Senate Standing Committee on Judiciary
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Good morning. We are holding this Committee hearing in room 112 of the old capitol. This is not our usual location, so those of you who are listening, who are on this Committee, you need to make your way across the street to the Capitol. Room 112. We don't have a quorum, but we are going to begin as a Subcommitee.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We're starting today at 930 here in the old capitol, and we're going to take a break at some point around noon, and then we'll come back and hear the rest of our agenda. The following items have been pulled from today's agenda. File number 13, SB 1250 by Senator Nguyen. File number 32, SB 1076 by Senator Wilk. File number 38, SB 1154 by Senator Hurtado, will not be voted on by the Committee today.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The author will present the bill, and any witnesses may come forward and speak, but there will not, let me underline, not be a vote on that bill. File number 39, SB 1424 by Senator Glazer, which failed passage in the Committee last week, but was granted reconsideration, will not have a presentation by the author, but will be voted on by the Committee. Now, let's turn to the consent calendar. Let me read the 13 bills that are on consent today. File number one, SB 1476 by Senator Blakespear.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
File number three, SB 1162 by Senator Cortese. File number nine, SB 1270 by Senator Grove. File number 10, SB 1521 by the Senate Banking and Financial Institutions Committee. File number 12, SB 1202 by Senator Newman, with amendments. File number 18, SB 963 by Senator Ashby, with amendments. File number 20, SB 1000 by Senator Ashby, with amendments. File number 21, SB 1452 by Senator Ashby. File number 22, SB 1454, by Senator Ashby. File number 28, SB 1394 by Senator Min.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
File number 33, SB 1194 by our very own Senator Wilk, and file item number 34, SB 901 by Senator Umberg. And finally, file item number 37, SB 1525 by the Senate Judiciary Committee. All right, we'll take up the consent calendar when we have a quorum. So we have, once again, we have 50% of the Republicans who participate on this Committee present, and we have less than 30% of the Democrats. So if we could get a few more members, we would have a quorum.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But as I mentioned at the outset, we're going to proceed as a subcommitee. And first up, we have file item number two, SB 1109, by Senator Bradford, who is present. Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Committee Members, and I honored to present 1109. This just is going to require the Department of Canada's control to collect and report demographic information on cannabis licensees. The information provided is voluntary by the licensees. Current law of the Department requires the Department to collect the names of all individuals who hold financial interests in a cannabis business. However, little is known about the demographic composition of these individuals.
- Steven Bradford
Person
In recent years, the legislation has focused on ensuring that California's cannabis market is inclusive and supportive of individuals impacted by the war on drugs as attendant when the voters pass Prop 64. Unfortunately, we are far from achieving that goal. Currently, this industry is 85% white male dominated, and we need greater diversity. So this will help us establish that many people are experiencing difficulty in entering this market and. And continues to lack the diversity that we all would hope for.
- Steven Bradford
Person
That represents not only California, but this nation. California has a responsibility to make sure that our cannabis industry is equitable and fair to all. SB 1109 will help us reach that goal, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Bradford. We're going to take witnesses and support and opposition here in just a second. Let me announce the rules. The rules will apply to every bill today. So each author, each bill will have two primary witnesses in support. Each of those witnesses will be allotted two minutes, and then we'll hear from others who wish to testify in support. They give their name, their affiliation, and their position on the bill. Let me repeat that. Their name, their affiliation, their position on the bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Then we'll turn to the opposition. The opposition will have the same two witnesses, each with two minutes each. And then the opposition, folks who wish to testify in what we call me too fashion, then they may give their name, their affiliation, and their position. After that, we'll turn to the Committee for questions and comments. All right, so if you are in support, Mister Bradford. Senator Bradford, do you have any witnesses in support of SB 1109?
- Steven Bradford
Person
I don't know if anyone's here today.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. All right, so we'll rely on you. All right. If you're in support of SB 1109, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one approaches the microphone. If you're in opposition to SB 1109, please approach the microphone. We have one person wishes to testify in opposition to SB 1109. Go ahead, sir. Did you wish to testify in opposition? No. All right. If there's anyone else here who wish to testify in opposition, he's in support. In support? All right, go ahead, sir. We'll take support. Now.
- Jared Kiloh
Person
My name is Jared Kylo, here on behalf of United Cannabis Business Associations with 200 cannabis retailers and firm support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Anyone else in support? Or opposition. Please approach microphone. Seeing no one. All right, let's turn to the Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Yes, Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair. No questions. I just want to recognize the author for being persistent in this area. The whole idea, once cannabis was legalized, was to make sure that there was an opportunity for people of color to enter the market, given that they bore the brunt of the arrests and incarceration for the drug. And so I support you, and when we get a quorum, I'll move the bill.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Senator Bradford, would you like to close again?
- Steven Bradford
Person
This is a straightforward measure that just making sure that everyone is represented in this space, in this opportunity, and we just lost a great advocate, the first and only African American CEO of a cannabis company, Troy Dasher, who was truly committed to diversity in this issue. So I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Bradford. At appropriate time, Senator Caballero will move the bill. All right, thank you. Next we have Senator Cortese. Then we'll have Senator Eggman. Senator Cortese, item number four, SB 1299.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and colleagues, I'm pleased to present SB 1299, the bill sponsored by the United Farm Workers. The increased frequency of extreme heat conditions and its growing risk to workers, highlight the importance and necessity of employer compliance with California's outdoor heat regulations to keep workers safe. SB 1299 promotes compliance with the existing outdoor heat regulation through a rebuttable presumption for heat related injury and death.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Farm workers who suffer injury, illness or death while working for a non compliant employer will be treated and compensated expeditiously. The bill also establishes the Farm Worker Climate Change Heat Injury and Death Fund. To offset DIR's administrative costs. The new fund will be funded on a one time basis from the existing workers Comp Administration Revolving Fund. Some of the largest agricultural counties in the state are experiencing record breaking heat waves. In 2022, King City in Monterey County broke its hottest temperature ever recorded at 116 degrees.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Fresno recorded an all time high at 114. Stockton in San Joaquin county shattered its 1988 record of 106 by reaching 112 degrees. These record breaking heat waves are harming the health of agricultural workers. From 2018 to 2019, the number of suspected and confirmed farm worker heat related deaths increased exponentially. With us today to testify, we have Martha Montiel, a farmworker representing the United Farm Workers, and Anne Katten. Is Anne here? Are you the interpreter? Excuse me, Mister Chair.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Anne Katten, Director of pesticide and worker Safety Project and legislative advocate for the California Rural League Assistance foundation. Thank you. And at the appropriate time. And ask for your aye vote. I think I was just clarifying that the witness needs her interpreter. I don't know how the chair wants to handle that.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, we'll figure that out. All right, thank you, Senator Cortese. Two witnesses, two minutes each. Ma'am, the floor is yours. Go ahead. And if you're speaking in Spanish and someone's going to, you're going to speak in Spanish, you're going to translate. All right, let's do it this way. Let's stop every, you know, 15 seconds or so so that we can understand. All right, go ahead.
- Marta Montiel
Person
Buenos dias, mi nombre es Marta Montiel. Soy un trabajador agricola miembro de la Union de la fundacion de la Union de Campesinos. Apoyamos la SB 1299. No estoy aqui para pedir mas beneficios para los trabajadores agricolas. No etoy aqui para pedir cambios en la regulaciones estatales de la calor. Cada vez hace mas calor, el calor enferma a los trabajadores agricolas. El calor ha matado a muchos de nosotros.
- Marta Montiel
Person
Good morning. My name is Marta Monteel. I'm a farm worker and member of UFW foundation, and we are in support of SB 1299. I'm not here to ask for more benefits for farmworkers. I'm not here to ask for changes to this state outdoor heat regulations. It is getting hotter. Heat makes farmworkers sick. Heat has killed too many of us.
- Marta Montiel
Person
El Estado, perdon, el Estado nos dio nombres de los treintas trabajadores agricolas que murieron en 2019. Cuando el Estado investigo estas muertas, describio que trece de los empleadores de estos treinta trabajadores agricolas muertos violaban la regulaciones de la calor. California no lleva un registro de cuantos trabajadores son admitidos en el hospital debido a los golpes de calor o otras enfermedades de debido al golpe de calor.
- Marta Montiel
Person
The state gave us the name of 30 found workers who died in 2019. When the state looked into these deaths, they found out 13 of the employers of those 30 dead found workers were in violation of the heat regulation. California does not keep track of how many workers are admitted to the hospital because of heat stroke or other heat illness.
- Marta Montiel
Person
En el verano de 2021, tuve una experiencia impactante cuando estaba trabajando en los campos de uva y hacia calor mas de cien. Mi colega empezo a sentirse mareado y casi perdio el conocimiento porque no habia acerca agua ni sombra. Se lo dijimos al mayordomo, pero el no quiso asumir la responsibilidad y nos dijo que podiamos llevarla a casa o al medico. Esta falta de respuesta y plan por parte de los empleadores es la norma.
- Marta Montiel
Person
In the summer of 2021, I had an impactful experience when I was working in the grain fields. It was over 100 degrees. My colleagues started feeling dizzy and almost became unconscious because there wasn't water nearby, there wasn't shade.
- Marta Montiel
Person
We told the crew leader, but he didn't want to take responsibility and told us that we could take her to the house or doctor's office. This lack of response and plan by employers is the norm.
- Marta Montiel
Person
La lucha contra el cambio climatico no se tratas de coches electricos, tambien se trata de cosas simples como agua potable, fria sombre, y descanso. No es demasiado pedir cuando sabes que estas cosas realmente salvan vidas. Gracias.
- Marta Montiel
Person
Fighting climate change is not just about electric cars. It's also about simple things. Cool drinking water, shade, rest breaks. That's not too much to us when, you know, these things really do save lives. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, next witness in support. You can stay here if you want to. It'll work. Go ahead. Just go ahead and start speaking.
- Anne Katten
Person
Good morning, Chair Umberg and Committee Members. I'm Anne Katten, work health and safety specialist with California Rural Legal Assistance foundation. We strongly support SB 1299 because, by incentive, compliance with the heat illness and injury prevention regulation, it will save lives and prevent debilitating injury and illness you've just heard about. The way the process would work is as follows. A farm worker suffers a heat injury, illness or death while employed doing agricultural work. The worker or deceased worker's family files a workers comp claim.
- Anne Katten
Person
If the claim is contested, it is reviewed by the Workers Comp Appeals Board, whose judges routinely evaluate evidence of safety regulation compliance in workers compensation cases. If the evidence demonstrate that the employer was not in compliance with the heat illness prevention standard, the injury or fatality becomes eligible for the rebuttable presumption under SB 1299. If there's no evidence of violation of the heat regulation at the time of injury or death, SB 1299 simply does not apply, but the case may still be ruled compensable.
- Anne Katten
Person
The workers Comp Appeals Board will rule based on evidence, including on whether there was failure to comply with the heat regulation. SB 1299 does not change the existing outdoor heat regulation does not apply to employers who are in compliance with the heat illness prevention regulation, does not create any additional workers comp benefit level, does not impose a penalty on employers. Thank you for your consideration. We urge an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Those in support of SB 1299, please approach the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation, your position.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Elmer Lazardi, on behalf of the California Labor Federation in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jassy Grewal
Person
Jassy Grewal with UFCW Western States Council in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, others in support, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one else approach the microphone, let's now turn to the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1299, let me ask the witnesses who were in support to return back to the audience, and if you're in opposition, to go ahead and take a seat. For witnesses who wish to testify in support or opposition, it's your choice as to whether you want to sit here at the tables or whether you want to testify from the microphone.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
That's to my left. To your right. All right, sir, floor is yours. Thank you.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Mister chair Members, my name is Jason Schmeltzer, and today I'm here on behalf of the California Coalition on Workers Compensation and the California Chamber of Commerce. I do want to observe broadly about presumptions. Presumptions serve a very specific purpose in the workers compensation system.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
And that is because even though California has a no fault system and judges are legally required to interpret the law in the direction of providing benefits, there are some types of injuries, when combined with the occupation, that make it extremely difficult for injured workers to meet sort of their low bar of proof or compensability. A few examples. Law enforcement and heart disease. We don't know precisely how stress and other factors of the job lead to heart disease, but we do know that it does.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Therefore, presumption, we sort of shift the burden to the employer. Same is true with firefighters and cancers. We can't draw a straight line for each firefighter to specific fires and specific exposures, but we do know that they're exposed to carcinogens their entire career. Therefore, presumption. Presumptions are granted because without them, it would be frequently impossible for a legitimately injured worker to demonstrate workplace causation and access the workers compensation system. Presumptions are about the workers compensation system.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
What I'm hearing in this Bill is a lot of concern about the regulatory process on Cal OSCA. 1299 doesn't really fit into the presumption scenario I just outlined. In most cases, there's going to be very little mystery surrounding how and where a farm worker began suffering from heat illness. From our perspective, a presumption isn't needed or appropriate here. Consider a few details.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
In order to trigger the presumption in SB 1299, a worker must show, one, that the employer was out of compliance with the heat illness regulations, and two, that their claimed heat illness is resulting from that lack of compliance. Once you've established those two things, there's no need for a presumption because you've established industrial causation and therefore have access to of the workers compensation system. So even in statutory construction, it doesn't sort of speak the workers compensation language.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
The bill is also unclear about what evidence must be presented to establish that an employer was out of compliance with the regulation.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You would wrap up? Thank you.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Absolutely. Or what this means. Finally, concern about the WCAB being the appropriate venue for the system. The Cal OSHA system has its own Appeals Board with its own rich history.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And I assume you oppose? You urge no vote? Yes. Okay. Thank you. All right.
- Laura Curtis
Person
Good morning. Chair and Members of the Committee, my name's Laura Curtis. Thank you so much for the opportunity to testify today. I'm here on behalf of the American Property Casualty Insurance Association, and while we are very sympathetic to this issue, and we, too, want to reduce the risk of heat exposure and illness. We are respectfully opposed because we don't feel that SB 1299 is the right solution. We align our comments with CCWC, but I would like to underscore two issues with the bill.
- Laura Curtis
Person
First, as the Legislature and Administration have recognized many times, presumptions should be established sparingly. Just last year, Governor Newsom vetoed a number of bills on presumptions, saying that presumptions must be based on clear and compelling evidence. However, the proponents of this bill have not shown data showing that he illness claims are being denied, nor have they shown a fault within the workers compensation system. Without this clear and compelling evidence, this bill fails to pass the standards that this Legislature and the Administration have set for presumptions.
- Laura Curtis
Person
Second, injury is defined in the bill as any heat related injury, illness, or death that develops or manifests after the employee was working outdoors or within the pay period in which the employee suffers any heat related illness, injury, or death. So there is no real limit on the timeframe as to what constitutes after working outdoors. For the majority of agricultural employees, a one week pay period is common. However, for others, such as dairy farmers, a one month pay period is not uncommon.
- Laura Curtis
Person
The injury must develop or manifest within a week or a month after working outdoors and could include, for example, returning home, working out, doing manual labor in one's own yard, or playing sports in the extreme heat. And while the bill says that it is a rebuttable presumption, this presumption is technically rebuttable. But a review of Section 3395 shows that there are 73 individual standards that could trigger this presumption in SB 1299.
- Laura Curtis
Person
And presumptions are rarely rebutted because the virtual impossibility of proving a negative renders the presumption functionally conclusive. Thus, SB 1299's definition of injury would arguably create a presumption of coverage for an employee who suffers a heat related injury illness a week to a month after working, and such precedent could upend the workers compensation system. For these reasons, we respectfully ask for a no vote on SB 1299. Thank you so much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, others in opposition, please apply. Approach the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation, and your position.
- Carlos Gutierrez
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Senator. I'm Carlos Guterres, on behalf of the Western Ag Processor Association, California Fresh Food Association, and California Cotton Ginners Association, in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dennis Albiani
Person
Dennis Albiani, on behalf of the California Grain and Feed Association, California Seed Association, California Pear Growers, several other agricultural organizations, as well as the Family Business Association, of California in opposition as well. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, others in opposition.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Good morning, Mister Chair and Members. Brady Van England, California Chamber of Commerce, you're in opposition. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, seeing no one else approach the microphone, let's bring it back to Committee questions by Committee Members. Yes, Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So let me just say. Well, thank Senator Cortese for bringing this bill forward. What I hear the opposition saying is that it's the wrong entities that are overseeing this and that the presumption is not necessary because there's already that causal relationship. Let me just say that we can look at all of that. The issue is, do I think we need to protect workers, in this instance, farmworkers, from the heat that is a result of climate change? And the answer has to be absolutely yes.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
When I worked for Governor Brown, if the indoor heat reached 80 degrees or higher, every employee was sent home because it was too hot to be in a building. And if it's too hot at 80 degrees, 82, whatever the number is, then how can we not have protections in place that will provide a life saving opportunity for people that are working outdoors? And that's the responsibility of the employer, and that's the responsibility of the mayordomos or the crew leaders. And in my mind, it's a minimum.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So I'm going to support your bill. We don't have a quorum here today, but I just wanted to say to that I really appreciate the finesse that you've used in this instance, because you're not asking for more, you're just asking for enforcement. And the way you enforce it is by saying, look, you gotta, if you don't have cool water, shade, an opportunity to get in out of the sun and rest, then there's a problem. And so I appreciate that very much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. No other questions? Comments? Seeing none, Senator Cortese, at the appropriate time, I believe Senator Caballero will move the Bill.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
I will.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And we'll take it up for a vote. Thank you.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Oh, I'm sorry. Would you like to close?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Really, I'd just like to thank the Committee consultants for a tremendous job on the analysis. We gained a lot of information I did as an author. In terms of recent examples of excellent statistics, well, they're not excellent in terms of the outcome on the workers, but excellent in terms of us making the case and supporting the cause for this bill. And that work is appreciated. It's a very deep dive, and I'd respectfully ask for your aye vote when the time comes thank you, Mister Chair.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. I believe it's Ian Doherty, as a matter of fact, who did the analysis, and we're all blessed by having such a wonderful judiciary staff. So thanks. Yeah.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Excellent job.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Okay, next we have Senator Eggman, who's present. And then after Senator Eggman, we have Senator Glazer times three. So, Senator Eggman, item number five, SB 1051.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Good morning, everybody, and thank you for hearing me today. This talking about protections for victims of domestic violence and assault and things like that, and for their families as well. We know one of the number one reasons women find themselves out of housing, couch surfing, and on the run is because they're not safe at home.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And so the State of California has extended a lot of laws to say that the women need to have protection to get out of leases for different kinds of things around abuse. This will then apply to being able to have one's locks changed. For people who don't want to leave, who don't want to have to break their lease early, should have another option for safety. And so this just says that with documentation, they're able to get their locks changed.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Family members also, where that person may be going, where that perpetrator may have had access to a key before, they may also get their locks changed. And that utilizing this protection should not then prejudice them going to find another apartment or being held against them. With me here today is Taylor? Taylor or Rickie? Taylor and Rickie. Taylor and Rickie. Okay.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Floor is yours.
- Rickie Brown
Person
Good morning, Chair and Committee Members. My name is Rickie Brown, and I'm a member of the San Diego chapter of Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice. Our flagship program, Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice, represents a network of tens of thousands of survivors across California, including family members who have lost loved ones to violence and who often did not receive the care they deserved in the aftermath. I'm here speaking in favor of SB 1051.
- Rickie Brown
Person
I came to be a member of Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice due to the murder of my son, but specifically for this bill, I'm a property manager who has experience with pieces of this legislation. As a property manager, I just mentioned one of my residents, a female, was a victim of domestic violence. She called the office requesting that we change her locks, but because she didn't have the proper documentation, we couldn't grant her request.
- Rickie Brown
Person
SB 1051 will make sure survivors and family members of direct victims of violence can have their locks changed. Currently, only survivors of gender based violence are eligible, but survivors are only eligible for this if they have a court order or police report. This bill would allow survivors to use alternative documentation and expand protection to survivors of any violent victimization experiences and their loved ones.
- Rickie Brown
Person
This bill will also make it easier for survivors to secure housing after they escape abuse or violence, reducing housing instability and increasing safety. One barrier survivors face when they are trying to relocate to safe housing is that their rental applications can be rejected because of circumstances surrounding their victimization or discriminatory perceptions that survivors are risky to rent to. Survivors and survivor advocates in California agree that prohibiting landlords from rejecting rental applications because of circumstances surrounding a victimization would help more survivors secure housing.
- Rickie Brown
Person
And as a property manager, this is very important because being able to reject and approve rental applications is very risky if they have problems that shows up on their report. This bill will strengthen survivors access to safe housing and reduce housing instability and abuse. For these reasons, we ask for your support on SB 1051. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Next please.
- Taylor Campion
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chairman and Committee Members. My name is Taylor Campion, and I'm a Senior Managing Attorney of the Family Violence Appellate Project Housing and Employment Justice Program. Family Violence Appellate Project is a co-sponsor of this bill and a legal aid support center that advocates for survivors throughout California. I've represented tenants looking for housing and have been a landlord. California law allows some survivors to stay safe from abuse by letting them change their rental unit locks and protects many people looking for housing from discrimination.
- Taylor Campion
Person
However, current law does not protect many survivors of abuse and crime because it has limited reach and fails to consider survivors' realities. Given that domestic violence is a leading cause of homelessness and survivors often struggle to obtain housing after becoming homeless, clarifying and standardizing survivors protections will benefit all Californians. SB 1051 protects many survivors of abuse and violence by increasing their access to locks changes, and clearly prohibiting housing providers from discriminating against survivors because of their victimizations.
- Taylor Campion
Person
It does so by increasing the types of survivors who can change their locks and the types of documents that qualify them for their locks change. These updates will ensure the same types of survivors who can access California's early lease termination law, and California survivors eviction protection may also change their locks. SB 1051 also protects survivors from being denied housing as a result of past victimizations. Frequently, survivors struggle to find housing because landlords mistakenly view the result of their victimization unfavorably.
- Taylor Campion
Person
For example, they're denied housing because an eviction on their record that was caused from abuse. By increasing locks changes and prohibiting discrimination, this bill will ensure more survivors have safe housing, increasing housing stability, and survivors chance of escaping abuse. Therefore, I respectfully request your aye vote. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, others in support, please approach the microphone.
- Anthony DiMartino
Person
Good morning, Chair and Senators. Anthony DiMartino on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice and Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice. We are co-sponsors of the bill. Thank you so much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Sandra Gonzalez
Person
Good morning. My name is Sandra Gonzalez, and I'm with crime survivors for safety and justice. And I agree with the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support, please approach. Seeing no one else approaching, let's turn now to the opposition. If you're. Excuse me. If you oppose the SB 1287, please approach. Seeing no one approach the microphone. Let's bring it back to Committee. Questions, comments by Committee Members? Seeing none. All right, Senator Eggman, would you like to close?
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much. I think the folks are coming up and supporting this today, and I ask for your I vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. At appropriate time, I expect a motion, and then we'll call the roll. Thank you. Senator Glazer. Senator Glazer is not here. He's on his way. So it will now be a foot race between Senator Glazer and any other Senator whose Bill happens to be up today before Senate Judiciary Committee.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I mean, you have some bills, don't you?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yeah. I'm gonna wait, though. Yeah.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
How are you feeling?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm not feeling great. Step aside.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Glazer. Thank you. Senator Glazer, please approach. We've got three bills by. Senator Glazer. Senator Glazer, would you like to start with item number six, SB 1287?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Great. Thank you. Thank you, chair. I'm very good.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members. First, I want to thank the Committee staff for their work on this Bill, and I'm happy to accept the Committee amendments. SB 1287 affirms the role that California public colleges and universities must take to ensure that students can exercise their free speech rights and exchange views respectfully. In recent months and weeks, we've witnessed an alarming trend of escalating harassment, intimidation, and violence targeted at marginalized groups on our campuses. This obviously threatens the safety and well being of our students, faculty, and staff.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It threatens the educational environment, and it threatens the free exchange of ideas. A result of this ongoing unrest, the federal Office of Civil Rights has opened investigations into discrimination on the basis of shared ancestry at 10 different California campuses. Our colleges have a responsibility to promote free speech while preventing discrimination and harassment. The amendments that I'm committed to taking significantly address First Amendment scrutiny, especially for public universities, whose student code of conducts include such provisions ensuring that they are firmly rooted in constitutional principles.
- Steven Glazer
Person
In addition, case law has affirmed that colleges need not tolerate speech that is inconsistent with their basic educational mission. This Bill aligns with this responsibility by requiring campuses to Institute policies that explicitly prohibit violence, harassment, intimidation, and discrimination, including calls for genocide. SB 1287 also requires universities to develop programs to educate students on how to exchange views respectfully. By fostering respect, civility, and inclusivity, we create a supportive atmosphere where all Members of the University community can thrive. With that, I respect. Thank you for your consideration of the Bill today. Respectfully ask for an aye vote at the appropriate time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Mister Berg, I assume you're here in support.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Correct. Mike on. Mike working. Thank you, Mister Chairman. Cliff Berg here. On behalf of the Jewish Public Affairs. Committee of California, which is the largest single state coalition of Jewish organizations in the nation. We and all the organizations that signed our letter and JPAC is made up of over 36 different statewide and regional organizations in California are in support of SB 1287, which would require institutions of higher education to update and enforce provisions in their student codes to prevent instances of intimidation, harassment, and violence on college campuses.
- Cliff Berg
Person
It is ironic that we in the Jewish community began to celebrate the first night of Passover last night, which is the story of the exodus and the freedom of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt. Yet Jewish people in California and the United States today face more harassment intimidation and the threat of violence than they have since the 1930s. It is incredible that in this country we are facing the situation that we have.
- Cliff Berg
Person
We had an empty seat at our table for the hostages, which still have not been released in Gaza. We urge your ongoing support. And I do also have a brief statement, if I did not lose it in my stack, from one of our Member organizations, the Anti Defamation League, which is also in support of the Bill. And we'll briefly, I think, since I am the primary support witnesses. Anti Defamation League was founded in 1913 in response to an escalating climate of anti semitism and bigotry.
- Cliff Berg
Person
ADL is a leading national anti hate and civil rights organization. According to ADL's recently released audit of anti semitic incidents, anti semitic incidents at college campuses spiked by a staggering 321% to 922 incidents, most of which took place after Hamas' October 7th Terrorist attack. Since October 7, the percentage of.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Berg.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Thank you, Mister Chairman I urge your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Other witnesses? Other primary witnesses in support. Senator Glazer, are there other primary witnesses in support?
- Steven Glazer
Person
He was doing both.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Mister Berg was going to do both.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay. Defamation league was the second, so.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Oh, I see. Okay. All right. If you wish to express your support for SB 1287, please approach the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation and your position.
- Randy Pollack
Person
Mister chair, Members of the Committee, Randy Pollack, President of Mosaic Law congregation here in Sacramento, in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Bruce Palmer
Person
Chairman Unberg. Bruce Palmer, representing the Jewish Community Relations Council, Sacramento, and also the Sacramento Jewish Federation in strong support of this Bill. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Others in support, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one else approaching the microphone, let's now turn to the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1287, please. If you're the primary witness, you may either testify from the microphone to my left or you may come and sit at the table. Thank you.
- Cynthia Valencia
Person
Good morning. My name is Cynthia Valencia. I am a legislative advocate with the ACLU California action. Our organization respectfully opposes SB 1287. We recognize that our universities and colleges are managing high intentions and threats on campuses while trying to keep students safe, and we take these concerns brought by the author, co authors, and the speaker today seriously. Unfortunately, many institutions are handling these moments of tensions by stifling and restricting speech that is protected by both the US and California constitutions.
- Cynthia Valencia
Person
We have reviewed the Committee amendments and we have appreciated the narrowed Bill Language. But as amended, the Bill will still restrict speech based on its viewpoint or content, which fails the strict scrutiny standard required by the First Amendment and state law. Even the Senate judiciary analysis has indicated that students must be able to receive a higher education in California without being required to waive their rights to free expression and peaceful protest.
- Cynthia Valencia
Person
To be clear, neither the First Amendment nor California law protects behavior on campus that crosses the line into targeted harassment and threats, or that creates a pervasively hostile environment for vulnerable students. Existing law already authorizes educational institutions to, for example, establish reasonable time, place, or manner restrictions. Existing law already authorizes institutions to adopt code of conduct that prohibits unlawful harassment. These existing laws and policies are applicable to every one of the specific incidents identified in the author's comments supporting the need for this legislation.
- Cynthia Valencia
Person
But rather than to work to improve the implementation of existing law and increase tolerance of divergent views, SB 1287 invites censorship in the name of civility. This legislation will likely lead to colleges and universities to silence a range of protected speech based on viewpoint alone, which is unconstitutional. Punishing students and speakers on campus when they lawfully and peacefully exercise their fundamental right of free expression is wrong and unconstitutional, even when the speech being expressed might be offensive, inflammatory, or even uncivil.
- Cynthia Valencia
Person
This sort of punishment is also expensive business for California by demanding that the institution follow SB 1287 strictures and threatening penalties when they don't. So, for these reasons, ACLU of California actions asks the Committee to vote no on SB 1287 because it is unconstitutional.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you very much. All right, next witness, please.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Good morning. Chair Umberg and Senate Judiciary Committee Members. My name is Omar Altamimi. I'm a senior policy coordinator with the Council on American Islamic Relations or Care, California chapter. On behalf of our organization, I'm here to respectfully express our strong opposition, SB 1287. This proposed legislation will unconstitutionally censor and chill the first Amendment protected speech of students on college campuses.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
And while we appreciate the Committee's amendments to SB 1287, we agree with the ACLU that the amended Bill Language still attempts to unconstitutionally restrict First Amendment protected speech. Specifically, as noted by the Senate Judiciary Committee analysis, even in its amended form, portions of the Bill would prohibit speech based on its content or viewpoint, which fails the strict scrutiny standard required by the First Amendment.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Further, as an organization serving and protecting the civil rights and liberties of Californians in the Muslim California community, we have received a record breaking number of complaints over the past several months showing a familiar pattern of Muslim and non Muslim students expressing solidarity with Palestine.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
Facing suppression of their right to free speech on college campuses amidst a rise of islamophobia, these students are being disproportionately harassed, criminalized, and subject to disciplinary action for simply exercising the First Amendment rights, including on April 5 at Pomona College, which deployed 30 police officers, some in riot gear, to arrest and jail 19 student activists exercising their First Amendment right by partaking in a peaceful, on campus sit in the University of Southern California's recent cancellation of the scheduled graduation speech by Muslim valedictorian Asna Tabassum, giving in to anti Muslim and anti Palestinian voices.
- Omar Altamimi
Person
And as we're seeing now at Columbia University, Yale, and now UC Berkeley, students are being subject to novel punishment for continuing the tradition of protesting on campus, as they had done for the labor movement, the Civil Rights Movement, the ethnic studies movement, and so on. Student protests have led to amazing moments in our history and turning points, and this Bill will only further chill and suppress the speech of Muslim and pro Palestinian students on college campuses. And so, for these reasons, we respectfully request that the Committee vote no on SB 1287 at the appropriate time. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, for those of you who wish to testify, please give us your name, your affiliation, and your position. So please approach the microphone if you're in opposition to SB 1287.
- Stephen Ramos
Person
Hi, I'm Stephen Ramos. I'm a law student at UC Davis. Strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mikaela Anan
Person
Good morning. My name is Mikaela Anan. I'm a JD PhD student at UC Davis, and I also strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jus Verhaeje
Person
Hello. My name is Jus Verhaeje. I'm a poli Sci major at UC Merced, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Valerie Mendoza
Person
Hi. My name is Valerie Mendoza. I'm a political science major at UC Merced, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Henry Hickman
Person
My name is Henry Hickman. I'm the co chair of the Young Democratic Socialists of America at UC Merced. I strongly oppose this Bill, and also, this Bill is a clear attack on. The recent pro Palestinian protests.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Henry Hickman
Person
You call for a restriction.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. We'll go ahead and shut down the microphone. Thanks.
- Henry Hickman
Person
Please. If you care about the first amendment, especially if you care about students, not pass on bias.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, next witnessed.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Dominic Kelly
Person
Thank you. Hi. My name is Dominic Kelly. I'm a graduating political science major from UC Merced, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Myles Azovito
Person
Hello. My name is Myles Azovito. I am a first year mechanical engineering undergraduate at UC Merced, and I appreciate the intent of the Bill, but I strongly oppose it in its current form.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you.
- Sahiti Kunduru
Person
Hello. This is Sahiti Kunduru, a student at UC Merced, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ayde Sabeles
Person
Hi, my name is Ayde Sabeles. I'm a critical race and ethnic studies major at UC Merced, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Sophia Elquihel
Person
My name is Sophia Elquihel. I'm a student at UC Davis school of law and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aishma Niern
Person
My name is Aishma Niern. I'm a law student at UC Davis and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aliyah Skye
Person
My name is Aliyah Skye. I'm a proud anti zionist Jewish American, and I am also speaking on behalf of the UC student Association, which represents over 230,000 UC undergrads. You should speak to your students. You should listen to your students. We strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kate Hamilton
Person
I'm Kate Hamilton. I am a law student at UC Davis and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kyle Johnson
Person
Hi, my name is Kyle Johnson. I'm the Legislative Director with the associated students at UC Davis as well as a board Member for the UC Student Association, fourth organization stand in firm opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Luna Loganiagam
Person
Hi, my name is Luna Loganiagam. I'm the Vice President for diversity equity inclusion for the Graduate Student Association at UC Davis, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Chelly Signs
Person
Hi, my name is Chelly Signs. I'm a Member of the UCSA board. I work in the legislative office at UC Davis, and I'm also the student observer to the UC regents. And I firmly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Shivani Gujarati
Person
Hi, my name is Shivani Gujarati. I am an undergraduate student at UC Davis and I am the Legislative Director for local affairs and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ruth Martinez
Person
Hi, Ruth Sosa Martinez. I'm a master's of public policy student at Sacramento State and here on behalf of young Invincibles, we strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Amara Santos
Person
My name is Amara Santos. I'm an undergraduate at San Francisco State University and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Valeria Mendez
Person
My name is Valeria Cantor Mendez. I'm the head of staff for the external affairs office at the Associated Students of UC Davis. I'm also the Vice Chair for the UC Student Association and we both stand in opposition of this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- William Robey
Person
Hello, my name is William Robey. I'm here with students for quality education. In the black student Union at Sacramento State University, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Michael Chang
Person
Michael Lee Chang, SAC State student. On behalf of students for quality education, or SQE, at SAC State, we oppose this Bill in the name of the third world Liberation Front.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Amaya Terry
Person
Amaya Terry, second year students here with students for quality education and BSU, and I oppose this Bill as it will also stifle black voices on campus.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Soni Jatravedi
Person
My name is Soni Jatravedi, and I'm a law student at UC Davis, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Marlene Renderos
Person
My name is Marlene Renderos. I'm also a law student at UC Davis, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Stanford McConaughey
Person
My name is Stanford McConaughey. I'm a third year law student at King Hall, UC Davis School of Law, Member of the National Lawyers Guild, and on behalf of the UC, on behalf of the Davis graduate medical, veterinary and law students for Palestine, we strongly oppose this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alright, thank you very much. Seeing no one else approaches the microphone, let's bring it back here to Committee. Questions? Comments? Seeing none. Oh, yes, Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you. Just a comment. This is not in the documentation here, but I'm a co author of the Bill. I understand the statements of the opposition, but I don't see this as a violation of free speech. What is going on in our country right now in reaction to the Far East? I find incredulous the stereotyping of all jews in this country as supporting Israel, which I'm not saying they shouldn't, but there's an automatic conclusion just because they're Jewish. And what this Bill does doesn't restrict speech.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
But unfortunately, the behavior on college campuses, as we're seeing in Columbia and Yale right now, goes way beyond just speech and invades into the territory of intimidation and physical threats, and it has to stop, and we should not allow that here in California.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Senator Glazer, as you're well aware, this is a controversial Bill, and this is a Bill that has First Amendment implications. And what we do here today also has perhaps some implications in terms of how this is going to be viewed by the courts. My guess is that someone may challenge us in court. And so I think it's important that we understand your intent here with the Bill and in particular with the recent amendments to the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The recent amendments call for defining, calling for genocide as a verbal or nonverbal act that are both, and let me emphasize that both intended to and reasonably understood as calling for genocide. Is that your understanding? Yes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The Bill is content neutral, contrary to some of the witnesses testimony. It speaks to the advocacy of genocide, and that could be genocide against all different protected classes and peoples throughout our state, our country, the world.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So just to understand, I understand I'm to some degree gilding the lily here, but I think it's important that we make it clear in terms of your intent, the speaker one had to intend to call for genocide, and the person hearing it, the statement had to reasonably understand the statement is a call for genocide. Is that your understanding?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's correct. And it has to be consistent with Supreme Court interpretations of First Amendment as being limited to situations in which speakers seek to coordinate their advocacy with those engaged in genocide.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And I know we've got a number of law students here, and so they'll understand the concept of specific intent that the person who is engaged in calling for genocide has to have the specific intent to call for genocide. Is that right?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That is correct.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Let me just understand that. So to the extent this Bill requires csus and community colleges to adopt a policy prohibiting calling for genocide, these policies can only apply to this narrow category of statements where the speaker specifically intended to call for genocide. And the hearer understood the statement to be calling for genocide. Is that right?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's correct.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Thanks. No other questions or comments here from Committee Members. We do not have a full Committee. At the point in time when we do have a full Committee and we have a quorum, I expect that there will be a motion. Would you like to close, Senator Glazer?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator, thank you to you and your staff for your consideration of the bill today. There's a lot of troubling incidents that are happening around our country on college campuses. This is a bill that's narrowly crafted to try to protect our students and their free speech rights and to prohibit violence, intimidation, harassment, and the calling for genocide of all people. With that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Appropriate time we'll take the bill up for a vote. Let me now turn to your next bill, which is item number seven, SB 1462. Senator Glazer, SB 1462.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Chairman.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Not quite as controversial.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, there are practically no new condos being built in California despite our housing crisis. Between 2011 and 2021, condos made up just 3% of all residential construction. 3%. If you look at another country, like Canada, they're building more than 30% of their housing stock are condominiums. So this is a serious problem because this is an entry level marketplace for many people. Home ownership begins sometimes with condominium ownership.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So this bill intends to increase condominium production statewide by allowing developers to use a buyer's deposit on the unit towards construction. Allowing developers to use more cash, as opposed to loans with high interest rates, will reduce their risk and lower their costs. This bill includes, importantly, some consumer protections by requiring developers to post a bond or other substantially similar financial instruments approved by the Department of Real Estate. If the buyer... Excuse me.
- Steven Glazer
Person
If the developer does not complete the condominium, my intention is the bond will kick in to complete the project or refund the buyer. I want to reiterate this point, as opposition may raise it. I will work through any questions about the bond to ensure consumers are protected. Additionally, I understand the Department of Real Estate may not be the best Department to administer the bond. I'll explore what Department can best do that if this bill moves forward today in order to ensure that we're protecting consumers. With me today to testify and support is Jordan Panana Carbajal from California YIMBY, along with David Marshall from the Westbank. With that, at appropriate time, respectfully ask for your support today.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Sir, floor is yours.
- Jordan Panana Carbajal
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Jordan Panana Carbajal, Legislative Advocate for California YIMBY, here to speak in support of SB 1462. California YIMBY is a statewide organization of over 80,000 members dedicated to making our state an affordable place to live, work, and raise a family for all Californians. Condominiums are often entry level homes for first time home buyers, averaging 2.7 times less than the standard single family home, making home ownership more affordable to working families.
- Jordan Panana Carbajal
Person
Despite this, only 3% of new homes in California between 2011 and 2021 were condos. One of the main reasons condo production remains low in California is the state's limit on developers utilizing homebuyer's deposit when constructing condo projects. SB 1462 will allow condo developers to use deposits made by buyers to cover construction costs while upholding protections to ensure the buyer is refunded if the project is not completed.
- Jordan Panana Carbajal
Person
To create more affordable homeownership opportunities in California, we must reduce the cost and risk for developers, such as increasing the availability of interest free financing while still requiring strong consumer protection. It is for these reasons California YIMBY respectfully request your support for SB 1462.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, other witnesses in support.
- David Marshall
Person
Good morning, and thank you to the Committee and Chair for allowing me to speak here today. My name is David Marshall, and I work for a prominent high rise condominium developer in North America and Asia. We have many entitled projects in California, none of which are entitled for condos, despite our preference, experience, and disposition to do so. The reason we chose not to move forward with condo is for one simple reason, it didn't underwrite. But this isn't a housing issue.
- David Marshall
Person
Many of our projects are rental residential. It is simply a condo issue. To break it down, there are two key characteristics that this bill helps to underwrite condos that align both the developer and the buyer. First, this bill provides certainty. A developer bonding against and using the deposit funds gives greater certainty to the buyer that their home will be built and to the developer that the funds are there to construct. Currently, the law essentially creates a 3% option contract. Should the market go up. Great.
- David Marshall
Person
The buyer just bought the value increase for 3%. Should the market go down, the buyer can terminate and lock in their downside for 3%. Given housing prices in California, this is heavily favoring the buyer. Importantly, I ask the Committee to note that this bill does not provide that buyers must make their entire deposit upfront. Buyers would be able to make their deposits throughout the development in order to allow buyers of different incomes. Second, financeability. Financing is aided by higher pre-sales and less debt.
- David Marshall
Person
This bill encourages pre-sales by bolstering the deposit ceiling to better align the developer and buyer to even the risk of the transaction. The bonding component of this bill provides financing for a project as well as oversight to protect consumers and ensure completion. Additionally, the ability to bond against deposits would provide a backstop for financial market volatility where developers will always have access to this cheap debt.
- David Marshall
Person
Given that financing costs are such a large portion of the cost to construct right now, bonding higher deposits directly decrease the cost to construct and lowers the price point that a developer must hit to underwrite their projects, naturally creating more affordable housing. I urge the Committee to view San Francisco or San Diego as an example of this issue. What are the types of condominiums that are being constructed? It's all ultra luxury. This is unlike what we are seeing in multifamily rental. This is because a developer can only underwrite a project with a high enough margin to make them much higher risk appetizing. To put it bluntly, would you accept more risk for less reward?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you. Could you wrap it up, please?
- David Marshall
Person
I ask the Committee to consider this as an intuitive option for developers to create for sale housing during this crisis, as communities are strongest, not only with renters, but with homeowners...
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Okay, other witnesses in support of SB 1462, please approach the microphone.
- Catherine Charles
Person
Catherine Charles here on behalf of Housing Action Coalition in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Seamus Garrity
Person
Seamus Garrity from Lighthouse Public Affairs on behalf of SPUR in strong support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Others in support? Seeing no one else approach the microphone...
- Steven Glazer
Person
Mr. Chairman.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I declined... I forgot to mention at the beginning I'm accepting the Committee amendment, so I wanted to make sure that was on the record.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes, thank you very much for working with the Committee. I think we've improved the bill. All right, so others who may be opposed to SB 1462, please approach. You may approach either the microphone to my left or come to the table, whichever you choose.
- Anna Buck
Person
Mister chair, Members of the Committee, my name is Anna Buck. On behalf of the California Association of Realtors, we're here representing nearly 200,000 real estate licensees in opposition to this Bill today. This Bill, while it is truly well intentioned to attempt to address the housing crisis we're facing here in California, it has the potential to financially devastate potential homebuyers.
- Anna Buck
Person
SB 1462 not only eliminates the state's liquidated damages cap for new condominium developments, but also enables developers to use a buyer's good faith deposit towards any cost of the project. Effectively, SB 1462 allows developers to keep the buyer's entire deposit regardless of the percentage of the sales price. Allowing developers to use buyer funds in this way is effectively lending developers buyers hard earned down payment funds at 0% interest.
- Anna Buck
Person
If developers can't be in a position to be funding basic construction, perhaps they should not be in business. This Bill requires, or the Committee amendments require, an informed consent warning to consumers, as well as a bond to be put in place. However, these types of bonds do not currently exist in our market and we've seen no indication from bonding companies that that would be the case.
- Anna Buck
Person
Having a home purchase where a buyer is warned where that they may not get a home that they sacrifice to afford because a developer does not complete the project and may not get their money back is unprecedented in our state and it's contrary to California's long history of consumer protection. And really, it's just simply wrong. Regardless of the Committee amendments, the informed consent provisions that are being added to the Bill, California is three and a half million units short of housing and homebuyers are desperate.
- Anna Buck
Person
This Bill creates a situation where these potential homebuyers would be highly susceptible to entering into these predatory contracts and therefore, we must oppose this Bill today. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in opposition.
- Cliff Costa
Person
Chair and Senators Cliff Costa today on behalf of the California Escrow Association, representing escrow officers who are predominantly in title companies and in independent escrow companies companies. While we appreciate the amendments accepted today and do think it improves the Bill, unfortunately, we still believe that this Bill is not the right approach. Fundamentally, our escrow officers are concerned about the lack of the consumer protections that are in the Bill, specifically as it relates to the purchasers deposit and the removal of the 3% liquidated damages cap.
- Cliff Costa
Person
Specifically, the lack of accountability about whether the access to the deposits funds actually reduce the price of the construction and the use of the bonds as a mechanism to protect consumers is troubling. Our Members have a lot of questions about how the bonds would be prose to work. Would it be able to collect on the bonds? Would consumers be able to collect on the bonds? We have seen and have heard of situations in Florida and Hawaii who have similar statutes where there's a lot of litigation.
- Cliff Costa
Person
We are looking further into that, but that raises a lot of concerns for us. Additionally mentioned in the business and professions Committee analysis, there are some concerns about DFPI and CDI enforcement actions against escrow officers who work in independent escrow companies and title companies for complying with this Bill. We hope that future amendments will address those concerns.
- Cliff Costa
Person
Overall, this Bill, we believe this Bill turns home purchasers into investors by allowing their deposit, which they could be paying interest on, to fund developers in the hope, in the hope that the home is constructed and hopefully at a reduced price, coupled with the removal of the liquidated damages cap. We think this is too risky of an investment for most Californians who are desperate for home ownership. Thank you
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in opposition, please approach the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation, and your position.
- Carlos Gutierrez
Person
Morning, Mister chair Members. Carlos Gutierrez, on behalf of the Community Associations Institute, California Legislative Action Committee in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in opposition, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one else approached the microphone, let's bring it back to Committee. Committee Members questions seeing. Yes, Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So let me just say that I think this is really a unique proposal and very creative. I have some concerns about it. I'm going to support it today because I think you're, you're going in the right direction. But I'm concerned with some of the issues that have been raised by the opposition. And as you know, if attorneys get money that's not theirs, they have to hold it in a trust account.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so the ability to keep it safe and in an account that is, cannot be used for day to day purposes is going to be really important. So the money is protected. And then I do think there needs to be a maximum down payment in terms of, I'd be really uncomfortable if people were putting down $50,000 and let me tell you why. During the mortgage meltdown, what we found is that people, as the increase in homes escalated, people got desperate to get into homes.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so what they did is they begged and they borrowed from family Members and in order to have enough down payment, and they ended up doing it as a group. So four or five people would buy a house in order to be able to afford the payment and have the credit that they needed.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so I don't want to see us run into a situation where people are begging and borrowing to come up with a big down because finally they're going to be able to get into a house that they'll own or a condo that they own and then they lose it because the contractor miscalculated, stole the money, did something else with it.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So it's gonna be important to make sure that there's at least a maximum and then a timeline so that a developer doesn't get these deposits and then sit on them. There are projects in the community that I represent that have been proposed for the past 15, 20 years because they just don't pencil out for whatever reason in today's market. And so I think that's all of that is going to be very important if we're going to really protect consumers.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And that's my goal is to protect consumers and to build affordable housing. This has been my number one issue since way back when. So I really do appreciate the thought that's gone into this. And I do it think we need to get condos and smaller lot developments going in order for to allow people to be able to afford their starter home.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Caballero. Other questions or comments? Senator Niello?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. Senator Glazer, I appreciate you reaching out to me yesterday and explaining amendments, but I can't support this because I'm not sure that there's anything that can be done to, I'll use the term violate the status of a deposit. I just think that that needs to be protected and I just can't think of circumstances that would allow it to otherwise be used, be it attorneys deposit in an escrow or deposit in escrow for this or any other purpose.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I just think that that is a thing that should not be violated for whatever good reason might otherwise make sense.
- Steven Glazer
Person
May I speak address that?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Sure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
First, that's the whole reason that we're proposing that there has to be a bond to keep the consumer whole. And as the opponents argue, there's not a market for it. Well, there's no market for a bond, then this Bill has no effect, period. You can't use the deposit because you can't get a bond to assure that the consumers will be made whole in case the developer walks away or doesn't follow the agreement. So that really is the heart of the consumer protection.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Suggestions from other Members of the Committee. I think I'm open to incorporating. But here's the dilemma, Senator. We have a housing crisis and you say, okay, why is that? And people can point to CEQA or they can point to lots of different things, but the heart of it for the capital markets is that the investment, the risk is too high for the return, that the cost of building is too great for any return they could expect.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And so this goes at the heart of what I think is creating this problem in our marketplace, which is that a developer, this attempts to lower the cost of money. It's true. It is a no interest opportunity to take that deposit money and use it much different than what a bank would charge.
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's all true, because that changes the equation for a developer where they say, hey, I can maybe afford to make this happen now because instead of paying 8% interest, I have a 0% interest plus the cost of this bond and the obligations to make sure that what I say turns out to be true and covers the risk of the person putting the deposit down.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And that gap of that zero to eight plus the cost of the bond is, as you've heard from witnesses, a material effect on their ability to say, I could build that project. We have a lot of condominium projects, housing projects that have been approved in the state, hundreds of thousands of units. And you have to ask yourself the question, why are they not being built? And you know, and I know it's because of that risk question and the reward question, and it's about costs.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Now, can we do anything about labor costs or land costs or supply costs? It's tough for us to legislate in those places, but what we can have something to do with is financing costs. This attempts to go in that space say we can have some effect on lowering the cost of financing. Otherwise, why do we think we're going to get ourselves out of this housing problem? That's the dilemma that I'm trying to help solve with this measure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And it's why the bond is integral to its advancement, because it has to be able to protect the consumer and make sure that if you have a developer who for whatever reason steps away, that that consumer must be protected and some of the additional protections Senator Caballero suggests. Just, I'm open to doing as well.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Other questions or comments, Senator Niello
- Roger Niello
Legislator
If I could, the challenge with building condominiums in particular is a little bit different than the challenge of building other housing units. And I think that there's an aspect of liability, ongoing liability there with condominium developments. But that point aside, if we are concerned about the cost of building housing, perhaps we ought to take a look at regulatory costs of building housing. You mentioned CEQA, but there's more than CEQA.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
There are things that are required on housing units that add to the cost, the benefit of which can be questioned, and we tend not to question the relative cost of those benefits. And I would suggest that that particular policy exploration could have significantly greater impact on the cost of housing and then therefore supply than this proposal.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
No doubt there are other proposals. Thank you, Senator Niello. Alright, other questions or comments? No. So a couple comments. First off, Senator Glazer, the developer may not use the deposit unless there is consent by the depositor. Is that correct?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That is correct. Informed consent is part of the Committee amendments that I've accepted.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And in terms of the informed consent, I welcome other language from the opponents. I personally think the informed consent provision amendments that you've accepted are fairly robust. I think that people are smart enough to understand what informed consent means, in other words, that they have to know the risks. Is that your understanding as well?
- Steven Glazer
Person
It is, and that's why I think opposition from the escrow officers should be resolved because there's clear direction in the work that they do. There's informed consent for the actions that are on the table.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The second point is my understanding of bonding companies. Bonding companies actually do scrutinize the entity that they're bonding and that they're going to make sure that they have sufficient security to be able to collect. Should they have, should someone actually try to receive part or all the proceeds of the bond. Is that your understanding as well?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That is correct. And also why we've added another layer of protection by requiring, in this case, the Department of Real Estate to bless that bond, to have another set of eyes and ears exactly on the same analysis that any bond company would engage in.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So no bond, no deal.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Correct, sir.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. And then thirdly, Senator Caballero raised the point about timing, which I thought was a good point, and asked that you consider as this Bill moves along, that the use of that deposit not be indefinite, that there be some sort of time constraint on how quickly they can use that deposit. Is that something you would consider?
- Steven Glazer
Person
It is. You also raised an issue of a cap on the down payment, and I'm open to considering that as well.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. All right, thank you, Senator Glazer. Seeing no other comments or questions, we are Subcommitee. At the appropriate time, I expect there'd be a motion. Would you like to close?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you for your review of the Bill today. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. All right, next is SB 1482 by Senator Glazer, item number eight.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Members. This is a Bill that's going to look very familiar to you because you passed a very similar Bill like it. On a 10 to zero vote earlier this year, that Bill was held up in appropriations, which is why we're back again. As small business borrowers have increasingly struggled to access traditional bank loans, they've resorted to alternative forms of financing to start, maintain and grow their businesses.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Alternative financing products include sales based financing, like merchant advances factoring lease financing all the way, which are structured in a way that make them do that, basically are loans. Unfortunately, gaps in California's commercial financing law have allowed some bad actors to take advantage of small business borrowers. Often unscrupulous actors steer small business borrowers into higher cost financing so they can get a better Commission. Borrowers are also encouraged to sign financing contracts with clauses that waive their right to legal representation. Proper court procedure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So this Bill regulates that predatory practice, such as brokers acting as merchant cash advance mills, that focuses on placing applicants into high rate financing. This Bill also closes loopholes in our current law by prohibiting any action that he construed as a confession of judgment, unquote. And as many of you know, confessions of judgment prohibit borrowers from legal representation if they default on a loan. The amendments I made recently resolved a pending issue with opposition.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It removed the requirement that brokers disclose the lowest approximate APR a borrower could potentially qualify for it. With me today, I have Louis Kadiespec, Executive Director of the responsible Business Lending Coalition, and Bianca Bloomquist with the small business majority. With that appropriate time, respectfully, Astro, and I vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, those in support of SB 1482, the floor is yours.
- Bianca Blomquist
Person
Thank you so much, Chairman Unberg, Vice Chair Wilk, Members of the Committee, my name is Bianca Blomquist. I direct California operations for Small Business Majority, a national nonprofit network of 100,000 small business owners with a historic presence here in California, were in strong support of SB 14. SB 1482 promotes responsible small business lending practices in three key ways. First, it regulates predatory practices by brokers. The Bill enforces transparency and ethical behavior in lending practices, protecting small business owners from unfair terms and hidden fees.
- Bianca Blomquist
Person
It levels the playing field for loan and non loan products. By applying a consistent rule to all types of financing, SB 1482 ensures that small business owners have a clear understanding of their options and enable them to make informed decisions. It also closes existing loopholes. The Bill addresses gaps in current laws that allow bad actors to exploit small business owners. By fixing these loopholes, SB 1482 fosters a fair and competitive marketplace for small business owners and consumers alike.
- Bianca Blomquist
Person
The story of Malibu's Burger's owners, Darren and Natasha Preston of Oakland and their struggles with high cost debt underscore the urgent need for SB 1482. In 2022, they filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, losing Natasha's family inheritance due to opaque and unfair lending practices. Their experience, unfortunately, is not unique. Many small business owners face exploitation in their quest for capital to start or grow their businesses. By supporting SBIR 1482, you are helping to create a safer, more equitable lending environment for small business owners across California. Thank you for your consideration and I respectfully ask for your aye vote on SB 1482.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
Honorable Members, my name is Louis Caditz-Peck. I'd like to thank you for your past support of the Bill and given that ill be brief, I serve as the Executive Director of the Responsible Business Lending Coalition, an organization of for profit and nonprofit voices dedicated to innovation in small business financing. We represent over 1000 small business groups, for profit financing providers, nonprofit cdfis, community advocates, as well as tens of thousands of small businesses themselves. This Bill accomplishes three things.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
Number one, it brings some oversight to the wild west of small business loan brokering, which now resembles pre crisis subprime mortgage brokering. Number two, it addresses bad practices described in a business week expose entitled sign here to lose everything, the predatory lending machine crushing small businesses across America. And number three, it closes a loophole in California's small business truth and lending framework, a remarkable achievement. Thank you Senator Glazer and others that all voted for it as well.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
But currently it asks bad actor financing companies to police themselves and slap their own wrists. This Bill would fix that. Thank you for your support.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much. Is there anyone else who would like to actually, let me check. Is there anybody else that would like to testify and support the me too. Please come forward.
- Dara Dada
Person
Hi, my name is Dara Dada with CAMEO, California Association for Micro Enterprise Opportunity and we support this Bill.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Danielle Kando-Kaiser
Person
Hello, chair Members Dani Kando-Kaiser, on behalf of the California Low Income Consumer Coalition in support.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much. Is there anyone else who would like to testify in support? Seeing no one else, the lead witnesses in opposition. If you'd like to come forward, please. Is there anybody in opposition? Would you like to testify at the mic or at the table?
- Patrick Joyce
Person
This is fine. Thank you. Good morning, Chair Committee Members Pat Joyce on behalf of Ford Financing, a sales based financing company that serves thousands of small businesses in California, we have an opposed, less amended position to SB 1482 and want to acknowledge the work thus far of the author to amend the Bill, especially removing that problematic provision related to best estimate APR disclosure.
- Patrick Joyce
Person
So we appreciate that and we agree with the author's overall goal of creating transparency in the marketplace and bringing accountability to brokers and providers who are not doing what they're supposed to do. And this includes. We support establishing a licensing framework in California. In the previous Committee in Senate banking, I think there was some discussion, registration versus licensing. We may differ from others in the market, but we would like to be licensed. In fact, right now, for all intensive purposes, providers do have to register.
- Patrick Joyce
Person
Under the expansion of UDAP to to commercial financing, providers are required to submit annual reports to the Department. This includes contact information and other relevant information related to transactions from the previous year. So if the Department wants to go after bad actors right now for deceptive, unfair and abusive practices, they can do that. They know where to find them. I think the main sticking point that remains is how to go about licensing.
- Patrick Joyce
Person
The Bill proposes overlaying a new licensing framework on top of the CFL, which we disagree with. It's a very confusing, convoluted law and very difficult to navigate. Our preference would be to work with the author, the Department, through technical assistance, and figure out an alternative approach, something that's more straightforward and simpler.
- Patrick Joyce
Person
And you take that and pair it with some of the laws that have been passed over the past three years, including SB 1235 disclosures, which is a big deal, the expansion of UDap, which I mentioned, as well as the prohibition of junk fees under SB 666. All these three laws just went into effect the past year. So it's our preference to take a beat. Let the market adjust to these three new laws and regulations which are important for the market in protecting small businesses. and I will conclude with that and appreciate no vote at the time. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, others in opposition, please approach. Microphone. Name, affiliation? Position?
- Nico Molina
Person
Nico Molina. On behalf of Capitis and Rapid Finance, then opposed unless amended. Position. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no one else approached mic, let's bring it back to Committee questions by Committee Members seeing none. So, Senator Glazer, would you like to close the Bill?
- Steven Glazer
Person
We've been working with opposition. We've narrowed the gap in terms of our differences. We certainly enjoy the support of the broader small business lending community, but we're going to continue to work on some of these issues of registration versus licensing. So if this Bill moves forward today with that, respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Glazer. Appropriate time. I expect a motion and we'll take a vote. All right.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Finally, Mister Chairman, there is a Bill on a vote only. I know you don't have a quorum yet, but certainly we're respect to going and appreciate that consideration at the appropriate time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes, we will take that up for vote only. Okay. Thank you. But I'm going to, I see no other authors here. I'm going to ask Senator Ashby to, she has witnesses here present item number 23, SB 1498. So if you're here on SB 1498, I realize we're taking it out of order, but because we want to move as along as efficiently as is possible, Senator Ashby, if you wouldn't mind presenting item number 23, SB 1498.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Chairman Umberg. Some of my witnesses are here for the next item, but we'll start with 1498 if you'd like. It's fine.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Oh, I'm sorry. Which item were you focused upon?
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
989.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, we can do 989. That's fine.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes, we'll do 989, and then at your discretion, we can do 1498 if you like. All right, 989. That's just to make sure that folks listening and are here understand what bill we're on. We're on number 19, SB 989. Thank you. Senator Ashby, floor is yours.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Chairman Umberg, and thank you to my witnesses for being here and sitting through Judish with us. Appreciate you very much, Chairman. I'd like to start by accepting the Committee amendments and thanking the judiciary staff for working with our team so diligently today, I am very proud to present SB 989. This is the Domestic Violence Deaths Act. SB 989 enhances investigation protocols surrounding domestic violence related deaths by empowering investigators with evidence based detection methods to identify potentially suspicious cases.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
This bill gives coroners the authority to inquire into deaths they deem suspicious and expands rights to immediate family members to obtain information about their deceased loved ones. Nearly one third of female homicide victims are killed by an intimate partner. Additionally, experts estimate that around 1200 hidden homicides occur annually, often disguised as staged crime scenes. Staged crime scenes create significant challenges for investigators, leading to inaccurate death certificates and classifications often deemed as suicide or accidents.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Research has identified 10 evidence based factors that warrant more thorough investigation into suspicious deaths. SB 989 adds these factors into investigation protocols, requiring law enforcement to consider them before determining the final cause of death. This bill equips investigators, coroners and families with the necessary tools and detection measures to identify suspicious cases.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Instead of ruling these deaths as suicide without further investigation, SB 989 ensures that law enforcement conduct more thorough investigations into suspicious deaths involving domestic violence and establishes a voice for families who have long been silenced under the current laws. Mister Chairman, with me today, I have two support witnesses, David Cropp, who is the case manager with the Sacramento Regional Family Justice center, and Joe Hunter, fire captain with the Sacramento Fire Department.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you very much. Floor is yours. Whomever would like to go first.
- David Cropp
Person
Good morning, Committee chair and Members. My name is David Cropp. I am with the Sacramento Family Justice Center. I also have 20 years of experience working in the area of domestic violence. I have over 35 years of experience in law enforcement. I'm a regional expert witness in domestic violence. I'm board certified in domestic violence, and I'm a licensed therapist. I say all this because I believe that I have the credentials to talk about this important to the legislation.
- David Cropp
Person
The first point I'd like to make is that there is nothing in this bill that a good investigator should not already be doing. Everything in this bill should be best practice for law enforcement professionals. Sadly, many law enforcement officers simply do not understand the nuances of domestic violence, strangulation or staged suicide scenes. Officers sometimes fail to recognize clear evidence, a foul play, such as a history of domestic violence. Cases of staged suicides are more prevalent than we might think.
- David Cropp
Person
The Alliance for Hope International is working on about 20 cases nationwide, and recent research suggests that there may be thousands of staged suicides in this country. This is not a non existent issue. SB 989 does not place an undue burden on law enforcement. It simply requires law enforcement to understand domestic violence and domestic violence related risk factors. There's no difference between Senate Bill 989 and the 1984 legislation that created Penal Code Section 13700 which is law enforcement's response to domestic violence.
- David Cropp
Person
I was a young officer back in those days, and I thought to myself at the time, why are these lawmakers putting their noes into our business? Sadly, implicit biases are alive and well in contemporary society, even in law enforcement. Obviously, I believe that 13700 was absolutely necessary in 1990.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much to wrap it up. Thank you. All right, next witness.
- Joseph Hunter
Person
Good morning. As was stated, my name is Joe Hunter, and I'm currently a captain with the Sacramento City fire Department, and I've proudly been with them for over 18 years. Simply put, SB 989 would enhance protocol under investigations with suspicious deaths with a history of domestic violence. And to put this in perspective for everyone here today, last year calls for service alone. In 2023, there were over 3555 calls for service of domestic violence with a violent crime history.
- Joseph Hunter
Person
That's nearly 10 calls a day for service in this city alone. And I can tell you that SB 989, if it was in play, I wouldn't be sitting here before you, because on October 6th, 2011 at 847 in the morning, I found out I lost my sister to domestic violence. A bill like this could change the outcome of other victims like her and bring justice to Joanna Hunter. I strongly support this bill. It's needed, it's important, and it can have impact on our community. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Captain. I'm sorry for your loss. Thank you. All right, others in support of SB 989.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Thank you. Kim Stone of Stone advocacy on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association. And I've also been asked to express the support of the San Diego District Attorney.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Others in support.
- Elaine Bissett
Person
Elaine Bissett, San Diego DA's office, in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Faith Whitmore
Person
Faith Whitmore, representing 30 family justice centers throughout California. The California Family Justice center network, in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Patricia Hunter
Person
Patricia Hunter, Joanna Hunter's mother, and the family justice center, I strongly support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kayte Christensen
Person
Kayte Christensen, two term board member of the Sacramento Regional Family Justice Center, survivor. Strongly, wholeheartedly support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jeff Neil
Person
Jeff Neil, representing the County of San Diego. We didn't. Weren't able to get a letter in support in time, but we do support the bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Others in support. Seeing no one else approached the microphone, I have no formal opposition registered. If you're opposed to SB 989, please approach the microphone. Yes, go ahead.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Thank you, Committee. My name is Julio De Leon. I'm a lieutenant with the Riverside sheriff's office. Unfortunately, we are opposed to the bill not because of the intent of the bill or the advocacy for domestic violence, because we do support that. However this bill approaches, the remedy approaches to remedying these issues go too far and is plagued with implementation issues, uses vague and uncertain language and terms, and poses intergovernmental issues and conflicts for us. We don't deny that staged suicides happen, because they do.
- Julio De Leon
Person
And we don't deny the position that the proponents proposed of additional training for our peace officers oppose that. However, it has been our experience that these stage crimes are quickly recognized by our investigators out in the field due to our current policies and procedures that we have in place. And we investigate all unattended deaths out in the field, all of them. And we have various safeguards and fail safes in place to make sure that none of these staged crimes go uninvestigated.
- Julio De Leon
Person
But the most glaring concern we have with SB 989 is the intergovernmental conflict it poses and its hidden, unfounded, unfunded. Excuse me, unfunded mandate on local governments. It allows family members to mandate local governments and other agencies in the county to conduct independent reviews of death investigations and reach out to and have other agencies within the county conduct those reviews. This places an unfunded mandate on local agencies to dedicate investigators and investigative teams to that review. And who will pay for this review?
- Julio De Leon
Person
Will the agencies conducting the original investigation or the reviewing agency? Why should residents of a particular city fund and pay and dedicate officers to investigate a crime that was potentially committed outside of their jurisdiction on all close? So we do not oppose the training component of the bill, but we do oppose the implementation and the language that's used in the bill. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Have you provided those concerns, suggested language, amendments to Senator Ashby?
- Julio De Leon
Person
Yes, we submitted a letter of opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Last week with the suggested amendments and definitions and so forth. Okay, great. Thank you. Others in opposition to SB 989, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one else approached the microphone, I'll bring it back to Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Comments? No. All right. Thank you. Senator Ashby. We're a Subcommitee, and at the appropriate time, I expect there'll be a motion. Would you like to close?
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I would, and I would like to address a couple of the things from this position. Respectfully. We can always do better. This bill is not intended to be an indictment of law enforcement. I'm a longtime supporter of law enforcement, a member of the public safety community from my city, sitting right here with me today. The members of Joanna Hunter's family would disagree that more cannot be done to protect families.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
They would be joined by thousands of other families whose loved ones did not receive justice in death. They would also be supported by individuals who were harmed by the same perpetrators because they were not initially caught in the first place. Lastly, as to cost, one of my sponsors is the Alliance for Hope International. They provide this service for free and already have existing relationships with coroners across the state. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Senator Ashby, you have another bill? We don't have any other authors, so what I'm going to do is two things. One, I'm going to implore Committee Members, and for purposes of folks that are viewing this, today is an incredibly busy day in the Legislature. And many members of this Committee also sit, including myself, sit on other committees. And so it is. The fact that they're not here means that they're sitting in other committees or presenting bills in other committees.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But having said that, I would ask the staff to bring their Members down to committees so we can establish a quorum, so we can begin to make sure that we're actually taking votes on these bills. All right, so I'm going to ask Senator Ashby to go ahead if you're prepared to present SB 1498. And then after SB 1498, if we were to go in normal, or it would be Senator Mengevar. Do not see Senator Mengevar.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
If Senator Menjivar does not arrive, I'm going to ask Senator Caballero if she wouldn't mind presenting her Bill. All right, Senator Ashby, item number 23, SB 1498.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Chairman. I'm here to present SB 1498, which provides a necessary enforcement tool to address the illegal marketing of cannabis and cannabis products that are attractive to children. I would like to very much thank staff for your staff for working with my staff on this Bill. It is vastly improved and I am grateful for your help. I'll be accepting the Committee's amendments. Current law requires that licenses adhere to regulations on the advertising of cannabis, including prohibiting advertising that is attractive to children.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
However, some cannabis operators choose to willfully violate these prohibitions by continuing to advertise content that is attractive to children. This leaves the promise of Proposition 64 unfulfilled, failing to protect youth from exposure to cannabis advertising that is attractive to young people. This Bill, as amended, allows the Attorney General, a District Attorney, County Council, or a city attorney to enforce violations in cases where a cannabis licensee violates Proposition 64 cannabis advertising laws.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
This is an added level of enforcement expanding on the Department of Cannabis Control's current authority. SB 1498 simply seeks to keep our children safe and ensure Prop 64 is implemented as intended by the voters. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Senator Ashby, for working with the Committee. I know you've spent quite a bit of time on this particular Bill. Those wish to testify in support of SB 1498. If you please approach. Seeing no one approaching. If you're in opposition to SB 1498, please approach the microphone. And you may want to be mindful of the fact that the Bill is very different than the Bill that looked like the Bill a couple days ago.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, if you're in opposition to SB 1498, please approach. Seeing no one. Well, one person approaching, maybe. Okay. All right.
- George Miller Iv
Person
Members. George, Miller, on behalf of weedmaps, we're scattered. As your Members are scattered. Members of our industry are scattered. We very much appreciate them. Amendments. Some of our industry participants have had very constructive talks with your staff. We look forward to moving forward. We have a serious concern from the legal industry side as to the implications. We would really like to see it more focused on the illicit marketplace and the hemp. Illicit cannabis and hemp marketplaces. But we look forward to working with you going forward.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mister Miller. All right, others in opposition. Seeing no one approaching questions by Committee Members at the appropriate time, I expect that there will be a motion. Senator Ashby, we'd like to close.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Urge an aye vote at the appropriate.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And, Senator Caballero, we'll keep you on deck. I see Senator Smallwood-Cuevas here. Senator Smallwood-Cuevas, if you would like to present item number 16, SB 1089, you may do so.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And once again, I'm now at the point of begging Members to actually show up at Senate Judiciary Committee so that we can establish a quorum. So if you're within sound of my voice, please ask your Members, or if you are a Member, to please appear, at least for purpose of establishing a quorum. All right, Senator Smallwood-Cuevas, item number 16, SB 1089.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair and colleagues. Good morning. I am thrilled to present SB 1089, which has been identified as a priority Bill for the California Legislative Black Caucuses reparation Bill package. Thank you to the Committee and our sponsors for your hard work on this Bill, and I will be accepting the Committee's amendments in 2020. The state Legislature passed AB 3121 to authorize a reparations task force to study the ongoing effects of slavery on African Americans.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Specifically, the task force reparations report called on the Legislature to require grocery stores and pharmacies to provide advance notice to their employees and communities about their store closures. The longstanding history of redlining and disinvestment in our black communities have left many of our neighborhoods with diminished access to grocery stores and pharmacies. During the second half of the 20th century, supermarkets expanded their presence, primarily in the suburbs, as a result of white flight.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And in the 1980s, top grocery store chains began to merge, collapsing services in black communities that resulted in fewer store locations in cities, fewer located in predominantly black neighborhoods, and today's supermarket chains have continued in terms of the reluctance to expand in Low income neighborhoods of color. According to the Institute of the local self help I'm sorry, self reliance, supermarket chains have a demographic location profile that prioritizes communities with a racial bias, communities that are not black and not Low income.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
In my community of South Los Angeles, we see this in real time. We also see the real health effects of food deserts and our most vulnerable communities, which have easier access to liquor stores and fast food restaurants than grocery stores. This has continued to ensure that residents in south LA have some of the highest rates of illnesses and die far too often at disproportionate rates of heart disease and diabetes, all preventable diseases similar to food deserts.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Decreased access to pharmacies have turned some black communities into pharmacy deserts. Pharmacy deserts are often an overlooked contributor to persistent racial and ethnic health disparities that leave our communities without their most basic necessities. When pharmacies close, prescriptions may be sold to another establishment, often without any notice to consumers, leaving them with no opportunities to choose where to transfer for their medications.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
In some cases, these prescriptions are transferred out of the patient's network, forcing them to pay out of pocket for a transfer they did not request and were given no notice of. Similarly, grocery store closures can be particularly harmful to our black communities, which are more likely to rely on food benefit programs like Calfresh and WIC, but may not know where to find comparable services outside of their neighborhood. SB 1089 will ensure that communities have advance notice and access to the information they need in these situations.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
They also will know about job losses, prescription transfers or decreased access to food, and this is particularly important for communities that rely on public transit and need to figure out ways and routes to get to the vital services that they need. They need time to prepare. Over the last week, I've worked closely with the Committee with you, Mister chair.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
I want to thank you and the opposition to address their concerns while also ensuring consumers, workers and patients in black communities have access to the information they need in the event of a store closure. SB 1089 will require employers of five or more employees to notify their community workers and relevant agencies within 60 days of their store closure and a 30 day notification requirement requirement for employers with five or less employees.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
This Bill would also require that these notices be made available on their storefronts and through existing channels of communications that they normally use with their customers, such as mailers, texts, emails and ethnic media. Additionally, the Bill requires that when pharmacies close, they inform patients of where their prescriptions will be transferred. We take concerns raised by the private right of action for these notices seriously, and we have removed the private right of action for these notices and cap fees for noncompliance at $10,000 per closure.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And that was through the work with the opposition and with the Committee. I am committed to working alongside stakeholders to address their concerns as this Bill continues to move through the legislative process. This is the first of many bills we will hear in the Legislature as part of the black caucuses efforts to restore Black California, which means really restoring all of California and particularly most vulnerable California. To do this, we must protect access to our most basic needs, food and medicine.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
No family should be without it. Joining me here today are Cynthia Ayala, pharmacy technician for Rite Aid, and Kimberly Robinson from the Black Women for Wellness Project, and Mariko Yoshihara with UFCW Western States Council, who will be here to answer any technical questions you might have. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Senator. Floor is yours. Two minutes each.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
Thank you. Good morning. My name is Cynthia Ayala. I am a pharmacy technician. Again, I write it in south central Los Angeles. I've been there for 15 years and also a proud UFCW Local 770 Member as well. I'm here today to testify in strong support report of SB 1089 I have experienced at firsthand the impact that the drug retail closures have, the impact on the workers, and the harm that it causes the patients and in the communities.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
On October 15, 2023 Rite Aid filed for bankruptcy and has since closed over 100 union stores in California. While not consistent, workers have typically been receiving two weeks notice when a store is closing, but this timeline has gotten Shorter as more closures occur. Last week at Rite Aid in Highland park, workers received a notice of the day of closure. A few weeks ago, Rite Aid in Cerritos received a 24 hours notice.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
Some workers have worked at these locations for over 30 years and are the main breadwinners for their families, receiving less than a day's notice that these families will lose their income, their healthcare benefits, causing significant turmoil and leaves them no time to plan for their futures. Advance Notice of the stores closures will allow us workers to better plan for our transition to consider if we want to accept these transfers that are farther away, take night shifts that arrange for childcare, or even apply for Unemployment Insurance.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
We are often expected to make these life changing decisions within 24 hours. Store closures also, pardon me, significantly impact our patients. Patients do not receive information on where their prescriptions will be transferred, causing chaos. The company used to post signs on where the medications would be transferred to, but had since stopped. Then three rite aids closed near my pharmacy. For weeks, we were bombarded with phone calls from patients who couldn't find the prescriptions. This is extremely stressful and distracting when we are dispensing and verifying prescriptions.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
We have patients who have their medication transferred out of network pharmacies, requiring them to pay hundreds of dollars out of pocket. This is why the protection in SB 1089 is so important, not only for workers, but for our patients in our community.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. If you could wrap it up.
- Cynthia Ayala
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, next witness.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
Good morning and thank you, Mister Chair and Committee Members. My name is Kim Robinson. I'm the community liaison with Black Women for Wellness and I'm reading this testimony on behalf of my colleague, Oyema Obikia, black women for wellness policy Director. Since the onset of the pandemic, black women for wellness has had the opportunity to run a now bi weekly food distribution program in Los Angeles and Stockton, where we offer community Members organic, fresh meals and produce.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
This has deepened our understanding of the devastating impact of food insecurities on our communities, particularly on black mamas and birthing people. In California, black mamas bear the disproportionate burden of poor maternal health outcomes, being more than twice as likely to experience severe injury and three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy related causes.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
Access to healthy and affordable food, which is shaped by the presence and types of grocery stores in our neighborhood, is critically important to ensure positive health outcomes for pregnant women and birthing people. As it stands, black birthing people experience inequitable access to healthy and affordable foods, which impacts the ability to achieve proper nutrition before, during, and after pregnancy. In fact, blackbirding people experience food insecurities at a rate 2.5 times higher than white birthing people. In California.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
Food insecurity during pregnancy is associated with a gamut of negative outcomes for mamas and babies, including preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, iron deficiency, postpartum depression, preterm birth, Low birth weight, and maternal and infant death, just to name a few. Furthermore, women who experience poorer maternal health outcomes at an increased risk for reoccurrences of these health outcomes in future pregnancies, in addition to chronic disease later in life, the structural and environmental conditions with neighborhoods play important roles in shaping the health behaviors of our community.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
And for black pregnant people and babies, structural barriers to food access, likely abrupt closures of grocery stores, have grave implications for health outcomes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. If you'd wrap it up, please.
- Kimberly Robinson
Person
Thank you so much. So in this Bill, for those reasons, I respectfully urge that you vote aye and this critically important Bill. Thank you for your attention.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Others in support, please approach the microphone.
- Christopher Sanchez
Person
Thank you. Christopher Sanchez with the Mesa Verde group representing the Consumer Federation of California, in strong support. Thank you.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Elmer Lizardi, on behalf of the California Labor Federation, in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
... for the greater Sacramento Urban League and support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support. Seeing no one else approached the microphone, let's now hear from the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1089, please approach the microphone. Or if you'd like to sit at the table, you can do so as well. So. Okay, could I ask your witnesses to return to the audience? And then we'll have the opponents take their positions at the table. Thank you. Whoever would like to go first? Thank you.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
I'll go ahead. Good morning, Mister chair, Committee and Members, Lindsay Gullahorn here today with capital advocacy on behalf of the California Retailers Association's Community Pharmacy Coalition. First, I just want to acknowledge the amendments that went into print yesterday, which we feel make great strides in the right direction toward making this Bill workable, and also very much appreciate the authors and sponsors willingness to work with us. Unfortunately, today, we remain opposed to SB 1089 unless it's amended to address some of our remaining concerns first.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
Also, our Members are not opposed to closure notification, nor do they disagree with the intent of the Bill. And while we do appreciate the notice requirements in yesterday's amendments being reduced to 60 days, which is more consistent with the Warren act, our Members continue to have concerns about the number of notices required and lack of clarity around how these notices should be handled, particularly with respect to notifying patients about where their prescriptions will go in the event of a closure.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
Pharmacies in particular are licensed and regulated by the Board of Pharmacy and must adhere to specific requirements for the storage and dispensing of drugs, patient privacy and notice to the board upon closure. It's very important for pharmacies to be selective in their communications to address patient privacy concerns and to ensure the safe handling of dangerous drugs. Pharmacies are required to notify the board of Pharmacy before closure and provide information about where the prescription inventory will be transferred.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
In addition, the pharmacy must adhere to patient privacy protections regardless of whether or not the store is closed or is closing. So the Retailers Association is very concerned that provisions of this Bill will undermine this process and patient information they are required to protect. Our Members are required to protect.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
So we would encourage looking to the board of pharmacy process for pharmacy closures to ensure there are realistic notice requirements that are most relevant to patients and their employees that do not impede any closure processes already in place through regulatory oversight. So, again, due to these concerns, we remain opposed unless amended respectfully, but also are committed to working with the author and the sponsor should the Bill move forward today. Thank you.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Hi, good morning. Daniel Conway, on behalf of the California Grocers Association, thank you all. I want to acknowledge the amendments that were made and really want to thank the Senator for having this conversation around food access. It's the conversation that we at the grocers are always happy to be a part of. That being said, we're here today in strong opposition to 1089 because we see it as being unnecessary and redundant.
- Daniel Conway
Person
As was just alluded to, we have existing state and federal law that provides much of the current or much of the notice that's contemplated in this legislation is already in statute. So we see that there's really no need to move forward with redundant legislation. More importantly, grocery store closures are rare. Typically, if a grocery store is closing, it's because they've opened a new location nearby to serve the same set of customers.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Or that community has, for any number of reasons, proven to be unable to sustain that grocery store. In those situations where a community can't sustain a grocery store, either because. Well, either because one's never located there or an existing one can't sustain itself, those are the conversations we need to be having, right. About how do we address food deserts and how do we prevent food deserts. This Bill, while well intentioned, does nothing to improve that food access.
- Daniel Conway
Person
It does nothing to bring grocery stores into underserved communities. Right now, there's three other bills moving. Senator Rubio, Assemblymember Nugyen, Assembly Member Irwin. All have food desert bills that are going to proactively improve food access.
- Daniel Conway
Person
My concern with this Bill is it will ultimately have a chilling effect on grocery store openings, because not only will it create another barrier for stores to have to contemplate in when they open, but they'll have to think about the fact that in a community that might be kind of on the margins of being able to sustain a store, they might at some point have to have an uncomfortable conversation with that community about why a store doesn't work. Work.
- Daniel Conway
Person
And that's my final point with this kind of notice and the situation that it would create. If a grocery store isn't able to sustain itself in a community, that's a symptom of probably greater problems. Right. And challenges and needs for an investment in that community.
- Daniel Conway
Person
And so in a situation where a grocery store is closing and having to leave that community and issue these types of notice, what it's going to trigger is basically a 60 day conversation with community Members, policymakers, about why it doesn't make sense to do business. There's. Which would ultimately have a chilling effect and make it harder for future retailers to come in. Thank you so much. All right. Thank you very much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, before we take the me toos in opposition, I want to establish a quorum. So, Madam Secretary, if you would call the rule for proofs of establishing a quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Umberg. Here. Umberg. Here. Wilk Allen. Allen. Here. Ashby. Ashby. Here. Caballero. Caballero. Here. Durazo Gonzalez. Laird. Laird. Here. Min Niello. Here. Niello. Here. Wahab, you have a quorum.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. We have a quorum. Thank you very much. All right, let's now turn to those who oppose to SB 1089. If you'd approach micro, give us your name, your affiliation, your position.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. Annalee Augustine, on behalf of the Family Business Association of California, respect the author's amendments. Still an opposed position to the Bill.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
All right, thank you. Brady Van Engelen, California Chamber of Commerce opposed. Thanks.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, seeing no one else approached the microphone in opposition to SB 1089, let's bring it back to Committee questions by Committee Members. Yes, Senator Caballero
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much. Let me just say that I appreciate what you're trying to doing do here, and I appreciate the amendments that have been proposed and accepted. There's two separate issues, and I just want to be clear about what we're doing. I served in local government, and I served communities where we were desperately trying to get stores in, and it was a tough nut to crack. It's not easy.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so we don't want to do anything that's going to set us up for failure to get those stores to come in. We were told you had to allow them to serve liquor, which the neighborhood did not want, and that was the additional battle that we fought. Anyway, my point is this one is the issue of notice to the employees and to the community, and I think that's really important.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Employees have the right to know when their job is going to end or they're going to have to commute, and that may upend a lot of things that they have organized in their life. And so I think the 60 day notice is appropriate. The issue of nutrition is a different issue because the challenge we have is to have people understand. I mean, if you don't have any money, you buy the cheapest thing, and the cheapest things are the worst things for you because they're processed foods.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so a big part of what we have to do is figure out, do we support the mom and pop stores so they have refrigerators and can keep things in their store that are fresh, or do we try to do it through the big stores that are not sensitive to maybe what the neighborhood really needs?
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
What's been the solution in the Latino communities have been the Latino stores that have come in, and I won't name them because we're in a Senate hearing, but in many instances, they replace the other stores that leave and they come in and they offer food choices that the neighborhood wants, and then they become very busy, and the change is significant. I want to think outside the box a little bit at some future date and say, what are the things that the changes that might be appropriate?
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And I don't think it's a bad idea to have a conversation with the neighborhood about what are we missing what would bring you into the store that appeals to a food taste that appeals to the people in the neighborhood to keep this store, hiring people from the neighborhood, and also doing well. So I'm going to support your Bill today.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
But I think there's, I want to be sure that we're not, we're not saying by keeping these stores here that the health of people is improved, because what we know is that some of the programs that WIC does are really tremendously important because they teach people how to cook fresh food. And for many communities, the cooker in the family doesn't know how to use that. And I can testify my mother was a really good cook, but those vegetables were when I was growing up.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And it was mostly because she came from the desert. Right. What do you know about living in a Latino community in the desert? So anyway, I'm going to support you Bill today.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. We heard this Bill on the Labor Committee, and in that discussion I suggested that there were certain parts that were within the purview of judiciary and sort of suggested that there might be some conversations about the private right of action. And I just want to acknowledge that the author addressed those comments that were made in labor in this Committee. So I will support the Bill. All right.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Yeah, I just, well, first of all, I'd love to hear from Mister Conway. He was wrapping up. And I just want to get a better sense of your sense of some of these food desert concerns that have been raised, because I think they're very real and would love to hear the grocer's perspective on that and how this Bill interacts with that concern. Sure.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Thank you, Senator. You know, I've had the fortunate experience of being Chief of Staff to the mayor here of Sacramento. So I've seen firsthand how much communities really fight to bring grocery stores in, that this is something that not only has a real material benefit to people just in terms of feeding them, but it also, it's a recognition that your community that like, that you've got this thing. And so grocery store openings are a good thing. And I think issues around food access and food deserts are something that I know this Legislature spent a lot of time on this Administration has.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Well, and so right now I look at a couple of efforts that I referenced, Senator Rubio's Bill, which would use grants and tax incentives to actually put grocery stores in food deserts. I think that's the kind of proactive legislation that could really do a lot to bring stores to neighborhoods that need them. But I also want to compliment my friends at UFCW because they're working with Senator Wicks to come up with a master plan to look at food deserts and food access.
- Daniel Conway
Person
So I think it's things like that where we can come at this both comprehensively, but also being very smart at kind of the micro level and going community by community. But I think there's things that we can do at the state and the local level that can really bring stores and bring food and bring access to communities.
- Daniel Conway
Person
My concern with this Bill is that ultimately it's redundant in that a lot of the warnings and the notice requirements already exist in statute, and that ultimately it's going to have a chilling effect on grocers coming into neighborhoods because they're going to be concerned about having a difficult conversation on the back end.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Can I just ask the Senator or the sponsor just about this chilling effect question or incentive and on the other side, the incentivization question, because, I mean, we are dealing with very serious access challenges in many parts of our state. And how are you incorporating these kinds of business decisions into your thinking about the Bill so that we're not doing anything with. And I understand there's a lot of really good reasons in terms of worker information that motivate this Bill.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
We also want to make sure we're not inadvertently impacting store openings or closures in a lot of vulnerable areas. So how do we. I'd love to hear your thinking about this chilling effect, incentivizing balance as you go through the, as you work on the Bill.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Well, one, thank you for the question, and thank you to all of my fellow Senators for their comments. To your point, Senator Allen? I think Senator Caballero's message was that this is a comprehensive issue, and it's going to require a lot of strategies to address food deserts. They didn't just happen yesterday. The research shows it's been part of the history of discrimination, the history of disinvestment, the history of removing and stripping assets from urban cores where the majority of black residents of California lives.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And the result is, in my community in LA County, black people die 17 years sooner than anyone else. 17 years sooner than anyone else. So when we think about the solution, it's all of the above. It's the understanding of the value of healthy foods. Because in south LA, there are, I think in south central core, there are three restaurants that you could actually sit down and eat your food. Everyone else has the checkout counter where you have to stand up and take your food to go.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
So I say this all to say that it's a deep challenge. And what I have appreciated about working with the grocery store sector, with black communities that are advocating for black health and food access and with the grocers is that this is the minimum we can do, is just to say when a mother is coming to get formula for her baby, she doesn't come and face a clothes store, or seniors coming to get their vital life saving medications, that they don't face a closed store.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
The minimum we can do in our partnership, because these businesses don't just exist by themselves. Communities have contributed. They've spent millions in these businesses. They have created a good workforce that also brings profit to the business. So this is really about partnership. And so this Bill is about as partners. The basic thing we can do is to notify a community and to notify the workers.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
So my Bill is addressing what I think is one of the things that, from the reparations task force, three years of deep study and analysis, is that the first thing we need to do is to just address the wound.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And that is let's provide real notification and let's provide a way that information is shared so that communities that require a lot of logistical support when it comes to transportation, when it comes to subsidies and needing to make sure that certain programs are accepted, when it comes to communities being able to access the metatransit or whatever it is that's necessary, that that information is there. So when you, so your question about how do we deal with closures, you're saying why the grocery stores are closing.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Let's let Senator Smallwood-Cuevas. Finish.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
So your question, I'm trying to make sure I'm getting to the question of why, what are we doing to address the fleeing of grocery stores from our communities? How do we address that?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
No, my best understanding, Mister Conway, maybe can clarify the comment that was made was a potential chilling effect on new investment by grocery sector into traditionally underserved communities because they're concerned about the, you know, about the requirements that this Bill might impose in a way that would give them second thought before moving into neighborhoods where there's already, for whatever reason, been a lack of investment.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Well, I will let my, the sponsors answer the more technical questions, but I want to say the grocery store industry has created a chilling effect in our communities as hundreds of stores have closed. Crenshaw Boulevard is a wide and vibrant boulevard, and we are left with one unionized grocery store, one in this corridor where there used to be three and so, and we're serving living around this, hundreds of thousands of single family homes and multifamily dwellings. So I say this.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
We have had a chilling effect, and it's been a chilling effect since the eighties as grocery stores went to the suburbs to support those families and consolidated what was left in the urban core. And now we're facing, you know, the conversation that the good Senator mentioned. We're faced with what are the ways that we can incentivize. This Bill is a common sense Bill in its real partnership and its care for communities to give notification.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And I think that this Bill does not create anything beyond what our communities deserve, which is fair notification and an opportunity to deal with situating their lives to be able to get access to good care. I want to continue to work with all of you in the Legislature to address how do we bring grocery stores into our community communities? How do we create good jobs and provide healthy foods.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
I think that is an ongoing struggle and fight that we have to commit to because it is a right to have that access in your neighborhood. It is an absolute right. And when it is removed, you also must have fair notice. So that's what this Bill is about. And I'll hand it over to.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I think that answers the question is best to give me answers. Yeah, I'm being yelled. I gotta go present it in GO. But anyway, I totally hear you. I hope that you'll engage in conversation with the grocer is just to.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Well, we have been, we've been working very closely with them .
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Because there are, you know, they're two separate issues. Right. There's the broader issue of the food deserts, which is a massive one that you've articulated. Well, how do we ensure that we address that challenge? And they're saying that they're worried about this maybe exacerbating that challenge. I understand. Obviously, you feel that way. Hopefully, you'll engage in dialogue, trying to figure out some ways to ensure that we're not doing anything with this Bill that could exacerbate the problem. That's all I'm doing. Same.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Let me ask, just a quick follow on. I think Senator Allen is saying there's two aspects. One, you don't want stores to, food stores or pharmacies to close. And two, you would like more food stores and more pharmacies to actually engage in the community, to actually build stores in the community. Is that accurate?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
I believe these things are intersectional. They're intersectional. Notice. Notice and food access go together.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But you want stores, you want more grocery stores in the community.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Absolutely.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So the question I think that Senator Allen was trying to raise is, do you think that this Bill create. I'm going to support it, but do you think that this Bill creates a disincentive? And if not, why not?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
No, this Bill does not create a disincentive, because like I said, this is a business operates with supportive community, and notifying your partners in any instance is necessary, but particularly when your partners are vulnerable, communities that have supported that business. So I don't see these things as too separate. I think these are intersectional. And certainly I will sit down with any grocery store that wants to come into south central Los Angeles and provide fresh groceries and good jobs. That's our job.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
That's my role as a Legislator. But my role is to also make sure that communities who have invested in these businesses, that we are properly notified when they decide to leave these vital. Leave our communities with these vital services. So I just want. I don't think these are all separate. I think it's integrated and one supports the other.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, Senator Ashby, then. Senator Wahab. Senator Ashby, thank you.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you. And you or me. I asked Ben Allen to walk slow because I have to get to Gio, too, but, you know, his legs are a lot longer than mine. I want to make a couple of comments, though. I'm going to vote. I'm going to support your Bill today. But I do think that.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And I probably wouldn't have with the right of private action, but having that private right of action removed makes it easier for me to wrap my mind around, I think, what I want to try to convey, and I might ask Mister Conway for help, who I know very well, because when he was the chief staff to the mayor, I was the vice mayor, and he. I know he represents the grocers, but forget that for a second.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
It took us over a decade to get a grocery store into Del Paso Heights, and it wasn't a union grocery store. We tried and tried and tried and tried. Alan Warren, me, Kevin Johnson, Rick Jennings. We were all fighting, fighting. We finally got one right. And I don't have any doubt that you are righteous 100% in your position that a grocery store that's already established that's going to leave should be working with that community. Absolutely.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Not only on the jobs loss, but the pharmacy and the food and all of that. I think what I'm concerned about, what I'm hearing from a few other people, is for a grocery store that's not in your community yet, that Crenshaw Boulevard, that you only have one to get a couple more. This Bill is going to make them think twice. I'm just going to say this.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I wouldn't want this Bill in my place in Del Paso Heights or Oak park when I'm trying to recruit somebody there, because they're going to say to me, it's extra hard because if we have to leave, you have in here this notice of closure where I'm going to have to have this tough conversation with the community about why I can't stay there anymore. Because I can't. We're not making enough money. I think preemptively, before they even choose the community, this Bill might make it harder.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
It's an additional barrier. It's already extremely difficult. If you've been on local government some, that's what you're hearing from us, like, ooh, I've had that fight. That's a hard fight. One more, you know, making that hill just a few inches higher, it's just gonna make it even harder to get over to get those stores. But I know what you're trying to do here.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
You know, it's just, if it wasn't a down budget year, I'd be telling you, scrap all of this and ask for subsidies for grocery stores in these communities, which I know you would support, and probably the grocers would, too. But I agree. We have to do something to deal with. It's not just the grocery stores. It's farmers markets and open spaces and parks that are safe and the whole thing.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And you are so nobly going after all of it, which is why I'm going to support this today. But I just want you to consider, as it's moving forward, hearing about how maybe you could reword some of it. Maybe you just have that for existing grocery stores. Maybe it's not new ones that come on. I don't know. But whatever you figure out as the Bill moves through, just don't make it harder for yourself and for those local entities to recruit.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas, do you want to respond in your close or right now?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
I will respond in my close, but I just want to give, because I just wanted to give my technical witness to answer some of these questions.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
These are all really great questions. I don't know if this is on. There you go. I mean, I definitely think that this food desert issue is something that is multi pronged. It will take a lot of different pieces of legislation to try to address it. But I think it's important to note in terms of the chilling effect.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
It's the closure that's the chilling effect. It's not the notice. The notice part is really important because we need to mitigate the. The health impacts of a closure to the community. But I don't see how giving just 60 days prior notice to the community has any more of a chilling effect than just the closure by itself, because that in of itself already raises some notice to the community about why it might be hard to survive there.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
So, again, this Bill specifically trying to mitigate the health impacts already in a food desert is extremely important, especially when people are relying on prescriptions. Potentially, it's their only source to find fresh fruits and vegetables. They need to figure out how to plan for where they're going to get their next prescription, where they're going to get their next grocery.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So, just to be clear, you don't think this will be a factor for, for example, a grocery store chain or a pharmacy chain in deciding where to locate? You don't think this will impact their decision?
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
I don't see how this would have any impact their decision any more than just the closure itself.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I see. Okay, let me. And Mister Conway, you'll get a chance here in a second. Let me turn to Senator Wahab. And let me, before we turn to Senator Wahab, just make an announcement. I know that we've had at least one author pop in after this Bill. I assume this Bill will come to a vote, and then we will break until 1:30 and then we'll come back and continue with our schedule. Senator Wahab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. So I was talking to some of my colleagues, and having served on local City Council. So I just kind of want to give a little bit of background on how things have gone just in real life. You know, I have a small to medium sized city in the Bay Area that's largely a black and brown community, largely a less affluent city. In fact, probably the least affluent in my entire district. And they've always.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The community has always wanted a healthy food store option, like Trader Joe's, whole foods or something. Right? And historically, they were never able to get it. One of the arguments is, you know, some of labor wants a food store that is union. And that was a battle 10 years prior to me getting on council and so forth.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And I served on the Economic Development Committee, which is the whole goal is to track and see what type of incentives and what work can we do as a City Council to attract businesses. Having had the conversations with a lot of grocery stores, and what makes it more attractive to a store to come into the town, you know, a neighboring city, the City of Fremont, the largest in my district, is far more affluent. Right, right.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Average household is over six figures in income and so much more. They had a sprouts, a whole foods, and a trader Joe's. Right. And you think about, okay, why, when we're not even that far apart? The Bay Area is a very regional area, so it's very close together, close knit in a lot of ways.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And the stores, their response was that when they look at a City of to where they're going to go, that they're actually looking at the education level, not necessarily income level, not necessarily demographics in race or anything like that, but education level because of the fact that less affluent individuals are usually on the go, have multiple jobs, and usually have to purchase something pretty quick to get to their next job or their next activity.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And that was kind of disappointing to see as to that's how they measure what makes a city more attractive. We also identified to see whether or not we had food deserts. Right. And the food desert definition in particular, of roughly a mile away, of like, is food accessible to folks? And you have stores that are these big chains like Target that now sell tomatoes and milk and some of the basic necessities that any family needs. And you're seeing these efforts now.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I fully agree with the fact that businesses need to announce when they're going to be closed because part of the Economic Development Committee we knew, hey, we're in talks, this business is going to close for X, Y or Z. Maybe they had a lot of issues. Maybe they're transitioning to, instead of brick and mortar, they're trying to transition to e commerce. A lot of people are delivering food. They don't even want to go to the store. So there's a lot there.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Now, I agree with the focus of the Bill as to the announcement and so forth. But I also, the piece that concerns me a little bit, especially for a representative of a smaller town that literally is struggling to compete with our neighboring cities, as I mentioned. Right. To announce exactly why they had to shut down sometimes can be used negatively in the sense that another business will not enter that area. Right. And that's not what we want either.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So, for example, even in our downtown, that had a lot of crumbling businesses and so forth, we, as the city, invested heavily on infrastructure, on piping and sewage, on, you name it, to make it more desirable to also invest in fiber optics, to say, okay, we're going to invest in, you know, 21st business technology and so forth. So I support this Bill and I'm going to move this Bill so in due time, whenever appropriate.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
However, I just want to highlight that as this Bill moves forward, and I know you're going to have to eventually deal with it in the Assembly and the rest of the Senate Floor and so forth, I really just, you know, want to highlight the potential consequences that are not really there yet. Right.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
There's a lot of concerns that businesses have, a lot of concerns where the smaller cities that are literally wanting healthy food, options that struggle to compete with their neighboring cities that may be more affluent, but also just addressing being more attractive to a business to begin with. So I just want to highlight that as a keynote of like something that I'm interested in seeing as the, this Bill moves forward and I'll move when appropriate. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Wahab. All right, other questions. Senator Durrazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I just want to add one short comment. This is being looked at by some folks as something that would hurt the community, something that would hurt the possibilities of grocery stores or pharmacies coming in the future. And I just think it's the exact opposite. What it does is give stability to that community. And I think everyone looks more positive on a community in terms of investments when that community is stable.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And if you've stabilized, because I mean, hopefully many more other businesses would look at and say, zero, I could count on this business being here. I could count on, I could rely on this. And if something were to happen, we would all know about it. We could all plan together about it. We would not be pulled out of left field with the damage and not knowing what it would do. So I see it exactly the opposite, and I commend you and we'll support the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Other comments? Questions? So, and I promise, Mister Conway, we get a chance to respond. Proponents say this would not have, this would not be a factor in analyzing whether a store would be located in a particular community. Your response to that?
- Daniel Conway
Person
Yeah, thank you, Chairman. And thank you to the Senators, because this was a great discussion where folks said things, made points better than I was able to make them myself.
- Daniel Conway
Person
I appreciate you delineating between the openings and the closures, because I think when it comes to closures, I think there's basically agreement around the need to notify employees in the community, because that already exists in law. It already exists in state and federal law. So we're not here to fight over notice because it's there. And that's why I kind of led with the fact that the notice piece is redundant.
- Daniel Conway
Person
I think the opening the conversation around what it takes to open more stores is what's critical here. And I really appreciate the conversation. And I appreciate your comments, Senator Durazzo, and some of the things. I'm sorry, Senator Small cuevas and a bunch of us have to go. So if basically what it incentivizes is safer, Betsy. So rather than looking at a marginalized community and saying, well, maybe we can make it work, you're going to say, you know what?
- Daniel Conway
Person
I'm going to stick to the community where I know these stores will work. And I appreciate your comments, Senator Wahab, about the broader factors. I mean, we have our big city mayors here today talking about public safety and homelessness. Like, if we want to bring stores to communities, we got to look at all of these factors and create.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Thank you. Just one other thing to consider. The point raised by Senator Wahab is if a store has to announce it's closing because of public safety concerns, just ask you to consider whether or not that helps or hurts other stores coming into the community just for your consideration. All right. Would you like to close? Is there a motion? Senator Wahab has moved the Bill. Would you like to close?
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, colleagues, for this debate and conversation. And like I said, we are continuing to work through all of the points that have been raised by the opposition. But remember, this is about communities. This is about vulnerable communities.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
And to the good Senator's point, how do we as a community have the notification that we need and the timeline to be able to make adjustments to, one, rally behind our businesses, and two, making sure that the local community is able to access the services that they need in real time. We've been pushing for grocery stores to come way before this Bill.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
We have been advocating for grocery stores in south LA for the last 10-15 years, and I believe this Bill is a win across the board because it acknowledges the impact on communities and it acknowledges the need for more grocery stores and services in our communities. And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you very much. It's been moved by Senator Wahab. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 16, SB 1089. The motion is do pass to Senate appropriations. Umberg? Aye. Umberg? Aye. Wilk. Allen. Ashby. Caballero. Caballero. I. Durazo. Durazo. I. Gonzalez. Laird. Laird? I. Min. Niello. Niello. No. Wahab. Wahab, aye. Five to one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
51. We'll put that on call. Thank you very much. All right, so we're gonna be in recess now. Until 1:30. Thank you very much.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Our channel.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
File item number 24, SB 1303. All right, Senator Caballero, file number 24, SB 1303. The floor is yours.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and members for the opportunity to present SB 1303, an important bill to help increase accountability on public works projects. First, let me thank the Chair and committee staff for their work on this bill and accept the committee amendments. And as outlined in the analysis, the labor code governing local governmental public works projects mandates that all workers receive prevailing wage. Public agencies must ensure compliance with these laws, but increasingly, this enforcement is delegated to private, for-profit, third-party compliance companies.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
If the compliance companies find evidence of a violation, they can take punitive action against the contractor by withholding payments without due process. The compliance companies function with minimal and inconsistent processes despite receiving public dollars to do this work. Additionally, the lack of rules regarding conflict of interest and prior affiliations with contractors can compromise enforcement integrity.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
This bill will ensure that if a public agency contracts with a private contractor to complete a public works project and delegates the enforcement of labor compliance to a for-profit third-party compliance company, laws are in place to protect the integrity of the process. SB 1303 will require third-party compliance companies to disclose any conflicts of interest to the Division of Labor Standards enforcement to awarding agencies and will prohibit third-party compliance companies from receiving contracts if conflicts of interest exist.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The bill will establish a structured process for third-party compliance companies to follow if they believe a violation has occurred, ensuring fairness and transparency in the enforcement process. And finally, the bill mandates that awarding agencies and third-party compliance companies seek resolution of disputed labor law violations by conferring with contractors before withholding funds and stalling projects.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
With me today to testify in support of the bill and help address any questions is Elmer Lizardi from the California Labor Federation and Rob Carrion from the Operating Engineers Local Three and California Nevada Conference of Operating Engineers.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. The floor is yours.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Thank you, Chair and members. Elmer Lizardi with the California Labor Federation. The federation supports efforts to enforce California's labor laws on every work site, especially on public works program projects where private companies are receiving public dollars to do this work. SB 1303 will help achieve this goal by increasing accountability of for-profit labor compliance entities, which oversee certain public works projects. Under existing law, public agencies that awards funds for public works projects are tasked with ensuring that parties comply with labor standards.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
Recently, as Senator Caballero has mentioned, we have seen an increase in these public agencies contracting out this incredibly important compliance work to for profit third party companies. Unfortunately, these companies operate with little to no state regulation, and this hurts contractors. The state and construction workers who depend on public works projects for their livelihoods. For example, one of the major gaps in current law, as mentioned, is that these for-profit compliance groups can oversee projects even if they have problematic conflicts of interest.
- Elmer Lizardi
Person
This leads to private compliance groups subjectively enforcing laws in ways that unfairly stall projects or abruptly freeze the funding that pays construction workers for their hard work. SB 1303 brings much-needed accountability for these private compliance groups by requiring them to fully disclose potential conflicts of interest to awarding bodies. With these simple fixes, this bill will help ensure that these companies and the public agencies that contracts work to them are fully accountable and effectively enforcing labor law to protect public dollars and workers in California. Thank you. And we respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you very much. Next witness.
- Rob Carrion
Person
My mike - yeah, there it is. Mister Chairman. Thank you and members of the board, Rob Carrion with the Operating Engineers Local Union Number Three, and on their behalf and the California Nevada Conference of Operating Engineers. We are proud co-sponsors of SB 1303, which will provide needed clarity in situations in which an awarding agency contracts with a third party to perform labor compliance monitoring on their behalf.
- Rob Carrion
Person
Existing law, pursuant to Labor Code section 1726, authorizes awarding bodies of public works projects to withhold payments from contractors in situations in which the awarding body determines that public work laws aren't being properly followed. And I would note that this is great policy that helps ensure our strong public works laws are being adhered to. However, there has been an increase of awarding agencies turning over this responsibility to private third parties, who then take the powerful step of withholding funds from contractors on public works projects.
- Rob Carrion
Person
It's important to note that these third-party for-profit compliance groups are not themselves parties to collective bargaining agreements and have limited knowledge about items that are covered in them. This has led to high road union contractors who are following the law and the terms of their CBAS having funds withheld from the projects they are working on.
- Rob Carrion
Person
As my colleague mentioned, SB 1303 would require for-profit compliance groups to disclose if a conflict of interest exists and would clarify that awarding agencies cannot utilize these groups in situations in which a conflict exists. The bill would also establish a process whereby for-profit compliance groups shall be required to meet with parties of collective bargaining agreements prior to withholding funds and notify the division of labor standards enforcement of their intent to withhold funds.
- Rob Carrion
Person
With that being said, SB 1303 seeks to provide statutory guidance for the use of for-profit labor compliance groups by awarding bodies. We appreciate your time, and we respectfully request your aye vote. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All those who wish to testify in support of SB 1303, please line up at the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation, your position.
- Jesse Gree
Person
My name is Jesse Gree, I'm an engineer, and I support this bill.
- Mike Monaghan
Person
Thank you, Chair and members. Mike Monaghan of the State Building Trades in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support. Seeing no one else approached through the microphone, let's now turn to the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1303, please approach either the table or the microphone. Seeing no one approaching the table or microphone, let's turn to the committee. If there are questions by committee members or comments. Questions or comments. Seeing no questions or comments. Is there a motion? Senator Caballero, I think you've accepted the amendments, is that right? You did? Okay. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, anyone like to make a motion? Would you like to make a motion? Senator Durazo? Thank you. All right, Senator Durazo has moved the bill. Would you like to close?
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Secretary. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 24, SB 1303. The motion is do-pass as amended to Senate appropriations.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
4-0. Put that on call. All right, thank you very much, Senator Caballero. I see Senator Wiener here. I don't think we'll take Senator Wiener out of order. Here's what we're gonna do is if you're an author and you appear, we will take next in order by file order. If we have no authors, then I'm going to look to the committee because we've got a number of authors who are on the committee, and I'll ask them to start to present their bills.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So, Senator Wiener, is it item number 17, SB 1037, that you wish to present today? Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes. Thank you. Okay, Mister Chair, thank you for working for you and your staff, for working with us on SB 1037. And I'm happy to accept the Committee amendment outlined in the bill analysis. I'm presenting SB 1037, a measure sponsored by Attorney General Bonta. Colleagues, as you know, because we've all gone through this together in recent years, we have taken very significant and impactful steps in advancing housing production at all income levels in California and making it easier and faster to get new homes zoned for permitted built.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We've also made sizable financial investments in subsidized affordable housing, and these efforts are beginning to bear food. It's going to take time, but we're moving in a positive direction. A large majority of cities in California are either applying or making good faith efforts to comply with state housing law.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Unfortunately, there is a minority, a relatively small minority, but a minority of cities in California that are not making good faith efforts and that are not just violating state housing law because they forgot to do something or they made a mistake, but are just brazenly ignoring state housing law, either refusing the grant permits for projects that are clearly required to be permitted under state law, or simply refusing to enact a compliant housing element.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Unfortunately, right now there are very few consequences for these violations of the law. Ultimately, the Attorney General has the ability to file a lawsuit against the city to force compliance. Compliance. But if the Attorney General files that lawsuit, goes all the way through the litigation, and wins, and the court enters judgment against the city, the city still has a significant period of time to come into compliance and avoid financial penalties.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So that means that cities have their only incentive to avoid litigation is not wanting to pay attorney's fees because they can force a lawsuit, enforce an entire litigation, and lose, and then still avoid penalties.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So this bill will end that incentive or that incentive to just go into litigation by saying that if the Attorney General sues you, if you go all the way through the lawsuit without settling, if judgment is entered against you, then the court will impose fines going back to the beginning of the violation. There is some of the opposition in their letters and in testimony have talked about, oh, it's just an honest mistake. An honest mistake is one that gets corrected well before litigation starts.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's not an honest mistake when you go through an extended pre litigation period of time, lawsuits filed, the entire litigation judgment that is not a good faith on this mistake. And this will remove the incentive to violate state law and will create a big incentive to avoid litigation. I respectfully ask for an aye vote. I do want to just mention one other thing, that the fines will be placed in a fund for affordable housing in that city. And so I respectfully ask for your. I vote with me today testify for from the Attorney General's Office, Janet Staniford and Francesc Marti from California YIMBY.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Floor is yours.
- Jana Staniford
Person
Good afternoon, Mister chair and Committee Members. I'm Jana Staniford. I'm a legislative advocate for the Attorney General. And I have with me also today Alex Fish, who's a special assistant Attorney General for housing, who's available to help answer any technical questions you may have on behalf of Attorney General Rob Bonta. I want to start by thanking Senator Wiener for authoring this bill, which the Attorney General is proud to sponsor. As you know, California is facing a severe housing shortage and affordability crisis.
- Jana Staniford
Person
The Legislature has passed strong laws in recent years to address this crisis, including over a dozen ministerial approval laws. But those laws will only move the needle to address the housing crisis if local governments follow them. Attorney General Rob Bonta has made enforcement of housing laws a top priority and has taken action against some of the most egregious violators. But the remedies available under existing law are not effectively deterring local governments from violating these laws in the first place.
- Jana Staniford
Person
Despite the ministerial approval laws on the books, several cities have been reluctant to process qualifying applications ministerially, instead imposing local requirements and other creative policies and practices that deviate from the clear, objective standards that the Legislature has established. This frustrates the purpose of ministerial approval lawsuit, which is to streamline approvals and build housing quickly. And while local governments are tasked with planning to meet the needs, the housing needs of their communities, there are over 200 jurisdictions that are out of compliance with housing element law.
- Jana Staniford
Person
This non compliance consumes public resources. The Attorney General could do more to advance other important state housing priorities if every jurisdiction promptly complied with a simple black and white deadline. To address these rampant compliance issues, local governments must be deterred from violating housing laws. Effective monetary penalties will serve as a deterrent and strengthen the state's hand when the Attorney General warns local governments if they're out of compliance.
- Jana Staniford
Person
And for local governments that refuse to comply, who shirk their responsibility to meet their fair share of regional and statewide housing needs, SB 1037 would allow the Attorney General to hold them quickly to account. We respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Francesc Martí
Person
Hello Chair Umberg, distinguished Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. My name is Francesc Marti and I'm the senior Director of strategy and government affairs at California YIMBY, a grassroots organization with over 80,000 members dedicated to ensuring that California is a place of abundant, secure, and affordable housing for all. I am here today to express our strong support for SB 1037, authored by Senator Wiener, which aims to strengthen the enforcement of California's critical housing laws.
- Francesc Martí
Person
At California YIMBY, we firmly believe that the housing laws passed by the Legislature in recent years are essential tools in addressing our state's severe housing shortage and affordability crisis. These laws, including ministerial approval laws, were designed to streamline housing production and ensure that local governments are doing their part to meet the housing needs of their communities. However, we have seen firsthand how the lack of compliance by some local governments has hindered progress towards our state's housing goals.
- Francesc Martí
Person
When cities and counties fail to process qualifying applications ministerially update their housing element, or when they impose additional local requirements, they are effectively undermining the intent of these laws and slowing down much needed housing construction. Furthermore, the fact that over 200 jurisdictions are currently out of compliance with housing element law is deeply concerning. When cities fail to adhere to these laws, they impede the state's overall ability to meet critical housing needs.
- Francesc Martí
Person
This non compliance not only obstructs potential housing process, but also perpetuates inequality in housing access and affordability. It's a cycle that deepens the crisis rather than alleviating it. It we believe that SB 1037 is a crucial step in addressing these compliance issues and ensuring that local governments are held accountable for following the law by allowing the Attorney General to seek effective monetary penalties for violations. This bill will serve.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Would you mind wrapping it up? Excuse me, sir.
- Francesc Martí
Person
Furthermore, the funds collected from these penalties are earmarked to develop affordable housing.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Okay, others in support of SB 1037, please approach the microphone.
- Catherine Charles
Person
Katherine Charles here. On behalf of Housing Action Coalition and support.
- Holly Fraumeni
Person
Holly Fraumeni de Jesus, Lighthouse Public Affairs. On behalf of SPUR civic wealth, Green Belt Alliance and YIMBY Action in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, if you're in opposition to SB 1037, please approach the microphone.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
If you'd like to come to the table, I'll ask one of the proponents to please stand. Thanks.
- Brady Guertin
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and members. Brady Guertin, on behalf of the League of California Cities. First wanted to thank the committee staff in the author's office for the proposed committee amendments on SB 1037, as well as the continued conversations we have had with the author's office and the Attorney General's Office. These conversations have been very productive, and we appreciate the way the bill has been improved with the proposed committee amendments before you today. With that said, we still must respectfully oppose the measure at this time.
- Brady Guertin
Person
Cal Cites believes that the measure is headed in the right direction, but we still have concerns with Section 2B of the bill. Specifically, the language states that local land use decisions or actions that are contrary to established public policy or procedurally unfair could result in significant, overly punitive fines for local governments, including cities, that are making good faith efforts to comply with state law.
- Brady Guertin
Person
This language is extremely broad, vague, and unclear in what actions could entail punishments from the state, and gives leeway to punish good faith actors for a genuine disagreement or misunderstanding of state law without allowing them to correct the violation. Cal Cities appreciates the efforts by Senator Wiener and this committee to make sure that good faith actors are not punished for their efforts but believes that further improvements on the language are necessary to make these goals clear in the proposal. Cal Cites looks forward to those conversations and appreciates the author's willingness to continue to work with us into addressing our concerns. Thank you, and I'm happy to answer any further questions on the proposal.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Others in opposition to SB 1037, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one approaching the microphone, let's bring it to committee. Questions by committee members? Any questions by committee members? Is there a motion by committee member? Senator Ashby moves the bill. All right, thank you, Senator Wiener, and I appreciate you working with the committee. I share some of those concerns about cities that are attempting to comply in good faith and because of one reason or another that they are thwarted in their effort.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And I know you've also attempted to address that. I look forward to additional language if you think additional language is necessary. But there are some cities, and I'm familiar with one in particular, that is in willful violation and proud thereof. So those cities need where enforcement is needed. They shouldn't get a free ride in terms of cost to all of us. Having said that, Senator Wiener, would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and we do appreciate the work on the amendment. That we're accepting today. We're not trying. This is not about punishing cities that are really trying and just having some challenges. There are. And also, just to be really clear, this is only after the Attorney General doesn't run around filing these lawsuits left and right. It's very seldom. And it's only after lots of effort by the Attorney General, by HCD, to try to help cities come into compliance. So this is a small subset of cities that have gone not just to litigation, but to court judgment against them. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, Madam Secretary, Senator Ashby has moved the bill. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Four to one. We'll put that on call. Thank you, Senator Wiener. I see. Senator Padilla. Senator Padilla, you normally would not go next, but because you're it, you're it. So after Senator Padilla, if we're continuing to go in file order, then it would be Senator Menjivar, then Senator Skinner, and then Senator Laird.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Then Senator Laird. Then we're down to just Members of the Committee, So. All right, thank you very much. Senator Padilla, the floor is yours.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister Chairman and Members. I'd like to begin by accepting the Committee's amendments and thanking the Committee staff for working with our staff on this Bill. Later this year, there will be national elections in several important democratic nations across the globe, including ours. Meanwhile, hostile, autocratic national governments are vastly expanding misinformation efforts to sow discord and influence our elections. The emergence of artificial intelligence has now empowered hostile actors to sow discord with incredibly realistic but fake images and even voice recordings.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
AI is an extraordinarily powerful tool in the digital age, which can have enormous influence over our public discourse, and misinformation online can go viral in a matter of a few hours. The average consumer, the average person, does not have convenient tools at the moment to distinguish between content produced by a reputable news source or AI generated misinformation, or, for that matter, intentionally harvested reams of misinformation disguised as news.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Many also lack the knowledge of how to identify AI generated misinformation due to how new and how impactful this new technology is. SB 1228 would require social media platforms to request identity verification from highly influential users and influential users as defined in the draft. And note, whenever the user is authenticated or unauthenticated, this is for the benefit of the consumer of the information.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
A recent article in the Washington Post uncovered thousands of Kremlin directed bots and websites flooding Europe with disinformation ahead of EU election, masquerading as legitimate news. The New York Times also recently found many news sites with Russian ties used to spread disinformation, aided by AI generated content, to fool casual readers into thinking they are reading a genuine article. Numerous studies have shown that online anonymity results in increased, unconstrained postings and aggressiveness. Many social media platforms already contain some form of identity verification.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Indeed, we only need to look, as your analysis points out, to the banking industry and the lending industry, for sound know your customer practices. I want to reiterate, this Bill does not require social media consumers to be verified, nor does it ask or seek to suppress the content of information, but rather to provide consumers of the information information as to whether the source and user putting out content is authenticated or not. With me today I have Mariko Yoshihara, with CITED, and Doctor Laura Mather, a cybersecurity expert and former CEO of Silver Trail Systems.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Whoever would like to go first. Miss Yoshihara. Okay.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. Mariko Yoshihara, representing the California Initiative for Technology and Democracy, also known as cited CITED. CITED is a new project of California common cause seeking to address election disinformation that is being turbocharged by social media, AI, and other emerging technologies. I would also like to start by reiterating what this Bill does not do. This Bill does not prohibit anonymous speech online. It does not require platforms to force users to verify their identity, and it does not prevent users from using pseudonyms or no name at all when they're engaging in online speech.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
This Bill simply requires platforms to seek to verify the identity of users once they've reached a certain threshold that we have identified that we have defined as influential or highly influential, meaning that their content is being viewed by hundreds and thousands of people within a very short period of time, because that is how disinformation is spread, because people don't know who is behind the content that they're viewing, the content that they're viewing, and whether it's real or fake.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
So this Bill is designed to provide users who are consuming that content with more information about whose identity is authenticated, so they can better assess whether what what they're viewing is credible and trustworthy or not. And it will also help mitigate the spread of unconstrained and frictionless mis and disinformation that is really polluting our information ecosystem and threatening the integrity of our elections and our democracy like never before. And that is our state's compelling interest. And this Bill is narrowly tailored to ensure that free speech, including anonymous speech, is protected. And for these reasons, we urge your support. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Next witness.
- Laura Mather
Person
Thank you. Mister Chair and Members, my name is Laura Mather and I am on the Advisory Board of CITED. In addition, I was one of the first employees of eBay's trust and safety organization. And it was my job to protect eBay users, often through user verification. After that, I started my own cybersecurity company. We protected brands like Citibank, Bank of America, e Trade, Apple, Microsoft. I've actually done the jobs of the people in the opposition, so I understand exactly the place that they're in.
- Laura Mather
Person
Mostly, I want to respond to that opposition. You need to understand that these companies make their money by verifying people so that they can target them for advertising. This is what they do. For them to say that this Bill will impede their ability to determine whether or not to verify people, that's a little bit ironic, given that's their whole job. They need to know who people are so that they can target them for advertising.
- Laura Mather
Person
In addition, I've worked with multiple brands through my two decades in this space, and I can tell you that these organizations are already verifying their users. They need to know if a user is a bot, they need to know if they're under the age of 13, they need to know if you all live in Sacramento. Again, so that they can target them. The fact that they have teams performing these types of verifications means that this is not a challenge for them.
- Laura Mather
Person
And then when it comes to even deeper verification, they're already doing this as well. If an advertiser wants to post ads on their platform, if a user wants to get paid for their content, these platforms are already verifying them because they don't want to get defrauded by their own users. They know how to do this. They know how to store the data. So in summary, having worked in 20 years in this space, I can tell you that these platforms, they know how to comply to this. They're already doing it in the cases that benefit them. We're just asking them to do that in the few cases that will benefit our democracy. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support of SB 1228, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one approaching the microphone. If you're opposed to SB 1228, please approach the microphone. All right. Would you like seat at the table? Yes, you would? Okay. Thank you. Whichever seat you'd like, please proceed.
- Khara Boender
Person
Chair Umberg, Members of the Committee, my name is Khara Boender, testifying on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association in respectful opposition to SB 1228. CCIA is an international not for profit trade association with about two dozen members from a range of communications and technology firms. While we appreciate the recent amendments to SB 1228, the Bill still raises significant concerns. First, it is unclear what constitutes satisfying the Bill's requirement to seek to verify influential users.
- Khara Boender
Person
... online services employ tools and features to protect the identity or anonymity of their users, and businesses aim to tailor these appropriately to the nature of the service and an online community the service is trying to create and foster. SB 1228 would bifurcate the online population into authenticated and non authenticated users, which could threaten online anonymity. Many users opt to use pseudonyms or no name at all when engaging in online speech.
- Khara Boender
Person
These users may be speaking about sensitive topics, represent dissident opinions under oppressive regimes, or be part of a marginalized community, among other reasons. Anonymous speech is a long held value and tradition in the United States, dating back to the federalist papers. Protecting anonymity of online speech carries forward such traditions and productions to allow for open and free expression.
- Khara Boender
Person
This Bill risks disincentivizing online anonymity and would suggest that non authenticated accounts be viewed as less safe or legitimate, especially under the requirement to show for at least 2 seconds prior to the rest of a post being available, a message akin to this user is unauthenticated. This could appear to serve as a red flag warning for other users, for any unauthenticated users content. User authentication requires additional data collection and can create security risks.
- Khara Boender
Person
This inherently requires companies to collect additional sensitive information and under this Bill, a government issued ID. While many platforms implement strong industry standard security measures, nefarious actors are constantly evolving and advancing new tactics to circumvent these protections. Because the explicit requirement to provide a government issued identification is limited to the most influential users, it creates a known and particularly appealing honey pot of information.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Could you wrap it up, please?
- Khara Boender
Person
I appreciate your consideration of these comments and stand ready to answer any questions.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Others in opposition to SB 1228, please approach.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Dylan Hoffman, on behalf of Technet, respectfully opposed.
- Austin Heyworth
Person
Austin Heyworth on behalf of the Internet Works Association, opposed and will continue to be working with the author. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Brady Van Engelen on behalf of Cal Chamber, opposed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Anyone else in opposition? Seeing no one else approach the microphone, let's bring it back Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So let me just say that I don't understand some of the arguments in opposition, and I guess I don't understand some of the statements about, I mean, it's a, it's, as I understand it, it's a very simple Bill. Either you're authenticated or you're not. And for those people that don't want to authenticate themselves, who just say, no, I'm not going to, I'm not going to give you the information you need to be authenticated, then people can wonder why they're unauthenticated and maybe doubt the veracity of what they have to say. I'm not saying that that's right or wrong.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
I'm just saying that's, at least as I understand it, this is a sunshine type of Bill, and I get the dissidents and the need for privacy for some of these, and that's fine, but then they're unauthenticated. And I guess I'm just really struggling with this whole idea that it's hard to do and that it is intrusive some way in the privacy of the individual. It seems to me once you put your name and your face out there, there's some privacy loss right there.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And I don't understand, quite frankly, people posting a lot of personal information, like everything that's going on in their life, because it seems to me that they give up their privacy concerns when they do that. Right. So anyway, I'm just, I'm struggling. Maybe you can explain a little bit more why you see this as a real intrusion.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And I, I'm all for people having the right to say whatever they want to say, but to the extent that it becomes targeted and it's hurtful and it is used as a tool to fool and confuse people, which is what it seems to me has happened in the political arena, the political and the social arena, because you have all these conspiracy theories, authenticating people just seems to make sense to me. I don't know if there's a, if you understand the question.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Padilla, you want to respond or respond in your close?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I can respond in close. I would just to the, Mister Chairman and Senator, I appreciate the point and the line of questioning. You know, I don't think that this proposed legislation would have any chilling effect on the anonymity of discourse in the public square. I don't think it would shell people from participating in it.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I think it is a tool, potentially, for the consumer of the information to make an independent judgment with the knowledge that an individual or source or moniker or whatever providing information they're consuming is either verified, authenticated or not. And I think that's valuable. And I think, circumstantially, the only tool the consumer has here are tools or information. It's the only weapon the consumer has now. In the context of rapidly evolving AI, and frankly, I would just refer the Senator and the Members.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Again, your own analysis at page five, which is a great quote from the Brookings Institution study, that. If I may, Mister Chairman, just remind the Members one of the drivers of decreased confidence in the political system has been the explosion of misinformation deliberately aimed at disrupting the democratic process. This confuses and overwhelms voters, end quote.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Well, I agree with you, and I guess that was the reason I asked the question. I don't understand the objection.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Senator Ashby moves the Bill, is that correct? All right, see no other questions or comments. Senator Padilla, would you like to close?
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Secretary. Senator Ashby has moved the Bill. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 14, SB 1228. The motion is due passed as amended, to Senate Appropriations. [Roll Call]. 5 to 0.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We're gonna put that Bill on call. Thank you very much. All right, next, we would normally have Senator Skinner followed by Senator Laird, followed by Senator Menjivar. zero, Senator Menjivar's here. Okay, I'm sorry. Next, we'd normally have Senator Menjivar. Senator Menjivar. Item number 11, SB 1497.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
These are uncomfortable chairs. oh, should I get in there? I don't know.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, Senator Menjavar, SB 1497, floor is yours.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. Uncomfortable chair. Not you, sir. This physical chair. Just wanted to know, I am taking Committee amendments that were proposed to me in EQ, written into print during this Committee. All right, thank you, colleagues, Committee Members, we've all heard the phrase, you break it, you buy it. That is exactly the approach SB 1497 is looking to take. The top polluters are responsible for breaking our environment, so now they have to pay for it.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
This Bill is requiring the top polluters to contribute to the cleanup, the damages their emissions have caused. And that threshold within this Bill is pretty high. Without it, California taxpayers will continue as they've been left to foot the whole Bill for climate harms these polluters have caused. So we're looking to establish a program in California's EPA to assess fees in the largest fossil polluters to pay their fair share of damages their products have inflicted in California.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
A couple years ago, in our budget alone, we allocated $9.3 billion just as a response to what we're seeing in related to emission caused damages. In La County, where I represent, reports have shown that in the next 15 years, we need to put aside $12.5 billion taxpayer dollars to address some of those causes. In fact, this wonderful Committee, in your own analysis, pointed to additional cost estimates done by the NRDC and the Wirski Business project if we maintained a business as usual approach.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So let's not do business as usual. Let's seek to avoid this and share some of the burden Californians already bear and will continue to bear with those whose action and products are the primary cause of climate damage. And we know from published scientific research using company self reported data that is turned into SEC that there are only a relatively small number of very large companies that bear the greater responsibility for the climate crisis.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Approximately in California, about 40 scientists are able to connect these emissions to the climate damages to our state. Things like extreme heat waves, increased wildfire, intensified drought, and sea level rises. So what exactly will this Bill do? It's going to first require the first comprehensive statewide cost study led by COwAPA to quantify climate damage costs to the state. They would then define their responsible parties as those who did business in the state and emitted more than 1 billion metric tons of CO2 during 2020.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
For those of you who can't picture what to 1 billion metric tons is, take a car that has a 25 miles per gallon car and drive it around the circumference of the earth 113 million times. That is what 1 billion metric tons looks like. We will then assess an initial fee on responsible parties to pay the costs for the study and administrative cost of the program. And again, from current info available today, we know which of these top polluters, which top polluters we're talking about.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So Calopa will oversee the program, will assess and collect the fees during the 20 year period, and we will then consider and allocate expenditures from the resulting Fund to address climate damage and projects for projects implementing state climate policy. We want to make sure that the funded projects come back. Let me back. We want to make sure the Legislature has a say in what kind of projects we will be funding through this Fund.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I want to be clear that we all know that this is not cutting any jobs, this is not bringing down regulations. This is not a tax whatsoever. This is a retroactive cause for what emissions have caused damage to, and no entity will have to close down because of this. I'd like to turn over now to Mister chair some of my witnesses here, since I am not a scientist.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I did bring a scientist with me to provide some expert testimony along with, as well as a Director of the climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Senator Menjivar, your witnesses, two minutes each. Go ahead.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Thank you so much, Kassie Siegel, attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity. This Bill is urgently needed. It's fair, practical, and fully supported legally. SB 1497 is modeled on existing laws like CERCLA, the federal Superfund law that requires polluters to help pay to clean up legacy pollution. And federal courts have repeatedly held that governments can impose liability for such costs on those who created and profited from pollution.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
The Bill imposes a fee only on the world's largest companies that have done the most to cause the climate crisis for the damage caused by the oil, gas, and coal that they produced. The simplicity of this approach is a strength of the Bill. The fossil fuel industry, like tobacco, lead paint, and opioid manufacturers, wants to blame others who use or sell their products for the damage. But this Bill can and should hold the fossil fuel industry liable for the damage caused by their products.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
California's childhood lead poisoning prevention law is also analogous. Just like this Bill, it assessed a fee on companies for producing products containing lead, and its Fund helps victims of lead poisoning. The law imposed liability on lead paint manufacturers, not the retailers, a sound policy decision that was upheld when challenged. You have before your written testimony from five of the country's top environmental law scholars explaining why SB 1497 is consistent with existing precedent.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
I thank Committee staff for all of their excellent, you, hard work on the Bill analysis, and I would be delighted to further discuss how the Bill satisfies due process in every regard or any other issue. It is fundamentally fair to expect the largest polluters to pay their share, and they have the capability to do so.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Thank you.
- Aradhna Tripathi
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Aradhna Tripathi. I'm a Professor at UCLA and a co author of the fifth National Climate Change Assessment for the United States. My key message today is that you should support the strong scientific foundation of this Bill. I want to make it clear that California can attribute the costs of climate change here to particular fossil fuel polluters as directed by the Bill. We all know that fossil fuels are driving the climate crisis. In fact, our Governor calls this the fossil fuel crisis.
- Aradhna Tripathi
Person
Fossil fuels are responsible for 90% of human cost CO2 emissions, and as pointed out, it can be traced to a very small number of major industrial polluters. Using well established attribution science, something that's been established for two decades has been used in hundreds of peer reviewed studies, we can directly connect fossil fuel emissions from these companies to climate change hazards in our state, as well as to costs like lives lost, income lost, and health harms.
- Aradhna Tripathi
Person
The costs that we've had just since 1980 alone have been more than $100 to $200 billion, if we're conservative in our estimates in this state. This is from 46 events. The types of events I'm talking about are in Sacramento, things like increased flooding from atmospheric rivers in Fresno, Merced, the types of things we heard about this morning, extreme heat affecting workers crop yields and also resulting in enhanced spread of disease from different vectors. In Northern California, explosive wildfires, the campfire alone, about 16 billion.
- Aradhna Tripathi
Person
And so with that attribution, science answers questions like how much did those emissions increase climate hazards like wildfire area and wildfire intensity. How much did emissions, you actually make extreme events like these heat waves, more likely to occur and more severe. What was the costs associated? What were the costs resulting from those emissions? In short, using peer reviewed approaches based on attribution science, Cal EPA conduct their study. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Others in support of SB 1497, please approach.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone Stone advocacy on behalf of Consumer Watchdog in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ashton Nagali
Person
Good afternoon. Ashton Aaron Nagali, Environment California and CalPIRG, we support. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Katie McCammon, program Director with 350 Sacramento. We support along with the support of Climate Action, California Climate Reality Project, California Coalition, Glendale Environmental Coalition, 350 Humboldt and Elders climate Action. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right. Next,
- Grisheena Mohabir
Person
Good afternoon. Grisheena Mohabir with California Environmental Voters in support. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. Tamara Abrams, Member of the Climate setup group of Congregation Bethel. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support of SB 1497? Yes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. I've been asked to note support from the Climate Center, Greenpeace USA, Friends of the Earth, Physicians for Social Responsibility, La Sacramento and San Francisco Bay Pacific Environment, NRDC, Food and Water Watch, NextGen California, Sierra Club California, the California Environmental Justice Alliance, California Nurses for Environmental Health and Justice, California Youth Versus Big Oil, Breast Cancer Action, Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environment. I'll just do a couple more Fossil Free California, Environmental Defense Center and elders climate action, northern and Southern California chapter. There's more, but I respect your time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you. And I should have added at the beginning is that if you wish to supplement your testimony, provide additional information, you go to the Committee's website and the Committee's website. You can see how you might submit additional information. I mentioned before that I know the conventional wisdom is that many of us cannot read, but that's not accurate. We all can read. So. All right, let's bring it back now to opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1497, please approach the microphone. If you'd like to sit at the table. We'll ask the proponents to please move back to the audience. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Please.
- Timothy Jefferies
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Council members, I am Timothy Jeffries with the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers and a journeyman boilermaker, member of the State Building Trades executive board, and a proud marine veteran. I'm here today in opposition of SB 1497. This bill, if successful, would drive up the cost of living for every working family. This bill seeks to change to charge emitting companies for their share of emissions, which is exactly the basis of California's landmark and successful cap and trade program.
- Timothy Jefferies
Person
Double dipping, so to speak, will only drive up the cost of energy production for consumers who have already made it pretty clear that they do not want to see continued escalating cost of living in certain cost of living or uncertainty taxes. This is an exciting time. We are in the midst of an energy transition in California. We are dependent on existing energy companies to continue to invest in hydrogen, biofuels, carbon capture, and additional climate innovation.
- Timothy Jefferies
Person
If we are even going to come close to meeting our existing or aggressive climate goals, assisting additional costs on these energy companies. Correction, assessing additional costs on these energy companies, who also employ thousands of union members, will only cause them to invest elsewhere. We've already seen and seen this in other sectors. It bears mentioning that we will continue to be dependent on transitional forms of energy and will be for a decade yet as we undertake this transition, continuously outsourcing consumer and commercial products.
- Timothy Jefferies
Person
Continuously outsourcing consumer and commercial products we are dependent on is bad business for California and a cost ultimately borne by working families. Right now, the question of dependency is especially important as we are seeking increasing military stability in the Middle East, causing cost increases for all Americans and security risks for our military. What we need in California isn't more taxes or less employers.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Could you wrap it up, please?
- Timothy Jefferies
Person
Yes, I could. I could. Thank you. On behalf of the thousands of blue collar boilermakers across California, we ask to vote no on Senate Bill 1497.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay, thank you very much. Other witnesses in opposition?
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
Brady Van Engelen, California Chamber of Commerce, here in respectful opposition, as this measure is a job killer. First, we remain deeply concerned, and I'd like to align ourselves with our colleague from the labor community, that this is in fact going to increase energy prices across the board. Simply put, added regulatory costs are going to increase costs, particularly for those here in California. And as noted in the committee analysis, that could extend onto airlines, onto other industries. The question is just not. There's a two part question.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
There is how much is going to increase and exactly who's going to be impacted by that as well, too. It's been suggested that SBX12 would actually offer, that was the special session bill from last year would offer some price protections. That's absolutely not the case. That was a measure that simply focused on transparency for refining margins, which is not something that would be shielded from this measure. Also, the committee analysis highlighted some of the differences between CERCLA and this proposal.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
I would simply add that in addition to that, there's a prospective approach that we have here in California that's unique to California in cap and trade. If SB 1497 were to be adopted, obligated parties, not merely those that are contemplated as part of this bill, but other obligated parties, would likely be paying twice for the same emissions profile. And, you know, one other thing I'd like to point out is there's a question of proportionality here as well, too.
- Brady Van Engelen
Person
California represents less than 1% of the GHG emissions profile on a global scale. However, this bill is seeking recompense in the form of attacks at a much, much larger scale than that. That's not simply for the. But that's basically for anyone that does business here in California. That seems extremely disproportionate to me and to what aim exactly? We should be looking for solutions that can either reduce costs or reduce emissions, or perhaps do both. This measure accomplishes neither one of those, and for those reasons, we ask for your no vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Others in opposition, please give us your name, your affiliation, and your position.
- Naomi Padron
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and members. Naomi Padron on behalf of the Western States Petroleum Association, in respectful opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Michael Monagan
Person
Mr. Chair and members, Mike Monagan on behalf of the State Building Trades, in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Natalie Boust
Person
Hi. Natalie Boust on behalf of the California Business Roundtable, in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dean Talley
Person
Dean Talley with the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, opposed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Peter Blocker
Person
Peter Blocker at the California Taxpayers Association, in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, anyone else in opposition, please approach the microphone. Seeing no one else approaching, members of the committee questions, comments. Seeing Senator Durazo?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yeah. First, I want to thank my brother for making the comments that you did and for fighting for working people. I know that sets your heart and soul. I've had some conversations with the author. Issues that I've been concerned about, and it's. Some of them are very, very complicated. Some of the things that concern me are.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And maybe you could answer them, or I can give them all out to you and you can answer some of which we already talked about, but one is the concern about going backwards in time and whatever. I don't know what technical term you want to call it, but some sort of fee on a certain period of time, about 20 years, is going backward and having someone take responsibility for what was done several years ago for a pretty large period of time. How will you know what's the knowledge that you have that would justify you doing that? We wouldn't do that normally with anybody.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
If you're charged with, let's just say, a crime, it'd be really hard to go back 20 years and find, you know, it's just more complicated is my point. And so this is pretty much akin to that because it's a serious amount of money not going to jail. They're not going to jail, but it's a serious amount of money for a serious impact that it had on our community.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
But basically, what is it that makes you pick that particular period of time out of all the other years and or going forward, establishing a standard that today you could say going forward, we shouldn't do that anymore, or there's a different threshold. The second area of questions is with regards to responsibility and upstream, you know, who's going to take the full responsibility? And I think you addressed this, but I just want to make sure another question is what's the urgency?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Why do you call it an urgency? I know maybe you're just doing that for the legislative piece of it to try to get this passed and done implemented as quickly as possible. I don't know if urgency has to do with something else, but if you would address that. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I'd like to start, so I'll start with your retroactive liability. And there's precedent for this. One example is in the analysis to CERCLA. I'd like to give a state example, which is the Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Law. And here in the state, we created that fund for the lead damages caused retroactively. We also, and that was paid into a fund and we use that fund to pay for projects.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So there is precedent for retroactive, for imposing a cost estimate on retroactive damages, and we've seen legislation related to that on tobacco, opioids, and so forth. There is an opioid fund as well right now in the State of California that manufactures only. So that's to your second question, that only manufacturers paid into it. On the Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Law, only the manufacturers paid into it, not the stores that they distributed to, not the distributors and so forth.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
For opioids, only the manufacturers of said drug pay into the fund. So we're replicating that same approach with this legislation. In regards to why not moving, why are we focusing on moving forward, well, one of the things I said in my talking points is that this is not going to reduce emissions.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
This is not regarding regulations, decreasing the emissions, or anything like that, or mandating regulations, because we do have programs like that with cap and trade. Albeit there's a lot of things that need to change with cap and trade, but there are programs working right now on future reduction of emissions.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
What we don't have right now is a fund that is eligible for us to pay for the damages already caused for the immense amount of money that we're having to pay for the flooding, the fires we're seeing in California. And when we talk about, you know, taxpayers being concerned about this, we're currently bearing the brunt of this, and we want to shift that responsibility and share that responsibility with the top polluters.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And I'll add to that, Senator, is that these aren't companies, because I'm here for the working class and the working community. These aren't companies that we should still feel sorry for. These are companies that, if they don't have to fire anyone because they're raking in billions and billions of dollars. I mean, Chevron, during the 20 period we're looking at, made 252, 77 billion. Exxon, during that period made $496 billion, and now they're raking in half of that in just three years. So even if, hypothetically speaking, there's a 10 billion assessment to this that is pennies on what they make now.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Durazo, any follow up? No? Are you finished?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I didn't answer the urgency.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I don't think I have the answer to that one. Actually. Actually, I do have the. So there were a couple of years ago, we expanded the amount of things that needed 27 votes, and this now is eligible under that expansion as to why I need 27 votes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Ashby had a question.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you. So I think this is a really ambitious bill, and I think you know that. And, you know, you have a tough road ahead of you here. I am going to support you today, but I want to lay out some really big concerns I have with the bill and make sure that you know that those are my concerns. So as you're telling where your colleagues are, you know that if I still have those concerns, I might not be such a sure vote in the future.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
But I want to give you time to work on it. So that's why I'm gonna do what I'm gonna do here. First of all, this doesn't really require comment, but I am concerned when the boilermakers and the unions show up and they're worried about jobs. So that's just something we need to address. If it's not a problem, then why are they here? Secondly, I am concerned about passed off costs. You know this. Is there a single complaint that we hear more than the price of gas?
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
So if we do anything to make that price go up, we have to be responsible for it. So we just need to keep it in mind. And then here's really, from a judiciary standpoint, and this is like a judicial issue, my biggest concern with the sort of legality of this bill. So in 2006, that's when the legislation was passed, it was AB 32 that established cap and trade.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And then, and I've heard more than any of you would care to hear about cap and trade, given my last six years with Mr. Steinberg. Okay? So in 2011, he changed cap and trade, and that's the piece that you're working within right now. So in 2012, then-Pro-Tem Senator Steinberg, he passed his bill, SB 1018, establishing criteria that must be met before CARB could proceed with links to cap and trade and other carbon markets, which is sort of where you're headed as well.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Now, cap and trade obligates emitters to pay above the emissions cap. And then again in 2016, that was further bolstered with additional requirements to pay in certain areas that were more affected, which we've talked about, too. So, given all of that. 2006, 2011, then we come back again for another bite at the apple in 2016. Here we are in 24, looking retrospectively to implement a very similar punitive plan where we have already once, maybe even twice, asked these same emitters to contribute.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And so, given all of those regulations that cover the same or similar periods as your bill, you feel that that makes this more difficult to implement or, quite frankly, to uphold if challenged. It's meaning a post facto penalty where an existing penalty or two was already in play. So that's my big judicial concern here. And the reason I'm going to vote for you, even with that big concern, is because I want to give you some time to work on it.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And potentially, there would be some things you could do to mitigate it, but you can't bill. It doesn't matter if it's the company that we all hate the most or a person that we all love. You can't bill someone two, three times for the same issue. Just like Senator Durazo said, you cannot charge someone twice for the same crime.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
And it makes it even more difficult to go back retrospectively 20 years to do so, especially since we have laws on the books dating back three different sets of those laws dating back through almost the entirety of the period that you're seeking to cover. So that is my concern, Mister chair.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I'd like to start and then turn to my witness for supplements, if that's okay. Okay. First, I'll speak on the cost. Because this is only looking to administer a fee on a tiny fraction of the top polluters, not every single polluter in California is going to have this fee assessed on them. So when the opposition says that this is going to impact everyone, that is incorrect.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So, for example, if you have polluter A on one side of the street, who gets the fee, and polluter B on the other side, who doesn't get the fee, polluter a is going to be incentivized to not increase the cost because polluter B's prices are going to stay pretty stagnant. So for them to stay competitive, Senator, it's going to be imperative for them to maintain their competitiveness against polluter B who does not get assessed the fee.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Now, also, you heard the opposition talk about SBX12, which we passed last year, and they only focus on the transparency side. But that bill, and we all remember this conversation, was to prevent price gouging. And we did pass that last year for transparency and preventing price gouging to ensure that we will hold the market steady. And the CC would set a maximum gross gasoline refining margin and penalties for refiners that exceed it.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So I'm viewing that as two items that are protecting from consumers getting the prices increased on why we have. And I would be concerned, too, when I see unions opposed to it. But I want to give this bigger picture, and perhaps to the Senators that have been here before, three of us have. Right? Whenever we talk about fossil fuel, you will always have some kind of concern that that means that you are no longer going to be at the table for a just transition.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And that is a valid, valid concern. And I will never take that away. But this particular bill has nothing to do with a just transition, which I am in favor of, has nothing to do with a regulation or a mandate that is going to adjust the way a company runs. So nowhere in my bill am I saying stop emitting right now, stop producing fossil fuels, because I'm not working on that right now. Maybe down the line I will work with the opposition on issues like that.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
But nowhere in my bill does a company have to change anything. Now, after reading this analysis, I was very thankful that I'm not in this committee because there's a lot of jargon in this and I think I learned a lot from it. And you threw out some terms that I'm not 100% familiar with. But the analysis point points to the legality of this approach. The analysis also pointed to this being remedial, not punitive. And I know, Senator, you mentioned that this is a punitive approach. But again, this analysis also pointed to the fact this is remedial and pointed to a lot of precedent for this approach. And if there anything I missed that you would add to that, I think.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
You did a good job covering it. Let me just finish with this one thought. And I'm really just trying to plant the seed in your head so you'll think about it going forward. You said not everyone will be penalized. That's true. But everyone who will be penalized has previously been penalized before, at least once. That's the piece I just want you to think about.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I forgot about that. You spoke a lot about cap and trade and sitting on an EQ, cap and trade had a great, great intent, but we're not seeing the true fruits to that program. And again, cap and trade is for future to reduce emissions. And cap and trade, all these polluters can just buy credits without reducing emissions. That's essentially what cap and trade is. So you only pay into it if you don't reduce emissions. So it's not punitive in that nature cap and trade, it's their decision to pay into it because they're deciding not to reduce emissions. So that's what I would say would be the difference in approaches.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Wahab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. I first want to thank you for bringing this bill forward. It is important for every single human being to really prioritize the environment. First and foremost. I want to state a couple things. Number one, these businesses that are being looked at right now are middle-class and middle-income providers to a significant amount of usually underserved and underprivileged communities, largely Black and brown communities.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So I do want to highlight that that is very important, which I think you and I do agree upon, that, you know, we are trying to protect as many jobs as possible. We also know that last year we had a very robust discussion in the Legislature regarding taxes and, you know, taking a look at what we're doing there and specifically in this industry of fossil fuels and so forth. Right?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And we are also, I think, some of the conversations that were brought up from this room is particularly about looking backwards for 20 years. Right? And it becomes, you know, what data is going to be looked at. Where is this data being tracked? How are the organizations going to be providing this data? Do they need to participate to be a part of this? Or is there any public records that you guys can go through already?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Those are all things that I think, you know, I'm gonna be honest. I think that we're supposed to keep, like, our tax information for seven years, something like that. Four years, seven years. I don't know the rule. Right? Seven years. Right? So I question a little bit of that as to how deep and how far back we're going, and especially with the change of leadership, change of business, business practices change, a lot of things like that. So I do want to highlight some of those things.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I do care largely about some of the workers issues that they are concerned with, to your point earlier, is that this is an industry that makes billions of dollars. Right? And I want to address your concerns in regards to opposition. I know you and I have had conversations about this as well, is that the goal of most of the policymakers is to protect and create more jobs and create better paying jobs and jobs with pensions and retirements and so forth.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So I really want to prioritize that, and I would like for you to be able to work with opposition on this bill to address those particular concerns, first and foremost. Right? Number two is that when we're looking back 20 years or so, really taking a look at what we can do to kind of make it a little bit more fair, you know. Do we need to look back 20 years?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Because 20 years ago, I don't even know what grade I was in, but it was a very long time ago, and I remember the dynamics change all the time, you know. Okay. Yeah. Even in cultural. Yeah. So cultural issues that tend to happen. So we know that. That's why thing that I do just want to highlight and how difficult that is across the board. I am more than happy to support this bill, primarily because my district in particular has actually supported this in our local central committees and so forth. There have been a number of groups that have supported it and environmental groups and things like that. And I do think that sometimes we need to prioritize this.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
But I also want to say that an early urgency measure, you know, whether we're going to call it a tax or not a tax, depending on the code and the definition and so forth, you know, that is debatable depending on the definition but I do would very much appreciate it if you, the author, would be willing to work with opposition as this bill moves forward. I don't want it to necessarily die in this committee, so no need to respond as your furiously looking at your notes. But I just wanted to say I would like a commitment from you to work with opposition to make sure that this bill is, the points are addressed as this bill moves forward. Thank you.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
May I respond?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You're shaking your head yes. Is that an affirmative response?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yes. May I add or no?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You may add. Sure.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you so much. I'm going to give a little jab to my Marine Corps brother here that we did have a meeting this morning and he did not show up.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Oh, okay.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So I have tried, but we're going to try again and I want to speak to the data. So currently, right now we can, scientists can't test and I'd like to give my witnesses to talk about the scientific portion of it. And on the data collection regarding of the responsible parties, companies self-report now. So we have that data and it's public now on the companies who will meet my threshold.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
20 years back? You're saying yes?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I'm going to turn to my witness because I think the scientific part, data collection is really important.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Let's do this. Senator Menjivar, why don't you finish whatever comments you have, then we can turn to your witnesses.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Okay. So companies self-report to SEC right now who meet that threshold. That's how we know we have approximately in the 40-ish range in California. Additionally, there is a legally binding methodology called the global social cost of carbon that allows us to look at how we calculate the emissions. And now I'll turn to the doctor here.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Yeah, Senator Menjivar is spot on. And so I do want to highlight.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Identify yourself also.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Sorry. Aradhna Tripati, professor at UCLA, climate scientist, co-author of the fifth National Climate Change Assessment, member of the National Academy's Board of Atmospheric Science and Climate, and the director of the Center for Diverse Leadership in Science, which is a green workforce development program in our state.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I was thinking your name, but.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Okay.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So. All right.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
So, yeah, with that, we have self-reported data that does go back 20 years. So yes, from the companies themselves.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And I want to highlight this. I know that the opposition is here and we have the California convenience. I always mess up the names, fuels alliance as well as, you know, the chamber and many others that are speaking in opposition. And the goal genuinely, I think for the Legislature as a whole is one, you know, we obviously want to make sure that business lasts in California. And we're not trying to increase prices for any average consumer.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We, we want to ensure sure that jobs are here, good-paying jobs. And number three, even myself, I have a bill in this space that really tries to prioritize alternative fuels in our gas stations and so forth. Right? So I want to say this for the larger public, that not one single bill is going to solve our problems when we're talking about climate change. That's the honest truth of it. The investment made, you know, like, I represent very poor communities and also extremely affluent communities.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And in our poor communities, they care about housing and jobs. In our affluent communities, they're the ones that focus on fresh air. But at the end of the day, every single living creature requires fresh air, clean water, and much more. So at a certain point in time, I do want to prioritize the effort that you are trying to make, and I think we all agree with this and some of the details we can debate, but we all need to work together to prioritize climate. So with that, I'll move it when appropriate.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Mr. Chair, and I apologize. I know both Senators have asked about why this 20-year period, and we have, and I'd like to turn to my winners to respond to that.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Yeah, just a couple of more words about why the covered period is 2000 to 2020 and why that's fair. And, you know, the polluter pays principle is at the heart of our legal system. And this bill is only based on strict liability. It's only asking some of the world's largest multinational corporations to pay for the damage that their emissions caused during this 20 year period. But, you know, we talk about the due process concerns. Fairness is fundamental to that analysis.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
And even though this bill is separate and distinct from the landmark lawsuits that have been brought to hold polluters accountable, and no bad action is necessary for liability here. Those actions are relevant because we know that for over half a century, the fossil fuel industry lied about the climate and blocked alternatives to their dangerous products, and they were successful. And had they not done that, the world would look very different because decades ago, Exxon's climate models were more accurate than NASA's at predicting climate change. And without that obstruction, things would be different. And so that does go to the fairness question and the choice of the covered period from 2000 to 2020.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
To follow up, so some of us aren't lawyers, right? And I just want to be able for you to give it to, in a very layman's way. Strict liability. Right? And especially these polluters, we're basically trying to focus on people who knowingly polluted our environment. Correct? Just explain it in a very, like, let's say we're in second grade.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Yeah, yeah. Thank you for that. I mean, I say strict liability in that they didn't have to have done anything wrong to be assessed the fee here. It's only because the fossil fuels caused climate change and caused that damage. If they had had no bad. If there had been no bad actions, this bill would still be fully supported. But when, you know, there's been questions raised by the opposition about whether due process rights are violated.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
And my point is that even though it would be absolutely fully supported without those bad actions, here we have an industry that did act very badly. And they're trying, you know, part of the disinformation campaigns that we've seen for decades are trying to shift the blame onto everyday people who use fossil fuels and say, you can't hold us accountable because you use fossil fuels.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
But what we know now from fabulous academic research, investigative journalism, and these lawsuits that have been filed is that the fossil fuel industry created demand for their deadly products. They did that with disinformation, and they did it by blocking alternatives. And so we would not be using the amount of fossil fuels that we are using today had they not been at that for over 50 years. We could have been generating clean, renewable energy, scaling that up starting in the 1970s or even earlier, and electrifying transportation.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
But we are where we are because of that obstruction. And so this bill is separate and complementary to the lawsuits brought by Governor Newsom, brought by Attorney General Bonta. For those bad actions, they do go to fairness.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay,
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thanks. Senator Wahab, anything else? No. All right, a couple questions. This seems to put what appears to be a large burden upon Cal EPA. That Cal EPA is the agency that will analyze, will assess, will basically decree. What is Cal EPA? Where do they stand? Are they in support? Where are they?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
No, we haven't sought any TA yet from Cal EPA.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So you've not had any conversations with Cal EPA?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
No. As far as I'm concerned, no, we haven't.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. I'm gonna support the bill, but something that would be not just important but critical is whether Cal EPA is on board with being able to implement. It looks to me to be complicated. I realize that I have a simple mind, and for you guys, it doesn't look so complicated, but it looks to me to be very complicated. So that would be a critical element. Secondly, is that in terms of who this applies to, does it apply to the extractors as well as to others?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So, for example, if you're not a refiner, if you're not a producer but you're an extractor, does it apply to you as well? I see. One head shaking, yes. And one head shaking, no. So I'll turn to you, Senator Menjivar. If you want to defer to one of your witnesses, that's fine.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
For extraction, production and sale of fossil fuels.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So it does apply to an extractor?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. It applies to an extractor and does not apply to the retailer so far as you know. Right.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
It doesn't.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But it applies to the refiner, right?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. And so what, what do you, just a ballpark figure. What do you estimate the, well, let me start with climate change. What do you estimate the cost of climate change between 2020? I'm not talking about that would be attributed to the fossil fuel industry. I'm talking about in General, one of the harm to California
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Aradhna Tripati it would be between 50 and $100 billion, conservatively. And the cost since 1980, between 100 and $200 billion, conservatively. Right. That's not including all sorts of things.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But that's, I want to just focus on a period that is focused upon in the Bill. So $50 to $100 billion from 2000 to 2020
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
would be a very conservative estimate.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. Conservatively. All right. What portion of that $50 to $100 billion would you attribute to the entities that are targeted in this Bill? What percentage proportion are they? 50% responsible. 80% responsible.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
Kassie, do you want to chime in?
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Yeah. So first of all, just to say about 75% of warming comes from fossil fuels. This Bill only addresses that 75%. And then when you have the 1 billion ton threshold, which narrows it down to a small number of companies, you do lose some of the emissions. So let's say roughly about two thirds of emissions with that threshold.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. So about, between, if it's two thirds, somewhere between 40 billion and 80 billion, you would say. Okay, and that 40 billion, 80 billion, that would be assessed as to the targeted entities that within this Bill. Right. And what mechanism exists. And I know you alluded to this a moment ago, but I'm the calculation, not just the calculation, I'm interested in not being able to pass that $40 to $80 billion onto the consumer. Why would they not be able to pass that $40 to $80 billion on the consumer?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So what I spoke to earlier is in terms of to stay competitive, because only a tiny fraction of these polluters will have this be assessed to them and not every single one. So the example I gave was one polluter a being across the street from polluter B, who in polluter B does not get this fee assessed to them. So to be competitive, they wouldn't want to bring it down to their consumers. And my witness can add to that.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
Also, just to add, this is different than climate policies. This Bill is not about reducing emissions. And this will not affect the ongoing marginal cost of production. It is so. It is in such sharp contrast to other things. For that reason, it's taking money from some of the largest companies and reinvesting in California. And finally, of course, anticompetitive behavior and price gouging is illegal.
- Kassie Siegel
Person
And we are so fortunate to have SBX1 2 now in California to give that extra protection against attempts to pass it on, even though it does not, like other policies, affect the cost of production.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm sorry. Go ahead, 30 seconds.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
And to give you a sense of what those numbers could look like, if you just look at what Exxon made, one of the companies that is one of the largest polluters in that time period, it's on the order of $1.0 trillion. Right. And what would be levied proportionally could be something on the order of 0.03%. Just a really rough back of the envelope calculation. So it's really small potatoes for them.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay.
- Aradhna Tripati
Person
And frontline communities are bearing all of it.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm not going to ask the opposition if they agree with small potatoes, but in any event. So it extends to 2045 in terms of assessment, is that right? Did I have that correct?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yes. So we're asking CalEPA to reassess it every two years to ensure that the calculations they made the two years prior are still in line with the damages that are caused through 2045.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So, in terms of due process, and I'll conclude with this, typically, when someone is assessed or accused, whatever it may be, of some action, whether it's wrongdoing or not, they have an ability to respond to that in some meaningful way. And I get that this is strict liability. But even those who are, even in the strict liability realm, if you produce a product that is designed defectively, you still have an opportunity, basically, to respond in terms of whether it was designed effectively.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But secondly, what the damages are and where here does it give the entities that would have to pay this? Where do they have. Where they have an opportunity to say, hey, Cal, EPA, you're wrong? Do they resort to the court? How do they address this?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So SB 1497 has a similar language to what is in the Childhood Lead poisoning Prevention act. And even in that prevention act, Shell went and challenged its fee assessment and the methodology that was utilized, and they lost their challenge. But they weren't prevented from challenge, from being. The same thing would be said here. They're not prevented from bringing it forward. So responsible parties are not being deprived of any due process or other rights under this Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. All right, I'm going to turn to Senator Wilk here. Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. The last time I drew out a list like this and I riffed, I got in a lot of trouble. So I'm not going to do that, but I don't need to answer. But something I think I would like to see you reach out and do. Have you talked to CalPERS and CalSTRS?
- Scott Wilk
Person
Because my concern, this is going to affect shareholder value, which is going to affect the pension funds of our hard working teachers and state employees, and I would get some information from them as well. I'm just not even close to being in support of this Bill, but we need to look at it holistically, and I think you might end up harming a lot of people that I know you don't intend to harm.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Excuse me. Senator Wahab made a motion, easy for me to say. All right, Senator Wahab moves the Bill. Did you have another question, Senator Durazo? Okay, sure. Senator Durazo. It's been moved. Senator Durazo, go ahead.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I think you've heard really loud and clear from a number of your colleagues, our colleagues here, how the principal goal of trying to make up or asking these companies, demanding from these companies who did so much harm to our, deliberately did so much harm to our environment and poor communities and communities of color pay the biggest price of all of that. And yet at the same time, you know, work in these industries, and that's a very difficult contradiction to deal with.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I think in addition to that, there are some big issues, very big issues that can't just be answered in a few words. Take some real serious research and thoughtfulness. So I will support you today, but this is going to be a very, very difficult Bill to vote for on in the future without some very significant, and that's going to take some real serious movement on your part to address. I'm just saying that as an opinion, because you are trying to do something that's very good.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
On the other hand, there are too many unanswered questions of the harm that could come from this kind of legislation. So just want to share that with you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. I think we've expressed our points of view. I appreciate your point of view. Senator Osso, Senator Menjivar, would you like to close?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you so much. I truly appreciate every single one of your questions and comments and concerns. I've jotted them all down. Senator Ashby, you are correct. This is a very ambitious Bill. This is the first time in California's history that a Bill like this was introduced. But we are one of the four in the nation that have said enough is enough, states like New York, Vermont, Massachusetts and Maryland have also introduced pretty identical Bill in Congress.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
We also have a Bill that was introduced that this was modeled after in the US Senate, because like I said in my first sentence, if you break it, you are responsible for buying it. Your analysis, I'd like to quote one of my favorite sentences from the analysis, is that we could easily conclude that fossil fuel companies benefit from the activity that contributed to the climate crisis.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
It is also probably fair to say that fossil fuels should have a reasonable expectation of being required to contribute something to help our states. I want to make sure that as we continue the conversation on just transition from fossil fuels to alternative energies, that our union Members, our working class communities are going to be in the middle of that conversation for a just transition. But that is a separate topic from this. Again, this is not regulatory. It is just to ensure that they help us pay for the damages their emissions have caused. With that respect for an aye vote.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Secretary. It's been moved by Senator Wahab, would you call the roll, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, Senator Skinner. Okay, so just to be clear, with respect to SB 1497, the vote was five to one and we put that Bill on call. All right, Senator Skinner, number 15, SB 976.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members, I'm back. I think I could talk at length about what we. The evidence that we are now seeing daily, whether it is in research reports, popular articles, whether it's something put out by a former tech employee who's a whistleblower, or whether it's a psychologist study or a. A pediatrician study, our own us Surgeon General, about the harms that have emerged amongst our youth with a direct correlation to the use of social media platforms.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And as everyone on this Committee knows, we are limited in our ways to regulate this. And we, including myself, have tried different attempts, too. And because of federal law and other things, it's hard to design a bill that would do what I think everybody in this Legislature wants, which is to protect our children. For something that parents are pretty much, their hands are tied. It's so difficult for them to influence or control.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And for our kids, just given their brain development, impulse controls, and various other things, is extremely hard for them to control. So the bill I'm presenting today, SB 976, it is purpose, is to do our best to protect our children from the harms of social media. And it does it by giving parents more ability to, in effect, put limits on.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But it also, most importantly, does it by requiring our social media companies, by default, to not use the algorithms that are embedded in their platforms, that have been demonstrated to have these addictive features. So that for all users who are minors, that these embedded algorithms would not be available or used for children users, and that they would not send notifications to our children users during the hours that they should be sleeping. And of course, we were pretty liberal about that.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
We put it to midnight and 06:00 a.m. And during their school hours, and that it otherwise allows parents to adjust various other things if they choose to protect their kids. Now, when we consider cries that, well, you know, there's benefits to using social media, that some kids, you know, find peers that they find feel socially isolated, and these social media platforms are a way for them to find communities like them. This bill in no way limits that.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
In effect, this bill allows kids to go back to the early version of Facebook. And for those of you who may or may not recall, when Facebook was first issued, it didn't have all of those addictive algorithm features. Instead, you, the user you were fed back based on who you liked and who you picked as a friend, it was not based on the algorithms.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So it returns back to that what we call a chronological feed, which allows then both more control that you're not getting information or stuff sent at you that you didn't choose, in effect. Now, let me get into some very specifics. You may have seen the LA Times editorial board piece.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I think it was yesterday that so aptly stated that the algorithms in these platforms are designed to feed users a steady stream of content that the user did not necessarily ask for, that keeps the user on the app. And this is why the algorithms are called addictive. And most importantly, what the user sees may be more dangerous, more extreme, or not age appropriate than what the user initially searched for. So that's what this bill is trying to correct for.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And I wanted to give kudos to the Committee analysis. It is very well done. I was very impressed, and I will stop talking now and allow my witnesses and support, and then we can get into more discussion. I have Dorothy Johnson, who is from the Association of California School Administrators, a sponsor of the bill, and Eleanor Blume, who is a special assistant Attorney General from our Department of Justice.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. And Senator Skinner, you've accepted the committee's.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Oh, I'm so. That was very bad of me. Yes, I am accepting the Committee's amendments, which are to require the AG's office to adopt regulations by January 1st, 2027 regarding how platforms verify age and parental consent, but to apply those age verification restrictions when platforms have the actual knowledge that the user is a minority between the period now and when those regs that the AG would adopt.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Additionally, I will clarify that entities in business and professions code, Section 22675 are regulated by the bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. First witness, please.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
Good afternoon, Mister chair Members. Dorothy Johnson, on behalf of the Association of California School Administrators, we represent over 17,000 education leaders in California's public schools. We are a student first organization and pleased to serve as a sponsor of Senate Bill 976. Our support for this measure stems from the need for a safer, more respectful online and offline school environment to uplift students mental health and academic success. It also stems from the need to ensure our educators can fulfill their goals as well.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
Unfortunately, the impact of addictive social media is clearly seen daily and reported as a growing concern for our school site leaders. Further, the frustration from parents who turn to schools and educators for help cannot be overstated. Schools are currently authorized under current law to regulate the use of students smartphones on school campuses and during school sponsored activities. This helps somewhat, but the socio emotional issues persist. Negative body image, anxiety, depression, thoughts of self harm, and so on.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
The state has made a real investment in children's behavioral health, including school focused services like certified wellness coaches, in addition to local initiatives. So while we work to treat the symptoms, we should also be looking at what are the causes. Given all the challenges facing today's students both on and off school campus, we believe tools to help enhance, focus and discourage disruption are in the best interest of our young learners and educators alike. For these reasons, we support SB 976 and respectfully urge your aye vote. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Eleanor Blume
Person
Good afternoon, Mister Chair and Committee Members. Eleanor Bloom, special assistant Attorney General for economic justice in the California Attorney General's Office. Attorney General Bonta is sponsoring SB 976 to protect kids from the harms of online addiction. This bill is part of a larger effort to create a safer online environment for California's kids where safety and mental health protections are provided by default, and to ensure that social media platforms obtain parental consent before exposing children and adolescents to addictive features.
- Eleanor Blume
Person
Thank you, Senator Skinner, for authoring in the Association of California School Administrators and public health advocates for co sponsoring with us this tremendously important legislation to protect California children. Last fall, Attorney General Bonta, along with State Attorneys General from across the country, sued Meta for misleading its users and putting our children in harm's way.
- Eleanor Blume
Person
Our lawsuit alleges that the company violated federal and state laws, disregarding serious warnings about the impact of social media use on kids mental health, building a business model focused on maximizing young users time on the platform, employing harmful and psychologically manipulative platform features, and lying about it to the public. This one company's conduct is deceptive, dangerous, and illegal. And it is just one piece of a really significant crisis facing our children.
- Eleanor Blume
Person
Our children spend more and more time online in front of screens for school play, self expression, connection and exploration. And with this comes the growing body of evidence that you've just heard about. The time spent online can have a negative impact on children, on their mental health, their ability to learn and to sleep, their feelings of exclusion, and their susceptibility to addiction. The Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act addresses this by changing the default social media environment for children.
- Eleanor Blume
Person
The bill takes several steps to protect young users from addictive social media platforms. First, SB 976 would bar social media platforms from serving media to children through a manipulative addictive algorithmic feed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Please wrap it up. Thank you. That was a good wrap up. Okay, good. Thanks. Perfect. All right, let's take other supporters of SB 976.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Thanks Kim Stone of Stone advocacy, on behalf of the Children's Advocacy Institute, in support.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Thank you. Cliff Berg. On behalf of the Jewish Public Affairs Committee, in support.
- Flojuane Cofer
Person
Thank you Doctor Flo Cofer, on behalf of public health advocates as a co sponsor and in support.
- Jeff Weiner
Person
Thank you Jeff Wiener. On behalf of Jewish family and children's services in the San Francisco Bay Area, we support. Thank you
- Mikey Hothi
Person
Mikey Hothi on behalf of common sense media in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. For others who wish to testify in opposition to SB 976, please approach the microphone. Would you like to sit down? All right, I'll ask the proponents to please return the audience. So.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members of the Committee, Dylan Hoffman, on behalf of Technet, respectfully opposed to SB 976. And we fully agree with the intent here to protect kids online and on these social media platforms. But I want to note that our companies have been at the forefront of creating new features and tools to provide parents with greater control over their child's social media experience. In fact, many of the tools and options that this bill contemplates are in development or already available on these platforms.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
However, we do take issue with the prohibitions on using an algorithmic feed unless a user can prove that they are not a minor, or if they are a minor if their parent consents. This is important because, as we interpret the bill, in order for an adult to use an algorithmic feed, they must verify their age with the social media platform.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
And while some companies are able to estimate a user's age range, these processes and tools are not nearly accurate enough to support the mandate of this bill. The fact is, there isn't a reliable method for verifying age and identity without collecting users personal information such as government ids, birth dates, or other information. This is even more difficult when trying to verify minors who often don't have identification.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Verifying a parent is even trickier as it will likely require a platform to verify a parental relationship and rights such as custody agreements. The de facto requirement to age verify and require parental consent to access core features also raises serious constitutional issues, and while the bill is drafted to avoid mentions of content, it still impacts the free speech rights of platforms and their users. Most directly, the bill mandates platforms present content and information in a particular way through a chronological feed.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Platforms have a First Amendment right to editorial discretionary and to choose how to present information. Much like newspapers and bookstores, this bill directly conflicts with existing case law, which has applied that right to online platforms as it relates to users. By restricting access to these features with age verification and parental consent SB 976 impermissibly and we believe unconstitutionally burdens adults access to lawful content and minors abilities to access and share information. Additionally, I'll end with this.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
The assumption that a chronological feed is inherently safe and an algorithmic feed is inherently harmful, I think is misguided. An algorithmic feed shows users information and posts from their friends, family and their interests. It orders and makes sense of the immense volume of user Mister Chair, if I may, I believe I'm the only witness. Is it possible to have more than two minutes?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You want more than two minutes because you're the only witness?
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Yes, I believe so.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Go ahead.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
I'm wrapping up. So I appreciate the ability. Shows users this to information. It makes sense of the immense volume of user generated content that's out there. It also helps ensure that they receive high quality, developmentally appropriate content. Chronological feeds, on the other hand, can be gamed by bad actors the same way that an algorithmic feed can. They can bury relevant information from friends and family in favor of accounts that post continuously.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
A lot of these accounts have paid teams to post frequently so that people see these. That is exacerbated under a chronological feed. So for these reasons, we are respectfully opposed. Appreciate them.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, sir. All right, others who are in opposition to SB 976, please approach the microphone.
- Austin Heyworth
Person
Austin Hayworth. On behalf of the Internet Works Association. Our concern is with the scope of. The definition of addictive feed. And we've suggested amendments here in other states across the country. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Naomi Padron
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Naomi Padron, on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association, and we would align our comments with Technet. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brandon Knapp
Person
Brandon Knapp with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Respectfully, oppose. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, anyone else posed seeing? No one else approaches the microphone. Let's bring it back to Committee. Senator Ashby,
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you very much, Chairman. I want to thank Senator Skinner for this Bill. I'm proud to be a co author along with Senators Allen, Durazzo, Rubio and Wilk. I know you have worked hard in this space, and I am very grateful for you for continuing to beat that drum at the appropriate time. Senator Umberg, I'd like to make the motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Will do. Okay. Other questions or comments? Seeing none, I believe Senator Ashby would like to move the bill. She moves the bill. All right. Senator Skinner, would you like to close?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you very much, Mister Chair and Members, rather than refuting various things in my close, I would just indicate that, as we are well aware, social media companies themselves have so far been unwilling to voluntarily change practices in a way that would meet the, that would protect our children in the way that various researchers have shown that the harm. We've observed this at the congressional hearing in January. We've observed it here in the state capitol. We see now places like Canada suing social media companies.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
We see different states taking action, including our own state, because we're in a circumstance where we have 10 years of very strong and good evidence of this impact on our kids, and we have to act to protect our children. And with that, I ask for your aye vote on SB 976, as amended.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Bill has been moved by Senator Ashby. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This file, item number 15, SB 976, the motion is do pass, is amended to Senate appropriations. [Roll Call] Four to zero.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Let's call the roll again. So all the co authors have an opportunity to vote on the bill. Senator Wilk. Okay, why don't we call the roll one more time?
- Scott Wilk
Person
Not voting.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Not voting. Okay. All right. There we go. Okay. Thank you, Senator Skinner. Okay. All right, let's turn to Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister chair. I'm pleased to present Senate Bill 1097. It will update the military and veterans codes to. To use gender inclusive language. It clarifies that benefits and protections provided to surviving spouses are also available to domestic partners, and it closes a minor loophole to clarify that only service Members on active military orders shall be exempt from jury duty.
- John Laird
Legislator
This is one in a series of bills of a number of Members where we look at the code and we try to make it gender inclusive. I did a Bill two years ago because Amber Ray was appointed the first woman as commander of the California Highway Patrol, and yet the entire code referred to the commander as he and did a Bill to update it. So that's what this does in a number of ways.
- John Laird
Legislator
In addition to clarifying about domestic partners in benefits and closing a loophole about jury duty, the Bill has no registered opposition. It passed out of the Veterans Committee yesterday with no no votes. I would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Those testifying in support of SB 1097 seeing no one approaching microphone. Those who are opposed to SB 1097. No one's approaching the microphone. Let's bring it back to Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Yes. Senator Wilk, do you have a question? Wilk moves the Bill. Senator Wilk moves the Bill. All right. Would you like to close?
- John Laird
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you very much. It's been moved by Senator Wilk. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
5-0. Put that on call. All right. For some housekeeping measures, we've got Senator Laird. Then we have Senator Min. Then there are three bills by Senator Stern that I understand are going to be presented by other Members. Then we have two bills by Senator Umberg. And, of course, we have a vote only on Senator Glaser's SB 1424. And we have testimony only on Senator Dodd's 1154. Senator Otato would like to present herself. We'll take her Bill when she presents herself. All right, Senator Laird, next Bill.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much. Senate Bill 1190 clarifies that mobile homeowners can install solar energy systems in their mobile homes, provided they meet certain requirements ensuring the home is capable of sustaining solar infrastructure. Right now, mobile home improvement associations can override this. They can set rules that don't allow individual homeowners, mobile homeowners, to be able to install solar and realize the net metering benefit.
- John Laird
Legislator
This is very clear because if it turns out that there's a master, a master account for the entire park, then that doesn't work and that is exempted from this Bill. And there's precedent in the legislation.
- John Laird
Legislator
When I was in the Assembly, you could not put up political signs, your first amendment rights were not able to be exercised and the Legislature stepped in and said if the Homeowners Association says that you can't put up a political sign in the window, that there's an overriding First Amendment right and that they would be allowed in mobile homes. This is consistent with that ethic. But it really meets our climate goals and it's we hope will add to people being adding solar.
- John Laird
Legislator
The Bill has no registered opposition. Here to speak and support and answer any technical questions is Linda Nye with the Golden State Manufactured Homeowners leave at the right time. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Laird. Ma'am, the floor is yours.
- Linda Nye
Person
Good afternoon, I'm Linda Nye on behalf of GSMOL in support of the Bill. For over 60 years, GSMOL has been a resident organization advocating for seniors on fixed income and other Californians of modest means living in mobile homes. As energy prices go up, an option for mobile home owners to help offset monthly utility bills and make up our contribution to addressing a changing climate. I recently decided to install solar on my own mobile home.
- Linda Nye
Person
I went through all of the required approvals, including first approval, which was from my park management. However, other mobile home owners have not been so lucky in getting approval from their park managers. We believe it's because there's no clarity and guidance in the state law required related to mobile home. Related, I'm sorry, related to solar and mobile homes. Senator Laird's Bill would clarify that we cannot be prohibited from nor taken advantage by park management while exploring whether solar energy is feasible in our mobile homes. This Bill keeps in place all local and state permitting and safety approvals. I thank you for your consideration.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Miss Nye. Others in support, please approach. Miss Nye, it's good to see you in person. I know we've seen one another on Zoom many times, so thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
In support, Beverly Purcell, Homeowner Association President, Orangeville 200 residents thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Michelle Moning I'm the HOA President of a park in Roseville. In support
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Joseph Nye, homeowner aye vote for the proposal.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Opposed? Okay. No, support. Support. Okay, great. Thank you. All right. Got it. All right. Thank you. All right. If you are opposed to SB 1190, please approach the microphone.
- Christopher Wysocki
Person
Mister chair Members, this is Chris Wysocki with WMA, and we really appreciate the author and the work that he did to work with us. It got us to a position of neutral, and I just want to say thank you for the dialogue and the discussion. Thank you, Senator.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All righty. Thank you. Anyone else wish to testify on SB 1190? Seeing no one else approached micro, let's bring it back to Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Senator Ashby,
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Just want to know, was that your husband, he had to clear the record so he could go home, correct?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Perfect. I'll move the Bill whenever the time is.
- John Laird
Legislator
I thought you were asking me that question. Never met him before in my life. All right.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
It was her husband on accident.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I see. All right, Senator Ashby. All right, Senator Ashby has moved the Bill. Questions, comments? Seeing no other questions or comments, would you like to close?
- John Laird
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote, and I appreciate the comments, especially the corrected one in the testimony.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, we want to keep an accurate record, so. All right, Madam Secretary, it's been moved by Senator Ashby. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Five to 50. We'll put that on call. All right, so now, we would normally have Senator Min followed by Senator whoever is presenting Senator Stern's bills, followed by Senator Umberg. And as I mentioned, why don't we do this? Let's take up SB 1424 by Senator Glazer. It's filing number 39. It's vote only. In other words, there'll be no presentation. There'll only be a vote. So is there a motion? It's the very last item. It's filing number 39, SB 1424 by Senator Glazer. And this is for vote only. This Bill was considered last week and was granted reconsideration. Senator Laird moves the Bill. All right, Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Two to one. All right, we'll put that on call. All right, thank you. Senator Allen, are you here to present any of Senator Stern's bills? Yes. All right.. All right. Which one would you like to present first? This Bill is by Senator Stern, but it's being presented today by Senator Allen. Great.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
All right. In 2022, there was something like a 20% reported increase in hate crimes. This followed alarming rises in various forms of hate in recent years, including anti API black LGBT incidents, big Spikes202324 in anti semitic and islamophobic anti Arab incidents. And we've seen this issue really acute in California schools. I think 2021, the number of appeals that CDE received related to discrimination, harassment, and bullying based on a protected characteristic was 58. That number rose to 70 and 22101 in 23, a 74% increase in just over two years.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
And now, more than ever, the Department needs to be equipped to deal with these incidents in an appropriate and timely manner. So this Bill establishes the Office of Civil Rights within the Department of Education to streamline the response to incidents of hate at local education agencies and streamline the response to complaints relative to the access of high quality education instruction and instructional materials. So with me today providing testimony and support is Alice Kessler from Equality California. And. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Floor is yours. Thank you.
- Alice Kessler
Person
Thank you, Mister chair and Members, Alice Kessler. I'm here on behalf of Equality California, the largest statewide LGBTQ advocacy organization in the nation. And we've been involved in legislation increasing the civil rights of students over the past 20 years. It's been a large body of work, and unfortunately, we're seeing a climate right now where our students are really in the crosshairs of a political climate where we're seeing.
- Alice Kessler
Person
Unfortunately, as Senator Allen cited, these incidents on the rise and no knock to the good people at the Department of Education, but this is something that over the years, there has been a backlog, and it has been difficult for students to bring these issues forward with the Department. And we also know that not all school districts are, you know, equally situated when it comes to these issues.
- Alice Kessler
Person
In fact, we have, you know, issues going on in local school boards dealing with book bans, dealing with curriculum, that have become quite heightened and have had an impact on those students that really are at the intersections of those conversation. So the idea here is really to create dedicated resources within the Department. This has the support of the Superintendent, and, you know, students really can't get a decent education if they're not safe and they're not protected at school. And so that's really the thrust of this Bill, and we would humbly ask for your support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, other witnesses in support of SB 1421.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Thank you, Mister Chairman. Cliff Berg here. On behalf of the Jewish Public Affairs Committee, in support. Thank you.
- Antoinette Trigueiro
Person
Toni Triguero. On behalf of the California Teachers Association, in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support. Seeing no one else approach the microphone. Those who are opposed, please approach the microphone. Any opposition? SB 1421, seeing no one. Committee Members, questions, comments? Senator Laird? Senator Laird's move the Bill. Questions? Comments? Seeing none. All right, Senator Allen, would you like to close?
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
On behalf of Senator Stern, I appreciate the support and your understanding and interest in this issue. It's obviously something that we care a great deal about and respect for us around vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. It's been moved by Senator Laird. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Six to zero. Put that on call. All right, next is SB 1444. Again, Senator Allen, presenting on behalf of Senator Stern.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I think I'm presenting SB 1504.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay, that's fine.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I think someone else is doing 1444, but if you need me to do 1444, I'm happy to do it. Min. Okay. All right. Yeah, so let's.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Oh, I see. Just an issue of competency. All right. Okay, so Senator Stern trusted you with SB 1504. Go ahead.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Well, let me start by saying that the author's office accepts the Committee amendment to add a cross reference to the definition of for social media platform and existing law. All right, so according to a report from our Attorney General, over half of teens report they've experienced cyberbullying. Certain demographics, such as LGBTQ+ teens, are particularly targeted, leading to increased risk of depression, substance abuse, and offline victimization. We also have seen that black or Hispanic Latino teens disproportionately bear the brunt of cyberbullying.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
And we now know that too often, young people are suffering in silence. And tragically, some even take their own lives as a result of online ... Also. And I know that'll be one of the topics of conversation with SB 1444. Too often, young people suffer in silence, tragically, some even take their own - sorry. Young people report that social media platforms bury where to report cyberbullying in boilerplate terms and conditions, and that when they do figure out how to complain, the platform just never responds.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
So this is a customer service Bill relating to to social media. It does not require the platforms to remove content. Such a requirement would be blocked by Section 230. But the Bill makes five distinct changes to existing law. First, it requires the cyberbullying reporting mechanism to be prominently shown on the platform. It requires a written confirmation of receipt of the report within 36 hours. Third, it requires a written statement of determination within 10 days of the receipt of the report.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Fourth, it lifts virtually verbatim language, expanding upon what constitutes cyberbullying from Meta's policies. So this is something that's already been developed by one of the big tech firms. And then fifth, befitting the life and death stakes for children, and it extends enforcement authority to city attorneys, district attorneys, and county council, and allows any individual that submits a report of cyberbullying to the platform to bring an action to enforce their individual rights to a response and a written determination. So we have witnesses here in support. Amelie Sarang, who's a high school freshman and cyberbullying survivor. And also, I believe, is Ed Howard coming? No, not Ed Howard. Okay. All right. Well, so Kim's here.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Would you - Miss Stone first? No. Oh, okay. Go ahead. Thank you.
- Amelie Sarang
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. My name is Amelie Sarang. I'm a freshman at Ruth Asawa SOTA High School in San Francisco, and as someone who has dealt with being cyberbullied, and as someone who has tried to help many of my friends with cyberbullying, I strongly support SB 1504. In 2021, when I was 11, a group of boys who had known me in elementary school began harassing me through a social media app called Discord.
- Amelie Sarang
Person
For example, they gave me a name in the server, which was, I need to suck up. I won't say it here, but, you know. They also said that nobody could ever love me in a romantic way, so that I was weak, butt hurt, and urged me to commit suicide. They were just picking on every detail they could for a reason purely to harm my self esteem that I already pointed out wasn't in a good place. They made fun of my height.
- Amelie Sarang
Person
And when an older friend of mine joined the server to defend me in a respectful manner, they just went to targeting that person too. It was hard to find where in discord to report what was happening to me. It isn't on its homepage. When you click on the safety center homepage tab link, it isn't on that next page either. And when you click on the safety library tab, it still isn't there.
- Amelie Sarang
Person
You have to click on topics and then look for how to report content to Discord, which appears on the very bottom of the next page. When I reported the users harassing me, I got no response or acknowledgement of my report. I still haven't. I've also experienced the way these platforms handle reports when I've tried to help others. Take Instagram, countless times I've come across comments people will make on others bodies, mental health, or lives in general.
- Amelie Sarang
Person
When I sent reports for comments like go kill yourself and stop eating while you're at it on no sit timetable, I would get a response of we found the content reported doesn't go against our community guidelines, but thank you for helping to keep the Instagram community safe. When of course, the content I reported clearly violates its community guidelines. Senators, this Bill is just a customer service Bill benefiting children. The risk that not having an accessible, timely, and effective cyberbullying reporting process poses to minors is extreme. If I was in an even worse place than I was when I was told to kill myself, I may have listened to them and done it, and that scares me. Senators, on behalf of teens everywhere, please help us. Thank you for your time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Could you give us your name, your high school one more time?
- Amelie Sarang
Person
Amelie Sarang. Ruth Asawa School of the Arts in San Francisco.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Aubrey, is your first name?
- Amelie Sarang
Person
Amelie.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Amelie. Okay. Thank you very much, Miss Amelie. All right, thank you. All right, Miss Stone.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Good afternoon. Chair and Members, Kim Stone of Stone Advocacy on behalf of the Children's Advocacy Institute, we're pleased to co sponsor the Bill. The best use of these two minutes is for me to share a couple first person accounts with you from parents and teens that demonstrate the need for this Bill. So apologize in advance for a reading. From a parent.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
My son faced an alarming threat through his use of a popular social app, which, due to a security flaw, exposed his personal information to a group with white nationalist ideologies. This breach escalated to real world threats, including attempts to sabotage his college applications and coerce him into spreading hateful propaganda. And then these are from teens, and this came from Rethink and Ask Trish, who shared them with us. Posted a video of me getting assaulted from five years ago.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
I reported it immediately to Instagram for harassment and bullying, but they didn't respond. How can I get that content to be taken down ASAP? Because I'm hugely embarrassed and I just want it gone. I don't know what to do. There is an account that has shared personal information about me and has posted sexualized videos and screenshots of me that have caused great pain in my life. I keep reporting it, but it keeps spreading. I am so lost.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
How do I go about having my address and photos of my home removed from posts that a bitter ex has posted on Facebook? She posted our address to incite violence against my family. I have tried reporting it to Facebook but get denied every time. We fear for our family's safety. Please help me. How can I contact Facebook to remove someone's messages containing sexual images of me that have been sent to my family Members and friends on Facebook? It's not clear.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Someone posted an offensive photo with me without my consent and cyberbullied me. A friend who follows them showed me the post. What can I do? We both reported it. But the reporting system doesn't address situations like this. They never respond. Respectfully ask your aye vote. Happy to answer any questions.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Others in support, please approach the microphone. Give us your name, your affiliation, your position.
- Dorothy Johnson
Person
Good afternoon, Mister Chair and Members. Dorothy Johnson with the Association of California School Administrators, pleased to support. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Sam Nasher
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Sam Nasher with the Los Angeles County Office of Education in support. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Cliff Berg on behalf of the Jewish Public Affairs Committee in support.
- Jeff Weiner
Person
Jeff Wiener, Jewish Family and Children's Services, we support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. You made good use of your time here, Mister Berg. I can see so.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Chris Didier
Person
My name is Chris Didier from Placer County on behalf of the victims of illicit drugs and also on behalf of National Crime Victims Rights Week, I strongly support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Didier. All right, those in opposition, please approach the microphone. If you're opposed to SB 1504, please approach the microphone. Or you could have a seat here in the front if you like.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
... and I'm testifying on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association in respectful opposition to SB 1504. While we share the concern about addressing cyberbullying, and while recent amendments address some of our concerns with the legislation, critical components essential for compliance have yet to be addressed. For example, the Bill includes potentially conflicting provisions.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It requires a social media platform to provide written confirmation to a reporting individual that has received a report but restricts the platform from using a communications method that is within a social media platform's control. Many online services offer an array of products as a part of their normal course of business, including email, messaging, social media, gaming, music, television, film streaming, among others.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
This could unnecessarily constrain a social media platform that receives a report of a cyberbullying by not allowing the platform to contact a user via email if that service is provided by the same company. Key compliance definitions also remain undefined and subjective. We understand that the Bill is largely modeled after last year's AB 1394 regarding CSAM.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
While online platforms employ a variety of AI and human driven tools to help flag, help flag, report, and remove dangerous and potentially harmful content, SB 1504 includes several vague or undefined terms, including reasonable, minor, or what may constitute a detrimental effect to a minor's facility, physical or mental health. CSAM is easier to detect and identify due to the nature of the material and platforms access to hashing values used to definitively ideate such material.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Identifying cyberbullying material is more subjective in nature, and this also makes the 36 hours response timeframe more difficult to comply with as this is not an apples to apples comparison when it comes to the content. For the above reasons, we urge you to resist advancing legislation that feels to provide a meaningful compliance roadmap recovery services. Thank you for your time and appreciation of the listening to my comments.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. I have a couple questions at the end. Go ahead. Others in opposition.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Thank you, Mister Chair Dylan Hoffman on behalf of Technet, also respectfully opposed to SB 1504, align many of my comments with CCIA as well. Just want to note that due to the prescriptive nature of the new reporting requires - mechanism for just one category of content, cyberbullying, combined with the massive increase in penalties and enforcement, this creates a strong incentive for platforms to deprioritize some of their responses to other categories of content.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Since a platform can be sued by anyone, not just a victim or their parent, platforms have strict timelines to comply with, and failure to do so will result in liability in $75,000 a day per violation penalties. Platforms are strongly incentivized to prioritize resources personnel to engineering and staffing their responses to this category of content, and these are resources that would otherwise be allocated elsewhere.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Just last year, this Committee passed a Bill related to CSAM, as noted, AB 1394, which created a very similar reporting mechanism, and we believe this Bill might undercut the priority that this Committee and this Legislature assigned to that category of content, and we think that may be an advisable choice. Technet and our member companies have engaged with this Committee on similar bills on reporting mechanisms. I referenced that one.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
There are several others before the Legislature this year, and we're open to working on a Bill that treats categories of content reporting mechanisms holistically rather than singling out single ones. So we hope to be able to engage with you guys on amendments at the appropriate time. Appreciate it. Thanks.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. So, Senator Stern is not here, so he can't commit to work with you. I can commit to continue. One of the challenges here in this Committee is making sure that we have definitions that are consistent and that we have laws that are workable. We can't always achieve that. But to the extent. I understand there were some coordination challenges. But to the extent that you have suggestions as to how we can make sure that this Bill, this law, is workable and that definitions, that terms are defined and that definitions are consistent, I would welcome that. So I see your heads nodding in the affirmative.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Okay. And then to Amelie, let me just say, I hope your parents, teachers, friends, if they're not watching this, there's a video that you can distribute. But most importantly, I hope that those who cyberbullied you watch this and see how you've stood up to them. So thank you. All right, questions by Committee Members. Comments? Oh, me toos. I forgot the opposition. Me toos. All right, if you're opposed, please approach the microphone. Give us your name, your position, and your affiliation and your position.
- Brandon Knapp
Person
Brandon Knapp, representing Electronic Frontier Foundation, respectfully, in opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. All right, others in opposition. Thank you. Seeing no one else, let's bring it back to Committee. Questions by Committee Members. Yes, Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you. Mister Chair. Actually, just really a comment. First of all, I want to thank you for your testimony and your bravery coming here and doing it, and you did an excellent job. One of the saddest days that I've had is back in 2017. There was a shooting at my local high school. In fact, it was the high school that my kids attended in the classroom that my daughter was in every single day of her academic career. In the aftermath of that, I got invited. Well, they invited me to come to speak to one of the junior highs that feed into that. And I said, I won't come speak, but I will come and listen.
- Scott Wilk
Person
And they ended up putting all the classes together. And what you young people have to go through, it takes a lot just to go through that. The cyberbullying, they were showing me examples. They're sharing stories with me. It was out of control in 2017. I got to believe that it's even worse now. And nothing has been done. Typically, on things like this, because I think there are still some challenges. I'm normally very conservative, say no, but I'm going to say yes today because we need these people to do the right thing and protect our young people. So again, thank you again for coming.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So Senator Wilk would like to move the Bill. All right, questions? Yes, Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
I just got something in my throat. Let's see if I can do it. I want to thank you for being here today and sharing your story. And I think that, you know, we're hearing more and more about the impacts of social media, and the more that we can beseech the companies to come forward and work with us on language and work with us on solutions, that we'll get it right, we'll get it better to address the issue that you raised, Mister Chair, which is that we try really hard to get it right, but it doesn't always work because we're working in an imperfect world.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
The more that we can understand how the, the Internet works and what it's actually, its potential for good and its potential for harm, we have to fix it. We have to make sure that we're doing everything possible. And for our children are the most vulnerable. Junior high is probably the toughest time in a child's life, and the ability to be able to maneuver through a system that doesn't harm them is going to be really, really important to our future. So thank you for, I know it's not your Bill, but thank you to the author and to the witnesses. This is really important.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you, Senator Caballero. Other questions? Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I also want to thank your witness for coming today. Continue to be strong and courageous, and I see you as speaking. That's when my two grandkids are in.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Yep. I just want to tell you that was really brave of you. And courageous. You did a great job, and I think you convinced some Members to. Senator Stern owes you for showing up when you did.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, well, let's. All right, thank you. We'll let Senator Stern know. All right. There's been a motion by Senator Wilk. Madam Secretary, would you like to close? I'm sorry.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I know the Senate. First of all, I want to join the praise for our witness. I mean, as a dad of a little guy with another one coming along, I just. I'm shuddering about the kind of life that we're. Some of the challenges that they're facing, this generation is facing that we didn't have to. All of us on this Committee.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
I know I can speak for Senator Stern and that he's going to work with opposition and try to see if some of these issues can be worked out, but that he, you know, he was really trying to also keep his eyes on the prize, and it's about protecting young people such as Amelie. So it's in that spirit that I ask for an aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Thank you, Senator Allen, for presenting. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We'll put that on call. Thank you, Senator Allen. And I see Hurtado here, so. Thank you, Senator Hurtado. SB 1154. And I understand, Senator Min, are you going to present Senator Stern's Bill next? Let's have Senator Hurtado go up first. File number 38, SB 1154. Senator Hurtado. It's for testimony only. The floor is yours.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Good afternoon, Mister chair and Members. I appreciate the opportunity, and I know it's already been a lengthy Committee hearing today, but I appreciate the opportunity to come and speak on an issue of importance to our economy, and that's SB 1154, which we're looking to address some of the concerns. That is a pressing need for. There is a pressing need for robust legislation against AI driven price fixing, and the need for legislation to deal with a new era of anti competition.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
In a new era of anti competition, we must be more aggressive and take a closer look at vertical deals, roll up strategies, as we have seen in agricultural land acquisitions. And we must look at information sharing, because as the DOJ has indicated, information sharing no longer makes sense in a world where it is easy to leverage big data and machine learning. And because aggregated data can be disaggregated, aggregation isn't necessarily a safeguard against anticompetitive conduct. The same is true of information sharing through third parties.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
As noted in the analysis. Acting chair of the Federal Trade Commission Maureen K. Allhausen delivered a speech on the use of computer algorithms to automate decision making by market participants. This is how she articulated the issue now confronting courts and policymakers across the country. Just as the antitrust laws do not allow competitors to exchange competitively sensitive information directly in an effort to stabilize or control industry pricing, they also prohibit using an intermediary to facilitate the exchange of confidential business information.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
To understand why this is such an easy call, Olshausen recommended replacing algorithm with a guy named Bob. Is it okay for a guy named Bob to collect confidential price strategy information from all the participants in a market and then tell everybody how they should price? If it isn't okay for a guy named Bob to do it, then it probably isn't okay for an algorithm to do it either. At its core, AI represents an extraordinary leap forward in efficiency and innovation.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
However, this technology also poses unique challenges, particularly in the realm of price fixing. Unlike traditional methods, AI can analyze massive data sets, predict competitor behavior, and adjust prices when unprecedented precision and speed. This capability, if misused, can lead to a new era of digital collusion. Covert and difficult to detect, yet with the same harmful impact, artificially inflated prices that harm consumers and stifle fair competition. We're seeing this pattern across much of the economy, especially with groceries.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
At the end of 2023, Americans were paying at least 30% more for beef, pork, and poultry products than they were in 2020. Why? Well, near monopoly power. Just four companies now control processing of 80% of our beef, nearly 70% of our pork, and almost 60% of our poultry. So of course, it's easy for them to coordinate price increases. The Biden Administration is enforcing antitrust more aggressively than any other Administration in the last 40 years.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Indeed, the Sherman act plays a crucial role in antitrust enforcement, and the recent lawsuit by the USDOJ against agristats incorporated demonstrates its effectiveness. Agristats, accused of violating section one of the Sherman act, allegedly compiled and disseminated information about broiler chicken, pork, and turkey producers, which harm competition and consumers. Unfortunately, the problem goes well beyond the grocery store. In 75% of us industries, fewer companies now control more of their markets than they did 20 years ago.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
This is where the necessity for strong legislation comes into sharp focus. We need laws that are agile enough to adopt to rapid technological advances and robust enough to protect our market's integrity. California's consumers are already bearing the brunt of unchecked technological abuses, paying higher prices and facing less choice. This is not the promise of technology we aspire to deliver. What should be done? First, antitrust laws must be aggressively enforced. However, the challenge lies in proving these agreements when they are embedded in data.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
SB 1154 aims to address concerns related to the use of pricing algorithms in the market. It mandates that entities using or distributing pricing algorithms must provide detailed reports upon requests by the Attorney General, including information on the algorithms, development, data sources, and potential discriminatory practices. Additionally, SB 1154 prohibits the use of pricing algorithms that utilize non public competitor data and establishes penalties for violations, with provisions for civil actions and liability for joint and several parties.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Furthermore, it requires transparency in the use of pricing algorithms by entities with significant revenue, imposing disclosure requirements for customers and employees. And it calls for a study to assess the prevalence and impact of pricing algorithms on competition and consumer protection. Moreover, it is imperative that our Attorney General has all the necessary tools to prosecute these advanced forms of collusion effectively. Current statutes may not fully contemplate the nuances of AI and sophisticated strategies it enables.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Without modernized laws, our hands could be, and very well are tied, and our markets are left vulnerable to exploitation. We must also consider the balance between fostering innovation and preventing abuse. California has always been a beacon of technological advancement, and it is crucial that we continue to lead by example. By implementing forward thinking regulations, we can ensure that innovation benefits all, not just a select few manipulating the system. In fact, algorithm price setting appears more ubiquitous than not.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
A simple Internet search for price setting software produces dozens of companies like price FX, feed Advisor 360, and smart pricing, each of which advertises its use of data driven machine learning and algorithmic repricing to bolster efficiency and profitability for their clients. Several of these tools are aimed directly at people who sell on Amazon, which has become a hotbed for machine driven dynamic pricing.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
The sheer availability of price optimization software, which, according to their own advertisements, is designed to raise prices on consumers, is an under discussed factor in the ongoing conversation about inflation, or great inflation, as I like to refer to it. Of course, the use of software to optimize pricing isn't always, or even often illegal. Comparing your rival's public price to your own price is a perfectly reasonable and time tested strategy, and that's not any different. In the era of big data.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
However, using software to privately collude with rivals on pricing or output to allocate markets or set floors or ceilings on pricing is within the orbit of what antitrust laws are designed to address, like SB 1154, and that's for good reason. Software enabled price fixing is likely responsible for higher prices everywhere from the gas pump to the grocery store. Who is not to say that the rise in improper evictions from residential care facilities, for example, is not an AI price fixing issue?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
After all, there is available information on this market, and the demand is there. The roadblock in many of these cases, like so many other price fixing cases, is how to determine whether there's an actual agreement among competitors to fix prices. Section one of the Sherman act prescribes every contract combination or conspiracy in restraint of trade. And while conspiracy might seem to invoke a broader level of speculation, it has conventionally been understood to mean a meeting of the minds or an agreement.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
And that's how colluding with software becomes legal in the minds of some judges. In a 13 page ruling dismissing the rainmaker case, for instance, Chief Judge Miranda Du of the Nevada district court finds that the parties failed to allege with enough specificity that the hotel operators had actually agreed with each other to artificially inflate the prices of hotel rooms. Judge Dhu couldn't determine, for instance, whether the hotel chains used the same exact pricing algorithm, even though they all entered into agreements with Rainmaker.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Judge Du also dinged the complainants for not having proof that the hotel chains actually accept Rainmaker's recommendations. Never mind that Rainmaker itself advertises that recommendation that its recommendations are accepted 90% of the time. These are fatal misgivings, according to Judge Du. But it's hard not to perceive Judge Du's demands for specificity as requiring ultimate proof of the allegations at the infancy of the case, before plaintiffs can even get their foot in the door.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
This interpretation of the law of price fixing creates a catch 22 plaintiffs need to have more specific evidence of an unlawful conspiracy before they can begin the litigation discovery process to get the same evidence. Related how does one prove the existence of an agreement that is, for all intents and purposes, being made by a machine based on non public information provided by the hotel chains?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
This isn't exactly the olden days, when executives sat in smoke filled rooms and agreed to set price floors for the mutually assured preservation of the respective profits. On the other hand, it might be something like the automated version of traditional trade associations, where competitors have long gathered to share industry standards and business strategies that at best, protect Members of the public from harms and at worst, enhance profits through unfair and anti competitive means. One thing should be clear.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Allowing price fixing to occur through shared software rather than an explosive agreement is not just a technological change, it's a legal change. Indeed, judges are simply rewriting the law to legalize price fixing when it's extremely hard to bring a complainant because the burden is just too high for plaintiffs, as is happening in the rainmaker case and potentially the real page litigation. Judges have created a liability shield for corporations to collude.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Nobody thought you could win is a devastating and avoidable sentiment in the face of clear and pervasive harm. The economic impact of inaction is too great when businesses collude to fixed prices. It does not just affect individual consumers, it stifles our entire economy and it concentrates market power.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
And worst of all, in my opinion, I believe that inaction undermines our democracy, and I am willing to put my political career on the line for it today, we as lawmakers have the power and responsibility to protect Americans, protect our freedom. It is not an easy task to do, but it is the right thing to do.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
I hope that my presentation today leads Committee Members and staff with what we are challenged and how and what we can do to move forward and what is down the road. Let us be proactive. Let us ensure that as technology advances, our law strengthen in Tandem, protecting us against emerging threats. Let California lead the way in demonstrating that technology can and should be harnessed as a force for good with the well being of our citizens at its heart.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
And I will leave you with a quote from Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. "To be very clear. Fraud. Using AI is still fraud. Price fixing. Using AI is still price fixing and manipulating markets. Using AI is still market manipulation." Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you, Senator Hurtado. I feel like I should get three units of continuing education. Very well done. There's not a vote on this, but do Members, because she's here, obviously, to advocate and to educate. Do any Members have any questions they would like to ask to follow up? zero, we're still going to do support in opposition, even though there's not a vote. Okay, do we have anybody here to testify and support seeing? None. Anyone here for opposition?
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Thank you, Mister Vice Chair Members Ronak Daylami with Cal Chamber respectfully in opposition to SB 1154 as a job killer. There are two key facts to keep in mind here. Price collusion is already clearly illegal under existing law. Second, the use of price of a pricing algorithm, excuse me, does not inherently constitute price fixing. Pricing algorithms are widely used tools employed by businesses, both to make their prices more responsive to changes in supply and demand, saving them valuable resources, but also to be more competitive.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Retailers use them to ensure they're offering the lowest prices to their customers. Banks use them to set rates and fees. From hospitality and utilities to transportation and airline companies, they enable dynamic pricing. The list goes on. This, of course, does not change the fact that colluding with competitors to fix high prices is prohibited. Stated another way, whether it's accomplished by salespeople conspiring or computers running algorithms, collusion is collusion.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
A third prosecution of collusion is not only something that can be pursued, but it's actually actively being pursued. As pointed out by the analysis. Unfortunately, SB 1154 is not just unnecessary, it's incredibly problematic, as it actually blurs the line distinguishing between lawful uses of pricing algorithms and price fixing. Its reliance on overly broad and vague terms will cause significant confusion and uncertainty, creating significant legal and administrative compliance costs for businesses left guessing as to what is and is not allowed.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
It also exposes businesses to significant liability and aggressive penalties at the they get it wrong. Combined with onerous reporting requirements imposed on businesses using algorithms even when there's been no allegation, let alone reason to believe that they engage in anticompetitive behavior or harm consumers, this Bill would have a sweeping, chilling effect on price competition among businesses of all sizes and industries. For these reasons, we must, unfortunately oppose SB 1154 as a job killer. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Others in opposition. Just so you know, we're not actually going to vote on the Bill, right? Okay, try to get my comments brief this time around.
- Khara Boender
Person
Thank you again. My name is Khara Boender, on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association. In opposition to SB 1154, pricing algorithms are designed to automate the pricing process and leverage data for better decision making. And these algorithms adjust pricing in real time in response to market conditions. And this automation results in businesses being able to save money, as manually managing pricing and inventory can be extremely costly and time consuming.
- Khara Boender
Person
In many cases, dynamic pricing also results in consumers receiving lower, more competitive prices for goods and services. Price comparison tools and dynamic pricing can help consumers find the best deals at any given time, saving them time and effort in searching for bargains. While there are potential concerns associated with pricing algorithms, these are already addressed under existing state and federal antitrust law. Collusion is legal under existing law, and California's unfair competition law addresses pricing discrimination on commodity commodities and services.
- Khara Boender
Person
Additionally, existing antitrust law prohibits competitors from colluding through third parties to set prices by improperly using sensitive information from rival competitors. Notably, this activity is considered illegal under existing law, regardless of whether firms use an algorithm. This Bill would have far reaching consequences given that it appears to assume that the use of pricing algorithms is presumptively illegal. For example, e-commerce and brick and mortar martyr retailers employ pricing algorithms to offer lower prices to, to consumers tied to inventory levels and pricing across other businesses.
- Khara Boender
Person
As the chamber mentioned, there are various other industries that use dynamic pricing algorithms as well. So I will not belabor you going through those again, but on behalf of CCIA, I appreciate your consideration of these comments. And while there is potential for abuse using dynamic pricing, these are already addressed under existing laws without harming other beneficial and lawful uses for businesses and consumers. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Alrighty. Thank you very much. Bring it back to Committee now. And I know, Senator Dodd, this is an important issue, and I know that this is basically a statement that you're going to continue to work in this area and that this is something that needs to be addressed. So thank you. All right, questions? Comments by Committee Members. oh, I'm sorry, I didn't. Do those who wish to testify in opposition provide their name, their position and their affiliation?
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Dylan Hoffman. On behalf of Technet, respectfully opposed.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Others seeing no one else, no comments by Committee Members. Need not have a motion. oh, Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I just want to thank the author. I know that you are very passionate not only about this, but also other issues that are connected to this. You know, a lot of mystery and the way land is bought land property. So I want to thank you for that. And I think there are a lot of times when we overlap in the issues and legislation, so thank you very much, .
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right. Thank you, Senator Hurtado, I appreciate your time. Thank you for working on this important area. Thanks. All right, in terms of how we're going to proceed, Senator Min is now going to present item number 30, authored by Senator Stern. That's SB 1444. After he presents that, he's going to present his own Bill, SB 1286. And then I will be up.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
If. I can stop coughing. All right, that's. Item number 27 is 1286. But Senator Min is first going to present item number 30, SB 1444. Okay, why don't you sit right there. Nope. Right there. The hot seat.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Senator Min. Thank you for presenting, on behalf of Senator Stern, SB 1444.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. And Members, the US surgeon General states that it cannot conclude that social media is sufficiently safe for children and adolescents. However, up to 95% of teenagers and even 40% of children aged eight to 12, including my own kids who are 811 and 13, are on social media regularly, per common sense media. California, of course, is seen as a leader on many issues and hopefully will be a leader on this massive child safety issue as well.
- Dave Min
Person
With a number of bills reflecting a number of policy approaches seeking to protect kids who are online, SB 1444 is a complimentary approach that allows parents to have the option to protect their children through the use of third party safety software. Under this Bill, social media platforms would transfer a child's data to a chosen safety software only after the child's age and the parent's guardianship are verified.
- Dave Min
Person
A child must also be notified if their legal guardian is using safety software in connection with their social media account. Additionally, the parent may only be notified of the data necessary for a reasonable parent to understand the risk that the child is experiencing as one of the illicit harms.
- Dave Min
Person
If the safety software provider discloses more data than is true strictly necessary or data unrelated to one of the listed harms, the Attorney General may entirely deregister the provider, which effectively ends that provider's ability to do business in the state. The Bill also requires that the Department of Technology would issue guidance to social media platforms and the safety software providers regarding technical standards to protect user data. The author's office will be accepting the Committee amendments which add some important guardrails to this Bill.
- Dave Min
Person
First, they add a requirement that safety software providers submit independent audits to the AG for review. Furthermore, audit summaries will be publicly published to ensure transparency. The amendments also limit data retention to 21 days. And lastly, they conform the definition of social media platform to existing BNP code, which is further limited to only platforms with more than $100 million monthly 100 million monthly global users, or which generate more than $1 billion in gross revenues per year.
- Dave Min
Person
This definition exempts all but the absolute largest social media platforms from having to provide any data. The author's office wanted me to emphasize that they remain committed to working with the Committee, their staff, and opposition to address all concerns regarding children's privacy and data security. The extent of alarm that social media is inflicting upon children is ongoing, pervasive, and severe. We hear about this all the time. It's in the media.
- Dave Min
Person
We are starting to see many studies on the effects of social media on children, but despite rising awareness of these harms over recent years and various legislative efforts, the risk to children's health and welfare from social media use continues. Third party safety software is an existing proven solution to rapidly increase safety for young adult social media users.
- Dave Min
Person
With that, I'd like to turn to my witnesses and support Mister Mark Berman with the Organization for Social Media Safety and Doctor Laura Berman, mother and advocate for child Internet safety.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, Mister Berman, go ahead. Or Doctor Berman, whichever one.
- Laura Berman
Person
I'm Doctor Laura Berman. I've been a therapist for 30 years, but I'm coming to you as a mama of three children, especially this one. Sorry. This is Sammy Chapman, my son, who will be forever 16. And he was a straight a student. He was on the football team. He was getting ready to apply to college. And as we all know, because we've all been kids, and anyone who's a parent knows good kids make dumb decisions.
- Laura Berman
Person
And thanks to Snapchat, via Snapchat, a drug dealer found him, solicited him, and offered to deliver drugs to our house as easily as a pizza. He was sheltering at home during the pandemic, isolated and bored, and accepted the offer. And his brother and I found him dead on the floor on February 72021. Had Sammy's law or the child let parents protect their children law been in place, Sammy would still be. Thank you. Sammy would still be alive today. And I'm here.
- Laura Berman
Person
It's not gonna save Sammy's life. My other kids are not gonna die because of the risks of social media and the dangers and the predators and the drug dealers that they are matching with our children and that our children are being exposed to. It's the equivalent of dropping them off in the darkest, most dangerous alley with drug dealers and pedophiles and pimps and expecting them to be able to navigate it, and they can't.
- Laura Berman
Person
And I'm here not only in Sammy's memory, but in the memory of the hundreds of thousands of parents who and families who have suffered the same fate. The social media lobbyists will tell you that the companies are putting safeguards and checkpoints in place. They've been claiming that for three years, that there is nothing there that a kid can, can't turn off. They are digital natives. We are tourists. What? I am a huge fan of social media. I use it in my profession.
- Laura Berman
Person
I believe it has tremendous benefits. But we must put guardrails in place, and that's what this law does. So I hope that you will consider voting aye for this law and allow these guardrails to be in place so that parents, should they choose, can protect their children. It's our right. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. As a parent and grandparent, I can only imagine your pain.
- Laura Berman
Person
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, next witness. And thank you for turning that pain into passion to help others. Thank you. All right, next witness.
- Marc Berkman
Person
Good evening. My name is Marc Berkman. I'm the CEO of the Organization for Social Media Safety here in Sebastian support of SB 1444. I want to thank the author, Senator Stern, for answering the desperate call from parents to protect our children from the many dangers of social media. These are severe, pervasive threats like cyberbullying, drug trafficking, sextortion, and suicide, among many others. Thankfully, we now have Sammy's law.
- Marc Berkman
Person
This is a bipartisan intervention that will provide immediate protection to millions of californian children from all these dangers by finally giving parents the choice to use third party safety software on all major social media platforms. Safety software provides life saving alerts to parents when dangerous content comes across a child's social media account. If a child is being preyed upon, cyberbullied, solicited for drugs, or ideating on suicide, safety software can warn parents, giving them an opportunity to intervene before the child is severely harmed.
- Marc Berkman
Person
These social media platforms simply cannot do this themselves. Safety software is an existing, proven, effective product already protecting millions of children from social media harms, sending out hundreds of millions of life saving alerts each year with a established efficacy. It has prevented suicides, deterred cyberbullying, and even stopped at least 16 school shootings. The problem is that the social media platforms need to provide data access at the parents request. Some social media platforms do this, while others tragically refuse to do so. This decision is simply unconscionable.
- Marc Berkman
Person
We can change that with Sammy's law, and we can protect children while also materially increasing data security and privacy over the status quo. Sammy's law does not just balance the opposition's concerns, it actually directly addresses them.
- Marc Berkman
Person
Thank you. If you could wrap it up. Thank you.
- Marc Berkman
Person
We've seen enough broken hearted parents. For the sake of California's children, I ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others wish testified. Name your affiliation? Position.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone. Stone advocacy on behalf of the Children's Advocacy Institute. In support.
- Chris Didier
Person
Good afternoon, Senators. My name is Chris Didier from Placer County on behalf of Victims of Illicit Drugs and also on behalf of my son, my youngest child Zach, who also died from fentanyl poisoning from Snapchat. We strongly support SB 1444, Sammy's law.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dave Min
Person
Sam Chapman, Sammy's dad, in support. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, let's turn to the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1444, please approach.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Thank you, Mister chair. Members of the Committee, Dylan Hoffman on behalf of Technet and we are respectfully opposed to SB 1444. I do want to say, as I previously testified, our companies are responding to this crisis. We are creating new tools and controls for parents. We're constantly re engineering our products to be safer. We're openly competing to do so, and we also recognize that there is a lot more work to be done.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
So I do want to just state that at the outset that we are trying to ensure that our platforms are safer every single day. I do want to note, though, that it's unclear how this Bill expands on the current status quo, since third party software providers are already able to contract with and obtain an API or application programming interface from a social media platform. This type of contracting allows for the vetting between the parties to ensure that user data will be protected.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
This Legislature has constantly reminded my companies that this is the most sensitive information about miners, and we take that responsibility very seriously to protect it, and so enshrined in contracts the ability to protect that, as well as seek remedies in case that data is breached. However, this Bill provides very little in the way of protections for user data, and additional requirements would be necessary just to match the current standards that platforms require of third party providers.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
As an example, the only requirements for a third party provider to register with the Attorney General is to make four simple affirmations. Even with the proposed amendments to add audit authority, this Bill is likely to result in platforms being required to provide their API and miners data to third parties that have not been properly vetted or approved. Another protection that is conspicuously missing is the preservation of platform's own safety and privacy settings for minors.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
At a minimum, a third party should not be able to unwind the many settings features parental controls, policies and protections platforms have in place to create a safer environment for teen users. Finally, this Bill would concerningly allow for more invasive parental surveillance and monitoring.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
And while our platforms believe that parents are often best situated to make important decisions about their child and their online presence, we do share the concern highlighted in the analysis about what this would mean for teens who aren't in support of homes and how these choices would play out in other states. For those reasons, we are respectfully opposed. Thank you to.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Hoffman. All right, others who were in opposition to 1444
- Khara Boender
Person
Hi, good afternoon again, Chair Umburg, Members of the Committee, my name is Khara Boender. On behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association and respectful opposition, CCI Members have been leading the effort to implement settings and parental tools to individually tailor younger users online use. For example, various services allow parents to set time limits, monitor use, provide enhanced privacy protections, and other tools to allow parents to block sites entirely.
- Khara Boender
Person
This is why last year we supported legislation that advanced through the Legislature here in California regarding digital literacy in the hope that that would help educate both children and parents about the tools that are available at their disposal today to be able to implement those types of controls.
- Khara Boender
Person
As mentioned by the other opposition witness, we do believe that the goal of SB 1444 can already be achieved without opening up application program interfaces to potential security risks and vulnerabilities because generally, APIs that are maintained internally are subject to a greater level of protection through several layers of security.
- Khara Boender
Person
I would also like to highlight that in 2021, several federal lawmakers, Senator Warren, Markey, and Blumenthal, submitted a letter to BARC technologies, one such third party vendor, outlining concerns about how the software may be surveilling students inappropriately and compounding racial disparities in school discipline. The letter details negative impacts of using such surveillance software in an educational setting, but also extends to issues associated with the tracking and surreptitious control of nearly all of a child's online behavior.
- Khara Boender
Person
This could proportionately affect younger users in certain marginalized communities or, as the opposition witness mentioned previously, unsupportive households. As noted in the Committee analysis, a near identical Bill in Illinois has been opposed by equality Illinois, ACLU of Illinois, and Planned Parenthood of Illinois. I think that wraps up all of my comments, as I don't want to opine on what the other opposition witness has already said, but I appreciate your consideration.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Artie. Thank you very much. Others in opposition to 1444
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Good afternoon. Ronak Daylami with Cal Chamber respectfully opposed thank you.
- Brandon App
Person
Brandon App, representing Electronic Frontier Foundation respectfully in opposition thank you. Others opposition to 1444
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Questions by Committee Member, Senator Durazo,
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. I committed to Senator Stern that I will be supporting the Bill today because I know his intent is in the right place and we're constantly looking for the best way to support our children, our youth, and at the same time protect our privacy. I know the Senator Stern has made amendments so far, but I do share some of the privacy concerns, not because I oppose it, but because I think that they're important to address.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
For instance, it's concerning that the private companies or third party safety software providers will have access to and manage user data of children regarding the children's online interactions, content, and account settings on these platforms. I'm concerned that the third party safety software providers will set their own parameters and criteria for what is evidence of a child's anxiety or depression. And I have concerns that the third party software providers would be able to share any data with law enforcement.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Should there be, there should be parameters and safeguards on that level as well. So I agree there should be oversight on these companies. Appreciate that the Bill requires that third party providers to be registered with the Attorney General. And with these comments, I urge the author to continue to work on these concerns and ensure that a child user's privacy is protected. Again, I'll be supporting the Bill. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. All right. Thank you. Other comments? Questions? Yes, let me go to Senator Caballero, then to Senator Ashby.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. So I share some of the same issues that Senator Durazo just articulated, and I guess where I come or how I come to it, and I have not had conversations with Senator Stern, and I wish he was here because then I could get commitments from him one way or another.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
But if we're going to protect the privacy of young people and make sure that the third party vendors are not illicitly using the information in a way that prejudices the young people that they're supposedly taking care of, I think it would be appropriate to do a regulatory, to give maybe the Department of Technology the ability to do a regulatory framework that says, says you can't surveil, for example. I think that's really dangerous.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
To have anybody surveilling your teen or preteen is really, I think, kind of frightening. Not kind of frightening to me. Mine are grandkids. They're not my children, and I'd want to know that they're protected and that someone isn't following them for ulterior purposes.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And I think the framework ought to be developed in conjunction with the Internet companies so that it's not undoing what the Internet companies have put in place for the protection of the young individual as well, the minor, for lack of a better word, so that we're coming up with something that doesn't undo what the companies are doing.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
If those features were set up to protect the minors themselves, and that adds an added level of security, that information can be divulged to the parents or can be shared in a way that protects young people, I would want to know that that kind of a setup, that there is a regulatory process that the companies can respond to and make suggestions about because it's way beyond. All I know is my grandkids can get around all the security features that anybody puts on the devices.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so it's really true that young people know how to do a whole heck of a lot more than those of us that didn't grow up with this kind of technology. I want to keep our kids safe, but I also want to know that there's an ability to work together to make that happen and that it's not an adversarial process.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you for the comments, Senator. And I have talked to the Senator, Senator Stern. I know he, the first thing he expressed to me is that he is willing to work and eager to work with all stakeholders, including opposition and Committee staff, on the points you raised. And that's the reason he accepted the Committee amendments, which put up important guardrails.
- Dave Min
Person
And to the extent you know that there are potentially practices or frameworks that could be utilized to collaborate with some of these social media platforms, I'm sure he'd be open to those. He's committed. I mean, he's trying to solve a problem, the problem that was raised, but tragic story relayed by Doctor Berman. But the safety concerns are a corollary concern here that this Bill might raise. And I know he's committed to working through those.
- Dave Min
Person
And I don't know if you have any permission for the witness to speak if he has any. Sure. Yeah. Questions? I appreciate the comments. We have been working a long time on this Bill to continue to address any concerns. And like I said in my statement, not only address not only balance here, but actually address them. And I think it's really important to understand that third party safety software is out and used by millions of families across the country with real effective results.
- Dave Min
Person
So we've seen a lot of lives saved from this corollary in terms of other interventions we're looking at either legislatively or that the platforms are trying to roll out. This intervention does not exist otherwise, and it's effective. So it exists and it's out there. We have not found any of, while we found children's lives saved, we have not found any of these concerns manifest after hundreds of millions of alerts go out. Now, despite that, this Bill adds additional guardrails for privacy.
- Dave Min
Person
Really, strictly limiting what can be disclosed to a parent has to be directly connected to a severe harm that is listed within the Bill. And we do. And Senator Stern told me, I could say this as well. We do have additional amendments drafted coming out that will further address these concerns. Really? I think definitively so. I will. I believe it.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Let me ask you this. If the system already exists, why do you need this Bill?
- Dave Min
Person
The problem is that some, and this is why the argument about contracting is the policy issue at stake. Some social media platforms, Reddit, Tumblr, others allow this access. Now, others, like Snapchat, do not allow the access. And that's where a lot of the harm to children is coming from. And the only way to get at protecting those children is through third party safety software. The problem is that there's a conflict of interest with business motives and safety.
- Dave Min
Person
And so if we create a level playing field, we can allow parents to have access to all the platforms that their children are using. And we can also have good players come into the industry and not be at a disadvantage in negotiating with the large social media platforms.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much. I really appreciate that.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Yeah, I just, you know, my heart goes out to you, the parents in the room who are here, because you just, you know, you never expect to be sitting in the state capitol in a judiciary Senate hearing advocating for something that might protect kids from what took your own son's life. So thanks for coming here, all of you. Thanks for doing it.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I, you know, we're throwing around this term Sammy's law, but I looked at your face a couple times and I said it, and it's still your son's name. And, yeah, I'll move the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Alrighty. Thank you. Other questions or comments? Senator Wilk, did you want to make comment or question? I'm going to make a comment.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you. Thank you, Mister chair. I, too, want to just say how sorry I am. I'm a father, grandfather can't even conceive what you guys have been going through. And like the Chairman said, just trying to make the best of this situation and impact other families. I really appreciate that.
- Scott Wilk
Person
One of the comments you said, which I think is so true, good kids make bad decisions. I know for me, I made plenty of bad decisions, and by the grace of God, I'm here today. But I lived in a much safer and simpler world than today's kids. And I just know. I remember dropping my eldest off at college and my wife and I, and looking in the rearview mirrors, we're pulling off the college campus.
- Scott Wilk
Person
And I just realized, not that your job as a parent's ever done, but those dangerous years were done, and that we are all stewards of our children. We don't own them, but we're stewards. And I think most parents, the vast majority of parents are good parents, love their kids and want to protect them. And so I agree there's still some challenges with this Bill, but I'm confident that Senator Stern will get there and happy to join my other colleagues in supporting the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Last comment. We don't have time for me to review my bad decisions as a young person. So the Senator Stern is not here. I will commit to continuing to work to resolve some of these things because the end product we have may not be one that everyone agrees with, but it should be one that does the greatest to protect young people without some of the challenges. And I do think there are still some major challenges.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I think this Bill is going to come back to the Senate after the Assembly for concurrence. And when it comes back to the, to the Senate, we're going to be looking for those changes. So. All right. With that, would you like to close Senator Min. Respectfully ask for your. I vote. And I would just note to some of the concerns raised. This is an opt in for parents. So it's not that everybody's data is going to be out there. It's for the parents that request it.
- Dave Min
Person
Right. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you very much, Madam Secretary. It's been moved by Senator Ashby.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Put that on calls. All right, Senator Min, item number 27, SB 1286. After Senator Min is done, then it will be Senator Humberg, and then we're going to call the roll one last time. All right, Senator Min, floor is yours.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you. Chair Umberg and Committee Members. I'm sorry. SB 1286 would extend protections that exist under the Rosenthal Fair Debt Collection Act.
- Dave Min
Person
Collections act, to individuals who personally sign for their business debt in order to protect small business owners from unfair, deceptive and abusive debt collection practices. We've seen that in many cases in recent years, small businesses have struggled, particularly during COVID In the aftermath of that, they've been struggling to find the necessary finances to keep operating. This is especially true for minority owned businesses, which have lower loan approval rates than white owned businesses. Even with similar revenues, credit scores and debt levels.
- Dave Min
Person
Since the 2008 economic crash, many traditional and non traditional lenders have required individuals to personally guarantee their business debt, while lenders are within their right to acquire co signatories. This goes against the purpose of entity formation, providing a personal guarantee opens the door for small business owners to be subject to abusive debt collection practices, practices of the kinds that we've seen associated with loan sharks and predatory practices in other spaces.
- Dave Min
Person
Some of these practices include threats, contacting borrowers at inconvenient hours, using false statements, or adding unauthorized interest or fees to the amounts owed. There are over 3 million small businesses in California that do not have any employees. These are essentially individuals who run their businesses day to day operations, marketing and accounting. These business owners are operating very similarly to individual consumers as they navigate the financial marketplace.
- Dave Min
Person
Under SB 1286, these borrowers would still be responsible for paying off their debts, but would simply be protected from unfair, deceptive or abusive collection practices. Here to testify and support the Bill, I have with me Desiree Nguyen Orth with the East Bay Community Law center and Louis Caditz-Peck with the Responsible Business Lending Coalition.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Good afternoon.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Go ahead.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Good afternoon. Chair, Vice Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Desirée Nguyen Orth. I'm the Director of the Consumer Justice Project at East Bay Community Law center, lecturer at Berkeley Law, formerly a business attorney for small business owners, and I am a Member of the Debt Collection advisory board of the DFPI. SB 1286 is an important measure that will require long accepted practices of decency in debt collection to be applied to debt collection for small business owners.
- Desirée Orth
Person
As of 202399.8% of California businesses are small businesses. That amounts to 4.1 million small businesses, 3.35 million people. 3.35 million of these small businesses do not have employees. That's 3.35 million people doing their own advertising, marketing, taxes, accounting, web design and more on top of the services or goods that they have set out to sell. That's 3.35 million people without a faceless accounting Department.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Based on my experience with these business owners, it is clear that many do not have the financial acumen or equal bargaining power to negotiate favorable or fair terms in financing. As such, the RFTCPA's least sophisticated consumer standard is very much appropriate. What I see in the field is women opening businesses to meet a need that they cannot otherwise fill with a 40 hours a week job.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Like the need for child or dependent care, starting a business allows them flexibility and the dignity that comes with providing income. SB 1286 seeks to ensure that personal guarantees from these small businesses are collected fairly without deceit or harassment. I'd like to briefly share a short story from one of our co sponsors, small business majority. Dave, who was a trainer for nearly 30 years, had a successful business before putting all of his savings into opening a new gym.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Improvements needed to be made to the space and he took out financing. After taking out the financing, Dave was in an accident and broke his femur. He was unable to work and commercial rent was about $6,000 a month. He was able to keep up with the payments until COVID with Jim's being the first to close in California, he really struggled.
- Desirée Orth
Person
Not only did the financing company leave threatening messages on his wife's phone, they tracked down the information of his customers to tell them about his debt and threatened to pursue them to get the money they were owed. The effect on the gym was devastating. I'd like to thank Senator Min for prioritizing small businesses, a largely underrepresented community that comprises a vast portion of economic fabric in California.
- Desirée Orth
Person
I respectfully urge your aye vote and I'd like to pass the mic on to my colleague Lewis, who represents the only new stakeholder to the RFDCPA.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
Thank you very much. Thank you chair honorable Members, my name is Louis Caditz-Peck. I serve as Executive Director of the Responsible Business Lending Coalition, an organization of for profit and nonprofit voices dedicated to responsible innovation and small business financing. We represent over 1000 small business groups, for profit financing providers, nonprofit CDFIs, community advocates, and tens of thousands of small businesses themselves. Across our many differences, we all agree that small business owners deserve to be treated fairly during the financing collections process.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
We did not take a position on this Bill in the previous Committee, or even in time to be in your Committee analysis, because our for profit Members needed time to analyze whether the Bill would create a difficult compliance burden, and they found that it would not. In fact, our Members shared that they generally comply with the requirements already. The exception was affirmative requirements to provide notices to borrowers. Some of those Members found that those notices would be new, but not onerous to do.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
Our primary feedback is actually we're concerned that the Bill does not go far enough in its current state. It does not cover loans to small businesses. It only covers collections against flesh and blood individuals that borrowed for a business purpose. And we think it should cover small businesses because of the sorts of things that exactly desiree just described happening, which that is out there. That is happening.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
Our Members shared that abusive collections practices harm not only business owners, but also fair competition when some companies are using these unethical means to extract a competitive advantage. Responsible lenders are at a disadvantage if they don't adopt the same unethical practices. That's what our Members shared. SB 1286. That's a fair standard for competition by prohibiting things like lying, calling the borrowers in the middle of the night to humiliate them, calling the borrowers relatives, and so on. Thank you very much.
- Louis Caditz-Peck
Person
I'd also like to thank you for your support of this Bill and maybe urge it to go a little farther on behalf of cameo and also small business majority who are here earlier today but couldn't stay. Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, others in support of SB 1286, please approach. Microphone.
- Rachel Mueller
Person
Good evening, chair and Members. Rachel Mueller, on behalf of the California Coalition for Community Investment and strong support. Thank you so much.
- Robert Herrell
Person
Good afternoon, Mister Chairman and Members. Robert Harrell, Executive Director of the Consumer Federation. We're a co sponsor of this measure with our small business allies. Thank you.
- Robert Herrell
Person
Thank you.
- Danielle Kando-Kaiser
Person
Dani Kando-Kaiser, on behalf of the California Low Income Consumer Coalition, in support.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Others in support. Seeing no one else approach the microphone. Let's turn now to the opposition. If you're opposed to SB 1286, you're welcome to take a seat at the table if you like. Cliff, how you doing? Whoever would like to go first? Mister Berg? Oh, you're going to go? Okay, fine.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
I'll let Mister Berg close it out. Good afternoon again. Lindsay Gullahorn with Capital Advocacy here today on behalf of the California Community Banking Network, representing the small local community banks that extend access to credit to both consumers and small businesses across the state. First, just want to note that we do appreciate the substantial work that has gone into this Bill in such a short period of time, as well as the author's willingness to accept amendments and initiate stakeholder discussions with us in our coalition.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
However, today we must unfortunately remain imposed because issues remain in SB 1286 and there is ambiguity about the problems being solved by this measure and whether this method is the appropriate solution. We appreciate the stated intent of the Bill to ensure that owners of micro businesses may Micro businesses are free from harassing debt collection practices. But we believe that this goal will be more appropriately accomplished through the creation of entirely new act.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
Rosenthal is modeled after the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices act, and both of these acts are tailored to the collection of consumer debts, which means that there are restrictions around practices like contacting a debtor's employer or their family Members. While this is appropriate in a consumer setting, many existing provisions just don't work in the commercial business space.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
Rosenthal goes well beyond simply banning harassing phone calls and mandates a lengthy series of compliance responsibilities for the collection of personal, family, or household debts, which also includes mortgage debt. Also worthwhile to note that our coalition is unclear on the author's intended goals. The author's statement in the Committee analysis indicates that nontraditional lenders are not acting under the same regulations as the traditional lenders that we represent. And this seems to be a different problem entirely.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
And we would certainly welcome a discussion on that policy that might create a more level playing field between the rules that traditional and nontraditional lenders abide by with respect to commercial borrowers. Also, author states the goal to protect micro businesses. But this measure's $500,000 threshold casts a much wider net and we believe this threshold should be reduced to $100,000 at the time of origination. Last the measure has moved and changed really quickly over the past week week and represents a significant change to existing law.
- Lindsay Gullahorn
Person
We're still trying to analyze it, frankly analyze many touch points and issues that the measure presents. So we think this is deserving of a robust stakeholder discussion and more thoughtful dialogue that might take some more time. So we respectfully urge the Committee to seriously consider whether the bill's methods.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. All right, Mister Berg, you and I are the only two people in this room that remember Hirsch Rosenthal. So I'm not going to ask you what Hirsch. zero, I see other hands. All right. I'm not going to ask you what Hirsch would want you to do. All right? San Fernando Valley. All right. Oh, I'm sorry. Hirsch has this fan club here.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Indeed, I am happy to play the Hirsch would have intended card.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Go ahead.
- Cliff Berg
Person
Thank you, Mister Chairman. Cliff Berg, on behalf of the California Association of Collectors, this is one of these odd situations where frankly, my client agrees with the author and would be perfectly comfortable supporting a standalone Bill that prohibited deceptive practices. Unfortunately, this Bill seeks an easy solution to the problem and would in essence cram small business into an act that Senator Rosenthal created to protect consumers. If you read the Rosenthal act, it mentions consumers 90 something times. The act is tailored to individual consumer circumstances.
- Cliff Berg
Person
It would create exceedingly difficult operational problems to stuff small businesses. It's a round peg in a square hole. And for the reasons therefore stated, we would love to work with the author on a law that protects micro businesses from deceptive and misleading practices. But the way he's going about it, cramming them into the Rosenthal act just doesn't work operationally and therefore we have to oppose the Bill at this time. We look forward to working with him and the sponsors. Thank you very much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, others who are in opposition.
- Tracy Stevens
Person
Good evening, Mister chair and Members. I'm Tracy Stevens, representing the California Financial Services Association. Also in opposition.
- Timothy Lynch
Person
Thank you Tim Lynch on behalf of the Receivables Management Association International, aligning our comments with the previous opposition. Thank you. Cliff. Costume on behalf of the California Creditors Borrow Association, appreciate the work and the commitment the author has made. We unfortunately remain still opposed. Thank you.
- Vanessa Lugo
Person
Vanessa Lugo on behalf of California Bankers Association and we're opposed.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you.
- Naomi Padron
Person
Good afternoon, chair Members. Naomi Padron on behalf of the California Credit Union League in respectful opposition.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, thank you. Senator Min, did you accept the Committee's amendments?
- Dave Min
Person
I do accept the Committee's amendments, yes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. All right, Members of the Committee, questions by Members of the Committee seeing no, Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So we heard this in banking and the issues were the same, that it's a round peg in a square hole or vice versa. And I wonder if you thought about fixing the issues as was just suggested rather than putting it in the act.
- Dave Min
Person
So I will respectfully disagree with the opposition witnesses. I don't think the Rosenthal framework is inappropriate for this. The abuses and predatory practices that launched, as I understand it, the Rosenthal and then some of you guys were around. I was not. But that launched the Rosenthal act and spurred that are identical to the abusive practices we're seeing against small businesses and this Bill does not apply to businesses. I just want to be clear.
- Dave Min
Person
The amendments we accepted in banking, as you know, made this so that it only applies to individuals who are co signatories to small business debt. And again, the abusive practices that are in play here, as far as collection, are basically identical to those that consumers face. So we think it's a perfectly apt framework. And, of course, if we were to create a brand new framework, it would have to be comprehensive. I suspect that we'd see a lot of criticism of all the different provisions of it.
- Dave Min
Person
So we think the Rosenthal act, particularly as amended, this Bill is actually a perfect fit. We have whittled it down. So it's a round peg in a round hole at this point. And I've not heard examples of how this is in app other than a handful of one offs, which we are happy to address. And we have moved the Bill quite a lot in a short period of time, as has been suggested. We have been open to taking amendments to avoid any synchronicities that might exist.
- Dave Min
Person
And we will continue to work with opposition and all stakeholders to try to adapt the Rosenthal act so that it fits well. And there may be a few areas that they can identify, anything that they can identify where there's a reasonable change that should be enacted, I think we are happy to consider.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you for that. Appreciate it.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Other questions or comments? Is there a motion? Senator Caballero moves the Bill. Senator Mim, would you like to close? Respectfully ask for your. I vote. Thank you very much, Madam Secretary. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 27, SB 1286. The motion is do pass, as amended to Senate appropriations. Umberg?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Umberg aye. Wilk. Wilk no. Allen. Allen aye. Ashby. Ashby aye. Caballero. Caballero aye. Durazo. Gonzalez. Laird. Laird aye. Min. Min aye. Niello. Wahab. Six to one. Senator, can you say six to one? Bill is on call?
- Scott Wilk
Person
Vote was six to one, and the Bill is on call, so Members can add on.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Next up, file item 35, SB 913.
- Scott Wilk
Person
We have file item 35, SB 913 by our Chairman. And the recommendation is? The chair's recommendation is an aye vote, but it's due pass, right? Right due pass. Due pass is amended to appropriations, and with that, whenever you want to start.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Thank you, Committee Members, for your patience here today. I'm presenting SB 913, which, after amendments and Health Committee and post Health Committee, would allow licensed alcoholism or drug abuse recovery treatment facilities to be visited by local, city and county officials with the consent. I'll underline that consent, of the Department of Healthcare Services, determine whether it's compliance with applicable statutes and regulation. Thank you to the Committee, especially in Doherty, for your work on this Bill. Besides my health, here's the problem.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The problem is that there are a number of recovery and treatment facilities, and there's really inadequate enforcement. The Department of Healthcare Services, I'm sure it's well meaning, but is under. Basically, it's under capacity. And so this Bill simply allows the Department of Healthcare Services to, in essence, deputize city attorneys with their consent, and only to the extent that they provide authority to actually make site visits and report that they are acting either within or without the law and regulations.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
None of these provisions will supersede the Department of Healthcare Services law. It doesn't increase authority at all. It simply meets our shared goal of ensuring treatment facilities meet standards of patient care. This is a problem, it's not just Orange County. Just to be clear, it's not just Orange County. This is a problem that impacts communities throughout the state. With me here is Caroline Grinder, on behalf of the League of Cities, and Alexandra Hoffman, City Attorney for Mission Viejo and other cities. Thank you. Let's start with Miss Grinder.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
Good afternoon, Members, or good evening, I guess. My name is Caroline Grinder. I'm here on behalf of the League of California Cities, which is proud to split sponsor SB 913 residential recovery housing provides valuable rehabilitation and supportive services in a therapeutic environment, which can benefit both individual patients and the broader community.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
However, for too long, cities have struggled to work with the Department to ensure that bad actors operating in their communities are held accountable, which has been to the detriment of those receiving care in the broader community. That's why compliance with state licensing laws, administered through the Department of Healthcare Services, is essential to safeguarding residents well being and maintaining quality care.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
According to DHCS, in 2023, the average time it takes to close out a single complaint is four months, and they receive nearly 600 of these complaints per year as the number of facilities continues to rise with billions of dollars worth of funding in the pipeline for behavioral health housing across our state, the Department faces a major hurdle in monitoring and regulating these facilities. SB 913 is not about limiting access to these facilities and these critical services.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
Cities have time and time again supported increased investments in behavioral health housing. SB 913's intent is to enhance the oversight and enforcement of existing state licensing laws for drug and alcohol treatment facilities with cities as partners. Specifically, 913 would enhance state licensing efforts by requiring DHCS to adopt a process that would allow cities to request approval to conduct site visits and enforce existing licensing laws.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
To be very clear, this would establish a process for cities to work with the Department to ensure compliance with the department's approval prior to any action. In no way does 913 allow cities to conduct these visits or take action without their direction and approval. Cities are the closest level of government to the constituents they serve and are positioned to respond promptly to emerging issues in their communities.
- Caroline Grinder
Person
Allowing them to partner with the state to do these inspections and enforce licensing laws enables swift action to address violations, ensure compliance and protect public health and safety. Cities are focused on legislative solutions that safeguard every person's well being and care. We believe 913 is a step forward in protecting residents and upholding the integrity of treatment facilities. We urge you to pass this important legislation so we can continue to have these conversations this year. Thank you so much.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you.
- Alexandra Halfman
Person
Good evening, chair and Committee. My name is Alexandra Halfman, and I'm the Assistant City Attorney for Mission Viejo. I also am an Attorney for the City of Fountain Valley. We like this law because right now all we do is get complaints about these facilities and there's nothing we can do about them. We don't know if they're good complaints that are valid. We don't know if they're bad complaints just from overly sensitive people who heard one loud noise the morning before. We don't know.
- Alexandra Halfman
Person
All we can do is tell our residents, complain to the state, and that from a customer service perspective, it's not a very good approach. People feel unheard. It kind of creates the snowball effect where everyone is just mad and complaining about these places, and we don't know if we can help them or not. So we like this law. It would give cities the ability to say, hey, we're getting complaints about this place.
- Alexandra Halfman
Person
Can we go check them out and confirm whether or not they're valid complaints or bad or they're nothing. So, and then after that, say, it's a place where confirmed their valid complaints. Then we can go to the state and say, hey, check this place out. And all the power still resides with the state agency. Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you. Do we have anybody in the audience that wants to add on as a me too as supporters?
- Paul Gonsalves
Person
Good evening, Mister chair Members of the Committee, Paul Gonsalves on behalf of the City of Thousand Oaks in support. Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you, sir. And I appreciate you running up there. Anybody here in opposition? Are you going to be a primary witness? Okay.
- Trent Murphy
Person
Good afternoon. I'll keep it quick. My name is Trent Murphy. I'm a policy analyst for the California Association of Alcohol and Drug Program Executives, known as CADP. Our Member organizations make up the bulk of the state's publicly funded substance use disorder treatment network, and we are here in respectful opposition. We understand the importance of compliance in upholding standards of care within licensed SUD facilities. However, expanding the authority of city attorneys to enforce DHCs licensing laws would compromise the effectiveness and consistency of these SUD licensing processes.
- Trent Murphy
Person
As I understand it, some of the reasoning for the Bill is centered around the DHCS complaint process taking too long. I just want to point out that over the past two years, DHCS has significantly improved their average time to close a complaint, reducing it by more than half. And in addition, in the most recent 23-24 budget, DHCS received roughly $2 million to hire 12 more full time compliance analysts. This is the equivalent of a 50% increase in the department's capacity to handle the complaint caseload.
- Trent Murphy
Person
We believe that this problem identified by the Senator has already been addressed by providing DHCs the resources they need and is a much more efficient, ethical, and reasonable avenue to ensure regulatory compliance of these SUD facilities. Thank you for your time and urge your no vote. Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you for your testimony. Anybody here as a me too in opposition?
- John Drebinger Iii
Person
John Drebinger with the Steinberg Institute. We remain regretfully opposed.
- John Drebinger Iii
Person
However, we do appreciate the recent amendments and conversations with the author's office and look forward to future conversations. Just feel like the Bill needs to be amended a little bit more before we can withdraw that opposition. Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you. With that, pull back to the Committee for questions, comments, concerns. Okay, we have a motion from Senator Minn. Senator Caballero, you've been full of questions today. No questions on this Bill.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Yes, I just wanted to know why the Mayor Steinberg is opposed to what I think is a pretty good Bill.
- Scott Wilk
Person
So maybe I'm probably not the right person.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Senator Umberg, you can respond.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Maybe I could just say that the Steinberg Institute is not the same as Mayor Steinberg.
- John Drebinger Iii
Person
So I will affirm Senator Ashby's comments there. However, the Institute itself is primarily concerned with just the potential impact on Prop One implementation. Again, not thematically opposed to the idea of around accountability. We are working with the author's office and with some of the other opposition to the Bill to figure out how we can reach that point of accountability. We just think that the current format might create some boundaries and administrative barriers to these facilities operating and providing legitimate services in community.
- John Drebinger Iii
Person
So by no means opposed to the idea of the Bill or the intent, but really just kind of trying to suss out some of the implementation and how we can get there and feel like through future conversation, we should be able to do that. Thank you, Senator.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
That's very helpful. Because one of the pieces, I think it's a really good Bill. I think the more that you can do inspections locally, the more effective it's going to be because you can get there easier. And my experience working for the state was that in the instances where there was a state, a state agency that was doing inspections, the possibility that they'd visit every single facility was once every 10 years or so, was very, very infrequent.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And usually it was done by complaint, so that you had, you had to have a complaint filed. And sometimes people have a hard time figuring out how to make that complaint, but to locals it's a lot easier. But I do think it might be helpful to have some kind of training component so that the locals are doing the inspections very similar or using the same punch list, if you will, that the state inspectors would have.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And so I think it's a good Bill and if a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We already have a motion.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Okay, great. Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Any other comments? Senator Allen, you want to chip in here? No? Good. Excellent. So we have a motion from Senator Minn. It is do passes amended to appropriations with that. Would you like to close?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister chair. Just a couple comments. One, is it is true that complaints closing have been reduced to 114 days. If you have needles spread around your neighborhood, 114 days seems like an awfully long time, number one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Number two is, if you complain and you never get a response, complaints go down dramatically. So this simply, the Department is responsible to train and authorize and provide consent. So it should be only with the authorization, within the authority and with the competency of the Department. With that, I urge an aye vote.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you. Let's call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 35, SB 913. The motion is do pass as amended, to Senate appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Scott Wilk
Person
Okay, the vote, 7-0. We will leave that open for members to add on. All right, next bill. Are we ready? We are not ready because I have not announced it. Thank you for having me. I didn't mean to grab it out of your hand. So, it'll be filed item 36, SB 919, by Senator Umberg having to deal with franchise investment law. With that, the floor is yours.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This is the last bill that we'll hear today, and so if you're a member of this Committee, after this bill is over, we'll take up the vote and then maybe be done. All right, so. Well, I expect many of you to ask lots of questions. So we're here well beyond six. So I want to thank Ian Dougherty once again for his hard work on this bill. Today I present SB 919, which increases transparency and franchise sales processes for prospective franchisees.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
What this bill does, excuse me, will provide notice the commissioner of third-party franchise sellers actively selling franchises, and disclosures to prospective franchisees about the third-party franchisee. Third-party franchise sellers, professional experience, credentials, listing of franchisor clients by the industry, a number of clients within each industry, service performed for their clients, and compensation received, litigation history and the names of franchisees to whom the franchises were sold during the past year requires annual notice, filing with the commissioner, and payment of a registration fee.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
With me today are Randy Pollack with the International Franchise Association and Keith Miller with the American Association of Franchise Dealers. Thank you very much.
- Randy Pollack
Person
Mister chair and members of the committee, Randy Pollack, on behalf of the International Franchise Association, we represent about 10,000 franchisees and about 900 brands. And what does bill is going to do is many of you have probably seen advertisements about. Hey, are you interested in a franchise? Whether it's on TV or on radio or in an advertisement.
- Randy Pollack
Person
And so what this bill does is that for these third-party brokers who are very important in the ecosystem of franchise, it's going to provide more information to those people who may be interested in purchasing a franchise. So the person, the third party broker will have to provide certain information to the person that they're doing the business with so they have a better understanding of what they're getting into.
- Randy Pollack
Person
Also, we're just asking for a registration through the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, a small fee so that there's some sort of state oversight. We believe this is a good bill. There's been no opposition and we urge your support. Thank you.
- Keith Miller
Person
Chair Umberg and members of the committee, thank you for your time today. And Mr. Chairman, thank you for authoring this bill. My name is Keith Miller. I'm here today on behalf of the American Association of Franchisees and Dealership and the Coalition of Franchisee Associations. I've also been a subway franchisee here in California for 35 years. As some of you know, I for many years have sponsored and pushed legislation to protect franchise owners. Mister Vice Chair could acknowledge over a decade of work doing this. As I've discussed over the years, when a franchisees invest in a franchise, they put everything at risk.
- Keith Miller
Person
If it fails, due to personal guarantees, they may lose their business, their savings, even their home. There are federal and California disclosure laws to protect the investor to make sure there is transparent disclosure, so prospective franchisees know what they are getting into. However, with third party sellers, often called franchise brokers, those protections may be lost. For example, in the required disclosures, a franchisor may not elect to provide any financial representation, such as unit level volumes.
- Keith Miller
Person
However, a third-party seller may be able to verbally give unit volume to somebody and not violate the laws. And this is a real problem with the law. These third-party sellers, as one reputable broker stated, are really the wild, Wild West. And what is worse, there's absolutely no requirements to become a franchise broker today. In fact, by the time I finish this next sentence, all of you can become franchise brokers just by calling yourself one.
- Keith Miller
Person
So let's make sure franchisees putting everything at risk, have reasonable protections. Let's make sure third party sellers are held to the standards of the laws already passed. Please support SB 919.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Do we have any me too testimony and support in the audience? Seeing none, do we have any primary opposition testimony? Seeing none, do we have any me too opposition testimony? Seeing none. Pull it back to the committee. Bill has been moved by Senator Wahab. Any questions, comments and concerns? Seeing none, you may close.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
In the interest of your time and my health, I urge an aye vote.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Okay with that, we got the motion from Senator Wahab. Clerk, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
This is file item number 36, SB 919. The motion is do pass to Senate appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Scott Wilk
Person
Nine. Both 9-0 will leave the roll open for members to add on. And with that, I'm going to turn the gavel over to our chair. Chairman. And I think he's going to start lifting the calls. I am going to wait.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All the bills so you all can move on to other committees. So let's do this.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Wahab moves the consent calendar. Let's start with that.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On the consent calendar. Umberg? Umberg, aye. Wilk? Wilk, aye. Allen? Allen, aye. Ashby? Ashby, aye. Caballero? Caballero, aye. Durazo? Gonzalez? Laird? Laird, aye. Min? Min, aye. Niello? Niello, aye. Wahab? Wahab, aye. Nine to zero.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine to zero, put that back on call. All right, next one.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item two, SB 1109, we need a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, Senator Wahab moves the bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
What's the file item, number two?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 1109. The motion is do pass the Senate appropriations. Umberg? Aye. Umberg, aye. Wilk? Wilk, aye. Allen? Allen, aye. Ashby? Ashby, aye. Caballero? Caballero, aye. Durazo? Gonzalez? Laird? Laird, aye. Min? Min, aye. Niello? Niello, no. Wahab? Wahab, aye. Eight to one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eight, one. We'll put that back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number four, SB 1299. We need a motion for this as well.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Wahab moves the bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Seven, two. Put that back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number five, SB 1051. This also needs a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Wahab moves the bill. Thank you for being our bill mover.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Once again, file item five, SB 1051. The motion is do pass to Senate appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
9-0. Put it back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number six, SB 1287, also needs a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Wahab, I'm sorry.
- Committee Secretary
Person
I think Senator Min.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Min moves the bill. Did you move it? Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Yeah.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. Senator Min moves the bill. All right.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine, zero. Put that back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number seven, SB 1462. This also needs a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We just voted on item number six. Now we're on item number seven. All right, Senator Caballero moves item number seven, SB 1462.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is do pass, as amended to Senate appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
7-3. We'll put that back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number eight, SB 1482, also needs a motion.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Caballero moves the bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Okay, the motion is do pass to Senate Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Min.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
9-1. We'll put that back on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Okay. File item number 11, SB 1497. Chair voting aye. [Roll Call. File item 11, SB 1497 by Senator Menjivar [Roll Call] Seven to two. I believe everyone's here.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
7-2. That bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 14, SB 1228. It was pulled. File item 14, SB 1228, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call] 10-1.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
10-1 that bills out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 15, SB 976, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
9-0. Bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Was that enough? We didn't get that. Not voting. Oh, okay. All right.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine to one, bills out?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nine to one?
- Committee Secretary
Person
You voted. You moved it. Okay. File item 17, SB 1037, chair voting aye. Allen? Allen, aye. Gonzalez? Gonzalez, aye. Laird? Laird, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Min? Min, aye. Niello? Niello, no. Wahab? Wahab, aye. Nine to two.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine to two bills out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 19, SB 989 needs a motion.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Wilk moves.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Wilk moves the bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And I just want to correct, because my system is not in line with this. What bill number?
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Senator Min moves the bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Ten, zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number 24, SB 1303. Chair voting aye.[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
He voted twice, so good. All right.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call] You moved the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You were just making fun of Senator Min. That's all. What's the vote? 9-1 bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 25, SB 1097, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
10-0, bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number 26, SB 1190, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
Aye.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eleven to zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine, two, bills i out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eleven to zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item 30, SB 1444. Chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, what's the vote?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Nine to zero.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
9-0. Bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Ten to zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eleven to zero, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eleven to zero, bill is out. 39 for vote only.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This is 1424 by Senator Glazer.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Yes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yeah, it was moved. Yeah.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Go back through. One more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Six to two. We're going to count those weak ayes as ayes. So the bill is out. All right. I'm sorry. Column 31.
- Committee Secretary
Person
No, you said it was out.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Did you close that out?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Unfortunately, we closed it out, so. All right, let's.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Yeah, we need to go back through something.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We have to go back through. Okay. One last time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eleven to zero, consent calendar is adopted.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number two, SB 1109. Chair voting aye. Durazo? Durazo, aye. Gonzalez? Gonzalez, aye. 10 to one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
10 to one, bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number four, SB 1299. Chair voting aye. Durazo? Durazo, aye. Gonzalez? Gonzalez, aye. Nine to two.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Nine to two, bill's out.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
9-2, bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number five, SB 1051, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
11-0, bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number six. SB 1287, chair voting aye. [Roll Call]
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
10-0, bill's out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number seven, SB 1462, chair voting aye. [Roll Call] Okay. Eight to three.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Eight to three, bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
File item number eight, SB 1482. Chair voting aye. Durazo? Durazo, aye. 10 to one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
10 to one, I think that's it.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Let me just make sure. Okay. Yeah.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right. Thank you, Erica. Thank you, everyone. We are adjourned. Well, let's make. What is it? 989?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Yeah. You just say it's out.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
It's out. 989, number 19 is out. Okay, thank you.
Bill SB 1109
Cannabis: demographic information of persons with financial interests in license applicants.
View Bill DetailCommittee Action:Passed
Next bill discussion: May 22, 2024
Speakers
Legislator