Senate Standing Committee on Transportation
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The Transportation Committee will come to order. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome. We do have a large agenda today with 17 measures on the agenda. I know with some of these measures, there are a lot of supporters and a lot of opponents. So we can complete today's work on a timely basis. We're going to have time limits on testimony. Most of you are used to that. The two primary witnesses for each side will be allowed two minutes each.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
For all others wishing to testify, please limit your comments to your name, affiliation and position on the measures. Let's establish a quorum Committee assistant, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senators Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Here.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese here. Niello. Niello here. Alan. Alan here. Archuleta. Blakespear. Blakespear here. Dahle. Dahle here. Dodd. Gonzalez. Laird. Laird here. Limon. Newman. Nguyen. Portantino. Portantino here. Seyarto. Seyarto here. Umberg. Senator Dodd is here as well.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we do have a quorum. Before we hear from authors, a couple of announcements. Item 12, SB 1276 by Senator Archuleta, is off. We will not be hearing that today. We also have two measures proposed for consent today. The proposed consent items are item three, file item three, which is SB 1285 by Senator Laird, and file item 11, SB 1158, by Senator Archuleta. Does any Member wish to remove either of those items from consent? If not, can I get a motion for consent?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The motion from Senator Dodd. Can we get a roll call on the motion, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is the consent calendar. Senators Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese aye. Niello. Niello aye. Allen. Allen aye. Archuleta. Blakespear. Blakespear aye. Dahle. Dodd. Gonzalez. Dodd aye. Laird. Laird aye. Limon. Newman. Nguyen. Portantino. Portantino aye. Seyarto. Seyarto aye. Umberg. 81.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So there's eight aye votes, and we'll leave the consent calendar on call. Now let's go to our first author. The file item number one is SB 898. Skinner. Senator Skinner, please come forward and you may present when ready.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you. Mr. Chair and members, the bill will have these author amendments that the uv window filtering will now apply to specified large trucks and bus driver side windows, not to passenger car and trucks. And the effective date is moved to 2032. So those are the amendments. So why am I introduced? This bill, SB 898, deals with the fact that in our vehicles, the windshields have UV filtering, but the rest of of the windows the do not.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And as a result of the lack of UV filtering on all other windows in a car, we have an interesting phenomenon of a large occurrence of left side skin cancers. So in the US, it's left side skin cancers because the driver, it is their left side. So this can be on their face, their arm, that is on facing that window that does not have this filtering. This same phenomena occurs in Australia, but on the right side.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So it is a factor of the lack of UV filtering. Now, if we were to add this UV filtering to all of the windows on all vehicles in the US, we would avoid 200,000 cases of skin cancer a year. 200,000 cases. So this bill is a health protection measure, a consumer protection measure. But with the amendments, it will now primarily protect those folks who drive for a living.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But I hope as time goes on, that other members, and maybe the car manufacturers themselves, will add this UV filtering to all of our windows to protect all the passengers in a car or in a vehicle and all the drivers. Let me have my witnesses for support. Oh, let me just make this other point. There are two researchers. They will not be my main witnesses, but they'll probably be add ons as me, too, and support.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But these two researchers were diagnosed with left side skin cancer, which caused them to begin to research this. So they are two of the main researchers that have added to our body of knowledge about this factor, that the lack of UV screening on windows is causing these cancers.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But meanwhile, allow me to have Louis Costa, from the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation workers to testify, as well as Dr. Christopher Zachary, who is a professor and chair emeritus of the Department of Dermatology at UC Irvine.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Please come forward. You can come on in. Thank you. You may proceed in whichever order you prefer. And you'll have a couple minutes each. Thank you for being here.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Thank you very much, Senator Cortese and colleagues. As I said, I'm professor and chair emeritus of the Department of Dermatology at UC Irvine. I'm an academic dermatologist. In fact, the last 26 years I've been at UCSF and UC Irvine, and I'm an expert in skin cancer and melanoma, having treated about 20,000 cases of skin cancer, including about 3000 melanomas. I actually had skin cancer myself, left side of my face, and my daughter had melanoma.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
And I'm sorry to say that many of you are likely to get skin cancer, or maybe you've already had skin cancer in your lives, and you probably know a few people who have had melanoma and might have passed from it. The cause of melanoma is complex, and it's not all UVA. I just want you to understand this. But UVA is an important factor in the development of this, particularly in this country.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Peer reviewed journals from the NIH, from the American Academy of Dermatology, the American Medical Association, the British Association of Dermatologists have consistently confirmed a left sided predominance of melanoma as being a real phenomenon. Sadly, skin cancer kills, and especially melanoma, which tends to spread to the lungs, the liver, the bone, the brain, and it is a difficult way to pass, in fact, particularly since it would be possibly prevented by an avoidance of UVA at risk of those who drive for extended periods, particularly truck drivers.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Their left side of the bodies is subject to 200% more UVA light than the right side. UVA blocking glass is available. Some vehicles already have it. If we use this on all vehicles in the US, it would virtually eliminate skin cancer related vehicle related to vehicle transportation. That would be 200,000 cases in the US and about 4000 deaths by melanoma. The fact is that there will be a reduction in skin cancer if UA UVA blocking technology is installed. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness, please.
- Louie Costa
Person
Good afternoon, Chairman Cortese, committee members, Louis Costa with Smart Transportation Division, proud sponsor of SB 898. As Senator Skinner stated, SB 9898 will require new trucks and buses sold in California to have driver side window protects us 98% of the UV rays to protect our operators and truck drivers from the consistent exposure. Smart Transportation Division represents thousands of bus operators in California, along with all the other tens of thousands of operators and truckers. Protecting the health of our members is the most top priority.
- Louie Costa
Person
Our members, as part of their daily jobs, operate buses and other vehicles for many hours a day, while the average American only drives or sits behind the wheel 55 minutes a day. A truck driver or a bus operator could be there upwards of 600 minutes a day, greatly increasing their exposure to uv radiation and the associated risk of skin cancers. Some of our members, both during a lengthy career and after retirement, have developed skin cancer.
- Louie Costa
Person
The exposure from the unprotected driver's side window was undoubtedly a factor in those cases and presents a continuous health risk. To our operators over the rest of their lives.
- Louie Costa
Person
By requiring vehicle manufacturers to create simple filtering on the driver's side, SB 898 will provide much needed protection for these essential workers out there, providing essential service to other California workers day in and day out, and they'll protect them from the ultraviolet radiation of the sun. We want to thank Senator Skinner for bringing this legislation forward. We thank you, Mr. Chairman of your committee, for their work. We thank the committee for hearing us today, and we respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Are there others in the committee room wish to come forward with a support position?
- Scott Wetch
Person
Mr. Chairman and members, Scott Wetch, on behalf of the Western States Council of Sheet Metal Workers and the State Association of Electrical Workers, in support. Thank you.
- Don Schinske
Person
Thank you. Don Schinske, on behalf of the California Society of Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery, in support.
- Zong Lore
Person
Zong Lore with the California School Employees Association, in support.
- Scott Brent
Person
Hello, Scott Brent with the Smart Transportation Division here representing 36 locals throughout California, 7600 members and we are in support. Thank you.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Helmer Lazardi, on behalf of the California Labor Federation, in support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. We do have a primary opposition witness? Curt Augustine, I believe. Would you come forward? Welcome again. You'll have a couple minutes?
- Curt Augustine
Person
Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Hello.
- Curt Augustine
Person
My name is Curt Augustine. I'm the senior director of government affairs for the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the trade association of the auto industry, as well as many of the technology providers for automobiles. We still maintain an opposed position to the bill, but do appreciate the efforts that the center has made to removing passenger car vehicles out of the. But our main issue is the definitions are a little vague and it would, I think unintendedly still include many of the larger pickup trucks based on weight.
- Curt Augustine
Person
And we would like to work with the committee and the chair to fix this. So we focus the exemptions on what I believe is the Senator's intent to do that. There is also still some concern as well, depending on how that could be worked out, having to produce a California only type of vehicle. And that's going to be somewhat unworkable. And again, there are some extended concerns with the thicker glass about law enforcement and first responders being able to do that.
- Curt Augustine
Person
I think this can be worked out. But again, we are seeking those tighter definitions to really implement the vision that this senator is espousing. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. Are there others in the committee room who wish to come forward, forward and express an opposition position? Seeing none, we will come back to the committee at this point. Yes, Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I have some questions. Starting off with the statistics, the staff report indicates that 53% of skin cancers occur on the left side of the body. That means 47% do not. That's not exactly an overwhelming proof, frankly, of anything. That's a pretty relatively even distribution of the occurrence. And then further, while you cited the, it was an Australian study, or was it New Zealand where they drive on the other side of the street?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Well, it was in the, I used Australia as the example, but in all countries where the driving is on the opposite side as to how we drive, they find the same kind of pattern of occurrence of skin cancer on their right side versus the left side.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Not according to the staff report. It says that, however, no studies have conclusively proven this link. In fact, a more recent study of thousands of cases found that melanoma was more commonly found on the left side of the body in the US and in England, Finland, the Netherlands, Scotland and even Australia. So I'm wondering why there appears to be this overwhelming proof when the statistical distribution is not that convincing.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And then conflicting studies where they do drive on the wrong side of the street, excuse me, the other side of the street, still the predominant side of the occurrence, is the same as in the US.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Well, I can't speak to the exact citation of the staff's report. There are, however, studies that have shown the correlation that I described, but additionally, the left side, if we're talking about the pattern of left side, that is the driver. Right? And so, while my bill. Now, my bill originally was for all windows, because I was trying to protect everybody, but it makes sense for drivers who. People who drive for a living to be protected, especially because they're going to be in a car more.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
However, as the passenger, you are still, if you're in the car just as much as any driver or your kids, then they are getting that UV through whatever side of the car they're sitting in. So if they're in a car for a long time. So this may address why the discrepancy on, you know, that left side may not be as dominant, because, again, it would be. You are getting this uv through any window now, other than the windshield in most vehicles. Not all.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Some vehicles have the tinting everywhere, but not all.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
That's interesting speculation. The problem is, I don't see where the data proves it, particularly the. Now, one could say that the 53, 47 distribution of right side, left side is because all of it's caused by people being in vehicles, and therefore there's going to be a certain incident of passengers being inflicted also. But I don't see anywhere in here or in your information, proof that this is causation, other than it seems to be based upon physical evidence.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And the problem is that we're having a significant impact on the production of vehicles, which might end up likely affecting the rest of the country, also increasing the cost of vehicles for something that appears to me to be tenuously supported by the evidence.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Well, you will note that I did not assert that all skin cancers come from this factor.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Precisely my point.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But the point is that there is a higher incident of the left side cancers. And again, there's, you know, I could pull up, we could have a little, you know, data fight about, you know, how many studies there are and how many. Right. But basically, the literature that my staff and I reviewed and that are witnesses, including the dermatologist and the Dermatological Association, and plus the researchers that are here shows this correlation.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Now, will this in any way, and let's say we are, let's say my bill was back to all windows, would it eliminate skin cancer? No, I would never assert that. But I think we mistakenly think that somehow we're safe in our cars. We realize, well, not everyone uses their sunblock. I think we've all had enough warnings that if we're outside and in the sun, that we should be using at least SPF 30 to protect ourselves from skin cancer.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But we may not even think about that when we are in a vehicle, and it is already the fact that this uv protection is in windshield windshields. So this would add it for only certain classes of vehicles that are usually driven by people who work for a living to just that driver side window.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I'm still skeptical of the data.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you, Senators. Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I appreciate the bill. I recognize it's been skinny down, but it seems like it's still a benefit and maybe it will expand later or it will happen automatically when car manufacturers decide to do that for safety reasons. I wanted to just ask you to clarify for me what is the relationship between making it UV protective and the tempered glass, or the type of shattering that happens in the windshield so that it falls into little blocks instead of it being in sharp shards?
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I just wanted to understand if there's a corresponding reduction in safety from having uv protection or if there's no effect.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
There are some. Some auto glass with UV protection is difficult to break. And so there have been some safety concerns that if the standard were to be the kind that is difficult to break, that you are, that we would be creating another unintended consequence of less safety. So we're trying to achieve that balance of providing the UV protection while still ensuring that safety to be able to, if you have to break the window to get out, that you can still do that.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Right. But so I understand what you're saying about it being more difficult to break, but when it is broken, is it the safety glass or is it the less safe when second glass, the question. Of it being tempered glass. Right. I just don't know if everyone knows the definition of tempered, you know? Yeah. In little blocks. Yeah.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I was going to address this bust out.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Apologies.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Oh, it's okay.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Ask the science fellow. The kind of glass, the kind of UV protection we're specifying would allow for the window to be broke, in effect, not into shards, but in effect, in one piece.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Okay, thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yes, Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Kind of along those lines. If you've ever tried to break out or punch out a windshield, you'll find you can't, you can stick a pickaxe through it and it'll just make a little hole. And it takes a lot of energy and a lot of effort to try and get that window out. That's why generally, unless the window has been popped out by major trauma to the car, we don't usually try to use the front window if we don't have time.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If we have time, we can do it, but a lot of times we don't have time. I'm talking ems and public safety. This side window, those windows, you can simply take out a little punch, tap it, and the window falls into little beads and falls out of the way. And when that's important is when you do have car fires associated with an overturned vehicle or something like that, if the window isn't broken out, or a lot of times it'll break out already.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And that gives them an escape path. The issues I'm concerned about is if it doesn't break out and it just stays in one sheet and a person is trying to get out, and that's their only escape path, what do they have to go through?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Because they only have a couple seconds before the smoke overwhelms them to get themselves out, and much less when we get there or when law enforcement or fire get there, and they go through the process of trying to figure out how to extract a person, especially under duress like that. So I guess my question for the persons who are going to manufacture and place these into the side windows, is this going to affect the ability of that side window to break into the little beads?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Because that's where we're going first, because there's always a driver or is it going to hold it into a sheet?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you for the question. First of all, I would say that the Tesla has uvB, uvA, and for that matter, infrared blockage in their windows. And this does not appear to be a problem. Secondly, I would say that Toyota for the last 10 years has understood that there is this problem with regard to uva. They have an ability, tempered glass, to block uva.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So it is not without the bounds of the motor manufacturers to actually do this in a manner that won't put much weight on the car, would hardly cost any more, maybe $0. And yet it has the impact to help a lot of people.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Now, according to the staff report, which had one paper in which it compared melanoma in England, Scotland and several European countries where, by the way, they drive on the right, it was a small numbers and we should be looking at something like the Sears report, with 100,000 patients still be able to get the support. What we're looking at here is actually, we gave the minimum numbers, we said a 5% difference between those who get melanoma with Uva and those who don't.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It's probably a lot more than that. It's probably more like 15%. And in any event, I would say. I would suggest that we look at the papers with much larger numbers.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I have a question for him. Follow up?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, that's fine. I want to just make sure the Q and A... I know you have a desire to answer all the questions that have been asked that you've heard, but we need to keep it just to the...
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Thank you for that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
To the current question. And, you know, in the interest of time and efficiency.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So I can quickly understand that laminate versus. So the Federal Transportation Safety Board has recently released something indicating that a laminated glass can be safer for escape purposes. So there obviously still lots of research being done on that. But in crafting the amendments and in designing it, we were aware of the safety concern and did and are doing our best to address it based on the research that is available.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Okay, thank you. In your studies, did it also discern between people who drive? Because a lot of people drive with their windows rolled down and their arm hanging out. When I'm driving and the sun is shining, I use the thing to keep the sun off my face. If I'm driving with my top down or something like that, I always have sunscreen on. So there's a lot of human factors that people can do to go ahead and address those issues.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And in fact, at work, when we're out in the sun and we're going out, we have to put sunscreen on. That's part of our safety protocol. So there are some jobs where there is a safety protocol. There is nothing that will protect us if we roll the window down. And so it just seems like there's a lot going on here that probably doesn't have to go on at all.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I think the industries themselves, because when their workers get sick, they usually respond with new protocols for workers that are either driving or being exposed. And I think that's where this kind of lays is it's in the purview of the person driving and the people working. If we start modifying vehicles away from quick access, then we're going to have issues. But there's also, you know, we have the screening devices. Have you studied those to see if they adequately block the UV rays from devices?
- Christopher Zachary
Person
When you say the screening devices, what specifically are you talking about?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Well, there's devices you can put on. They have little suction cups.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Oh, I see. It's noted. I'm sure it cuts down on the amount of UVA. And I will tell you that that is noticed in the papers. But no, they have not specifically looked at that. What I would say is let's not look at the northern climes where the sun doesn't shine. Let's look in this country, particularly in the south where there's a lot of UVB, UVA to look at the relative...
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I look at Southern California, that's where I grew up. And it shines a lot down there.
- Christopher Zachary
Person
Down here. But in Finland, for instance, or wherever, or in northern England, as you know, I was brought up in a country where the sun doesn't shine.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Okay.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We won't ask you to go any further.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
That's all. You know, that's all. I'm fine, thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Anybody else?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Mr. Chair, I just was wondering if Mr. Augustine might have anything to add to our discussions.
- Curt Augustine
Person
Yeah, I can address Senator Seyarto's question. Under the proposal, the window, driver's side window would be like the windshield and it would have that same challenge of breaking into it. So that's spot on. And that's where our concern is, is under the way the language is currently drafted, there are many pickups that would be, are sold today that would have to meet this qualification.
- Curt Augustine
Person
So the exemption is not as broad as... There are regular size pickup trucks that would be required under this bill to meet this standard. So that would create two different standards within the country and would cause a lot of different design problems with the doors and all that. And not to mention the glass issue.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Excuse me, hold on. The bill does not specify that that side window on the vehicles that we've now amended would affect has to be the exact type of same glass of the windshield. It can be tempered. So I want to put that in the record. That is the way the bill is designed. So, to Mr. Augustine's point, it is not the fact that the bill is written to require.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I'm going to bring it back to the Committee. There's no other questions on the floor, so we're done with questions and answers. And to the author, I appreciate you working with the Committee. This bill has gone through significant iterations and amendments already, and I trust that you can confirm that you'll be, you'll continue to work on these issues. I think I've heard you say that in your presentation.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Yes.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
That's our understanding here amongst the Chair and Committee staff.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Yes.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you, and you're welcome to close.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Appreciate your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. We'll ask the Assistant to call the roll call, please. Do we have a motion? Do we have a motion? Thank you, Senator Archuleta.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number one. The motion is do passed and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote is four to three, and we'll keep the bill on call. Thank you. Next up, we have file item two, Senator Laird. Welcome. You may present when ready.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm presenting Senate Bill 930, which establishes the Memorial Highway Signage Fund to promote equity in memorial highway designations. Last year, I had a resolution to name a highway in California for one of our late colleagues who had been a Legislator on the Central Coast. I thought it would be a good idea if I got co-authors of everybody still in the Legislature that served with him.
- John Laird
Legislator
And I had trouble for a while getting everybody to sign on because, of the 642 memorial highways or transportation structures in the state, 82% are named for men. And as a result, there are some Members that aren't enthusiastic about stretching that inequity further. So what this bill does is set up a fund, because signs can cost between eight and $10,000, and for some that may not be attainable. And then we move to try to get toward equity in the naming.
- John Laird
Legislator
And this does not mean we don't name, continue to name, transportation items for fallen officers or others that are men. It means that we have a process for equity to try to move up and make sure that, over time, we catch up. Because we all know, whether it's Sally Ride, the first woman to walk into space, or Dianne Feinstein, the longest serving us Senator in history, or Maya Angelou, noted author, that there are plenty of qualified people we should honor as we move toward that equity.
- John Laird
Legislator
I want to be clear that I want to thank the Committee staff for working with my office on this. I will be accepting the Committee amendments clarifying that the Legislature should determine if a highway naming should draw from the established fund rather than Caltrans. As the bill continues through to the Assembly, I'll work with both policy committees to ensure alignment. Were having conversations with Caltrans and we'll work on funding separately from this bill. So this bill has no costs. The bill has no registered opposition. I would respectfully ask for an aye vote. And I have no lead witness.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. No lead support witness. Is there anyone in the room who wishes to express a support position? Seeing no one come forward. Are there any opposition witnesses? Seeing no one come forward. We are going to bring it back to the Committee. Yes, Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
I'll move the bill at the appropriate time.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Yeah. My concern about the bill is that currently it's pretty much fallen officers that get honored on a memorial thing. I, frankly, personally don't believe that it needs to be extended to public officials or other people that should be just singled out to be on a highway thing. There's plenty of other memorials that can be done that way. As far as the racial and gender equity, we're doing a section of freeway down in our area.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
It was after Darnell Calhoun, who was a black officer from my city that was shot and killed last year. Up by Davis, that section is named after a female officer who was killed up there. So I think that's kind of because there's been not as many females in those lines of work. I think that issue is kind of separating itself out. But I really hesitate to start naming every structure after every person.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
You know, not every person, but people that we're going to single out as symbolic of greatness. Hopefully, that's not what any of us are here for. I certainly, if that ever happened in my city, I would raise up out of my grave and go speak out against it, and so don't even try it someday. So, anyway, I'll be laying off your bill today. I'd rather this just be for the officers that patrol our streets and highways and die in the line of duty. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Seeing no other request to speak, we do have a motion from Senator Dodd. And we'll call the...
- John Laird
Legislator
Mr. Chair, could I close?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I'm sorry. Yes, you can.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you. Because I would like to just make the comment that the cat is out of the bag. If you are in my district, the Watsonville freeway is named after Oscar Rios, a former mayor. The highway is named after Henry Mello, a former state senator. Bizz Johnson has a highway named for him that is in Sonoma. Frank Belotti, a former Assembly Member, has a highway name for him. And I imagine if I had a list, I could get easily to a substantial number.
- John Laird
Legislator
And so there are numbers of highways named for people that were not fallen officers, firefighters, or Caltrans workers. And we do need a process to have equity in that. And I get the fact that, maybe next year, when we finally have a majority of women in the State Senate, we will finally get to the point that we will have more eligible candidates for equity if we name it for legislators. But I think that this inequity is felt acutely by the Members of the Legislature and people that are in the 18% and not the 82%. This gives a good process. I ask for an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you, Senator. Appreciate your work on this. And the motion by Senator Dodd is do pass as amended to Approps. I'm sorry, that's the wrong bill. It would be do pass. It is do pass as amended to Approps. That's where both your bills are going to end up.
- John Laird
Legislator
Well, no, they're not going to end up there. They're just going there next.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We'll see. We wish you the best, of course. Assistant, go ahead and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number two, SB 930. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote is 72. We'll keep the Bill on call. Thank you. Item four is next up, Senator Wiener on SB 960. Welcome, and you can proceed whenever you're ready, Senator.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister chair. I'm here today to present SB 960. I think a few of you, Senator Porntino and Senator Dodd, may remember this is a. We did a similar version of this Bill when we all first arrived in the Senate. Worked on it for a few years, and we're continuing the work today. SB 960. Will require Caltrans to improve pedestrian and cyclist safety as well as public transportation on our state highway system. And the focus of this Bill is the state highway system.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That any normal person would just say that's a city surface street. That's the real focus of the Bill. We are in a traffic safety crisis. About 4000 Californians die every year on our roads, and many of them are pedestrians. Many of them are drivers and they're cyclists. And we have 1100 pedestrians who die just because they're walking on our streets. Our state owned roads, many of which function as main streets even in local communities, are all too often quite dangerous.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Many lack sidewalks, many lack crosswalks, any kind of bike infrastructure, and many facilitate high speeds. These local streets often host important backbone public transportation lines in our community, where buses are stuck in traffic and not prioritized in any way, where people are waiting for the bus in a situation that's not very safe. In 2019, after several years of work, the Legislature passed a Bill that I authored, SB 127.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That Bill would have required Caltrans, as the owner and operator of these state owned roads, to implement bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure improvements as it was repaving and rehabilitating these roads. The Governor did veto SB 127 that year, but directed Caltrans to develop policies to accomplish these goals. Caltrans issued such a policy. Unfortunately, in the last five years, that policy has all too often not been followed, and so it's time to put this policy in legislation.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We still see many local street projects on our state roadway system in the State of good repair program, the shop that are just exempted by Caltrans from the policy. So they're doing the work, they're doing the rehabilitation and not putting these safety features in place while they do that project. In addition, the Department is not taking stock of transit priority facilities like bus lanes through its asset management program or setting performance targets for transit priority improvements.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Public transportation is a key part of a complete street, and Caltrans should be doing more to make transit more effective and accessible to riders. SB 960 seeks to increase Caltrans investments in bike and pedestrian improvements and direct the Department to start planning for and systematically investing in transit priority improvements on the state highway system.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The Bill does so by requiring all shop projects, starting with the 2026 shop to include pedestrian and bike improvements and for projects commencing with the 2028 shop to also include transit priority improvements. SB 960 requires engagement with local communities, especially underserved communities, in the development of these projects. The Bill does not require such vulnerable road user improvements on portions of the state highway system, where access to pedestrians and bicyclists is legally prohibited, what we would traditionally think of as a freeway.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Nor does it require the implementation of a pedestrian or bike facility that would cause a substantial, unavoidable safety risk to pedestrians or bicyclists. The Bill will also require Caltrans to develop by 2026 a transit priority policy. And finally, SB 960 requires Caltrans to establish a dedicated project intake, review and approval process for jurisdictions, including cities and transit agencies, that are trying to implement complete street projects on the state right of way or facilities that are intersecting with the state right of way.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Our colleagues time has come for the state to play its part in improving safety on our streets. SB 960 will do that, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote with me today to testify and support are Jeannie Ward Waller, representing the California Bike Coalition, and Danita Stromgren with AARP.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Welcome to the support witnesses. You'll have a couple minutes each and proceed in whichever order you like.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Danita Stromgren and I'm an AARP Member volunteer and also happen to be a resident of District three at the City of Davis. Thank you chair Kurtazzi and Members of the Committee, for allowing me to speak today on behalf of the 3.2 million AARP California Members. Traffic related deaths and injuries are a severe public health crisis impacting older Californians, basically for two reasons. The first is safety.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
Pedestrians age 65 and older are more likely to die or be seriously injured in traffic violence, especially on streets that do not have complete street improvements like protected bike lanes and high visibility crosswalks. The second reason is health and well being. Older adults thrive when they can safely walk, bike and take public transportation, and studies have shown that active transportation communities with complete street investments have increased life expectancies, reduced healthcare costs and end up with happier residents.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
For these reasons, AARP was proud to sponsor California's first complete street act in 2008. However, six years 16 years later, we're disappointed to see the lack of progress in making our neighborhoods safer and healthier through meaningful active transportation investments. SB 960 is urgently needed not only to address where we are now, but where we are headed. By 2031, in four Californians will be over 60. For those of us who aren't there yet, we all will be there at 1.0.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
What we're doing now clearly is keeping our state maintained roadways safer for older adults. SB 90060's complete street requirement is necessary for state agencies to prepare for a safe, healthy future for generations of older adults to come. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak on behalf of AARP's Members in California in support of SB 960, and we ask for a unanimous aye vote.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. I'm Jeanie Ward-Waller with fearless advocacy on behalf of Calbike, one of the co sponsors of SB 960. As you've heard, we face an alarming rise in roadway fatalities as well as a climate emergency caused by an overreliance on personal vehicles. To address these crises, we urgently need a stronger mandate for Caltrans to build a comfortable, convenient, multimodal system. SB 960 requires Caltrans to implement their own policy and plans for walk, bike and transit priority facilities on the state highway system.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Caltrans adopted its first complete streets policy in 2008, and all 12 districts completed active transportation plans in 2021. Based on these plans, Caltrans identified 15 billion in need for walk and bike facilities on the system and set a target to invest 3 billion over the next 10 years in those facilities. However, despite ambitious policy and planning, Caltrans has a long way to go before their investments in projects reflect these goals.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Calbike investigated the 2024 shop, the State Highway Operation and Protection Program, which is Caltrans 21 billion investment in maintenance and rehab projects over the next four years. We found that 600 projects in the 2024 shop will only add 215 miles of bike lanes and 30 miles of sidewalk compared to Caltrans targets. That's less than 8% of the target to build bike lanes and 2% of the sidewalk target that will get built in the next four years.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Caltrans is even further behind in identifying and implementing transit priority. These projects have the potential to get buses out of traffic, make service more reliable and attract riders out of personal vehicles. However, Caltrans developed a policy last year that has yet to be adopted, and the districts are just beginning work on transit plans that will take several years to complete.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Shop repaving projects present the best opportunity to cost effectively build walk, bike and transit facilities rather than having to come back and build them as standalone projects. Caltrans budget is larger than ever thanks to SB 1 and the federal bipartisan infrastructure law. With this influx of funds, Caltrans should not miss opportunities to make our system safer, greener and more accessible for all users. I urge your support on SB 960.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Is there anyone else here in the Committee room wishes to speak in support? Please come forward.
- Rafa Sonnenfeld
Person
Good afternoon. Rafa Sonnenfeld with YIMBY action on behalf of East Bay YIMBY, Mountain View YIMBY, Northern Neighbors, Peninsula for Everyone, San Francisco YIMBY, Santa Rosa YIMBY, Sloco YIMBY, Urban Environmentalists, Grow the Richmond, Ventura County YIMBY, Streets For People, Southside Forward, How to ADU, People for Housing Orange County, Progress Noe Valley, South Bay YIMBY, and Napa Solano for Everyone in support. Thank you.
- Melanie Morelos
Person
Melanie Morelos on behalf of the Green Lining Institute and support.
- Laurel Paget-Seekins
Person
Laurel Paget-Seekins for Public Advocates in support.
- Jonathan Cole
Person
Jonathan Cole for Climate Action California in support.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Marc Vukcevich on behalf of Streets For All in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Seamless Bay Area in support.
- Steven Wallauch
Person
Steve Wallach on behalf of the Napa Valley Transportation Authority in support.
- Catherine Charles
Person
Kathryn Charles on behalf of Housing Action Coalition in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Zach Tych Kuros on behalf of transform in support.
- Jamie Pugh
Person
Thank you Jamie Pugh with NextGen California in support.
- Laura Tolkoff
Person
Thank you Laura Tolkoff, Transportation Policy Director with Spur happy to co sponsor also and respectfully request your aye vote also here on behalf of Move LA who couldn't be here today offering their support.
- Fatima Iqbal-Zubair
Person
Fatima Iqbal-Zubair with California Environmental Voters in support.
- Sofia Rafikova
Person
Sofia Rafikova with the Coalition for Clean Air in support.
- Jodie Medeiros
Person
Jodie Medeiros, Executive Director of Walk San Francisco and also representing San Francisco Bay Area Families for Safe Streets. We support.
- Robin Pam
Person
Robin Pam on behalf of Kids Safe San Francisco in support.
- Audrey Ratajczak
Person
Audrey Ratajczak from Cruise Strategies on behalf of the City of San Jose in support.
- Dan Allison
Person
Dan Allison in support.
- Georgia Dohrmann
Person
Georgia Dohrmann on behalf of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission and Support.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Silvia Solis Shaw on behalf of City and County of San Francisco. Mayor London breed in support. Also on behalf of the City of Santa Monica and the City of West Hollywood, all in support. Thank you.
- Carol Taylor
Person
Carol Taylor from Genesis in support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. It looks like that concludes support witnesses and we're going to move now to opposition. We have primary opposition witness Mark Watts. He may come forward.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Good afternoon.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. I'm pleased to be here today, and I just want to point out that I understand Senator Skinner's Bill very well. As a kid, I had a sports car with no roof, and I have the beginnings on the left here. So, I figure it's all true. But today my main purpose of talking to you is to oppose this Bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
My organization, Transportation California, was one of the leaders in putting together from the public sector side, the private sector side, SB 1. We worked for years getting to that point. And at that point, when we were working on that with all the Members here, such as Senator Newman and others, we knew we couldn't fully fund the reconstruction needs of the State of California, let alone local streets and roads.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
As a consequence, we put together collaboratively with the Governor and the Legislature a package of taxes that accomplished about a third of what we needed to in any one of those three categories, state, local streets and roads, and transit. And as a consequence, the state program, mostly dedicated to reconstruction, rehabilitation, is receiving on an ongoing basis something less than 5 billion of what it needs.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So when you dedicate new programs later in the process to items that are very needed, such as complete streets, we believe they need to find their own source of funding rather than depleting the State Highway Program system of funding, because at this point, we're just not seeing the equity in the, the policies.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So as a consequence, our organization, representing the folks who build, plan and construct the highway system in the State of California, as well as the transit system in California, are strongly opposed to this measure at this point in time. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you for your testimony. Are there others here in the Committee Room who wish to come forward and express opposition to this Bill? Seeing no one come forward, we'll bring it back to the Committee. Questions or comments? Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I appreciate this Bill and its ambition, and I wanted to just make a couple comments and then a couple questions. So in my District 11, when I served as the mayor of the City of Encinitas and also the chair of the Transportation Agency, we had a really great relationship with Caltrans, and I felt like they did build a lot of complete streets, active transportation projects.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I understand that statewide it's variable, and part of this is to establish a really strong basic foundation for what projects would be built. One of the things that I wanted to try to understand, which I wasn't able to from the Committee consultant report, was what exactly are the roads that are not freeways that are considered, these state highways that are not local roads, or are the local roads included?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. So, and I'm glad that Encinitas has had a great experience. This is not about demonizing Caltrans. There are good projects that have happened. I know the City of San Francisco has had ups and downs and some great collaboration and other very problematic situations. So life is complicated as per the norm.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So, for example, in San Francisco, Van Ness Avenue, if you've ever been there, state highway, 19th Avenue, state highway, Park Presidio state highway, Santa Monica Boulevard in LA, or at least stretches of it, is a state highway. And so, we have, all across. So, in big cities, you'll have major roads that you look at it, you're like, this is a city street. No, it's actually technically a state highway. It's owned by Caltrans. The city, the local government cannot just go out and do work on it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Only the state can. And so we've had challenges in San Francisco, even, like doing traffic re-signalization along 19th Avenue. You had to get permission from Caltrans to do it, and it would take forever, but for an enormous number of small towns. And I know it's just because we had, when we did this Bill last time, all these small-town folks from rural areas would come forward and say things like, our main street is a state highway. I live two blocks from my kid's school.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
My kid cannot walk to school because there is literally nowhere to cross the street. That should never be words. Those should never be words that come out of a parent's mouth, and that is Caltrans responsibility. And again, I want to be clear. This is not about saying you have to start a new project there. This is about when they are already doing a project. They are already resurfacing, reconstructing, saying, while you are at it, do these other things. You don't have to do all of them.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
They can do an evaluation, but they can't just ignore it. With all respect, I was involved in SB 1, too. SB 1 was not just about driving. It was also about biking and walking and all of these other things, and transit. And it's not taking money away. It's ensuring that when we do this capital work, we're looking out for all users.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes. Thank you. And just to clarify, so in Encinitas, we did have friction with Caltrans, like for example, the freeway on ramps and the timing of the lights. And there were various things that would come up, homeless encampments and the Caltrans right of way. I mean, there are many different places where government agencies need to work well together. But the point is that this sets a framework for when there's already work being done, that it be brought up to a certain standard.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
And I think, given the reality as well, that a lot of the active transportation money is being cut, proposed by the Governor in his proposed budget, you know, there potentially are fewer active transportation projects that will be coming forward. So having more of them from inside of the Caltrans right of way is really important. Especially, of course, to meet all of the goals around mode shift and emissions reduction that we're going for across many policy areas.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I wanted to know if you could just directly address, because I've heard this before, that the opposition's statement and the core of what he was saying, which is basically, we just don't have enough money to do this. If we do one project and it balloons in cost, then that means we can't do these 10 other projects. And the state of good repair is also a really important value. So, I'm just wondering if you could address that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, so. And then I'll ask Miss Ward-Waller to talk about it as well. Of course, we all want to address the full need, and no one's claiming that SB 1 and so forth, like, solved the entire problem, but we infused a huge amount of new investment into the system with SB 1. And I'm proud of the work that this Legislature did to get there. And so, we have resources, and when we are already doing a project, we should be.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It is way more efficient to include additional elements in a project. And sometimes it's as simple as a crosswalk, way more efficient to include it rather than treat it as a separate project. This whole notion that the State Highway System, and again, we're talking about city surface streets, effectively, that that's somehow separate from complete streets. I just don't agree with that. And it's much more efficient to do it all together.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Okay, thank you very much. And when the time comes, I'll move the bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I think Miss Ward-Waller can probably add to what I was saying.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Please do.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Yeah, I just love to briefly add, in addition to SB 1, and I think the opposition didn't address this directly, we also have federal formula funds from the bipartisan infrastructure law, which were also added, have been added the SHOPP additionally. And that law also had provisions about addressing things like climate inequity and safe streets. So, we feel like that's very appropriate money and it can be used flexibly. Of course, it's in this pot for state highway operation and maintenance.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
But that pot also had provisions in SB 1 that said every time Caltrans does a project, take every opportunity to improve bike, walk, and transit facilities. And that's what we're saying in this Bill we're not seeing yet. So, we want to push harder.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Question. Neighborhoods, you know, the streets need to be redone. We hear it all the time when we're as mayors or council Members. When are you going to redo my street? Now are you talking? Are the municipalities going to be able to actually step in and consult with, or vice versa with Caltrans in their priorities, in their neighborhoods, rather than a thoroughfare that maybe be a highway, who's going to have the say for the overall appeasement of the constituent?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. So obviously, there are a lot of communities where there's a mix. There are local streets, which are purely the responsibility of the city, and then there's what looks like a local street, but is really a state-owned road, and then Caltrans is responsible for that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The Bil requires, and one of the things that we're really trying to do is to really, really get Caltrans to consistently and deeply engage with and work with the local community, which, again, I'm not broad brushing that does happen, that collaboration. But we want it to be even more because a lot of times, cities will put together plans for an entire area that includes some state roads. And we want Caltrans to be collaborating closely with the city because we don't want these to be sort of siloed.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
That's not helpful to anyone. So we want that collaboration, and ultimately, cities really know, like, what works in terms of that street safety for the entire network. And so that collaboration is very important.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Well, thank you. I just want to make sure they're included.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
I'll move the Bill if no one. We got it? Okay. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. Anybody else? All right, we do want to give the author an opportunity to close, and then we'll go to the motion.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I think we've... I think we've effectively closed. So I respectfully asked for an aye vote. And I also just want to acknowledge we did... They came in as author amendments before the analysis. I want to thank the Committee and for working with us on amendments that we already put into the bill. So thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We know you did a lot of work on it with the Committee. Appreciate it very much. And we do have a motion from Senator Blakespear. And that motion is... I'll let you read it out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number four, SB 960. The motion is do pass and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote's at six to three, and we'll leave it on call. And we'll move right to item five, Senator Wiener. That's SB 961, as you know, and you're welcome to present on this one.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. And again, I want to thank you and your staff for working with us. And we've taken a number of amendments as author amendments ahead of time, but they were worked out with the Committee, and we really appreciate that. And just to be clear, the most significant of those amendments is taking the bill from what we call an active speed governor requirement to a passive speed governor requirement. Active means that you are physically impeded from going above a certain speed.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Passive means that you are notified and reminded when you are going above a certain speed. So the bill is now passive. So SB 961, like the bill we just heard, addresses the traffic safety crisis in California, and does so this time not from a street design perspective, but from the actual vehicle. SB 961 requires this common sense technology, a passive speed governor, which has already been recommended.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Just to be clear, the National Transportation Safety Board, the NTSB, which is here today, which is the top transportation safety agency in the country, has recommended this technology for all new cars in the US and has submitted a letter supporting this bill. And you'll hear from the NTSB today.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
SB 961 will require all passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses that are manufactured or sold in California to be equipped with passive speed governor, otherwise known as an intelligent speed assistance system, to warn the driver when they are traveling faster than 5 miles an hour above the speed limit. Half of vehicles manufactured or sold will have to have a passive speed governor by 2029 and 100% by 2032. So I want to be clear that this is established technology. This is not some sort of new technology.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's established technology that is already in vehicles in this country and other parts of the world. The EU has required speed governors. The City of New York is in the process of equipping its entire municipal fleet, thousands of cars so far, with active speed governors. And that has gone very, very well with a very high degree of accuracy in terms of the GPS. And we should do so here in California for all new cars manufactured or sold here.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
4,000 people a year dying on California roads, as I mentioned with the last bill, nearly 50,000 people a year in the US. That is an increase both in California and nationally over the last five or six years. And I want to be very clear, it's not normal, and we should never accept this as normal. Every one of those people who dies is someone's child, parent, friend, spouse, and it changes their family forever. And the numbers are going up.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And when you compare the US to other wealthy nations, we are definitely not normal. We are an extreme outlier. It is not this way in other countries, and we know that speed is a significant factor. And I understand that people like to be able to go as fast as they want to go. And all we are saying is, let's do a reminder when you are going significantly above the speed limit so that you can be reminded to slow down. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I also neglected to mention the other piece of the bill in terms of side guards for trucks. And we're actually passing around a photo of what it looks like when a car and a truck collide and the car ends up underneath the truck, which significantly, dramatically increases the risk of the person dying or being very seriously injured. And this is, again, existing technology that will prevent cars from going underneath the side of the truck. I respectfully ask for an aye vote. With me today to testify are Ellen Lee with the National Transportation Safety Board, NTSB, and Marc Vukcevich with Streets for All.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Welcome, Ms. Lee and Mr. Vukcevich. You may proceed.
- Ellen Lee
Person
Good afternoon, Chair Cortese and Members of the Committee. My name is Ellen Lee, and I'm grateful for the opportunity to speak here today on SB 961 and in support of NTSB's recommendation on the implementation of intelligence speed assistance, or ISA, systems in all new vehicles. The NTSB has long supported ISA and since 2012 has recommended the adoption of the technology. Speed is a contributing factor in nearly 30% of all roadway fatalities. This is unacceptable.
- Ellen Lee
Person
The NTSB continues to investigate major crashes where speed was a causal or contributing factor, including one in Avenal, California in 2020. Some of these involve drivers going double or triple the speed limit. We recently investigated a crash in Nevada where a speeding and impaired driver ran a red light, causing nine fatalities.
- Ellen Lee
Person
This led the NTSB to issue new recommendations, one to NHTSA to require ISA technology in all new vehicles that, at a minimum, warns the driver when the vehicle exceeds the speed limit, and one to vehicle manufacturers to implement ISA as standard equipment in new vehicles. Broad deployment of ISA will reduce the frequency of speeding and speeding related crashes like this one, saving lives and preventing injuries.
- Ellen Lee
Person
While this technology may sound too new to require an all new vehicles, it is already an option offered by many US manufacturers for commercial and passenger vehicles and has been available in European countries for years. ISA will soon be mandatory in all vehicles sold in the European Union, yet NHTSA has been slow to take any meaningful action. ISA is a proven countermeasure that, if widely deployed, will save lives on California roads, and we applaud you for considering this policy. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Good afternoon. Marc Vukcevich, Streets for All, sponsor of the bill. I'm here today because of one simple but devastating fact. Traffic violence has become the number one cause of death for California school aged children. It's not drugs. It's not guns. It's getting hit by a car. And for context, the societal cost of car crashes is more than the cost of wildfires. It's more than the cost of cancer. Pedestrian deaths in this country have shot up 77% since 2010.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
And that fact I mentioned earlier was actually incomplete. Traffic violence is the number one killer of all people from the age of five to 44. And that number one factor in car crashes is not impaired driving or texting, but speed. And the public at a high level is aware of this. I believe that if the public was asked, they'd want the Legislature to tackle the number one killer of adults and children in California.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
The largest factor that parents cite in allowing their children to walk to school or not is not whether that child is going to get kidnapped on their way to school. It's the worry that their child's going to die walking to school. After fuel efficiency, safety is the largest factor people cite when choosing whether or not to buy a car. The public has a right to feel safe on our roadways, and I believe that the public contract is broken on our roadways.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Has anyone driven on the highways recently? The madness. It's madness the way people are driving right now on our roadways. The Legislature cannot pass a bill tomorrow to cut the amount of cancer in half, but the Legislature can act on this issue area. That's what the European Union has done, requiring this on all their vehicles in their 27 member countries with a total population of 440 million people. And that's with countries that have a car culture like Italy and Germany.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Speed assistance technology is just like seatbelt warning signal technology that, like airbags and rear backup cameras, was also opposed by the auto industry but has saved countless lives. Lastly, I'll leave you with some numbers. In just 2021, in Pico Rivera, 221 people were injured or killed on the streets. In the City of Napa, 327 people were injured or killed on the streets. And in the City of Fullerton, 988 people were injured or killed on the streets. I ask you to take action. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Are there other support witnesses in the committee room who would like to come forward and express their support? If so, please come on up with name, affiliation, and support.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Jeanie Ward-Waller with CalBike in support.
- Grace Nelson
Person
Grace Nelson on behalf of Streets for Everyone, I support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
... Support.
- Laura Tolkoff
Person
Laura Tolkoff, SPUR, in support.
- Jodie Medeiros
Person
Jodie Medeiros, Walk San Francisco, one of the bill sponsors, in support.
- Robin Pam
Person
Robin Pam, Kid Safe San Francisco, in support.
- Zack Deutsch-Gross
Person
Zack Deutsch-Gross, TransForm, in support.
- Dan Allison
Person
Dan Allison in support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, I'm seen no other support witnesses. We'll move to opposition now. I believe we have Curt Augustine, Alliance for Automotive Innovation, and Chris Shimoda coming forward. Welcome, gentlemen. You can proceed as soon as you get situated. A couple minutes each, please.
- Curt Augustine
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, my name is Curt Augustine. I'm the Senior Director of Government Affairs for the Alliance for Automotive Innovation. Thank you for the opportunity to do this. We are in opposition to this bill, not because safety is not the highest priority for the automobile industry, but it's a premature solution. This is not our sole position, but it is the position of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to which the Board has made its recommendations. With all due respect to the prior speaker, NHTSA on April 3 issued a letter saying that they are researching this important topic.
- Curt Augustine
Person
They have ongoing research right now to do so, and they believe that ultimately the technology will be in place. But to do, as their role as the regulator for traffic safety, believe it is premature to do so. Many of the reasons that they cite are because the technology is developing, but it's also because that our infrastructure, unfortunately, here in the United States, is not up to par as to what it is in the European Union.
- Curt Augustine
Person
The European Union signed in their member countries, signed the Vienna Convention, that makes all their signage the same, makes all this program available. We have manufacturers who sell the same exact car in the United States and in Europe, and because of the lack of proper infrastructure and regular infrastructure here in the United States, they have to turn these features off because they don't work or customers are so annoyed with the false warnings that they find it, excuse me, very troubling.
- Curt Augustine
Person
So this is an important issue that is premature. And finally, the rules are for the European continent. Germany does not have a separate set of rules. France does not have a separate set of rules. It is for the entire continent. So for California to have one set of rules and having all the other vehicles coming into our state, it's an unworkable solution. It's premature. Let's let NHTSA do their work, and we are working with the Administration to set real rules for safety for our roads. Thank you.
- Chris Shimoda
Person
Good afternoon, Chair Cortese and Members. Chris Shimoda with the California Trucking Association in respectful opposition to SB 961. So, as the Committee analysis notes, pursuant to the National Motor Traffic and Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 and successor federal legislation, NHTSA, which has already been referenced, is charged by Congress with writing and enforcing federal motor vehicle safety standards.
- Chris Shimoda
Person
The Act expressly preempts states from adopting their own standards, and NHTSA has taken the view in an opinion letter cited in our opposition letter that Congress intended the agency to occupy the field of motor vehicle safety, even where NHTSA has yet to promulgate a standard. For trucking, in the case of both underride guards and speed notification or limiters, NHTSA currently has open rulemakings.
- Chris Shimoda
Person
CTA's federal partners at the American Trucking Associations are on record supporting the federal rule on speed limiters and are participants in NHTSA's Underride Advisory Committee, which is currently meeting and was mandated by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act to provide advice and recommendations to the Secretary of Transportation on safety regulations to reduce underride crashes and fatalities related to underride crashes.
- Chris Shimoda
Person
This work will inform underride solutions for dozens of use cases with unique equipment as diverse as port chassis, fuel tankers, construction equipment, ag equipment, refuse haulers, as well as many more, dozens of others. As with all federal rules, NHTSA will base its rulemaking on extensive quantitative research, data, and analysis. Rather than creating a competing process with NHTSA, which is a billion dollar agency with over half a century of experience establishing motor vehicle safety standards, we encourage the author and sponsors to continue to support NHTSA's ongoing research and rulemaking. For those reasons, we respectfully request a no vote. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you for your testimony. Are there others here who wish to express an opposed position? We see folks coming forward.
- Brian White
Person
Yes, Mr. Chair and Members, Brian White on behalf of the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association. We have an opposed unless amended position to exempt intermodal chassis from the side guards. Thank you.
- Steven Wallauch
Person
Steve Wallach on behalf of the Institute of International Container Lessors in opposition.
- Karen Schmelzer
Person
Karen Schmelzer with Motorcycle Industry Council, opposed unless amended.
- Christian Robinson
Person
Christian Robinson with SEMA, the Specialty Equipment Market Association, opposed.
- Dylan Elliott
Person
Dylan Elliott on behalf of Shasta County, respectfully opposed.
- Dean Talley
Person
Dean Talley with the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, respectfully opposed.
- Kenton Stanhope
Person
Kenton Stanhope with the California New Car Dealers in opposition. Thank you.
- Melanie M. Perron
Person
Melanie Perron on behalf of the Associated General Contractors in opposition.
- David Gonzalez
Person
David Gonzalez on behalf of the Truck and Engine Manufacturers Association in opposition.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Brady Van Engelen on behalf of the California Chamber of Commerce in opposition.
- Theo Pahos
Person
Theo Pahos representing Ford in opposition.
- Dominic Demari
Person
Mister chairmember, Dominic Demari here on behalf of BMW in opposition.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Seeing no other opposition testimony at this time, we'll come back to the Committee. Questions and comments. Senator Archuleta?
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Senator, I'd like to tell you I'm going to have to lay off this Bill. It should be a two part Bill, one pertaining to the Governor and being able to slow the vehicle down because of safety and speed and so on. And I'm all for that. But the Bill also includes the fact that we have the trucking industry, that in Southern California, and you have it here in Northern California, the trucking industry that's got to move goods from the ports.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
And these trucks that you pictured, these 18 wheelers, the truck itself, they stack them up and they move them on rail. And with the guard things on the side, they're not going to be able to stack them. So it's going to cause a problem when they're mandated to do that. So I recommend that you separate the Bill and we look at that separately and then I could probably go on the Bill. So with this, I can't. So I'm going to have to stay off on that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, I appreciate it. If I could interpret that as a question and respond.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Whichever.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. No, I just, I appreciate that. We did, the trucking industry came in, it was about a week and a half or two weeks ago, to meet with me, various stakeholders from the industry and did raise the issue about stacking in ports. We've actually distributed a photo that shows them being stacked with these underguards and, but we committed to the trucking industry to that. We, listen, I don't want to pass an aspect of a Bill that can't be implemented. I would, I don't want to do that as a lawmaker. And so we are actively looking into their concerns and have committed to continue to engage with them on it. But I appreciate that feedback.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Nehlo would be next.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. So it seems like every transportation Committee meeting we have, we entertain proposals to try to control the crazy driving that's going out on our streets right now. And I've talked about this just about every time because it's not just speeding, it's reckless driving. Rapid lane changing, tailgating seems almost habitual with some, seems almost a deliberate lawlessness.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And I've begun to conclude that because when I'm driving in, in the morning, when traffic is heavy and the hov lane is moving quickly, I'm looking in my rearview mirror to the passenger seat of, of the vehicle that's going by me, and my unscientific estimation is that roughly half of the vehicles do not have a passenger in the passenger seat. That is a deliberate violation. I'm not a big fan of hov lanes, but it's the law and I observe it, and that is a habitual violation.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
A lot of upscale cars have the heads up display on the windshield, and it does show the speed limit in the area you're driving. Sometimes it can be inaccurate, but on the freeways it's accurate. And a lot of the cars that I see speeding by me at 80-90 miles an hour generally are more expensive vehicles. And I suspect a lot of them already have that heads up display, and they don't care. They're deliberately breaking the law.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Over time, probably more cars will have that, as they do in Europe. But I'm unconvinced that it's going to make a difference. And every time we entertain these proposals to try to control the crazy driving that's going on, I say that because it's not just speeding. I've yet to see a proposal that we increase enforcement, and we are hundreds of positions shy of our Highway Patrol force, and the Governor has even diverted a bunch of them to retail theft enforcement, which is not their mission.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And I'm waiting for somebody to come say, we need more cops on the road. We need to stop people more for this driving behavior. And I think eventually I realize that's costly, we have a budget problem, but I'm convinced that eventually that's the only solution that's going to work.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Next up at Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. Senator Wiener, you and I spoke, I think, last week, and we were talking about the intelligent speed assistance system. And my understanding is that you've taken an amendment to go from active to passive. But my question is that passive system, would it be persistent or would it be momentary where, you know, when I exceeded some limit, would I get a beep or would I get a persistent alarm?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The Bill language is not hyper prescriptive in terms of what that has to be. And so there would be flexibility there. And so we're not trying to sort of micromanage what that would be. And again, this is existing technology that's in cars now. And there is a spectrum. Right. It could be like every time you exceed the limit, it reminds you it could be on a more persistent basis. But we're not overly prescriptive in the language of the Bill.
- Josh Newman
Person
It seems like from the driver's experience, there's a huge difference. There especially on the highway. Mister Augustine, could you speak to this?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes, Senator Wiener is correct. A lot of these features are in cars, and our automakers are proud to have developed and put them in there. But because of the differences between the European system and again with the uniform signage and better other technological issues, these challenges that exist about with the warnings, they're often wrong.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Here in the United States, they will continue to remind you, the vehicles are designed, you can shut it off, but it's been our company's experience that, and in fact, there are many people in this room who have anecdotally told me they have these features on their car and they turn them off because they don't work well here. And so that's, it's, again, it's a challenge for our country to properly implement this, and it's not something that just one state is able to solve on its own.
- Josh Newman
Person
All right, thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And Senator? Yeah, I just want to sort of respond to that. So as I mentioned at the beginning, New York City is equipping its entire massive municipal fleet with active governors. What we took out of our Bill, active governors say already several thousand vehicles have already been equipped. And according to New York City, the accuracy rate in terms of the speed is, I believe, over 99%, if I recall correctly. It's very high. And so I don't agree with the argument this is somehow some sort of untested possible to do it well in the US. I don't know if you want to add to that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I would like to add as well that as of, I believe, the 1940s or 1950s in the United States, we have something called the manual on uniform traffic control devices that regulates that. Every single signage in the entire United States on city roads have to be conformed to the same exact standards. And that's what the entire United States, every single state, including Alaska and Hawaii, have to meet those standards. And so on that note, I'm a little bit confused about the opposition's comments as well.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And additionally, most of these speed Governor systems on the intelligence side, that they also use geolocation, it's a GPS based system. So additionally, on the signage, I just want to add that it's duplicative. Lastly, I'll say that in our Bill, it specifically mentions that if there is any type of momentarily confusion that the system has, that it reverts to the highest speed limit in California, essentially so that there is no moment of kind of getting a persistent warning that you're supposed to be driving 20 mph while you're on a 45 miles per hour road.
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate it. I guess the thing I'm kind of wrestling with is how drivers will actually respond to what they will receive is really invasive technology. Right. So, to Senator Wiener's example, if I drive for a company, I have to allow that the company has some oversight over my behavior as a condition of my employment.
- Josh Newman
Person
But if it's my car, it seems unlikely to me that a lot of Californians are going to buy a car where the speed alarm is persistent, where you can't turn it off. It seems to me that they will either figure out a way to disable that or find a third party to disable that, or they won't buy that car. So it raises the question, is that the best solution to that problem?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, there have been studies, and I don't have them at my fingertips at the moment that these systems actually do cause people to drive.
- Josh Newman
Person
I know, and I saw in the notes that the study in Europe saw no significant difference between a momentary beep, you've exceeded the speed limit, versus a persistent beep. But I guarantee you the persistent beep is not the car that people want to buy.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Right.
- Josh Newman
Person
So the base of my question is, would you allow for the least common denominator there, which is the non persistent beep as part of your amended version?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. And we're happy to have that conversation with you, Senator. I know we started it, like, right now. The Bill is not prescriptive. We're trying to provide some flexibility, but we're happy to have that conversation. I don't know if the NTSB has any thoughts on that particular issue. You don't have to if you don't want to.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We have not been prescriptive either, in terms of the types of warnings. Generally speaking, warnings are most effective when they're multimodal. So if you have a visual and an audio warning versus just one or the other, but our recommendations are not specific to that.
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate it, thanks.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mister Wiener and Mister chair. Many people know that I'm an avid bike rider and share the concerns of street safety and road safety, safety and the spirit behind the Bill. I do have a couple questions, because my hope, obviously, is if the Bill passes, it's implementable, it's doable. It's not just a concept. And so, a couple questions, by the way, in my own household, the intermittent complaints of my family in driving with me is more powerful than persistence, just for the record.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
But the analysis and the Bill references a report from Caltrans back. Is that on the effectiveness of the warning system or on the side guards? What's the reports that are coming back? The study, the pilot, is it on both? How are we going to measure the effect of this? That's question number one. It says Caltrans is going to report back.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. The Bill also requires a pilot program for state vehicles. And that's the report back.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And the pilot is on the warning system or on the effectiveness of the side guards.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The state fleet pilot program, is it active speed, Governor?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So just on the state fleet, that's the requirement.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We put that in. It's not a mandate for the entire fleet. It's a pilot program. We put that in because in our work with the Committee, we took out active and put in passive. And so we decided let's have a pilot program of state vehicles so we.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Can, you know, so that's on the active system?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. For this, for the state vehicle fleet pilot program.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Is there going to be any analysis of the passive system or on the effectiveness on the system side guards?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's not in there now, but I wouldn't have a problem with that, so.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Just, that's something you may want to look at.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, we're happy to consider that. I don't have any issue with that. Data is always a good thing.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Data is always good. And then on the federal issue, are you at all concerned with federal preemption and how, how will this mesh down the road when the Federal Government weighs in with specificity?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, okay. A couple of things. First of all, if, if the Federal Government were to say, we're going to implement this nationally and preempt everything at a state level, I would applaud that because that would mean not just 40 million Californians, but 330 million, I think Americans would be protected. So the Federal Government does have the power to preempt a safety standard like this. The Federal Government has not done that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And in fact, when the Federal Government recently, I don't know how recently enacted truck rearguard requirements for vehicles. The NHTSA acknowledged that most states, I think a majority of states already had state level truck rearguard requirements and that it was preempting those requirements. So it is not new for a state to get ahead of the Federal Government, the Federal Government to catch up and preemptively. I did some research, actually, last night about this. I've been looking into the history of seatbelt requirements.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I believe Wisconsin was the first state to require seat belts in new cars. In 1961, Wisconsin enacted that. I believe the Federal Government mandated seat belts in the front seats of cars in 1968. So again, Wisconsin got ahead of the Federal Government and I'm assuming, assuming there was a preemption in 1968.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
All right. And then my final question is along the lines of what Mister Archuleta raised on the stacking issue and the drayage transportation. Again, if it turns out to be infeasible to do from a practical perspective, you're open to exempting out those particular.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes, so we are. I made a commitment to the trucking industry when we met with them a week and a half, two weeks ago ago that we would look closely at the concerns that they were raising around feasibility. I have no desire to be the author of a law that has an infeasible provision in it. I would never want to do that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so we have, I have committed and I keep my commitment and reiterated today to work with the trucking industry to figure out what's actually happening here. We've showed that photo where they are stacked, but.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And obviously they have one where they can.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Right. And so if it turns out that there's something that's infeasible, we will absolutely address that because I'm not going to try to force someone to do something that's impossible to do.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And that brings me to my final question is, so what will be the arbitrator of that final decision? Who will decide whether it's feasible or infeasible? If at the end of the day one says yes, one says no, who makes the final decision on whether it's actually implementable?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Legislature.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Legislature. I'm just talking about as the author of the Bill, how would you resolve an impasse in that particular?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I think we need to figure out what the facts are and what that impasse is. My hope is that there's not an impasse because hopefully we're all rational actors and so we're going to continue our conversation with the trucking industry and the industry has my commitment on that and.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I just want that, that particular piece to be honestly brokered and we will.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Keep you in the loop on it and you as well, Senator.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Next is Senator Seyarto, followed by Senator Blakespear.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
First I wanted to talk a little bit about the protection guards on the trucks in the long haul. A lot of times on those trailers they have a big tail swing and if you're going over hills or down through dips, those can actually catch and basically high side, what you call a vehicle. We had a fire engine get stuck on a hill like this because it couldn't make the dip.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And so it was stuck there until we could get a crane large enough to try and pull it out. Addressed. Has that been addressed in the studies that are talking about these things? Because there is uneven terrain that a lot of vehicles have to go through, especially trucks, when they're delivering into neighborhoods or areas where there's uneven terrain like, say, Baldwin Hills.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Yeah, I'll ask Mister Brooksburg to talk about that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't have research to cite, but you're mentioning tail swings. And I just want to clarify that these devices are placed between the two wheel axles, and so that tail swing issue isn't going to necessarily be affected by this particular issue. I'd also mentioned that these wheels don't, sorry, these devices don't go below the length of the wheels. And so it is kind of the expected horizontal axis that the truck is expected to be driving. And I say this as someone who used to be driving at least box trucks, not big rigs.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
From the trucking industry what's your take on what I was talking about?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Senator? That's exactly what we referred to in the testimony. There is a federally mandated Advisory Committee on underride guards. It consists of crash experts, safety advocates, as well as the industry and the manufacturers to go through every facet of underride, every different type of equipment of, to figure out what the proper solution is for each of these various equipment types.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And I stated some of them in the comments, but there are literally dozens of different types of trailers that need to be dealt with in an eventual rule, and NHTSA is currently deliberating on those.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Okay, great. Thank you very much. Now onto the speed, the thing that lets you know that you're going too fast. And I might have missed part of this, and I apologize. I was trying to watch most of it on the screen while I was doing what I was doing. So you're going down. Let's just choose a freeway. The 50, everybody's doing 75 if they're not doing 80, and everybody knows it.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If you have one of these on your vehicle, is this going to be constantly beeping at you as you're going down the freeway, or is there a way to disable it, or you have to turn your music way up?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You can always turn your music way up. But we did discuss this, that the language of the Bill is not hyper prescriptive, so there could be a range of approaches to it. So it's not, we intentionally were not hyper prescriptive about, about what the exact frequency would be. Right.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Because that seems like a huge distraction, especially as you're going through some of the areas of the freeway and people are in pretty close proximity to each other. And when the thing starts beeping at you and people start honking out there for various reasons, and those are distractions from a person that can cause them to not be paying attention. And especially when they're going at those speeds, they really need to be paying attention.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, it would be safest if they were not driving 90 miles an hour, for example.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Right.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I just want to, when we're talking about safety, that's sort of the fundamental issue. And I also want to, and Senator Niello raised this earlier.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. And a different issue about, you know, about just people are doing their thing and violating the law in a lot of ways. I do want to say, though, that especially with newer cars, it's really easy, even when you don't realize it, to be going a lot faster than you think you're going. The new car, it's just so smooth and it's quieter. And so there are times when people are not even intending to drive at an excessive speed and they just are.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I was here.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And there are people who. Yeah, exactly. New cars. And I think there are a lot of people who would appreciate being alerted, like you're going too fast. So I don't think everyone who's speeding is doing it intentionally because they want to violate the law. Some people don't even realize it. And warning them will cause them to slow down.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Right. And if they do the drastic slowdown, though, to respond, respond and stop the beeping, the rest of freeway is still going 75-80 miles an hour. Now what?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
You're a traffic hazard and traffic impediment.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It doesn't have to.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Well, I mean, people slow down all the time. There are times when people realize, zero, my God, I'm going 85 miles an hour. I don't want to do that. And then they slow down. Doesn't mean they don't need to slam on their brakes, you can slow down,.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
You just take your foot off the pedal. That's what I tell people.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. You just smoothly, you know, so I don't, I don't see that as a slowing down and speeding up as a normal thing.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If you're doing 55 and the speed limit as opposed to the 60 or 65 and you go to 65 and everybody else is doing 80, you're a hazard. So you either have to speed up or get way over in the slow lane and you're still a hazard on some of the freeways. I drive. So I can, I can see it. So that's my concern is I think everybody knows when they're speeding, there are enough telltale signs.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And I don't think that this is necessarily going to do anything but distract people and could potentially cause accidents. And if they're the only ones going not with the flow of traffic, they become a hazard themselves.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I also just do want to point out that this is not just about freeways. This is also about city surface streets, where if someone is driving even 10 or 15 miles an hour over the speed limit, which we tolerate more on freeways, but happens on city streets, kids can be playing out on the streets. Seniors are crossing the street, and that is incredibly dangerous. And it's good to warn people that they're doing that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Yeah. And then you have the thing going beep, beep, beep while you're trying to navigate all this and keep an eye on everything.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You slow down.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Yeah. And you still get distracted. So anyway, thank you very much. I appreciate your answers.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Let me go to Senator Blakespear, and then I'll come back to you. Senator Archulata.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
It's brief. Thank you. I have had some outreach about the guardrail provisions when it comes to waste hauler trucks, and I know there are lots of different things that would be considered, but I don't know if you have anything specific on that, that particular type of truck.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I don't think we've gotten specific outreach. I'm looking at my staff. I don't think we've gotten specific outreach from the waste haulers. We're happy to talk to them.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Archulata.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Okay thank you.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
You know, we heard about the beeping noise and the warning and so on, but if I made to my colleagues in the experts, a Governor actually stops if you can push on the accelerator all you want, and it's not going to respond because it's set to a certain speed. The question is, where's the technology on my car? When I'm in a school district, there's a little sign in school zone, and it points that out.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
And I go into a business zone and there's a little sign on my dashboard. Zoning. But as I accelerate to get on the freeway, I have the power to accelerate, but if there's a Governor on there, it's going to stop the acceleration. Would you, with your witness there, give me some definition of that? A Governor truly is something that, a mechanism that prevents the foot pedal, the accelerator, go down and yes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes, that is what a speed Governor. An active does Governor. An active Governor, which is not in this Bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I was going to note so there are, I'll answer your question, then I will add just what Senator Wiener said. So, yes, a Governor would control this, the speed, and it sets a maximum thing. And there are those devices on vehicles, especially on commercial vehicles. They don't want their employees driving over certain speed limits. And to Senator Weiner's point, that was the essence of the original version of the Bill. That is, to be fair, that is not what is in the Bill currently.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
So it's just the warning.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Yes, yeah. And then the other thing, I thank you, Senator, for bringing this up, because we had an incident in my city with this huge cement tube that is going to be used, and the truck, the bottom of the trailer goes like this and up, and it hit the railroad embankment and stopped traffic. We had the Highway Patrol there, the sheriff's there, fire Department there, because it got stuck and the train was coming. And literally it was finally moved within minutes when the train didn't.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
So somebody didn't tell the train and it went by. So I did witness that. So there's a lot of obstacles still there. And I talked originally about the stacking, which has to do with economics and moving cargo, but then there's the others. So there's still issues in the Bill. And that's, again, with all due respect, I'm going to lay off.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you. Appears to conclude Committee comment other than the chair. And I just want to thank the author for, again working with us. And I know you mentioned that at the outset of your presentation to get your own author amendments done. There wasn't a lack of interest or concern by the Committee staff or the chair regarding the side rail issue, for whatever that's worth. But I do think it's important to put on the record.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I think we had our hands full dealing with the passive intelligence speed system in trying to help work out appropriate language there. And it was presumed that as you move along with this, that you'll sort out these issues regarding the side rails. But we were made aware of concerns, and I know that we had some discussions about that. And again, I just wanted to get that on the record. I appreciate your indicating that you'll continue to work with folks on that as the author. And with that, you're welcome to close.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. Colleagues, I really appreciate the robust discussion. I think we can all agree we want our roads to be safer. We shifted from active to passive. We heard feedback from colleagues that people were not comfortable with an active physical barrier to going above a certain speed. And some of the sort of scenarios, sometimes ed cases, but nevertheless scenarios where people might need to go at a higher speed.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We listened, we heard, worked with the Committee and changed it to a passive to make sure that people are aware and reminded so that they slow down. And I will reiterate on the trucking piece that I am deeply committed to continuing engagement with the industry and that I am not going to be pushing to pass something that is infeasible and, we'll continue that work. Like I said, I had my first meeting with them about less than two weeks ago. We'll continue that engagement. You have my commitment. They have my commitment. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote. All right.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. We will come back. Did we have a motion on this item? Senator Portantino moves the Bill and I'll have the Committee assistant formalize the motion and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number five, SB 961. The motion is do pass and re referred to the Committee on appropriations. [Vote].
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote currently is three to three and we'll leave the Bill on call. We are going to recess before taking up file item six, hopefully for a short time, and we'll be back as soon as that recess is over to pick up in the file order with file item six. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, Senate Transportation Committee has reconvened after the short recess that we had. We are going to pass on item six pending some paperwork that needs to be done on that item. So we'll move to item seven, SB 983, Senator Wahab. Please join us up here, and we'll release at the podium, and you may proceed when ready.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. This is a lightweight bill. So Chair and Members, California lacks the infrastructure needed to make zero emission alternative fuels a realistic option for consumers by 2050. In fact, our climate goals are actually even far more aggressive at 2030, and some will even argue at 2027. SB 983 will create the Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Task Force. This task force examines how we can preserve the competitive nature of gas station pricing and just convenience, and how we can integrate alternative fueling into existing gas station infrastructure.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Current investments into alternative fueling infrastructure are only half of what is needed to transition by 2050 or earlier. This task force will determine the most cost effective path forward for zero emission fuel alternatives, both electric as well as hydrogen, while using our existing gasoline infrastructure. To meet Governor Newsom's mandate to transition vehicles to zero emission sources by 2035, SB 983 is a crucial step. I do want to highlight a couple of things.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We always argue about we need to transition, we need a cleaner, greener environment and efforts around that. Yet no realistic option has been presented. I want to highlight that the reason why this is important is because communities of color and largely disadvantaged communities and renters, like myself, don't have a place to charge their vehicle. They don't.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So if you live in a multifamily complex, unless that property owner installs an EV hydrogen station, you are going to have to struggle as to how quickly can you charge your car, can you work on it, and much more. Especially as companies like Ford are creating all electric Ford F-150 pickup trucks and much more. And we need to do better.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And I think that this is a viable option to create a task force to really understand how we can make EV and hydrogen at our local current setup and infrastructure. So that is the bill. I would like to also introduce my witness, Keith Dunn, with the State Building and Construction Trades Council, as well as my other witness. But with your permission, Chair.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay. Thank you, Senator. Mr. Dunn, I guess you'll proceed first. You'll have a couple minutes, and then we'll go to the other witness.
- Keith Dunn
Person
Thank you. Keith Dunn, State Building Construction Trades Council. Like Senator Wahab said, transitioning to a carbon resilient economy is going to take a lot of time. This bill will establish the studies that we need to make sure that our workers are not only building the charging stations of the future, but also that they cover our entire state. As we've seen, there's not equity right now in some of the rural and even in urban areas with charging opportunities.
- Keith Dunn
Person
Our workers, principally that go to construction sites, and for them to have the opportunity to drive electric cars, are going to need the charging stations to get there and to get home. They don't exist today in some areas of our state. We think that this is a equitable approach to make sure that we have the type of information that provides the eventual building of that infrastructure in a manner that addresses the gas station owners and others that are going to be transitioning to different fuels.
- Keith Dunn
Person
We also think that having the opportunity to cover the entire state the way that the bill is laid out, I think is a very equitable approach to make sure that we have rural representatives, urban representatives, independent gas station owners, and others that really are going to be impacted as we transition to this climate resilient economy. To be included in that discussion, to make sure that it's covered statewide, to make sure that our workers have the opportunity not only to get to work if they're driving a F-150 Lightning electric truck, but also to charge it if they need to while they're there. So we think this is a great approach. We think that we've done a good job in working with the author and others to cover statewide, and we just ask for your support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay, thank you. Next witness.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
Thank you, Senators. Teresa Cooke on behalf of the California Hydrogen Coalition, very pleased to be here in support. As many of you know, fuel cell electric vehicles offer a really unique zero emission vehicle opportunity for our folks that live in multi-unit dwellings, for our super commuters, and for our drivers that need to drive in larger classes of vehicles. So also, I would say the Ford fuel cell electric truck is also, you know, on its way to market.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
Equally important for our transition to zero emission vehicles. The network of 8000 existing fuel and gas stations today is where hydrogen infrastructure is going to go. So I can't stress enough on behalf of the hydrogen community how very important this bill is in terms of getting ahead on figuring out what we can do to smooth the transition between the fossil fuel infrastructure that we have today, but the rather minor retrofit required to turn that into hydrogen fueling infrastructure for these zero emission vehicles. And so for these reasons, we are exceptionally pleased to be here in support and encourage your support of the bill. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thanks for your testimony. Others wishing to express support, please come forward.
- Damon Conklin
Person
Good afternoon. Damon Conklin with the League of California Cities, as well as on behalf of the California State Association of Counties, in support. Thank you.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Good afternoon. Brady Van Engelen on behalf of the California Chamber of Commerce, here in support. Thank you.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Good afternoon. Jack Yanos on behalf of the California Fuels and Convenience Alliance in support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we don't have any registered opposition listed. Is there anyone in the committee room who wishes to express opposition? If so, please come forward at this time. I'm seeing none. We'll bring it back to the Committee. Yes, Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Okay, thank you, Senator, for bringing this bill forward. As California is going into hydrogen, it's going into alternative fuels, and I think the gas stations that you're talking about, the infrastructure is already there. So it's a win win for California to look ahead. So I'm hoping that as we move in that direction, that we realize the infrastructure that we have, that we need, and this is part of it. And I'll move the bill when appropriate.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we have the offer of a motion. Is anybody else wishing to be recognized? Seeing none, Senator, you can close.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we'll have the Assistant state Senator Archuleta's motion and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number seven, SB 983. The motion is do pass and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, it's at 5-0, and we'll leave it on call. Thank you, Senator.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Item number eight is Senator Durazo's bill. Is she present? Do you not see, Senator... Oh, got it. All right, we will take item 10 out of order out of deference to the other authors. We'll pass on item nine for the moment. Item 10 is SB 936, Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you very much, honorable Chair. And I'm here to present SB 936. First, I would like to thank the committee for working with my staff to bring this bill to the committee. And I accept the committee amendments. So, car crashes are consistently a top cause of unintentional injury or death. And for Californians, thousands of people lose their lives or suffer life changing injuries annually in automobile collisions.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
California traffic fatalities surged 22% from 2019 to 2022, while severe and fatal traffic crashes have resulted in $166 billion in economic and quality of life costs for Californians in 2022 alone. A 2022 study from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found disparities in the risk of travel for low income communities of color as well.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Recently, a devastating crash involving a drunk driver speeding at 104 miles an hour in a 45 miles an hour zone claimed the lives of four Pepperdine University students on Pacific Coast Highway on a stretch that is known as Dead Man's Curve. Over the last 10 years, there have been 4000 collisions on Dead Man's Curve. Serious road safety improvements have been neglected on Pacific Coast Highway, along with other unsafe stretches of road throughout the state.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Caltrans and regional transportation agencies receive federal and state funds to build, maintain, and develop highways and road improvements. My bill requires the Office of Planning and Research, in coordination with the Department of Transportation, to develop and publish a report detailing the needed safety improvements of the 15 highways in California with the highest number of collisions. With this report, the Legislature can examine means of addressing these locations and how best to expedite safety improvements.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
SB 936 is a step forward to a proactive plan to address our most dangerous highways and will give the Legislature the information needed to save lives. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote. And I did not bring any witnesses.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
As is your tradition.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
As is my tradition.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Is there anyone here in the committee room who wishes to express support? Please come forward.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Marc Vukcevich on behalf of Streets for All. We originally had in oppose unless amended position to the bill in Senate EQ. After the amendments made in that committee, we're really supportive of the bill. So I appreciate that, Senator. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you. Anyone else in support? Seeing no one else come forward. We do not have a registered opposition witness. Is there anyone in the committee room who wishes to express opposition? If so, please come forward. Seeing none, we'll bring it back to the Committee. Senator Archuleta has offered a motion. Niello? Was that Senator Niello? Alright. Thank you for the correction. Anyone else want to be recognized on this bill? It's file item 10, SB 936. We'll go to the author for his opportunity to close.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All right, well, I just respectfully ask for an aye vote and want you to take note of the brevity of this issue. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. And to the Committee Assistant, we'll ask her to restate the motion and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 10, SB 936. The motion is do pass as amended and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, that bill is 7-0, on call. We'll move to item 13. File item 13, SB 1418. Senator Archuleta, that's your bill. If you'd like to present, you're welcome to do so at this time.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Committee Members. I am submitting Bill 1418 regarding hydrogen and fueling stations. As Chair of the Select Committee on Hydrogen Energy, it has come to my attention the pivotal component of our transportation and transition towards cleaner, more sustainable mode of transportation, hydrogen fueling stations, are at times not being built or unnecessarily delayed due to an overly burdensome permitting process.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
The permitting process is new to a lot of municipalities, so it will take a little time for them to understand that California is going in that direction, and all the support we can get from the state to encourage them to go forward is essential. Senate Bill 1418 addresses the important issue, as hydrogen has shown great potential toward decarbonizing our heavy duty transportation sector. Senate Bill 1418 transcends simple local ordinances or municipal concerns and, rather, addresses the statewide imperative.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
This bill recognizes the need for consistent standards across all jurisdictions to facilitate the prompt and cost effective deployment of these crucial zero emission fueling stations. Senate Bill 1418 underscores our legislative commitment to fostering zero emission vehicle infrastructure while mitigating barriers to the installation of hydrogen fueling stations by municipalities. Senate Bill 1418 brings parity to the electric vehicle permitting process by streamlining the administrative approval process for hydrogen fueling stations in the same way that we do for charging stations.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Specifically, Senate Bill 1418 mandates that cities and counties must adopt an ordinance and checklist that creates an expedited, streamlined permitting process for hydrogen fueling stations. This directive is designed to expedite procedures and ensure that citizens have access to clean energy options without unnecessary administrative hurdles. While Senate Bill 1418 streamlines the permitting process, health and safety remains a top priority. My previous bill, Senate Bill 1291, which passed and was signed by the Governor, ensured hydrogen fueling station permits adhere to stringent health, safety, and performance standards.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Senate Bill 1418 keeps the core components in place. Furthermore, to address fiscal and procedural concerns, Senate Bill 1418 phases in its requirements so that most cities and counties in the state will not have to develop an ordinance until September of 2026, well after GO-Biz releases its model ordinance and checklist for hydrogen fueling stations permitting. In conclusion, California has more fueling or more fuel cell electric vehicles and the hydrogen stations necessary to fuel them than any other state in the nation.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
And with California's recent success in securing substantial federal funding for clean renewable hydrogen initiatives through the Alliance of Renewable Clean Hydrogen Energy Systems, also known as ARCHES, the timely passage of Senate Bill 1418 is essential to take full advantage of these federal dollars to expedite the development and development and movement of the hydrogen infrastructure into the future, in turn facilitating our state's transition to a cleaner transportation future.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Senate Bill 1418 represents a pivotal step towards realizing our environmentalist stewardship obligations and advancing our sustainable transportation objectives. For these reasons, I respectfully ask for your aye vote. And here today in support is Teresa Cooke, representing the California Hydrogen Coalition, who can also assist in answering any questions.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Ms. Cooke, you're welcome to begin.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
Thank you, Senator. I would just point out, to Senator Archuleta's point, California also has the very worst ratio of fuel cell drivers to fueling stations available today. So that is something that, you know, we look forward to working with this Committee on to improve through this bill. Teresa Cooke, pleased to be here on behalf of the California Hydrogen Coalition and the California Hydrogen Business Council. We appreciate your consideration of legislation easing the build out of hydrogen fueling infrastructure.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
As my friend and colleague Damon with the League will point out, permitting is not the only challenge facing hydrogen. But as ARB's 2023 AB 8 report notes, permitting does play a role in the station delays that we see today. Our station developers are particularly excited for the checklist required by this bill. Early awareness and transparency into each permitting agency's demands for hydrogen fueling stations will not only shorten build times, but also reduce overall costs. As many of you know, California's hydrogen hub is transportation focused.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
The program could not be possible without the $12 billion from the private sector deploying 8,000 trucks and 5,000 zero emission fuel cell electric buses. Bills like 1418 go a long way to support our collective efforts, and for these reasons, we encourage your support today. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you for being here. Are there others in the committee room who wish to express support for this bill? Please come forward. SB 1418.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Jack Yanos on behalf of California Fuels and Convenience Alliance in support.
- Lisa McGhee
Person
Lisa McGhee with Tom's Truck Center in full support of this bill.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. We show no registered opposition. Is there anyone in the committee room who wishes to express opposition? You are registered opposition? All right, well, come on up. You'll have a couple minutes. I apologize.
- Damon Conklin
Person
Hear me? Yeah. Wonderful. Damon Conklin with League of California Cities. Thank you very much. With respect and regret, we have to be opposed unless amended. California Cities, we support the state's transportation and climate goals, and cities across the state, we are, in many circumstances, prefer hydrogen technology over electrification, especially for medium and heavy duty.
- Damon Conklin
Person
This is class 2b and up sized vehicles for our public fleets as well as our transit. Seeking to extend the streamlined process for EV charging to refueling in the hydrogen space that came about from 1291, cities are squarely and narrowly limited in their scope of review to only health and safety. And since 1291 has passed, have we seen a big tsunami of permits across city desks? No, we have not. Currently, we have 18 permits under review across the state.
- Damon Conklin
Person
I would say, in fact, last month there were more permits withdrawn than there were permits submitted for hydrogen. And why is that? Hydrogen is exceedingly expensive to produce, store, transport, and dispense. It requires complex structural, mechanical, and engineering and electrical code compliancy. We are not opposed to the permitting and moving along of hydrogen, and we want to see hydrogen hubs built up across the state.
- Damon Conklin
Person
But a one size fits all approach for a local municipality, regardless of their size, their capability, and their resources, what may work for a larger city or a city that has a transportational hub versus a city that is in a remote area that will never see this permit across their desk and yet is going to be held to the same standards, we think is unfair and unequitable.
- Damon Conklin
Person
So for those reasons, we're looking for an amendment that would just squarely kind of put these bills maybe 5 miles from a freeway and a highway so that we're making sure that it's applied to those very cities that most likely are going to be seeing those permits. So for those reasons, we respectfully oppose unless amended.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you for your testimony. If there are others here who wish to express opposition, you may come forward now. Alright, seeing none. We will bring it back to the Committee for discussion. Yes, Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Excuse me. For reasons stated by the League and local control purposes, I would, taken in isolation, oppose this. But since the situation with electric chargers receives an exemption, I am a supporter of hydrogen being part of the mix, and I would see that as unequal treatment of the opportunity for the facility. So I'm just going to lay off.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Anyone else wish to be recognized? Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Yeah. The concerns relative to the cities notwithstanding, I just think this is an important policy. I'd like to be at it as a co-author at some point in time when that is opportunity avails itself. I have seen in my district where the municipality just had no understanding of what was going on and took just enormous amounts of time and money by the developer. And at some point in time, there are consultants at these cities and or counties. I'm not just laying it all on cities. Have the ability to go out and hire the expertise that they need to feel comfortable about the health and safety issues, whether it's hydrogen or anything else. Thank you. So I'll be supporting the bill.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. I'm struggling with this bill mostly because whenever we talk about streamlining a process at the cities, you could put it in line with the other 15 whatevers that need to be streamlined. And so when you're looking at something like this, it's like which part of the process can they streamline more?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Because the studies, the CEQA stuff, all of those things are what causes the delays. Because it's however long it takes somebody to put something out and that, you know, they contract those studies out, however long it takes to get those studies back in, those are kind of mostly where the delays are. If we're talking about cities that are not permitting these just because they don't want them, that's a whole different animal.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I don't know if streamlining is going to fix that, but I'm not seeing how superseding or pushing this to the front of the line of streamlining with is beneficial to the other people that also have streamlined processes that have been enacted by our Legislature, how we can choose one over the other. I, too, am in favor of this technology as being part of our umbrella solution for our future fuel requirements. But I don't know that the streamlining process that is outlined here is going to make, is going to have the desired effect unless they also address the other issues that are causing the delays in the first place.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
May I respond?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yes.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Okay. Well, I'd like to get you off the fence, because you didn't give me a hard no. You said you're kind of on the fence. Well, let's go ahead and get you off. And let me...
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Would it help if I told you where I was?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Don't spoil the surprise.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Let me just.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Let me just share this with you. As you just said yourself that as hydrogen is becoming part of California's future, a bill we just heard with Wahab was using some of the gas stations out there that will open their doors up to hydrogen, the infrastructure. And what brought this about is the hydrogen stations that we do have, the municipalities that finally made the agreements, what they did is they didn't talk about parity with electric. They just made it so difficult for that individual to...
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Well, you got a rancher here. When anything's very difficult to conduct your business... Well, they made it so difficult that they made him put in sidewalks, trees, fire hydrants, all kinds of things. He spent $300,000 before he even got anything started. And then the file sat for two years. So in here we got $1.5 billion coming from the federal government so California can start moving its hydrogen and trying to do what we're supposed to do, take care of our environment.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
So here we have the opportunity, and we're taking baby steps. And as we take these steps forward, yes, we're going to have to tell municipalities, if you get someone who wants to put one in your neighborhood, your city hall or wherever it's going to be, well, grant it. But if you don't get anybody who wants it, well, then it doesn't apply because it's not going to go across the State of California overnight. This is going to take a few years to get this thing done.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
But as it goes through the system, we don't want anyone in the industry to feel that the municipality is being punitive and putting that file down below. And that's what we're talking about. And the fact that the infrastructure that we're looking for, there's millions upon millions of dollars that are going to be invested in California. So as we move along, there will be other bills that will pertain to transportation into manufacturing, into cost savings, and so on. So we're at the threshold of opening up this new environment that will include hydrogen and so many other things for the future. And this is just that one first step. If there's anything that my consultant would like to add to that.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
Thank you, Senator. I would just say during the permitting process, there is probably more back and forth and changes and surprises throughout the sort of iterative process to make sure that these permits qualify for the local government satisfaction than I think the hydrogen industry might prefer. And so to have as much kind of upfront notification as possible about what we can do to be the best neighbors possible, I think goes a long way for us to do our part in this.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you for those answers. And I understand that because that is with a lot of industries. Thank you.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
And I also think, if I may, Mr. Chair, that, as California keeps going forward, we're going to find more and more people... GO-Biz is really involved with this now. California would not have sought out to get that $1.5 billion if we didn't think we needed it here in our state, and we wouldn't have been competitive to win that amount.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
And now that we have it, we have to implement policies and procedures to actually, as I mentioned, to create a flow to the consumer, and that's where the manufacturing, the transportation, municipalities have to work together. So it's going to be a long process, and this is just the beginning. And with that, I respectfully ask your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you for the close, Senator. And Senator Newman. Go ahead. We're going to reopen, and we're going to have to allow Senator Archuleta another close, you know, but go ahead.
- Josh Newman
Person
Anyway, sorry about that. I'm actually a principal co-author of this bill, and I am a frequently challenged driver of a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle. But I actually do think Mr. Conklin's proposed amendment is interesting. Ms. Cooke, if you could reply. I mean, it does make sense, especially as you look forward toward higher intensive uses medium duty, heavy duty trucks, to spot hydrogen refueling stations within 5 miles of a major thoroughfare. Does that make sense? Because it does seem like a reasonable amendment.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
I think I would want to know how much of our current fueling infrastructure is located within a similar kind of footprint. Right. Like, I think Damon and I were chatting earlier, far flung stations not in maybe major travel destinations are a top priority. It's not really a goods movement corridor per se. But as you know, there are a lot of residential areas that may be outside of that five mile area that still should be considered.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
So I would, just out of curiosity, want to learn a little bit more what that looks like. What is that density within 5 miles off of a highway versus everything else outside of it? Because it may very well make great sense, or it may be kind of evenly distributed, in which case we might not have a great solution.
- Josh Newman
Person
Right. There may be some other parameters that might be useful. Right. So, you know, so, you know, I would urge the author, I mean, I'm a principal co. I think it's a good bill, but I'd urge the author to work with the League to see if there's kind of a matrix that might be applied to solve that problem.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Yes, I can see doing that. And again, you mentioned 5 miles off. The idea is if the Wahab takes hold, then we have stations that are close to the highways and freeways, which is a good thing. Taking them off 5 miles, then you're going into a municipality, then it comes up to the local government that would be able to jump in. So however we do it, we've got to be part of the future, and hydrogen is there. So once again, Mr. Chair, I urge an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we have a motion by Senator Newman. And I refrain from my comments, and I'm going to continue to refrain, but I would associate my thoughts with Senator Dodd's earlier comments, which I find to be very true. Thank you, Senator. And we have a motion. If you'd like to restate the motion, Committee Assistant, and call the roll. He did. He closed twice. Thank you though. Thank you. Maybe three times.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 13, SB 1418. The motion is do pass and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay, that Bill is at seven ayes, zero no's, and we'll keep it on call, Senator. Thank you. Appreciate your presentation. All joking aside. Senator Durazo. And we appreciate the witnesses. Thank you for being here. Senator Durazo, file item seven? Eight. File item eight. If you're following along SB 1488, Senator Durazo, welcome.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You may begin presenting whenever you're ready.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. First, I accept the following Committee amendments. Delete the contents of SB 1488.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Two, revise Business and Professions Code, Section 5272 E1, to replace one year with 120 days, and three, add a new section to the BMP Code in the Outdoor Advertising Act, which states, when the Department is formally renegotiating an agreement with the Federal Highway Administration on California's obligations under the Highway Beautification Act, the Department shall, among its priorities, support for advertising displays at arenas as described in Section 5272. As amended, SB 1488 will reduce the length of time for a marketing contract from one year to 120 days, which more accurately reflects outdoor advertising opportunities.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
This Bill provides stadiums and arenas revenue streams that do not rely on public funding. The arena exemption was first established by the Legislature to help fund the construction and the operations of the states' stadiums and arenas, which are an important both economic and cultural regional centers. Stadiums create thousands of permanent local good construction jobs and generate millions, hundreds of millions, in state and local taxes, especially through the permanent service jobs.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
These message boards also play a vital role in helping to direct traffic around stadiums and providing public safety alerts. Arena operators are not granted an unregulated privilege. They must comply with state and federal law. And this Bill does not provide a financial advantage for sports arena billboards. It is important to remember that there are over 8,500 outdoor billboards in the state and of those, nearly 500 are digital signs.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I remain committed to working with the opposition, bringing together all parties as this Bill moves forward in the legislative process. Today I have Angie Minetti to provide brief remarks in support of SB 1488.
- Angie Minetti
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Mister Chair and Members. Angie Minetti here representing the Los Angeles Dodgers in support of the Bill. Outdoor advertising provides a way to diversify our revenue streams and also provides less reliance on public subsidies. While the Bill no longer provides an outdoor an exemption for arenas from the Outdoor Advertising Act, we still believe, we still support it because it gives clear directive to that outdoor advertising is prioritized during the federal state agreement discussions.
- Angie Minetti
Person
We thank the author, the Chair and Committee staff for working with us and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Is there anyone else in the committee room who wishes to express support for this Bill? This is file item eight. Seeing none, we're going to go to primary opposition, which I believe is Steve Cruz. You may come up if you're here.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
If we have more than one person, that's fine. All right, just please identify yourselves and proceed. You'll have a couple minutes each.
- Steve Cruz
Person
Great. Thank you. Mr. Chair and Members, Steve Cruz. On behalf of the California State Outdoor Advertising Association. We have had an opposed position on the bill, but wanted to be here in Committee today to express our appreciation for the Senator in agreeing to the amendments that she outlined today, and so wanted to thank her for that and the Committee for their work. So we don't have an official neutral position today, but felt it was important to acknowledge the progress.
- Steve Cruz
Person
And I'll just quickly say that our fundamental concerns, which are highlighted in the analysis, is that the approval of these exemption bills that put us out of compliance with state and federal law and the corresponding threat of federal highway dollars, that's been our primary concern. And then additionally is the concern about the unlevel playing field that it creates with our Members in terms of how they cite their boards.
- Steve Cruz
Person
Now, having said that, I think the much improved with the directive, we want to understand what that directive means and how should there be additional parameters around it. Does it isolate one policy, in this case the re-exemption, to the advantage of other media policies that either the industry or the state wants to advance in those conversations. So again, not officially neutral, but, much improved. And so thank you, Senator, and look forward to working with you as the bill moves forward.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. You'll have a couple minutes if you choose.
- Korbe Palmer
Person
Yes, sir. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair, Members of the Committee, Korbe Palmer from Lamar Outdoor Advertising, also a Member of the California State Outdoor Advertising Association. I agree with and echo the comments that Steve brought up as to the concern of risking federal highway funds with these one-off exemption bills.
- Korbe Palmer
Person
But I also want to emphasize how similar policies that the Association has opposed in the past create inherent unfairness for operators who are bound to comply with the federal Outdoor Advertising Act, such as ourselves, which regulates how large signs can be, how far apart they can be, etcetera. That said, once again, we're thankful to the author willing to work with this and look forward to continuing discussions.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you for being here. Is there anyone in the Committee room who wishes to come up and express an opposition position? Seeing nobody moving forward? We'll come back to the Committee for any questions or concerns. Members? Yes, Senator Archuleta and then Senator Nguyen.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Okay, being a Dodger fan, let me put that out there. But knowing Dodger Stadium, give me an idea of the footprint and where these signs would be in the future. Where exactly would they be? Would anybody know that?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Hi, Senator. That hasn't been determined yet. Obviously, since the bill doesn't provide for an outdoor arena exemption, we haven't had those discussions. But certainly those proposals would have been taken to local LA City Council and at the local level to be determined signage placement, if that is something that the Dodgers could continue to pursue, which is not permitted at this time.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Okay, good. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Others wishing to be recognized? Senator Nguyen, thank you.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the advertisement or the outdoor. We hear this all the time. Okay, I mean, every time there's a bill that comes out that has to do with billboards, especially on the freeway, that's the same answer you give. I mean, what can we do to move forward so that we can actually, you know, allow, and not just allow an exemption for one industry? What can we do?
- Steve Cruz
Person
Thank you for the, thanks for the question, Senator. You know, there are bills that have been approved by the Legislature. I mean, there were a few last year.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I was an author. I was one of the co author of that bill last year.
- Steve Cruz
Person
Yeah, you know, there have been a few, but I understand your point. And so I know that part of the negotiations with the federal government is to have a discussion around about the policies in California. There is an opening to have that conversation, which is, I think, why our remarks were around. I think let's have a robust conversation about what that directive would look like. But I think you're right. That has been the policy.
- Steve Cruz
Person
Ours has been fairly consistent with the administration and that it would threaten federal highway dollars. And so our position has been consistent there and it's been consistent on, like, when there are exemptions to the rules, where does that leave us that have to comply with the existing rules. And so that's, that's why we've been, I think, pretty consistent over the years. But we are willing to have, like, conversations and our Association is, in fact, going to be involved in those conversations with FHWA. I hope that answers.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I hope so because we've had exemption bills that has expanded 10 years, five years, and we hear the same comments, same concerns 10, 15 years ago, and we're still here. Let's find a solution so that we can all work this through together so that we're not having to do one singular bill for an industry every time.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I hope that if there's anything that we can do up here to move that process so that it works for you guys and it works for everybody else in California.
- Steve Cruz
Person
That's fair. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we're going to see if there's anyone else who wishes to be recognized. I make sure I look to my right this time. All right. Seeing none, Senator Durazo, you have an opportunity to close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. And we will continue to work on this. But I want to remind us that this exemption is not part of this bill. That's really important for folks to walk away with that understanding. And we hope that as good Senator just said that in negotiate renegotiating an agreement with the Federal Highway Administration that will give it the priority that it deserves so that we could come up with something that makes sense for everyone. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. We'll bring it back to. We have a motion, I'm sorry. The motion was by Senator Archaletta, and we'll have the Committee assistant formalize that and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number eight. The motion is do pass as amended, and we refer to the Committee on Appropriations.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senators Cortese? Cortese, aye. Niello? Allen? Archuleta? Archuleta, aye. Blakespear? Blakespear, aye. Dahle? Dodd? Dodd, aye. Gonzalez? Laird? Limon? Newman? Newman, aye. Min? Portantino? Portantino, aye. Seyarto? Umberg? Six to zero on call.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote's six to zero on call. Thank you. We'll move now to item 14. That would be SB 1216. And that would be Senator Blakespear. You may present whenever ready, Senator.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Okay, thank you. Thank you, Chair and colleagues, I am pleased to author SB 1216, which will improve safety for cyclists on our roadways by limiting the overuse of sharrows in class three bikeways. You are being distributed a picture of a sharrow so you know exactly what it is. Sharrows, as some may know, are a painted symbol on a roadway to indicate that bicyclists and drivers are sharing a lane. These types of bicycle facilities are used all throughout the state to connect bike networks.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Building out our bike network is very important as the state prioritizes active transportation as a core component of mobility. However, our roadways are filled with bigger and heavier vehicles, more distractions than ever, and are inherently dangerous, especially when mixing bicycles and cars. According to the California DMV, each year in California, over 100 bicyclists are killed and over 10,000 are injured in collisions.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Just last year in the City of Encinitas, a 15 year old boy named Brody Champlain Kingman was killed because he was sharing a roadway on his e-bike, and there was an accident with a van. With the ever increasing prevalence of e-bikes and adoption of cycling as a mode of transportation and recreation. We have to do better by our residents and prioritize the safest bike infrastructure possible, especially with limited funding.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Our state encourages active transportation and has invested hundreds of millions of dollars to implement safe bike infrastructure through the ATP or Active Transportation Program. But it's clear that there are safer alternatives to sharrows, and our state funding sources should prioritize those without physical separation from large, sometimes distracted and fast-moving vehicles. An inherent danger exists for cyclists of all ages and abilities.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Also, a simple observation is that sharing the roadway with cars prevents many from seeing cycling as a reasonable or viable option for getting around, and this further forces us into seeing cars as the only way to get around. We have to do better by ensuring our state prioritizes the safest bike facilities possible and this bill does two things to make cycling safer. First, it prohibits sharrows and class three bikeways on highways with a posted speed limit over 30 mph.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
This is in alignment with design guidelines published by Caltrans earlier this year that class three bikeways should only be used in very low speed and low volume locations and as a last resort when no other viable alternatives exist.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I recognize that many sports cyclists who ride along scenic highways with higher vehicle speeds feel safer when drivers are aware of their presence, and therefore this bill still allows signs that say bicycles may use full lane, which is the state law, so long as the signs are not considered a class three bikeway for the purposes of evaluating bicycle or complete streets targets and goals.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
The second thing this bill does is it prohibits active transportation funds from being used to create sharrows or class three bikeways when the design speed is greater than 25 mph. ATP funds should be used to encourage active transportation and finding ways to reduce injuries and fatalities. These funds shouldn't be used for projects that don't actually make biking safer, like simply adding markers without including any other features to slow traffic or to create a safer environment.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
The bottom line is that we need our roadways to be safer for cyclists and for the state to prioritize the safest types of bikeways possible. With me today, I have Marc Vukcevich on behalf of Streets for All, and I also have, oh yes, and he is right here. So thank you for coming.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
All right, I told Senator Cortese here to step out, so Mister Vukcevich, please proceed.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
You guys can call me whatever you like, it's fine.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
It is Vukcevich. Soory, Vukcevich?
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
All good. SB 1216. It's pretty simple. Sharrws had an important role to play in the evolution of safe street bicycle transportation policy, but it's been over 20 years now since Willie Brown presided over the first sharrow outside of San Francisco city hall, and the best practices for bicycle infrastructure have evolved for its time.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
While research have shown that sharrows may offer some improvement for experienced cyclists, there's little evidence that they encourage more people to adopt cycling, particularly women and children and nonrecreational riders, due to the lack of meaningful features to slow traffic or eliminate potential collisions. Cyclists are safest when physically separated from vehicles have shown that sharrows have a small effect on reducing dooring, but do not have a large effect on preventing car-bike collisions.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
And in fact, a 2016 study by civil engineers at the University of Denver showed that streets with sharrows performed worse than streets with on street markings at reading collisions. Kind of the gist of the matter is that FHWA, Nacto, and even Caltrans themselves don't allow or don't encourage sharrows on streets above 25 mph. Our Bill says 30 to allow for more local flexibility. And really, the question before you is not where cyclists are and are not allowed to ride.
- Marc Vukcevich
Person
Cyclists are, according to the vehicle code, allowed to ride anywhere on any single roadway. The question is where the state should be telling cyclists to ride. And that's the question before you that I'd like to say I close. Thank you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
All right, thank you. Miste Vukcevich. Are there any other individuals here in the hearing room who would like testify in support of this measure? Please come forward.
- Jeanie Ward-Waller
Person
Jeanie Ward-Waller on behalf of CalBike, in support.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Anybody else? I understand we do have a primary witness in opposition, Chris Lee, on behalf of the Nevada Transportation Commission. Mr. Lee, you can come to the table, depending on, oh you're good.
- Chris Lee
Person
I'll be brief. Good afternoon, Chair, Members. Chris Lee here on behalf of the Nevada County Transportation Commission, have an opposed position. Appreciate the amendments. We think they improved the bill a lot, but still have two minor points of contention that we'd hope to work out. First, I think we have a slightly different interpretation of the prohibition. We do think that the bill would prohibit the installation and maintenance of class three bikeways other than sharrows.
- Chris Lee
Person
And in a county like Nevada County, where you have limited right of ways, you have a lot of low-volume rural streets that are likely never going to be widened. We do think that this is something that we should have in our tool chest to show that cyclists can be present. They're going to be on the facilities, and we think it's an option that shouldn't be precluded by state law. Second point on the grant funding.
- Chris Lee
Person
These are not the type of facilities we typically would pursue grant funding for, but we do think that they should be allowed to be considered, except for perhaps the sharrow example, on a high speed facility as part of a broader grant application. So hope to resolve those two remaining issues. Again, I think the amendments move the bill in a better direction, but currently have an opposed position.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Other members of the public that would like to express an opposition position?
- Damon Conklin
Person
Damon Conklin, on behalf of League of California Cities. We have concerns, just echoing the earlier statements that were just made by Chris Lee. So we've been working with the author's office and we feel that we're moving in the right direction. We've got some good collaborative conversations there that I think we'll be able to live with. But I want to thank the author for having open door policy and working with us.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Any other opposition? Seeing none. Let's come back to the Committee. Colleagues, any questions or concerns for the author? Seeing none. Do we have a motion on the measure? Senator Blakespear, if you'd like to close.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Okay, thank you. I guess, in summary, I just want to say that we want to have our active transportation funds used toward projects that actually lead to mode shift. So people deciding to ride a bike when they were maybe taking a car before. And so those projects need to be safe, they need to be separated. And I have seen many examples of sharrows painted in roads that are not actually creating the active transportation that we want and the network that we need. So I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we can entertain a motion at this time. Senator Archuleta moves, and we will have the committee assistant formalize that. Call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 14, SB 1216. The motion is do pass, and we refer to the Committee on Appropriations. Senators Cortese?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese, aye. Niello? Allen? Archuleta? Archuleta, aye. Blakespear? Blakespear, aye. Dahle? Dahle, no. Dodd? Dodd, aye. Gonzalez? Laird? Limon? Newman? Newman, aye. Nguyen? Portantino? Portantino, aye. Seyarto? Seyarto, no. Umberg?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote on that Bill is six to two, so we'll keep it on call. Senator Niello is over in Judiciary, so we will move to item 16, Senator Newman, SB 1372.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Can we flip flop the order?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We could. We can go to 17 and then back to 16. File item 17 would be SB 1387. Again, Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. Thank you for the opportunity to present SB 1387, which would update the Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project, or HVIP, to include medium-duty pickup trucks and independent contractors who depend upon these vehicles for their livelihoods. As you're all by now more than well aware, California has fully committed to the ambitious and aggressive goal of moving beyond gasoline-powered vehicles.
- Josh Newman
Person
Despite this, there are still no medium-duty, zero-emission pickup trucks available in California on the market today, and all of the state zero-emission incentive programs. Of those, none currently provide grants toward the purchase of a medium-duty work truck for farmers, laborers, landscapers, independent contractors, all of whom tend to use medium-duty trucks such as the Ford F-250 and the Dodge Ram 2500.
- Josh Newman
Person
The state's accelerated zero-emission transition is not just another routine business expense they can adapt to, but there is still a massive cost associated with these vehicles, and that cost could represent the line between purchasing them and deploying them in their businesses or not.
- Josh Newman
Person
SB 1387 would update the state's leading medium and heavy-duty ZEV incentive program to extend grants for the first time to both fleet and individually owned Class 2B and Class 3 medium-duty pickup trucks, of which there are an estimated 4 million in California alone. With me to testify is Damon Conklin, on behalf of the League of California Cities, and Lisa McGhee, are you not? No, you're not. Lisa McGhee is my lone witness here.
- Josh Newman
Person
And with respect to all of our time, on behalf of the state's leading HVIP dealership, Tom's Truck Center, I am respectfully asking for your aye vote today.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. You may.
- Lisa McGhee
Person
Yes, welcome. Thank you. My name is Lisa McGhee, and I'm the ZEV Programs and Affairs manager. I'm with Tom's Truck Center. We're a highly active HVIP dealership. Last year alone, we supported over 288 HVIP vouchers. Over 150 of those were hydrogen. Senator Bill's.
- Lisa McGhee
Person
Senator Newman's Bill is instrumental to fleets that operate as independent contractors, such as landscapers, e-commerce delivery drivers, subcontractors, electricians and plumbers, laborers that are interested in e-mobility trucks, officers, all which are not eligible to participate in HVIP, regardless of the truck size. Yet these fleets operate and use these trucks for commercial business purposes over 50% of the time. However, the HVIP implementation manual states it needs to modify and remove the following if used exclusively for commercial and not personal use.
- Lisa McGhee
Person
This is flawed and excludes the fleet contractors from participating in being eligible for HVIP vouchers, which and its intent is making commercially available ZEV commercial trucks affordable. Please include independent contractor fleets to be part of our climate policy solution. I can share an experience that I'm dealing with this week with a contractor that has been in business for over 20 years, pays his taxes, has a California contractor's license and submitted an HVIP voucher for a Ford Transit EV cargo van.
- Lisa McGhee
Person
HVIP rejected his contractor license as a valid business. He went and got a DBA business license, and we are pending a response. SB 1387 is necessary, making ZEV purchases possible for independent contractors who can't afford these investments. HVIP immediately reduces the upfront investment which the upfront investment is critical. The Inflation Reduction Act and or the CVRP program do not. These fleets should be eligible included. I urge you to please support SB 1387. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Other support witnesses please come forward.
- Damon Conklin
Person
Damon Conklin with League of California Cities as well as on behalf of the California State Association of Counties. We are in big, strong support of this Bill. Class 2B, this is your F-250 vehicles. This represents the plurality of public fleets. We really appreciate the incentive and the ability to offset some of those hard upfront costs transitioning. Thank you very much.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the rest of this is me too.
- Teresa Cooke
Person
Teresa Cooke, on behalf of the California Hydrogen Coalition, California Hydrogen Business Council. Happy to be in support. Thank you.
- Jay Snike
Person
Jay Snike on behalf of the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts, also in support.
- Curt Augustine
Person
Curt Augustine with the Alliance for Automotive Innovation in support. Thank you.
- Shane Lavigne
Person
Shane Lavigne, on behalf of First Student and National Express, in support. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we have no registered opposition. Is there anyone who wishes to express opposition? If so, please come forward in the Committee Room now. All right, seeing no one, we're going to come back to the Committee. Questions, concerns? Just a minute. Before we entertain a motion. I have to get back to the Senator. Sorry, Senator Archuleta. Senator Newman on the amends.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We need to get a statement from you as to where you're at on.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm sorry. Yeah. We are more than happy to take the amendments proposed by the Committee. We thank the Committee for their work on them.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. We'll come back to you for a close. Now, I'll come back to. Senator Dahle moves, moves the Bill as amended. Anyone else? All right, we're going to go ahead and call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 17, SB 1387. The motion is do pass as amended and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll call]. 10-0 on call. 10-0.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. That bill is at 10-0. We'll keep it on call. Senator Newman, are you prepared to take.
- Josh Newman
Person
I am so. Thank you. And thank you to my witness. Appreciate it.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So this would be file item 16, SB 1372.
- Josh Newman
Person
That's not my writing. So I'm told the opposition is not ready, but I'm not sure that's my biggest concern.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I don't think that's your problem.
- Josh Newman
Person
At the moment. Apparently, they're stuck in line at the airport. You'll see what I'm referring to at some point.
- Josh Newman
Person
Okay, Mister Chair and Members, thank you for the opportunity to present SB 1372, which would ensure equal access and equitable treatment for users of California's commercial airports by requiring third-party expedited screening services such as Clear, to adjust their current operating model and offer a dedicated screening lane in order to operate at California airports.
- Josh Newman
Person
In light of my place in the agenda and keeping in mind that I've spoken to most of you about the merits of this Bill, I'm going to spare you what would have otherwise been a doctoral-level dissertation on the origins, operations, and imperfections of the Clear service. But some background and context is needed, so bear with me for just a moment. In the aftermath of the 911 attacks and the impact it had on air travel, Congress passed the Aviation Transportation Security Act of 2001.
- Josh Newman
Person
This legislation led to the creation of something called the Registered Traveler, or RT, Program. Congress' goal at that time was to both enhance airport security and improve the traveler experience. In 2006, under the Federal Registry Notice, multiple RT providers began operations. But in the wake of the Great Recession, virtually all of those RT providers became unviable as businesses, and by 2008 had ceased operations.
- Josh Newman
Person
In 2010, a former fund manager named Karen Seidman Becker and an asset manager named Ken Kornick purchased the assets of one of those failed ventures, a bankrupt company called Clear. They relaunched the company in 2012 at an especially opportune time, as the Transportation Security Administration was finally seeing some success in streamlining the screening process, including the launch of a new service that we now know as TSA PreCheck.
- Josh Newman
Person
In 2019, Mister Kornick submitted testimony before the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Security under the heading of improving security at America's airport stakeholder perspectives, and in that testimony, he made the assertion that Clear's secure enrollment platform establishes an impermeable link between one's identity and biometrics achieved through digitally authenticating a traveler's government-issued identification, establishing that the person enrolling is the person on such document through the use of challenge questions driven by commercially-available data and capturing biometric data including fingerprints, iris image, and face.
- Josh Newman
Person
What they really do is they capture the information that's associated with your face, and they associate it your driver's license, which is exactly what the TSA agent at the gate does. But Clear's ostensibly high-tech methodology and proprietary technology, according to Clear, has allowed Clear to foster what it describes as a strong public-private partnership with TSA, a partnership which represents a win-win for all stakeholders, driving innovation, enhancing security and efficiency for all travelers at zero cost to taxpayers.
- Josh Newman
Person
There's only one flaw with this otherwise very compelling narrative. None of it is actually true as it relates to security beyond confirming a traveler's identity. Clear's kiosk-based system is not tied into TSA's secure screening database, and so it has very little bearing on the security of a Clear traveler as they pass through the line. In 2022, Clear's verification service actually allowed an airline passenger using a false identity to pass through its system. That passenger was also found by the TSA to be carrying ammunition.
- Josh Newman
Person
In 2023, two incidents occurred where individuals not enrolled in the company's security program were actually escorted through a TSA security checkpoint without having presented valid identification. And one of those incidents actually involved a passenger who had apparently used a boarding pass picked out of a trash bin. When it comes to improving airport efficiency, Clear doesn't do that either.
- Josh Newman
Person
Every Clear customer who has escorted past travelers waiting in either of the standard TSA or TSA PreCheck lines winds up at the exact same place as those who don't use Clear, at the entrance to the conveyor belt where your personal items are screened. Throughput from that point remains totally unchanged, the only real difference being that those not using Clear are understandably annoyed about being shunted aside by those who do use Clear.
- Josh Newman
Person
As it relates to the third proud claim about driving innovation, I suppose Clear actually has done that. In the proud American business tradition of making something out of nothing, Clear has built a thriving business around doing things quite well, providing passengers willing to pony-up an additional dollar 189 a year, an opportunity to cut in front of their fellow travelers who either won't or can't do that themselves, and building partnerships with airports that let those airports generate the additional marginal revenue that this opportunity creates.
- Josh Newman
Person
Proof of this clever innovation are the swarms of commission-incentivized Clear personnel that you meet as you join the line of the airport, especially where the line is long. Who upsell you on the benefits of cutting the line with Clear. And I'm among those who don't think that's especially honorable or fair.
- Josh Newman
Person
And what this Bill seeks to do on behalf of all the airport travelers who are continually inconvenienced or annoyed by this service is to create sufficient motivation across Clear and its nine current California airport partners to simply re-engineer their traffic flows to separate Clear subscribers from other non-Clear travelers, thereby sparing the rest of the traveling public from its off-putting and irritating impact. So, I have grudgingly accepted the Chair's proposed amendments.
- Josh Newman
Person
Let me make that clear, although I am concerned that by softening the business Bill, we are reducing the likelihood of its ultimate success. In addition to hearing from the opposition this afternoon that Clear is a wonderful, useful, and universally loved service, you're also likely to hear that having TSA reconfigured screen procedures to allow for a dedicated line for Clear is beyond its control.
- Josh Newman
Person
Excuse me. Or that the conduct of airport screening is a federal function outside California's jurisdiction. As a practical matter, neither of those things is true. At LAX in fact, Delta Airlines has recently lost its own branded premium security line called Delta One, which completely bypasses the public TSA lines, and which is staffed by a combination of Delta and TSA employees.
- Josh Newman
Person
Equally importantly, the State of California has a very clear prerogative to exercise oversight on the activities of airports within its jurisdiction, to include ensuring that every traveler, not just the wealthy or the privileged, can be assured of equal treatment and the best travel experience possible. So let me make that clear. Thank you. Very clear, no pun intended, that the goal of SB 1372 is not to put Clear out of business. It is not to banish Clear from California.
- Josh Newman
Person
It's simply to guide them toward realigning their business practices with those very straightforward ideals. With me to testify today is Christy Rivera, on behalf of the Association of Flight Attendants, and Gilbert Galam, on behalf of the American Federation of Government Employees. They're making a big entrance to our witness area here. I am respectfully asking for your aye vote this evening.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. We'll welcome your witnesses, and they may testify in whichever order they prefer. Yes, that's fine. You'll have a couple minutes each.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
I'll go first. Hello, my name is Gilbert Galam. I'm the Local Secretary for American Federation of Government Employees Local 1230. I represent 1,200 TSA screening officers at all airports in Northern California from major airports such as Sacramento International Airport, Oakland International Airport, and San Jose, Mineta International Airport. I am here in support of Senate Bill 1372. Currently, as it stands, Clear is a major headache for our TSOs. The service adds no value to security or efficiency for the traveling public.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
In fact, after talking to several of our workers, they brought up some of the common problems that come up while interacting with Clear. Many screeners have reported to us of many instances where Clear employees brought passengers to travel document check and dropping them off at the front of the security queue without actually communicating to TSA that the passenger was verified through their service. This creates confusion during the screening process, imposes a security risk, as well as inconveniencing passengers in the security queue.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
Along with this, the travel document check position routinely involves officers needing to juggle multiple parties competing to be at the front of the line. At any given time, they may be verifying airline employees, airport employees, passengers with disabilities, along with regular and Clear passengers at the same time. The addition of Clear as a priority party adds to the already large mental load that our screeners undertake during the screening process.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
Our officers also report that they have seen many arguments between Clear customers and the regular passengers that they skip, often leading to very contentious conflicts as they enter the security checkpoint. These scenarios create distractions for our screeners and pose a security risk for the traveling public.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
Their biometric technology, intended to automate the process in which a TSA officer validates a passenger's boarding pass and ID, has never been found by the TSA to improve aviation security, and unlike TSA PreCheck, Clear customers do not undergo any form of background check or pre-screening. In fact, the Department of Homeland Security reported that in 2023, Clear was responsible for two major breaches of airport security.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
In one incident, Clear employees escorted an individual carrying ammo under a false name through the security, and in another, an individual who used a boarding pass found in the trash. At roughly 12 times the cost of TSA PreCheck, Clear is nothing more than the luxury resale upcharge of space in the airport security queue where the well to do and can pay to skip the line at the direct expense of every other traveler.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
While Clear may save time for its paying customers, non-customers suffer from Clear's aggressive sales tactics and longer security queues as they get pushed aside to make way for someone with means. Supporting this Bill would be a win for security as well as equity among the traveling public.
- Christy Rivera
Person
Excuse me. Good afternoon, Mister Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Christy Rivera. I'm a 33-year United Airlines flight attendant and on behalf of the Association of Flight Attendants, CWA, AFL, CIO, with nearly 50,000 members and roughly 6,000 of those members based here in California. We support SB 1372, which would require a third-party expedited screening service provider like Clear to operate in a dedicated screening lane independent of those used by non-Clear travelers at California airports.
- Christy Rivera
Person
SB 1372 is needed because of continuing reports about irregularities in the verification of passenger identification by Clear, which raises concerns about the integrity of aviation security. One such egregious event reported involves a traveler using the fake identity that was discovered when TSA screeners found ammunition in his carry-on luggage. In another incident, a passenger was escorted through security using a board he passed retrieved from the trash can.
- Christy Rivera
Person
As I'm sure you're all aware of these over 14 million people are enrolled in Clear, but the TSA found approximately 48,000 travelers who did not complete a facial match as part of their registration. Clear is not TSA. TSA PreCheck is the federal program that collects biometric data, fingerprints, and photos, which verifies identity documents and expedites screening for low-risk passengers. Clear doesn't add any enhanced layer of security to airport operations.
- Christy Rivera
Person
TSA PreCheck. Clear members must also register for TSA PreCheck if they want to take advantage of any expedited screening. Instead, Clear is just a pay-for-play way to cut the screening line. SB 1372 would restore equal access and treatment at airport security checkpoints by requiring companies like Clear to operate in a dedicated security lane separate from the general travelers and TSA PreCheck members.
- Christy Rivera
Person
The separation would preserve Clear's ability to operate in California, but in a way that streamlines the security processes and for everybody moving through California's airports, Clear customer or not. For these reasons, AFA, the Association of Flight Attendants CWA, supports SB 1387.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you for your testimony. Are there others here who wish to speak in support of this Bill? If so, please come forward. We'll move now to opposition. Opposition witnesses you're welcome to come forward.
- Jim Lites
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman and members. Jim Lites, on behalf of the California Airports Council, representing the 31 commercial airports in the state, notwithstanding multiple entertaining conversations with Senator Newman, we are opposed to the bill, and the airports in the state do not control the checkpoint that is controlled by the TSA. And so the desire that there be a dedicated TSA officer to handle those that are clear customers is not something that the State of California can compel the TSA to do.
- Jim Lites
Person
We are happy to work with Senator Newman to talk to the TSA about those desires, but at the end of the day, what this bill will do is cut off revenue for the nine airports that have clear today, and it's not clear from the amendments that we've just had a chance to take a look at.
- Jim Lites
Person
If the airports that do not have clear today are going to be able to bring clear in before the provisions of the bill take effect, we certainly would not want to see airports turn into haves and have nots, those that got in under the wire to have clear, and those that all of a sudden are prevented from doing business with Clear in the future. So we remain opposed to the bill and would ask for your no vote.
- Jessica Ng
Person
Mr. Chairman, members of the committee, my name is Jessica Ng, and I'm the director of state and local public affairs for Clear. Clear is a secure identity company operating as a qualified anti-terrorism technologies since 2010 under the Transportation Security Administration's Registered Traveler program.
- Jessica Ng
Person
Our opt in only technology uses a member's biometrics to verify their identity at the security checkpoint in 56 airports nationwide and nine of California biggest airports in California, we employ about 600 people, share more than $13 million in annual revenue with our airport partners, and serve approximately 3.5 million Californians across the entire Clear platform and approximately 1 million in airports. The Registered Traveler Program was created by TSA in 2004 to encourage private sector innovation in technology and identity.
- Jessica Ng
Person
Since clear's founding, we have led the way on identity technology. We were the first to bring biometrics to the checkpoint years before the Federal Government. We recently rolled out NextGen identity, the first IAL two certified source corroborated identity program in aviation. We understand Senator Newman's intent is to separate Clear members from other passengers. His stated goal of creating dedicated clear lanes could make sense at certain high volume checkpoints where we process more than 20% of passengers.
- Jessica Ng
Person
And as my colleague has already said, in any checkpoint airlines, the airport partners like Clear and TSA must all be aligned on the most efficient way to process passengers decisions about how to staff TSA podiums and screening equipment rest solely with TSA, subject to their own staffing levels and operational needs. So we as are also reviewing the committee amendments with the possibility of updating our position, but wanted to make sure that we are available for any questions given the testimony given so far. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Are there others here who wish to speak in opposition to this bill?
- Emellia Zamani
Person
Emellia Zamani with the California Travel Association, in respectful opposition.
- Cliff Costa
Person
Mr. Chair and senators, Cliff Costa, on behalf of Delta Airlines, in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Jose Torres Casillas
Person
Jose Torres with Technet, in strong opposition.
- Kathleen Van Osten
Person
Mr. Chair and members, Kathy Van Austin, United Airlines, in opposition. I also promise I would say ask for no vote on behalf of Alaska Airlines. The lobbyists had to leave, so thank you.
- Alyssa Silhi
Person
Alyssa Silhi, on behalf of the Burbank Glendale Pasadena Airport Authority and would just like to know that we would be one of the have nots noted by the testimony under this bill.
- Obed Franco
Person
Good evening, Mr. Chair and members. Obed Franco on behalf of the Southwest Airlines, in opposition.
- Robert Singleton
Person
Robert Singleton with the Chamber of Progress, also respectfully opposed.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, seeing no other opposition coming forward, members of the committee. All right, we're going to start with Senator Seyarto. He had his hand up first, then Senator Allen. And I'm going to go from left to right. I'm sorry, just to keep track here. Senator Niello will be after that, and then we'll come over to this side.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. As we heard the testimony being very clear what this is really about. Light up. Okay, so there's a couple of scenarios that we were in this testimony that I understand all too well, and that's the Clear persons didn't catch somebody before they went into the TSA line where their bags actually get screened. I have walked, I have gotten approved at the initial booth of TSA pre several times, forgetting that I had a bottle of water or something like that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Even though somebody told me five or six times in line, make sure you don't have any water, and they put it through.
- Josh Newman
Person
That's not what we're describing.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Well, if somebody was caught with bullets, they wouldn't be caught at the initial screening part, they'd be caught at the TSA.
- Josh Newman
Person
Senator sorry, it's somebody was caught whose identity was not the identity they presented.
- Josh Newman
Person
And they were not as secure.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Right.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But there was also the scenario that somebody gave that somebody had bullets and they got caught, and that is caught in the TSA pre line.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Just let Senator Seyarto, have the four. I'll give it back to you on an individual basis if you see a response. Senator so you don't.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
The screening lines in TSA are. They're controlled by TSA. I don't think pre gets to tell the TSA people how to do their screening lines leading up to the part where the baggage actually gets screened. All they're doing at the front is doing identity checks. I don't see what the difference between TSA pre as far as singling out or making winners and losers in the loading section.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Then the folks glaring at the TSA pre line when it's really short and they're in this big long line because they don't have TSA pre. You pay money, you get your pre screening credentials, and then you get to go in that short line that's over at TSA pre. So that's. This is no different than that. It's just saying that you're going to. You spend some more money and then you get to go through that line. I have not spent more money to go into that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
The people that are out in front, that somebody quipped about them being on, you know, whatever their pay thing is, those are employees, and I think clear has several hundred of them, and they're people that are working and they're not. They're not having. They're not part of our 5.8% unemployment. So I don't, you know, and the inconvenience, yes, it is annoying. I don't like it when I'm almost up to the front and then they bring over somebody and they put them.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And it only takes a second. It's not that big a deal. And then they go on to their thing. That's not a big enough inconvenience for me to take somebody who has done, you know, participated in free enterprise, which is doing this company. If this company didn't have customers, it wouldn't exist. So obviously there is a customer base forum and a demand for them. Otherwise they would cease to exist. So, you know, for all of those reasons, I don't see that those.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
That we should be cutting the clear, the clear people out just because they're not. They're not convenient to us. And it annoys us when those people get to go in front. Plus, I had one other question. Are the Clear people, are they part of a union?
- Josh Newman
Person
I don't believe Clear is unionized.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They're not represented. Okay, thank you. That's all.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You're welcome to respond.
- Josh Newman
Person
I appreciate that. I'd actually asked my representative from the union that represents TSA employees to explain the difference between TSA precheck and Clear.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
TSA Precheck. The difference between TSA and Precheck and Clear, I mean, the difference is that we have, through pre check, they go through a background check, and they go through. We have biometrics that are recorded, and they go through an interview process to ensure that they are not a security threat. And from what I believe, clear only has access to commercially available data that. That users submit. That is not. I feel that is not. That is not as secure as the way that TSA does it.
- Gilbert Galam
Person
I feel that TSA precheck eclipses many of clear's functions.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, in effect, clear is, in reality, it's a concierge service. They provide a service. That service is allowing Clear paying customers to bypass the line. Senator Sara, you and I respectfully disagree. I think we, as legislators, have an obligation as it relates to public assets to ensure that the public is treated equally as they encounter that, you know, that process through those investments. And I would ask Mrs. Rivera, I mean, also to speak to it. Right. So the security problem is real.
- Josh Newman
Person
And this isn't simply a question of somebody not bringing, you know, not noticing they had a bottle of water. It's actually. It's actually much more serious than that.
- Kristie Rivera
Person
So I would just speak to this as a 33 year flight attendant that is post 9/11. The farther we get away from the days and the tragedy of that event, the further and further we get away from really focused on the safety and the links in safety that is necessary for a safe aviation process. Any one of those links in safety, particularly with our colleagues at TSA, that are broken, puts lives in jeopardy. These are real lives in jeopardy.
- Kristie Rivera
Person
These are the lives of our paying passengers on board the aircraft, as well as my colleagues like myself, that are the very last line of defense when it comes to aviation safety and security.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you for your response. We're going to move to Senator Allen next.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I just. Well, let me just ask right now. Let me just ask if the representative from Clear can respond to some of these. Pretty serious.
- Jessica Ng
Person
Sure. Thank you so much, Senator, for the opportunity. First of all, I think it's important to note the original purpose of the registered traveler program. It was designed by TSA in order to bring greater private sector innovation into the aviation security checkpoint, specifically with respect to identity verification. So it's really important to note that at a time we were actually the first company to bring biometrics to the checkpoint, long before the Federal Government did.
- Jessica Ng
Person
Today, we actually have the highest fidelity digital identity in the entire aviation ecosystem. Not only that is the greatest level of assurance that you are you. You are who you say you are. And, in fact, that represents the fact that we have fulfilled the promise and continue to fill the promise of the registered traveler program. We were doing biometrics before the Federal Government was doing it. We now have ial two source corroborated digital identities.
- Jessica Ng
Person
That is the level of digital identity that ensures that the people who are going through the checkpoint, whom we're working with, our TSA partners for physical screening, are really who they say they are. And that's an incredibly important part of what the registered traveler program was designed to do.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Sure.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
But I appreciate all that very much, but I was asking to see if you could respond to some of these specific incidents. Surely you've heard of them. \
- Jessica Ng
Person
Sure. Of course, I'm not able to speak with. Due to the security reasons, I cannot speak in great detail. But I think it's really important to understand that at Clear, security is job number one. And there are three things to know. First of all, this was an isolated incident. We have verified 167 million identities over the course of our aviation work. And quite frankly, it was the result of human error. And where an individual was not following are very strict protocols.
- Jessica Ng
Person
And so it was not a fault of the biometric system upon which the technology is designed to reduce human error. And so since then, we have implemented changes. First of all, we took swift personnel action, but more importantly, we also updated the training for personnel practices and technology to ensure that those don't happen again.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Can I just ask, Mr. Lites, how does this. Tell me a bit more about. About how it comes to be that clear sets up shop at a particular airport? And what's the interplay with TSA and FAA or Department of Homeland Security in that decision?
- Jim Lites
Person
So, starting with the second part of that, the TSA has the arrangement with Clear, and it is the airport that contracts with Clear. So if an airport brings Clear in, then the TSA accommodates them at that checkpoint. It's really based on the size of your physical checkpoint. For example, at the San Diego airport, Clear is only in one checkpoint. It's the only checkpoint where they have enough space for Clear.
- Jim Lites
Person
But in the new terminal that they are building at the San Diego airport, they are making those checkpoints larger. And Clear would have the opportunity to be in those additional checkpoints once the new terminal is open.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
As a separate line just for Clear?
- Jim Lites
Person
That is a TSA decision. They set up that process where clear customers are brought to the front, to the TSA officer, and the airport does not control that.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Do you know, I mean, can you, do you maybe know, maybe someone else can comment on this? Is the impetus, the motivation behind this relationship between TSA and Clear and how it got started?
- Jessica Ng
Person
Sure. So, about 20 years ago, based on congressional intent, the TSA created the registered traveler program. That registered traveler program was actually created prior to this iteration of Clear. We are now the company, the only company that is authorized under that program. Program, and we partner with 56 airports around the country.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Okay. Is there anywhere. So one of the things that you know, and I've spoken considerably with the author about this, is there any place in the country where Clear has its own standalone line that's only for Clear, as opposed to the current model, which either puts you in, depending on if you're pre check or not, you know, to the front of the line of the pre check or not?
- Jessica Ng
Person
I am not aware of one. But if one exists, it would have had to have been at the decision of the TSA to allow for that. Quite frankly, what we're always focused on is highest level efficiency in terms of throughput, and there are checkpoints in different airports where we are processing more than 20% of that checkpoint. And so, quite frankly, it may make sense to have dedicated lanes.
- Jessica Ng
Person
But again, any of those decisions are required to be collaborative amongst Clear, amongst the airport partner, and ultimately with TSA. And so any such decision, if one were to exist, we have hundreds of more than 100 lanes, so I can't speak to every single one, but I would say that it would all be subject to approval and authorization by TSA.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Okay. I appreciate it. I mean, I'm. Yeah, I'm. I'll make some comments later.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you, Senator. Senator Archuleta, followed by Senator. I'm sorry. Senator Niello was first and then Senator Archuleta, just very quickly.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And because Senator Newman and I had talked about this, I gave it a great deal of consideration, and I landed no. And unfortunately for your bill, the amendments don't persuade me otherwise, so I'm not going to be supporting your bill.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Go ahead, Senator Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. A question. Do you happen to be registered pre-check in order to use clear, or can the general public purchase clear without being a pre-check customer?
- Jessica Ng
Person
Clear does work for both standard and pre-check members. You do have to be an adult over 18 with a valid us issued driver's license or passport, but you can use it with standard or pre-check.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
For 961?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah, for 961.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. Other side of the room. Finally coming back here, Senator Limon. And then Senator Blakespear, it's okay. We said we would move this way.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Right.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. You know, I will say this bill has generated quite a bit of conversation, not just legislatively, but I think with the public as well. And when that happens, I think we actually, you know, we can laugh about it, but we also hear a lot of input.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I appreciate the testimony on both sides because I think it got into a nuance that is not part of the public discourse in the way of not just the value, but maybe some of the imperfections in all systems, not just in one system. I will be supporting your bill today. I am not sure that the amendments, they move in a direction. I am not sure it is a direction that is super comfortable, particularly in light of just treating airports differently.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I want to acknowledge that the airport director for my community called and expressed concerns, and it's an airport that doesn't have this program. So if the program is going to exist in one place in a certain fashion, but not in the other, I think it creates some level of inequity. But it's moving. And I think that the conversation today, particularly in light of, you know, some of the imperfections and challenges around safety, I think merit my vote of support to see what gets worked out.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But I do want to express just, you know, that these amendments make, they move. I just don't know. They create, they give you another problem. So I wanted to just recognize that. And I do appreciate that while there's been a lot of giggling and laughing about the bill, there's really true policy intent here that goes beyond someone cutting in line.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Blakespear, and then we'll come back to Senator Nguyen.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes, thank you. So I appreciate the conversation today and the author for bringing this forward. I never felt much irritation with Clear, but now I think I will.
- Josh Newman
Person
My work is done.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
But, so the way that I'm reading the data and information that's been presented today is that there is this identification that's taking place that has a high quality standard for the most part, and that there were one or two incidences of potential safety concerns which could have happened with the TSA agent as well. I think the commitment to quality, to hiring practices, to standard protocols, to that highest level is, of course, critically important.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
And I don't think we know today if what those standards are was Clear that that would be or wouldn't be equivalent to what TSA is doing. Hopefully there's oversight that's happening that is substantial and that would ensure that these types of things are very few and far between. But so to me, the safety concerns, at least from the information presented today, doesn't seem like it's the biggest issue, really.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
The biggest issue is that people who are wealthy enough to buy Clear are cutting to the front of the line for both TSA pre-check and for people who don't have TSA pre-check, it's allowing you to buy your way to the front of the line. And in many ways, you know, the reality of that is, considering what is that we're, how do gonna we see our transportation system?
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
How is it like getting on the airplane where people who have more money are able to sit in first class or in business class versus coach? And what, and in some ways, I mean, the question of, are there any airports? And I'm sure San Diego, which I represent and was on the airport authority, but I'm sure they're not providing their own line for Clear because there would be no point because what you are buying is cutting to the front of the line.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
So, you know, there's a concierge service of someone holding your hand and walking in front of the other people to say, you get to go, you get to get your things screened faster. That's because they still have to go through, of course, the screening line as well. So the question of how do I feel about that? How do we feel about that, that people can pay money and go to the front?
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I think I agree with Senator Limon that these amendments, I think, are worse because the idea that some airports are going to be able to, airports are making revenue on this, I think we have to be really clear eyed about this, that this airports are always trying to stay afloat and they sell parking and they sell food and concessions, and the airlines pay to go into those airports. And that's how airports finance themselves.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
So this is a revenue stream for them and they are not going to like it that they're not going to be able to access this if there are only nine of them. I heard 54 and nine, but maybe.
- Josh Newman
Person
They're the nine currently in California.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Nine currently in California. Nine airports currently in California that there's going to be a rush toward Clear by before the end of the year 2025, January 2025 to get an agreement in place, I would think, if this bill goes through in this form. So I'm planning to and will support the bill today.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
But I would suggest that you reconsider whether your goals are achieved by having this in place, because nine of them in California and then everybody else excluded is not going to create a better system. I think it does open us up to a system that is that really serving us? I mean, I would rather it be all of the airports in California or none of them. All of them having the option or none of them. I guess I'd leave it at that. So thanks very much.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
And those are my comments.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Nguyen, and then we'll go to Senator Dodd.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Newman, I think I've received more national coverage on a bill that I've ever had, especially on a no position that I've had. And so I just wanted, though, just to set the record straight that there was a national news outlet, misstated my position and it's gone all over the country. And you know why I emphasize with your reasoning behind the bill, Senator, I've always been on record of being very supportive of free market innovation.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And with that being said, I'm also not a co author of this bill. I don't know how that outlet got there nationally, that I'm a co author, joint author.
- Josh Newman
Person
No, either.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And that this was a bipartisan bill. I just want to set that record straight. So I'm actually going to lay off today and watch as it moves, continue to move forward.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Yes. So I have great respect for the author to, Senator Newman, I know that you're doing this for the right reasons. In your heart, your mind, your soul. There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that that's correct. I will say Southwest has a way to buy up to get in the a line. And I know that members of this body use that because I was on it this weekend and frankly, did it myself with others.
- Bill Dodd
Person
It's just a fact of life when you're traveling with people, you want your somebody to come with you. We have commute lanes all throughout the State of California, the commuter lanes. You buy a Tesla, you buy a brand new electric car, you get in the commute lanes, you get in express lanes. You can get in express lanes and pay for that. When I came in here, I was trying really hard to give Senator Newman some sort of vote on this.
- Bill Dodd
Person
I'll tell you, this thing is starting to annoy me.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm not sorry, Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
It's not up to you to be sorry. I'm just telling you, TSA is the one that makes the decisions. It's annoying to me that here we are trying to get in the middle of that relationship when they've got relationships all across the United States of America, 50 different states, and then we've got your witnesses that turn from making it a nuisance and everything to actually fear mongering on safety issues. So I'm going from a, not voting to an absolute no on this.
- Bill Dodd
Person
I'm just really, you know, frankly, I just think this is going the wrong way from my vantage point.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator Allen?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Yeah, I mean, I've talked, spoken extensively with the author about this, and we've had some fun repartee. I respect the author a great deal and the sponsors as well. I guess my concern is along the lines of what just expressed by Senator Dodd. This just seems to me to be a decision that ought to be made by.
- Bill Dodd
Person
You'll be way more tactful.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I'll probably be a little more tactful. It just seems that this ought to be, this is a decision made by the airports and by TSA and by Homeland Security, FAA. And it just feels like a strange place for the legislature to be coming in and putting its finger on the, on the scale. So Ima lay off, too, but I certainly happy to have further discussion with the author on this.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
But this is, for me, it's about the locus of decision making, and this doesn't feel like the right place for this decision to be made.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. It looks like my colleagues have completed their comments and questions. I want to say that having worked with the author on this bill and also having had extensive conversations with him, and of course, he had extensive conversations with the committee staff as well.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
That is, I think his motivation is correct, that you basically have two different systems right now in the State of California, the airports that are operating in the so called model that exists in the nine airports and airports that aren't in the program at all. And I believe this legislation, if we could get it passed, would significantly motivate, significantly motivate all of the players involved, including the airlines. And I don't know how many of you have worked in a jurisdiction like I have.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It sounds like some of you have, where, you know, in a municipal jurisdiction like San Jose, where you come to realize very quickly that it is southwest that's calling the shots. It is the airlines that are paying for everything. It is the airlines that are setting up these systems to make money, and they are under the jurisdiction of the State of California.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Now, we can respectfully disagree about how effective the bill might be and motivating them, but it seems to me if we put what is in effect a moratorium on their ability to expand until they get this right and start respecting people in a uniform manner up and down the state, you know, that why would they do anything if we don't regulate at all? Water seeks its own level, and right now it's kind of all over the place.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I think the motivations of whether it bothers you to see somebody cut in front or pay to cut in front or not are less compelling to me than that. I don't think TSA and the airports and the airlines are going to be motivated at all to create a better system, a more streamlined system, a system that's not commingling, you know, these lines and these occurrences unless somebody gives them that motivation.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I think the bill would do that under, I think it would have done that the way it was originally put in print. I think it would have done that the way the Senator was thinking about doing author amendments. And I think ultimately the way the committee staff suggested, again in the form of a moratorium, would, would certainly do that, and it was, would be worth a try. So that said, I'm going to be supporting the bill with an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
As, as I think everybody's aware in terms of the briefings they've received from this committee, I would recommend folks do that and give the author an opportunity to keep moving this through. I am a little dismayed, and I wasn't sure I'd ever say anything like this in public, and I'm not going to get specific as to who the participants were, but there were commitments to remove opposition on this bill if these amendments were taken.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The senator, the author, stood up and said he was taking those amendments. We keep our word here. This is one of the things that I've been extremely impressed with working in the legislature, that when somebody says, I'm going to be an aye, they're an aye. When someone says, I'm going to be a no, there are no. When someone says, I'll talk to you at 3:00 about your bill, they do it. That's what happens up here.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I'm not accustomed to people coming into a committee like this, a significant committee, and saying, we're going to remove opposition if these amendments are taken and we're going to show up and we're going to say it and not do it, and I'm going to leave it at that. But I want everyone here to know that that occurred.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I don't think it was fair to the author, and I think it was a setup to the author in terms of coming in here and ultimately win or lose, he could have asked for. What he really wanted was something that wasn't amended down, so not good. And I hope that's a message to folks that don't do that with this committee.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I would hope you don't do that with any of the committees in the legislature, but don't do that in this committee because the next time my recommendation will be to reverse the amends, to go back to the original structure of the bill, if no other reason to make the point. And I won't be taking those kind of offers seriously anymore from participants who do that around here. Your word is your bond. That's what I've learned. And it's got to stay that way.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So Senator, if you want to close, you may.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Let me come back to a question. Senator Allen. Right. To provide clarity, you asked about the nature of the relationship, the origins, what happened and missing described. Some of it was there were 11 companies, including Clear, that were part of this registered traveler program. All 11 went bankrupt during the Great Recession.
- Josh Newman
Person
The two co founders of Clear actually bought one of those companies out of bankruptcy precisely because it was a registered traveler program, which is sort of, that's about the same as if you buy a liquor store that's gone out of business because it has a current liquor license. The value is in that license. The value was in the RT certification, and they've built a business around that since.
- Josh Newman
Person
But it's simply leveraging that asset to extract value from the traveler experience without, to my witness's point, without actually meeting their representation of enhancing security, improving efficiency, or providing a quality experience to all travelers. They don't do that. Right. That's the basis of this bill. The other basis of bill, which has been really interesting because it certainly has catalyzed a lot of conversation, is a broader kind of equity question, which is, I want to make really clear, somebody used the example Southwest.
- Josh Newman
Person
You buy a ticket on Southwest, you can upgrade, that is, two classes within a private transaction. If you go to Disney, you can buy the fast pass. Again, two different transactions with a private entity. The point here is that sooner or later we all have to travel. Sooner or later, we are all subject to the regime that has been created since 9/11. And my witnesses especially are subject to that regime. So you heard from them.
- Josh Newman
Person
You heard from the people who take care of us in the sky. They don't like this service for really legitimate reasons. One, it doesn't enhance security. Two, it heightens the fraught nature of the interactions that happen at airports right now. The folks who keep us safe on the ground don't like this service for really valid reasons. Right?
- Josh Newman
Person
One, it's not secure. Two, it heightens the fraught nature of all the interactions that they have to have every day with the general public. So I want to make clear, the intent here was never to put Clear out of business. Right. It was simply to create enough momentum around their relationship with airports that they could collectively go to the TSA and say, hey, there's a better way to do this business that better serves the traveling public.
- Josh Newman
Person
But I would argue it would better serve Clear, because Clear is actually foregoing a whole bunch of business among people who don't want to cut the line but who otherwise might enroll at a concierge service because it probably would be valuable to them if they did that. So. And I also want to make clear, you know, as noted, you know, those weren't my preferred amendments. They were proffered to me by the committee.
- Josh Newman
Person
I am not one who rolls a chair, especially, you know, to his point, where we had commitments around that new set of amendments. I do appreciate. Senator Blakespear. Senator Limon, you know, your concerns. The goal, again, was to create enough energy around this to do something that we know can be done. So the assertion that TSA is this a movable object, not true. As I noted in my opening remarks, the Delta, in the Delta terminal at LAX, they've created a new line.
- Josh Newman
Person
TSA and Delta Co. share it. You know, God bless all the Delta customers are going to use it. We could do the same thing if we had the will. I was simply trying to create the basis for that. So let me close with this.
- Josh Newman
Person
For those of you, you know, those of you who use Clear as the Clear attendant, escorts you through the line in front of the next person, the mom with the three kids, ask yourself, do you look that person that's being shunted out of the way in the eye? If you don't, it's because you know this service is inequitable, it's wrong, and if you do, you're wrong. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The true last word. We will ask committee assistant to state the motion. Is there a motion?
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
I'll make the motion.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Senator Archuleta. So we'll formalize that motion now and call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 16, SB 1372. The motion is do pass as amended, and we refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
Six to three on call.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the vote currently is six to three, and we'll keep it on call. Thank you, Senator. We are going to come back to a bill we passed on and appreciate Senator Wiener's cooperation and patience through the recess that we took earlier. And we'll come back to file item six. This is SB 1031, Senator Wiener. Please proceed whenever you're ready.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. One moment, Mister Chair. Okay, thank you, Mister Chair and colleagues, I'm here with my legislative partner in this endeavor, Senator Wahab, to co present Senate Bill 1031, the Connect Bay Area Act. The Connect Bay Area Act addresses major existential financial challenges for Bay Area public transportation agencies while investing in various transportation needs, including our roads. SB 1031 authorizes the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, or via a qualified voter initiative, to propose a Bay Area ballot measure for sustainable transportation funding on the 2026 ballot or later.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
SB 1031 also advances stronger regional transit network management reforms in order to modernize and integrate our systems in a stronger way. Bay Area public transportation has faced financial challenges for many years, and the pandemic poured lighter fluid over those challenges. And while ridership in the Bay Area is gradually recovering, it's not doing so quickly enough to prevent particularly fare reliant transit systems from facing major fiscal shortfalls and having to make major service cuts again. These problems preexisted the pandemic.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The pandemic made it much worse through hard work in the budget last year, we were successful as a group in securing bridge funding for our transit systems to put off those service cuts that would be starting right now to delay them into 2026. So thank you, colleagues, for that. This measure will provide long term sustainable funding so that we do not have these continual emergencies.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So SB 1031 will authorize placement of a revenue measure, and there are various options, including sales tax, parcel tax, a business tax, and the possibility of a transit demand management approach to fund transit operations, transit capital and our road systems. The bill has a requirement that a minimum of 70% of the revenues generated in each county must be invested in transportation projects, programs and services benefiting that county. And there are other provisions as well.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And now, and before I turn it over to Senator Wahab to speak about the consolidation aspect of the bill, I do want to really thank Chair Cortese and also Chair Glazer, because this will, if we're successful today, go to the Revenue and Taxation Committee tomorrow. The two chairs, and also their staff and the pro temp staff, worked intensively with myself and Senator Wahab on a number of issues on the bill.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And even though this needs to be a Bay Area collaborative effort with many stakeholders in this building and outside, we did a lot of really, really strong stakeholder engagement. And so I do just want to. This is being distributed to everyone, I think a list of amendments or a term sheet, I should say, including some amendments that we've agreed to with the chair. And so, Mister Chair, would you like me to read those?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, please. Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you. So first, MTC's or the voters authority to place a measure on the ballot will expire after 2040. So 2040 will be the latest that a measure could be placed on the ballot. Any taxes authorized as part of this measure will have a duration no longer than 30 years. The goal of the measure will be to raise $1.5 billion annually from new revenues.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
If a sales tax is part of the mix, then the sales tax will be no more than one half cent sales tax. We will retain placeholder language in the bill for the new transit pass proposal that in the bill and that will be retained. Next, the MTC can only bond against revenues raised by the taxes authorized by the bill and that are retained by MTC. Bonds can only be used for capital investments.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
MTC, as regional network manager, will have authority to condition STA funds on its network management policies that are approved by the Commission or whatever entity within the Commission does so subject to the prescribed guardrails in the bill. The bill will not change MTC authority on conditioning any other existing funding streams, so limited to STA funds. And then finally, on the return to source issue, which we currently have spelled out in the bill. We're aware that there's a lot of discussion in the region around that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's been most intense in the South Bay, but it's elsewhere as well. And I am fully committed to continuing discussions with stakeholders around the region, including, but not limited to the South Bay on return to source and the structure of the expenditure plan framework. I want to stress, colleagues, this bill is a work in progress, and I look forward to continuing collaboration with the chair because it will not end today. And with chair Glazer as well.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Respectfully ask for an aye vote, and I will now turn it over to my partner in this effort, Senator Wahab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Not to you, your witnesses. Okay. All right, so a Wiener and Wahab bill, right? So you guys know that this is a beautiful bill. So I just want to say, good evening, chair and colleagues. I would like to thank the Committee staff for their engagement on this bill. I also just want to again echo the words of my colleague here and thank the chair Cortese as well as chair glazier for really spending 730 in the morning with us on a weekly basis.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So I really just want to highlight that. And I want to highlight that. Section three of SB 1031 is an assessment and report of recommendations for the 27 public transit agencies across the nine Bay Area counties. So my vision is not just to aim for repairs, but for a system that connects us deeper in the Bay Area and one day in the future across Northern California. SB 13...1031 we did this last time, too, is setting the stage for that transformation.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The intent of the assessment is to improve speed, affordability, safety and cleanliness, but also promote climate goals, incorporate technology, improve accessibility, improve accountability, and reduce administrative costs. The assessment itself consists of three parts. Part one, identify the agencies, their governance structure, finance mechanisms, labor agreements and MOUs, as well as the fleet stock, and more.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Part two is to assess consolidation, which may include combining staffs of two or more agencies while retaining separate governing boards and potentially replacing multiple governing boards with a unified governing board representing a broader jurisdiction. Creating a more effective umbrella structure under which existing transit agencies are brought together but still operate as distinct agencies with separate governing boards.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Increasing coordination across two or more agencies to deliver one or more components of a transportation service to the agencies can increase their capacity to provide trips. Or part three, and part three assess consolidation impacts following the assessment. Assessment, which is to be performed by Transportation Institute with a consulting labor Institute, the California State Transportation Agency will develop a report of recommendations while engaging impacted stakeholders. This includes local governments. Any further action is entirely up to a future Legislature or the agencies themselves.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All of this is necessary to increase ridership, sustainability, increase the overall quality of Bay Area public transit, and increase the public's confidence in management of our transit systems. The Bay Area deserves a world class transit system, and we need an independent assessment of all of the agencies to help us get there. With SB 1031, we're not just dreaming, we're doing. We're building a legacy of transit that will carry the Bay Area forward. So I just want to thank you guys.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I want to thank our witnesses, and I will respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay, we're now Mister Chair. I have two witnesses today, Bevan Dufty, who's the President of the BART board of directors, and Rebecca Long, the Director of legislation and public affairs at the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you. Witnesses may proceed whenever you're ready.
- Rebecca Long
Person
Thank you. Good evening, Chair Cortese and Members, I'm Rebecca Long, Director of legislation and public affairs with MTC. I'm honored to be here today and would like to thank Senator Wiener and Senator Wahab for their leadership in authoring this bill and also share MTC's appreciation for the engagement of the pro tem, the Chair and Senator Glazer as well. SB 1031 is admittedly an ambitious undertaking.
- Rebecca Long
Person
It recognizes that in this post COVID world, we can't have the world class, reliable, affordable, efficient and connected transportation network that the Bay Area wants and deserves without two new things. One, significantly more dedicated resources for public transit and other improvements, and two, greater oversight and coordination of the region's 27 transit agencies. MTC is sponsoring SB 1031 to deliver on these goals because we believe our region's future, as well as the state's climate, equity and economic goals, depends on it.
- Rebecca Long
Person
The Bay Area cannot thrive economically, socially or environmentally without a reliable and convenient public transit system. Over three quarters of Bay Area voters understand this, with 78% saying public transit is important to the Bay Area. But this is not just a transit bill. One quarter of SB 1031 funds are proposed to make local streets safer for all users, with another 15% dedicated to a multimodal infrastructure program aligned with county priorities that are consistent with our long range plan and climate goals.
- Rebecca Long
Person
Both of these programs are formula based, with counties guaranteed to benefit in proportion to their contribution toward the tax. I ask for your aye vote today so that Bay Area voters will have their own chance in 2026 to vote for a truly connected Bay Area. Thank you.
- Bevan Dufty
Person
Good evening. I'm Bevan Dufty, 2024, President of the BART board of directors. On March 28, our board adopted a support, if amended, position on SB 1031. We are thankful for state funding provided through SB 125 and recognize the incredible work of MTC to engage stakeholders in the Bay Area legislative caucus on a bill that addresses the region's top transportation funding needs.
- Bevan Dufty
Person
BART is laser focused on improving quality of service and implementing cost savings, but we need a permanent, sustainable source of funding to close the $300 million operating deficit beginning in fiscal year '27. The transportation funding measure is not a green light to continue the status quo. Transit riders and non riders alike deserve world class public transit, safe streets and multimodal capital projects.
- Bevan Dufty
Person
At BART, we are running only new train cars, investing in safety and station cleaning and installing new fare gates throughout our system by the end of 2025. Our outstanding General Manager, Bob Powers, is also leading efforts to improve coordination across more than two dozen transit agencies. We appreciate the authors taking proposed amendments on guardrails to MTC's enhanced authority and an expenditure plan that seeks to close operating deficits while pledging funds to complete important capital improvements.
- Bevan Dufty
Person
We also appreciate both Senators continued leadership and their understanding of the Bay Area. Cannot wait another year for enabling legislation. And let me join the Senators in thanking the Committee chair. Committee Chair Cortese and also Chair Glazer. BART wholeheartedly supports 1031 moving forward through the legislative process and we look forward to opportunities to collaborate. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you to the witnesses. Is there anyone else in the Committee who'd like to come forward on a me too basis and indicate name, affiliation and support?
- Catherine Charles
Person
Good evening Chair and Members Catherine Charles, on behalf of Housing Action Coalition, in support.
- Jonathan Cole
Person
Jonathan Cole, Climate Action Commission, in support and seeking amendments.
- Andres Ramirez
Person
Mister Chair and Members Andres Ramirez, on behalf of the Transbay Joint Powers Authority, don't have a formal position on the bill, but very grateful to both of the authors, their incredible staff leadership and yourself for engaging us in conversations. Hope to see us move forward. Thanks.
- Steven Wallauch
Person
Steve Wallach, on behalf of the Napa Valley Transportation Authority in support.
- Adina Levin
Person
Adina Levin with Seamless Bay Area in support and concurring with allies with voices for public transportation.
- Gerald Williams
Person
Gerald Williams, on behalf of IBEW Local 1245 in support.
- Jodie Medeiros
Person
Jodie Medeiros on behalf of Walk San Francisco we support
- Laura Tolkoff
Person
Laura Tolkoff with SPUR we support and seek amends and feel very confident about the amendments that have been moving forward over the last week.
- Robin Pam
Person
Robin Pam, on behalf of kids safe San Francisco, in support.
- Mark Watts
Person
Good afternoon. Mark Watts, on behalf of the San Francisco County Transportation Authority, in support.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. All right, thank you. We'll now move to opposition. We do have primary opposition. Jim Lawson, you can come on up. And I believe we have representatives from Sam Trans and Caltrain on the opposition side. If that's true, please come on up. You can come in if you want to come into the well, if you don't want to, you don't have to.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, we're going to allow two minutes, I'm sorry, two minutes, Mister Lawson, and then we're going to go, I guess, have these witnesses split two minutes, since that's the rule here.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We're also, for those of you out there wondering, we're going to have an additional opportunity for in betweeners because we happen to know from all the working group work that's been done that there's a lot of folks out there that are neither clearly opposition or support that would want to be heard in a hearing, but we'll get to that after opposition. Mister Lawson.
- Jim Lawson
Person
Thank you, Chair Cortese and Members of the Committee. My name is Jim Lawson. I represent the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, the VTA. I do want to express my sincere thanks to you for your leadership in trying to come to some agreement in this, and I especially want to thank Senator Wiener, who I deeply respect for his leadership in transit and transportation and all of the extraordinary work he's done, as well as Senator Wahab in her efforts to support public transportation in the State of California.
- Jim Lawson
Person
We recognize MTC's efforts to address a serious, serious issue for public transit in California. My colleagues and friend, Mister Dufty has laid out some of the problems that Barth faces here, and because this bill is multifaceted and involves several different areas, I want to concentrate on the areas in which the VTA has taken its opposed unless amended position. There are two areas that we'll focus on. First of those is the revenue generation portion of the bill. We absolutely would like more revenue.
- Jim Lawson
Person
Let me make that perfectly clear. If anyone was in doubt, we are not opposing this. But as background, VTA receives operating and capital support from four different local sales taxes if you add Caltrain's multi county measure RR, our county residents pay 1 and 3 quarters cents an additional local sales tax to support public transit. These taxes, not including the measure RR, generate $890 million per year to support transit and capital projects. 80% of our operating budget is supported by these taxes.
- Jim Lawson
Person
While our capital projects are funded by the existing sales tax measures, the operation support from them needs to be extended, otherwise we'll face major service reductions. The unfortunate result would be a reduction in our service hours, the impact on the transit dependent, the economy and our climate. Any region wide tax would prove any competing sales tax would provide a potential conflict when we need to reauthorize those sales taxes. There are very few windows of opportunity to pass sales taxes and they have to be carefully crafted.
- Jim Lawson
Person
Our local measures also support capital projects on Caltrain in the amount of $1.3 billion, BART phase two at about a billion and a half, and on an annual basis these taxes support operations to our friends at BART for $102 million. We also support ACE at $4 million and Caltrain at $63 million. We are also, number two deeply concerned with MTCs ability to withhold TDA and STA funds. I understand the amendment would limit this to TDA funds.
- Jim Lawson
Person
VTA is working cooperatively with the regional network management structure to improve service throughout the Bay Area. The challenge we have is that Santa Clara County does not fit neatly into the San Francisco-Oakland centric view of the Bay Area. That MTC holds 80% of the trips and Santa Clara County begin and end in this county. We have achieved 100% of pre COVID levels on our bus services.
- Jim Lawson
Person
Frequent network by doing what, you know, fast, frequent, reliable service, we think there can be reasonable differences on priorities and providing one party the unchecked ability to disrupt our service is not acceptable. On revenue our citizens contribute on a significant Gail as we know, the way to succeed with transportation measures is through collaboration and cooperation. Achieving buy in is the recipe for success and we would appreciate the opportunity to be part of that success. On the regional network management, we want to work cooperatively.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You'll have to wrap up.
- Jim Lawson
Person
I'm wrapping up. I'm sorry. I apologize for going over. Thanks again for all your work and all you've done to assist transit in the Bay Area, and we look forward to working with the authors on further further amendments.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you for being here. I know it's been a long day.
- Jim Lawson
Person
Thank you Mister Chairman, and I apologize for going over.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It happens next witnesses good evening.
- Michaela Petrik
Person
I'm Michaela Wright Petrik with SamTrans, which provides fixed route bus paratransit and on demand service in San Mateo County. SamTrans has an opposed unless amended position on SB 1031. The bill requires a consolidation study on a tight timeframe with no cost estimate or Fund source. We support instead focusing on coordination, which can have a real benefit for our riders. Second, the Bill grants MTC broad authority to place the measure on the ballot.
- Michaela Petrik
Person
We're concerned about losing voter support for our local transportation funding, which may be up for renewal in 2028 and provides over $100 million annually. And third, the Bill expands expands MTC's authority to withhold existing STA and LTF funds unless certain objectives are met. Samtrans relies on these funds for operations and MTC shouldn't be able to withhold them. We appreciate the author's focus on providing new transportation funding and look forward to working through these issues. Thank you.
- Jason Baker
Person
Good evening. My name is Jason Baker, Director of government and community affairs for Caltrain. The Caltrain board has taken an opposed, unless amended position on SB 1031. We appreciate the authors working with us since that vote to try to address our concerns, but we feel like there is more work to be done, including refocusing the bill on better addressing operating deficits, focusing on coordination, not consolidation, and addressing concerns about withholding funds that agencies rely on for operations.
- Jason Baker
Person
We thank you for your attention to the critical issue of transit funding, and we look forward to working with you as this bill evolves. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, thank you to those witnesses. We're going to ask if anyone else wants to come forward and express an opposed position to this bill. If so, please do so now.
- Matthew Broad
Person
Mister Chair and Members, Matt Broad here on behalf of the ATU and the Teamsters, respectfully opposed unless amended with regard to the consolidation piece in the Bill. Thank you.
- James Thuerwachter
Person
Good afternoon. Chair and Members James Thorwachter with the California State Council of Laborers want to thank both of the authors for their incredible work on this. Unfortunately, we still are at a oppose unless amended position, but we look forward to working with both of the offices going forward. Thank you.
- Manny Leon
Person
Manny Leon, California alliance for Jobs opposed unless amended.
- Andrew Antwih
Person
Mister chair Members Andrew Antwih, on behalf of the city County Association of Governments of San Mateo county, the board has adopted an opposed unless amended position.
- Chris Lee
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members Chris Lee, on behalf of the Sonoma County Transportation Authority, Regional Climate Protection Authority, had an opposing, unless amended position on the prior version of the bill. Look forward to reviewing the amendments and hoping to resolve those remaining issues.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
For the tweeners. Is that okay?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We're not there yet.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Okay, wait.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Is that it for opposition? He was just asking if tweeners are okay at this point. We're going to take that as a third group, so we'll get to you. If that's what's remaining, we'll stop here. Do we have.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
This isn't a usual thing that we do in this committee, so I'm going to just sort of lay out the ground rules for this real quick. You can say what you want. Obviously, you don't have a me-too position, support, or opposition, so the idea would be to speak in 30 seconds or less, half a minute each, indicating as much as you can in that point as to what the distinction is in your position.
- Zack Deutsch-Gross
Person
Thank you. Zack Deutsch-Gross with Transform on behalf of Voices for Public Transportation, support if amend. We want to see 70% or 750 million, whichever is greater, for operations, and protect that against bonding, prioritizing progressive revenue sources and prohibiting highway expansion as part of the measure. We look forward to working with the authors and seeing the term sheet. Thank you.
- Andrés Ramos
Person
Good evening, Chair and members. Andres Ramos, on behalf of Public Advocates we're also members of the Voices for Public Transportation Coalition. We're in a support if amended position for the same reason stated by the previous speaker. Thank you.
- Steven Wallauch
Person
Good evening again. Steve Wallauch on behalf of the Alameda Contra Costa Transit District. The AC Transit Board hasn't adopted a position yet, but they have identified some concerns that they have that they shared with the Working Group Committee, and we look forward to working with Senator Wiener and Wahab on resolving those issues. Thanks.
- Grace Koplin
Person
Good evening, Chair and members. Grace Koplin on behalf of the Bay Area Council. We were in an opposed unless amended position, but the amendments take the bill in a positive direction, so we are now reevaluating our position. I want to thank the author and the committee for all the work they've done on this measure. Thank you.
- Sara Greenwald
Person
Good evening. My name is Sara Greenwald with 350 Bay Area, speaking as a 350 Bay Area is a member of Voices for Public Transportation, and therefore we concur. We support as amend.
- John Anderson
Person
John Anderson, speaking on behalf of California Environmental Voters, in support of the amendments requested by Voices for Public Transit.
- Bryant Miramontes
Person
Good evening, Mr. Chair and members. Bryant Miramontes with AFSCME California. We are in-betweeners. We appreciate the opportunity to speak on this issue. We are supportive of the authors for bringing this bill forward and their willingness to work with us on getting closer to a place where agencies get the funding they need, services are maintained or restored, and that the workforce is supported during the process. And we are supportive of the revenue raised and generally are supportive of the goals of the bill and just want to ensure that those funds are allocated transparently and that they are going where they are needed most. So in addition to that, just aiming to continue reviewing the consolidation language and other components of the bill. Thank you.
- Louie Costa
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members. Louie Costa with SMART Transportation Division. We don't have an official position, but we do remain concerned with the consolidation language and we'll continue to work going forward. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you all. I'm impressed. You did pretty well with the 30 seconds each. Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Yes. First of all, I want to thank Senator Wiener and Senator Wahab and Senator Cortese for these amendments. I think this makes this a much stronger bill. I'll be supporting this today. I really think that we ought to have some thoughts and some conversation on empowering self-help and have the region more readily think this out themselves. We do have a real history, and I know that Senator Wiener and Senator Cortese know this.
- Bill Dodd
Person
At MTC, we all three served as commissioners, and on regional measure two and regional measure three, we were able to work that out. I might add, for gentlemen from VTA, you had 2% of the bridge tolls in regional measure three and got 15% of the money. So it's not to be competitive. It's just, I just think the region gets in with the stakeholders and can go through a lot of this stuff without putting all the members from Central California, North, North Central Californians, Southern California.
- Bill Dodd
Person
And I'd like to bring them a package back here, frankly, if that's at all possible. I think, don't think I know that MTC has been working on this since 2022, and I'd like to see them get together and see what they can put together in the next few weeks and get back to the bill's author and try to work something out in the Chairman, of course. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Others, other members of the committee wishing to speak? This clearly is a regional matter, and, you know, deference to those who aren't from the Bay Area region, like Senator Dodd and myself and the authors, I'll try to be pretty concise. I do want to say that this term sheet was really, from my perspective as a chair, the absolute minimum acceptable to just keep the bill moving in terms of a recommendation.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I can't compare past measures in terms of proportionality of dollars and so forth, but those of you who are sort of looking at this as a Bay Area item from afar, Mr. Lawson on the opposition side, who actually represents the area surrounding Senate District 15, and to some extent, Senator Wahab's district as well, has really been pretty generous in his comments. That county pays 30% of all sales tax in the Bay Area, in a nine-county region, 30%.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And this bill calls for them to send the sales tax money if there is a half-cent sales tax, to MTC, located in their beautiful headquarters in San Francisco, where I've spent plenty of my time, for them to decide in their ultimate wisdom how to redistribute that money out to the nine-county region. It says 70% return to source, but it says MTC will decide which projects and which programs will be supported. It's not going to fly.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The opposition campaign for this measure is started already in Santa Clara County. I understand from the outreach that I had to do to the Board of Supervisors there, to the mayor of San Jose who's absolutely required an 80% return to source, an actual return to source, not money that's filtered through a regional agency, that those folks are, are coming out more publicly tomorrow with their opposition campaign.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And to Senator Dodd's point, all the years that I worked in this regional government space, which all in all if you include the COG in the MTC, was 20 straight years, the way this would work is those regional organizations would go out to mayors conferences, they'd go out to boards of supervisors, they would go out to stakeholder groups and generate a consensus support around what was going to be brought to the Legislature. That happened.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Some of you who were here would remember that happening with a housing bill that Assemblymember David Chiu brought forward a couple years ago. Intensive outreach done by the regional entity, not by the Legislature, not by chairs of committees, not by committee consultants, but that work would be done and brought forward, as Senator Dodd said in a package where there's consensus. I think the problem here that's rapidly becoming beyond a ticking bomb type of a situation is that that work hasn't happened.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It has happened regionally and locally to the extent where there's any kind of consensus. And in fact, people are starting to get very, very scared that their ability to raise local revenues to support their own operators. In Santa Clara County, that's one operator, coterminous with the county in the middle of Silicon Valley, dependent on sales taxes, wondering how in the hell are we going to keep ourselves afloat in the future with the displacement of those sales taxes by a half-cent that we don't even control?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You could see why that would be problematic in Southern California, Central California, any place if you took one county with 30% of the sales taxes and said, put it in an envelope, send it in a check to San Francisco and we'll figure out how to redistribute it for you, it's a hit piece waiting to happen. So Senator Wiener knows that Senator Wahab knows that, Pro-Tem knows that with all those names were mentioned earlier, Senator Glazer knows that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We're going to continue trying to work through this and see if we can sort of backtrack and figure out how to deal with it. In my opinion, the simplest way is a direct return to source based on where that sales tax is coming from, as to whatever that number is. 70 or 80% of this measure, we haven't been able to get there today in this committee. But if that's not done soon, you know, I suspect that the measure itself won't be.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The Bill itself will not be long lived. And even if it is, there will be no successful measure locally because the biggest county in the region is already opposing it. That said, it's important to move it forward to see if our outstanding authors here can pull this off. And I remain willing and able to help along the way. But I wanted to make it very clear that there's a very, very conditional aye vote on my part today and probably more time that I put in already into any bill in my three and a half years here. And we're just at the beginning point. So thank you to the authors. Senators, if you'd like to close, we can take up a vote on the bill finally.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I'll make a few remarks and turn it over to Senator Wahab. First of all, so Mr. Chair, I want to thank you for working so intensively with us, understanding that there's been a lot of energy, shall we say, in the South Bay and also in San Mateo County, which I represent almost 20% of. And I need to be very, very clear if we're going to go to the. Whatever gets out of the Legislature, to go to the ballot and to pass something regionally will require significant consensus.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Not 100%, but consensus, and a lot of broad support geographically, in business community, labor, advocacy community, and so forth. If you have, you know, one of, if you have a significant opposition, that makes it very hard to pass something. So I think we have done, there's been a lot of work over many, many years for various regional measures to build that support. We are at the beginning here what my office has done a lot of outreach all over the region. We'll continue to do so.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I agree. We need more and more of that outreach so that we can really build that support. I also just want to say, having served with you, Mr. Chair, and with Senator Dodd on the MTC, on some level, a really high return to source, like direct to counties, in some ways benefits Muni, benefits San Francisco because we have, like Santa Clara County, San Francisco has a transit agency that is coterminous with the county. But for me it's about.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes, about my own, but also, as I know it is for you, about the region, which was so integrated and needs to be more integrated. There's been a little bit of a narrative in this process. For example, BART, which has had the most obvious financial problems, that it's about just one limited area.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
When we know that BART, in addition to the counties that pay sales tax, and there are only three that do, San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa County, we know that there are six BART stations in San Mateo county which does not pay sales tax, but there are six there. And I know, Mr. Chair, you're committed. I'm committed to making sure that BART goes all the way down to San Jose.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So BART will go from San Jose all the way through the East Bay into Contra Costa County, into San Francisco, and fairly significantly into San Mateo County. We know that Caltrain, which has a problem starting in a couple of years, connects my city to yours. We know that all of these that SMART has such huge potential as it expands to really connect the North Bay. These systems are all becoming more and more integrated, and they have to be more integrated.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And as we all work together to address the needs of different counties, we need to never forget that we're not just our county, that we all depend on each other and we all rise or fall together. And so I respectfully ask for an aye vote and I will turn it over to my colleague.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. I just want to be very frank, and I really do appreciate all the work that every single individual has really given to this effort. You know, my intention with the original bill to consolidate and really understand what that means was because of the fact that, you know, there is 27 agencies in nine Bay Area counties, some also duplicating efforts in the same areas and still taking away money from the pot of money, that is, transportation, but not necessarily delivering better service or more deeper into the Bay Area. And I think that's problematic.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And so with this effort and also working with Senator Wiener, you know, I represent the East Bay and the South Bay, and I share the South Bay with, you, Chair Cortese. And I often tell Senator Wiener, you know, the Bay Area is bigger than just San Francisco. So I do have concerns with, you know, funding just in one particular area or goal. And I think that this Bill solves a lot of the concerns we have. Right?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We are talking about return to source, and I want to be very clear, last year, we clearly saw transportation being cut, funding being cut, and we had to claw back for the money there. We also know ridership is struggling regardless of if we want to talk about COVID, pre-COVID, or post-COVID. Across the board, it's still not where we need it to be. And we're talking about the environment, and we're talking about vehicle miles traveled. We're talking about all of these things that really transportation covers.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And this bill in particular, addresses a lot of those concerns. We have talked to a lot of opposition, to be completely frank. There are certain things that, you know, we're not trying to put the finger on the scale in regards to the study, and we've had those open and honest discussions as to exactly what are we doing. We also don't want more and more agencies to be created and created not in a uniform manner, but also taking money from the pot of money that is there.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
This bill not only has a true, honest, independent study, it also puts money on the table, money that literally can improve public transit, make sure that we are maintaining our infrastructure that we're talking about, both in regards to just our highways and so forth that we are in negotiation with, but also the infrastructure of all of these agencies and what they do. And we're putting people to work, Americans to work. That is one of the goals we need to invest. And so I respectfully ask for an aye vote, because this is a good bill. This is a hard discussion, but it's very simple to answer. We need this bill. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay, we're gonna ask for a motion. Was there a motion from Senator Dodd? I thought so. We will restate the motion and call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Ten to three is the vote currently, and I think we're leaving that on call, right?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay. Thank you. Senator Niello, file item 15. This is the second to the last Bill we're going to hear today, in case people are wondering. Senator Niello, on file item 15 is SB 1260.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Second to the last Bill. And one of the best.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair and fellow Members of the Committee, for the opportunity to present.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Senator, let me. We just asked people to take their conversations out into the corridor, please, so Senator Niello can have the respect.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Well, maybe they want to hear my presentation.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It doesn't appear to be happening. Senator, I hate to disappoint you. All right. You can proceed whenever you want. I'm just trying to.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I appreciate that. Thank you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you again for the opportunity to present SB 1260, a bill that requires the High Speed Rail Authority Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to perform an analysis of the High Speed Rail Project, including the determination of the economic and financial justification. Now, as you will all recall, on March 12 of this year, the Transportation Committee held an informational hearing on the review of the California High Speed Rail Authority Draft 2024 business plan.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
While many concerns were raised during that hearing, what was particularly notable to me were observations by the High Speed Rail Peer Review Group. Full phase one system will cost at least three times as much as was originally represented. It will take 20 years longer. It will not meet the trip times specified, and will carry only about 70% of the otherwise projected passengers. This is quite simply not meeting the commitments of voters when Proposition 1A was passed.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
The High Speed Rail Peer Group made several recommendations to the Legislature, one of which was for an independent review. Specifically, they said, we suggest that the Legislature might want to Commission an independent review of the economic and financial justification for the project, including the ability to operate without subsidy as required by Proposition 1a before recommitting to the full phase one system.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
It didn't say not committing to the phase one system, but because of all of the issues, let's maybe take a time out and reassess things. I found this to be a very reasonable suggestion, given the massive cost of this project to the taxpayer and the equally massive deficit the state is facing. They suggested a framework for the review could be found in the authority found in the authority to the Federal Railroad Administration in support of recent grant requests.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
They also suggested a thorough analysis of the submissions by an independent academic institution and overseen by an independent state agency. We have a responsibility to take this type of review under consideration, ensuring we are not putting good money after bad.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
This bill would require the Inspector General to conduct an independent review of the economic and financial justification for the high speed rail project, including a review and assessment of a specified benefit cost analysis submitted by the High Speed Rail Authority to the United States Department of Transportation. The bill would also require the Inspector General to conduct an independent review of the ability of the high speed rail project to operate, as I said before, without subsidy, before the Legislature recommits to the full phase one system.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And finally, the bill requires the Inspector General to consult with, with industry experts for these reviews. I do not have any formal witnesses here today, but I do have comments from Lou Thompson from the High Speed Rail Peer Group that I would like to share with you. As he wrote in the review, "As the project has moved forward, it is becoming clear that the lessons learned, often inexpensive and painful, should be applied to the High Speed Rail Authority project and other megaprojects that will emerge.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
We recommended that an appropriate agency, Commission, and independent study of the experience of the project and the lessons the state should learn from this and other recent megaprojects that must be applied to future megaprojects the state undertakes or supports. As an initial step in doing so, the Legislature might want to request that the peer review group and the LAO work with the Inspector General and the High Speed Rail Authority to provide a report to be discussed as part of the 2025 plan".
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I think we're at a serious point with regard to high speed rail that we need another $100 billion as is estimated to complete phase one, and we have no idea where it is coming from and we really need to know, if we complete phase one, is it going to comply with Proposition 1A? And it seems like a difficult task at this point, so I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Any witnesses, Senator?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
No.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Anyone here wishes to express support for the Senator's Bill in the Committee room? Seeing none. Anyone who is opposed, please to come forward. Please identify yourself publicly and then you'll have a couple minutes. Thank you.
- Keith Dunn
Person
Thank you Mr. Chair. Keith Dunn here on behalf of the State Building Construction Trades Council, the District Council of Ironworkers, as well as the Association for California High Speed Trains. I would be pleased to sit and debate the merits of high speed rail. I think there are many.
- Keith Dunn
Person
I think it meets the policy goals of the state. This is not what the bill is. This bill is to direct the independent auditor to take certain actions to come to some conclusions about the project. I've been involved with high speed rail since before the bond and have worked to support a challenging project that is going to be the first high speed rail program in our nation. And it's accurate that there's been some missteps. There are lots of reasons for that.
- Keith Dunn
Person
But the progress that we've made recently in acquiring billions of dollars from federal funding shows that we're on the right path. We're moving to get train sets and moving forward with this program. With regards to this bill, I supported the independent auditor. Let me say again, independent auditor. The reason that we have an independent auditor, again, independent, is so that the Administration, the Legislature, lobbyists and others can't influence the direction that he takes.
- Keith Dunn
Person
This auditor who has been appointed, just got approved with the budget, is moving forward and making independent decisions on this project as an independent. auditor. I think the worst thing that we could do is start directing the independent auditor to take certain actions to come to conclusions that some of us may have on this project. Again, the independent auditor is in place.
- Keith Dunn
Person
The independent auditor is going to do what the independent auditor has been set out to do, which is independently review this project in consultation with the oversight board that was mentioned and the High Speed Rail Authority and others. But he's an independent auditor who's been set forth to take an independent path to make those decisions. And for those reasons, I would ask for a no vote on this bill.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you for your testimony. Is there anyone else here who wishes to express an opposed position? If so, please come forward. I'm seeing no one stepped forward in the Committee room. We'll come back. Senator Blakespear?
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I'm going to align my comments with the opposition witness here. I think we've only recently hired the Inspector General, and I was part of the hiring Committee that was reviewing the applicants for that. And I know it's been less than a year that that person has been in office and trying to do the work. So I think we should let him do it. So I will not be supporting this bill today. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Other members of the Committee? Senator Seyarto?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Yeah, we did hire that inspector last year, and I hope to get some good work out of him. But also, you know, I think the more we shed light on the project and allow people to understand what it is, where it's at, what it's doing and how much it's going to cost, the better, because the public at this time has a pretty large distrust in this particular project.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And while it is the first high speed rail project in the nation. Correct? There's another one that they just broke ground on yesterday, as a matter of fact, going about 120 more miles than this one that will probably be done in 2028. We need to know why. So I support these efforts of shedding some light on these projects so that we know how to do it better in the future because, like I said, the public is very skeptical now of these types of projects.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And if we're going to gain their support, we're going to need them to not be skeptical and to be behind them. And the only way we can do that is to make sure that we have the information we need to present to them so they can make their judgment on whether we are spending their taxpayer dollars correctly or not. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, other Members of the Committee.? Yes, Senator Dahle?
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you. With all due respect to my good friend here in opposition, I take a little different tact on high speed train. I have not been a fan from day one, and I don't think that's any secret. Not for the fact that I don't think high speed rail is a good project or a bad project. I take the look at are we really doing what we told the Californians, what we're going to do as far as the environment?
- Brian Dahle
Person
Because at the end of the day, it's costing per ton, $100,000 per ton of reduction of carbon. So I don't think that the train actually does the job that they say it's going to do projected on the ridership that someday may happen at the cost. For $6-8 a ton, you can reduce carbon by doing good forestry. And I think that's a way better place to spend our resources in California.
- Brian Dahle
Person
At the same time, I've been on the Transportation Committee and on the Budget Committee where we've had several different directors and I think the last directors on his way out. But it has been a boondoggle. It has been, had many different things that have been very frustrating. And the cost and, you know, we hear every day in these committees that the Federal Government is going to just, you know, help us out. Well, the Federal Government is $34 trillion in debt today. That's our kids' future.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Every hundred days it's a trillion in interest to pay that debt. Every hundred days. That's 3 trillion a year. So I'm telling you right now, the Federal Government isn't going to continue to be able to bill us up. They're going to be completely broke and our nation is going to be broke. We have to do something about spending. We have to be responsible. And for those reasons, I will support this bill. But we need to really look at the reduction--
- Brian Dahle
Person
The Inflation Reduction Act is not reducing inflation, it's actually promoting it. And it's our kids' future that's on the line. And that's unfortunate that we don't really take a good look at that. So I want to make those comments. I know that this bill will die today and the high speed train--
- Brian Dahle
Person
20 years from now, remember my words, because this thing is horrible for California and it's way too much money and it's not going to do what it said it was going to do for the environment on top of it. And to my friends all across the aisle who continue to support this, I know it's hard for you because most of you believe what I have said, but just can't vote that way. Do what's right and kill this thing and let's move on to helping the environment.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yes, Senator Nguyen.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I agree with my colleagues here. Look, 2008, it was estimated that this high speed rail was going to be about $45 billion. 2024, the draft, $106 billion approximate potentially up to 127 billion. When does it stop? And I think that's where it's always good to have more review, look at the financial, go to the voters and let them know. And so this bill is a good bill.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
It moves us in the right direction of just giving us the data. And so I will be supporting it tonight, today-- It's tonight, actually tonight. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Anyone else wishing to comment or ask a question? Committee and the Chair have no recommendation on this item. Simply recommend that everybody vote their conscience as usual. And with that, we'll allow Senator Niello to close.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Well, thank you for the comments. I know that this is controversial. The project itself is controversial. My proposal here is controversial. But here's the deal. We're kind of at an important point on the project.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
The most recent update that we had last month, the LAO and the peer group were both unusually critical as compared to previous updates. And I think it's safe to say that every time we assess the costs, they increase. And right now it's going to take, I think it's $7 billion to complete just the Central Valley portion. And we have no idea where that money is coming from. $100 billion to complete phase one, and we have no idea where that money is coming from.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
It would seem to me a legitimate time to call a timeout and take a look at where we've been and where we're going. And I'd also point out that we are going to, we're already on the way to, and we will end up with a project that is contrary to what the voters approved with Proposition 1A. And as Senator Nguyen said, the original cost estimate was $45 billion.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
But if you read the title and summary of Proposition 1A, it says, basically, you get the whole system for the 9.5 billion that was approved at that time. If you read the title and summary. Unfortunately, a lot of people make decisions on propositions just reading the title and summary, which is why I have another bill to do something about that. But I won't digress to that at this point. The other thing is, this system is not going to operate without subsidy.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And that was admitted to during the report by the head of the High Speed Rail Authority, because I asked the question after reading the financial information, I don't see anything here about the amortization of fixed costs. And he said, that's right. We never do that. Now, anybody who's in business, how would you like to be able to assess your profitability by not accounting for the depreciation of your buildings and fixed equipment? You'd probably make a heck of a lot more money.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Or you could show that on a financial statement, but it would not be true. So we already have the assumption of the Authority that the amortization of fixed costs will not be included in that which fairs will recover. I rather doubt that the voters believe that when they approve Proposition 1A, and you won't find that language anywhere in the proposition.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
So eventually, we're going to have a real problem with voters as to what's going to be delivered, because it will continue to be late, it will continue to be more expensive, and I think we need to call a timeout and figure out where we are and where we're going. Respectfully, ask for an aye vote.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We have a motion by Senator Dahle, and we'll ask the Committee assistant to restate the motion and call the roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 15, SB 1260. The motion is due pass, and re-refer to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll call] 4-7, on call.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right, the current votes for support, seven opposed on call. Thank you. All right, thank you. Mister chair and colleagues appreciate the opportunity to present SB 915 to you today. SB 915 allows local governments to weigh in on the operations of Autonomous Vehicle Aervices, or AVS, in their community, particularly commercial passenger service. Currently, AV operations are approved or denied at the state level by the DMV or the PUC. Though they hold proceedings to gather public input, there's no guarantee the state will consider local concerns.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
These concerns are justifiable. Autonomous vehicles have been involved in hundreds of accidents in San Francisco, where they were deployed months ago, the first city where they were authorized to operate. In 2023, the San Francisco Fire Department reported more than 70 instances of driverless vehicles interfering with emergency response. If I read my news feed earlier this morning properly, there was a robo taxi going the wrong way on a one way street in San Francisco just in the last 24 hours.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Governance of local streets and roads has long fallen under the shared jurisdictions of state and local government governments. The operations of AVS should be no different. Local governments currently do not have the authority to respond to rising frequency of incidents. Operations continue to be approved in more and more cities and counties without the oversight of the communities themselves.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Under SB 915, when a state agency like the DMV or the PUC approves operations for an AV service, local governments can pass ordinances to regulate these vehicles within their jurisdictions. They may do that. These ordinances would allow for limits on service rates, hours of operation, and the number of vehicles operating at any given time. Local ordinances must include a policy for AB's to enter into their jurisdiction. I repeat that local ordinances must include a policy for AB's to enter into their jurisdiction.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Additionally, if a state agency authorizes AV operations, AV companies can still move forward with operations even if a local government does not pass an ordinance. If there's no ordinance, the default guidelines will be what the state agency approved. SB 915 also allows local governments to create permitting processes and establishes penalties for AVs that commit moving violations and obstruct traffic. Local governments may also form JPAs to collaboratively regulate services across their jurisdictions.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
This Bill requires all all AV commercial passenger service companies to ensure compliance with disability access laws, provide an override system for emergency responses responders, something that's factually been a problem, and train emergency responders on how to manually override them. SB 915 has received broad support from local governments and workers. With us to testify today, we have Meagan Subers from the California Professional Firefighters and Gregory Kramer with Disability Rights California. Thank you, Mister chair.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Proceed when you're ready.
- Megan Subers
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. Members of the Committee, Meagan Subers, on behalf of the California Professional Firefighters, we are proud to be a co sponsor of this Bill. As you know, CPF represents about 35,000 rank and file firefighters, emts, and some 911 dispatchers. This Bill will allow a jurisdiction, if they so choose, to adopt a local ordinance regarding the operation of autonomous vehicle robotaxis, similar to the way taxis with human drivers are regulated as a testing ground for full autonomous vehicles.
- Megan Subers
Person
San Francisco and my Members at Local 798 have experienced the growing pains of a new technology being rolled out with little to no regulation and no means for the city to implement their own oversight. There have been numerous incidences, as you heard from the author, in 2023 alone, the Department reported over 70 issues with interference with emergency response activities.
- Megan Subers
Person
Just in the city, autonomous vehicles have parked on top of fire hoses, blocked in engines and ambulances, and even collided with a fire engine while it was responding to an active fire scene during a fire or an emergency medical incident. Every second counts, and it's the responsibility of our trained and professional Members to dedicate their expertise to preserving life and property.
- Megan Subers
Person
What they do not have time for is wrangling a malfunctioning driverless car, trying to start or shut off an engine they can't gain control of, or try to locate a 1800 number to call for assistance.
- Megan Subers
Person
SB 915 will ensure that firefighters and emergency responders throughout the state will receive the necessary training to take control of a vehicle in the event of an emergency, be informed of relevant software updates that happen pretty frequently from as I understand, and other measures to ensure that they are equipped with the tools they need to do their jobs keeping the public safe. It's extremely important to us that the regulation of these vehicles is treated with the same seriousness and care of those operated by humans.
- Megan Subers
Person
And just I know I've talked to many of you, but maybe not everyone would like to state for the record, clearly that the co sponsors are committed to further clarifying that an ordinance cannot ban autonomous vehicles and also committed to addressing the concern about a patchwork of ordinances. So with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Damon Conklin
Person
Good evening. Damon Conklin with League California cities proud co sponsor of Senate Bill 915 California cities and I want to make this very clear support the autonomous vehicle industry. We want to see the industry continue to grow, innovate and flourish. However, the current system is broken and lacks parity and transparency. Local cities know, maintain and police local streets and roads best, not the state. Yet we have a system that does not involve local government in the deployment of autonomous vehicles in our streets.
- Damon Conklin
Person
Local governments have extensive traffic management experience, expertise offering more fitting solutions than the DMV's general approach. Local municipalities are used to regulating traffic and school zones and airports. Municipalities know what's best when it comes to making their streets safe because they are run by the people who reside in the community that oversee it. But right now, local municipalities have zero control over the hundreds of autonomous vehicles wreaking havoc in our streets.
- Damon Conklin
Person
In fact, the state is allowing AV companies to expand and robotaxis will be able to operate on any public road within any given municipality 24/7 in any weather condition around vulnerable populations such as elementary schools. Regardless of local concerns about the capsule on the vehicles that are deployed throughout their community, or even to protect consumers by establishing some sort of ceiling rate on the services, we recognize that the industry grows. There are challenges and that requires adjustments. Senate Bill 915 is one of those adjustments.
- Damon Conklin
Person
SB 915 will provide local municipalities of voice in autonomous vehicle deployment by allowing cities, if they so choose, to adopt a local ordinance that takes into consideration necessary guardrails that reflect the local community. Cities should be involved, not ignored. For these reasons, we respectfully ask for your support for Senate Bill 915. Thank you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you very much. Now take statements from others in the audience in support, name, organization and position.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Thank you Elmer Lizardi on behalf of the California Labor Federation proud co sponsors in support.
- Mark Watts
Person
Hi Mark Watts representing the San Francisco County Transportation Authority in support for this measure, thank you very much.
- Matthew Broad
Person
Mister Vice Chair and members. Matt Broad on behalf of the Teamsters proud co sponsors of this Bill, the Amalgamated Transit Union and the California School Employees Association in support. Thank you.
- Dylan Elliott
Person
Good evening. Dylan Elliott on behalf of the Board of Supervisors of the city and County of San Francisco in support. Thank you.
- Carlin Shelby
Person
Good evening. Carlin Shelby on behalf of the cities of Palo Alto and Oakland in support. Thank you.
- Bryant Miramontes
Person
Bryant Miramontes with AskMe California in support.
- Ryan Snow
Person
Ryan Snow, Brotherhood Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen in support.
- Chris Lee
Person
Chris Lee on behalf of the County of Santa Clara, in support.
- Mark Isidro
Person
Mark Isidro on behalf of the County of Los Angeles, in support.
- Mark Isidro
Person
Mister Vice Chair Members Louis Costa with Smart Transportation Division in strong support. Thank you.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you all. And we primary witnesses in opposition are Renee Gibson and Shannon Dillon. If they would come up.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Begin when you're ready.
- Renée Gibson
Person
Good evening, chair Cortese, Members of the Committee. Thank you, Mister Chairman. My name is Renee Gibson and I am the Director of government affairs for the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to testify today in opposition to SB 957. AVIA was pleased to join 75 organizations in a letter opposing this Bill, including disability organizations, local government leaders, and economic development organizations. AVIA Members are committed to bringing tremendous safety, mobility and economic benefits of AVs in a safe and responsible manner.
- Renée Gibson
Person
We recognize that the Bill has been amended to allow, rather than require cities to enact their own AV ordinances. With my limited time, I want to be clear about what this Bill would do if enacted.
- Renée Gibson
Person
It would still allow cities to effectively ban AV's, preventing Californians from being able to realize the safety and accessibility benefits that the deployment of AV's promises it is not difficult to imagine a scenario where a city could enact a policy so restrictive that it would block AV services from operating, for example, by using maximum fares or vehicle caps. The ability to travel across city lines is fundamental to transportation accessibility.
- Renée Gibson
Person
This Bill would have a disproportionately negative effect on the Californians that are most excited about AV passenger and delivery services. Services including people with disabilities, those in food and transit deserts, senior citizens and small businesses, farmers and manufacturers needing to move goods. They will not see the technology's benefits unless they have access to AV's across city lines.
- Renée Gibson
Person
AV's are positioned to combat the trend of unsafe driving that has persisted for years on us roads, but this Bill would create a roadblock by creating an additional barrier to entry that is unrelated to safety. Expert regulators at the DMV and PUC have created intricate rules that Govern AV operation and conduct rigorous oversight over the industry.
- Renée Gibson
Person
These state regulatory frameworks are designed to adapt to the AV industry as it matures and processes to establish and update the respective rules for AV's provide significant opportunities for public participation. For these reasons, I urge the Committee to support safety and accessibility solutions, and I respectfully request your no vote. Thank you.
- Shannon Dillon
Person
Good evening. Chair Cortese and Committee Members, my name is Shannon Dillon. I'm here representing the National Federation of the Blind of California. Thank you for allowing me to testify in opposition to SB 915. A large benefit of autonomous vehicles for people who are blind or have Low vision is the ability to travel to places we can't get to via public transit or to places where we go.
- Shannon Dillon
Person
By taking multiple forms of transportation like taking a bus to a light rail to a BART, all to just one place, sometimes with delays in between each form of transportation. A trip via an AV would be in one vehicle and would significantly benefit our ability to travel. If any city or county or local government can ban or significantly restrict the use of AV's, we lose this benefit and for this reason, we oppose this Bill. Thanks for your consideration.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And now, are there any other people in the room? This is a me too testimony. Identify yourself, organization and position.
- Timothy Taylor
Person
Tim Taylor with the National Federation of Independent Business and on behalf of the Cal Asian Chamber in opposition. Thank you.
- Lizzie Cootsona
Person
Good evening. Lizzie Cootsona here on behalf of Tesla and respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Robert Singleton
Person
Robert Singleton with Chamber of Progress. Respectfully but strongly opposed.
- Jose Torres Casillas
Person
Good evening, Chairman Members. Jose Torres with TechNet in strong opposition.
- Aidan Ali-Sullivan
Person
Good evening. Aidan Ali-Sullivan with Waymo, opposed.
- Curt Augustine
Person
Curt Augustine with the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, opposed.
- Nico Molina
Person
Nico Molina, on behalf of Kodiak Robotics, also Gatik and respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Grace Koplin
Person
Grace Koplin, on behalf of the Bay Area Council and respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Timothy Burr
Person
Good evening, chair Members. Timothy Burr, on behalf of Aurora innovation in opposition. Thanks.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you all. Now we'll bring it back to the Committee for Senator Blakespear. Senator Dodd, Senator Umberg, Seyarto.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Yes. Thank you. I appreciate the testimony from the witnesses, and I appreciate you coming all this way and reading your scripture the way that she did. I think that was really, it was wonderful to see that. So thank you for coming to testify. I'm not going to be able to support this Bill today, and I have essentially just philosophically believed that this needs to be regulated at a higher level.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
I think having 400 plus different regulations for autonomous vehicles, I see it as being akin to a lot of other things that we want to have the locus of the regulation be at a higher level, like broadband, which is also in on all sorts of streets, digging into streets in order to put the broadband in.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
But we don't allow local governments to have a lot of regulations about what happens in that area because we see it as something that is a benefit that we want to promote and similar with 5G and some other things. And I think it's true what the opposition said, that essentially there would be ways to ban cities, could figure out how to close off their city from allowing autonomous vehicles to go into them. And I don't think that that furthers our purposes.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
And to the safety point, I just, I think that there are some legitimate, very legitimate safety points about fire departments and an autonomous vehicle sitting on a fire hose and no firefighter being able to move it.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
But I would like all of that to be dealt with in every community, not just the community that had that fire Department where that happened or has that preschool or all of the different safety concerns we have, which are legitimate and serious, but I think they need to be applied uniformly across the state. So I wanted to express verbally the reasons for my opposition and say thank you for considering that.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Yeah. Like a couple other bills tonight, I listened to the testimony and making my decision on the fly here. I think this is a very difficult Bill. I associate my comments with Senator Blakesbury, although I take a different tack. Why? I'm very concerned that 400 cities are going to be making these decisions, but I'm not really that concerned about it today or for the next five years because I think the companies have fallen a little bit short in working with communities.
- Bill Dodd
Person
To you see what's happened in San Francisco, it's been a comedy of errors in many respects. But I have a great deal of confidence in Senator Cortese, in his ability to work this Bill and to work with the proponents and the opponents of this Bill as this Bill advances, I'm going to support it today.
- Bill Dodd
Person
But I'm really looking for a program that as technology improves, that we don't have 400 cities that over five years have totally stifled innovations, innovations that we need and want in our communities. This technology is incredibly important. You've heard from the witnesses in opposition. I have a lot of agreement with what they said, support this Bill today to allow the author to work this as we move forward.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Umberg, thank you, Mister chair. Thank you, Senator Cortese. This is a really important Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I want to make sure, along the lines of what Senator Dodd mentioned, that you're committed to making sure that we don't ban vehicles in cities. And I understand that, that you're amenable to making sure that we don't ban them, but that we regulate them, which is perfectly appropriate. Of course, regulation can strangle it such that a regulation may effectively ban the vehicle. So can you address that for me, please?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, there's not ever been any intention to ban, I think, with the sponsors from the very beginning, and I say it in this way because all of your legislators, you know how these bills start. The very first conversation was, this is coming, we need to embrace the technology. But you know, this is the only set of motor vehicles in the state that have absolutely no local regulation whatsoever. We've been doing it that way since the days of Henry Ford.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
A combination of state permitting and registration and then local drop off points, speed limits, airport regulation, school safe routes to schools we've all worked on. So the idea has been all along and it's asked and pleaded. You also know how this goes, especially in the early committees. You get opposition, you don't get cooperation, usually until a little bit later. But we said, look, give us opposition.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Your best amendments to make sure this is seamless, to make sure that we don't have any kind of patchwork system that's going to obstruct these very brilliant chip driven computers from figuring out what the speed limit is in a certain city or whatever the regulation is. We're hoping to get more of that cooperation, but no intention to ban. That's something the sponsors are very clear on. I'm very clear on. We've been very clear on, and I know there's some concern about the timing.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We try to take some of that pressure off with the timing of local jurisdictions doing their ordinances, meaning Merced may be two months behind San Jose or two months ahead, for all we know. More importantly, in a place like my community and many of yours, where there's really no natural boundaries, you could have cities right next to each other that are not perfectly in sync and when they're adopting their ordinances.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So one of the, the amendments that we on author's amendment that we proceeded with in the last Committee was to say if an ordinance, not only is it a "may" instead of a "shall" at the local government level, but if a city hasn't yet proceeded, that the default is the state permitting process. And that's in the Bill now that you see in print. But we're open to how much more we can deal with that problem.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I know in some very brief conversations with you, Senator, that you have some ideas about that. I'm more than happy to commit to additional work in that regard.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Taking whatever is the best standard it may need to be, the more, for lack of a better way to put it, the least regulated standard, when you have two cities right next to each other to make sure that when somebody's being picked up in an ADA situation or just trying to get a ride to the airport, they're not dealing with two different jurisdictional restrictions. So I'm happy to do that.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Indeed, that is my second point is that we not have a patchwork of regulations in terms of regulations, as you mentioned, drop-off points and other regulations to ensure sort of the flow of traffic that's all appropriate. Regulation says you may not go over 5 miles an hour effectively bans the AV. And I don't know where you draw the line.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I don't know where you draw the line, but I'm asking you, before this comes to the floor, or certainly before it gets to the governor's desk, should it proceed that far, to have clear definitions or at least standards so that we can look at it and be assured that we're not going to basically either ban or we're going to create such a difficult situation that it's a de facto ban. So I trust you'll do that. Thank you, sir.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you very much. They need to be commercially practical, as we would say in the law, and we'll make sure to get that language installed before you see it again. Thank you very much.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you, Senator Cortese, Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. So this is another one of those tough bills. I am very sensitive to local government as well as public safety issues. And so I had a question for the opposition, in particular the representative from the industry. What kind of outreach efforts are done with local government and also public safety? And if you want to separate the two, that's fine. In order to prepare for the entry of these vehicles into their system.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And as a prelude to that question, as a public safety guy, every time something new came out on vehicles, whether it was electric vehicles, whether it was airbags, all these things, they required us to go through training, and the industry itself would provide that training. So I'm kind of curious what kind of outreach that the industry has made to go into communities, work with them, identify their issues, and do that outside of being forced to via a law that we draft.
- Renée Gibson
Person
Certainly. Thank you, Senator, for the question. I certainly appreciate that question. We believe that local governments are incredibly important and that robust engagement with local governments is in the DNA of our industry. Autonomous vehicle companies have every incentive to work with local governments as they deploy and test. Currently, this happens in a few different ways. Local notification is required under the DMV testing permit regulations, and I'd be happy to send you the citation there later on.
- Renée Gibson
Person
They're also required to give local governments and the DMV the law enforcement interaction plan requirements, which have to explain to law enforcement how to interact with the vehicle. And there's also opportunities for local government input throughout the regulatory process that exists in the current framework developed by the DMV and the PUC that has been in existence for a decade at this point.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
My concern with this is that there is a really robust outreach to address those well before the incorporation of the vehicles there's nothing worse than seeing something you don't really recognize or familiar with that you may have to deal with as a public safety professional or even as a citizen. And so we want to make sure that those are in place and that we're working with the local governments. I don't know that we need legislation to make that happen.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
However, if we find later on that it is not being done and we are having problems, then I think that would be the appropriate time to create incremental legislation to ensure that we are addressing the exact problems without throwing this big blanket over the entire industry and stifling what they need to do to be able to advance. Because I think I understand that there are inputs that get done on these vehicles based on the experiences that they have.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So whenever there's a different situation, there's more inputs that have to go in. Eventually, they will have experienced just about anything they can experience, and they will react accordingly. Is that correct, or am I Sci-fiing ourselves out?
- Renée Gibson
Person
No. Thank you, Senator, I don't know the exact answer to your question, but I can share with you that there have been 70 million autonomous miles driven in the United States up to this point. So I think you're correct that AV's continue to test and learn and become safer as they go along.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Right. All right. And then my last comment is that people are entitled to different modes of transportation that work for them. And I think it's important that we use technology and embrace technology that gives us not only the transportation loans we've had, because there's some that I've used in the past that I will ever, never, ever use again. My horrific ride through Las Vegas one time, I never set foot into that type of vehicle again. But it wasn't an autonomous vehicle. It was man operated.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So I just feel like we need to ensure that we don't throw roadblocks in the process of ensuring that we continue to use our new technology to create more and more avenues for people of all walks of life, in all situations to be able to take advantage of the technology that's comfortable for them.Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I wanted to ask Renee, could you sort of break down a bit more about. I mean, we're hearing so many different arguments on both sides here. Obviously, there's a desire on the part of local governments to make sure that their streets are safe. And there's a frustration when technologies come in they have so little control over. Obviously, a number of amendments have been taken. I mean, the way it was written originally, I gotta say, was extraordinarily broad and it really needed to be amended.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
That all being said, can you talk about the ways that you're concerned about this really harming technology as written right now? I think we're all kind of grappling with, with how far this is going to change things, I suppose.
- Renée Gibson
Person
Thanks, Senator. I certainly appreciate the question. What I hear from our Member companies is that regulatory certainty is crucial to allow for companies to expend the type of resources they need to expend, for companies to deploy to scale. And so when you have the potential for hundreds of local jurisdictions to set up their own regulations, that creates a patchwork of regs and that creates an incredible amount of uncertainty. And I think that is really what the heart of our opposition is here.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Sure. I guess. Now what we've heard is that what will be most likely is that cities will form JPA, like regional JPAs, so that you can have coherence. I understand it's not guaranteed under the Bill, and maybe one thing is that your response is not guaranteed in the Bill. Yeah.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Okay, so this is the, let me turn to the author because this is what we have been told when these kinds of patchwork concerns are raised. It's a good answer. But if it's not guaranteed in the Bill, how do we have any assurance that we're not going to have the patchwork? Right.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
So is there, how do we encourage that understanding that there's a benefit associated with giving local control over some of this decision making? At least that's the logic of your Bill. We can't hang our hat on the JPA model if we're not pushing people in that direction. So what can we do to better encourage that type of cooperative work amongst the cities so as not to lead to absolute chaos where, you know, one jurisdiction is totally different rules than another right next to it?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, you know, it's a great question. I mean, first of all, the premise of the Bill is it's inevitable that we have to get local government involved in this work. It's just the way we're set up to deal with motor vehicle regulation in the state, and we have been for decades and decades. I think jpas, much like we've set up community choice aggregation and other entities that have pulled cities together to create seamless regulation around energy and other things can happen here. This Bill allows that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It calls for the formation of JPAs or enables it. It enables it. It enables it.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I'm just using that as an example but from the beginning, there's really been two different patchwork conversations here. We've had the industry come to us and say we don't want the patchwork that I think Senator Humberg was talking about where, and maybe you are, too, where, you know, there's a city that doesn't adopt an ordinance at all right next to one that does adopt an ordinance, and so now you're literally not permitted to operate there.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We made the default, the DMV and the CPUC, if that happens. So there's no interruption of service ever in this Bill that I can see. But the other patchwork is okay, so you're not interrupting service, but how are these robotaxis and these companies going to deal with different speed limits, different drop off points, as if somehow the DMV has created that already, that somehow we have a uniform system already in the state. We don't. We have the worst kind of patchwork system.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
First of all, we have an agency that isn't really equipped to deal with the nuances of 400 cities and hundreds of school districts and all the other airports and everything else that's out there. But we've been further sort of told that the robotaxis, because they're coded, are doing a better job than human drivers, that the capacity they have to understand navigation is beyond what human drivers are, that they have the power of the chip. I'm from Silicon Valley, as you know. You know, we embrace innovation.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We understand the power of the computer chip to understand far, far more variables than the human mind could deal with behind the wheel of a car. And yet we're being told at the same time that these vehicles, because this industry wants to be unregulated, that these vehicles are not going to be able to deal with the speed limit in Elk Grove, that's different than in Stockton, that's different than in San Jose, that's different in Santa Clara.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Or the drop off point at the airport at San Jose International that's different than San Francisco International because it's patchwork. Because San Francisco runs that airport and the airport in my district's run by the City of San Jose. My God, how are taxis and rideshares doing it with human drivers? And supposedly this wealth of intellect that's built into the computer chip and the coding is not going to be able to do the same damn thing? It doesn't make any sense.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You can have it both ways and say, I don't mean you, I'm just saying the opposition. But we're more than happy to keep working with them and keep, we've amended this Bill and made it, as you said, a Bill that wasn't going to work in that way in terms of either patchwork conversation, either patchwork discussion. And we've gone a long way to addressing that, but happy to keep taking input. I think we're going to need it from the industry, though.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I mean, they know best what they're going to need to make this all work.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Just to follow up on that, the comment about how, you know, you're not going to permit a city to not allow service. Right. But we've got Scott Wiener here in the room, right? I mean, one of Scott's core premises on housing, right. Is that local governments, even if they're not banning, if they're not allowed to ban a certain type of development or they'll do everything they can within their power to make it a lot harder.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
And so while an outright prohibition, of prohibition, would not necessarily be allowed under your scheme, an antagonistic local government could.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Really cause major disruption, as could an antagonistic Legislature. As good an antagonistic Legislature, but at least that's a statewide that passes bills once, that gets bills signed once a year.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And the thing that's hardest to understand about the opposition is, for those of you who have served in the local government at any level, is why they wouldn't want to have the access point, the opportunity to go before a City Council or county Board of Supervisors on any given Tuesday and lobby and communicate and do this and get what they need instead of, instead of coming here, no offense, once a year and rolling the dice that they may or may not get a Bill that works for them.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
If any level of government is going to stunt the growth of this innovation, and probably all AI, it's state government, not local government. Local government is nimble.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I trust those local officials, some of the folks in this room I've served with as county supervisors in the Bay Area, I trust those local officials that when they hear from both sides, and they will, that they're, when they're lobbied by both sides, and they will, whether it's a local school district, saying, we would like to have a safe zone so our kids are in the way of a vehicle that's dropping somebody off, they will hear that and they will adjust to that, and they could do it again on any given day, adopt ordinances in my city every week as we're here today, they're adopting ordinances.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We don't do that here. And I think the industry is going to figure out maybe not by the time this Bill is seen its way through, maybe not in the next six months, but they will figure out that they're much, much better off dealing with local government in terms of what their needs are.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Okay. I mean, this whole town seems to be. There's a lot of folks whose profession is to write bills, to circumvent, having to go to deal with all these different local governments on a variety of topics.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
They'll all be in all the major cities in California doing the same darn thing. Right. There's registered lobbyists in San Jose. There's registered lobbyists here. And it's. That's. Yeah. This Bill doesn't change lobbying and doesn't decentralize it.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
You can understand why they'd prefer a statewide approach than having to deal with, you know, hundreds and hundreds of different cities.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I think they prefer to be unregulated as much as possible, honestly. And I understand that as a business person myself. I don't know. I'm trying to respond to your questions, but I also want to be respectful to the chair as far as perhaps we can move on. I don't want to interrupt you, but.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
You know, I was just trying to get an understanding of philosophy. I mean, I think, you know, this is a, you know, certainly, I mean, certainly an aggressive Bill. And, you know, my tendency is to want to give you the opportunity to continue working. I'm trying to feel out your philosophy, and I'm not sure I agree with everything you said, but that being said, I'm. I guess I want to talk passes out, and I'm willing to give you the courtesy of continuing to work on it.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I do want to get a better sense of how you're thinking through these kinds of issues. So let me leave it at that.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And now, Senator Limon and Senator Portantino, thank you.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
You know, I've kind of grappled with what the best approach would be. On the one hand, I hear what some of my colleagues are saying in terms of how you deal with 400 plus cities and the challenges that that would be and also just the logistics if there are minor but meaningful changes between city to city, when, you know, someone doesn't really know, like, I mean, how fast can that happen, right? There's some cities that are.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
That side is one city and this other side is another city. But at the same time, I'm also just aware that I represent urban and rural communities, and to apply and only have one state agency apply rules for roads that are pretty different actually is also really difficult. And I, you know, I've heard this Bill, I've heard the discussion, I read it, but I'm not actually sure what the best solution is.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But I do think that this conversation needs to happen and that your Bill staying alive is what's going to prompt a conversation about what the fix is. Because I do think there is a problem. And without knowing exactly what, you know, the right solution is and whether it should be one entity, govern 58 counties or 480 plus cities, or just all the same rules for the whole state, I'm not sure.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But my vote today is a reflection of the fact that I think that this Bill is requiring us to have a much needed conversation on this. Otherwise the conversation really just stays on front pages of newspapers and doesn't get resolved. And I do think some resolutions, resolution is needed. And I appreciate that. We're still thinking through how to also not, you know, how to also deal with the fact that the modes of transportation are changing very rapidly and we're not staying away from those.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
We're just trying to figure out how to incorporate them in terms of safety. So just wanted to share those comments and I will be supporting the Bill today.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you, Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you. The Senator from Santa Barbara sort of alluded to, my question is was it considered to do it county by county? That would be 58 government agencies versus 410. Was that ever put on the table? Because it seems like that would sort of accomplish the broader goal of having local input but then also making it uniform throughout a county, which, you know, their public works people interface with all the local governments and there's regional approach. Was that ever put on the table?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It wasn't seriously discussed, Senator, it's a great question. I think the problem is, and my understanding of this, frankly, is less about discussing on this Bill and more as a 12 year county supervisor, that the counties would have to have permission from the cities to go in and regulate on their streets, in their jurisdictions and in their airport. It would certainly simplify to some degree the number of entities involved.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I'm sure there's county supervisors and past county supervisors like me that would say it's a wonderful idea with the mayors and City Council Members agree to sort of cede that responsibility. Right. They don't have literal direct jurisdiction in some of those entities.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I mean, it could be written into the Bill to give them the authority in this particular, just something to think about because I think it would certainly make it more palatable and I think from a regional planning perspective and deal with a lot of the concerns that just as Senator from Santa Barbara mentioned you have streets that one side of the street is one city, another side. There's lots of nuances.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
LA County has 88 small cities and LA City, but it has one county government that sort of does all of it. And so, and I want to align myself with the comments of Senator Umberg, too. We don't want to ban this. We want to regulate it and control it. And so, you know, I'm willing to support the Bill today, but I really want you to think about doing it on a county wide versus citywide. And I do also want to.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I was co raised by my blind Aunt Genevieve, and so I hadn't really thought of the impact on the blind community and how important having this technology available is. So I want to make sure that we're not banning it and that we're properly regulating and controlling it. And so I'm willing to support it today. But really think the definitions and other, the concerns that other people have raised certainly merit your thoughtfulness, which I know you're going to give.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you. Senator, if I may, there are certainly aspects of the Bill, aside from my earlier comment, perhaps cap on rates or whatever it is that could be done at the county level. We will definitely take a look at that. And obviously, we have the League of cities as a sponsor. We'll talk to them about that, too, and see where they may want to see some of that, just from the cost of doing it, for example. Thank you. Any other comments? Motion.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Okay, the Bill has been moved. I just very briefly will say I cannot support the Bill. Conversation is fine, but this Bill moves in a singular direction, and I don't see how we avoid the patchwork approach unless it's made so restrictive in that sense that you end up essentially being what it is currently. I always support local control, but in this case, I can't support the Bill. So the Clerk will please close.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you. Thank you, Mister chair. Just an opportunity to thank people. I really appreciate all the comments and the questions, sincerely, of course. I especially appreciate, you know, those who said, you know, that they have some confidence in my ability to keep working this through and addressing those concerns and addressing those interests and not taking a leap of faith that things are going to happen. I appreciate all of that. I appreciate all of the testimony that we heard today.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It's been, I thought, you know, measured and appropriate. And of course, you know, hearing from the disability community is important. Disability rights is a sponsor of the Bill. We will keep working on making sure we're addressing the needs of the disability community. Besides just our work with them. And, of course, if you hadn't had a chance to look at the last amendments. We put a whole series of Ada requirements into the Bill, so we're listening. We'll keep working on it.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
We really want to hear from the industry as to how to make some of this seamlessness work for them. And I think if the Bill keeps progressing, we have a better chance of getting everyone's attention, bringing everyone to the table with that. I know it's been a long day. I respectfully ask for your. I vote. And with that, the Clerk will read the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese, aye. Niello.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number nine, SB 915. The motion is do pass, and we refer to the Committee on Appropriations. Senator Cortese.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese Aye. Niello.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Aye.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
No.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Niello No. Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Allen aye. Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Archuleta aye. Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Blakespear no. Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dahle. No. Dodd
- Bill Dodd
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dodd Aye. Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Gonzalez Aye. Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Laird Aye. Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Limon Aye. Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Newman Aye. Nguyen.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nguyen no. Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Portantino Aye. Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
No.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Seyarto No. Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Umberg aye.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
10 to five it is out.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
All right. Thank you. We will lift the call for previously absent Members and start with the consent calendar. Right. We'll try to move through this quickly. I know everybody is eager to get out of here. I am.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is the consent calendar with Chair and Vice Chair voting aye. Senators Archuleta.
- Bob Archuleta
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Archuleta Aye. Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Dahle Aye. Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Aye
- Committee Secretary
Person
Gonzalez Aye. Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Limon Aye. Newman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Newman Aye. Nguyen.
- Josh Newman
Person
Aye.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nguyen aye. Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Umberg Aye. Thats 15-0 out.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Okay, that bill's out, 15 to zero.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The bill is out. Nine to four.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Eleven to four. Bill is out.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Eleven to four. Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Eight, four. Bill is out. Just a point of order, 961, SB 961 is out eight to four. Thank you. Sorry.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
11 to four, the bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
11, zero. The bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
11, zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
That was 10.
- Committee Secretary
Person
{Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
14, one. The bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Nine, zero. The bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
11, four. Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Five to eight, not out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Not out.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Not out. Five to eight, not out. The bill failed.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Eight to four, the bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
14, zero, bill is out. All right. We are adjourned. And as everyone is adjourning, let me thank everyone for putting up with a long meeting and probably less than my best cheering, but we'll get a little more efficient in the future. And thanks to the committee staff and everyone who attended.
No Bills Identified