Senate Standing Committee on Local Government
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The Senate Committee and local government will come to order. Good morning. Thank you for joining us for this meeting. The Senate welcomes the public in person, and we are holding our Committee hearings here in the O Street building.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I ask all Members of the Committee be present in room 2200 so we can establish our quorum and begin our hearing. I encourage all authors and the public to be as short as you can to the point so we can get through our agenda without having to come back.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We will have to break a little bit before noon, and if we haven't finished our hearing, we'll need to come back later in the day. We have 22 bills on today's agenda. Seven bills are on consent. Let me go through them right now. Item number three, AB 598, by Assemblymember Wix. Item six, AB 1413, by Assemblymember Ting.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Item seven, AB 24, by Assemblymember Petrie Norris. Item eight, AB 2192 by Assemblymember Juan Carrillo. Item 11, AB 2533 by Assemblymember Juan Carrillo. Item 14, AB 2262 by Assemblymember Reyes. And item 21, AB 3062, by Assemblymember Barakahan. And a few housekeeping notes.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We have a special item today being considered under our Senate Rule 2910 d, and that is SB 739 by Senator Ashby. This Bill is coming back to us for concurrence. Is Senator Ashby here? No, she's not. Okay. We don't have a quorum. We don't have a quorum. We will operate as a Subcommitee.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We don't have a quorum, but we will start. So we have Senator Cortese, if you will come up. Welcome, Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you Madam Chair and Committee Members. Appreciate the. opportunity to present SCR 163, which would reaffirm the responsibilities of local agency formation commissions. For over half a century, LAFCOs have promoted orderly development and balanced it with sometimes competing state interests of discouraging urban sprawl, preserving open space and prime agricultural lands, and efficiently extending government services.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Each county in the state has a LAFCO, which is composed of elected city and county members, at least one public member, and in 30 counties, special district members as well. The local LAFCO is responsible for the formation of county service areas, which enable essential services, including water and sanitation, to be provided in a given area.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
These officials are uniquely qualified to determine whether a project is feasible in a given area. Without an application to any decision from LAFCO, guarantees about services from the proponents of urban developments have no weight behind them.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I know there's been some general concern as to whether or not the resolution is in some way dis-acknowledging, if you will, the acute need for more housing. I'm certainly a huge proponent of housing production, but I'm also a huge proponent of orderly growth.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And that's the only real reason for the resolution, is to come forward and remind folks on an act that was created in 1963, amended over a decade later after a four-year effort, and then amended again by our good former colleague, Madam Chair, Senator Hertzberg, after another four-year effort, that it's a body of work that's worked very, very well in terms of orderly growth.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I suppose that there are a lot of Members either because of the fact that they haven't had a lot of experience at the local government level. Some of us have, some haven't. This is really just a restatement of what already exists with, of course, being a resolution. No, no intent whatsoever to change the law.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
With that, I would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Do you have any witnesses?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
None.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Are there any witnesses-- Let's just do it in support. So all those in support, would you please come forward?
- Elizabeth Espinosa
Person
Good morning. Elizabeth Espinosa, here today on behalf of the California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else wish to speak in support? Seeing none. Anyone in opposition, please come forward.
- Adriana Romo
Person
Good morning. I completely support this amendment or reaffirmation of LAFCOs. I'm Adriana Romo. I'm the Deputy Executive Officer for the Los Angeles LAFCO. Thank you, Mr. Cortese.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. I had asked for opposition, but which are you?
- Nick Cammarota
Person
I'm in the opposition case.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, go ahead.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
Nick Cameron, on behalf of California Building Industry Association. Just here to point out two concerns with the resolution as it's currently drafted. I think the first is that we are stating that LAFCOs have the sole and exclusive authority to engage in processing, initiating, conducting, and completing changes of organization and extraterritorial services or reorganizations as well.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
I don't think it's even by the terms of the LAFCO law, I don't think that that's an accurate statement, because that process begins with cities and counties and districts adopting a resolution to begin the process. And in addition to that, landowners and voters by petition can do the same.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
And we don't want to create the impression that somehow in this resolution, we're blocking that process. I know that the Committee analysis recognizes this fact. It is also available for LAFCOs themselves to initiate proceedings.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
And so we want to have a resolution that more accurately, I think, states what the law is. I think that even in the conducting of these proceedings-- the County of Santa Clara has a unique situation where their cities actually in some circumstances conduct the organization, change, reorganization, those sorts of things as well.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
So it's not a universal statement that they have, that LAFCOs have the sole and exclusive authority, the cities themselves, in that case, do it.
- Nick Cammarota
Person
I think, finally, what we don't want to see is a reference to one particular project because the law, assuming that this becomes actually more accurately stated in the resolution that it should apply to all projects. And I think that's something we all agree on. So for those two reasons, we'd like to see the bill, the resolution, modified.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Anyone else in opposition? Okay, seeing none. Yes, Senator Wiener?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. So I'm, I'll be honest, I'm a little perplexed by the, maybe that's the wrong word, but I'm trying to get my head around this resolution. First of all, I'm trying to say why, why it's needed. The law is what it is, right, on LAFCOs and for California Forever--
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I want to-- For California Forever or any other situation, if LAFCO has the final say, despite other agencies approving something or the voters, then that is what it is. So why do we need to have a resolution stating what the law is?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I mean, putting aside that there's a dispute about whether the resolution accurately states the law, but why, what's the purpose of doing so?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Well, let me, and if I may, let me also address the opposition. We've already agreed that the language that the opposition brought out needs to be changed. That's communication that we've gone back and forth with CBIA, no dispute whatsoever in terms of the way it was just characterized.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And that's just something that needs to go back through legislative counsel. We'll need to amend the RN and then cross it before the floor if we get out of Committee today. And it doesn't impact, back to your question, the why or any of the general intent for the resolution.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It has been 24 years since the Legislature really took up and had a discussion in a Committee or on the floor to the extent members want to do that. Obviously you were interested enough to engage me today. That's the purpose. It's, I think, a tremendous body of work that's been first created in 1963 as I said, we all know that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Years and years of work has gone into it on two separate occasions to make sure it's right. And it's a good corollary to the values of the State of California in terms of how we want growth to proceed. So this is just elevating that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It's just creating awareness and really nothing more than that. There's nothing in it that would change the law whatsoever. And I think the Committee analysis did a great job of acknowledging that and really closing out the analysis by saying that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, I appreciate that. And I will say in terms of California Forever, I have very consistently declined to take a position on that project, be involved with it. There are plenty of people who are involved. So it's just not a project that I am in any way involved with or have taken a position on.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I do have concerns that this potentially either is or could be perceived as the Legislature putting its thumb on the scale in terms of that project. And so that's sort of a concern that I have. But I'm glad you're working with the opposition to at least make sure that the resolution fully, accurately describes the law. So I appreciate that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Yeah, let me just say that the resolution itself is project-neutral.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
You know, it talks about general concerns about, you know, some of the things that one would be worried, worried about if we didn't, if we had not delegated state powers, you know, through the counties to LAFCOs in a, you know-- I don't know about thumb on the scale. These are state concerns.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
LAFCO would have no power at all, and the counties would have no power at all if not for the State of California. So we're just, the act itself was created in the State of California. We're not amending it here. We're just, again, creating awareness around it.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The analysis does refer to that project, and I don't have a problem with that. Don't blame the Committee. You could hold out probably any number of a half dozen circumstances around the state where local LAFCOs are going to be engaged ultimately, I think, in, you know, establishing boundaries and making sure fire services and special districts are adequate for the developments that are being contemplated and the jurisdictional issues that are being contemplated.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
So I want to make it clear I'm not faulting the Committee at all for holding out that project. We've certainly had discussions along the way about what are examples of areas that this may be of concern. And so I'm complicit in that. But I, too, have not taken any position, publicly or otherwise, on that particular project.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Right. Although I will note that I think at the end of the resolution, it does refer to corporate interests purchasing thousands of acres of formula. Maybe there's another project around the state where that's happening at that scale.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
There's an entire documentary that's been premiered here over on K Street about land grabs are going on up and down the state, and I would recommend every single legislator amongst our colleagues watch that. It's compelling, it's powerful, and it's finally received global distribution. So we're not overreacting to that, I'm not overreacting to that.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
But I think it makes one wonder if the level of awareness about the structure that we do have in place, the governmental structure we do have in place to deal with those things, is really out there.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It was just over a year ago, in part related, I think, to the Solano project that you're referring to, that informational hearings were held during the Legislature, John Garamendi, among others, the congressman, testified as to general concerns.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And one of the recommendations that came out of that Committee in the give and take with the panelists was, it's probably time for a reaffirmation of LAFCO. And here it is, so--
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I appreciate it.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Senator Seyarto, any comments? Okay, thank you. Would you like to have closing remarks?
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
I think I've done enough of that, but I do respectfully ask for your aye vote. And again, I really appreciate the Committee's cooperation with this.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Oh, we don't have the--okay. We'll have the vote later. Now we want to move on to Item One: SB 739. Senator Ashby. Good morning.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Good morning, colleagues, Madam Chair. Nice to see you this morning. I am here to present SB 739, which allows the City of Elk Grove to utilize construction manager at risk construction contracts for a new Sacramento regional zoo in Elk Grove.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Under a typical delivery process, a city is required to complete all construction drawings and bid the entire project as a comprehensive package, which extends the design time and construction duration, ultimately increasing costs on a project. However, a construction manager at risk, which is a CMAR model, allows a city to hire a construction manager early in the process.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
This helps streamline the delivery methodology, it improves cost estimating, and quickly delivers construction related recommendations. SB 739 seeks to allow the City of Elk Grove to utilize this model during the construction of their new and exciting zoo.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Utilizing this model for the onset of the project can help further align the design and construction, but most importantly, control costs. SB 739 is a crucial step towards bringing this economic opportunity to my district. Bill has received unanimous bipartisan support so far.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I think there are a couple people here to testify: Rod Brewer on behalf of the City of Elk Grove--he is a council member--and Jason Jacobs, on behalf of the Sacramento Zoo Board.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
There's Rod.
- Rod Brewer
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair Members. Rod Brewer, in this capacity as the vice mayor of Elk Grove, the zoo is actually in my district.
- Rod Brewer
Person
And I want to thank Senator Ashby for her leadership in carrying this Bill and moving this project forward, because this project that we're doing is going to be transformational, not only for the City of Elk Grove before the Sacramento region itself.
- Rod Brewer
Person
And the construction of the new zoo will generate not only a short term economic impact from its construction, but would also deliver ongoing economic benefits that would support the regional economy. The project is estimated to produce 2400 construction jobs and have a $249 million total economic impact over five years.
- Rod Brewer
Person
The first five years, the city has a community workforce training agreement with local trade unions. The new zoo project would be subject to that agreement. Senate Bill 739 would not create any burden for the State of California. I want to thank you again for your support for SB 739.
- Rod Brewer
Person
With your leadership, the City of Veldgrove will be able to bring an entirely new level of experience to the Sacramento region that will forever redefine zoological parks, not only here, but nationwide. Thank you very much, and we ask for your. I vote.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
Good morning. My name is Jason Jacobs, and I serve as the Executive Director of the Sacramento Zoo. Many animals that we care for, such as lions and giraffes, are facing tremendous challenges throughout the world that doesn't even count local species that we take care of, like the western pond turtles.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
Accredited zoos provide a vital service not only for wildlife, but also for people. Zoos contribute resources for wildlife conservation, as well as caring for populations of rare and endangered species. Zoological parks also serve as cornerstones for our community.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
With incredible educational experiences, the new regional zoo, located in Elk Grove, will serve as a conduit between people and wildlife.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
The current zoo sees over half a million guests per year on a limited footprint, with no parking and no room for expansion, the new zoo will be capable of hosting well over half, I'm sorry, well over a million visitors per year. While serving a crucial role of conservation and education.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
Certainly the majority of the visitors for this new proposal will never get the opportunity to travel to Africa to go on Safari. And that's what we are going to build in Elk Grove. We're going to give a window to the wild and provide an experience like none other.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
It's a very complex project, and that's why we ask for your support on SB 739. We care for thousands of animals, ranging from a one and a half pound meerkat to a 4500 pound rhinoceros, who, by the way, is the largest resident of the Sacramento region.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
It is an extremely complicated process to provide homes, incredible homes, for these animals, and we ask for your support. We thank Senator Ashby for her support on this project.
- Jason Jacobs
Person
She's been a fan of this project since the beginning, and we hope that you will help us create something incredible, not only for animals, but for people in this region. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, we have any others in support?
- Keith Dunn
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. I'll be brief. Keith Dunn, on behalf of the State Building Construction Trades Council, in support. Appreciate the Senator and her efforts on the. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Any others in support? SB 739 seeing none. Anyone in opposition? None. Okay. Bring it up to Dais. Senators, any comments or questions? Move the Bill.
- Rod Brewer
Person
Oh, right.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. No comments or questions.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Senator, you may close. Well, I guess on behalf of my largest constituent and all the little ones, too, when the time is right, I would appreciate an. I vote. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you very much.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Put that--AB--okay. Assembly Member Wicks, good morning. I think we're going to start with the 2243. Okay. All right. We will move to Item Five: AB 2243. Assembly Member Wicks.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. I'm here to present AB 2243, a bill to clarify and expand AB 2011. First of all, I'll be accepting the committee amendments today and appreciate all the work of the committee on that. I want to call out that they restored the existing provision in AB 2011 that require projects to be at least 3,200 feet from oil and gas extraction and refinement. My goal as a Legislator is to facilitate abundant housing that is both climate-friendly and safe.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Towards that end, we've been spending the past couple of months working diligently with air quality experts, HVAC experts, and architects to find a way to ensure that the safety of residents in the building within 3,200 feet of oil and gas is sufficient. At the end of the day, though, we concluded that we just don't have the technology yet, which is why we proposed this amendment. So for now, I'll continue to help reduce oil extraction in our communities, to help existing residents, and to free up more land for AB 2011.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The other issue that we've been discussing with environmental justice groups is applying AB 2011 within 500 feet of freeways. While it's not being requested by the committee, we're also committed to amending the bill at the next opportunity to step up the air filtration in those areas to MERV and require central air.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And while we're working with--sorry--and we'll keep working with the EJ groups over the summer recess to fine-tune those details. They have been very helpful in the conversation. As far as the rest of the bill, AB 2011, also known as the Affordable Housing and High Roads Job Act of 2022, was a bill I authored in 2022.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
It allows the development of multifamily infill housing in areas zoned for retail, office, and parking lots. In return for making those house--these housing developments by-right, developers need to provide affordable housing on site and ensure that the construction workers are paid the prevailing wage.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Since the enactment of AB 2011, there have been substantial changes to the economy, including the collapse of demand for office space, the reduced demand for brick and mortar retail, and the increasing interest rates. Those changes have created both the demand and opportunity for us to open up sites where housing might be economically feasible.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Additionally, since AB 2011's enactment, housing developers and local governments have identified aspects of the law's language that are subjective and open to interpretation. The subjectivity has led to project delays and dissuaded utilization of the law. It has also led to inconsistent application across jurisdictions and created the potential for unnecessary lawsuits.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
AB 2243 would address both of these issues by expanding AB 2011's geographic applicability and clarifying aspects of the law that are subject to interpretation. In terms of geographic expansion, AB 2243 would apply AB 2011 to the following types of projects: sites within 500 feet of freeways, as I mentioned, regional malls that exceed 20 acres in size, the conversion of office to housing, even if the site is not along a major commercial corridor, and to existing high-rise districts, even if the site is not along a commercial corridor.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
In terms of removing subjectivity, AB 2243 includes a series of clarifications, including clarifying that all aspects of AB 2011 projects are ministerial and not subject to CEQA, clarifying how AB 2011 intersects with Density Bonus Law, and subjecting--and specifying that any site remediation needs to occur after project approval but before the site can be occupied.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Importantly, AB 2243 does not touch AB 2011's labor standards or affordable housing standards, which is why it is still supported by 2011's diverse coalition of construction, labor, SEIU, CSEA, affordable and market rate developers, and other pro-housing organizations.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
So AB 2011 has been in effect for about a year, actually almost a year to the day, July 1st. During this period, obviously, we've seen high interest rates. You know, we've seen projects that have--in my district, we've had the North Berkeley BART, which has been an ongoing conversation of how we're going to develop that, years and years in the making. They're now using AB 2011 to help expedite that process for thoughtful housing. We're seeing projects in San Francisco, projects all over the state trying to utilize AB 2011.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
We're also recognizing some of the weaknesses, and I think, you know, and I said this in last committee, I'm in my sixth year of 12 years and so I think of myself now as like legislatively middle-aged, you know, and have a better understanding of how this works, and housing law is very complicated.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
You know, we went through a lot to get AB 2011 passed. It was a big lift. We want to make sure it works, and so I think as important as the first bill that we put out there is equally as important as now its implementation and how we actually make it work better. So this is really born out of a lot of conversations with stakeholders to ensure that this bill can--this law can be used most effectively to build the housing that we need to, working with a diverse coalition of labor and others to support it.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
So I'm honored to have been the original author, thrilled to be working on the crossing the t's and dotting the i's to make sure it applies in the most effective way possible, and when the time is right, respectfully ask for an aye vote. And with me here to testify, I believe, is Corey Smith--yep--from the Housing Action Coalition, and Danny Curtin from the Carpenters.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Good morning.
- Corey Smith
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. Corey Smith, on behalf of the Housing Action Coalition. We're a home building, industry-funded nonprofit that advocates for more homes for all residents at all income levels and proud to co-sponsor AB 2243 because we understand the importance of creating more homes for Californians and this bill moves the needle.
- Corey Smith
Person
With the passage of the landmark bill, AB 2011, it's been critical in expanding production of housing at all income levels, and we have members across the state who are using AB 2011 to build new homes, but there are opportunities to strengthen the bill and deliver even more housing, and that's what this is.
- Corey Smith
Person
These clarifications will improve the law as currently written to allow for additional sites to be developed for housing. Sites that were previously ineligible for streamlining will now be feasible, and it will expand production throughout the state, including infill locations.
- Corey Smith
Person
Since the time that AB 2011 was proposed and passed and then implemented, we've had a number of members who are trying to use the bill but are just unable to due to these criteria, and with these clarifications, additional sites will be eligible for streamlining, clearing the way for much-needed housing in really good locations near amenities, services, transit, and jobs.
- Corey Smith
Person
This bill is ultimately also going to help increase the certainty for housing, which will in turn decrease the cost of construction for housing, which is something we desperately need to be doing right now. Thank you very much.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Good morning.
- Danny Curtin
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Members. Danny Curtin with the Carpenters Union. Assembly Member Wicks pointed out that the labor standards are the same, so I won't belabor it, but I do want to make a couple of points, especially Senator Durazo, you and I have been around working on labor issues for a long time.
- Danny Curtin
Person
I've been doing longer as you have. You're just like 42 years old, and I know how that goes. But the point is, the conditions of the working people in California and America are not that good anymore. It's a really difficult time. The labor standards in this bill are potentially going to change the nature of the situation in the workforce in this industry. It is one of the four industries that are rampant with wage theft. We've gone over all of this.
- Danny Curtin
Person
There's about five billion dollars a year between state and federal, and loss of taxes that go into subsidizing the worst actors in the industry because they wage theft, because they don't pay their taxes, and they workers need social supports. The one element that's critical to actually possibly changing that workforce around is the ability for the joint labor management committees to actually enforce the law directly because we cannot rely on the department relations, not because they're bad, because they're overwhelmed.
- Danny Curtin
Person
So this has the potential for actually changing that. Half the workforce in this industry is in poverty. A quarter of it works under the table. So we thank you for recognizing that the housing crisis is also a wage crisis. Thank you very much and ask for your support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. We're now going to do the support. Anyone wishing to step up, give your name and organization in support. Please come forward.
- Alexander Hampton
Person
Hello. My name is Alexander Hampton, Local 46, Sacramento, and I strongly support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Holly Fraumeni
Person
Holly Fraumeni de Jesus with Lighthouse Public Affairs, on behalf of SPUR, CivicWell, formerly known as the Local Government Commission, as well as Fieldstead and Company, in support.
- Rafa Sonnenfeld
Person
Rafa Sonnenfeld, on behalf of YIMBY Action and our nearly two dozen chapters across California, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Cesar Placencia
Person
Cesar Placencia, Local 405, Santa Clara County, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Kelly
Person
Matt Kelly, Local 46, Sacramento, California, in support.
- Maria Jordan
Person
Maria Jordan, Local 46, in support.
- Marcel Moore
Person
Marcel Moore, Local 46, Sacramento. I'm in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rod Finley
Person
Rod Finley, Local 46, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Chris Myers
Person
Chris Myers with the California School Employees Association, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Marina Espinoza
Person
Marina Espinoza with the California Housing Consortium, in support.
- Daniel Branton
Person
Dan Branton, Drywall Lathers Local 9109, right here in Sacramento, in strong support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Hargrove
Person
Matthew Hargrove with the California Business Properties Association, in support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Brian Sherman, Local 46, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- John Gillum
Person
John Gillum, Local 46. I support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Mahdi Manji with Inner City Law Center, in support.
- Jordan Panana Carbajal
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members of the Committee. Jordan Panana Carbajal, on behalf of California YIMBY, in support. Thank you so much.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Beeston
Person
Matthew Beeston, NorCal Carpenters Union, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aiden Hall
Person
Aiden Hall, Local 9109, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Michael Whitley
Person
Michael Whitley, Local 9109. I support.
- Emilio Trevino
Person
Emilio Trevino, Local 46. I'm in support.
- Lauren De Valencia Y Sanchez
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Members. Lauren De Valencia, representing the American Planning Association, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, is there anyone in opposition to AB 2243? Please come forward. Good morning.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
Morning. Morning. Morning, Madam Chair and the Committee. My name is Jonathan Pruitt. I'm with the California Environmental Justice Alliance. We'd first like to start by thanking Assembly Member Wicks for reincorporating the oil and gas setback into the AB 2243.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
This continues California's leadership on this issue, and we'd like to thank the Assembly Member and her staff and all the hard work for that. However, CEJA still respectfully remains in opposed unless amended position on AB 2243. We appreciate the direction of recent conversations and the author's commitment to meeting with us over the summer, the summer break, to continue to discuss our remaining concerns with the bill.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
Our alliance agrees that deeply affordable housing is a key need for millions of Californians and appreciates the seriousness with which the author and the committee members take on this challenge, and at the same time, it is imperative that affordable housing developments are healthy and they are safe.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
Our outstanding concern deals with the removal of the 500 foot buffer around freeways. This buffer provides residents with much-needed protections from our ticket matter, as well as other exposures presented by freeways, and so we do look forward to continuing those conversations with the Assembly Member and her staff to identify those equitable solutions that can build on this Legislature's commitment to creating healthy and affordable housing.
- Jonathan Pruitt
Person
And again, thank you to the author for reinstating 3,200 foot setback and maintaining a key protection for environmental justice communities, and so we look forward to those continued conversations over July. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brady Guertin
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. Brady Guertin, on behalf of the League of California Cities, in respectful opposition for a couple issues. From a technical aspect, the shot clock goes from the completion of a submitted application. That's concerning because we can't control if the proponent has followed the regulations that's established.
- Brady Guertin
Person
So we're concerned that that shot clock with the deemed approved language would be concerning. From another aspect, AB 2011 just became law last year. Our cities are working diligently with HCD as well as the Attorney General's Office to find out how best to address environmental justice with the bill, with some of the changes that are proposed in 2011.
- Brady Guertin
Person
And we just feel like we're running too quickly to do again more by-right for extending the by-right to areas that were not once--were not meant for residential housing in the beginning. So we're concerned that we're moving too quickly with this and cities need more time to comply with 2011.
- Brady Guertin
Person
That said, wanted to appreciate Assembly Member Wicks's office. We've been working closely. I know we had concerns about the fee language, which was addressed, so we appreciate those conversations and look forward to continuing those over recess, should it continue. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. In opposition? Anyone? Please come forward in opposition.
- Reina Tello
Person
Hi. Good morning. My name is Reina Tello and I'm here with California Environmental Justice Alliance and PODER. We are opposed unless amended. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Reina Tello
Person
Oh, and I was also asked to do a MeToo for PSR-LA and for APEN.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Marisol Latello
Person
Hi. My name is Marisol Latello. I'm from PODER and CEJA, and I oppose unless amended to protect people like me.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Marisol Latello
Person
Thank you.
- Jessica Yu
Person
Hi. My name is Jessica Yu, and I'm with PODER and CEJA, and I strongly oppose unless amended to include all setback.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Good morning. Jennifer Ganata with Communities for a Better Environment and CEJA, registering the opposed unless amended positions of Esperanza Community Housing, Housing Equity and Advocacy Resource Team Los Angeles, and East Bay Community Law Center. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Asha Sharma
Person
Asha Sharma on behalf of Leadership Council for Justice and Accountability and the Center for Race, Poverty and the Environment, and we are opposed unless amended. Thank you.
- Tiffany Ng
Person
Good morning. Tiffany Ng, registering opposed unless amended positions for 350 Southland Legislative Alliance, 350 South Bay Los Angeles, the VISION Coalition, Stand.earth, Black Women for Wellness Action Project, and FracTracker Alliance. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Morgan Gonzalez
Person
Hi. Good morning. My name is Morgan Gonzalez. I'm with California--or I'm with CEJA and also Communities for a Better Environment, and we're in opposition until amended. Also, I'm shouting out EHC, CCAEJ as well. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Paul Gonsalves
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Members of the Committee. Paul Gonsalves, on behalf of the cities of Simi Valley, Santa Clarita, and Thousand Oaks. We'd like to echo the comments of the League, in respectful opposition. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Anya Lawler
Person
Good morning. Anya Lawler, on behalf of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation and the Public Interest Law Project. We have an opposed unless amended position on the bill. Appreciate that there are amendments forthcoming. Once we've had a chance to review those, we'll review our position as well. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Baker
Person
Good morning, Senators. Matthew Baker with Planning and Conservation League. We don't have an official position on this bill, but with great respect for the author and her work in this arena, I did need to state that we shared the concerns of our CEJA partners. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Casey Elliott
Person
Good morning. Casey Elliott, on behalf of the cities of Santa Ana, Lafayette, La Habra, and Newport Beach, with an opposed unless amended position. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Good morning. Melissa Romero, California Environmental Voters. We have an opposed unless amended position, but really appreciate the author's willingness to reinstate the oil setbacks language and pending further changes to the freeway setbacks language. After that, we'll be reconsidering. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Raquel Mason
Person
Good morning. Raquel Mason, with Standing Together Against Neighborhood Drilling, Los Angeles, in respectful opposed unless amended, but appreciative of the amendments.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Any other opposition? Okay. Seeing none. Members? Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Chair. I fully support this bill, and I want to thank the author for all of her incredible work on a lot of housing issues, including AB 2011. That was the initial bill that helped break the log jam that, the paralysis we had seen in this building around some labor standards.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I think it opened up a lot of doors for work we did last year on SB 423 and SB 4 and so on and so forth. So thank you so much for your leadership. I do just want to comment on some of these never-ending pushes to exclude more and more California geography from having housing.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I'm not criticizing in any way or--I just want to--because we dealt with this last year as well. What we see, and this is very typical of why we have a deep housing crisis in San Francisco because everyone has a laundry list of why you can't build housing, where you can't build housing, never-ending geography that should be excluded from housing, and it grows and it grows and it grows without actually advocating for more housing.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I have, you know, said this before, and I will say it again, and I know I irritate people when I do it, but I would love to see the environmental movement talk more about a pro-housing agenda. Not just 'we shouldn't build housing here,' but here are the places where we should make it super, super, super easy to do so. And there are some voices in the environmental movement who do that, and so I applaud that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
There are other voices in the environmental movement that it's just about where you're not allowed to build housing and never supporting making it easier to build housing in the other areas. And is it any wonder that we have so many people living on our streets, that we have so many low-income renters who, if they lose their apartment, they will be on the streets or out of California? Is it any wonder that working class families are getting pushed out of many parts of California?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And is it any wonder the kids can't afford to live in the communities where they grew up? Because it's all about, no, no, no. Here. This is bad. This is bad. Here's a reason here. Here's a reason there. And never yes. You know, in terms of the oil setback issue, I want to be clear.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This is not an oil setback provision. Oil setback means, what we did when we passed the oil setbacks--and I authored one of the various versions of those law, oil setback laws, before it was adopted and I support an oil setback--oil setbacks is about telling oil companies you are not allowed to drill in certain areas.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It was never about that the oil companies now get to decide where we put housing. It just completely flipped, and with this very significant buffer, which I was forced to take in SB 4 last year, we are now carved out big swaths of Los Angeles and parts of Orange County, some wealthy communities. Swaths of Huntington Beach and Beverly Hills now get carved out, wealthy areas, because they have technically a drilling site there. And so that's when we, when we start carving these big carve-outs, that's what happens.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And then on the freeway issue, that 500 foot buffer, which I have never accepted in any bill and I thank you for not accepting that, I, like you, agreed to the air filtration, which makes a lot of sense. To start saying we're not going to build within 500 feet on either side of a freeway, talk about the amount of geography that that would wipe out of a bill. So thank you for not agreeing to that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So, you know, we're not allowed to build. We have to exclude the coastal zone. We have to exclude anywhere near freeway. We have to exclude anywhere near where an oil company decides to have a drilling site. We have to exclude in certain wildfire zones. Exclude, exclude, exclude, exclude, exclude.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And it gets to the point where, where are you allowed to build? So, you know, I just want to make that statement. I will move the bill once we have a quorum, but I think we need to really zoom out and look at the big picture here. And again, thank you so much for your leadership.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you very much. And what he said, a lot of this stuff, I have the same concerns about our approach to trying to get more housing, but we have to understand the interrelationship between housing, transportation corridors, jobs, roads--all of it is interrelated.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And this approach I have concerns about, and one of the reasons I have concerns about is I--take like a regional mall. Let's talk about Hawthorne Mall. If at the end of the day, it's easier to tear all that stuff down, just don't worry about the zoning and just rebuild the housing that you want to build in these commercial areas.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
You know, the type of building construction and all of those things, eventually those things have, you know, you have safety concerns about, you know, you know, building and safety. Those--all these type of building are, all these type of housing and building requirements are different for the different types of--your commercial buildings you got.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And they're built with materials that are not necessarily adequate for a housing type of building. And so you spend more money and time trying to convert Type 1 and 2 buildings into Type 5 buildings for Type 5 use, and when you do that, you lose opportunities elsewhere to actually just build what you need with the materials that are environmentally what we want them to be.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And so we're not, you know, I feel like we're going down a path where we're spending a lot of money trying to fix a car when you should just go ahead and replace it because it costs more to, you know, more to buy all the parts and fix all the parts than it does just to buy another car.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And that's what we were doing with these buildings. A lot of these buildings are outdated as far as their construction use for today's environmental concerns, including windows, the type of cement that's being used. Remember, we want to get rid of the old type of cement because it's not environmentally friendly.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And yet we're going to continue to use these things. So when something has outlived its purpose, it's time to tear it down. And as far as putting residential into these areas that used to be zoned for commercial, that's something for the city.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And they're planning to, to make work because the transportation corridors, everything about those areas were all planned and built for that. And when you convert it, there's a lot more to converting than just putting up partitions inside, maybe trying to modify an HVAC system. That's another whole big issue, and then making it so that it's safe for people to live in if there's a fire or something like that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So to me, this is building upon something that I think there may have been some conversions of 12,000 units or something, but we have yet to see the longer term result of those and whether those are more costly than they were if we just, like I said, tear it down, build what you want in the right way, in the right place, because then you can also focus your energies on building away from the freeway.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Some areas, you're going to have a tough time doing that, you know, and because those are the more dense areas and what Senator Wiener was talking about makes a lot of sense that our problem isn't necessarily enough room. It's the process that people have to go to, you know--cities used to spring up and, you know, and build houses and meet the demand, and they just can't do that anymore.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And so it's those processes that we have to look at if we want to fix this housing problem so that we can identify, you know, the real issues about, you know, when you're trying to offset some of the impacts from building and things versus this--it's a barrier of regulations and all of these other things that we make.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
This is a self-made problem, we've created it, and yet we won't get rid of the things that we created that are making housing cost so dang much. And now we are caught in our own web, and that's what I feel like. It's like all of these things that we've talked about in the last three years that I've been here and long before I was here, we're now caught in that web and we can't get out. And we're going to have to try to do something different and I don't know that this is it.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I just comment to the author. There was one that you didn't. Specific amendment that you didn't specifically mention. I just want to make sure it's restoring the existing law regarding inclusionary housing ordinances.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah. Yes, we're accepting amendment.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Sorry.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yes.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Just want to make sure with that. I do just want to make a couple of comments based on what my colleagues have said. I understand we all have the frustration of not building enough housing fast enough. There's no doubt about it.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
But it also comes at a time when there are communities, poor communities, communities of color, who over the decades were ignored when it came to deciding where to build. And I think it's important that as we move towards a more deliberate. Okay.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Planning for where we're going to, you know, that we need this much housing, that issues that affect those poor communities and communities of color also be taken into consideration. So the frustration of, you know, my colleague said, don't build here. No, no, no, no. There are many good reasons why that's done.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We just have to figure out when those. And how to integrate those concerns, that environmental issues that come up. I have five freeways in my district. I don't know of any other district in the state that has that many. So these may be unique to certain areas, but they're very important to certain areas.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
So I think it's our job to try and figure out how do we integrate and give it the right balance. So with that, I think there's no more comments. No. Okay. I think five free re. I'm sorry. zero, I'm sorry. We're going to take the. Do a roll call for the quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
So we have a motion by Senator Wiener. Do passes closing remarks.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Well, I appreciate the comments. I appreciate both the support and opposition. I, too, have a lot of freeways in my district. It is California. I think many of us do. Oh, my golf swings good, too.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I genuinely welcome opposition, the environmental community, to the conversation around developing a pro housing agenda, because I think that benefits all of us. And we've had ongoing conversations. I've committed to having continued ongoing conversations. I want to land this in a place that works for everyone.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I'm dead said, dead set, committed on ensuring that we are building the housing that we need for all of our communities. So with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, madam.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass this amendment to the Committee on appropriation. [Roll Call].
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Are we going to hold that open? Yes. Yes, we'll hold that open for more votes. Okay, now. Okay, now, Assembly Member Wicks, we're going to hear on AB 1893.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members, I'm here to present AB 1893, a Bill to modernize builders remedy.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The builder's remedy is part of housing element law that says that if a city or county does not have a compliant housing element, then local zoning does not apply and a developer can propose a project that can be any size, anywhere in the jurisdiction.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The goal of builders remedy is to compel cities and counties to complete their housing element. Why is this the goal? Because we have a massive housing crisis, and the only way we're climbing out of it is if every city and county does their part by adopting and implementing the housing element, is how we do that.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Unfortunately, one in three jurisdictions are out of compliance with housing element law. Those jurisdictions are essentially saying that solving the housing crisis is not their problem.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Theoretically, this wouldn't be a problem because in non compliant cities and counties, we'd be seeing lots of builders remedy projects that result in lots of housing, so that ignoring state law did not mean an end to housing production. Unfortunately, the builder's Normie has not functioned in that way.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
One of the reasons is that the existing law is legally murky, adding a level of risk that turns off risk adverse developers and those that can't afford to litigate.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The law also includes an affordability requirement of 20%, which sounds noble and lofty, but actually makes most housing projects economically infeasible, even if the occasional project is able to pencil. And also, cities still have at their disposal a myriad of tools to thwart projects they dislike, even if they are code compliant.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
That's why, while there are now at least 100 builders remedies projects proposed in the state, we don't have a single unit built from a builder's remedy project. We have a lot of discussion about builders remedy projects.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
There's often talk of this on the twitterverse, but builders remedy projects have not actually resulted, to my knowledge, in a single family having a roof over their head. The result is that there are effectively no consequences for cities and counties that ignore housing element law, which is why we need to modernize this law.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Working with our sponsor, Attorney General Robanta, we have crafted a Bill that removes any ambiguity about where the builder's remedy would apply how much density would be allowed and what objective standards would apply. It also enhances feasibility by reducing the affordability requirement to something that does not render projects infeasible.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The aim is to create a self enforcing mechanism that facilitates a substantial amount of housing in those cities that have not complied with state housing element law.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
This Bill is about striking a balance in the face of existing law that is quite marquee and doing so proactively, instead of waiting for the courts to make the case, which could not only take five to 10 years, but whose outcome is completely unpredictable.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
To strike that balance, we've had to take actions that that the cities like but upset some of our pro housing friends, like putting a density maximum on build or so many projects.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
We've also had to do some things that cities don't like that our pro housing friends do like, which is to remove the ability for jurisdictions to effectively deny projects by sitting on them in perpetuity.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
The result is a Bill that has a broad and unusual coalition that spans from the inner city Law center, which represents pro Bono, the homeless on skid row, CBIA, Habitat for Humanity, affordable housing developers, California, YIMBY and others.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Everyone in that group has given up something for what they see as a greater good, which is more adoption of local housing element and more approval of housing when cities and counties fail to adopt them. And the delicate balance is the reason that I am unable to, unfortunately accept the proposed Committee amendments today.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Unfortunately, the proposed amendments tip the balance far in the favor of the jurisdictions that do not have existing housing element, giving them a range of tools to neutralize builder's nominee projects.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And while we've had very fruitful and long and deliberate conversations both with the chair and the staff, ones that I'm eager to continue should this Bill move out of Committee, I felt that the amendments undermine the Bill too substantially, unfortunately, and I don't take this lightly.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
As you know, Madam Chair, I have the utmost respect for you and your team, and I know you've worked decades on a lot of these issues, but we went back and forth on this, trying to figure out if we can land this, if this Bill gets out of community. I'm committed to continuing those conversations with you.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I'd like to figure out a way that we can do that. But the amendments currently is written. Unfortunately, I can't take them. My belief is that the best way for cities to compel with their housing element, the best way for cities to complete their housing element is to do it or face the consequence which is more housing.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I have my witnesses here to testify in support. I'll let them self introduce to when the time is right, would respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. And so we'll have two at two minutes each or.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, two minutes each. We have Alex Fish from the Attorney General's Office who will be here for technical assistance. Okay. Okay. Thank you. Go ahead.
- Jana Staniford
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Madam Chair and Committee Members. My name is Jana Staniford. I'm a Legislative Advocate for Attorney General Rob Bonta. On behalf of the Attorney General, I want to start by thanking assemblymember Wicks for her leadership and for authoring this important Bill.
- Jana Staniford
Person
The builders remedy in the Housing Accountability act has been on the book since 1990. It says that if a local government doesn't have a compliant housing element, then it cannot disapprove a moderate or mixed income project, even if it's inconsistent with zoning or the local land use designation.
- Jana Staniford
Person
It's a consequence when local governments refuse to plan for the needs of their residents. The Legislature's intent in existing law is clear. The Housing Accountability act should, quote, be interpreted and implemented in a manner to afford the fullest possible weight to the interest of and the approval and provision of housing.
- Jana Staniford
Person
So the purpose of the builder's remedy is twofold. It was intended to serve as a compliance tool to encourage local governments to complete their housing elements, and it provides a path for housing development even when local governments fail to do so. Unfortunately, right now the builder's remedy isn't working as intended.
- Jana Staniford
Person
175 jurisdictions still don't have a compliant housing element one to three years past the deadline, and since 1990, the builder's remedy has not resulted in one project being built. Despite reports that over 150 builder's remedy projects have been had applications submitted, not one of those projects has been entitled or built to date.
- Jana Staniford
Person
Instead, the lack of clarity in the existing builder's remedy statute has led to local disputes and litigation. Our investigation revealed that local governments are employing a variety of tactics to delay or block builder's remedy projects from moving forward. These delays and effective denials of project applications have largely avoided consequence. By stopping short of a vote.
- Jana Staniford
Person
This has delayed or even prevented housing projects from being built, significantly increased the cost to develop new housing, and likely deterred some builders from submitting applications at all, especially smaller builders that can't afford to litigate. AB 1893 would respond to these issues.
- Jana Staniford
Person
Close loopholes, provide clarity for developers, city planners and courts, and unlock additional opportunities to build housing to meet the needs of hard working Californians. We respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Good morning, honorable chair and Members. My name is Matthew Manji and I'm with inner city Law center. We're the only pro Bono legal services provider based in skid Row in Los Angeles, and we serve folks who are homeless and at risk of homelessness throughout La County.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
The Reno process was created to ensure that every jurisdiction builds housing for residents at all income levels in every city, neighborhood and community in California. Working people drive the local economy, ensuring the stores are operated, mail is delivered, and the food and food is grown, cooked and served.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Working people are the heart and soul of our economy and our communities. But unfortunately, many communities have ignored their obligations to build housing for their community Members, especially housing for Low income families. AB 1893 ensures that no community can say no to affordable housing and to mixed income housing.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
In Los Angeles County, some of the wealthiest cities, including South Pasadena, San Marino, La Habra Heights and Palos Verdes estates, have refused to do the bare minimum, not to build affordable housing, but to plan for it.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
California has made it our top priority to acquire every city to build its fair share of affordable housing, and the builder's remedy process allows developers to propose affordable and mixed income projects if cities do not come into compliance. But so far, every project has faced lawsuits, and rising building costs have made projects infeasible.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
If the builder's remedy is not a real option, there is no consequence for cities to break the law and refuse to come into compliance. When South Pasadena and Alhambra, both in noncompliance, refused to allow affordable and mixed income housing. This drive displacement and gentrification in East Los Angeles and Highland park.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
We cannot allow the status quo to continue. AB 1893 proposes affordability requirements at feasible levels while creating rules and standards for builder's remedy projects. AB 1893 ensures that high income communities can no longer say no to housing, placing the burden solely on Low income communities.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
If housing law, element law is to be enforced, the builder's remedy must be clear and mixed income projects must make economic sense. For the first time in this decade, homelessness fell in Los Angeles County this year. This is only possible because we built affordable housing in the City of La.
- Mahdi Manji
Person
Every city, every neighboring city must do their fair share, and AB 1893 will ensure that. Thank you very much and thank somebody who works for her leadership and thanks to her community Members.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, we're moving on now to others in support of AB 1893.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Marina Espinoza with the California Housing Consortium in support. Holly for many days due to lighthouse public affairs on behalf of Civicwell Spur build, Casa Field, Ted and company Sandhill properties and Habitat for Humanity California and support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Darlene Dupree, on behalf of the Association of Regional Center Agency in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jordan Curley
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. Jordan Curley, on behalf of California. YIMBY and strong support. Thank you so much.
- Donita Stromgren
Person
Danita Stromgren, volunteer with California AARP on behalf of our 3.2 million Members in California, in support. Thank you.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Cassie Gilson with Acxiom advisors, on behalf of the California Building Industry Association and support. Thank you.
- Leslie Rodriguez
Person
Leslie Rodriguez, on behalf of Housing Trust, Silicon Valley, in support. Thank you. Corey Smith, housing Action Coalition, in support. Matthew Harger with the California Business Properties Association in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Any others in support? Okay, seeing none for opposition, I understand we have two witnesses who requested to testify. Arthur Wylene, General counsel for Rural County Representatives of California, and Mike Rossin, public interest law project. Hold on to. Okay, go ahead. Oh, there we go. Thank you. I'll just go ahead and go ahead and jump in.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
So Arthur Wileen, General counsel for rural counties and formerly the county council for Tehama County, in respectful opposition to the Bill in its current form, I will say we do conceptually very much agree with the author and sponsors that the builder's remedy requires reform and clarification.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
In its current form, the builder's remedy is basically a negative implication in the Housing Accountability act. And when it does apply, which is unclear, the scope of objective standards that can apply under what circumstances and with what limitations are also unclear. There definitely needs to be some reform in this area.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
The builder's remedy, to be effective for its intended purposes needs to be clear. It needs to be administrable, and it needs to strike the right balance with the state's other very important public policies, some of which have been mentioned earlier here today, ensuring adequacy of public services, affordability and things of that nature.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
Unfortunately, with great respect to the author and sponsors, AB 1893 in its current form does not do this. There are multiple points in the Bill of unclarity that will make it very difficult to administer. To give just one example, I think there's a lot of them that are mentioned, I think, very well in the Committee analysis.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
Although such projects are ostensibly required to comply with objective standards, no combination of those standards can preclude the project from being constructed as proposed by the developer. Most standards that I've worked with imply some limitation on the whims of the applicant. How do we make that work?
- Arthur Wileen
Person
That's kind of, sort of, that's what we're sort of our major concern with the Bill. Also. This Bill does, and I think is intended to, and this is really the policy issue, does reduce some of California's other public policies.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
It certainly reduces local inclusionary housing requirements, but also very much reduces the incentives to use some of state law's other tools, including the density bonus law.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
Moreover, the Bill has a new standard for denial of a project that I think if you just read it, unjustified delay, from which a reasonable person could conclude that the project was effectively denied, clearly shows a level of subjectivity that is certainly going to generate litigation. But I'm not sure it's actually going to generate housing.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
We had a very similar issue that we worked on last year with Assembly Bill 1633 that dealt with a very similar issue of unjustified CEQA delayed there as here. We as local governments recognize that bad faith, unjustified delay, which I'm sure does happen in the state, that's not a good thing. That should not be encouraged.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
That should be discouraged and prohibited. Yes, ma'am. But we spent close to two years working with a lot of stakeholders, working very hard in support of that effort, and came up with a very nuanced and balanced compromise. We did say yes to housing.
- Arthur Wileen
Person
We did say yes to that Bill, and we would very much like to work with the author and sponsors over the interim to come up with something that really will accomplish the goal. Respectful opposition to the Bill in print. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. Mister Rossin?
- Michael Rossin
Person
Yes, I'm Michael Rossin. I'm the Director of litigation and advocacy at the Public Interest Law Project. It's a state support Center for local legal services and other public interest law programs in California. We have been working for housing element compliance and enforcement for 25 years, and there's been substantial increase in compliance over the years.
- Michael Rossin
Person
I note that two thirds of the cities in California are already in compliance with the 6th cycle. So we're not in a case where everybody is thumbing their noes at the housing element law.
- Michael Rossin
Person
Currently, I'm co counseling with the AG's office on the knockdown and drag out suit against the City of Huntington Beach, who steadfastly refused to adopt a housing element. So we worked together with the proponents of this Bill and the opponents to the Bill.
- Michael Rossin
Person
I'm here partly because I co drafted in 1990 the original HHA amendments that created the builder's remedy. And at that time, and that was Leroy Greene's SB 2011. At that time, the purpose of that Bill was to open the door for affordable housing developers to in nibby communities that had erected barriers against producing affordable housing.
- Michael Rossin
Person
That's why the 20% affordability requirement was in there, to make sure that that path was open for affordable housing development. There was, as you know, the affordable housing developers have fewer resources than the market developers, and there needed to be a way for them to overcome the extreme resistance to affordable housing development.
- Michael Rossin
Person
Affordable housing development is something that's much harder to get approved in communities than market rate development. Although I agree there's a lot of resistance to market rate development these days.
- Michael Rossin
Person
Second point I would like to make is that, and I concur with the opposition points that were, that were just made, is that what this Bill does is okay.
- Michael Rossin
Person
This Bill upends the inclusionary zoning laws of over 170 communities in California because what it says is that if you're going to do a builder's remedy project, you can't apply your inclusionary zoning law to that project unless you show that the project would be infeasible, unless you show that it would be feasible, you can't apply your inclusionary zoning.
- Michael Rossin
Person
That would require every community that gets a builder's remedy program to hire an expert and do that analysis. So I respectfully oppose and if, unless amended and happy to work with the author to amend going forward.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We want to open this up now to others in opposition, please come forward.
- Ethan Naegler
Person
Ethan Naegler, on behalf of the city. Of Rancho Palos Verdes and respectful opposition.
- Rafa Sonnenfeld
Person
Rafa Sonnenfeld with YMB action and YMB law, we have an opposed unless amended position. Appreciate some of the amendments that were taken recently and would like to continue working with the author to get to. Neutral or support the Bill. Thank you.
- Matthew Baker
Person
Good morning again. Chair and Senators Matthew Baker, with Planning Conservation, again with with great respect to. The author for her leadership on these issues. We remain opposed unless amended.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee, Jeremy Smith here on behalf of the State Building and Construction Trades Council, respectfully opposed. Thank you.
- Brian Augusta
Person
Good morning. Chair and Members Brian Augusta, on behalf of the California Rural Legal Assistance foundation, the California Coalition for Rural Housing, National Housing Law Project, Public Advocates and the 40 other organizations who have supported our letter submitted to the Committee in respectful opposition unless amended to this Bill.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Good morning. Chairman, Members Brady Grin, on behalf of the League of California Cities in a respectful, opposing list, amended position. Thank you. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good morning. On behalf of the Marin County Council of Mayors and council Members, in respectful opposition to the Bill.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Phoebe Seaton
Person
Phoebe Setonwood, leadership Council for justice and Accountability and Leadership Council action in respectful opposed and less amended position. Thanks so much.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Asha Sharma
Person
Asha Sharma, on behalf of the center. For race, poverty and the environment, with an opposed and less amended position. Thank you. Thank you.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Jennifer Ganado, communities for a better environment. Registering respectfully and opposed unless amended. Thank you. Thank you.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Good morning. Sylvia Soli Shaw here on behalf of the City of West Hollywood. We are unfortunately in an opposed unless amended position. I'm also here on behalf of the City of Beverly Hills, also with an opposed position. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay. Bring it up. Any more in opposition? Okay. Seeing none, we have our Members at the dais. Anybody? Senator Wiener?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Senator, some of us are like moths to the flame, and you are definitely the moth of the flame on this one, and I really commend you for taking this on. Builders remedy, of course, was sort of a dead letter for a long time.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This thing that had been in California law for decades, and just most people didn't even know about it. And the reason people know about it now and why it's become this contentious debate and why leading to this Bill is because we finally, over the last, you know68 years, put teeth into our state housing planning requirements.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We actually created RHNA numbers that were not a joke, and RhNA was just a joke for a long time in terms of the Low numbers that cities were receiving. And we changed that. And we actually, and then we said, you know, housing element has meaning. You actually have to do a housing element.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's not just a piece of paper, paper that collects dust on the shelf and we put teeth into it. And that's a powerful thing. And it's created tension, but it's healthy, long overdue tension during this transition period. And so now builder's remedy has meaning because of the changes in the law that we've made.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I know that this has been a tough one for a lot of us because I have, in terms of the coalitions that I work with in the pro housing world, the people who all agree that we need a lot more housing, there's disagreement within that coalition. And so it's a tough one.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I know it's been challenging for you as well. And I just want to say to my friends on both sides of this issue, we'll figure it out. It's all going to be, it's all going to be good. And I do think that there is, you know, the current builder's remedy is a very chaotic thing.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It was not a well constructed law. It creates a lot of chaos and uncertainty. There are some who believe that that chaos and uncertainty is a good thing because it creates a stronger incentive for cities to actually get it together and follow the rules.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
On the other hand, as you've noted, it's nothing leading to some explosion of new housing or really much housing or any housing at all. And so I think there is a really good argument to really strengthen the law, which you're doing here. And so I really do commend you for that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. So this one, I'm really kind of torn on. On one hand, probably the worst way to get me to agree with or disagree with the bill is to start attacking cities and making it sound like it is all their fault and it's all the fault of the people that live there that don't want these things going on.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I have watched cities evolve, new cities that have gone through building phases and trying to do their update their housing elements and their General plans and all of those things.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And when they finally get done with one, a year later, a new law comes into place and they have to go out, fine, $2 million to go redo all of their general plan, their housing and all that. So there's a process that has created a lot of angst with cities.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And yes, on the other hand, there are people that absolutely want to keep their community at a certain building level of income and all of that, and that is equally as wrong.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So I'm looking at, from the perspective of some of the cities I represent, including the city I live in and all of the things that I've been hearing anti this and anti that on cities, somebody better get down to my area and look and see what's getting built there, because there's a lot of stuff getting built.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
The reason it's getting built now and not eight years ago is not the city's fault. I was there when we had an affordable housing project in 2016. It was a good project. And the back and forth between HCD and all the other different housing agencies and the funding agencies and all of that, they are finally grading.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Eight years later, they're grading. So there's a process in there where cities are trying like hell to build and get what they're supposed to be doing. But there's also the other part which we've created that is impossible to get through. Cities don't have control over builder financing. Cities don't have control over HCD.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Fighting with cities over definitions and whether they're going back and forth trying to get a housing element that they just got done, done again. So it's like everybody needs to work together, stop blaming each other. I mean, our, like, HCD and other agencies that work with cities, they have to remember customer service cities are their customers, too.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They're not there to just come out and wield a hammer and beat them over the head because that's not going to accomplish anything. And in fact, some of this stuff is going to have a backlash to it because some of the stuff that is getting built right now people are looking at those and thinking, oh my God.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And if I were, I wouldn't want to rent one of those because they look horrible. Who wants to go and live in something that looks terrible? So that's why cities need the ability to be able to have some say in how something looks.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But a lot of the laws, we want the builder's remedy, and all these, these are just cramming those things in. And they're, and some of them are hideous looking, and they're in hideous locations right next to a freeway, right next to a busy street, no parking.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All of those things are coming to pass now, and you're going to get a bigger backlash from communities because there's no way for them to mitigate those things. So, you know, this is law. This, you know, the builder's remedy is law, and it does need fixed.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And so I'm kind of willing to try and keep this moving so you can continue to work on that. But for Pete's sake, you got to get off this anti city nonsense because I was there, and I'm not. I wasn't there as a city member. I was, I was on the City Council for sure.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I wasn't there as an advocate for the city, but I got to watch the process and how frustrating it is. And now we're listening to this, this nonsense about the city's this and the city's that, and they're just trying to help communities be great communities for everyone to live in.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And if everybody would cooperate, we could get there. And this is going to have to be hashed out somewhere, somehow so that we can find that sweet spot where they have enough incentive to do it, but also the ability to do it.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And the last thing I'm going to say on this subject matter, in California, there is no such thing as affordable housing to be built. There is no way to build an affordable house. The only thing we can do is subsidize whatever it costs to build to bring the price down somehow for a while.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So that's, you know, for me, that's the frustration of this. And I think you can tell that in my voice. For all of these years, I've been listening to this and watching this and working with cities and trying to find what, you know, where is the sweet spot? And we can't find it. So I appreciate your efforts.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
It seems a little bit of heavy handedness, but I think it needs to be worked on a little more, and I'm willing to let it go in order to continue to work on it so that we can get something that really does work.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you. Would you mind if I respond, Madam Chair, to that? Or I can also take other questions. Sure.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you. Madam Chair, as is noted on our materials, the Housing Committee, which I chair, supported this bill, and I voted yes.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And our, if I take the issue of the affordable housing, which, of course, was a concern for our Committee as to whether we would allow for a modification on the affordable housing issue, but when we looked at all the data and the fact that even with our strengthened Housing Accountability Act, and there have many laws that have strengthened it, including my SB 330, and I'm going to forget the other one, I think it was SB 167, but I can't remember.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So don't hold me on bill numbers. And then the combination of HCD's willingness to enforce the RHNA, it has, of course, raised the specter of builder's remedy. However, even with the strengthening of the Housing Accountability Act and the number of local governments that are not in compliance, we've not yet seen a project built under builder's remedy.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So now, look, on the one hand, it would be great if there was never a project built under builder's remedy. It would be great if our cities would just come into compliance. I'm not trying to attack city, Senator Seyarto. I'm just being clear that we wouldn't have to have these enforcements if they would come into compliance.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
However, if they don't, then the builder's remedy is a remedy, and it was in law well before it was put into law. I can't even remember the exact year. It was the late sixties, I believe. It's been a minute. Anyway, it's been a long time, decades. And yet we've not seen.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So if I'm now speaking just from the affordable housing point of view, if our commitment is to ensure that we achieve some affordable housing, if a builder's remedy project is built, then what the conclusion of the Housing Committee was is that we were open to the change in the requirement because we've not yet.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Our goal is to get affordable housing and we've not achieved it. And if we insist on a certain number, it doesn't necessarily mean that we're going to get that which we want.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So our conclusion in the Housing Committee was that the changes, while, yes, on the face of it, look somehow like we are hurting affordable housing, in fact, might result in our achieving it. If any builder's remedies, projects go through.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And the other changes in the bill, we felt would make it more likely that a builder's project remedy project got built, and I can certainly appreciate some people and some of the opposition just doesn't like builder's remedy, period. But it is not before us to eliminate that aspect of the housing accountability law.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
What's before us is whether we modify it or not. And it was the Housing Committee's conclusion that the modifications that were in the bill were appropriate in order to have the remedy on our housing accountability law be functional and work. There was an assertion that this overrode, what's the word? Inclusionary housing.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But anyway, I don't know if you want to address that author.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I would actually ask Mr. Fish if you want to respond to that.
- Alex Fisch
Person
Sure. Thank you, Senator. That is exactly the logic of the bill that we're trying to actually get the affordable housing or subsidized housing, if you will.
- Alex Fisch
Person
And the local inclusionary is an interesting issue because just in the opposition letters you can see the divergence of opinions all the way from one group submitted a letter saying that we were foolishly introducing local inclusionary into the builder's remedy and it doesn't exist under current law to we were destroying local inclusionary, which of course is preserved under existing law.
- Alex Fisch
Person
So those are obviously diametrically opposite opinions. That's the sort of thing that would get resolved in court over a number of years and we wouldn't know until a court of appeal decision. And everybody can this is the type legal ambiguity of these stakes. Everybody can put their dreams onto what the meaning is of the law.
- Alex Fisch
Person
Courts are going to do what they're going to do. So we tried to strike a balance in many areas of this text. You'll see that. And local inclusionary is a good example where we said we will allow local entities to use their local inclusionary programs if they're able to demonstrate the project is feasible.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Just since we're on that subject, Mr. Rawson, can you were around when this first got started.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I think one of the things that's misunderstood people have said. Some of the witnesses said there haven't been any builder's remedy projects approved. That's not true. But you have to understand what a builder's remedy project is, especially when it was for affordable housing developers or developers that were willing to provide 20%.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The nonprofit developer goes in, makes a proposal for an affordable housing project and the NIMBYs come out and they turn it down and they don't have a housing element that's in compliance. They also don't have a good health and safety reason as to why to turn it down.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And we call them up on the phone and we talk to the city attorney and we say, you know, you're going to get sued if you don't do this, and that's going to cost you even more money. So you should follow the law.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And most of the time, the city attorneys, they didn't know from the Housing Accountability Act. They read it and then the project was approved. That's a builder's remedy project. And there have been many, many of those approved by nonprofit developers over the course of almost 30 years of this law.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So I think you need to understand that, too, that this has opened the door for affordable housing developers to get over the NIMBY opposition that occurs in some communities, not all communities, but in some communities occurs.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Wasn't that the case in Santa Monica? There was 16.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Are we talking about the recent builder's remedy projects? Yeah, there were 16 proposed and they resisted and they went into, but they looked at the law and they said, well, we're probably going to have to approve these. So they sat down and negotiated and came to various decisions about each one. I'm not sure what those were.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
They were settled. Yeah. Yeah. Yes. The author wanted to respond.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, I was just gonna, there was sort of a lot of comment here. I don't know if I'm also happy to. I don't know if anyone else wants to speak. I can kind of wrap.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I'm sorry. I'm sorry I went to you. Yes, Senator Dahle?
- Brian Dahle
Person
Well, I just, first of all, thank you for bringing a difficult bill, I believe, and, but I want, I just want to shed some light on maybe just the process and years of being at the local level, doing general plans and trying to do the right thing.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I've said I'm kind of along the same lines as Senator Seyarto, that first of all, cities don't build houses, developers build houses. And we've seen the evolution of people that profit, that build houses to try to make a profit.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And we've seen now nonprofits, a lot of nonprofits, folks in the marketplace, because we're trying to manipulate what kind of housing we get out there. And I agree with the statement that there are no affordable houses in California, period. I don't care if you call it affordable. It's not affordable.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And it's unfortunate because it's difficult for those folks who are in that category, and those are my children, and they have no dream of ever owning a home in California because it is very hard to attain that. Now, in my district, this is the largest district in the state geographically.
- Brian Dahle
Person
The reason we're there we like open spaces, but the folks. So this is a battle more in areas that you all represent. And I can't imagine dealing with the frustrations that you all deal with. But I am also a Senator that represents my district and also represents the whole State of California.
- Brian Dahle
Person
We get to weigh in on these issues, and what happens in other areas will eventually come to my areas and parts of my area. I'm going to be supporting your bill today, and I think it does maybe need a little bit more work.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But I just want to say that somehow we have to get to the point where we're not having attorneys duel back and forth about what laws do what, because at the end of the day, we still need to drive the cost of housing down, truly drive it down.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And the only way you can do that is focus on some of the other policies, not what a city or county is doing for their housing element, but our green building standards, our cost of energy, our cost of producing materials that build houses in California.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I mean, we talk about, you know, it takes concrete, and our concrete is so much higher than everywhere else. Our labor is so much higher. Everything is higher in California because of regulations, and many factors play into it.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And we work around the edges on bills like this to try to get somebody to a place where they can actually build a house. And then on top of that, we have folks who don't want to have anything happen in their communities. They vote. They'll tell their representative, yeah, go pass all these policies.
- Brian Dahle
Person
But when you come to. When it comes down to their community, they push back. They don't want any neighbors or they don't. They don't want to change their community for the people that actually work in their community. Now, I have Truckee. I represent the City of Truckee and Tahoe, where the billionaires are kicking out the millionaires.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Literally. It's bizarre. And they don't care. The billionaires don't care. They're gonna have their space. But the people that serve them live in Reno, Nevada, and have to commute every day up to Truckee to try to serve their needs.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And I've been working on those issues to try to get those folks to be able to live in their community. Actually, Truckee used to be a little logging town, and that's where all those people that worked in the ski resorts lived. And now it's turned into a place where you can't afford either.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I'm going to support your bill because I think we need to have these conversations where we actually make it available for those folks that serve those wealthy folks, have a place to be in part of that community as well, and not have to live someplace a long way and a way to serve them.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And so, for those reasons, I'll be supporting bill. I hope that we can get to a place where, and I know that all cities aren't here. Some of them have. Have done their job very well, and this has been an opportunity, I think, for some to push back.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And so I'll be supporting your bill today, hopefully, for the fact that we can get those people who actually work and are on those working wages in our communities. And I think this bill will actually help us get there. So, thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Did you want to.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I just wanted to. On the Santa Monica example, and of course there were a couple, but our Housing Committee analysis of this bill cited the Santa Monica example. I don't know if it's exactly the same one, but in that negotiation, Santa Monica reduced the affordability requirement.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So that was the result of okaying the project to reduce the affordability requirement.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Okay. I have one more question for Mr. Rossin. The issue of inclusion. Could you explain that a little bit more?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sure. So right now, the bill says that if you propose a builder's remedy project by one of the percentages that's in the current version of the bill. Yeah, I just turned off my mic. You have to apply the inclusionary percentage if it's a greater percentage, but you can only apply that inclusionary percentage if it's a greater percentage.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
If you do study, if you can make a finding that by putting that greater percentage on the builder's learning project, putting that percentage on the builder's learning project is feasible, or putting that percentage on the builder's learning project will not render it infeasible. You have to do that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And so every community in which a builder's remedy project is proposed would have to go through that process in order to propose their inclusionary zoning requirement.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And in Santa Monica, with 16 builder's remedies projects, they would have had to look at each project individually and come up with an analysis that said whether or not the inclusion area in Santa Monica was feasible or not feasible, it's just not workable.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The state. What do you mean it's not workable?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, especially with regards to the right now, the state, first of all, the State of California requires that when you do your housing, if you have an inclusionary zoning ordinance and over 170 communities do, if you have that, you have to put in your housing element an analysis that shows that your inclusionary zoning ordinance, including the percentage, does not create a constraint to develop.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
You already have to do that in your housing element. I know we're talking about cities that haven't done their housing, but there are other remedies that the state has as well.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The state can require that any community that has a 15% requirement or higher inclusionary requirement, the state can require that they do a study over the whole city to see whether a 15% inclusionary requirement is feasible.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The last thing, all inclusionary ordinances have a provision in them that says if a developer doesn't believe or thinks that they can't make a fair return on their investment by providing that percentage of inclusionary, they can go to the city and say, you're not allowing me to get a fair return on investment.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Can I get my inclusionary reduced? And all ordinances, all the inclusionary ordinances in California that I've seen have that provision in them. And the city can say if the developer makes the case, they can reduce the percentage that's already there. So we don't need this now, especially if it has to be on every single builder's remedy project.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It's going to really, cities can't afford that, and so they will not apply their inclusionary law, which they've already looked at and decided that's what has to happen in their community in order to go forward and grow. We need to include affordable housing.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We're not doing what we need to do for communities of minority, communities of color that have not been able to afford to stay in our cities.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Weiling.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Certainly. Thank you. And I would like to point out on the issue of feasibility. One of the provisions in this bill essentially puts the burden on the local government to prove that its objective standards, again, not subjective standards. Objective standards applicable to an appropriate zone as defined in the bill, are feasible.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I think one, even with an expert, that would be incredibly difficult. Difficult to affirmatively prove that feasibility has an economic element. And without access to the developers' finances, without access to a lot of information that we often don't have, even with an expert, that would be extremely difficult to do.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
To the point made, allowing the developer to demonstrate infeasibility makes a lot of sense. They have access to that information and within the policy that the builder's remedy, that is an existing law and that we don't challenge within the policy, there is something to be said for offering them that opportunity.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Flipping the burden around, functionally is going to make it very, very difficult to enforce any objective standards, even the ones that this bill, one allows and that two don't physically preclude doing whatever it was the builder proposed. So I think that that's, again, another one of those sort of ambiguities. How's it going to work in practice?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
How is it going to be administrable? That certainly affects inclusionary issues, but also affects the basic imposition of any form of standards. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, I would like to hear just quickly from Mr. Smith, if you could add anything on labor. I know you came in late.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
Thank you. Madam Chair, Jeremy Smith here again, on behalf of the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California. I think our concerns with the bill, as we discussed with Mr. Fisch from the Attorney General's Office, we appreciate those conversations, is around this idea of disapprovals under the Housing Accountability Act.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
We read the bill now as allowing developers to challenge any permitting, environmental mitigation, or public health analysis, which they consider, quote, burdensome, as an illegal disapproval, even when those agency actions may be necessary to address environmental and public health concerns. We fear this could undermine the entire CEQA and land use process.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
I don't think that's the author's intent, but that's how we read the bill in its current form in print. And we think this is going to undermine those processes by encouraging local governments to approve housing projects just to avoid litigation with potential negative consequences for the environment, environmental justice, and other stakeholders in the development process.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
So our concerns are around that kind of definition of disapproval and how that would be dealt with in the Housing Accountability Act.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Great. Thank you. Thank you for the time. I think we go back to the author if you want to. Sure, wrap it up.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Thank you for the conversation. There's been a lot. My hope is that we never have to use builder's remedy, that this law will not apply to anyone. Because as Mr. Seyarto said, we've worked with our cities to make it easier for them to work with HCD to have a more seamless process.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I'm committed to working with you on that because I do hear that from some of my cities as well.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I do think we have a lot of cities out there who are doing, who are doing the right thing, who are, you know, compliant with housing element, who want to build, who are zoning the right way, who are doing everything they can.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Sorry to interrupt you for just a second. I just want to make sure I wasn't. I need to make my comments and then you wrap up, or if you want to.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yes, I just wanted to respond to Mr. Seyarto.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, finish that and then I'll make some comments. Thank you.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
So my hope is that we can, you know, this bill is about creating clarity around the law. We do have a lot of legal ambiguity. I do think there's work that needs to be done with regard to HCD and how our local governments access and have relationship with our state agencies.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
So I certainly would continue to work with you on that. It's definitely a complicated bill. And to Senator Skinner's point, there's been, and the conversation around inclusionary. There's been a lot of conversation around that.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And you've seen even cities reducing their inclusionary rate, because in the end of the day, we want to make sure that these projects pencil out or else they're not going to be feasible. So, again, that's something else.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I'm happy to continue to working with the Senator and others on around the inclusionary rate, but I'm happy to also hear out your questions and then provide a close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. Well, everyone knows that you're a fighter for housing Assemblymembers, so I want to acknowledge that, and we all want to do much more. Everybody here talked about either their own situation, their own district, district, about how we need more housing.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We need more affordable housing, in my opinion, because that's what's keeping people out of finding a home or buying a home or just paying the rent. So we need more affordable housing. And it's, you know, we have been working, we've been talking the last couple of days. I can't support the bill in its current form.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
It's a huge lift. It's major changes, many moving pieces, and to assess, we've had a difficult time to try to assess the impacts of the entire bill. There are parts of it. Some of them were mentioned by our pro and con witnesses. But this disapproval process will really expose local governments to litigation.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The objective standards, you know, keeps blocks local governments from imposing all kinds of things that we in the Legislature have asked the locals to develop policies on. We've asked locals to develop policies on climate adaptation, fire hazards, flooding, electrification, open space, labor requirements. We've done that. And so this blocks governments from being able to do that.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Affordability lowers affordability. So there are some very key things here that are being disrupted. The Legislature worked hard to make sure that we can quickly approve CEQA documents and exemptions for housing projects. I'm also not comfortable with the way, again, the objective standards.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
So in many cases in this building, we've told the government, again, work hard, address these issues, and this bill would prevent local agencies from imposing the requirements that we expect of this so our greatest need in this state is housing, in my opinion, is housing for the lowest income individuals.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And this bill shifts from that focus, in my opinion. We tried, we've had some communications. We've had some, and I thought yesterday we were ready to go. You felt the amendments were unworkable. But we've been working hard on this. We've made suggestions since, for a week now.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And, you know, to me, the message is that, you know, unless you have the whole thing as is that you're unwilling to take amendments. And we tried really hard and you worked with your staff not to get any amendments from this and to be left with only the bill, I think, is not a good idea.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I think it really, again, for all these issues that we've been talking about. So I would be voting no on it.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
No. Okay. Thank you, Madam Chair. I appreciate your, your position, and as I mentioned, have enormous amount of respect for the work you do. And I also agree with you on the need for affordable housing for our lowest income communities. I also think we need housing for folks at all income levels.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
This has been a really tough bill, as I mentioned, with a pretty complicated coalition, which has been mentioned by other colleagues as well. I want to keep working with you on this and try to earn your vote on the floor if the bill gets out today.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I'm committed to working with you on some of the stuff that's been raised today around, you know, the affordability issues and some of the objective standards, I think our staffs and us continue, you know, had a lot of fruitful conversations.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I do think there's some places where some of that stuff can land and want to keep working with you on that. I'd like to see the bill move forward so we can get it through into the next hurdle. Obviously, it'll go to, if it gets out sale, it'll go to Appropriations and genuinely have a collaborative approach.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
We've taken a ton of amendments on this bill throughout the entire process. This is, I think it's gone through, I don't know, multiple Committees in the Assembly went through housing here, so maybe it's 5th or 6th Committee. So we've taken a lot of amendments along the way, and we'll continue to do so.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I expect we'll continue to take more amendments as we move into the Appropriations Committee, and we'll want to work with you on that as this bill moves forward. I would respectfully ask for an aye vote so that we can keep that conversation going.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I'm happy to work with any of the Members on this Committee with concerns that were raised to see if we can refine the approach. But what we're trying to do here is to create some certainty for folks around a pretty ambiguous law that does need to be fixed again with the goal that it never actually applies because cities are doing the right thing. And we continue to work with HCD to ensure that cities can do the right thing.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
So with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Okay, our vote. You are cutting off. We're cutting off discussion on the bill.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I asked for her.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Right. But I had raised my hand. While you had already spoken. I spoke once. True.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yeah. I mean, I thought that's why I stopped her earlier to ask her.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I didn't realize that discussion was going to be cut off.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Told her, answer the question. And she was going to, I was going to make my remarks and then she was going to make it. Right.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And I raised my hand so, because, look, it's okay. It's okay. I don't.
- Brian Dahle
Person
With all due respect, Madam Chair, we are Senators. We. I think we should give the Senator an opportunity. Just, just my thing. We allowed a lot of testimony today, and this is a very big bill and a lot of controversy. I would ask that you give her the grace.
- Brian Dahle
Person
If you want me to withdraw my motion, I will. Until after the Senator speaks, I will. Okay.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
It is never my preference to vote against, against a chair's recommendation. And when in listening to the author's opening comments, I heard the author indicate some willingness to move towards what the Committee was asking, but not in the form that is listed in the analysis. Now, I appreciate there's been lots of conversations.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
However, I am not confident comfortable killing the Bill. My Committee already supported the Bill, and I gave my reasons for why. But I'm also always reluctant to not support a chair.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And unless I heard wrong, I heard the author indicate that there was willingness to move not to accept the amendments as written, but to move towards now, whether that happens in approps or.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But I just wanted to put that on the record because, again, while I'm not willing to have the Bill Die, it is also not my preference to override the chair.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
You know, every Bill that has come through here, we have worked really, really hard up until the last second before a vote is taken, worked really, really hard sometimes here to reach some amendments to show good faith that we're moving in the right direction.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Every time we got closer to that, the negotiations were stopped and the ideas were rejected every single time, all the way even up until this morning. So I don't take lightly voting no on this Bill. I don't take lightly.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
But I also need to know, as chair, I need to know that there was a seriousness behind the commitment, that it was not just going to be, don't worry about it. We're going to take care of it down the line.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
If I don't see that and I see just the current Bill, take it or leave it, I'll think about it. That's just not acceptable to me as a chair. And we're talking about really important issues, which is local government. We need to support local government, but we also need to push local government. I'm all for that.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
But the process here has been that there's no acceptance of some serious amendments. None. So I really, you know, again, I want you to understand that I take this very, very serious, but it's my responsibility also, if somebody's going to make, if an author is going to make a commitment, where is the proof?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The proof is in what we have up until today, a whole week has gone by since we made the original suggestions for amendments. It's not like we didn't care or we ignored or we didn't discuss. So that's my explanation to you, Senator. Skinner, thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yes, thank you. I appreciate that. And I'm going to be supporting the motion supporting the Bill for all the reasons that I said earlier in the hearing. And I, as a Committee Member, I very, very rarely vote against the recommendation of the chair, but sometimes we all do from time to time.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I just want to sort of acknowledge that on this Committee we have multiple strong housing leaders. We have a chair of our local government Committee.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We have the current chair of the Housing Committee, the immediate past chair of the Housing Committee, multiple Members of this Committee who have carried huge water in terms of housing policy for many, many years. And we all have some very well developed views on the direction of housing policy.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I think it's always good to try to resolve things. And I've resolved, you know, on a housing Bill that I had, we dispute I have with the chair, and we, and we resolved that. But sometimes the resolution doesn't, doesn't happen. And so I'll be voting for it today, which is, again, not something I typically do.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But I think under the circumstances, that's where I am with the greatest of respect to the chair and respect for her not supporting the Bill.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Madam Chair, thank you for allowing them to speak. I appreciate that. And I will make a motion now on AB 1893.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass to the Committee on appropriations. Senators Durazo, [Roll Call] Four to one. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We have a motion.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All right, Mister Carillo, are you ready? Thank you for your patience. Really appreciate it. You'll be presenting 2192 first.Sorry. 2371.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Electrified security fences are proven to be safe and also used by various government agencies, including CAL FIRE, public works departments, and school bus storage yards. AB 2371 simply adds the consistency to the process so all entities can use the technology.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
How about I start with 2371? Would that be okay?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Perfect. Thank you. Go ahead.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Thank you. Mister Vice Chair and Members of the Committee, thank you for allowing me to present this Bill. AB 2371. I would like to start by accepting the Committee's amendments and thank your Committee team for their hard work on this important Bill and for the Committee's accommodation during this very difficult week for me and my team.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
I believe the amendments include language negotiated with the Public Safety Committee last week which removed the remaining opposition to the Bill, as well as amendments negotiated with the Committee that add child care facilities, recreation centers and community centers to the list of sensitive facilities.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Senators, electrified security fences have proven to provide an effective and safe deterrent for businesses seeking to protect large and heavy products that must be stored outdoors. Previous legislation as well as international standards have ensured that these fences are safe.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
In fact, despite the thousands of fences installed throughout the country, there has never been an injury, much less a fatality, caused by one of these fences. These fences do, however, serve as a deterrent in an effective alarm system, particularly for businesses that have equipment or inventory that must be stored outdoors.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Under existing law, an electrified security fence may only be installed and operated inside the exterior exterior fence or wall. On a commercial property, a person can only come into contact with electrified security fence if and only if he or she commits trespass and breaches defense or wall.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Some local governments have embraced existing law that governs the installation and operational standards for these security alarm systems and work quickly with businesses and government agencies. Unfortunately, some local governments have delayed a permit applications for years when issuing permits to install such security systems.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Currently, there are almost 400 businesses waiting for their local governments to issue approval, and most concerning these businesses have been waiting on average for more than one year and still don't have approval yet.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
AB 2371 addresses this by requiring that the local permitting process is consistent with that of other security alarm systems and reinforces existing law that requires these security fences are installed and labeled in such a way that it will be virtually impossible for anyone to accidentally come in contact with one.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
For the past eight years and at more than 1000 properties throughout the state, including public agencies such as CAL FIRE and city public works departments, electrified security fencing, basically a fencing site offense, having safely and effectively securing properties and employees without incident.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Under my Bill, local governments also retain the absolute right to make local zoning decisions that dictate where these types of systems can be used. For example, you cannot put an electrified security fence on your residential property.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Joining me to testify and support are Analee Augustine with the Family Business Association of California and Yolanda Benson with the California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you for testifying today. We're going to give you each two minutes. Thank you.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Members. Annalee Augustine here on behalf of the Family Business Association of, California, a nonprofit dedicated to helping the 1.4 million family businesses in California, we're proud to co sponsor this Bill. Many of our Members use this technology and credit it for the ability to remain in business.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Manufacturing and industrial businesses need to protect their long term investments such as vehicles, construction equipment, tractors, and other forms of large inventory. This is often what businesses rely on for their day to day operations, and they actually can't afford to replace it.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Oftentimes, significant amounts of theft, criminal trespass, and property damage threaten the safety of employees and customers and ultimately the ability to provide safe jobs. Electrified security fences have been proven through time and application to be nearly 100% effective at deterring crime and therefore are critical to combat the rising incidences of crime that communities face.
- Annalee Akin
Person
There's no reason why businesses should have to wait years when they've already identified a threat to the safety and their ability to protect their equipment and employees. For these reasons and more, we thank the author and our proud to co sponsor this Bill. Thank you.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. That was right at two minutes. Good job.
- Yolanda Benson
Person
I'll be less. Yolanda Benson, representing the California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce and the 127 local Hispanic chambers throughout the state, serving 815 over 815,000 Hispanic owned businesses in California. We believe that 2371. We thank the author for carrying this important Bill.
- Yolanda Benson
Person
We believe it offers a consistent framework for small businesses, especially small businesses like the Hispanic owned business who has an import export business. One of our Members, they specifically have cargo containers on their property. Because they're an import export business. They have had burglary and theft inside their cargo containers.
- Yolanda Benson
Person
Even though the cargo containers were locked, there has been theft. They've lost thousands of dollars, which is a loss to a business as a small business that can't easily be made up the loss of these, the electrified fence, security fence would be an easy added security for this kind of business. It is their livelihood.
- Yolanda Benson
Person
They need to have these kinds of choices in providing security for their businesses. We ask for your aye vote on this very common sense Bill. Thank you.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mister Chairman, Members. Randy Perry, on behalf of PORAC and CAL FIRE firefighters, in support. Thank you.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Very good. Thank you. At this time, we'll take the me too s in support. Just your name, your organization you represent, and your support for the Bill.
- Dean Talley
Person
Dean Talley with the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, strong support.
- Shari McHugh
Person
Good morning. Sherry Mchugh, representing the self storage Association and support. Thank you.
- Katherine Charles
Person
Katherine Charles, on behalf of the Bay Area Council in support. Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Ryan Elaine. On behalf of the California Retailers Association, support.
- Matthew Hargrove
Person
Matthew Hargrove of the California Business Properties Association, in support.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
Nick Chappie on behalf of the California Trucking Association and strong support. Thank you.
- Michael Caprio
Person
Good morning. Michael Caprio with REIT public services and strong support.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Jack Yanos on behalf of the California fuels and convenience alliance in support.
- Christopher Rodriguez
Person
Christopher Rodriguez on behalf of the California. Chamber of Commerce in Support. Thank you.
- Annalee Akin
Person
Annalee Augustine, also here on behalf of Copart in support. Thanks.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. Do we have any Members of the audience who want to be the primary opposition witness in which you'll get two minutes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good morning chair Members. Just wanted to clarify that after the Committee amendments and Senate judiciary, the League of California Cities as well as the California State Association of Counties has gone to neutral on the Bill wanted once they were printed and wanted to appreciate again the sponsors and authors office for the conversations on those.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And we appreciate them being open to our concerns with the Bill. So thank you.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Great. Thank you very much. Do we have any me toos in opposition? If not, we'll bring it back to the dais. Do we have any questions or a motion?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Move the Bill.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We have a motion to move the Bill by Senator Skinner. You may close.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Thank you Mister Vice Chair. As many of you know, we unexpectedly lost Aldo Garcia. This happened last week. He was a rising star in my office and a beloved Member of the Capitol community. We went to his funeral services last night and I still cannot believe that he's gone.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
It's been really hard for our office to deal with this event from last week. I say that because this Bill is one that he was responsible for in my office. And I just wanted to take a moment to remember him and acknowledge all of his hard work, not only in this Bill but in other bills as well.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
I thank you for your attention. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All right, well from our Committee we extend our sincere condolences on that. That is a tough loss and we all feel that. So with that we'll go ahead and take roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass this amended to the Senate Floor. [Roll Call]
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
All right, we'll keep that bill open on call. Next up we have AB 2443 by Mr. Carrillo again. Go ahead.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Vice Chair. And Senators, thank you for allowing me to present this bill today. This is a very simple bill that we'd allow three cities in my district, the cities of Victorville, Pamphlet and Lancaster. The rest critically needed resources at the local level.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Senators, my district Assembly District 39 is a brand new district that straddles the Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County lines. One of the primary things the communities in my district have in common is that they have been left behind. When people think of Los Angeles County, they are not thinking about Palmdale and Lancaster.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
And when people think of San Bernardino County, they are not thinking about the cities of Adelanto and Victorville. And I'll give you an example. Measure edge in Los Angeles County, which funds homelessness programs throughout the county, only returns about 15 cents to the dollar that is collected in the City of Palmdale for this measure.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
My communities in the high desert are consistently forgetting about and left out of critical resources at both the state and the county level. This measure simply allows them to do it themselves, to raise funds locally to meet the local needs of these cities.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
Heading support of the bill is Jason Gonsalves, on behalf of the cities of Palmdale and Victorville.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Gonsalvis, you got two minutes, please.
- Jason Gonsalves
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. And thank you to the author, Assemblymember Carrillo. Jason Gonzalez on behalf of the cities of Victorville and Palmdale in strong support. As noted by the author, this bill simply allows the mayor and council to choose to put something before their voters, their constituents. We used to call it self help.
- Jason Gonsalves
Person
And as these communities grow, the infrastructure needs and the demands grow. And with that, we respectfully request this flexibility through January 2029 as noted in the bill and request your aye vote. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. This is support. Okay. Any more support? No. This is. Okay.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Okay. Senator Wiener moves the bill. We'll do a roll call.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Seeing no more witnesses in support, we move on to opposition. Anyone in opposition of AB 2443? Okay. Seeing none come to the dais. Any questions or comments? No, seeing none. Would you like to.
- Juan Carrillo
Legislator
I request an aye vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass to the Senate Floor. [Roll Call]
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Thank you. Leave it open for more votes. Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you. Okay, we move on to. I need the other list. We're going to. We can have a motion. Motion for the consent calendar.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Yes.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The consent calendar. The motion is moved by Senator Wiener. We'll now do roll call on the consent calendar.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is adopt a consent calendar. [Roll Call] Two to zero.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And we're gonna hold it open. Yes. Okay. And we did 2443. You already did that one. Okay. Okay.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion on the first two.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We're going back to vote on two bills. If we can have a motion. SB 739, moved by Senator Wiener. We have Ashby. SB 739. Senator Ashby. We'll have the roll call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is that the Assembly amendments be concurred in. Senators [Second Roll] Two to zero.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. And we need a motion. I'm sorry, leave it open. Okay, we need a motion on SCR 163. Okay, thank you. We have roll call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is be adopted and ordered to third reading. [Second Roll] One 20.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, now we move on to AB 2235. Oh, here we go. Yay. Lucky you. Okay, we're going to move ahead then to AB 2735. Welcome, Assemblymember Rubio.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Madam Chair and Senators, for the opportunity to present AB 2735. I would like to begin by accepting the Committee amendments and would like to thank the Committee and staff for getting this Bill into a better place. This Bill arises out of a clear need to protect both consumers and the insurance market from uncertainty posed by the current State of California's insurance market. Sources estimate that there is 20% less availability for insurance options that there were just a year ago.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
AB 2735 looks to provide stability for the existing market by establishing an alternative insurance option for our state's water providers. In 2015, the Legislature passed AB 656, authored by then Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, to allow for insurance risk pooling for mutual water companies. In addition to the provisions of AB 656, this Bill will allow a water corporation and a public agency to enter into a joint powers agreement for the provision of insurance and risk pooling. The California Fair Plan has provided a backstop for entities seeking coverage when they otherwise have not been able to.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
However, it has become abundantly clear that this existing system is in jeopardy. This is being felt by water providers across the state. Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and Governor Gavin Newsom have both noted their preference to reduce the number of entities who utilize the Fair Plan, as a significant loss would cause reverberations for the market as a whole.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
AB 2735 provides a unique, explicitly permissive solution to this complex problem for our water providers. JPAs can set lower premiums and offer broader coverage than otherwise available through the private marketplace due to the fact that they fall under unique regulatory and taxation parameters.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
By allowing water providers that fall outside of the scope of AB 656 to participate in pooled insurance, this Bill would help stabilize water rates while simultaneously stabilizing the utilization of the Fair Plan. As this is a proven model for other utilities, AB 2735 is a common sense, novel solution for water providers across the state. Here with me today to testify is Jennifer Capitolo, Executive Director of the California Water Association, the sponsor of the measure, and Paul Fuller, Insurance Administrator for Cal Mutuals. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. You may proceed.
- Paul Fuller
Person
Good morning, Committee Members. My name is Paul Fuller. I am a licensed insurance broker and water operator in California. I represent approximately 4000 public water districts, mutual water companies and investor owned water utilities throughout the country, including 900 in California. Like many policyholders in California, we're experiencing, our water clients are experiencing rate shock in the commercial marketplace. It's not unusual for our water clients to see rates exceeding 100% from expiring levels.
- Paul Fuller
Person
And that is on top of rate increases from prior years and on top of higher deductibles, less coverage and lower limits. Now, fortunately, our public water district and mutual water company clients have an option, and that is an insurance pool or joint powers authority. I'm not here to suggest that insurance pools are a panacea to the insurance crisis, but I can confirm that insurance pools provide more affordability, more stability and more value compared to today's commercial marketplace.
- Paul Fuller
Person
There's three reasons for that. Number one is structure insurance pools utilize reinsurance, which is a more efficient way of buying insurance. Second would be the ability for ease of business for insurance pools to ultimately provide more risk management services without regulatory oversight and control. And then finally, it would be the value and the expectations that they have on their Members.
- Paul Fuller
Person
They can mandate a heightened level of safety performance. And for these reasons, insurance pools, at least compared to today's insurance marketplace, creates a better value, more affordability and more stability for public water districts, for mutual water companies. And we're asking for your consideration to allow investor owned water utilities that same privilege. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else wants? Oh, I'm sorry, I jumped right over you, go ahead.
- Jennifer Capitolo
Person
No problem. Jennifer Capitolo, Executive Director of the California Water Association. We're the statewide association co sponsoring the Bill with Cal Mutuals. We have about 90 Member companies here in the State of California, and our water utilities are regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission. This Bill for us is 100% about water affordability. We're seeing water rates steadily increase and we are looking everywhere possible to try to stabilize water rates for our customers.
- Jennifer Capitolo
Person
We're looking at every line item in our water utilities budget and seeing if there's anywhere that we can look for adjustments. And we feel like this is an opportunity for us to reduce those costs related to insurance and directly then pass those savings onto our customers. This Bill idea came from a small company that's actually in Senator Dahle's district, even though he popped out. And it's called Lukins Brothers Water Company, 3000 service connections in the Tahoe area.
- Jennifer Capitolo
Person
I think he was talking about the millionaires and the trillionaires. This is this little tiny, disadvantaged community that is the folks that work in the hotels and the casinos in Tahoe. And in 2020, their property insurance rates were $43,000 a year. Here we are now in 2024, their insurance costs are $279,000 a year. So $43,000 to $279,000. In three years, that's how much it's increased. And that's, of course, because of the Caldor Fire, the risk there. They weren't impacted by the Caldor Fire. They've never had a claim on their insurance ever in their history of a water utility.
- Jennifer Capitolo
Person
But just that ever changing pressure on the private insurance market, that huge increase experienced there for those customers. So 21% rate increase for them resulted in about a $23 a month addition onto their utility water bill. And that's just not acceptable. Right. I think we can all agree like that is rate shock when we talk about it. So we met with Cal Mutuals. We came up with this idea. We're here hoping that this Bill moves forward today and we can help savings for our water utility customers. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Perfect. Two minutes. Thank you. Others in support of AB 2735.
- Steve Baker
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. Steve Baker with Aaron Reed and Associates for the Upper San Gabriel Valley Municipal Water District, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Sarah Brennan
Person
Sarah Brennan with the Weideman Group on behalf of California Water Service, in support.
- Alison Ramey
Person
Alison Ramey on behalf of the California Coalition of Utility Workers, State Association of Electrical Workers and State Pipe Trades, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kendra Daijogo
Person
Madam Chair and Members. Kendra Daijogo with the Gualco Group on behalf of the San Jose Water Company, thank the author for her efforts.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support? Ok, seeing none. Anyone in opposition, please come forward.
- Faith Borges
Person
Faith Borges with the California Association of Joint Powers Authorities. We'd love to thank the author and the Committee for your work on the most recent amendments with looking forward to the opportunity to review them once they're in print. But we do expect to go neutral with that. So thank you for your work.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Broad
Person
Madam Chair. Matt Broad here on behalf of ACWA JPIA and then also been deputized by AFSCME to remove opposition with the Committee amendments, which we think strikes a balance between addressing rate affordability but also protecting the JPA model. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in opposition? Okay, seeing none, I come to the dais. Any questions or comments from our. We have a motion to move the Bill. Would you like to close.
- Blanca Rubio
Legislator
Again, would like to thank you, Madam Chair, and the Committee for their hard work to get us to this point. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. All right, we have a motion to move the Bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is due passed as amended to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]. Two to zero.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, who do we have here? Assemblymember I guess we're stuck with you. We have a bunch of others, but I'll let you go up. Welcome, Assemblymember Lowenthal. You're here to present AB 2235 right?
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
That's correct, Madam Chair. And Senators, I will be brief. I want to begin by thanking the Chair and your staff for your patience and understanding, truly thoughtful consideration of this bill and where it's at. The Port of Long Beach is embarking on ambitious plan to build the largest off wind turbine facility at any US port.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The facility will help California meet its goal of producing 25 gigawatts of offshore wind power by 2045 and help lower the national cost of offshore wind power by 70% by 2035.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Offshore wind will play a critical role in California's renewable energy portfolio, helping California achieve its SB 100 goals while delivering the renewable energy to support carbonization across multiple sectors, including the Port of Long Beach's transition to zero emissions.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
AB 2235 provides for an express ability for the City of Long beach to procure contracts specifically relating to the peer wind project and describes the project delivery methods by which those contracts can be procured.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
AB 2235 also provides specific requirements for business entities entering into contracts for peer win project relating to bonding a skilled and trained workforce and insurance. Madam Chair, I want to note that we are working on language at this time between the ILW and the state building trades regarding jurisdictional elements and will not move the bill.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
You have my commitment to not move the bill off the Senate Floor without such an agreement.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Good news? Good news. Okay. Yes. Would you like to speak in favor?
- Dan Chia
Person
Yes. Thank you. Madam Chair and Members, my name is Dan Cha, representing the Port of Long Beach, the sponsor of this bill. Relatively straightforward bill to give the port the contracting flexibility to build the largest facility to support the offshore wind industry, as the Assemblymember described.
- Dan Chia
Person
Once assembled, these two turbines will be towed out to sea from the Port of Long Beach to win lease areas in the central and Northern California that will generate clean, reliable power for the grid.
- Dan Chia
Person
In addition to putting the state and the US at the forefront of this technology, pure wind will help the state meet its climate goals, while creating good paying union jobs and creating economic opportunities for local communities.
- Dan Chia
Person
And just to be clear, these turbines are so large that there's no other way to actually assemble them but at a pier right near the coastal areas. But also to be clear, this bill only pertains to the construction of the pier itself. We're not talking about building the actual turbines with respect to this larger development.
- Dan Chia
Person
Currently, the port is required to utilize a design build project delivery method for its public works infrastructure projects. But because of the project's complexity and aggressive delivery schedule, we need this flexibility as provided for in this bill. Time is of the essence as well to develop this infrastructure needed to enable offshore wind and tackle the climate crisis.
- Dan Chia
Person
Without this legislation, our project would be delayed at least a year, with costs for a project that is already approaching $5 billion. But the delay would increase the project by another $250 million. So thank you for consideration, and we urge, and aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. No more witness. Okay, do we have anyone in support of AB 2235?
- Marvin Pineda
Person
Chair Durazo and Members Marvin Pineda, on behalf of the International Longshore Warehouse Union, want to thank the Committee, want to thank Senator Lowenthal and his staff for all his hard work on this bill. We know we could get to an agreement, and we'll work hard with that. So we respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Hello. Sylvia Solis Shaw here on behalf of the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, in support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no one else in support? Anyone in opposition?
- Jeremy Smith
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee, Jeremy Smith here, on behalf of the State Building and Construction Trades Council. I guess technically we're opposed to the bill in print, as the Assemblymember has alluded to.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
We have been in lengthy conversations with the ILWU to try and figure out some language in this bill so that it can continue moving forward. I guess so, technically, we are opposed. We are opposing the Assembly, but we are heartened by those conversations led by the Assemblymember and his hard working staff.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
And we think we're going to get somewhere in the next four weeks. But we are technically opposed to the bill in print. I and just wanted to make sure that was clear to the Committee.
- Jeremy Smith
Person
So we support the bill moving forward today with the Assemblymembers promise that it will go no further until we can come to an agreement. So thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. I'm glad to hear that it's not exactly the same thing, but I know where you're going, and just, you know, urge that moving forward, that all the parties really, there's too much at stake here. It's going to be an extraordinary project from what I could tell. Just one question.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
You mentioned that, if I please, the turbines. You mentioned this is about the construction of the pier.
- Dan Chia
Person
That's right.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Have you gotten anywhere near the conversation of, or does it not matter to you now about these turbines and where they would be manufactured? I asked because I had the privilege of going with the group to Denmark, and we actually took a boat out into the ocean and saw these massive, massive turbines. It was pretty extraordinary.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
So I look forward to that. But is that a completely different conversation?
- Dan Chia
Person
Not slightly, but the state. There is significant opportunity to bring the manufacturing in state. The Energy Commission has published a report about meeting the state's offshore wind energy goals. It includes consideration of a multi-port strategy, not only for the staging and integration, putting these massive turbines together, but also manufacturing these.
- Dan Chia
Person
And there are other ports that can provide, that have the capability to provide that manufacturing capability. So we absolutely want to see those turbines manufactured here as well. I'm sure the Assembly Member would support that. But it is part of a larger multi-port strategy that, you know, is several steps ahead of us.
- Dan Chia
Person
But we hope to get there eventually.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Madam Chair, if I could. On that note, it's critically important that the manufacturing takes place in the State of California. And I encourage my very good friends at the ILWU and the trades to be cognizant of the timeline that we're operating under as it relates to meeting the state's goals, which is on a distinct timeline.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And the ability to have manufacturing take place in the State of California is also indirectly tied to an agreement. So if I may just finish up here.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Don't finish up yet. We have any questions? No, no questions or comments. Okay, now you can.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. You know, obviously the State of California is in a tremendous state of transition right now, and we see that with our workforce. But nowhere is it more evidenced than the 69th Assembly District.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And I have intense admiration for my brothers and sisters in the trades and the ILWU, who in the 69th Assembly District are going through tremendous transformation on the ILWU side. We see the threat of automation having not just an impact on their jobs, but on the total economy of the 69th Assembly District.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
And also 69th Assembly District has been an oil district. There are two refineries in the district. There is drilling everywhere in the district, which employs a tremendous amount of men and women in the trades. Those are good jobs, good union paying jobs. And as we all move towards this transition.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
There is an air of uncertainty on both parts. So I applaud them both for being so vigorous in this bill and beyond in making sure that we're carving out and securing union jobs in these areas. And so I'm very optimistic that we are going to get something done as it relates to this.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
This is solely a construction bill, but obviously, as it relates to federal money, as it relates to manufacturing, there are so many other things that are indirectly implicated in this, and so very optimistic that all parties will get together and find the kumbaya.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. All right, we need a motion.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Motion has been made by Senator Wiener.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Keep the rolls open. Thank you very much. All right. Okay. zero, no. Garcia is first. Yeah. All right, but which one are those two? All right, Assembly Member Garcia, I think you're up. And you'll be taking up AB 2922.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Yes, Madam Chair. Thank you so much. And I'll begin by thanking you, the Committee consultants, the analysis that was written, and we will be accepting the amendments. And I will share with you that I appreciate the time that you gave our team, our sponsors, stakeholders who are embedded deeply in the program.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
This program has been extremely valuable in our part of the State of California as we develop what has been known as California's lithium economy. In Imperial county, as the supervisor out there would say, lithium Valley is Imperial Valley. So thank you again. This Bill extends the authorization for capital investment incentive programs.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
It's known as the CHIP program, SIP program, until January 12035. This program authorizes local governments to track large manufacturing facilities by offering capital investment incentives for qualified manufacturing facilities, such as clean transportation, alternative fuel vehicles, and manufacturing of EV's, all of which are crucial for achieving a cleaner energy future in California.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
This program, as I already mentioned, has had tremendous benefits in our region.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
And by extending this program and some of the amendments that are before us, and although there are some questions that remain to be discussed with stakeholders with offices within the Administration, we think that moving forward, we'll be able to put together a program that will be applicable across the State of California that will meet all of the goals and objectives of high standards when it comes to labor, high standards when it comes to benefits, and high standards when it comes to the types of jobs that we want to attract to California, as it pertains to meeting our clean energy goals and our climate goals.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Big conversations this week and later today in both houses as it pertains to climate. And these types of programs intersect quite complimentary. So with that, we have our principal supporters that have been driving the conversation on our behalf. It's Rebecca Terrazas, assistant county Executive officer for the County of Imperial.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Good morning, Madam Chair and Members of the Committee. Once again, my name is Rebecca Tarasas Baxter. I am the assistant CEO for the County of Imperial. And on behalf of the Imperial County Board of Supervisors, we are pleased to sponsor AB 29. Two. Two.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
It's a Bill that would reinstate the SIP program so that local governments like ours have more opportunities to attract large manufacturing facilities to invest in our communities. Now, although the program has been extended and expanded since its enactment, this program was unfortunately allowed to expire in January of this year.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
AB 2922 will bring this vital economic tool back online, and reauthorization of the program will be a significant economic tool as the County of imperial continues to implement the Lithium Valley economic Opportunity investment plan.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
As a matter of fact, we are in the middle of negotiations with CTR, who actually has a PLA, with labor, with the Building and Trades Construction Council, to enter into the SIP program. However, this program lapsed during those negotiations, and that's why we're here today to try to reauthorize the program.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
According to the California Energy Commission, as much as one third of the world's current lithium deposits are in California. It is estimated that Imperial county may hold as much as 18 million metric tons, enough to support over 375 lithium ev batteries.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
But lithium is found in other parts of the United States and around the world, and success of the industry in California is not yet assured. So, due to the nature of California's lithium deposits, extraction here will be the cleanest, the most health friendly, and least carbon intensive in the world.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
But it will also require significantly more upfront capital than open pit mines or evaporation ponds found in Utah, North Carolina, Australia and Chile. For a rural, underserved county that has perpetually suffered from high unemployment and high poverty rates, among the highest in the state, this is a transformational opportunity that's before us as an emerging and growing industry.
- Rebecca Baxter
Person
It is imperative that California does everything it can to make our state competitive to the companies looking to enter the lithium extraction and manufacturing industry. Therefore, for these reasons, we ask for your. I vote on AB 2922.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you very much. Anyone else?
- Lawrence Gayden
Person
In support of AB 2922 Lawrence Gaydon, with the California Manufacturers and Technology Association, supporting as a manufacturing maker Bill. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Elizabeth Espinosa
Person
Good morning. Elizabeth Espinos, on behalf of the Board of Supervisors in the County of Riverside, and support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Alejandro Solis
Person
Good morning. Alejandro Solis, on behalf of the Clean. Power Campaign, and Los Amigos De La Comedada, all in support. Thank you. Thank you.
- Marvin Pineda
Person
Marvin Pineda, on behalf of La Coperativa Campesina, in support. Thank you.
- Brady Grant
Person
Good morning. Chair Members Brady Grant, on behalf of the League of California's cities in support. Look forward to looking at the amendments. Thank you.
- Eric Lawyer
Person
Good morning. I'm Eric Lehr. On behalf of the California State Association of Counties in support and also looking forward to reviewing the amendments. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, anyone in opposition? No seeing none. Great. Come to the dais. Any questions or comments, Senators, motion by Senator Wiener. Any comments? Questions? None. I want to thank you very much, both the county as well as the authorization.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
It's a really wonderful example of promises that are always made to poor communities and communities of color that, yes, we'll get to you. Yes, you're going to have the same opportunities to thrive in this economy. And all that's done is the assets are sucked out and people are left poor.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
In fact, sometimes even more poor than when they made the promises. So this is a great example of what can be done for a community that has the history of imperial county.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And I think your leadership, Assembly Member, is a testament to we can have both economic prosperity and a great economy, and the people who work in those industries can be treated fairly with good jobs.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I admire all that you've done standing up for environmental issues at the same time that working people have the right to be able to afford the basics and more than just the basics in their lives. So I'm glad to be supporting you in this. So if you want to wrap up.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Thank you. And as I mentioned in our opening, we'll continue the conversations. We know that these programs don't always, there isn't a one size fits all, and I think that's a conversation that we constantly hear here in the Legislature.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
And so we're trying to get this right, not just for Imperial county, but for the rest of the State of California. And that's part of the conversations that will continue moving forward with the Administration, with this Committee and the committees to follow.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
So I just want to say thank you again for working with us all the way up until the last day of the last hour and respectfully ask for your. I vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion by Senator Wiener.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass this amendment to the Committee on appropriations. Senators Durazzo? Aye. Durazo. I say arto. Dahle Glazer. Skinner. Skinner I Wahab. Wiener. Wiener I 30.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We'll hold it open for more votes. Thank you very much. Assemblymember Garcia AB 3198.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Yes, thank you, Madam Chair and colleagues. This bill is an important bill for our region. In short, it would remove legal barriers in the current statutes that authorize the county Riverside imperial Irrigation District, the Coachella Valley Water District, local cities and tribes to become members of a future joint power authority related to electric services in the region.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
The language in the bill was closely vetted and supported by the Coachella Valley Energy Commission, or known as CVEC, which is comprised of the same stakeholders I previously mentioned, all which are community elected representatives of all of these particular agencies, again, that were just highlighted today, CVEC is in the middle of a robust strategic planning process to determine an alternative governance structure for electric services in the Coachella Valley, and the new JPA is one of the preferred options because of this importance to the region. Sumner Wallace, who represents a portion of Coachella Valley in the neighboring district, has also added on as a co-sponsor to demonstrate how extremely important it is to the entire region.
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Joining me here today to provide testimony on behalf of CVEC is Antonio Ortega, a representative, one of the members of this organization/body.
- Antonio Ortega
Person
Members of the committee, as the Assemblymember said, my name is Antonio Ortega. I'm here representing the Chairman of the Coachella Valley Energy Commission.
- Antonio Ortega
Person
As you heard already from Assemblymember Garcia, AB 3198 is needed to remove barriers in current law that prevent some local agencies from participating in a future joint powers authority related to power services in the Coachella Valley.
- Antonio Ortega
Person
Working through the Coachella Valley Energy Commission, which represents six cities, four tribes, two counties, one water district, and one irrigation district, we identified the issue that needed to be addressed, rolled up our sleeves, and worked diligently at the local level to identify a solution.
- Antonio Ortega
Person
Once we determined that legislation was needed to remedy this issue, we approached the Assemblymember, who understood its importance to ongoing efforts, and agreed to author AB 3198. This bill is an important piece of a broader local discussion, and we appreciate the Committee's thoughtful analysis and consideration. I thank you for your attention, and we respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Great, thank you. Anyone else in support, please come forward.
- Syrus Devers
Person
Thank you. Syrus Devers with the Coachella Valley Water District in strong support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you for being here.
- Elizabeth Espinosa
Person
Again, Elizabeth Espinosa on behalf of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors and support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. See no one else in support. Anyone in opposition? Seeing no one in opposition, come to the dais. Colleagues, any questions or comments? Seeing none. Move the bill by Senator Wiener. Assemblymember, would you like to wrap up?
- Eduardo Garcia
Person
Just thank you and respectfully ask for your support on the matter.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Call the vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass to the Senate Floor. [Roll Call].
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. We'll leave the rolls open. All right. Now we have Assembly Member Wilson. I'm sorry. Okay. Okay. I'm sorry. Yes, go ahead. Thank you. Assembly Member Wilson. Yeah.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Good morning. You gonna face us here? You don't wanna go?
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
You know what? I have a hard time reading from the podium, okay? So if it's okay, I'll present from here.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Good morning.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Good morning. Good morning. Thank you, Madam Chair and Members, and thank you to my colleague for giving me the opportunity to present before her. I. Our witness has to leave and catch a flight back home. I want to begin. And thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you to the Committee staff for working with me on this policy.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
I will be accepting the Committee amendments which strike the provisions of the Bill and instead require the County of Los Angeles to report to the Legislature on or before March 1 of 2025, the fiscal viability of East Los Angeles as a special district or incorporation, as well as the feasibility of forming a municipal advisory council, a local town council or a coordinating council that could represent the comprehensive interest of the entire East Los Angeles community or provide the Legislature with an existing report or reports containing sustainability with similar information.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors adopted two motions in response to AB 2986 which require the LA county Chief Executive Officer to report back to the board the information outlined on page five of the Committee analysis related to unincorporated East Los Angeles and other unincorporated communities throughout Los Angeles County.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
As noted in the Committee analysis, these reports may provide sufficient information to the Legislature to evaluate next steps for the East Los Angeles community and provide much needed transparent data to the residents of unincorporated East Laden and other unincorporated Los Angeles County communities.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
East Los Angeles is the most populated unincorporated community in Los Angeles County and would be the 10th largest city in the county if it were a city. It is California's most populated unincorporated census designated area. This community is 7.5 sq. Mi and has approximately 120,000 residents, 95.5% of whom are Latino.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This vibrant community has no local representation and yet is surrounded by cities, some of which have less population and all of whom benefit from local governance. Senators, I am proud to represent East Los Angeles and be a product of East LA.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
East Los Angeles is the heart of California's Latino community, whose culture has influenced the world and cultivated generations of political leaders, entertainers, activists and scholars. In 2012, LAFCO denied efforts for East Los Angeles to incorporate based on a 2008 financial study done during the recession. The rationale was that the community's tax base could not support cityhood.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Denying that effort meant that self determination towards the creation of local government never went to the voters. Residents in East LA were denied the opportunity of choice through their vote, according to community leaders who worked on that effort.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Then, county Supervisor Gloria Molina promised to deliver an annual financial report detailing tax collection and expenditures for the community, as well as the creation of the East Los Angeles Advisory Committee, composed of local leaders, which was in fact established. Unfortunately, the financial reports never materialized and that Council and Committee was dismantled.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This community's nearly 120,000 residents have sought a stronger civic voice for decades. Despite being the largest unincorporated area in LA County, East LA residents have only one local elected leader, a local representative, the county supervisor whose district includes 2 million people. AB 2986 does not mandate cityhood or incorporation as a special district.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
The Bill simply ensures that LA County produces widely and decimates information pertinent to East LA's past and future, empowering East Los Angeles residents so they have a voice in their community. I've developed this Bill working with hundreds of East Los Angeles tenants and homeowners, business owners, nonprofit directors and community leaders.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
I've been listening to the Committee conversations related to housing and that historically poor communities of color who over decades have been ignored when it comes to deciding where to build housing. I agree with the comments made that more deliberate planning needs to be considered.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This is currently not happening in East LA and there is no East LA community development plan and very little input, if any, from residents who reside in the neighborhoods within East LA. AB 2986 is necessary to ensure that East Los Angeles residents can access pertinent local information through transparent communications.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
We can help this community without placing any undue burden on LA County, LAFCO or the state.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
I want to recognize our friends and labor and their concerns as someone, and as someone who has received on multiple years a 100% report card with labor, my record speaks for itself and I want to take the time during recess to work and meet with labor and address their concerns.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
That is my commitment and what I am more than happy to do and what I have been doing throughout this process. I look forward as well to meeting with LA County Supervisor Solis to better support our beautiful East Los Angeles community that we both represent and ensure that the community in East Los Angeles feels seen, feels heard.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And we developed an actual, real transparent East Los Angeles community Development Plan.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
As elected leaders, we come and go, but the families that make East LA stay and they make it what it is they are deserving of leaders who put their differences aside and take the work necessary in front of them to improve the conditions and the quality of life of the families that we represent.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This Bill has received unanimous and bipartisan support and to testify here is for AB 929. 86 is Christy Hernandez, chair of the Maravilla Community Advisory Committee, who will speak as a resident and stakeholder in East Los Angeles.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Just 1 second. I had announced at the beginning of the the hearing that we had to be out by 12:00 so we're going to be very strict with the time, with everyone. I ask everyone else keep their presentation short. Okay, so I think you are going to get the full for two.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Four, since we only have one witness. That's what I said, you get the full for two people. So four minutes and then we'll ask everybody to be. Otherwise we're going to get hauled out of here.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Okay. Thank you, Madam Chair. Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Committee Members. My name again is Christia Hernandez. I was born, raised and I live in unincorporated East Los Angeles. As mentioned, I'm also the chairperson of the Maravilla Community Advisory Committee where we convene meetings between East LA residents and community stakeholders.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
I do this on a volunteer basis, as does our whole MCAC board, because we care about the quality of life for local residents. With the goal of increasing civic engagement, our community has requested a third party financial study for unincorporated East LA, which has led to request for a study from Sacramento.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
As the largest unincorporated community in California with close to 120,000 residents, we lack the representation of City Council or mayor. Our most local elected is an LA County supervisor who represents 2 million people.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Residents currently do not receive annual financial reports or budgets, leaving us in the dark about how much tax revenue our community generates and how our tax dollars are being spent. The last financial report specific to East LA is 13 years old and does not accurately reflect the community's current financial status.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
It is imperative that we have access to up to date financial reports to understand how our tax dollars are being allocated and ensure that we are receiving our fair share of funding for services and infrastructure maintenance. This Bill is not about cityhood and does not mandate cityhood.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
It's a request for transparency to understand the distribution of funds to unincorporated communities, specifically East La. Sadly, misinformation, fear mongering and false claims have been spread, leading to conflicts resembling David versus Goliath, pitting our community against each other, making it seem like we are anti labor. We are not.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
We want to work with labor, as many of our supporters are also union Members. We want to work with supervisors released and whomever is next is our next county supervisor on how we improve East LA. We are tired of being told we are too poor.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
We want to see a plan that improves economic conditions and the quality of life for our families. We don't want to be silenced as we simply want transparency. East LA is more than a campaign stop. We are globally recognized community with a rich history of culture and activism.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
If now is not the right time for transparency and self determination, then when the financial study for East L A is crucial for ensuring fair distribution of resources and services.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
As the largest unincorporated community would contribute more to tax revenue into the General Fund, the study can help to promote equity and service distribution and inform our community about spending patterns. The county has not made that information available since 2011.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Since the introduction of AB 2986 in March, we have observed significant changes in the behavior and interaction of the county with the community, including La. County Board of Supervisor motioned to oppose our study but then took steps to conduct their own financial study with a price tag of $5.1 million.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Why would the county oppose this Bill and then turn around and pass a motion to conduct their own study for East La? The county has suddenly shown interest in East LA with an uptick in county recognition of individuals with ties to the eastside, increased social media coverage and photo ops with small businesses in schools.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
However, in sheer contrast, those of us who have shown support for our financial report and transparency have been shunned and bullied. Because of my support for the Bill, MCAC, the community group that I chair, was displaced from our meeting location of 30 plus years, a community auditorium and a county building.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
We have asked for the supervisor's support to reinstate our application and it's going on two months of no action. Nonprofits in favor of our study have seen reallocation of their funding impacting their community programming. Small business owners in support of our study have reported visits from code enforcement and health inspectors.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Opposition is further marginalizing and disenfranchising East LA residents, nonprofits and business owners who support this Bill. Residents should not be bullied or sabotaged for requesting transparency, for wanting to empower our community with information, for wanting more for our community. As a democracy, it's crucial to work together to improve the quality of life.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
We welcome the conversation, but instead there's an intense effort to silence and suppress the voices supporting transparency and empowerment. So this Bill is one piece of a much larger conversation. More East Los Angeles residents like myself have chosen to come back to the community that raised us and work towards a thriving economy.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
Contrary to the narrative of by the opposition, county Members make east LA their lifelong home. And as a beloved community organizer Diana Tarango once said, don't move. Improve. This financial study will provide us with the information to help find ways to improve our beloved community that we call home.
- Christina Hernandez
Person
So in the name of democracy and transparency, I ask for your I vote and the opportunity to continue this conversation. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Anyone else in support of AB 2986?
- Michael Seaman
Person
Thank you. Michael Seaman on behalf of California Unincorporated, we do support the Bill. Our statewide organization speaks on behalf of 5 million Californians who are disenfranchised because they do not have mayors and city councils to take care of local issues.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, thank you very much.
- Michael Seaman
Person
We support local control, democracy and fairness.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support? Okay. Hearing seeing none. Anyone in opposition to AB 2986? Are we going to have. Okay. Okay. Good morning. Two minutes each.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and honorable good morning, Madam Chair and honorable Committee Members. My name is Tamia Mocho Frias and I am the senior budget deputy for Supervisor Hilda Solis of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
On behalf of Supervisor Solis, I am here to oppose AB 2986 which seeks to establish a task force to determine the feasibility of incorporating East Los Angeles or creating a special district. Supervisor Solis authored two motions which already addressed the bill's concerns and both were unanimously approved by the Board of Supervisors in April.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
The county directed was directed to not only oppose the Bill, but to engage LAFCO, our labor partners and all parts of the East LA community to conduct an analysis on the fiscal viability of East LA as a city or special district.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
The county is also looking to form a municipal advisory council, a town council, or a coordinating council to represent the comprehensive interests of the entire East La community. This would be in addition to the longstanding community advisory councils that already exist in East LA.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
In May, the county was directed to provide an annual report on services and investments in the unincorporated communities with a population of over 10,000, and to run a formal information campaign to ensure these unincorporated communities were aware of the annual report and the services, projects and programs the county provides.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
And throughout the process, our community stakeholders should be engaged, heard and kept updated. The county has already initiated this work regardless of the Bill, but more importantly, the work will be completed and issued to the public long before the provisions of the Bill that takes effect.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
My colleague will discuss further the LAFCO process, but I'd like to underscore that the process begins with signature gathering to ensure that the residents of the area in question really do want to incorporate and we have gathered over 2200 signatures of East La residents and businesses who oppose incorporation.
- Tamia Gibson
Person
It is with them, as well as a dozen of our union partners, the Board of Supervisors, LAFCO, and community organizations that we oppose AB 2096. Thank you. Thank you very much.
- Adriana Romo
Person
Good morning and thank you. My name is Adriana Romo and I'm the deputy Executive officer for Los Angeles Laska LAFCO. As you are aware, our Commission took a position to oppose AB 2986. I do want to commend the Committee for a Great Bill analysis. It was very informative and it clearly understands the LAFCO process.
- Adriana Romo
Person
So I do appreciate that. I want to just highlight a few of the areas as to why we ask that AB 2986 as presented for LAFCO to form a Committee to review incorporation or special districts is because it bypasses the LAFCO process process and current legislative actions since its creation has worked.
- Adriana Romo
Person
Where an applicant submits a petition to LAFCO, LAFCO reviews and it's been successful for formation of new cities and special districts in La County as late as 1991. There is nothing to suggest that current law is insufficient. And AB 2986 as presented to us is just a different approach altogether. It sets bad precedent.
- Adriana Romo
Person
Also, since the introduction, we had not heard anything from any of the residents. We are here to support the residents provide the process so that the residents could fulfill their requirements to file an application to LAFCO.
- Adriana Romo
Person
We are very fortunate that we have Commissioner Wendy Salaya here, who is one of two commissioners that represents the General public in Los Angeles County. And she is very engaged in the community professionally and personally. And she does have a voice in the East Los Angeles. She's very door to door person and we appreciate that.
- Adriana Romo
Person
And her being here also. LAFCO is required to review a proposal that's submitted to us. And the Bill by LAFCO forming a committee goes against that because we're in the formation of the analysis process and formulating Committee so that we can then analyze and make recommendations to our Commission. And that is generally a conflict.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I'm sorry, you have to wrap it up.
- Adriana Romo
Person
Okay, so to wrap it up, I do want to say that there are. There is an option with the governor's office and planning research for incorporation guidelines. And there is a process for the proponents to go ahead and start an initial fiscal analysis before they go into the deep dive of a collecting petitions of 25%.
- Adriana Romo
Person
So we're here to support the residents. Thank you very much. And support the process.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Any more? Anyone here in opposition, please come forward. Your name and organization, please?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Willie Pelope, Madam Chairwoman and Members of the Committee representing the Los Angeles deputy probation officers. Ask me. 685. We're in opposition.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Tiffany Whiten with SEIU California and respectful opposition. Thank you. Thank you.
- Amy Hines-Shaikh
Person
Honorable chair and Members, Amy Hindsheik with Unite Here Local 11. We respectfully have her opposed unless amended. And we thank you so much, honorable chair, and your great staff for intervening on this matter. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Siverling
Person
Madam Chair Members. Matthew Cyberling, on behalf of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy sheriffs and the California Association of Professional Employees, both in opposition. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Megan Subers
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair Members. Megan Subers, on behalf of the California Professional Firefighters and the La County firefighters, local 1014 in opposition. Thank you.
- Sara Flocks
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair Members. Sarah Flocks, California Labor Federation. We are opposed to the Bill in print. We have a number of unions in the LA area, including the La County Fed, that are in opposition to this Bill as well, but yet we have not been able to vet the amendments.
- Sara Flocks
Person
We will do that in return with the position. Thank you. Thank you.
- Marvin Deon II
Person
Marvin Dion, County of Los Angeles. In light of our review of the analysis and the described amendments, we remain opposed.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in opposition? Okay, seeing none. Colleagues at the Dais questions? Comments.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Senator Skinner, as I read the amendments, it indicates that it has a shall in terms of the study. So would that, does that trigger the local mandate, in other words, requiring the state to pay for it if we're directing a county to do something.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Amendments don't change, though.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
The issues around whether a Bill meets the test of local mandate as we know it. However, the word shall is rather directive. I don't have opposition to that, but it is directive. It is saying shall versus. Anyway, but just wanted to raise that.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Report. Okay. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Any other comments? No. Okay.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Sorry. I - appreciate that these things, you know, that there's, when inter jurisdictional, even though there's not jurisdiction here yet, however, the county, all of the county, the entities related to the county, I mean, they're.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I guess what I would say is, I shall remember there doesn't seem to be a lot of support for your Bill, and I realized that the chairs amendments primarily require a study versus enacting it as initially.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But I just note that anyway, that we're being asked to, in effect, impose something that the people for whom it would be imposed on are not supportive of.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yeah, I just want to make a comment.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I believe, hopefully, I'm hopeful that after the, many of the organizations that were in opposition, after they see the amendments, hopefully that they will be supportive as a way to move forward, provide information, create the information, create the report, and hopefully that, you know, becomes a reason to support the process moving forward.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We're not changing what it takes. If there was interest in going towards Cityhood, we're not changing anything of that. That's Lafco, so we're not moving anything. This is a matter of how to get the information.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Instead of the state doing a study, it makes more sense just to follow up on what the county has already decided that they're going to do. And it's pretty much, you know, a lot of the information that generally has been requested. Okay, do you want to wrap up? Again, we're. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We're gonna get kicked out of here.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. And again, I appreciate my colleague in the Assembly for allowing me the opportunity to present before her. Thank you, Assemblymember Wilson. Senator Skinner, there are over 500 letters of support already in the system for you to review. This has all been a grassroots movement from the bottom up.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
My staff, we are a staff of three in the district. I don't have the resources that the La County Supervisorial District one has to be able to implement all of their staff to be able to collect the signatures that they've collected. So it is a David and Goliath versus situation.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And so I appreciate the comment, but I want you to know that if you were to attend a meeting in East Los Angeles, you would see hundreds of residents in support of wanting to have transparency in local government, wanting to have the data as to how their taxes are being allocated, wanted to form some kind of local representation that allows for them to have some kind of say in the various different communities in East LA, the six different business corridors that need support and services, wanting to see an actual transparent, public and real East Los Angeles community development plan that includes the voices of the very people that live there that currently does not exist.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And so this is a step forward, and I'm grateful to the supervisor for having made the motion. The two motions that now will include the study for East Los Angeles as well. And this didn't exist before this Bill.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Transparency for all unincorporated communities within LA County with more than 10,000 residents that prior to this Bill, did not have any information as to how their taxes were being used.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
We hope to continue the conversation again, I pledge to be able to work with our labor partners to get to a good space and for them to understand the Committee amendments, as well as working in collaboration with supervisor Solis herself. Because at the end of the day, this is not about whoever is in office.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This is about our community. This is about ensuring that the residents of East Los Angeles feel seen and heard and with that. Thank you, Madam Chair, for your support and respectfully request. And I vote to have the conversation move forward.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Do I have a motion? Senator Wiener moves the Bill. And we have a roll call, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass this amended to the Committee on appropriations. [Roll Call] Three to zero.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. We're gonna hold it open, and we're gonna have to return at 01:00 to finish the rest of the agenda. Thank you all.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. Thank you. The next bill that we will be presenting is by Assembly Member Wilson, AB 2257. Thank you, and thank you for your patience.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Appreciate you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, you can get started whenever you want.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
All right. Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Senators. I am pleased to present AB 2257, a bill designed to enhance the transparency, efficiency, and fairness of the rate setting process for water and sewer services in California. I would like to thank the committee staff for all of their diligent work on the amendments, all of which we are accepting and are technical in nature. At its core, AB 2257 is about fostering a constructive dialogue between public agencies and the people they serve.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Under existing law, Prop 218 requires public agencies to provide advance notice to property owners, a public hearing for protests, and restricts the imposition of fees unless they represent the actual cost of services. However, the increase in Proposition 218 litigation challenges local agencies' ability to set fair rates to cover operational and investment costs.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
As a reminder, these are costs to the ratepayer. Often, these legal challenges come without prior objections being raised during the public comment period, leading to costly and unforeseen lawsuits that strain the financial resources of these agencies. Once again, the agencies are the ratepayers.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
This bill aims to resolve disputes early and reduce the frequency of litigation, which can be costly and time consuming for both parties. Once again, the ratepayers. AB 2257 represents a balanced approach to rate setting. This bill is about more than just procedural adjustments. It's about ensuring our public agencies and our communities work together more effectively to tackle the challenges we face.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Importantly, this bill still protects the right to litigate against ongoing failures by an agency to implement rates in compliance with the substantive requirements of Proposition 218. This ensures that agencies cannot misuse fees for purposes other than those explicitly stated. With me today is Kristopher Anderson, Senior State Relations Advocate at the Association of California Water Agencies, ACWA.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
Good afternoon, Madam... Yeah, good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Kris Anderson on behalf of the Association of California Water Agencies, the sponsor of this bill.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
You have two minutes.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
Thank you. Public water and sewer agencies provide essential government services for the benefit of communities, agriculture, industries, and the environment. These agencies are responsible for ensuring a consistent and reliable water supply, safeguarding the quality of drinking water, planning, constructing, maintaining critical infrastructure, and much more.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
With climate change presenting unprecedented challenges, these agencies must also adapt and enhance aging infrastructure to mitigate the impacts of increasingly frequent and severe climate related events. Billions of dollars in infrastructure investments are necessary to ensure water supply reliability for future generations. Prop 218 places strict limitations on how agencies can raise revenue, and as a result, public agencies predominantly rely on revenue from service rates and assessments to finance their essential government services.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
While these agencies require financial stability to meet increasing demands, a rise in Prop 218 litigation is making it increasingly difficult to ensure agencies can pass fair and reasonable rates to cover cost of operations and investments. And as the Assembly Member noted, oftentimes these lawsuits are filed without prior notice to the public agency.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
AB 2257 would bolster the existing rate making process in order to enhance dialogue and transparency between public agencies and their customers. The goal of this legislation is to shine sunlight on potential objections when agencies have an opportunity to respond and address these concerns.
- Kristopher Anderson
Person
Again, want to thank the committee staff for all their hard work on this bill and thank the author for carrying this important measure. And if you'll indulge me, I have been asked to register the support of East Valley Water District, Calleguas Municipal Water District, and Environmental Defense Fund. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support of AB 2257, please come forward.
- Kristian Foy
Person
Hello. Kristi Foy with Arnold and Associates, here on behalf of Three Valleys Municipal Water District in strong support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- McKinley Thompson-Morley
Person
Hi there. McKinley Thompson-Morley on behalf of the City of Sacramento in support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Erin Niemela
Person
Madam Chair and Members, Erin Niemela with Niemela Pappas on behalf of Eastern Municipal Water District, Santa Margarita, and the California Stormwater Quality Association in support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Obed Franco
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Obed Franco here on behalf of the Contra Costa Water District in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Baltazar Cornejo
Person
Chair and Members, Baltazar Cornejo with Brownstein on behalf of Otay Water District in support.
- Holly Fraumeni
Person
Holly Fraumeni de Jesús with Lighthouse Public Affairs on behalf of Valley Water in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kasha B Hunt
Person
Kasha Hunt with Nossaman here on behalf of Padre Dam Municipal Water District as well as Olivenhain Municipal Water District.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jason Ikerd
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. Jason Ikerd on behalf of the California Municipal Utilities Association and the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts, happy to be here in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Eric Lawyer
Person
Good afternoon. I'm Eric Lawyer on behalf of the California State Association of Counties, proud to support. Thank you.
- Clifton Wilson
Person
Clifton Wilson on behalf of the South San Joaquin Irrigation District in support. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Again, anyone else in support, AB 2257? Seeing none. Anyone in opposition, AB 2257? Okay. Seeing none, bring it back. There's... Senator Seyarto, any questions or comments? Seeing none. I'd like to offer the author any wrap up.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yes. Yes. Thank you so much, Madam Chair. By promoting early and meaningful dialogue between public agencies and rate payers, this bill lays the groundwork for more equitable and effective water and sewer service rates in California. With that, at the appropriate time, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. Do we have a vote? I mean a motion. Motion. Moved by Senator Wiener. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is do pass as amended to the Senate Floor. [Roll Call] Two to zero.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We'll leave the rolls open. Thank you. Okay, moving on. Okay, I think you're lucky to come ahead, Assembly Member. Yes. Assembly Member Addis. Welcome. Good afternoon.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Chair. We have an underage witness that might join us up at the table.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yes, thank you. You'll be presenting AB 3233.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Yes. So, thank you, chair, staff and advocates. Today I'm here to present AB 3233, the local environmental Choice and Safety act, at face value. This Bill is a direct response to an issue that I have heard from my constituents, particularly those in Monterey County.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
But beyond that, this is a persistent problem that applies to all of us here and to all Californians. In recent years, we have heard from medical professionals, educators, local governments, parents and countless others about the impacts of oil and gas operations on communities.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
We have all read research on the impacts to public health, including increased risk of asthma and cardiac disease and most especially in Low income communities and communities of color, witness the increased risk of earthquakes from drilling and oil spills and air pollution, and heard concerns about depreciating property values, as well as decreased investment in residential areas near oil and gas sites.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
As a result, many cities and counties have taken steps to reevaluate whether to maintain these operations, especially as California reduces its dependence on fossil fuels and a carbon neutral future. Monterey County, San Benito County, La County, Alameda County, and Culver City have introduced ordinances and passed local measures to reduce or eliminate oil and gas.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
In doing so, they have made it their responsibility to do their own cost benefit analysis of whether to keep such activities in their communities and to determine if any economic benefit is worth the negative consequences to health, safety, tourism, the environment, and so much more.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Despite the overwhelming and popular support for these local measures, the California Supreme Court ruled last fall that the local measure in Monterey County would not hold due to how we have written state law. This invalidates the actions of communities, disenfranchises voters who voice their concerns, and ultimately limits the ability of local governments to protect their communities.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
It's a dangerous legal precedent that we cannot ignore. AB 3233 enables local communities to make their own decisions about their welfare, health and economy. Specifically, this Bill clarifies local government's authority to limit or prohibit oil and gas operations, methods and locations within their jurisdiction.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
And it does not ban new oil or gas operations or mandate local entities to stop activity. It simply clarifies that they do so. Joining me today to testify and support is the Center for Biological Diversity, Holland Krebsman, and California State Association of Counties Catherine Freemandhead.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
If you would just take one moment. Okay, go ahead, whoever wants to start.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Committee Members. Holland Kretzmann for Center for Biological Diversity.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
I'm an attorney with more than a decade of experience with California's oil and gas laws, and the center proudly sponsors AB 3233, the Local Environmental Choice and Safety Act, a Bill that would preserve the ability of cities and counties to use their local authority to protect their residents from oil and gas pollution.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
It's common sense that local governments ought to be able to decide whether and under what conditions to allow polluting activities to take place in their jurisdictions after carefully weighing input from their constituents and the potential harms to health and the environment. That's the way it's always been in California.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
Cities and counties have had local rules applying to all kinds of industries on the books, including oil and gas, for decades. They can range from straight bans to setback minimums to ordinances designed to facilitate more production. This Bill acknowledges that local governments are going to have different approaches to oil and gas.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
The point is that it's up to those cities and counties to decide for themselves. Last year, the California Supreme Court invalidated parts of Monterey County's oil and gas ordinance on narrow grounds based on an outdated 1961 provision of the state oil and gas code.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
But the oil and gas industry has distorted this decision to sow confusion about what local governments can and can't do. The industry's threats and intimidation have had a chilling effect on local governments who want more clarity in the state law about the scope of local control.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
AB 3233 would put an end to this confusion by updating the public Resources code to make it crystal clear that local governments can enact protections from oil and gas development, including restrictions on specific techniques.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
The Bill does not tell local governments that they must ban or restrict oil and gas, so the Bill does not raise or lower production. That decision is left to local governments. The oil industry is in steep decline due to decades of naturally decreasing production and lower demand.
- Holland Kretzmann
Person
This Committee should not allow the industry to put blame on local governments who just want common sense control over what happens in their own cities and counties. We urge you to support AB 3233.
- Catherine Freeman
Person
Thank you. Go ahead. Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Kathryn Freeman with the California State Association of Counties, which represents all 58 counties. We're pleased to support AB 3233, which would enhance local control over land use and zoning issues with regards to oil and gas operations in California.
- Catherine Freeman
Person
Most land use decisions, as you've heard, are delegated to local governments to ensure the best possible outcomes are made for each individual community. Counties are responsible for weighing the aesthetic, environmental, economic and safety concerns within their communities. As such, we've vested interest in maintaining clear authority to govern all oil and gas related uses throughout our jurisdictions.
- Catherine Freeman
Person
This is why CSAC filed an amicus brief in Chevron versus County of Monterey, which challenged measure Z, a local ordinance which aimed to restrict oil and gas development within the county. AB 3233 would clarify in statute that these local powers apply to the regulation of oil and gas production facilities.
- Catherine Freeman
Person
To be very clear, we are not opposed to the development of oil and gas projects in California. This Bill simply would ensure that counties have the authority to balance their unique local needs that arise in the context of oil and gas development. It's for this reason that we support AB 33, and thank you for your time.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, anyone else in support of AB 3233, please come forward.
- Michelle Rubalcava
Person
Hi, Michelle Rubalcava with Nielsen Merxmer on behalf of Contra Costa County and support and also being asked to do a me too for Santa Cruz County. Thank you, Fatima.
- Fatima Balziwayer
Person
Fatima Balziwayer with California environmental voters. This is one of our top priority bills, so we're in strong support. Also doing a me too for the climate center. Thank you.
- Erin Niemela
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members, Erin Nimela with Niemala Pappas on behalf of a campaign for the Safe and Healthy California, also in support.
- Rebecca Marcus
Person
Good afternoon. Rebecca Marcus representing the Center for Food Safety and Support. Thank you.
- Tiffany Ng
Person
Good afternoon. Tiffany Ng with the California Environmental Justice Alliance, registering our strong support and providing strong support from the Central Coast Alliance, United for Sustainable economy or cause strategic concepts in organizing policy, education, LA or scope, LA and the Vision Coalition, all in strong support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Katie McCammon
Person
Katie McCammon with support from 350 Sacramento and also support from 350 Bay Area Action, 350 Santa Barbara, San Diego, 350 banned single use plastics, 1000 grandmothers for future generations and 350 Humboldt.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jakob Evans
Person
Good afternoon. Jacob Evans with Sierra Club California and strong support. Thank you.
- Jennifer Ganata
Person
Good afternoon. Jennifer Ganato of communities for a better environment and strong support and also registering strong support for a Center for race, poverty and environment. Thank you. Thank you.
- Morgan Gonzalez
Person
Good afternoon, folks. My name is Morgan Gonzalez with communities for a better environment in Ceja. A resident of Los Angeles City District 15 also registering strong support on behalf. Of Stand LA and PSRLA. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mitch Steiger
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair Members and staff. Mitch Steiger with CFT, a union of. Educators and classified professionals in sport.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And the other young man. No? Okay, next time. Hi, thank you for coming.
- Rebecca Marcus
Person
Hi, my name is Jessica. Here on behalf of APN, Asian Pacific Environment Network. Network in strong support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. Rey Nateo, registering strong support on behalf of CCauj. Thank you. Thank you. Good afternoon. I've been asked to note support for climate health. Now consumer watchdog, I think CCe jn just noted, but Central California Environmental Justice Network, climate first replacing oil and gas. Fossil Free. California Sunflower alliance, protect Monterey County elected officials to protect America. Code Blue, Santa Cruz Climate Action Network, Environmental Defense Center, NextGen California and NRDC, the Natural Resources Defense Council. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you very much. No more in support. How about in opposition? Welcome.
- Hip Deola
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Paul D'Arro, representing the Western States Petroleum Association, having been here all day and listened to the statewide need for affordable housing versus local control, I fully understand the principles of local control.
- Hip Deola
Person
But if there's a statewide need and value that overcomes local control, I believe that in this case, the local control is not merited. Oil reservoirs that sit a mile from the surface in California have always been and continue to be a statewide resource with value.
- Hip Deola
Person
The decline in the production rates in California are because of permitting issues, not a decline in actual oil. We have thousands of mineral right holders that may end up losing the value that are under their property. Whether there is locally. You can legally take the property rights away from the mineral right holders, I think is in question.
- Hip Deola
Person
Shutting down oil production will further exacerbate the problem of relying on foreign sources of crude coming on oil tankers to California shores. We currently import 75% of the crude that our refineries need to meet the demand of California drivers.
- Hip Deola
Person
Most of these imports come from Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Ecuador, countries that don't share our working standards with our skilled and trained workforce, nor our strict environmental standards. Importing foreign oil also comes with a cost to our refineries and ultimately consumers at the pump.
- Hip Deola
Person
In state oil production is transported via pipeline to all refineries in the State of California imported oil and the cost of the transport via pipeline is a dollar a barrel. The importation of oil coming from primarily the Middle East and South America, there is a cost of $6 a barrel for that transport cost.
- Hip Deola
Person
Having a tanker travel three weeks from Saudi Arabia to the shores of California, not only is this a bad idea? The trade off of potential local bans or limitations of oil production results in more dirty foreign oil coming to California and more cost to consumers at the pump. For those reasons, we strongly oppose the Bill.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Chair Senator Sean Wallentine from the California Independent Petroleum Association in opposition to the Bill. I heard it said earlier, this Bill is not opposed to oil production. I disagree. The Bill is opposed to oil production. That's the whole point of the Bill, is to restrict or allow local governments to restrict oil production.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
But it's not about local control because, for example, Kern county would probably want to expand oil production. But this Bill does not allow Kern county to do that. This Bill only goes one direction, shut down oil production.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
I'd like to say, too that the state oil and gas supervisor, Mister Doug Ito, and his team, they have the authority right now to shut down any oil well anywhere in the State of California that is polluting or harming the environment or any individual. They hardly ever do that. Why? Because our oil wells are not polluting.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
They're not pollute. We're not allowed to pollute in California. Unlike oil wells that are drilled in Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Ecuador, where they're bulldozing the Amazon rainforest. That's where CBD should be. They should be protecting the rainforest, not here.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
Trying to shut down the most responsible oil production industry on the planet with a workforce, by the way, that is majority black and brown residents that I hear every one of these hearings that said that we are harming black and brown Californians, that is not true. We employ them. We give them great jobs. Okay?
- Sean Wallentine
Person
We give everyone great jobs. And so this idea that oil companies lurked into neighborhoods and then drilled wells where there are houses is false. The oil wells were there. They've been there for a hundred years.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
And the very cities and counties that the author is wanting to give authority to, gave authority to build houses right up against our oil wells. And now it's our fault. We're bad because people live near our oil wells, who, by the way, we get along with very well, mostly.
- Sean Wallentine
Person
And so in opposition to the Bill, on behalf of our 350 oil producers, service and supply companies, and royalty owners, and our 55,000 strong workforce. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have anyone else in opposition to AB 3233? Madam Chair Mike Monaghan. On behalf of state building trades, in opposition.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in opposition? Seeing none. Comments or questions? Senator?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I can make comments. Now is the time.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
That's why I'm staring at you.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Well, I think after all the hearings we've had on similar bills to this, I think everybody kind of knows where I stand on this. If we were not dependent on oil at all and we are producing oil and shipping it somewhere else, I would probably say, yeah, this might be a good Bill.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
However, out in Riverside County, we don't produce any oil. We don't have one darn oil because we don't have oil fields underneath our county.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If LA County, on the other hand, decided that they were going to produce a ban on gas, oil and gas operations throughout the county, we'd all be in dire, dire straits because all of our people commute. There's 62% of them commute to go to their jobs. So, there's a lot of oil usage right there.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
The other thing that this fails to mention is that a lot of the things that we have today, including the building, you're standing on the podium, you're standing in front of this table, and all of the things around it are byproducts of oil. And if the counties that had the oil all decided to shut down. How.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Would we continue to supply manufacturers with the products that they need to build us the lifestyle that we are all accustomed to?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So, you know, I think this Bill is about 40 years premature, because until we stop needing oil, it is foolish for us to think that somehow if we just shut it all down, everybody is going to be healthy again and move on their way. They'll be broke.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We won't have energy to keep us cool when it's warm like it is today, because, again, a lot of our electrical needs are based on petroleum products that generate electricity at night when we're not generating enough. And right now we have to generate a lot.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So if we were to enable just locations that have the oil to shut themselves down, the entire state would be in trouble. And that's what I think one of the gentlemen was talking about over there was, this isn't just about one area, it's about the entire state.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And that's why when we have state resources, we can't allow jurisdictions that have the resources to say, hey, you're not going to. We're not using that. We're not going to share that. If Sacramento didn't share water with us down in Southern California, we'd be in big trouble.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So if the Arizonans over at Boulder Dam decided they were going to not allow hydroelectric production anymore and shut down their dam, we'd all be in big trouble. So this isn't a local agency issue, this is a State of California issue, and it goes beyond that. It's a State of California issue.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And then if we have to get oil from other places that have less restrictions than we have, that are producing oil in a non environmental friendly way, that don't have all of the regulations that monitor whether they are actually polluting or not, if we're going to allow them to be the producers and then put them on their ships and ship them over here for all of the oil that we need, again, we're going to be in trouble because the oil that we do have, that we would desperately need, because then we'd be short oil that would cost us.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
If you think $6 a gallon right now is bad, we're talking $15 to $20 a gallon. How is anybody supposed to afford that? Are you going to tell everybody, go out and get an electrical car for $75,000? We're not there yet. We don't have the grid to support that part.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We don't have the capability to replace the oil that we are demanding now. And we can't just keep taking oil off the grid until we have something to replace it with. Not a dream of something to replace it with, but the actual stuff on the ground to replace it with.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And usually when that happens, the market moves itself over, and then things diminish as you go along. It will never, ever go away because of what we as consumers demand. The marketplace, not just for gas. I'm talking about all of our products, anything made with plastic, all of it.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So I can't support this Bill because I think it would be a. Long. Term disaster for California in our economy. So therefore, I appreciate. Everybody wants to be healthy. You know, I served the areas, the areas that are oil prone, took over city, Inglewood, all those areas for a long time, and never the side effects of oil.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Never even crossed our minds over there. The air was very clean because of the ocean breezes and stuff, if nothing else. So that's some of the cleanest areas as far as air is concerned around. So, you know, I think there's a lot of things that cause people to be unhealthy, and I think it's.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They're putting a lot more weight on the oil production industry for that cause than they probably deserve. Do they have a little bit? Yeah, but that's our trade off for having what we have. And so with that, I'm not going to be supporting the Bill today, but I do appreciate your effort.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Yes, Senator.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Is a motion appropriate? Oh, you have one? Okay. Senator Wiener?
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Made, by the way.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Okay. I. You know, we're all having to run in and out of Committee, so I didn't know. Who is it?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I will note, attempt to rebut the treatise that we just heard, though it is quite rebuttable, other than noting that we are, in some of the earliest high heat days, making up a heat wave in California ever recorded. We have right now in the US, the highest category hurricane that.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Well, in that it's not hit the US yet, but the highest category hurricane on the earliest date, due to the high temperatures of the ocean. And there is no scientist. I shouldn't say. No. There's always a few scientists.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But the vast, vast majority of scientists will squarely and certainly point that to the fact that we are actually in and experiencing the extremes of the climate crisis. And it was an avoidable crisis. We did not avoid it because of our dependence on fossil fuels. That is not really what's germane in this Bill.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
This Bill is giving some localities the right to act as they feel is appropriate. But again, I will not go through the entire treatise that my colleague made, other than I'm supporting the Bill, and I appreciate you bringing it in.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Appreciate the chair's recommendation.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Would you like to give closing remarks? Unless there's anybody else. Okay.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
Well, thank you, chair. And thank you for the robust discussion. I know that each person on this Committee cares deeply for their community, cares deeply for the people of California, and I absolutely acknowledge that. And I will just reiterate, there are no mandates in this legislation. This is simply about community choice.
- Dawn Addis
Legislator
It's about local governance and local choice, which I've been a proponent of across venues and respectfully asked for your. I vote. Thank you. All right, call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is to pass to the Committee on appropriations. [Roll Call] Two to two.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
We'll leave that open. We'll leave that open for more votes. zero, there you are. Okay. Assemblymember Alvarez, you're here to present AB 2783. It.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you Committee Members for the opportunity to present Assembly Bill 2783, the San Diego Port Reform and Accountability Act. I want to thank the staff for their work on this bill and the Senators who took a moment to meet with me to discuss why this legislation is important to the district that I represent.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I also want to begin by accepting the Committee's amendments as proposed with a commitment and understanding that we can discuss restoring the notice requirement for some cases over the next month as we work through the legislation.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
AB 2783 is a product of over 60 meetings with stakeholders across San Diego, including labor and members of the San Diego delegation. The bill implements key reforms aimed at improving transparency, accountability, and oversight within the Port of San Diego. The Port of San Diego is a unique port in California. It's a port district with multiple member cities, five member cities that was created by the state Legislature in 1962.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
By establishing clear guidelines for ethical oversight, this bill will enhance the port's participation as a community partner and ensure that port decisions are made in the best interest of all members of the public, especially the most impacted communities that I represent. I recognize and value the port's role in San Diego's economy and workforce.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I have three members of my family who have very good jobs in the maritime industry in the port of San Diego, and I want to see the port continue to be successful as it is a backbone of our economy in San Diego's region.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Many of the reforms in this bill are in response to recommendations outlined in grand jury reports issued by San Diego County just last year. The grand jury found that there's a lack of oversight, transparency, and accountability for an organization with such a far reaching power and jurisdiction.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
It also revealed concerns among port district stakeholders where smaller cities reported a lack of follow through and investment in their cities proportional to the revenue generated by the Port of San Diego within the municipal boundaries. AB 2783 responds to these concerns by establishing independent Ethics Review Board similar to what is found in other ports on the West Coast.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
The bill also has been amended to codify the ports existing Maritime Industrial Impact Fund, known as a MIF, which requires the port to set aside maritime revenue for off tide land projects that mitigate impacts that are generated by the maritime activity.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
According to Cal EPAs Cal Enviros screen tool, the sensitracks adjacent to the port of San Diego score in the 100th and the 99th percentile in exposure to diesel particular the very top extreme end. The neighborhood that I where I'm raising my family is in one of those red shaded if you've seen those Cal Enviro maps?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
They're shaded by colors, color coded. Red shaded means it's most severe on the Cal EPA's severity scale. So the MIF this fund can help mitigate some of the health disparities that we have seen.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Just as an example, the Port of Long Beach has an annual allocation of the same type of fund from three to $4 million per year to help, again, support community investments that are related to port activities. The Port of LA also does that, averaging almost $2 million per year.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I have some concerns with the eligible spending categories that the MIF has written and hope that we can also continue to have a discussion on this provision to ensure that the funds get used to help mitigate the real impacts in the community.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
I will say my office has worked in really good faith with the opposition to identify changes met with a port starting prior to the beginning of the legislative session before introducing the bill.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And I recognize there are items that we still do not agree on, but certainly continue to the dialogue as we have throughout the entire process with all parties. AB 2783 has been amended with the reasonable bill that implements transparency and accountability standards found at ports and other public agencies.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
It's supported by local elected officials, the Assembly's San Diego bipartisan unanimous delegation, the League of Women Voters, and the ILW Longshoremen Workers who work on the port. Appreciate your again, the consideration. And now I'd like to ask our witness, we only have one witness, so she might go a little over two minutes, but not much over two minutes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. There we go. Thank you very much, Chair Durazo, Senators, and staff, thank you very much for allowing me to address you today. I flew up this morning from San Diego. I'm just a regular citizen, community advocate and I live in Coronado, California.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Shout out to Senator Dahle, too, because I used to live in Red Bluff and Chico for a decade and I miss my North County. I do. I really do. It's a beautiful place. AB 2783 is critical for us in San Diego.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The port remains a powerful yet unaccountable public agency, and in the last couple of years it's been roiled in scandals, in lawsuits, in unexplained departures of their CFO and their CEO, with payouts, censures of their commissioners, abrupt departures of commissioners, and not a lot of transparency here. That doesn't include the continuous Brown Act violations that happen, public record acts lawsuits that are in the court systems now.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And the third of the three grand jury reports in a row that sharply criticized the port's governance, which the port rejected out of a hand. First, the independent ethics board for the port is an absolute imperative. The port contends they already have a code of ethics.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But I'll remind you, so did Enron Corporation and the Weinstein Film Company. It doesn't mean anything unless it's independent oversight. Independence away from general counsel to truly separate that ethics oversight is a best practice in every governmental agency, and it should be in this one, too.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The grand jury stated, and I quote, the five cities special district is led by a seven member unelected board of commissioners, largely autonomous, self governing, self funded, and independent of oversight by local elected officials.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Changing state law is our only hope to Institute this independent oversight, and that's why the citizens down in San Diego County in these port communities look to you to be our voices. We cannot afford to hire lobbyists to line up at the microphone behind us. We're here and I'm their voice right now.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Secondly, the Maritime Impact Investment Fund must be codified to ensure the set aside is allocated annually. As the Assemblymember Alvarez, who's not my representative, by the way, it's Assemblywoman Boerner, who's my representative, and Senator Atkins. The Port of San Diego has consistently underfunded this set aside. Compared to other California ports. As he mentioned, in 10 years they've contributed just over $2 million. Port of Long Beach since 2009 has 50 million that they've spent in their fund.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The model that other California ports operate under dedicates these funds to mitigate these health impacts in the adjacent communities. In my community, Coronado, by the way, is in the hundredth percentile of diesel particulate pollution, and Coronado is a wealthy community and we share with Barrio Logan the same pollution that is affecting and impacting our health.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So I urge the Committee to determine if the port should be allowed to deter from the best practice that other ports follow, that these funds are for mitigation. These funds need to go to healing public health. We're in the 100 percentile. The same Cal EPA enviro screen shows Coronado in that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But these funds need to go to healing public health and cleaning up port, not to fund electrification mandates. These grants are plentiful for electrification mandates for ports throughout California and we do believe that, that the port of San Diego should seek those for the electrification as well.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
For those that say that Coronado hosts navy carriers at our side, I'll remind you that all of those are nuclear powered aircraft carriers so they bring clean energy. We know this comes directly from the port. The port is a terrific economic engine. It does have a lot of great jobs.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Those of you who come to visit us in San Diego fly into it. But the port of San Diego cannot shirk their responsibilities to us or to you. There are shared state lands, and we implore you to codify these really essential guardrails for the port powers that be to ensure their accountability, proper governance, and true ethical oversight. Thank you.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anyone else in support of AB 2783?
- Marvin Pineda
Person
Marvin Pineda, on behalf of the International Longshore Warehouse Union, Local 9429, representing all the ILW workers and the Port of San Diego, in support. Thank you.
- Michelle Rubalcava
Person
Michelle Rubalcava with Nielsen Merxmer, on behalf of the city of Chula Vista, in support.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, anyone in opposition to AB 2783, please come forward. Good afternoon.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair andCommittee Members. Jonathan Clay here on behalf of the Port of San Diego, regretfully still remain opposed unless amended. We appreciate working with the Assemblymember. We've had many conversations with them over the last six to eight months talking about many of the issues he's brought forward.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Unfortunately, though, the language in the bill is still at a point where we feel that we need to try and seek changes. We're completely all for ethics. As has been highlighted, we've had an ethics ordinance in place since 2001. We've had lobbyist disclosure requirements, and for a long time.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Our main concern with the language that's being put into the bill is the prescriptiveness of it, the problems that it's going to create. Amendments were taken to remove represented employees from this ethics commission that would be created but leave unrepresented there. The problem that creates is first one with our harbor police.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Harbor police above the rank of lieutenant are all unrepresented. So now we're going to have a conflict with the government code over who's going to be going to what place under what processes. Saying the port has always had port employees in employee review board that also independent community members are appointed to that review employee issues.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Again, we're going to have a conflict here. The problem that we have with the way this language is structured is since we're codifying everything very prescriptively, any changes that we're going to need to make in order to make this actually implementable and work is going to require us to come back multiple times, probably for legislation.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
So one of the things that we're advocating for is if you're going to put ethics provisions in there, that's great. Put out some of the basic framework of that, but leave it to an ordinance. Same with the lobbyist disclosure requirements that's been brought up in the past.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
Other governmental entities in San Diego have ethics or lobbyist disclosure requirements. Those are all done via ordinance. Same thing. We argue that, sure, tell us and statute that we have to have this, but let us do this via ordinance. Again, we're a public entity.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
We have to comply with the Brown Act, noticing requirements, et cetera, et cetera. As it relates to the censure provisions, if the ethics process is created, those should be taken out. That all gets handled under whatever is going to be this ethics process in terms of, and again, there's provisions in there on disclosure notice.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
That's the appropriate place to have these kind of conversations. The center stuff, unfortunately, just relates to a disagreement that my board had with a fellow commissioner, and I don't think that's necessary to bring up to Sacramento and legislation. As it relates to the grand jury report. I've had the pleasure of representing the port for 26 years now.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
This is, I think, my second or third time of seeing this very similar grand jury report. And the port has not ignored this. We've responded each and every time talking about the public trust. What's interesting about this is the port is made up of five member cities.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
It was created in 1963 by this Legislature, Senator Jim Mills, and it was made up of the five city harbor departments. So these were the five cities that came together to unify the operation and what was done on the port. Those cities still remain in control of their commissioners. Commissioners serve at will.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
If a city has a problem with something their commissioner is doing, they can ask those commissioners to come back to their council, report out to them, and as was recently happened, they can even remove a commissioner if they feel that they're not representing their interests.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
So there's a lot of kind of misunderstanding from the grand jury in terms of how this works. I think there's a lot of desire to do different things within the tidelands. And as a tideland's trustee, the port has to manage this on the greater benefit for the state.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
It also gets lost that the port has made and operates 23 public parks, fishing piers, and boat launches all around San Diego Bay. The port was the first port to actually implement--I'll wrap up--cold ironing or what is now called shore power, wherever, you know, cruise ships, container vessels, plug in.
- Jonathan Clay
Person
The port is accelerating all the heavy duty truck rules to try and meet the state schools instead of in 2030, by 2026. That's the other dynamic we have here. We have things that we're trying to do on the tidelands versus off the tide lands for improving clean air. With that, we respectfully request your no vote on this bill.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Anyone else in opposition to AB 2783? Seeing none, I guess that's up to you, Senator Wiener. Okay, move the bill. Any comments? Questions? None. Assemblymember?
- David Alvarez
Legislator
Thank you again, Madam Chair. And again, thank you to your staff. Really appreciate the opportunity to work collaboratively. I have heard some things today that I had not heard before from the opposition. As you all have lived through this, the opposition sometimes changes as the course of bills moved through. We've worked through all the prior opposition.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
We were able to remove everyone who was opposed to this. That's why there is nobody testifying. That is, I think you all have seen me do that work here in the Legislature. We'll continue to do that. And if there is a way to get there with the board to address their concerns, we will do that.
- David Alvarez
Legislator
And we'll be the first to bring that up. At least for now, the bill as it is before you, with the amendments, as you've introduced, seem to be appropriate to move forward, and I respectfully would ask for your aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, thank you. Can we have the roll call, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is do pass as amended to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. Thank you, Madam Chair, on behalf of Assemblymember Mathis, item 15, AB 2293. You may present.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. It's not good morning, but I'm here. Assemblymember Mathis would like to thank the Committee and the staff for their diligence and hard work on this bill. The collaborative effort was very much appreciated and shows both the need for this bill and the nonpartisan nature of the issue that it is addressing.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
With that, I accept, on his behalf, the Committee amendments. Briefly, AB 2293 would allow a 501c organization to join a joint powers agreement for the purpose of providing healthcare services.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
AB 2293 replicates an existing and proven mechanism that allows a 501c organization to partner with a JPA when providing services to zero emission transportation systems and applies it to healthcare services. In doing so, this bill provides a flexible solution to improve healthcare services within the state.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The Joint Exercise of Powers Act authorizes two or more public agencies to form another legal entity or establish a joint approach to work on a common problem, fund a project, jointly implement programs, build facilities, deliver services, or act as a representative body for a specific activity.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
JPAs are commonly formed to work on projects that construct or improve groundwater management, habitat conservation, airport expansion, mental health facilities, redevelopment projects, employee benefits services, and regional transportation projects. Despite the benefits that 501c healthcare organizations provide to local communities, these organizations are largely excluded from forming or joining a JPA.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
This exclusion is especially problematic given the current challenges facing California's healthcare system, which is struggling to maintain operations in many regions across the state.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
To help address the challenges facing California's healthcare system, AB 2293 would authorize one or more private, nonprofit 501c organizations formed for the purposes of providing healthcare services to join a joint powers authority or enter into a joint powers agreement. Importantly, this bill expands healthcare access for Californians without incurring any further debt. There is no opposition to this bill, and the bill passed the Assembly with bipartisan support and received no no votes. I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you. Are there any lead witnesses and support, please?
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
No.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Any support testimony at all? Me, toos? Okay. Is there any opposition to the bill? Okay. Seeing none, we'll bring back to the Committee. Any questions or comments? Do we have a. Oh, you're here. Great. Senator Wahab moves the bill, and, Madam Chair, you may close.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
On behalf of Assemblymember Mathis, I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay, we will call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is do pass as amended to the Committee on Appropriations. [Roll Call]
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. All right, I'm ready to go. We're gonna get. We're gonna go back and finish, hopefully. oh, we're gonna lift the call. Lift calls. Lift a call. We're gonna lift all the calls. Are we going to do all of them, including consent? Okay, we have a motion on the consent calendar.
- Committee Secretary
Person
(Roll Call
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. That's it. So we're done? Yeah. Well done. Okay, I just want to say something really quick. I want to give. If I could get everybody's attention, I want to thank the local government Committee staff. Staff? The work and the hours they put in to make all of this happen without being in public sight is truly astonishing. I couldn't have asked for a better team.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Sincerely, thank you, Anton, Jonathan, YT, Evan Ryan, everyone else, please accept my gratitude, and I'm sure, on behalf of all the Members of the Committee to the public, thank you for your patience and cooperation. We've concluded the agenda. The Senate Committee and local government is adjourned. Yeah.