogh no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any other vote changes? Jones aye to no.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Jones aye to no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 119 by Senator Becker.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 410 by Senator Becker an act relating to electricity.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you. Members, happy to present my last Bill today, which is SB 410. This Bill holds utilities accountable to fix interconnection delays and prevent future ones by mandating timelines of interconnection that help meet the state's climate and housing goals. Bill supported by the Cal Chamber, SEIU and NRDC and Sierra Club. And I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate? Seein no microphones up. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Mcguire aye. Smallwood-Cuevas, aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item 120 by Senator Blakespeare.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 428 by Senator Blakespear an act relating to civil actions.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President and colleagues. I'm also on my last item. This is SB 428 back on concurrence. Assembly amendments clarify that an employer must receive permission from an employee before filing a temporary restraining order. With that, I urge your concurrence in the Assembly amendments.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Members. Any Member want to be heard on this measure? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Seeing no objections, ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 121 by Senator Padilla.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 605 by Senator Padilla an act relating to energy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Padilla.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 605 is back on concurrence. The Assembly amendments narrowed the Bill to a study. It has zero, no votes and no opposition. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Discussion or debate. It is eligible for a unanimous roll call, seeing and hearing no objections. Ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Move on to file item 122 by Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 725 by Senator Smallwood-Cuevas an act relating to private employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator, the floor is yours.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. The Assembly amendments refer to the above described severance pay requirement instead as a dislocated grocery worker allowance. The Assembly amendments also limit the allowance requirement to apply only to a successor grocer employer that after a change in control, will own, control or operate 20 or more grocery establishments. The Assembly amendments also modify the retail store exclusion and definition of grocery establishment to exclude a retail store that has ceased operations for 12 months or more. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Very good. Discussion or debate on this issue? Any discussion or debate, seeing no microphones up. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil no. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Glazer. Ochoa Bogh no. Skinner aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the Assembly Amendments are concurred in.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Moving on to file item 123, SB 741 by Senator Min. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 741 by Senator Min an act relating to domestic violence.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 741 amends the Domestic Violence Prevention Act to allow discovery only if specifically authorized by the court showing good cause. The Assembly amendments are minor and technical. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate see? No microphones up. Secretary please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alvarado-Gil aye. Nguyen.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 33 to six, the Assembly Amendments are concurred. In moving on to file item 124 by Senator Allen. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 777 by Senator Allen an act relating to solid waste.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Members, I fortuitously bring you SB 77, which provides sensationally needed transparency for how stores are spending the money they charge customers for the thick plastic bags that are dispensed at checkout. By requiring regular reporting, Members will recall that current law requires revenue generated from bag sales be spent on the cost of the bags and complying with the law, and for consumer and staff education to promote reuse and recycling.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Assembly amendments narrowed the scope of the Bill to allow for chain stores to report in the aggregate and calls for annual instead of quarterly reporting. This is an optimistically and intelligently written Bill that's received bipartisan support. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Very humble. Members, any discussion or debate on this fantastic Bill? All right. Seeing none. Excuse me, Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I rise in support of this Bill. And I know there's been some conversation about why, but if you recall back a few years when they did, the bag fee 10 cents a bag and the Grocer supported it, and we were talking about bag bands back then and of course they would support it because the money doesn't go to any recycling, doesn't go to cleaning up the environment, doesn't do anything but put money in their pocket.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I'm excited to see this Bill come forward. And the author did a good job. And I want to know what they're doing with that money. Because at the end of the day, if we're going to support reducing bags blowing all over the State of California, we ought to take some of those resources and actually do something with it to reduce the garbage. And so, for those reasons, I will be supporting this Bill and look forward to you supporting it as well.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Dahle, any further discussion on this matter? Seeing none, Senator Allen, you may close.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Well, I will extemporaneously thank my good friend Vice Chair of EQ. Thank you for your comments. Thank you for your support of the Bill. This is an important transparency measure, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle aye. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove aye. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen aye. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Ochoa Bogh. Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 36 to two, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to move next to file item 125 by Senator Durazo. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 822 by Senator Durazo an act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. This bill represents years of work in my Budget Subcommittee, five in our Senate Climate Working Group, the Infrastructure Group and many hearings in the senate this year and last. This bill will establish agreements between state agencies to advance equitable access to high-paid jobs through procurement, contracting and other investment programs funded by taxpayers. Assembly amendments reduce the number of state agencies required to enter into an MOU and remove the requirement for a report. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this matter? Senator Eggman. Let's get the microphone on. Senator Eggman's recognized.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I just wanted to thank the author for her boundless energy and her unwavering support. No matter how evasive the votes are, she finds them for labor. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. Further discussion or debate? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Senator Durazo, do you want to close?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your vote. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having seized, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Dalhe. No. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. No. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. No. Laird. Aye. Limon. McGuire. Aye. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. No. Niello. No. Ochoa Bogh. No. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. No. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk. No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Glazer. Limon. Aye. Min. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Moving on to file item 126 by Senator Caballero. Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 831 by Senator Caballero an act relating to agricultural workers.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. And Members, I rise to present SB 831, which is back for concurrence. The Assembly amendments add intent language, and authorize the Governor, on behalf of the state, to enter into an agreement with the United States Attorney General or the United States Attorney General designee to establish a program to grant undocumented agricultural employees temporary relief to work and live in the United States. It's inconceivable that anyone would vote no. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion or debate on this matter? Discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil aye. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello aye. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Caballero aye, Ochoa Bogh aye. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 34 to five, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item 127 by the Committee on Governance and Finance.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 889 by the Senate Committee on Governance and Finance an act relating to taxation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 889 is the Senate Governance and Finance Committee's annual technical tax omnibus Bill, which is back on concurrent. The Bill contains changes suggested by the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration and the State Board of Equalization Assembly amendments make various technical and conforming changes, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure, it is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections. Ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly. Amendments are concurred in, moving on to file number 128. Secretary, please read
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 525 by Senator Durazo an act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I'm pleased to present SB 525, which is back in the Senate for a concurrent vote. SB 525 is the first in the nation historic investment in our health care workforce. The men and women, everyone who works in the workforce to keep us healthy, safe and alive. This Bill establishes a phasing schedule for healthcare facilities that will bring healthcare workers up to a minimum wage of $25 per hour, all while taking into account the unique needs of health facilities.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The final version of the Bill you are voting on today represents agreements that have been worked out with a broad and range of stakeholders to address concerns that they have raised to me to organizations. With the implementation of the Bill, all while still investing in their workforce, each sector participated and together crafted a comprehensive approach with amendments taken in the Assembly. Larger employers, for example, would begin investing in the workforce right away by going to $23 per hour.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Health facilities in rural and small county facilities would have more time to get, but start to the 25, but start at $18 right away. Cities and counties will not be prevented from raising their own workers wages, and would not be prevented from enacting a broad based minimum wage. There's no disruption in services at the community. Clinics and countyowned facilities will have a slight delayed implementation that will not impact local public sector bargaining.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Most of the opposition, including the clinics, counties, the Chamber, are now neutral on the Bill, and the California Hospital Association and Children's Hospital Association are now in support Members. This Bill is a statewide solution that accounts for regional and local differences, and more importantly, is a critical step to ensuring that we are addressing our healthcare workforce shortage. During the pandemic, everyone acknowledged the extraordinary courage of our healthcare workers.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And with SB 525, we can properly show our respect and gratitude and increase the wages of hundreds of thousands of healthcare workers across the state. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for aye vote on this historic investment in our workforce.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Durazo. I see microphones up for Senator Niello, Grove, Seyarto and Min. Begin with Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. So, I'm not sure how this broad based coalition came to an agreement. I have to suspect a prisoner's syndrome. They perhaps concluding this Bill is going to pass no matter what, and I suspect they lament the otherwise task that they'd have in fighting similar measures jurisdiction by jurisdiction throughout the state. And so I'm speculating they tried to make the Bill as least bad as they could.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
But as for me, I am very concerned about the health, financial health of our healthcare facilities, hospitals in particular, especially in rural areas, because raising the minimum wage isn't the only issue here. When you raise wages at the bottom of the scale of an organization, it compacts the difference between that wage and higher paid people. It's called wage impaction. And what it does is it causes the wages at the upper levels to increase to reestablish that relative difference.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Wage impaction will have a significant impact on the overhead of hospitals based upon this significant increase in minimum wage. But that's not all. You see exempt employees who are paid by salary, not hourly. They're not paid overtime. And because of that, they have a minimum wage that is double the minimum wage on an annual basis. In this case, the $25 figure is what I figured it out.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
But the lower to between 20 and 25 in any case, ends up in a minimum wage for exempt employees of $100,000 and increasing $100,000 for minimum for exempt employees. So just raising the minimum wage is a Low estimation of the impact it's going to have on the overhead of hospitals. Like I say, as for me, I am very concerned about the health of our healthcare facilities, especially hospitals. And if you are, you will join me in voting no on this.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I have microphones up for Senator Grove and Senator Men. Senator Grove followed by Senator Dahle.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I got this text from one of my hospitals that has really been struggling because of the population that I serve in the Central Valley. 70% of the people that they serve are medical recipients, and they're very concerned about medical rates and increases. So the text reads as follows, permission to read?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The text reads as follows: the impact of the $23 an hour as we don't have to meet the immediate 25 for other hospitals will be $13 million for Kaweah, $13 million without any increase or reimbursement, and $13 million that we don't have. The MCO's Tax and Distressed Hospital loan program celebrations certainly were very short lived.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
This wage increase, along with the associated increases in payroll taxes, retirement benefits, and other labor costs related to wage rates, will result in tens of millions of dollars in new, completely unfunded expenses for Kaweah health. We might as well give back the $20 million that we received in the distress hospital loan program as now we realize there will be no way that we can pay it back and have no financial health and recovery for Kaweah. We employ over 1600 people.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
We're a level two trauma center in the Central Valley. We have 670 beds, 1700 employees, and I don't understand how we're supposed to comply with this mandate. We have a CHA board that we feel like negotiated this balance and outcome and protected most hospitals, and that's the statement that they use. But they did no such thing.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Kaweah Health is surrounded by Adventist Health hospitals and Tulare, Hanford and Bakersfield, Selma, Reedley and Delano and Tachibi, who will be required to raise their minimum wage to $23 an hour on June 1, 2024. Kaweah Health is required to raise ours to $18 an hour, but will have no other choice but to raise it to $23 an hour to be competitive and keep nurses to treat the most vulnerable Members of society in the Central Valley that we serve medical recipients.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Health hospitals in Kaiser and Fresno, likewise, retail restaurants and hotels and other similar industries will in the community will also lose employees to hospitals. This is a ripple effect that will cause dangerous aftershocks to the Central Valley. For the fiscal year end of June 30, 2023, Kaweah Health lost $11.2 million, contributing to market deficits and overhead and indirect cost taking medical patients and emergency departments, another 70 million providing them with outpatient surgery.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
While I can never turn down a medical patient who presents themselves in the emergency room, I can begin to further reduce the amount of outpatient surgery that we provide for medical patients. This is not the California For All program the Governor or the Legislature touts and is definitely not access to health care. What an absolutely shame on a community for a community that has over 70% of its patients on MediCal respectfully asked for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, President. I rise in support of this Bill and appreciate all the hard work the author has done to get a broad based consensus behind the Bill. I got COVID my first week here in the Senate, as I think has been reported on, and when I was treated at a Kaiser hospital, the nurses and care workers were exceedingly helpful. We talked about essential workers at that time, but we can't just treat these workers as essential when it's convenient and then ignore them at other times.
- Dave Min
Person
$25 an hour works out to about a $50,000 a year salary. That is not a lot here in the State of California when we're talking about the high cost of living. So I would urge my colleagues to think about what it takes to live in this state when we're talking about healthcare workers, just the high cost of living that we have.
- Dave Min
Person
And while I recognize the point made by my colleague from Fair Oaks, I would just point out that hospital CEOs, on average, at nonprofits, make eight times what their average employees make. I think that wage compression is something that we're not seeing as much of in this era, when CEOs make so much more than their average employees. So I would respectfully urge you to vote for this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Min, Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Members. I also rise in opposition to this Bill. And as somebody who represents 15 counties, more land than many states are in the first Senate district with many rural hospitals who have been on the brink for a long time. If you're in Modoc County, you have to go 150 miles to have a child today. Not to mention the many rural clinics that we have that serve our constituents in these rural areas.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I know that the author talked about off ramps, but as my friend from Fair Oaks mentioned, the problem is the impaction that goes up and the availability for these workers and workforce. This is not just a nurse's Bill. This is for the line staff that works in these hospitals. And so I just want to go on record to say I know that the California Hospital Association has negotiated and is in support.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But I will tell you, as a business owner in California, I negotiate the death of my business every day. Here, we just prolong it. And this Bill, in my opinion, is a negotiation that will see hospitals go out of service and we will see rural health clinics for sure be severely impacted and probably go out of business. And for those reasons, I cannot support SB 525 and urge you a no vote on this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Dahle, any other Member want to be heard on this matter? Senator Niello, for the second time, yes.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you for the second time only because my name was mentioned in a comment just a few minutes ago implying that what I meant with regard to wage impaction or for that matter, exempt employees, that I meant CEOs. You did not hear me say CEOs. I didn't even mean a CEO. I wasn't even thinking about a CEO. Hospitals have hundreds, sometimes thousands of employees ranging from janitors to nurses to middle management, middle level managers to top metal managers to CEOs.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And wage compaction impacts everything all the way up. Probably CEOs the least, actually, or maybe even not at all. But there are hundreds of other employees, pay, that are impacted by wage impaction.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, any other Member want to be recognized on this measure? Seeing none. Senator Durazo, you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. President, and I appreciate all of the comments. When I first introduced this Bill on this floor, there was a lot of conversation. There was a lot of issues raised and concerns raised. And I took those to heart. And the organizations that I worked with took them to heart. We heard about the distressed hospitals, the small hospitals, the rural, the clinics could go on and on and on.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And what I'm most proud of is that they were all willing to have a conversation to do something about the wages of their workforce. These employers, businesses, industry leaders, along with SEIU, really talked about what does it take to have a strong, prosperous healthcare systems in California? And also include at the table the people who carry out and who work for us and who carry out the needs that we have as patients.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
So that's what I'm most proud of, of the organizations and the individuals who worked on this so much. And I lastly want to thank the pro TEM for her guidance in this process. It was very important. And I hope that with this we showed that we can all be talking about the same thing. Not picking one thing over the other, not picking the workforce over the success of a healthcare system, but out everything in a comprehensive way. With that Mr. President, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, secretary, please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Alvarado-Gil no. Limon aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, we're going to now move to two items that we passed up due to the hard work of our Majority leader. It's file item 40 and 41. We're going to turn first to file item 40 by Senator Mcguire. If the Secretary would please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 286 by Senator Mcguire an act relating to public resources.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Mcguire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you so much, Mr. President. Amendments taken in the Assembly on this Bill restructures the fishery working group and entice the framework for the working group to the Coastal Commission's coastal development permit process instead of the State Lands Commission lease process would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you Senator McGuire. Introducing the Bill. Senator Dahle for you.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Mr. President and Members, I've been waiting all night for the Majority Leaders Bill SB 286. I want to talk right to the amendments, something I've been talking about for a long time.
- Brian Dahle
Person
This allows the State Lands Commission to reasonably compensate mitigate for unavoidable impacts within the lease as provided clarifying the California Coastal Commission to actually spend money and go out and, quite frankly, work with the tribes, work with the fishing industry, and all those folks who are going to be, in my opinion, bought off as we move forward for offshore wind. And I want to now tie this to the other thing I was talking about earlier, the other Bill, which is central.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Every you have to have central procurement to make this happen. We just voted on central procurement that allows the Coastal Commission with DWR to be able to tax all ratepayers in California to go mitigate the impacts with the Coastal Commission. So make no mistake about it, these are tied together and this is going to drive rates up in California even higher. At the same time avoiding the impacts, the true impacts that are going to happen out in the ocean for offshore wind and with geothermal.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I want to make sure you clearly understand what's happening here. The ability for the Department of Water Resources and the state lands to work together to move forward on offshore wind, which I believe will be a huge impact not only to the environment, but to the fisheries, to tribes, and to the shipping industry at the same time. And this Bill right here, along with the other one, are going to be devastating to the prices of energy in California over the next 12 years. For those reasons, I ask for a no vote on the amendments and the Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Dahle, any further discussion or debate on this measure? Any further discussion or debate? Seeing none. Senator McGuire. You may close.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
So I want to be very clear about what this Bill is and what it does, and I'm going to be very brief on this, Mr. President. Number one, this cuts five years off of the permitting process by combining both the local and the state SQL process. Something that the other side has always wanted is to be able to streamline the permitting process for development in this state.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
I get it don't like offshore wind, but it does exactly where they have been focused on streamlining the permitting process. Two, it keeps both the federal environmental process NEPA and the state environmental process sequa completely intact. 110% full stop. Take a look at the Bill. Three, just like any large project in this state, of course there will be impacts. And so what this Bill does, it establishes three different tranches to be able to mitigate the impacts.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Number one, it establishes a career training Fund to be able to get impacted communities, communities of color, native communities, to work on offshore wind. We should be doing more of that. Number two, there will be an impact to the fleet, to the fishery community in the state. It provides them mitigation funding in case fishing grounds are impacted. That's how we do things in the United States. And then number three, it provides funding for impacted communities. This is like any other project would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye. Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd aye. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer aye. Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado aye. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire aye. Menjivar aye. Min aye. Newman aye. Nguyen no. Niello no. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth aye. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
A vote of 32 to eight the Assembly amendments are concurred in we're going to move next to file item 41 Senator McGuire. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 319 by Senator McGuire in accolade to electricity.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you so much. Last one, I promise. Mr. President amendment Sick and the Assembly require state energy agencies to develop electrical transmission infrastructure development process that describes the state's electrical transmission infrastructure planning and permitting process. With respect, ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members any discussion or debate on this measure is eligible for a unanimous roll call without objection. ayes 40, no zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we have a couple things that we still have to do tonight. We have bills on call. We have a second supplemental file that will be out shortly. We have motions and resolutions still to come. Members, just to make you aware, what's next going to what's next going to happen is we're going to take up a Bill without reference to file for new Members. This is a new experience. Perhaps this is SB 567 will be the next matter we'll hear without reference to file.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Give us a moment. And that's what's coming up next. You all right? Members, we're now going to go to a measure without reference to file. Without objection, we're going to hear SB 567 by Senator Durazo, seeing none. Secretary, please read
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 567 by Durazo, in accolading to tenancy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo, the floor is yours.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. SB 567. The California Homelessness Prevention Act is back for concurrence from the State Assembly. This Bill ensures that the California Tenant Protection Act of 2019 is enforceable. The latest version is the product of negotiations with several committees in both the Senate and the Assembly and stakeholders. It includes amendments such as delaying implementation of the Bill until April 1, 2024, as amended.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Some of the opposition has been removed, and I have committed to working with the California Apartment Association to address a minor language error with future legislation. Colleagues, we are all feeling the impact of the homeless crisis in our districts. More and more people are becoming unhoused at a rate faster than we are providing shelter. To address part of this crisis, we must stop the flow of families into homelessness. That's why it's important that our statewide tenant protections are actually enforceable. I respectfully ask for your vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So, discussion or debate on this Bill? Discussion or debate, Senator Jones?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise today to express some concerns regarding this measure, SB 567. For example, under SB 567, if a senior small housing provider inadvertently miscalculates the rental amount and asks for just one penny more in rent than is permitted by AB 14 than was permitted by AB 1482, they are potentially liable for attorneys fees and costs.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
To address this concern, on page 17 of the Assembly Judiciary Committee analysis, it states, in pertinent part, quote, the author may wish to consider limiting recovery of reasonable attorneys fees and charges to cases where the owner has acted willfully or with oppression, fraud, or malice. The author has not incorporated this amendment into the Bill. And for this type of measure, which fundamentally changes the negotiated deal on AB 1482 from 2019, it's important that we get it right. I ask for a no-vote this evening.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Is there further discussion or debate on this measure? Further discussion or debate? Seeing no microphones up. Senator Durazo, you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I respectfully ask for your vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Alvarado-Gil. Archuleta aye. Ashby aye. Atkins aye. Becker aye Blakespear aye. Bradford aye. Caballero aye. Cortese aye. Dahle no. Dodd. Durazo aye. Eggman aye. Glazer Gonzalez aye. Grove no. Hurtado. Jones no. Laird aye. Limon aye. McGuire. Menjivar aye. Min. Newman. Nguyen no. Niello. Ochoa Bogh no. Padilla aye. Portantino aye. Roth. Rubio aye. Seyarto no. Skinner aye. Smallwood-Cuevas aye. Stern aye. Umberg aye. Wahab aye. Wiener aye. Wilk no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado Gill no. Archuleta. Dodd. Glazer. Hurtado. McGuire. Aye. Min Newman. Niello no. Roth.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 24 to nine, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, if I can have your attention, please. We can be attended to these matters. We can get out of here a lot sooner. We're going to lift calls now. Everybody knows that button on your machine that you can press to see where you're off of bills. If you don't know that, ask Senator Eggman. She's a pro at this. Okay, so we're going to start lifting calls. To begin with. File item number six. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Ashby. Bradford. Cortese. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 38 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item number seven. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Go to file item number nine, SB 613. Secretary open the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 to one, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item number 10. SB 844. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese. Aye. Min. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Is there a corrected vote there or no? Okay. All right. On a vote of 39 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item number 14 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moved on to file item 15 by Senator Menjivar. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 16 by Senator Newman. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 44 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Grove. No. Menjivar. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 33 to seven, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item number 44 by Senator Ochoa Bogh. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Grove. Aye. Jones. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero on the urgency and 40 to zero on the measure, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 46 by Senator Roth. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 47, Senator Becker, secretary please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Durazo. Aye. McGuire. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Can I ask members to please give us your attention? Now, it's very difficult to hear up here and we have members who need to add on and they need to hear as well. So get the volume down, please. Thank you. We're going to move on to file item 48 file item 48 by Senator Bradford. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Ashby. Aye. Durazo. Gonzalez. Grove. Archuleta. Aye to no. Limon. McGuire. Min. Skinner. Smallwood-Cuevas. Stern. Wahab. Wiener. Grove. Aye
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27, 28 to two, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 49, Glazer. Please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Durazo. Aye. Limon. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Limon. Aye. Bradford Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file 51, Senator Becker, secretary please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado-Gil. No. Durazo. Aye. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 52 by Senator Nguyen. Please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 53 by Senator Dodd. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Durazo. Bradford. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file 54 by Senator Limon. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Nguyen. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to seven, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 55 by Senator Wiener. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Nguyen. No. Ochoa Bogh. No. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 56 by Senator Newman. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Nguyen. Aye. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 57 by Senator Blakespear. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Nguyen. No. Roth Rubio. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to nine, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 58, Senator Becker. Please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Durazo. Aye. Limon. Aye. Nguyen. No. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 to five, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 59 by Senator Stern. Please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Archuleta. Ashby. Blakespear. Aye. Caballero. Dodd. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Laird. Menjivar. Nguyen. No. Rubio. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Umberg. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 24 to 10, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file 62 by Senator Limon. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Nguyen. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Eggman. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 61 by Senator Blakespear. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Becker. Aye. Nguyen. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 63 by Senator Durazo. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nguyen. No. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 65 by Senator Seyarto. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Eggman. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 66 by Senator Caballero. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 67 by Senator Ashby. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dahle. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
A vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 68 by Senator Hurtado. Please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Seyarto. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 36 to three, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 70 by Senator Roth. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 72, Senator Bradford. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Blakespear. Cortese. Hurtado. Aye. Laird. Limon. Min. Skinner. Wahab. Smallwood-Cuevas, aye to no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 26 to six, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 73 by Smallwood-Cuevas. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Caballero. Hurtado. Aye. Newman Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to 10, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file 74 by Senator Allen. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford. Caballero. Dahle. Aye. Grove. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. Aye. Nguyen. Aye. Niello. Aye. Ochoa Bogh. Aye. Seyarto. Aye. Caballero. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the roll one more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file 75 by Senator Bradford. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Caballero. Aye. Hurtado. Aye. Nguyen. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 76 by Senator Durazo. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Alvarado-Gil. Blakespear. Caballero. Dodd. Caballero, aye. Dodd. Glazer. Min. Nguyen. No.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 to eight, the assembly amendments are concurred in. File item 77 by Senator Gonzalez. Secretary, please open the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nguyen. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Rubio. Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, just ask you to just stay at your seats, please. We're going to take a short pause. We're going to go to motions and resolutions in just a moment. Stay tuned. Members, we're going to go to motions and resolutions. I think there are a number of members who want to be recognized. Can we ask members to return to their seats, please? Could we ask all the members to return their seats? We'll begin with Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to submit a letter to the journal for SB 362 to clarify author's intent. Letter clarifies that by granting exemptions to allow data brokers to keep certain information, we do not allow data brokers to deny every deletion request without justification.
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's s SB 362. It's been approved by both sides. Thank you, Senator Becker. It has not? I want to recognize. Senator Jones. Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. On this motion for the letter, the Republicans would like to abstain, please. So if we could do a roll call vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, we're going to do members, a roll call vote on the submission of a letter on SB 362. We're just Senator Becker is asking for an aye, and Senator Jones is asking for an abstention. The Clerk would call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen. Aye. Alvarado-Gil. Aye. Archuleta. Aye. Ashby. Aye. Atkins. Aye. Becker. Aye. Blakespear. Aye. Bradford. Aye. Caballero. Aye. Cortese. Aye. Dalhe. Dodd. Aye. Durazo. Aye. Eggman. Aye. Glazer. Aye. Gonzalez. Grove. Hurtado. Aye. Jones. Laird. Aye. Limon. Aye. McGuire. Menjivar. Aye. Min. Aye. Newman. Aye. Nguyen. Niello. Ochoa Bogh. Padilla. Aye. Portantino. Aye. Roth. Aye. Rubio. Aye. Seyarto. Skinner. Aye. Smallwood-Cuevas. Aye. Stern. Aye. Umberg. Aye. Wahab. Aye. Wiener. Aye. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dahle. Gonzalez. Aye. Grove. Jones. McGuire. Aye. Nguyen. Niello. Ochoa Bogh. Seyarto. Wilk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to zero. The motion carries. All right, we're going to recognize Senator Gonzalez. What purpose do you rise?
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I request permission to submit a letter to the journal regarding AB 126 that will clarify the intent that both disadvantaged communities and low-income communities are eligible for equity-focused dollars awarded through the Clean Transportation Program. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. I see a potential objection. Senator Jones?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I would ask that the role from SB 362 be substituted for this vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. Without objection. Ayes 32, no zero. Motion carries. We're going to move next to Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I respectfully request to submit a letter to the journal for SB 525.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. I see. Senator Jones. Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I ask that a roll call from SB 362 be substituted for this roll call.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. Ayes 32, no zero. The motion carries. Senator Durazo, a second request.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to request unanimous consent to submit a letter to the journal regarding the intent of SB 567. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. That will be the order. Anything further, Senator Durazo? Senator Rubio, what purpose do you rise?
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to ask for unanimous consent to submit a letter to the journal for SB 558.
- Steven Glazer
Person
558. Without objection. That will be the order. Any other microphones up I cannot see? Senator Bradford?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. I would like to submit a letter to the journal regarding SB 842, stating the intentions to not interfere or impede local air district rules and regulations addressing refinery turnarounds and maintenance. We have agreement on both sides.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection, I'll be the order of the day. Any other... Senator McGuire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you so much, Mr. President. At the request of the author, I'd like to remove AB 1505, file item 86, move it to the inactive file.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. Any other microphones up that I cannot see? Maybe it's my eyes or the lateness of the hour. Okay, everybody ready for that supplemental file number two? Everybody ready for that? There is no supplemental file number two. All right, the following measures will be moved to the inactive file. File item five, SCR 72. File item 81, SCR 87. File item 84, ACR 84. File item 88, ACR 86. Without objection. Done. All right.
- Steven Glazer
Person
My favorite words here. Ladies and gentlemen, the desk is clear. Madame Pro Tem, the desk is clear.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. What a long but productive day. And as is typically true at this point of the evening, at the end of session, I wanted to take a minute to make some special acknowledgments and thanks, and then I'll turn it over to the Republican leader before we close out. And for your benefit, Mr. Presiding Officer, I want to be sure to let you know that these comments will constitute an over. He knows what I mean.
- Toni Atkins
Person
So some of you might ask how I feel about this being my last end of session as Pro TEM. Well, I'm not sure there's anything quite like the last day of session to underscore what my friend John Perez told me when I succeeded him as speaker. Some of you have heard me say this your happiest day is when you buy the boat, and your second happiest day is when you sell the boat. So tonight, as Pro Tem, I have that thought in mind.
- Toni Atkins
Person
In the meantime, I'm going to do my best to live up to the namesake of this wonderful gift and sash that my staff gave to me. So I said I would wear it. They bought it for me. What could I do? But it means continuing to be, in the words of my namesake, absolutely happy and productive every single day, not just nine to five. Though I think the hours will get easier once that boat sails past Coronado and up the northern coast. Mr. Majority Leader.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Where did he go? Up the coast. The northern coast. The boat will be sailing. It will land at a dock somewhere near you. One of the best things St. Dolly, the original backwoods Barbie has taught us, is to count our blessings and to be grateful. And I want to take a moment just to acknowledge some of the people that I am most grateful for tonight. And I'm going to start with our incredible Secretary of the Senate, Erika Contreras.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Erika, your partnership and friendship has meant the world to me. December will mark five years since you were elected by this House, and in that time, you have become a pillar of this institution and a respected guardian of the Senate. Our past, our present and our future. Thank you. And Chief Assistant Secretary Bernadette McNulty. And if the summer belonged to Barbie, the fall belongs to Bernie. Every year at the end of session, it's like watching Reggie Jackson in October.
- Toni Atkins
Person
You've seen them perform so well throughout the year, but then the pressure's on. They really shine. And that's Bernie, I want to thank. To that, I have to add the incredible desk staff. All of you are so conscientious from start to finish. The people's work would not get done without your long hours and your careful work. And I know that you'll still be working when we end this evening and wrap up. So I want to thank you.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And with that, most people don't quite understand, but there's so many people behind the scenes. I want to thank the staff that do engrossing and enrolling. It would mean nothing if we couldn't get the work completed by doing that. So I want to thank that staff and team as well.
- Toni Atkins
Person
We have to thank Kara Jenkins and Gabe Pettic and their teams at the Legislative Council and the LAO for thoughtfully guiding us through the enacting bills and the budget, and particularly as the last weeks come to closure, they are incredibly busy, especially Ledge Council. So I want to thank them. We have to thank our Chief Sergeant Katrina Rodriguez and all of our Senate sergeants. They're all around.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Additionally, our California Highway Patrol, who keep us safe, special Services, our incredible parking attendants, the Capitol security staff for all of the dedicated service in keeping us safe, ensuring the rights of Californians to address their government, and they are safely able to do that. I want to thank our Capital Health Services team and Jennifer Hatfield. Variants and viruses may keep on coming, but they are right here helping us be prepared and able to fight back. So thank you to them, and they're still here.
- Toni Atkins
Person
So I want to make sure we also acknowledge our DGs and Housekeeping staff. I want to thank each of them for their hard work and diligence in the historic capital, in the lob, and in the swing space. I know it's been a lot more difficult since COVID and certainly with the construction. Please know that we appreciate each and every one of you, and we respect you and the work that you do for us.
- Toni Atkins
Person
I also want to thank the Legislative Data Center, the call moderators, and all who've helped to maintain and expand the public's ability to interact with us, the Senate, and who keep our vital technology up and running. And you have to think about it, especially now, our legislative travel staff, who help get us home and back and everywhere in between, and who are probably hoping we are going to wrap up soon. So you make those early flights that they have you scheduled on.
- Toni Atkins
Person
I have to thank our Committee staff, our incredible Committee staff who once again have worked around the clock. Their analysis, your analysis, is crucial to making our bills and legislation better. And I have to say thank you to all of our staff, the ones who work on our bills, from drafting to signing, who make sure that our message gets through to the public and to the press and to our constituents. You are incredible, and we thank you.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And while I'm on it, I want to thank the media and the press. As our presiding officer knows, and he's done legislation on this, a democracy needs a free and independent press. We appreciate your standing guard and even holding us accountable in doing that work. And finally, I want to take the privilege of thanking my own amazing staff, including my leadership team. Nick Hardeman, there are no words, and I certainly can't look at you right now.
- Toni Atkins
Person
But there is enormous respect and appreciation and much love to you and Katie and the incredible Damien and Alex Pam Iisen, who leads my amazing team in the district office and has never once taken her finger off the pulse of the community that I represent nor away from our constituents. Diane Griffiths, thank you so much for coming back. You've been my go to person on so many things, especially the tough job of working to change the culture in this capital.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And Kimberly Rodriguez, better known as k rod by our majority leader. There isn't an action taken on this floor that hasn't crossed your desk. I want to thank you for the due diligence that you do so well and your sense of organization is really unmatched. And to Chris Woods, I can't count how many times I've said the words more than a decade of responsible budgets by Democrats. But I do know you have been responsible for so much of that success and that work.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Nisha Fritz, the skills and empathy that you have as a former journalist and someone who helped advocate for the rights of educators, you've been the perfect person to lead the comms team and you gave me access to baby goats. Special mention.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Michelina woods, you've been such a great leader for the caucus and thank you for all the hard work you're doing even as I speak to help us highlight the good work from this session as we close to Grace Davis and my incredible scheduling team, you're like air traffic controllers playing Tetris on a roller coaster. I don't know how you do it, but I appreciate each and every one of you.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Vanessa, Hazen and Kyle, who's now gone over to help the speaker and to the leadership staff for Senator Jones and the Republican caucus, I want to recognize you and thank you. Senator Jones, I know that Kusi dinged you for being nice to me, but I surely appreciate it. You're a great advocate for your district and your caucus, and I want you to know you're absolutely enough. You got to see the movie.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Senator Mcguire and the majority leaders team, I've said it before, we've worked together as partners. You're always there pushing tough wins across the finish. Know there's a famous saying, coffee is for closers. Well, you certainly are an amazing closer, but giving you coffee is a little like putting an outboard motor on a comet.
- Toni Atkins
Person
To our Senate Committee chairs, all of you, thank you for your heavy lifting all year round and your willingness to serve in these vital leadership roles and doing the hard work to each and every one of my colleagues. Each of us has the honorable distinction of doing the people's work on behalf of roughly a million people. Our work is far from easy, but it is work that we are so privileged to be able to do.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Five years and six months ago, almost to the day, I stood at the dais and I pledged to work hard every day to earn the trust that the Senate had placed in me. I hope you have found that to be true. I am incredibly grateful for this opportunity that I've had to work for my constituents, for the Senate, and for all Californians, and I have loved it every step of the way.
- Toni Atkins
Person
I think if someone had told me 40 years ago when I was coming to San Diego to help my sister with her newborn baby that I would be in a position in this position and have the opportunities that I've had, I would never have believed them. But that's the California dream, and so many of you have similar dreams, and you've seen them come through. I intend to keep paying that dream forward, and so I want to thank you.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And now I have the incredible opportunity to turn it over to a longtime colleague and friend from San Diego County Leader Jones wants to be able to share some remarks as well.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, madam Pro Tem. It is an honor to be here this evening as we close out this session. This is my 11th end of session evening, and I think one of the historic things about this end of session is this is the first time in history that both the Pro Tem and the Minority Leader have been from the County of San Diego. So I think that that's a big deal for both of our constituents but also for the entire state as well.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
But I'm always conflicted when we get to this point of the evening, when we are properly congratulating each other for the hard work that we've done and the amount of bills that have been passed and the late nights that we've put in this week. Although thanks to the majority Leader, those nights weren't so late. He ran a tight ship this year, and we were able to get out of here earlier on some of these evenings. I lost the over, by the way.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I thought we'd be out by 10:00 because personally, my preference would be about 85% of the bills die and we not work so hard to get them out of the Senate. And my preference would be to come in on Monday and let's just do all the support supports and hang out for the rest of the week and then come here on midnight and close it down.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
But I want to acknowledge some pretty interesting things that I found about this, and I hope you will find as well. When we talk about the smooth end of session, I think when their history is written of Senate Pro tempores, and if there's ever a Mount Rushmore of Senate Pro Tem's, Senate Pro Tem Atkins' face will be on that Mount Rushmore because this is the first smooth end of session she's had as Pro Tem. So I'll highlight some un-smooth end of session shenanigans that happened in 2019.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Of course, we had a foreign object thrown over the rail up on the top of the gallery at the end of session in 2020, some ridiculous Republican Senator got COVID and almost all the Republican Members were barred from the floor session, resulting in a partially remote end of session. But I will say it was the best day of Senator Nielsen's life in the Senate when he was the only Republican on the floor. In 2021, there was a Gubernatorial recall with rowdy crowds protesting COVID policies.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This was also the last legislative session in the historic Capitol, which I know many of us and others that serve in the Capitol miss. As I said, President Pro Tem Tony Atkins deserves an award for getting us through these historical end of sessions. But I want to give you some console on this. I don't want you to think that you're unique in these tough end of sessions.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
In fact, in 1861, after all those crazy events, there was still a better end of floor session in 1861, where a strong disagreement during an end of session resulted in a duel. And one of them did lose. And it was hosted at the Assembly Speaker's house in Marin County. And that wasn't the only duel at end of session in the 18 hundreds. They were a little crazy back then.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
As Minority Leader of the Senate, it has been a great honor of mine this year to serve all of you and to serve with all of you. I want to join the Pro Tem in thanking a lot of people as well. I'd like to thank my fellow Republican Senators that trusted me with the mantle of leadership this year.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I appreciate all of you and the hard work that you do and the trust that you have put in me and your patience and your guidance over these last 10 months. Thank you very much. I want to acknowledge those that some that the Pro Tem have already recognized, the Chief Assistant Secretary to the Senate, Bernadette Mcnulty. Bernie, thank you very much. The Republicans love you too. Bernie's Boss, the Secretary of the Senate, Erika Contreras. You know, other Republican leaders have said this too when they came.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I got a whole new appreciation for Erika as a result of being in leadership. And I just have to tell her thank you, because when we came in in January, we made a lot of changes in our staff. Some of our Members didn't have staff. We had to pull policy consultants out of retirement to come back to work. And Erika helped make that smooth and helped us get that done. So thank you very much for all the hard work that you've done serving us this year.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I appreciate it. And the floor staff, the entire desk team and everybody that helps us in the back of the House and all over. Thank you all as well, again to Katrina Rodriguez, the Chief Sergeant, and all of the Sergeants for the great work that they do keeping us safe. With respect to the Republican staff, I'd like to thank my Capitol office and my district office for working solid together so that I didn't have to worry about them while I was working on caucus stuff.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And thank you to all the Republican staffers, both in the lob and in the swing space and in all the district offices that serve our constituents with honor and integrity. The Senate is much appreciated. A huge round of applause to our outstanding Senate Republican caucus staff, policy consultants that analyzed thousands of bills, fiscal consultants that spent nights going through the budget and fiscal impacts of the bills, communication staff that have helped us communicate to the public about all the work we're doing in the legislation.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I just want to park real quick on the policy and fiscal consultants for the Republicans. I don't know what the ratio is, but I think the staff ratio is less than the actual Member ratio. And when you all are passing fiscal bills and policy bills late on a Sunday or sometime on a weekend, our folks don't get it until Sunday night or Monday morning. And they have to have that prepared for us by Monday sometimes and Tuesday when committees start.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
So our fiscal and policy staff, I really want to recognize and acknowledge the extra hard work that they do to keep up with everything that's going on in the Senate. I want to thank the Majority Leader, Mr. Mike Mcguire, for his collaboration and operations of the Senate. Although we've known each other for a little while, I've greatly enjoyed working with you closely this past year.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I congratulate you on being President Pro Tm Elect of the Senate and look forward to a long and continuing leading of the Senate together through next year and the year after. Last but not least. Once again, I want to thank President Pro Tem Tony Atkins. Your leadership of this upper House is highly valued and I appreciate that.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
You have always treated us with respect despite any policy disagreements that we have in advancing the tradition of the Senate being a civil institution, there's a saying that I subscribe to that everything rises and falls on leadership, and that rises and rises on your leadership, and I appreciate it. Thank you very much.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Mr President. You're going to love this. All of you will. The next floor session is scheduled for Wednesday, January 3, 2024. Somebody put 23 here. 2024 at 02:00 p.m.. Good night, everybody.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, the Senate will reconvene Wednesday, January 3, 2024 at 02:00 p.m.. The Senate is adjourned.
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