Senate Floor
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We're going to get started in 30 seconds. If we could have all Senators to be able to take your seats. We have a very special introduction here in just a few moments. And we have been told a special music act will be making an appearance in just about 30 seconds. We'll be right back with you. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, we're going to be honoring one of our own here today.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
And that's our Assistant Secretary of the Senate. Can we please give it up loud and proud for the one, the only, Bernie McNulty. Ladies and gentlemen. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate. Bernie. Bernie wants to head off on the crazy train. Let's go to the music, everybody. Let me hear you Senate. Let's go. Can I hear it loud and proud. Let's give it up for Bernie McNulty, everyone. Senate will convene in 30 seconds. For those of you who are new to the Senate, this is how we start every session. We welcome you. Mister Secretary, can you please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Secretary. Quorum is present with the Members and our guests beyond the rail and in the gallery. Please rise. We're going to be led in prayer this afternoon by our amazing chaplain. We are so grateful that Sister Michelle is here. After which we're going to ask you to all please remain standing for the pledge of allegiance. Sister Michelle.
- Michelle Gorman
Person
Well, darn it, I don't have a good prayer after that for Bernie. If I knew, I would have. But maybe this one will do. Let us pray in gratitude for the blessings of this session. And for each one of us, and especially Bernie. And we pray in the words of Rabindranath Tagore. Loving God. You have made us known to friends whom we knew not. You have given us seats and homes not our own.
- Michelle Gorman
Person
You have brought the distant near and made a brother, sister of the stranger. We are uneasy at heart when we have to leave our accustomed shelter. Sorry. We forget that there abides the old and the new. And that there also you abide through birth and death. In this world or in others. Wherever you lead us, you link our hearts with bonds of joy to the unfamiliar and the familiar.
- Michelle Gorman
Person
When one knows you, then, alien, there is none, then no door is shut. O grant us our prayer that we may never lose the bliss of the touch of the one in the play of the many. And until we meet again, may the Lord bless us and keep us. May God let her face shine upon us. And may God look upon us kindly and give us peace. Amen.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you, Sister Michelle. Members, please join us in the pledge of allegiance. Thank you, Members. We are joined by special guests here today, of course, Californians from every corner of this great state. We also want to be able to recognize former Pro Tem and current Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg is here today. My goodness.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Could we please give Pro Tem Steinberg a round of applause. We are also grateful that Bernie's spouse, Amy, is here today and can we please give her a round of applause. Senators, you have really done incredible work this week. And as you know, pursuant to the Constitution, today is the last day for each house to pass Bills at 12, midnight this evening. This week, we have dispensed with hundreds of Bills. Your work has been a testament, a testament to the dedication and purpose that you bring to this job each and every day.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Today is going to be a day where we need to be patient. We ask for some flexibility, and we're going to get the job done. Being focused on several measures that will be in front of us, we want to give folks a heads up. There will be recess times and moments of waiting. And in between, we'll play a couple other tunes and have Bernie do a little bit of a dance. With that said, we have approximately 45, 45 Assembly Bills in front of us today and approximately 60 Senate Bills to be able to dispense with between now and the midnight hour.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
So in the famous four words, let's get to work, and let's be honest, the Senate's work wouldn't happen without the always get it done Bernie McNulty. This morning, this afternoon, we're going to honor Bernie. We're going to take a moment to be able to recognize her, and we want to be able to say thank you for your amazing service. I'm going to try to get through this without getting blubbery. All right. Suck it up, buttercup, is what she just said. Okay. Thank you so much. Hot damn.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
You know, Bernie is one of a kind. She is tough as nails. She is smart, innovative, and one of the best problem solvers, I think, that we have ever met. She's the type of person that you want by your side in toughest moments of your life, whether it's personal or professional. She lives her life always by going the extra mile. You know, the Capitol Morning Report once did an article about Bernie. And in that article, it mentioned the blood throwing incident here on the Senate Floor and how quickly and smoothly the Senate recovered to finish that end of session.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
The article recounted how amazing it was that things went so seamlessly when Senators and staff had to retreat to room 4203 that night. We had everything ready to go within 45 minutes. We even had extra pencils and pens for every Member of the Senate. Bernie thought of everything. Now, no one, no one should be amazed, because there was work to do and Chief Assistant Secretary Bernadette McNulty was on the job. Whenever the Senate has work to do, you can count on Bernie to get the job done. And no matter who you are, Bernie is always going to be there for you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
She's always going to go the extra mile, and she's always going to put people first. Bernie served this nation for 28 years in the US Air Force reserves, and she is served the Senate and the people of California for 27 years, the last 15 years as Assistant Secretary. Candidly, we are all better off for. We're all better off for having work with her. Work with her. If I could be candid, we actually work for Bernie.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
This state is stronger because of her leadership. As it comes time for Bernie to finish her work and turn the page on just an amazing career in public service. We'd like to offer this final comment. Bernie, it has been an honor of a lifetime for all of us to be able to work with you. And I know that it may not be permissible under the rules of the California State Senate, but we want to let you know we love you, Bernie. You are truly the best.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Can we please give a round of applause to the one, the only, Bernadette McNulty. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, esteemed staff, and to the residents of California, we have a few folks who would like to be able to say some words. We would now like to recognize leader Jones on the floor.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President, Members, thank you very much for this opportunity and honor to thank Bernie for her service to this ... body, to our state and to our country. Many of you know that I come from a navy and marine town, but what you may not know is I have a particular affinity to the US Air Force. My grandfather served during Vietnam. I'm sorry. My dad served during Vietnam.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
My grandfather retired from the US Air Force in 1965 and was a POW for two years during World War II. So the US Air Force has a particular closeness in my heart, and I think that's what helped immediately me take a fondness to Bernie, even before meeting her and being warned about not to cross Bernie. I didn't care because we had the air force thing. And I appreciate that. And thank you for your service to our country.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Now, I know Bernie would rather us not do all of this today, and she would rather us keep it brief, but I have a 30 minutes speech because I went back and got her elementary school records, her high school yearbook, and even some of her US Air Force records that I'd like to spend the next 30 minutes talking about how great Bernie is and was and.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
But I value my life. So I've cut it back down to about three minutes. Is that okay? Bernie, of course, deserves every moment of recognition that we're going to give her today, even if it is against her objection. I want Bernie and this body to know that on behalf of the Republican Members and the staff you have worked with over the decades, we sincerely thank you. We appreciate you. We honor you. You are often put in a spot to umpire, calling balls and strikes in a rowdy extra innings game.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And I can say honestly, from my service here in the Senate as a Member and now as Leader, you've always been fair, you've always been clear. You've never left any ambiguity. And I appreciate that. While neither side will always agree with the call, we know you make the calls as you see them in the fairest way possible, always looking to maintain the integrity of the Senate.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
We really appreciate your willingness in the busiest of times to take a moment to answer the questions of anyone, even when I come up to you in the middle of you writing something down. You've not barked at me yet, and I appreciate that. I would have. Those questions could come from staffers, green know it all Legislators, grumpy senior staff, and even some long time Senators like myself that should know better than to interrupt you. You have always handled those questions with patience and professionalism.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
When I took over as Leader, I'm privileged in my service as Leader that I have three previous leaders in my caucus. And one of the very first things they all told me was, whatever you do, do not upset Bernie. Do not get in Bernie's way. Do not try to break the rules, do not stretch the rules, do not. And I took all those warnings to hand, and I have never, and I think all of those warnings were a little bit over publicized, to tell you the truth.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I want to particularly point out how you've built up a solid working relationship with our Policy Director, Greg Maw, over the last 18 years. And that has helped the House function well, efficiently for all of us involved. We can always count on you to know the answer. And to be fair. And as I said earlier, we all could go on and on about your professionalism, balanced with your well placed snark.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
As Bernie might say, let's move it along and suck it up, buttercup. I like that. She's had to say that to me a couple of times, too. Bernie, thank you from the bottom of our heart. All the Republicans and all of our staff and everybody that serves with us, we appreciate you. We love you. Good luck. Godspeed. God's blessings. Thank you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Leader Jones. That was beautiful. Thank you. We now would like to be able to recognize Madame Pro Tem Emeritus, Tony=i Atkins.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Mister Pro Tem. You know, you're going to hear some common themes here, which means it all must be true. But isn't it amazing how the people who deserve the recognition the most hate it the most. Bernie, we're sorry. And in the words of younger people, sorry, not sorry. While every day the Senate is in session is important, every day is. There are a few days that are really kind of supercharged. House of origin, deadline, budget deadline, last day of session. Well, here we go. It is on those days when, as Pro Tem and as a Senator, that I really appreciated.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Chief Assistant Secretary Bernadette McNulty. My mentor and friend, Chris Kehoe, said to me upon my first day in the Senate, trust Bernie. She knows everything. And as has been mentioned, her time. She started in 1997 as an intern with the Chief Clerk and has risen through the ranks to her current role as Chief Assistant Secretary of the Senate, as the PT pointed out, 27 years. You also understand that she served for 28 years in the Air Force reserves.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And to my seven incredible veteran colleagues, what an incredible salute you gave her this morning. Wonderful. But Bernie kept us moving during the pandemic, through the construction, which is, thankfully quiet today, and on many, many late night deadlines, on the days that were busiest, with the most at stake, I was actually able to be calm, mostly because Bernie was at the helm, and that meant everything to me, and I knew it was going to be okay.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Okay. It's no secret that I'm a pretty big Dolly fan, as is my colleague from Bakersfield. I also am a pretty big Bernie fan. It makes sense. Dolly has awards for being the best, and so does Bernie. Dolly treats everyone the same, as the Republican leader said, with fairness, kindness and respect, as does Bernie.
- Toni Atkins
Person
For Bernie, everything is about the team, and she treats everyone like a Member of the team, which is the other reason, I think she probably hates this a lot. She gives it to the team. Dolly wears really big wigs and a lot of rhinestones. Well, Bernie, retirement's a great time to start. Amy, I'm going to leave that in your capable hands. I think a rhinestone hat and some boots, at any rate, ain't gonna happen. Well, we'll see. We'll see. Retirement makes a big difference in people's lives.
- Toni Atkins
Person
And I know that this body is sorry to see you go, but we also recognize how important it is that you get to go to the next phase and to do some incredible things and spend some time with your spouse and family. Amy retired, I think it was a year or so ago, and we got to stand on the Assembly Floor and recognize her incredible service. Today, we recognize your incredible service to millions of Californians over the last couple of decades. I know that no one can comprehend the impact that you have had on the lives of Californians. Thank you for your service to country. Thank you for your service to this state.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We now would like to be able to turn the floor over to the Secretary of the Senate, Erika Contreras. Then we'd like to be able to go back to Madam Pro Tem Emeritus. Some very special gifts. Madam Secretary, the floor is yours.
- Erika Contreras
Person
Thank you, Bernie. First, I want to say that I had nothing to do with this presentation. This was them, all of them. And I told them, don't do it. She has about six more months left. She's gonna be mad. And, of course, they did not listen to me. Are we surprised? No. Secondly, I just want to say that I'm so glad they didn't listen, because you deserve this recognition and so much more.
- Erika Contreras
Person
You know, I'm just so grateful that I have the honor and the privilege to be able to be the one to say, thank you, Bernie. On behalf of our Senate desk team who is here on the floor today, and those working behind the scenes and engrossing and enrolling, Senate TV, Senate Floor analysis, all the Senate and Assembly staff, fellows, interns who you have managed, trained, scolded, counseled after missing deadlines, especially after this week, mentored, guided, and most importantly, lifted.
- Erika Contreras
Person
We say thank you. You arrived at the Capitol a transplant from New York with unique military experience. You were a young woman looking for a new home. A strong, smart woman with incredible work ethic, discipline, and a curiosity for your government. When you decided to come work for the Senate, you gave all of us a gift, not just because of your public service, but through your displays of integrity, kindness, patience, humor, and respect and love for the Senate.
- Erika Contreras
Person
You have openly shared your knowledge and wisdom with so many of us who grew up in this building, sometimes intimidated by the people, the process and the rules. But through your investment in our staff, you have left your mark and a lasting legacy. Personally, I am grateful for the direct support you have provided me, including during some very difficult moments of crisis.
- Erika Contreras
Person
I could not have been able to carry this body without your brilliance and your backing. When I became Secretary, you owed me nothing. And yet you gave me your loyalty, your hard work and your best advice. I am proud of you, my friend, and all you have achieved in your personal life and your amazing professional career. Congratulations to you and Amy. Congratulations, Bernie. I love you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, we now would like to be able to present Bernie McNulty with some special recognitions. First and foremost, we have a beautiful photo of the Capitol that is signed by every Member of the California State Senate. And we want to say thank you to this ... body for celebrating today as Bernie McNulty Day in the California State Senate. We have the certificate to prove it. Can we please give a round of applause for Bernie McNulty.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We're going to take photos in just a moment, but we're also going to ask Bernie to please come forward for one last recognition. So Bernie is a baseball fan and she loves the Yankees. And she is pretty dang excited that we will forgive her for that. But we want to say thank you. We are providing her with an Our Lady of Guadalupe candle with her face on it that she will be able to light for the Yankees this year. So we are going to present that with you. I want to say thank you to the majority leader for providing this. And look at that photo, everybody. My goodness.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We're going to put that right there for a moment. Hot damn. She just swore. All right. We also believe that Bernie McNulty is the greatest of all time, which is why today is Bernie McNulty Day in the Senate. And we have also provided Bernie with an official sash that says GOAT of the Senate. Can we please give her a round of applause. This is a well oiled machine, ladies and gentlemen. Look at this. We're going to put on the GOAT. Now, the last item is. Senator Ashby and Mayor Steinberg has been busy, busy trying to get the Oakland A's to come to Sacramento. And here's the good news.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
The Oakland A's are playing in Sacramento. So we have four tickets. Four tickets directly behind home plate, we are calling Bernie's baseball retirement extravaganza. Ladies and gentlemen. Let's go, Yankees. We are proud as the California State Senate to do a family forward pack. Can I get a 'Let's go, Bernie'. I say, can I get a 'Let's go, Bernie'. One more time. Can I get a 'Let's go, Bernie'. One more round of applause for the one, the only, Bernadette McNulty.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We want to invite Members of the Senate to join the photograph. Hold on, hold on, hold on.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk staff, please come up forward. The desk staff, come on forward. Come on forward. Come on.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Well deserved. All right, Members, as the presiding officer, I'm going to call that unauthorized ceremony out of order, and we will begin again. All right, congratulations. It's going to be hard to top that today, but we have a few spicy bills that will make an effort.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, if you could return to your desks so we could begin our formal part of our work today. We're going to begin with privileges of the floor. There are none. Further messages from the Governor will be deemed read. Messages from the Assembly will be deemed read. Reports of Committee will also be deemed read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to move next to motions, resolutions, and notices. We're going to move now next to consideration of the daily file. Second reading file. Secretary, please read.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
2032.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we are going to begin again our session. We'd like to invite Members to come back to their desks, please. Members, please come back to your desks. Members, we are going to ask that you remain here in the chambers for the duration of the day.
- Steven Glazer
Person
If you have a reason to move to go to the Assembly, as one example or other urgent matter, to please check with the majority leader before you leave the chambers. If for some reason you've left the chambers and haven't done that, we will not hold a roll open for you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So keep that in mind, and please work with the majority leader in advance on times in which you think you may have to leave the floor. Okay, I'm going to try to give you a heads up on bills that are coming up because we are going to jump around a little bit.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So, looking ahead today, these are the file items that we're going to go to. We're going to begin with file item 36. We might even get a unanimous roll call that we can utilize there. We'll see. We're going to go from there to file item 4041-4344 so that's the lineup that we will begin with.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Seeing no microphones up. We will start with file item 36. This is Assembly Bill 2745. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2745 by Assembly Member Mathis an accolade to pest.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Good afternoon, Mister President. Members. I rise today to present AB 2745 on behalf of Assembly Member Mathis. This bill was drafted to protect all agriculture in the State of California, including those who choose to implement sustainable, integrative, regenerative, or organic practices from those who negligently threaten their livelihood.
- Brian Dahle
Person
This bill would authorize a county Commissioner to levy a civil penalty against a person who maintains a premise, plant or conveyance that is infested with a pest that is determined to be a public nuisance.
- Brian Dahle
Person
The penalty under this bill would be up to dollar 500 per acre to be in violation if that person takes any any good faith actions to begin to rectify the problem. Within 15 days of receiving the notice, the civil penalty is dropped.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Good faith action is left undefined to allow the greater flexibility for farmers when solving these problems. Recent floor amendments taken by the author came at the request of the Department of Food and Agriculture and address a conflict with existing regulations as well as barriers to enforceability.
- Brian Dahle
Person
According to the Department staff, the recently removed section would confuse the existing authority in the process for defining pest rather than protect well intentioned farmers from unnecessary actions.
- Brian Dahle
Person
In addition, it also noted by was also noted by the Department that the removal section seems to be trying to solve a problem that does not exist and does not actually have real world impacts.
- Brian Dahle
Person
The author of the measure has also submitted a letter of the Legislature intent to the journal which clarifies the under this measure, farmers will continue to be able to run their operations and address pest infestations in the way they see fit.
- Brian Dahle
Person
AB 2745 has received no no votes and to this date, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Dahle. Any discussion on this measure? Further discussion scene nine. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house. Go through the roll one more time. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 23 to four, the measure passes. Next up is file item 40. We're going to go to. We're going to move next to file item 37. Members, this is Assembly Bill 922. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 922 by Assembly Member Wicks an accolade to nutrition assistance.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahab is the floor manager of that measure. Senator Wahab..
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
thank you. On behalf of Assembly Member Wicks, I rise to present AB 922, which encourages investment in community based restaurants while feeding our unhoused persons and creating pathways to needed social services. Alameda successfully implemented an 18 month, $131 million program using American Rescue Plan act funds. The program provided 5 million prepared meals from local restaurants.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Once funded, AB 922 will continue this program that creates prosperity for local economies and take action in our extreme homelessness crisis. Through AB 922, we want to continue to drive dollars to the more than 130 local restaurants that provided meals. 47% of those restaurants were owned by black, indigenous, and other people of color and or women.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
By passing AB 922, you will simultaneously feed those in need and support economic stability and create a model program for the state. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wahab. Any discussion on this measure, Members, any further discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to eight, the measure passes. Next up is file item 40. This is Assembly Bill 1836. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1836 by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan an accolade to intellectual property.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present AB 1836 on behalf of Assembly Member Bauer Cahan. AB 1836 will require an estate's consent to create a convincing digital replica of a deceased performer in cases not covered by the First Amendment.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Under current law, images and videos of deceased performers can be used without consent in a broad range of creative works without their family having any input or receiving compensation. This bill will allow the families and estates of deceased artists the right to protect the likeness and art of their loved ones. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Ashby, any discussion on this measure? Does any Senator want to be heard on this measure? Seeing no further discussion, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Michelle Gorman
Person
Seyarto.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes 32, noes four. The measure passes. Next up is file item 48. Members 48, this is Assembly Bill 3138. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3138 by Assembly Member Wilson and acclaimed the vehicles. Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you Mister President. Colleagues, I'm here to present AB 3138 on behalf of Assembly woman Wilson. This Bill modifies the existing alternative digital license plate program to allow drivers to choose if they would like the digital license plate to include GPS. Again, that's an opt in.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Current law already allows consumers to choose to purchase a digital license plate. So this just modifies the opt in on the GPS. But the Bill also puts in place privacy standards for the GPS plates that far exceed protections in current law for other comparable GPS equipped devices.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
While GPS, like other technologies, has the ability to be abused, the appropriate policy response is to put guardrails in place, just like we've done in this Bill. Thank you. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister President. I rise in opposition to this Bill. This Bill solves a problem that probably doesn't exist. And the simple question what's wrong with our existing license plates? So what's the benefit of a digital license plate in California? Not really clear.
- Josh Newman
Person
Other than customization, one of the very clear prohibitions in the use of this technology was to not allow for certain parts life's plate to be customized. And yet this company, over time, has continually allowed users to customize their place in ways that I think we'd all find offensive and which the DMV and CHP find problematic.
- Josh Newman
Person
And that includes that bottom of the play where we all see DMV.ca,.gov comma. This technology allows you to reinsert something of your choice there.
- Josh Newman
Person
And although the company has been warned multiple times the technology still exists to do that, they have also been warned in many ways that there are problems related to the location reporting of the devices.
- Josh Newman
Person
Those problems have not only been not solved in California, they recently lost their right to distribute these plates in the State of Michigan for precisely these reasons. And there should be real concern on the part of this body about the privacy and the protections afforded to users of these plates.
- Josh Newman
Person
Specifically, what if you are involved in a relationship and you're the subject of domestic abuse? The very license plate on your car could be used by the abuser to track you down.
- Josh Newman
Person
In January 2023, research revealed that they were able to hack into this company's systems and gain full administrative control with the ability to access locations of each and every reviver plate, and even the ability to change what was displayed on the license plate itself.
- Josh Newman
Person
According to a DMV report a couple years ago, the CHP determined that the plates did not adequately meet CHP's visibility, reflectivity and illumination requirements. And again, in Michigan, they've lost the contract for the violations that I've discussed.
- Josh Newman
Person
And so this is not a solution that we need to endorse, nor does this legislation benefit anything other than a single company. I urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Newman. Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Rise in support of AB 133138. And in response to some of the previous points, this August body often passes legislation that hurts or helps a single company.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I don't find that argument to be relevant in this particular case, but to the point of the Bill itself and the issues that have been brought up on privacy and tracking and GPS and all of that, the bottom line is it's very simple. This is an opt in service. This is an opt in device.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
You have to pay to use this device and have it put on your car. Now, the technology that's in this car is actually very interesting to me. And I was interested in, when I bought a new vehicle a couple of years ago of opting in to this service and this device. But guess what?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
It costs a lot of money. So I wasn't that interested after I realized how much it cost.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I think that the issues that were raised up in the previous presentation in opposition can be totally argued away by knowing that for somebody to put this on their car, they have to choose to have it on, they have to opt into the service, and they have to pay to get it. I urge an aye
- Brian Jones
Legislator
vote on 3138.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Senator Jones, any further discussion? Members, any further debate? Seeing none, Senator Cortese, you may close.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I certainly respect the comments of my colleague from Fullerton around the need for plates in General. And of course, privacy concerns. The law already allows the license plates themselves, the digital plates. The only question this Bill was trying to address is how to handle the GPS piece of it.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
It's been worked over very thoroughly by committees in the Assembly and the Senate, and the DMV itself has reassured us that there are not content based issues. And it's certainly, as one of our colleagues just stated, an opt in. So I'd respectfully ask for your aye vote I'll be having Steve. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members one more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 26 to seven, the measure passes. Next up is file item 43. This is Assembly Bill 2107. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2107 by Assembly Member Shin, an act relating to healing arts. Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Thank you, Mister President. This will be my last Bill I'm presenting on the floor, and it is. A Bill of great weight, so I'm. Very honored to be doing this. AB 2107 allows pathologists to review digital data, results and images from a remote location in order to improve the efficiency of diagnosis.
- Scott Wilk
Person
With this authorization, pathologists will be limited to viewing these materials in a physical license laboratory, even though no laboratory equipment is needed. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wilk. Any discussion. Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to 0, the measure passes. Thank you, Senator Wilk, for your service. As you present your last Bill to the Senate, we're moving next to file item 44. This is Assembly Bill 2729. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2729 by Assembly Member Joe Patterson an accolade to land use.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present AB 2729 on behalf of Assembly Member Joe Patterson. Assembly Member Patterson and I have been working closely all year on our complementary pieces of legislation that used to overlap. We've made them complimentary around housing in response to the most recent amendments. Primary opposition has gone neutral.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The bill extends entitlements and permits on housing projects that were approved before January 1 of this year, but expire before the end of next year and tolls those approvals during any CEQA challenges. We're in a very high interest rate environment right now, and there are approved projects that are frozen because of those high interest rates.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We want to make sure that those permits will continue so that as interest rates, I pray, come down, the projects can get built. This is a good bill. It deserves your support. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Any discussion on this measure, Members, any further discussion? Seeing, none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 36 to two, the measure passes. We're next going to file item 45. This is Assembly Bill 2803. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2803 by some Member of Valencia an act relating to the Political Reform act of 1974.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. AB 2803 restricts the use of campaign funds for illegal defense when candidates and elected officials are convicted of public crime or fraud. If a candidate or elected official who uses campaign funds in defense of these charges is found guilty and is convicted, they must reimburse the campaign account asking for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on this measure, Members? Any discussion? This is a 27 vote bill. It is eligible for unanimous roll call. Seeing no objection. Ayes, 39. No, 0. On the urgency and on the measure. zero, it's a pra. Excuse me, not on the urgency, on the measure itself. We're going to move next to file item 47.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is Assembly Bill 1893. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1893 by Assembly Member Wicks an accolade to land use.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The Legislature worked hard over two years to make sure that local governments are quickly approving CEQA documents and exemptions for housing projects that further our state goals and don't have environmental impacts.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Members, I rise to present AB 1893 by Assemblymember Wicks. I AB 1893. Modernizes the builder's remedy, that aspect of statute, to provide clarity and guardrails to existing law. Builder's remedy is applied when a locality's housing element has not been certified by HCD. Unfortunately, the current law is unclear.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Some interpret it to say that builder's remedy allows developers to build anything they want anywhere. Some interpret it that it provides no benefit to developers at all, which both can't be true. Correct.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
What AB 1893 does is ensure that builder's remedy is a real tool, but it sets guardrails on the size and location of the housing projects that can be built built under builders remedy.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
So the goal is not to penalize the residents in cities and counties that ignore state housing law, but rather to motivate our jurisdictions to follow the law and to get their housing elements certified and to not just give developers any pass, but rather to clarify exactly what it is their right under builder's remedy.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Skinner. Senator Durazzo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I share the goal of getting more Californians into homes they can afford. At the heart of this bill is a good concept. Unfortunately, I can't support the bill in its current form, which came before my local government Committee.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
The bill's new definition of disapprove will limit community input and the ability to address critical environmental justice issues. We already have many requirements on local agencies to approve projects quickly. The law is already clear that local agencies need to meet time frames for approval of projects and can't hold more than five hearings in an application.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
I'm not comfortable with the way the Bill overrides local objective standards, which can include mitigation measures for climate change, flood hazards, transportation impacts and other impacts from development. In many cases, we in this building have told local governments to work hard on addressing those issues.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
This Bill would prevent local agencies from imposing those requirements if it would change the project that the developer proposed. Finally, this Bill lowers affordability requirements to qualify for the builder's remedy and sets a concerning precedent for overriding local affordable housing requirements.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Our greatest need in this state is housing for the lowest income individuals, and the builder's remedy was written so that affordable housing could get built even if the local zoning didn't allow it. Unfortunately, this Bill shifts that focus. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Durazzo. Any further discussion, Members, any further discussion? Seeing none, Senator Skinner, you may close.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I would remind Members that builder's remedy is already in current statute and this adds clarification, including things like height limits. I think the Bill strikes the right balance. It's supported by a diverse coalition of solutions oriented organizations that represent affordable housing developers, market rate housing developers, and housing advocates. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having the secretary. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 26 in favor, four against, the measure passes. Next up is file item 52. File item 52. This is Assembly Bill 2716. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 20716 by Assembly Member Bryan an accolade to oil and gas.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas. Senators, please give Senator Smallwood-Cuevas your attention, please. Senator, the floor is yours.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you. Mister President and colleagues, I rise to present AB 20716 on behalf of Assembly Member Bryan. A bill that will hold Low producing oil wells in the Baldwin Hills Englewood oil oil field accountable for their harm to surrounding communities.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
The Inglewood oil field is the largest urban oil field in the country and the County of Los Angeles, City of Los Angeles and Culver City have all initiated efforts to stop the harms coming from it. The operators of the field themselves have indicated a desire to shift away from marginal production to make better use of their land.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
The district bill is the appropriate measure to help begin the transition. It was written by the frontline communities that we represent. And it is exactly the kind of people centered policy work that residents of South LA deserve. And I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Any discussion on this measure? Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing none.. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 28 to nine, the measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 58. This is Assembly Bill 1042. File item 58. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1042 by assuming Member Bauer-Kahan an accolade to agriculture.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thank you so much, Mister President. Members, I'm happy to present AB 1042 today on behalf of Senator Barkehan. Currently, California treated seeds. Their labels identify the pesticide treatment used. They don't include the concentration amount of each treatment. This makes a simple label change requiring treated labels for seeds to additionally include.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
The amount of pesticide applied to the seeds. This is about increasing transparency to help. Us better understand the impact of these pesticides on human health and the environment. I know the author worked extensively with all stakeholders on this bill. She's taken amendments to delay implementation, create.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
A sell through policy for seeds packaged before 2027 and only apply to the bill to seeds planted in California. With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Vote Members. Anyone want to be heard on this measure? Any Senator want to be heard on this measure? See no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the measure passes. Moving on to file item 59. Senator Jones is the floor manager. AB 3134. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3134 by Assembly Members Chen an accolade of property taxation.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones. Senator Jones, this is your item for me? Sure. Senator Wilk has presented his final bill.
- Scott Wilk
Person
I'm retired.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones, the floor is yours.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I appreciate you being on top of things this morning. I rise to present AB 3134, which expedites the payment of property tax and assessment refunds to taxpayers existing law authorized counties to proactively issue a property tax refund without a taxpayer filing.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
If a claim in the amount owed is less than $5,000, this measure increases that cap to $10,000. I ask for your I vote on AB 3134 ever.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Is there any discussion on this item? All right, we do have a Member off the floor, so we're only going to go through the roll once, and then we're going to put this measure on call. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones moves a call. Next up, file item 60. This is Assembly Bill 863. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 863 by summary Member Aguiar-Curry an accolade to recycling.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. This bill is about extended producer responsibility on carpets. Since July 2011, California consumers have paid a carpet stewardship assessment fee when purchasing the carpet sold in California. That funds a statewide program called CARE. Cal Recycle, determined in CARE's annual reports that they weren't compliant from 2014 to 2017.
- John Laird
Legislator
Again in 2019, 2021 and 2022. In 2021 CARE agreed to pay 1.1 million in penalties for their failure to meet the program goals for four years. Clearly, this program needs to be reformed. Recyclers and collectors have left the state or gone out of business due to a lack of feedstock while carpet is still being landfilled.
- John Laird
Legislator
This bill will result in meaningful reform of the program that the author has been working with stakeholders with since 2021. In her efforts to work with the stakeholders on this bill, the author has scaled back the provision significantly, and those amendments have removed the opposition from the resilient flooring, synthetic turf, and cushioned interests.
- John Laird
Legislator
She's worked hard to get this bill in a more moderate place, is committed to continue to work with stakeholders. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Laird, is there any discussion or debate on this measure? Any further discussion, Members seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Laird moves a call. Next up is file item 61. Assembly Bill 1113. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1113 by Assembly Member McCarty an accoladeto pupil data.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you, colleague. And Members, I rise to present AB 1113. The bill directs the California Department of Education to define and collect enrollment and participation data on students partaking in after school programs. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This Bill has support, support on both sides and is eligible for unanimous roll call. Any further discussion on the measure?
- Steven Glazer
Person
That objection. Aye's 39. No, 0. The measure passes. Moving on to file item 62. This is Assembly Bill 2250. Secretary, please by Senator Wiener. Is he here on the floor? He is.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2250 by summary Member Weber an act relating to health.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Colleagues that rise to present AB 2250 on behalf of Assemblymember Weber. To require health plans and insurers to include coverage for social determinants of health, health screenings, and access to community health workers.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Social determinants of health is commonly defined as the conditions in which people are born, grow, work, live an age in which a wider set of forces and systems shapes the conditions of daily life and affects health, functioning and quality of life outcomes and risks.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This impacts about 80% of your health risks, health outcomes, and, unfortunately, your life expectancy. It's horrific that in 2024, your zip code determines your life expectancy. These screenings are essential in helping people stay as healthy as possible, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Does any Senator want to be heard on this measure? See, no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We do have a full house. We'll go through the roll one more time. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
Skinner, Aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes, 32. Nos, 4. The measure passes. Next up is file item 63. This is Assembly Bill 2263 with floor manager Senator Wiener. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2263 by Assembly Member Friedman an accolade to public social services.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. I rise to present AB 2263 on behalf of Assembly Member Friedman.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This bill creates a guaranteed income study and funding act coordinating council, and tasks it with conducting a comprehensive study on the needed infrastructure and funding mechanisms for a statewide guaranteed income program to alleviate poverty and promote economic empowerment in California. Guaranteed income programs offer a beacon of hope for the 5 million Californians living in poverty.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Guaranteed income not only alleviates financial hardship, but infuses dignity into the lives of those facing economic adversity and grappling with systemic inequalities. Early data from guaranteed income programs in California is promising. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a Member off the floor, so Senator Wiener moves a call. Next up is file item 64. This is Assembly Bill 2460. Senator Umberg is prepared. Secretary, please read the bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2460 by Assemblymember Ta. An act relating to common interest developments.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg, the floor is yours.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. AB 2460 clarifies that an association, the membership itself, may reconvene an election meeting using a reduced quorum, not leaving it simply to the board. I urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, does any Senator want to be heard on this measure? Any Senator want to be heard? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg moves the call. Next up is file item 65. This is Assembly Bill 2629. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2629 by Assemblymember Haney. An act relating to firearms.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Mister President and Members. Even though there are individuals who are federally prohibited from obtaining or possessing firearms, they continue to be able to do so. Because neither the Cal DOJ nor the federal authorities are informed of the mental incompetency of those findings. So this Bill seeks to create more communication to close the loophole. So we can communicate when someone should not have a gun, and therefore they not have a gun. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Portantino. Does any Senator want to be heard on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house, so we're going to go through the roll one last time. And then we're going to close the roll. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Committee Secretary
Person
Cortese. Aye to no.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino moves the call. Next up is file item 66. This is Assembly Bill 2851. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2851 by Assemblymember Bonta. An act relating to air pollution.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, please give Senator Laird your attention. Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. Assembly Bill 2851 focuses on eliminating toxic emissions from metal shredding facilities throughout California. Metal shredding facilities are disproportionately located in our most vulnerable and underserved communities that already are suffering from high amounts of pollution exposure.
- John Laird
Legislator
This Bill will bring together local air management districts, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, and the Department of Toxic Substance Control to develop and implement facility wide fence line air monitoring at metal shredding facilities. At the time of the analysis, there was no registered opposition. I respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house, so we'll call the absent Members one last time. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to seven, the measure passes. Next up is file item 67. This is Assembly Bill 2095. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2095 by Assemblymember Maienschein. An act relating to public notice.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. AB 2095 changes the legal requirements for publication of legal notices to require that the notice be published in print on the newspaper's website and on a statewide website maintained by the clearinghouse for notices by California newspapers are urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, this has support on both sides and is eligible for unanimous roll call. Any further discussion on the measure? Seeing none. Seeing no objections. Ayes, 39. Noes, zero. The measure passes. We're going to move now to file item 68. Assembly Bill 1843.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1843 by Assemblymember Rodriguez. An act relating to private employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and Members. Today I rise to present AB 1843 on behalf of Assemblymember Rodriguez. This Bill would significantly improve and expand the mental and emotional support options available to our EMS workers in private ambulance companies. With AB 1843, our first responders will have the resources and support they need to address their mental health needs and recover so they can continue providing Californians with the emergency care that they need and deserve. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call. Seeing no objection. Ayes, 39. Noes, zero. The measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 71. Floor manager is Wahab. This is Assembly Bill 1831.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1831 by Assemblymember Berman. An act relating to crimes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. On behalf of Assemblymember Berman, I rise to present AB 1831, which would modernize our laws to ensure that AI generated sexually explicit images of children are illegal to possess, distribute, and create. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wahab. Is there any discussion on this measure? Members, any discussion? This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Sorry, we have someone off the floor. All right, all debate having ceased. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 to zero, the measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 78. This is Assembly Bill 180. Senator Wiener is prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 180 by Assemblymember Gabriel. An act relating to the state budget and making an appropriation, therefore, to take effect immediately, Budget Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. AB 180 is a Budget Bill Junior amending the Budget Act. It makes amendments to the 2024 Budget Act and relates to the implementation of Senate Bill 1137 from 2022 by the Majority Leader, which establishes health protection zones and additional monitoring and leak detection plans for oil and gas operations. The Bill appropriates $9.9 million from the Oil, Gas and Geothermal Administrative Fund to the Department of Conservation. $2.32 million from the same fund to the California Air Resources Board. These adjustments are necessary to implement the Budget Act of 2024. Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members. Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener moves the call. Going to move next to file item 79. This is Assembly Bill 218. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 218 by Committee on Budget. An act relating to oil and gas, making an appropriation, therefore, to take effect immediately. Bill related to the budget.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. Colleagues, this Bill includes. Excuse me, AB 218 is the resources Trailer Bill. It includes statutory changes necessary to implement a 2022 measure, Senate Bill 1137, by the Majority Leader, which established health protection zones as well as additional monitoring and leak detection plans for oil and gas operations. Soon after SB 1137 was chaptered, an initiative was placed on the November 2024 ballot proposing to repeal the Bill. That ballot measure was withdrawn this past June. As a result, implementation of much of the Bill has been in limbo for approximately 18 months.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Due to the referendum and withdrawal, several deadlines in the original Bill need to be extended to ensure proper implementation, such as operator, facility, and wellhead compliance and leak detection and response plans. The Bill appropriates $2.65 million from the Oil, Gas and Geothermal Administrative Fund for the 2024 to 2025 fiscal year to the State Water Resources Control Board to support water quality components related to SB 1137. Members, I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener moves the call.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
File item 81 is up with Senator Glazer ready to present.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1205 by Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan. An act relating to public post secondary education.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Madam President, on behalf of Assemblymember, Bauer-Kahan. This is a measure, Members, that you have seen a number of times before. Back in 2016, with your support, a program was created to support students trying to finish their University education at the California State University in four years if they're a freshman, and at two years if they are a transfer. That program is set to expire in sunset. This Bill is the extension of that program.
- Steven Glazer
Person
In addition to extending the sunset or extending the program, it also has some reporting requirements back to the Legislature and changes the name from the California Promise to Finish in Four. Members, when we enacted that Bill that created this program in 2016, the four year graduation rate at the state universities was 19%. That's it, 19%.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The students entering as freshmen graduated today, that four year rate is 38%, a doubling in eight years. That means students completing their degree, less debt and providing the greatest opportunities that that University education can give to them for themselves and for our economy. So it's been a very successful program. Glad that we have the opportunity to extend it and to continue the progress we've made with the greatest work of the University presidents and faculty and staff of the University system. And with that, respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Does any Member wish to be heard on this item? I see no mics up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Ayes, 39. Noes, zero. And the measure passes it.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're going to go to file item 46. Is Senator Menjivar on the floor, please? Could you ask her to return to her desk. Senator Menjivar. All right, Senator Menjivar has been found. Let's move to file item 46. This is Assembly Bill 2041. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2041 by Assemblymember Bonta. An act relating to the Political Reform Act of 1974 and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Menjivar, the floor is yours.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
AB 2041 raises the $5,000 lifetime cap on security expenses using campaign funds, which has not been adjusted for 30 years and now is wishing to increase to a $10,000 lifetime cap. AB 2041 removes the requirement for a verified threat by law enforcement to reimburse the security expense.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Instead, it would have the candidate or elected official confirm under perjury, there is a security threat. The author's office has worked extensively on this language with FPPC. The candidate security is a nonpartisan issue and has previously received bipartisan support. Therefore, respectfully asking for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? All right, seeing none, this is a two thirds vote. Members, an urgency. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we have. Hold on, please. We have all the Members who are back on the floor, so we're going to go through the roll one more time. Members, please. Your attention, please. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, it's 33 to 5 on the urgency. 33 to 5. The measure passes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to move next to file item 80. Members, this is Assembly Bill 98, floor managed by Senator Limón. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 98 by Assemblymember Juan Carrillo. An act relating to land use.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Members. Today I rise presenting AB 98 on behalf of Assemblymembers Carrillo and Reyes. AB 98 represents an important step forward addressing a pressing issue that continues to impact California, land use decisions and that negatively impacts vulnerable communities. Our state and our world economy is increasingly relying on movement, storage and delivery of goods.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Although there are many benefits that come with this, there are also some acute costs that are associated. Some communities in our states are becoming concentrated by the development that fuels this industry, causing them to be hubs for warehousing and the often diesel trucks that come with them. Areas like the Inland Empire contain well over 1 billion warehousing, making it home to 4000 distinct warehouses and 600,000 truck trips a day. This is why for nearly a decade the Legislature has grappled with how to protect impacted communities from the risk that heavy duty diesel trucks present.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Freight and its impact on public health and communities across the state matter and is an issue statewide. AB 98 addresses these impacts while enacting a number of key policy changes. First, AB 98 puts in place mandatory setbacks of 300 to 500ft between warehouses and sensitive receptors such as homes, schools and hospitals.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
These setbacks vary based on the size of the warehouse and the zoning of the area. Next, this legislation puts in place 21st century building standards for new warehouses such as prohibiting heavy duty diesel truck from being adjacent to sensitive receptor property lines and property line buffers of 50 to 100ft. AB 98 requires a two for one replacement for homes demolished in order to make room for more logistics, development and 12 months payment to displace renters. AB 98 also puts in place a mandatory update of truck routes statewide to ensure trucks do not route themselves through residential streets in our communities.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
AB 98 includes an interim report in 2028 that allows for us to track our progress in reducing emissions due to these setbacks and evaluate our next steps. The legislation before you is a compromise and like most compromises, there are groups that will say that this Bill goes too far and there are groups that say this Bill does nothing.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I believe that this is a sign of a compromise and I trust that the authors, Assemblymember Carrillo, a city planner for over 20 years and Assemblymember Reyes, one of our Legislature's strongest environmental justice champions, have delivered a Bill that strikes the need for a compromise. I know that they are committed to seeing legislation not just as we pass it, but also through the implementation process as well. More importantly, I believe this legislation is not only righteous in its intent, but it is critical in addressing a growing issue. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Limón. I have microphones up from Senator Ochoa- Bogh and Senator Dahle. We'll first turn - and Senator Durazo. We'll first turn to Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. As a representative from the Inland Empire, I rise to express great concern with this last minute legislation. The issue is of critical importance to our region as one of the fastest growing areas in the country, including the fact that San Marino County is the largest county in the state. And whereas the areas in the Inland Empire still has a lot of open land, it needs to keep pace with the demand for employment opportunities. Otherwise, our residents will continue to commute for hours to other regions for work, which, mind you, only result in increased emissions. Many of our communities have recognized concerns regarding our region's air quality and adopted policies to help balance the impacts of the economic development in our communities needs. Those policies should be developed by our communities, at the very least with their input.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I ask the authors to hold this Bill to ensure that all stakeholders are at the table so we can have a true collaboration on a comprehensive policy that will benefit all of our communities, rather than a gut-and-amend at the very last minute in which I have to express great concerns, because many of our own stakeholders within the Inland Empire had no idea that this Bill was moving forward or even voted or being discussed.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
That is not true representation. And one last point I would like to make is that many people talk about how many warehouses are in the Inland Empire. And of course, one, because we do have a lot of open land, and number two, because the I-10 corridor has always been a major corridor to the State of California from other states of the country or in the country, coming in through the area to deliver many of the goods that our state utilizes. So with that, I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. I have on the speaker list, Senator Dahle followed by Senator Durazo, Caballero, Wiener and Eggman. So I see your microphones. Let's turn next to Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Members, I too rise in opposition. I just want to say that I actually sat in the Committee and it was one of the most bizarre committees I've seen in the 12 years I've been here. First of all, the Senator from Hayward asked who was at the table and they said, oh, the local groups and there was the social justice people and the labor, and then they said specifically who? And neither of the authors could say exactly who was at the table. That's a fact.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I was there and they couldn't answer the question. This Bill has been cooked up at the end. And let me tell you something. This is not just the Inland Empire. This is the whole State of California. Now those in the Inland Empire have some, I believe, some significant issues that may need to be addressed. But we have a port in Oakland that brings freight in Stockton that ... to the rest of the country. And so this is just, I think more than anything it's, it was not, the people weren't at the table.
- Brian Dahle
Person
This was cooked up in the backrooms of the Assembly in smoke filled rooms and it was not done right, not in the transparency of people at the table because they couldn't answer who was at table. So this Bill needs a lot more work. This is a statewide Bill and it's going to impact a rice farmer in Yuba who is going to expand 10,000ft and he has a day school next there next to it. He's going to be impacted. This is not just the Inland Empire. What has been the focus of this Bill. This is a statewide Bill. It's going to impact a lot of the state. And for those reasons, I respectfully ask for no vote
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up is Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you Mister Chair. Mister President. I serve as Chair of the Local Government Committee where we heard this Bill. This Bill establishes new guardrails to protect frontline communities impacted by warehouse development. It establishes setbacks and other minimum standards for new and expanded warehouses. Yes, across the state, because we need state standards with higher standards for the most impacted region, the Inland Empire.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
It ensures two to one replacement of any demolished housing at an affordable level, which is critical to those communities. It requires local governments to ensure they have truck routes that direct traffic away from homes and schools. State standards are critical to make sure that local governments aren't approving these warehouses with almost no protections at all for local communities. On the other hand, local governments can still require larger setbacks and more mitigation measures, including CEQA mitigations, or deny these developments altogether. Nothing takes that away from them.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
But I especially want to thank Assemblymember Reyes and Carrillo for being willing to submit a letter to the General to clarify that the housing protections in the Bill are intended to expand on the hard fought protections for tenants. This is difficult for some, but I want to thank the people who have been organizing and I fighting for their communities for years. This is not a new issue. The specific issues that are raised in this Bill have been debated and debated year after year, and we've not been able to reach any kind of an agreement.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
And this is one special opportunity. So I want to thank the activists, those fighting for environmental justice, and the authors, the activists being both working people inside of those warehouses who face terrible wages and working conditions. And yet the construction jobs of those warehouses, many times are good jobs. I want to thank the CBOs, the residents.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Those are the people that many of us have stood with. And then there are others who oppose this because it's finally getting to, we're finally getting to the point of statewide standards. They don't want any standards. In every campaign we have, we come across these moments of some very difficult decisions. In this case, poor communities, poor communities, communities of color who historically have gone the shaft that are involved in this. They need some justice. In this case, the air our communities breathe, the illnesses our children suffer, the poverty of not knowing if they can pay for a roof over their head.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Local governments have failed, promising economic development while giving away millions and millions in tax breaks. Throughout our lives, many of us have fought hard for what we thought was the best along every step of the way. We always wanted to get better, knowing that we deserved much, much more. So our choice is, do we keep on pushing for more and fair and decent living conditions for our communities, or do we give up? Today I ask us to embrace this big step forward, not give up, keep fighting for more. I for one, along with many of you, will stand side by side with these communities. Thank you very much.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Durazo. Next up I have Senator Caballero, followed by Senators Eggman, Becker, Menjivar, and Grove. Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President, for the opportunity to say a few words in support of this Bill. I want to thank the authors for their incredible work. As my good friend from LA said, this is not a new issue. Two or three years ago, a Bill very similar to this, taking a totally different approach to how to regulate the space around warehouses, was presented by one of the authors and the Bill came to Gov and Finance and we had a hearing where we invited the community to come and have a conversation with us about why the Bill was important.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Ultimately, I asked the Bill to be held and I talked with the author and asked her to do some more work on it. There were too many things that needed to be taken care of in order for us to make sure that we were protecting local government control, but we also creating an opportunity for people to be safe in their community when we start building these kinds of, of facilities.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
And she went out and she did exactly what she said she was going to do, we had a robust discussion in our Committee. And I just think it's really remarkable that she was able to get to a place where not everybody is happy. And if you look at the list, the list has, it's not one side or the other, it's both sides that are a little bit unhappy. And the value of that is, you know, that it's been negotiated pretty intensely and I understand not everybody was at the table. And sometimes that's hard to do.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
What you're trying to do is make sure that you're giving enough local control to local government so that they can make some choices for their communities. And you give an opportunity for the workers that are going to work inside the building and the workers that are going to live in the neighborhood to also have peace of mind that the environment will be as clean as possible given these kinds of facilities.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
So as we move, as we move to a society where people don't shop in a store anymore, but they buy online, these facilities are going to continue to proliferate. And so we've brought it on ourselves and we need to make sure we're protecting all elements in the community as we do this kind of development. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Senator Eggman.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mister President and Members. Unfortunately today I rise in opposition to this Bill. Locally, my community has been working for a while now to come up with our own ordinance around this. And as far as we can see, this looks like it supersedes whatever we may come up with. And if my environmentals and my local community are against this, then I think something's wrong with looking at a one size fits all. As people know, I represent the Stockton area where we have the 99, the 5, the 205, the 80, and the port of Stockton, as well as a rail system that sends things all over.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
The way this Bill is written, it also includes some small manufacturing. We voted in this chamber a couple days ago to make sure nobody does paper. We only have plastic. Well, I got international paper in my district making these paper bags and an ordinance like this is going to impact them. Those are good jobs. Those are jobs off the highway. So I believe that as we continue, as the Senator from Merced said, we are now a society who likes to shop online and we want our things and we want them now.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
I'm not saying that these warehouses should be the end all, be all for people, but it is a part of our society and our goods movement. And again, as far as I can see, this does not just impact warehouses, but also small manufacturing. The port of Stockton, the largest inland port in the western hemisphere, is set in my district. And when the port of Stockton became public, next to it was a navy station, Rough and Ready Island. Stockton community was able to acquire all of that.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
And that has been our main focus for development, for warehouses, for everything having right there on the portennead where the ships come in, the train goes out. This Bill will impact my entire region as far as jobs, job creation, and movement goods. This Bill, at the end of the session, rushed right through with nobody allowed to give any input, I think is not the way to go about good legislation. And I would ask for your no vote and come back next year and try to include and include all the ones that are already in process around the state and not just put a one size fits all at the end of session on the last day.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Eggman, Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I want to address two issues, the environmental justice issue number one, but also I want to address the issue of manufacturing. It gets to some of the points that were just brought up in my district. First of all, we have a lot of manufacturers. I've got a long list of manufacturers expanding 20% happens all the time. That's what happens in technology. You start small and you expand, and these manufacturers are making choices all the time about where to, these companies are making choices about where to manufacture. And in most cases, now they're deciding not to manufacture in California.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
And I think that's one of the things we want to address as a body, and I want to address is how do we bring manufacturing back. How do we keep manufacturing here. So anything that makes it more complicated for them, whether it be design standards, all these things, when they were not the intent of the Bill is of great concern for me. So I've spoken to the authors, and they've committed to me to working on manufacturing because they were, again, not the intent of this Bill. And I've trusted that commitment. So that was important to me, and I wanted to bring that up because it was important conversation.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Secondly, on the environmental justice front, I'm certainly concerned that so many environmental justice groups are opposed. But I do, I certainly know the heart of the authors, especially one of the authors, who I think we can use the names I can never forget on the Assemblymembers. But I'll just say Assemblymember Reyes, who has been working on this for many years, and I appreciate the comments of my colleague from Los Angeles about the wins in this. And of course the locals can always decide to make more stringent regulations. So those are two concerns, but I do appreciate the efforts to address them. And thanks for hearing me out.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Becker. I have Senators Menjivar, Grove, Wiener and Ashby. Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Colleagues, I rise with heartburn because I have a lot of respect for both the Assembly Members and I spoke to Assembly Members Reyes on this and I greatly, greatly respect them.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
But I share a lot of the concerns that the Senator from Stockton, Yucaipa, others have shared this, and maybe it's with two years in here, the frustration of all these big kind of topics getting shoved down our throats in the last minute without going through a true process to really have every individual that is going to be impacted by this at the table.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And I know that wasn't the intent of the authors here, and I get that that's in front of us. But this, you know, there's a center that mentioned this is to protect our most vulnerable communities. This will not protect our most vulnerable communities. These setbacks don't even meet the carbs minimum 1000ft recommendation.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
This is a 300 to 500ft setback from the loading dock. Imagine if they have an entire parking lot that is 300ft. There's going to be absolutely no setback. And in my district, warehousing and manufacturing is blooming, which I'm really excited for because of the jobs that's bringing to my district.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
But think about the even more congestion that that's going to cause without adequate state direction. And I do believe that this Legislature next year can come back and actually really work and then go through the entire process to get something that's going to have everybody feel like it is a compromise.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
But when not one single environmental group is for this legislation, we need to be wary. And with that, I'm respectfully asking for a no vote on this Bill.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up, Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I too rise in opposition of Abby 98, which is a rushed Bill that's extremely harmful to jobs, farming and redevelopment efforts in my district. It removes all local control and zoning issues and creates aggressive mitigations, which was mentioned by my colleagues the last minute.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Gut and amend has zero input from the public, which they mentioned as well, and that these individuals are responsible for these land use decisions or local decisions it unfairly targets the Inland Empire. But I also think it unfairly targets the central valleys.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Specifically my colleague from Stockton with the ports and then also with us, where we have large land. That's one of the values that we have in the central valley is we have land. And to negatively impact us again on these issues is just completely unfair. The Bill was intended to address warehouses in urban areas.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
However, as drafted, the Bill applies to agriculture and processing facilities. So if you have an agriculture farm and you have a warehouse on it, and you want to do where you park your tractors or your product or your almonds or whatever the case may be, and you want to expand it, you'll be bound by this legislation.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And it just doesn't fare well to the agricultural communities. This one size fit all approach, you know, undermines local control. And I would just like to remind you guys, without being sarcastic and just being real genuine, that two days ago you were talking about local control is good.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Like, you have to have local control and they can shut down oil and gas and it's all about local control. And then now you make the argument that vehicle land use and vehicle traffic can't be entrusted to local control. And so I guess it just depends on the weather or the subject matter.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
But the bottom line is that this is a rushed and flawed piece of legislation.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I really do wish I would have my colleague from Stockton coming back with me next year to be able to address this issue if it does come back up, because she really understands it and gets it from a perspective of representing her district with the Porta Stockton there.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And she has, again, no offense, ma'am, but the third largest food producing county in the world. And I obviously have the first. And so. But I don't have a port, but I think it negatively impacts both of our districts.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And, you know, just to be fair, I know that, you know, my colleague, my good colleague from Los Angeles and San Francisco, you represent large amounts of people and we represent large amounts of rural area, but we should have.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I wish there was some kind of rule that negative policy that comes out of this building can't negatively impact another person's district. And this Bill does that and it negatively impacts the Central Valley. And I respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise in support of AB 98. I actually enter. I want to first, there's been a lot of talk today about how as if this Bill just sort of landed from outer space and plopped in our lap a few days ago, and now we're voting on it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
There has been years and years of work on this issue. I entered the Legislature in December 2016, on the same day that Assemblymember Reyes entered the Legislature in December 2016. She has been working on this issue ever since then. Our former colleague, Senator Connie Leyva, spent years and years working on this issue.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
This is a known issue, and Bill after Bill has been introduced on this. And the sad reality is not sad, it's just the nature of politics is that the folks, the warehouse industry and the industry folks, do not want to see any limitations or any meaningful limitations on warehouses.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And there are folks on the other side who want to see incredibly strict, much strict, far stricter restrictions than are in this Bill. And so Bill after Bill would just die. And so now we have before us a Bill. Is it perfect? No. No Bill of this complexity is going to be perfect.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But does it strike a reasonable balance to say, yes, we need logistics, we're not going to just shut it down. But people live in these communities, too, and this is impacting them in profound ways.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Another aspect of this Bill that I think is really worthy is that when housing is removed, it has to be replaced two to one. I think that is also a good thing. So I support this Bill. I will be voting for it, and I urge and I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Senator Ashby, followed by Senator Niello.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. I rise in opposition of AB 98, though I hold both authors, Assemblymember Carillo and Assembly Member Reyes, in very high esteem. And I know that they have worked hard on this issue and are experts in the area. But sometimes a solution for one area doesn't fit every area in California.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I was local elected here in Sacramento for over a decade, and it has only been a couple of years since we suffered an absolute shortage of warehouse space. Warehouse space here means innovation, jobs also. We have a lot of areas in Sacramento where warehouses are close to homes. We do it intentionally.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
We worked hard to create corridors for healthcare, where we do innovative work to try to push forward solutions for healthcare, for finding cures to diseases, for manufacturing things right here in the great State of California, for keeping them close to where they're being used and sold by patients and by doctors and hospitals.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
We've worked hard on these goals. I've heard from my cities and my county all have taken official positions in opposition of this Bill. In fact, some of my council Members and mayors have testified in the last 24 hours at hearings to say how worried and concerned they are about this bill's implementation in this region.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I applaud this work. And I know it's hard to find a balance. And oftentimes in this chamber and in many other chambers where we make laws, if nobody's happy, that means you've found a middle ground.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
But there are also times where when nobody's happy, it means we need to keep working on it because we haven't solved for the problems that we originally set out to cure.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I believe that the implementation of this Bill in my district and around my district will create a magnitude of issues, and I believe it is an issue that we should empower our local governments to be a stronger part of. I urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up, I have Senator Niello, followed by Senator Seyarto. Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Members, this is what we do, and I'm not speaking to the last minute, rushed aspect of this Proposition. What I'm speaking to is the one size fits all. Yesterday I spoke about earthquake standards for hospitals. I could come up with many more examples.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
One rather perverse definition of politics is looking for problems, finding them everywhere and applying all the wrong solutions. Now, that's not exactly what's happening here.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
We're not necessarily looking for problems, but we see a problem in a particular area and we solve that problem for that particular area and we apply it to the whole state, whether it applies or not.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And I would suggest that there is strong evidence that this Bill, this proposal, the details here, do not equally apply to every area the state. I've heard comments about allowing for local control, but I also heard the comment that we are applying some reasonable standards where most, presumably locals, want no standards at all.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
And the specific statement that local governments have failed. Now, maybe that's why they were excluded from the discussions. And with regard to my colleagues, my colleague from San Francisco's comment about a balanced approach, how in the heck can you have a balanced approach when you completely eliminate one of the major stakeholders that's affected by the policy.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I would urge, and also with regard to the comment about my colleague from Menlo park who says that he has the assurance by the author that they will work to allow for manufacturing. Well, I just add that if local governments are excluded from this, what's the guarantee that that's going to be revisited? Assurance at all?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
One specific thing that I'd like to point out that probably a lot of people might not be aware of, particularly with regard to effect on local governments. Every jurisdiction in California has to redo their circulation plan. Everyone it's mandated by this Bill.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Every jurisdiction with a General plan has to redo their circulation plan, that is estimated to cost tens of or hundreds of millions of dollars. Now, that's a reimbursable mandate, right? No. I found a lot of people don't realize that if a mandate can be funded by the local government by imposing fees, it's not a reimbursable mandate.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
That is the case here. Local governments are going to have to redo their circulation plan at the cost of millions of dollars of process, and they're not even going to be able to apply for a mandate reimbursement. Now, forget about the fact that reimbursable mandates are largely ignored by the state, but nonetheless, it is not even eligible.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
I urge a no vote. I urge that we stop looking at one area, solving a problem in one area, applying it to the entire state, whether it applies elsewhere or nothing. I urge a no vote. I urge a difference in our practices.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Nirllo, Senator Seyarto.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
Thank you very much, Members. I rise in opposition to this measure. It's already been stated about the local jurisdiction versus the state having intervention. Local jurisdictions matter. It hurt my heart to hear somebody describe that are analyzed, that somehow our local government officials in these affected cities have failed their cities.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I know those folks. I've served with them since the nineties. They have worked hard to try to create economic development in some of their communities where there was none. And those are communities that have always struggled because of their location. One of those communities was able to tap into the interest in having these warehouses.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And they're not just warehouses, folks. This is where our food comes from. This is where our vehicles come from. This is where our hardware comes from. When you're trying to fix things at home, this is where all of those type of things that we use on a day to day basis come from.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And the reason they're out there is so that we don't have to have them in shipping containers offshore because we don't have any room for them. Our region, and this is the region I come from, I represent a large swath of this area that is being, that is in question here. And yes, there are a lot.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And as stated earlier, the reason is because we have freeways that go south, north and have access to the entire western United States.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
So when you're trying to get product to people who are sitting on their computers and are expecting more and more to have their product by the next day or the day after, that's what we're responding. We're creating that demand, and they're simply responding to it.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I want to talk a little bit about the corridors where they are building these. The 215 corridor used to be a two lane free or two lanes on each side freeway. And alongside the freeways was some not very prolific development. And that's where these are going in. They're going into the areas that weren't developed.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And the housing that they are replacing when they buy those properties from those property owners is housing that, according to our environmental justice efforts, we don't want there because it's right next to the freeway.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
When these warehouses came in, the 215 freeway got expanded to three lanes and it had several overpasses and interchanges that it didn't have before. And some of the arterials through those very impacted communities that were already impacted are now improved a great deal, which is helping the circulation. It needs a lot more.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We need more investment out there in our circulation, but that also enables us to put neighborhoods and build neighborhoods in areas where neighborhoods should be built. So there is a lot of, you know, there's been a lot said about that issue in particular, but there's also been a lot said about the air quality out there.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
I grew up in Pomona, Walnut Valley, and this whole region, that whole foothill corridor, if you look it up, the reason we have bad air quality out there, and have since the 1960s and seventies, long before warehouses came in, is because of the prevailing winds, which means the onshore winds come in from the La area and blow all the smog into our basin.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And it's trapped by the hills and it's captured by an inversion layer. That's why it's smoggy out there, always has been. And yes, it's terrible. The best days for us were Santa Ana wind days because it would blow all the stuff out over the ocean. So this isn't the reason that there's bad air out there.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And in fact, it can help us have better air out there because the people that work closer to their homes don't have to commute because it was prevailing winds. And the second reason was commuter traffic. As we expand our housing out into our region, we need jobs out there.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
We need the jobs from the warehouses, we need the jobs from the development, the commercial development that goes out there, and the manufacturing. But we're not going to get those if we intervene in our local agency's efforts, whether it's a county or a city, to be able to mitigate the issues that their constituents are concerned about.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
A one size fits all approach does not work. The last thing I want to once again mention is, yes, I was at that hearing also, and what happens up in the northern part of or over on the other side of our hills is much different than what happens in our region.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And if we're going to have an honest discussion and consider all of these impacts, including the economic impacts of these regions, it's important to have the input from the people who are on the ground. If you don't think their planners are being responsible, maybe you should have those planners at the table to talk about that.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
But I can guarantee you none of the planners on our side of the hill were consulted about this effort this year, folks. Local control is important. They know what their economics are. They know what their street circulation needs to be. They know what improvements need to be made. They know what landscape needs to be put in.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
And I can tell you from experience watching this area develop for the last 30 years, there's been a lot of things that have been done right by those very people that are being criticized as having not been doing things right. No, they have been doing things right. They've been growing their economy.
- Kelly Seyarto
Legislator
They've been providing jobs, and they've been enabling development of housing away from our freeway corridors. And that's what we're supposed to be doing. So I would urge everyone to consider this very carefully. If this was your region, would you want this to be imposed on your area? I urge you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
No vote. Thank you, Senator Seyarto, seeing no further microphones up. Senator Limon, you may close.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. Members, I appreciate the robust discussion on this important issue.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And I do think that the magnitude of discussion is reflective of this issue in particular and the impacts it has from all over the state, because we've heard from Members representing very different parts of our state, there's been a lot of talk about the process of giving input.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And one of the things that I reflect on is that as legislators, the number one way that we can give input or create a public process is by carrying a Bill. When I got here in 2016, I looked at what some of the issues were that were important.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Today, I reflect on this particular issue, and I find that 15 bills were introduced in this space related to heavy duty vehicles, land use, impacted by warehouses. Very few. As a matter of fact, only one of those became law.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
So at least in the eight years I've been here, 15 bills in, we have not been able to get past the status quo. The status quo is nothing right now. There is no floor on what the basic requirements should be.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And both sides that oppose this, that come from very different perspectives, believe that the status quo is better that's really difficult, Members, because for all of us that want to have input, we've had the capacity to raise this issue through legislation, to work on this.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And we find ourselves in a space where we now have a Bill in front of us that I think every single one of us can find something we don't like. Certainly as a Member that has carried strong environmental justice legislation, this is hard for me. It is hard and difficult for me to be here.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But I also know that eight years in 15 bills and quite frankly, three authors that have carried those 15 bills, this is where we are at. I want to point everyone to section 65.0935, sections a and b of this Bill that state that local governments can exceed the, the expectations of this Bill.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Local governments still have to approve warehouses. It doesn't take away their authority to decide. I agree that there are areas, communities, cities, counties that have a great majority of warehouses between now and the next eight years when we might get something on the table. I can also guarantee that we will have more warehouses.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
This allows for a floor. It does not set the ceiling. We've talked about jobs and the way that jobs are impacted. This is also about ensuring that those who do the jobs that care about all of this have the ability to know what's ahead of them. And that's why we have such strong labor support for this.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
We've talked again about the plans and how long it's going to take cities to come up with transportation corridors. We've aligned this Bill with what their already expected requirement is for 2028. I know that this is a difficult vote.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I know that this is not easy because I stand here before you telling you it is a difficult vote and it is not easy.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But I also strongly believe that over the eight years that I have served in this Legislature, the number of bills that have been introduced that have gone through committees and not made them out or not made it to the finish line and gotten a signature have all been part of a discussion.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
They've all been part of a public policy recognition that says we have issues.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
So I stand here before you, and I know we're all going to have to make a difficult decision, but I stand here before you asking for an I vote because I truly believe that the evidence we have over the last eight years that we've been working on this policy issue is that this is where we are at.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
The, the authors have committed to continue to think about this legislation passed today. We don't have the evidence that the status quo of nothing, of no floor, no standards. No regulation is better than what we have in front of us. Members, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'll debate. Having ceased secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
No, call the absent Members, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members one more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Lemon moves a call. See? How do we do? First vote? You. You won. You won. Okay, now.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, folks, we're going to... We'd like to ask all Senators to remain here in the chambers. We're going to do a few mechanical paperwork. Issues should take us just a minute or two, so please remain here in the chambers. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, Members, we'd like to ask Members to return to their seats, please. We're going to move now to unfinished business. This is our favorite part of the calendar because it's Senate bills that have come back for final review. Members, we're going to begin with file item number four. This is Senate Bill 268. I don't see.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, no running in the chamber. All right, let's call up file item four. SB 268.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 268 by Senator Alvarado-Gil an act relating to crimes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Alvarado-Gil.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present Senate Bill 268. We will be talking about rape, a serious and violent felony. I want to make sure that those who are sensitive to this topic have the ability to step out if needed. This is a very important Bill, and it is back to us on concurrence.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Senate Bill 268 will make all forms of rape, including that of an unconscious person, a violent felony. Here in California, rape is already a violent felony when accomplished by force. This Bill would memorialize in law that drugging someone and taking away their ability to consent is, in fact, a form of force.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
I would like to point you to People versus Lewis, which was decided in June of 2023 by a 7-0 vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Just a moment. This is..Want to speak to the amendments in the Assembly? Okay.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Correct. Correct. In this case, it centered around a woman who was drugged in a bar. She was kidnapped, and she was raped. The victim was drugged, so her cognitive abilities were impaired. She walked out of that bar with the defendant. Instead of physically being forced out of that bar, she walked.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
The defendant argued that if he did not use physical force to kidnap the victim, but instead used deception. And in this ruling, the court ruled that using deception to kidnap someone who was mentally incapacitated is the same as using force.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator, I just want to ask you again to please speak to the Assembly amendments.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
Yes, madam. Mister President. Thank you. The Assembly amendments do make technical changes and add several co authors to this Bill. This court case has been instrumental in understanding why this Bill is so important. We've been working on it for two years.
- Marie Alvarado-Gil
Legislator
We've gotten quite a bit of support without a sponsor and without the endorsements of the women's caucus or any of the affinity caucuses. I do want to thank the Problem Solvers Caucus for sponsoring this Bill and urge an I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion on this measure, it is eligible for a unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 40, Noes 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item number seven. This is Senate Bill 892 by Senator Padilla. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Padilla.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 892 by Senator Padilla an act relating to public contracts.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. SB 892 is back on concurrence. The amendments in the Assembly added the requirement for a detailed equity assessment. At the request of the City of San Jose, appropriations gave the Department until January 1, 2027 to develop the regulations and requires any procurement after that to include the requirements of this Bill.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
It requires that procurement standard does not affect not conflict with regulations adopted by the privacy agency. This Bill has received bipartisan support and no, no votes. Respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, anyone want to be heard on this measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40 no, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Alright, let me correct that on the last item. File item seven. That's a unanimous roll. Call it 38 to zero. We're going to move next to file item eight.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is SB 1450. Hold on. Once again, we're faster than our computers, so just a moment. All right, we're up with file item eight. This is SB 1456. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Ashby.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1456 by Senator Ashby. An act relating to professions and vocations and making an appropriation therefore.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1456 is back before us to consider Assembly amendments. The measure now includes additional provisions that stem from our discussions earlier this year and throughout the past many months.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
As part of the California State Athletic Commission's sunset review oversight. It now ensures that fighter safety, by requiring on site ambulances to transport injured boxers, is included in the Bill. The Commission's work is truly mission critical. Without this Bill, the Commission would expire on January 1. I urge an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, anybody want to be heard? Any Senator want to be heard on this measure? Seeing none, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes 39, Noes 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item nine. Senator Umberg, this is Senate Bill 42. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 42 by Senator Umberg an act relating to courts and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and colleagues. This is a cleanup Bill to the care court, the care court Bill, which was authored by my colleagues, Senator Eggman and myself. It's an urgency measure. It ensures that health professionals consider other alternatives before recommending the patient's conservatorship. Updates the process by allowing utilization of documents from past treatments.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Updates the the rights advisement process, and requires investigatory report by the county agency regarding the care court petition to complete it as soon as practical. Allows mental health professionals to testify as experts, and also provides additional notice to petitioners. Urge an aye vote.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. If I may ask a couple of questions.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Umberg. Senator Durazo.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg, will you take a question?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Sure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Thank you. Could you explain about the requirement that a court advise the respondent, eliminates the requirement that a court advise the respondent of their rights. If the court finds the respondent understands and waives that, could you explain the impact that it could have on or doesn't have on due process?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So if I understand that provision correctly that relates to the petitioner. The petitioner is the person who submits the application to the court so that the individual who is schizophrenic in most cases is, in essence, enrolled in the care court.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And if the respondent believes that by informing the petitioner as to the case status, that that may do harm. So, for example, if the respondent is concerned that the petitioner may do something that may be harmful to that person, then they can waive any sort of notice to the petitioner.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay. And just, if I can, one more question. There were some concerns raised to me about safeguards that could. No safeguards that could prevent patients from being involuntary detained. Could you respond to that issue?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm not sure what the genesis of that concern is. This care court is an alternative, typically to a criminal process. It's a civil process, and there are safeguards built in to make sure that that individual basically doesn't. One, gets treatment and two, doesn't end up back in the criminal justice system.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So I'm not sure what you're referring to.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Okay, that's fine. Thank you very much.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, any further discussion or debate on this measure, it is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Wihtout objection, Ayes 38. Noes, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. That's 38-0 on the urgency. 38-0 and the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up, file item 10. This is Senate Bill 59 by Senator Skinner.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 59 by Senator Skinner an act relating to transportation electrification.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Members, and Mister President, please take up SB 59 for concurrence. The amendments use the language from the previous version of this Bill, SB 233, which passed through this chamber with strong support. Further amendments in the Assembly made updates to technical definitions and criteria and updated the lead agency to be the Energy Commission.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Skinner, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 29 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. All right, Members, an update on our work tonight. Today and tonight we're going to take a 30 minutes break at 05:00 p.m. we've completed over 30 bills so far this evening.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. SB 399 is back for concurrence. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're asking Members to please stay in the building so we may resume our work right after our break. Okay, thank you all for your cooperation this afternoon and this evening. Next up is file item 11. This is SB 399. Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahab.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senate Bill 399 by Senator Wahab and act relating to employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion, any debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate? I'm not seeing any. Secretary, please call the roll call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahab moves the call. We're gonna move next to file item 13. This is SB 552. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Newman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 552 by Senator Newman, an act relating to public safety.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present SB 552, which is back from the Assembly on concurrence and which provides technical cleanup to a Bill I authored in 2017, the California Swimming Pool Safety Act. Amendments taken in the Assembly were non substantive and addressed chaptering out conflicts. For these reasons, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any. Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion. All right, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to 0, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next to file item 14. This iis...All right, we're going to take a moment. Pause. All right, Members, next up is file item 14. This is Senate Bill 819 by Senator Eggman.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 819 by Senator Eggman an act relating to Medi Cal.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Eggman.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
Thank you very much, Mister President. Senators, the time has arrived. This will be the last time I will raise this mic on the Senate Floor. Well, to present my own Bill, I can't make any promises about anything else.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
This is my last Bill, SB 819, having to do with mobile clinics for Medi Cal, work with the Department on this. The Assembly amendments got some more technical, and maybe we all do bills like this, right? I mean, that's what we're here for, to help folks, to make government work and to serve our constituents.
- Susan Talamantes Eggman
Person
On this final Bill, I would ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, is there any discussion on this measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call, without objection. Senator Eggman, Ayes 40. Noes, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Congratulations to you. All right, Members, we are going to take a 10 minute break. We are asking all Members to remain here in the chambers.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Although there are restrooms that are considered part of the chambers. Remain here in the chambers. We'll be back here in 10 minutes. Okay, so at the hour of 4:51, we'll be back in session. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, Members, thank you all for coming back to your desks so we can continue with our work. We are. We are on unfinished business and we are going to begin with. Is Senator Menjivar on the floor there? She is. Going to begin with file item 15 SB 1103. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1103 by Senator Menjivar. An act relating to intelligence.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1103 is back on concurrence and has been significantly narrowed. I took 10 separate amendments over on the Assembly. We removed the advance notice periods for increasing building operating costs. We defined what building operating costs are. We trimmed it out to only apply language translation provision to qualified commercial tenants.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
We made clear who this law will apply to. We made a provision that requires the commercial qualified tenant to provide the landlord on an annual basis a notice of self attestation of their entitlement, and we allow the landlord to give written notice of a change in formula or method to building operating costs, giving them more flexibility.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Asking respectfully for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Is there discussion or debate discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
You know where Senator Min is?
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Menjivar moves the call. Next up is file item 16. This is SB 1108. Secretary, please read.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1108 by Senator Ochoa-Bogh, an act relating to mobile home parks.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1108 is back on concurrence. Assembly amendments address a conflict with AB 2247 by assemblymember Wallace and incorporate technical changes requested by the Department of Housing and Community Development. These include moving the provisions into a more relevant code section and delaying implementation. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure. It is eligible for a unanimous roll call. We have Members off the floor. Rats. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Ochoa Bogh moves the call. Next up, file item 17. This is Senate Bill 1120 by Senator Becker. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1120 by Senator Becker an act realting to healthcare coverage.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Senator Becker, thank you. Rise to percent on concurrence. SB 1120, this is a physicians make decision act. Over in the Assembly, we made some technical amendments. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, this is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 48, Noes 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 18. This is Senate Bill 1155 by Senator Hurtado. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1155 by Senator Hurtado, an act relating to the Political Reform act of 1974. Senator Hurtado.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1155 is back on. Concurrency. Amendments taken in the Assembly were technical and clarifying in nature. The Bill has made it through the Legislature with bipartisan support and no opposition. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion? This is eligible for unanimous roll call. It's a 27 vote Bill. See no objections. Ayes 40. Noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 19. SB 1170 by Senator Menjivar.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 1170 by Senator Menjivar and act relating to the Political Reform act of 1974. Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Colleagues. SB 1170 is back on concurrence, the amendments taken. The Assembly further added the technical assistance we received from FPPC, respectively, asking for an I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'm going to pass temporarily.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in the it 8080 Members. We're going to lift a call. I have your attention? We're going to lift a call on file item 80. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 22 to 16, the measure passes. Gotcha.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, Members, we're going to go back to unfinished business. We're going to on file item 20. We're going to pass temporarily. So file item 21 is SB 1281. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Yes, Senate Bill 1281 by Senator Menjivar, An Act Related to Developmental Services. Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Mister President, the men's taken in the Assembly for SB 1281 were meant to narrow the scope, but maintains the heart of the Bill, which is to improve equity amongst the self determination program and all 21 Regional Centers, respectively. Asking for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure, it is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 22. File item 22 is SB 1283. Senator Stern has passed temporarily. Next up is file item 23. This is SB 1286 by Senator Minh.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1286 by Senator Min, an act relating to debt collection.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Members, this is the Bill that deals with predatory debt collection practices, and I just want to address some comments that were made by our colleagues in the Assembly who claimed, I think, among other things, that I had committed or my staff had committed to taking all of the amendments from the other side.
- Dave Min
Person
And I just want to iterate that that was never the case. We took a significant number of amendments from proposed by opposition and many stakeholders since the time that this passed out of this body, including amendments that clarified that the Bill does not create any additional licensing requirements.
- Dave Min
Person
Amendments that change the eligibility threshold of the Bill from one transaction of equal or less than 500,000 to an aggregate of all transactions adding up to equal or less than 500,000.
- Dave Min
Person
Amendments changing the language around the implementation date as requested by opposition amendments providing guidance on where venue is appropriate for judicial proceedings related to this Bill and other technical changes. We worked a lot with stakeholders here on this Bill. We think it's a good Bill.
- Dave Min
Person
This is obviously, as you know, a product of a lot of different stakeholders coming together. So I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Min. Any discussion on the. On the measure? Any further discussion on the measure? Seeing none, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're going to lift the calls on items 78 and 79. We'll lift the calls on item 78. 1st secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to nine, the measure passes. We're going to move next to lifting the call and file item 79. Secretary, please call the absent members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Member.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 to nine, the measure passes. We're gonna move back to unfinished business. Next up is file item 24. This is SB 1313. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1313 by Senator Ashby, an act related to the vehicles. Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I'm proud to present SB 1313 back on concurrence. The Safe Roads Act Assembly amendments reflect terminology and alignment clarifications. Respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on the measure? Any discussion, it is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections. Ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 25. This is SB 1419. Senator Rubio.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 1419 by Senator Rubio, an act related to the food and making an appropriation. Therefore, Senator Rubio.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present SB 1419, which is back on concurrence with minor technical amendments. We want to ensure our underserved communities have access to healthy food options, especially within food deserts across our state. With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you, Members.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on the measure? Any discussion? It is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections. Ayes, 40. Noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 26, SB 1451.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read a Senate Bill 1451 by Senator Ashby, an act related to professions and vocations. Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1451 back on concurrence. This bills the annual business professions code omnibus vehicle. The majority of the provisions in SB 1451 reflect recent discussions through the sunset review oversight process. Assembly amendments are the product of significant, some might say never ending, stakeholder input.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
This is an important Bill, particularly given new provisions recently added that we believe are timely and important. Respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Ashby. Any discussion, Members, any debate on this sunset Bill? See none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Is called the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 38 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move next. All right, next up is file 27. This is SCA one by Senator Newman.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate constitutional amendment number one by Senator Newman and accurately into elections.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Members, I rise to present SCA one back on concurrence, which, when passed, will allow California voters to amend our state's current process for the recall of a state level officer under its provisions. In the event of a state level recall effort which qualifies for the ballot, voters would answer one simple question.
- Josh Newman
Person
Should the elected official in question be recalled with one simple answer, either yes or no. Such a change will reduce incentives for gaming the recall process for purely partisan gain while preserving the recall's essential role as a validator of popular consent and a tool for enforcing ethical accountability.
- Josh Newman
Person
Amendments taken to the Assembly stipulate that the measure, when passed by a two thirds vote of both houses of the Legislature, will appear on the 2026 ballot. I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Newman. Any discussion, any debate on the measure? See, none. This is a 27 vote Bill. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members. On a vote of 32 to 832 in favor, aid against. The Assembly amendments are concurred in.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Senator Menjivar, could you come to the front.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Now that I'm up here? We'll be done in 1 hour. We're going to be doing file item 20. Senator Glazer is prepared. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1181 by Senator Glazer and accurately into the Political Reform act of 1974.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Senator Glazer.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Madam presiding officer. Remember, this bill is back for concurrence. It's a cleanup bill to the original SB 1439, which extended the Levine act to local elected officials. The Assembly amendments address chaptering issues with a companion bill and also adjust the contribution level that would be deemed acceptable without a respectfully asked for an I vote.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Do we have any debate on this? On this item? So you know this is a 27 vote bill. Secretary, please call. This is also eligible for unanimous roll call. Any objection? Ayes, 40. No, 0. Measure passes. We're taking a quick pause.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, Members, I forgot to mention that was the last bill I was presenting. Was there an applause or anything? That's out of order? There's no applause. All right. Okay, I know that. Members, it's 5:31. We are breaking for dinner. We're going to be back here at 06:01 on the dot. On the dot.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We ask that Members don't leave the building. We're going to be back here at 6:01. Senator Menjivar is going to ensure that she's going to make sure we're in recess. Members, the Senate will convene in the 30 seconds. Members, I'd like to invite all the Senators to come back to the floor, back to their desks, please.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, thank you, Members. Thank you, Senators, for being back and on time. We are ready to get going. Let me give you the order at least, the likely order of bills that we're going to hear over the next few minutes. We're going to begin with file item 70, followed by file item 72,73,74,77 and 84. Okay.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All subject to change, so keep paying attention. All right? Okay. First up then is file item 70. This is Assembly Bill 1252. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1252 by Assembly Member Wicks an accolade to public safety.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blakespear.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. And Members, over the last 30 years, California has set the standard in demonstrating that strong gun safety laws can save lives. In three decades, we've seen our state go from having the third highest gun death rate in the nation to the 7th Lowest Assembly bill 1252 represents another important step in this effort.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
This bill enshrines the Attorney General's Office of Gun Violence Prevention and statute, guaranteeing that its critical work continues beyond any single Administration.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
Vitally, the legislation also requires the office to release a groundbreaking report by July 1, 2026 that will address gaps in our firearm tracing system, help us enhance the implementation of existing laws, and provide actionable recommendations to ensure Californians remain at the forefront of gun safety innovation. AB 1252 is also fiscally responsible.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
It clarifies that the office can access existing funding streams, up to 2.5 million allocated under the Revenue and Taxation Code, reducing any burden on the state's General Fund. California's progress in preventing gun violence is no excuse to rest in the satisfaction of what we've accomplished.
- Catherine Blakespear
Legislator
In fact, it is a further call to action and a sign of what is possible. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Blakespear. Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? See no microphones up. Secretary, call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Blake Spear moves a call. We're going to move to file item 72. This is Assembly Bill 2471. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2471 by Assembly Member Jim Patterson an act relating to professions and vocations.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Thank you. And Members, I rise to present AB 2471 on behalf of Assemblymena Jim Patterson. Currently, registered nurses are required to pay a non refundable fee for the evaluation of their qualifications to use the title public health nurse.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
This is in addition to their regular registered nurse license renewal that they already complete every two years. SB 2471 would repeal this requirement for the qualifications of public health nurse, and it would also remove a penalty fee that currently exists for not renewing that certificate. This is supported by the Board of Registered Nursing.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
It does not have any. No votes. And I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Niello. Any discussion on this measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call, seeing no objections. Aye's, 39. No, 0. The measure passes. Next up is file item 73. This is Assembly Bill 3024.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3024 by Assembly Member Ward an act relating to civil law and declaring the urgency there to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen, floor manager.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Members, I rise today on behalf of Assembly Member award to present AB 3024, a Jewish caucus priority bill addressing the form of harassment and discrimination known as hate littering.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Last year, the anti Defamation league recorded a 38% rise in hate motivated propaganda efforts, including the practice of targeting a victim's personal property with racist, anti Semitic, or anti LGBTQ flyers that make them fear for their safety.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
This has rapidly became a preferred tactic of hate groups, not only for its personal and effective nature, quite literally hitting close to home, but also because it exists in a legal gray area, making it extremely hard for law enforcement to prosecute.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
While California does have some of the strongest hate crime statutes in the country, these activities often do not rise to the threshold of a hate crime or trigger California's anti hate prohibitions on conduct such as cross burning. As a state, we must recognize that these materials are not just pieces of paper, expressions of free speech.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
They are direct threats placed on the personal property or of targeted Members of our communities with the intention to harass, intimidate, and dehumanize. This act will make necessary improvements to existing law by strengthening the Civil Rights Act of 1976 to ensure victims are provided adequate protections against hate littering, creating new legal tools to hold offenders accountable.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Acts of hate have no place in our communities, and we must do everything we can to ensure that our neighbors and loved ones are free from hate related violence in any form, and I respect for. Ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Allen. Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing, none. This is a 27 vote bill. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house Member, so we're gonna call through the roll one more time. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes, 30. No, 0. On the urgency. Ayes, 30. No, 0. The measure passes. Moving on to file item 74. This is Assembly built 2795. Floor manager Menjivar is prepared. Secretary, please read the measure.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2795 by Assemblymember Rambolla, an act relating to the public social services.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener, can you step to the side, please? Senator Menjavar, as you know, this is a support. Support floor is yours.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Absolutely. This bill ensures that Members of tribal communities receive equitable access to calworks seeking care at the Indian Health Clinic. Respectfully asking an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes, 39. No, 0. The measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 77. This is Assembly Bill 2243. The floor manager is Senator Wiener.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read the measure.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2243 by Assembly Member Wicks an accolade to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. Colleagues, I rise to present AB 2243 on behalf of Assembly Member Wicks.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The bill clarifies and expands AB 2011, the Affordable Housing and High Roads Jobs act of 2022, which allows for the streamlined development of multifamily infill housing in areas zoned for retail, office, and parking lots by right, provided that developers provide affordable housing on site and pay the construction workers building the project the prevailing wage.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We know that this approach works. In the 13 months since AB 2011 was enacted, thousands of units have already been approved, and over two thirds of them are being built by union workers. Yet since the enactment of AB 2011, the housing crisis has only gotten worse for a variety of reasons.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And we've also seen some aspects of the law that need to be tightened and clarified. So this bill will do that. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Wiener. Any discussion on the measure? Any discussion on the measure. Seeing None. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have Members off the floor. Senator Wiener moves a call. We're going to move next to file item 84. This is Assembly Bill 3264. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3264 by Assembly Member Petrie-Norris an accolade to Energy.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mister President and Senators, I rise today to present Assembly Bill 3264. On behalf of Assembly Member Petrie-Norris, a bill to address energy affordability. This suite of solutions will set the stage for us to lower bills for everyone and put more money back in the pockets of California families. This bill has enjoyed bipartisan support.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd,
- Bill Dodd
Person
Respectfully, that's where aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on the measure? Any discussion on the measure? Yeah, we still have Members off the floor, so we're going to call the roll once and put the measure on call. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
She walked out. Senator Dodd moves a call. Members, we're going to move to the supplemental file number one. One should have a copy of that. We are going to begin at the top. This is file item 85, Senate Bill 219.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 219 by Senator Wiener in accurate into greenhouse gases.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Colleagues, SB 219, which I am joint authoring with the Senator from Los Angeles, Senator Stern is back on concurrence. SB 219 makes a number of technical cleanup amendments to SB 253, the Climate Corporate Data Accountability act, and SB 261, the Climate Financial Risk act, which we passed, which were signed into law last year.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
In addition to technical changes, SB 219 extends the California Air Resources Board's deadline to complete a rulemaking process by six months while leaving fully. Leaving intact the timelines for disclosures. SB 219 has received bipartisan support in the Assembly, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on the measure? Any Senator want to be heard on this measure? Seeing none, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener moves a call. We're gonna move next to file item 86, SB 440 by Senator Skinner. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Bill 440 by Senator Skinner an accolade to local government.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Members, SB 440 is back for concurrence. It allows local governments who so choose to join together to form regional housing authorities to help finance affordable and missing middle housing in their regions.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
The amendments taken in the Assembly successfully removed the opposition from the California Building Industry Association, the California Association of Realtors, and it also addressed the concerns of the county Association of County Treasurers and tax collectors. And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on the measure? Any discussion on the measure? Seeing none, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner moves a call. Next up is file item 87. This is SB 690 by Senator Rubio.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 690 by Senator Rubio and act relating to domestic violence.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Ladies and gentlemen, gentlemen of the Senate, today I rise to present SB 690, which is back on concurrence after taking amendments in the Assembly to lower the years from 15 to seven years that a victim can seek justice. Unfortunately, many believe that the statute of limitation is about incarcerating people, or perpetrators rather.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
But in the end, really, this is about protecting victims. Usually when the statute of limitation, perpetrators find ways of harassing, intimidating and even harming victims once the statute has expired and they know that nothing can be done.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Unfortunately, this is the reality for many victims where they are harassed, pushed to the brink, and when they actually have the courage to come forward, the time has expired and they will endure a lifetime of harassment because there's nothing that they can do. We must allow sufficient times for victims heal and recover and seek justice.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
And I hope that someday we can see this in this building. Thank you. With that, I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, any discussion on the measure? Want to remind Members to speak to the amendments in the Assembly? See no further discussion. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Rubio moves a call. We're gonna move next to file item 88. This is Senate Bill 954.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 954 by Senator Menjivar and act relating to sexual health. Senator Menjivar.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 954 back on concurrence amendments, clarify that there is funding in the budget and move jurisdiction and allow jurisdiction under the Department of Education asking for an aye.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Any discussion on the matter? Any discussion seeing non secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Menjivar moves a call. Moving on to file item 90. This is. Yes, your name was called. That's right. You'll have an opportunity. It's on call. We'll bring it back. We're going to move to file item 90. This is Senate Bill 1243 by Senator Dodd.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1070 by Senator Padilla, an act relating to health care districts.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is file item 90, SB 1243.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1243 by Senator Dodd and Act relating to the Political Reform act of 1974.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mister President, Members, this bill started out the year with much fanfare and drama, but SB 1243 is back for concurrence. Amendments taken in the Assembly were a result of compromise reached between all the stakeholders. All opposition has been removed. To support or neutral. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Dodd, any discussion or debate on the measure? Is there any objection to using a unanimous roll call? There is an objection. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'm certainly glad we didn't use the unanimous roll call. Ayes, 39. No, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. All right, we're going to move on to file item 91. This is SB 1303. Secretary.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 1303 by Senator Caballero and accrual into public works. Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 1303 is back from the Assembly. On concurrence, the Bill was amended to make technical changes and reduce costs. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Caballero, any discussion or debate on the measure? Any discussion? Yeah. All right. Secretary, call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, on a vote of 32 to seven, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to next move to file item 92. This is SB 1323. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 121323 by Senator Menjivar relating to criminal procedure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'd like to recognize that. We're going to be done in an hour. Senator Mendovar, floor.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Senator. Mister President, that was my line. You can't take my line away.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Credit for it.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
SB 1323 is back on concurrence. The amendments are technical in nature, and all opposition has been removed. Asking for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senators, anyone want to be heard on this measure? All right. Seeing no microphones up, this is eligible for unanimous roll call. She said all opposition had been removed. I thought we were all right. Secretary, please call the roll. Just testing that a little bit. I'm glad everyone's paying attention. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
I'm going to call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 28 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move on to file item 93. This is SB 1450. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senator Bill 1450 by Senator Allen and accurately into elections.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
This Bill streamlines Administration to reduce costs and improves election management under. The Voters Choice act while protecting vital. Voter access requirements, Assembly amendments, reworked mailer provisions, and specified election plan timelines. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Allen. Any discussion on this measure? See no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're gonna move next to file item 94. This is. All right, give us a moment. Thank you. Members, we're going to move to file item 94. This is Senate Bill 1526.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Secretary, please read Senate Bill 1526 by Committee on business, professions, and economic development, and, accurately, consumer affairs.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones, can you move to the side there? Thank you. Senator Ashby, the floor is yours.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
I was waiting for him to present it. Mister President, SB 1526 is back for concurrence. Amendments in the Assembly made a number of technical changes related to the Bureau of Private Postsecondary education, addressed chaptering issues and made some other minor changes. Respectfully asked for an aye vote on SB 1526.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, further discussion on this measure. It is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Seeing no objection. Ayes 39, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. I'd like to ask all the Senators to please remain in your seats. We're going to lift calls here in just a moment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Everyone, please stay on the floor and be prepared to close out the votes on all the measures on call. Senator Jones, for what reason do you rise, sir? What is your parliamentary.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I'm just wondering, by chance if there might be a message from the Governor on the desk.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator, thank you for your caring about the governor's messages. I'm sure he's very appreciative of that, and we'll check, and if there are, we'll let you know.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Okay. Mister President, I appreciate that. You know what I'll do is I'll check LA Times and see if there's a message from the Governor on LA Times. Thank you. Thank you Mister President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, Members like everyone to return to their seats. It's very hard to hear and want to make sure since we're closing the roll on these 15 or 16 items, that everyone gets the chance to vote. Senator Jones, can you find your seat there for a moment? All right, we're going to begin with file item 59.
- Steven Glazer
Person
This is Assembly Bill 3134. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 to zero, the measure passes. Next up is file item 60. This is Assembly Bill 863. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 24 to nine, the measure passes. We're going to move on to file. Item 63, AB 2263. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 in favor. Nine against, the measure passes. Gonna move on it to file item 64. This is AB 2460. Secretary, please call the absent Members. Doug? Aye. Mcguire. Aye. On a vote of 40 in favor. Zero against, the measure passes. Next up is file item 65, AB 2629.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 in favor. One against, the measure passes. Next up is file item 11. This is FB 399. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 in favor. Nine against, the measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 15, SB 1103, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 22 in favor. Nine against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 16, SB 1108, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 40 in favor. None against, the measure passes. Next up, file item 70, AB 1252, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 in favor. Eight against, the Assembly amendments are concurred. In. Moving on to file item 77. This is AB 2243. Excuse me, on that last one, it was not. The Assembly amendments are concurred in that's the measure passes. Moving on to AB. File item 77. This is AB 2243.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 28 in favor. None against, the measure passes. Moving on to file item 84. This is AB 3264. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 39 in favor. One against, the measure passes. Next up is file item 85. This is SB 219. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 33 in favor. Of four against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 86. SB 440. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 in favor. Nine against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. We're going to move to file item 87. This is SB 690. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
And a vote of 40 in favor. None against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Finally, Members, file item 88, SB 954. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 in favor. Nine against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Niello, for what purpose do you rise?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Mister President, I think that you are. Doing an outstanding job. And I think this is an outstanding time to quit. I move to adjourn.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It's a non debatable motion. Members, we have a motion to adjourn. It's non debatable. Secretary, call the roll. I think I'm channeling Senator Gonzalez, asking for a no vote. Senator Niello is asking for a yes vote. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote in four in favor of 31 against, the motion to adjourn fails. All right, hold on. Call the absent Members one last time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, everyone having the chance to vote on that. Three in favor, 33 against. The motion to adjourn has failed. Thank you for the entertaining pause. All right, Members, here's what we're going to do. We have five items now on the docket. Since we're not adjourning, I'll let you know what they are ahead of time.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to begin with file item 53, followed by file item 56, 75, 76 and 82, if you're following along at home. So we're going to begin this segment with file item 53. This is Assembly Bill 1465.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 1465 by Assembly Member Wicks, an act related to air pollution.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please give Senator Skinner your attention. Members, please give Senator Skinner your attention.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Mister President and Members. AB 1465 by Assemblymember Wicks, changes the penalty baseline for the largest sources of air pollution in California when they violate our air pollution laws. These penalty baselines were last changed in 2001 and have had only minor increases since 2018.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Ceilings are routinely adjusted based on mitigating factors, such as how fast the violation is corrected and the past history of violations. As we all know, unhealthy air continues to be a concern, especially in communities located near our ports, near our good movements corridors, and near heavily industrialized areas.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
The existing penalty structure is not an adequate deterrent to prevent violations of air pollution laws. Consequences for air quality violations must be severe enough to deter a violation before it occurs so that violators don't simply treat fines as an acceptable cost of doing business.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
AB 1465 resets those penalty ceilings to incentivize the large sources to operate safely, to perform required maintenance, and to communicate to the public about local health concerns. It is a Bill that protects our public health and acknowledges that air quality is still a severe challenge in California that we owe it to our constituents to address.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And with that, I ask for your. I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Senator Skinner, any discussion on the measure? Any discussion on the measure? Seeing none. Secretary, call the roll. Excuse me. Pause. I now see a late microphone up from the Senator from Bieber.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mister President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Daly, I have a question to. The author, if I may. Senator Skinner, will you take a question?
- Brian Dahle
Person
Okay, so title V permits is what this, I believe, is taking into consideration. Title V permits are authorized by the Federal Government. And how will this Bill impact title v?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
It does not change who receives the title v permit. Those, as you pointed out, are still issued. It only allows our regulators who enforce our air pollution laws the ability to adjust the fine for a violator of a title V violator against our air quality laws.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jolly, on your own time. Excuse me? I said, Senator Jolly, on your own time.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Well, I believe that the title v permits that are issued by the Federal Government are based off of credits per county, if my memory serves me correct.
- Brian Dahle
Person
And this Bill is going to drive up the cost, and it's very difficult to determine where the error is actually being where the bad air quality is coming from if you have more than one title v permits in your county, which most counties do. So for those reasons, I won't be supporting the Bill.
- Brian Dahle
Person
I believe this is a violation, actually, of the federal law that is in place. Didn't have a quite great understanding of the Bill, but that's my take on it. So for those reasons, I won't be supporting it.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Right. Any. Any further discussion, Members, any further discussion? Senator Skinner, you may close.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I would note that you probably have noticed in the file there are letters from Members of Congress in support of this Bill, and there's also notations that analysis shows that it is not in violation of federal law.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And in fact, our congressional representatives want us to make sure that we have enough teeth in our enforcement in order to help prevent these severe emissions, air pollution emissions. And with that, I ask for your.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I vote I'll debate having ceased. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 in favor, 10 against, the measure passes. We're gonna move next to file item 56. This is AB 2561. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2561 by Assemblymember McKinnor. An act relating to public employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Mister President and colleagues, on behalf of Assemblymember McKinnor, I am pleased to present AB 2561. This Bill requires local agencies to annually report on the status of staff vacancies, recruitment and retention efforts during a public hearing. California's local government is currently dealing with significant staffing crises that has affected public service, employment and the overall economy. AB 2561 is a critical step forward to ensuring greater accountability in local agency staffing practices and to empower workers. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 27 in favor, 10 against, the measure passes. We're going to move next to file item 75. This is Assembly Bill 3261. Secretary, please read. This is 75.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3261 by Assembly Member Mike Fong an accolade to horse racing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Rubio, the floor is yours.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, I rise to present AB 3261 on behalf of Assemblymember Mike Fong, AB 3261 supports our horse racing industry in California and thousands of jobs linked in that industry. It will give wagering customers in California. Greater options by increasing the cap on.
- Susan Rubio
Legislator
The number of races they can wager on. This vote has no opposition. Has passed unanimously in the Assembly. I ask for your aye vote thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Any discussion on the measure? See no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Member.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Aye. On a vote of 40 to 0, the measure passes. Next up is file item 76. This is Assembly Bill 3129. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3129 by Assemblymember Wood. An act relating to health facilities.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present AB 3129 by ssemblymember Doctor Wood. The crisis facing democracy, both in our country and around the world, stems from the rise of monopolies and concentrated power. These forces wield significant political influence, echoing the challenges faced in the 19th century, an era marked by intense conflicts, cultural tensions, and widespread fear. The fight against unchecked corporate power is a bipartisan issue spanning generations of leaders.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Republican President Theodore Roosevelt, in his 1901 address to Congress, emphasized the importance of using our power to protect our people, institutions, and industrial liberty. Similarly, Democratic President Woodrow Wilson warned in 1914 that the concentration of wealth, money, and property in the United States, under the control and in the hands of a few individuals or great corporations, has grown to such an enormous extent that, unless checked, it will ultimately threaten the perpetuity of our institutions. The pertuity. I'm sorry.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Most of us, whether directly or indirectly, have worked on tackling antitrust issues, whether it's striving to create balance in our newsrooms, ensuring residential care patients are not pushed out of care, addressing roll up purchases in agriculture, or advocating for the right to repair or preventing our hospitals from closing.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
These efforts are all part of a broader struggle to protect our people, institutions, and economic freedoms from corporate dominance, a responsibility that transcends political lines. The trends by some private equity firms in the healthcare are especially alarming. In July, Lina Khan, the Chair of the Federal Trade Commission, submitted a letter of support for this legislation.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
During her time as Chair of the FTC, she has highlighted several concerning practices relating to private equity firms. First, private equity often loads companies with debt, strips assets and pursues financial tactics that weaken the firms they acquire. With short timelines of three to seven years, they use high levels of debt, 60% to 80%, burning the acquired entities.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
This can lead to reduced staff and services under the guise of efficiency. Tragically, private equity takeovers of nursing homes have led to an estimated 20,000 excess deaths, 20,000 excess deaths over 12 years. Second, private equity consolidates market power through serial acquisitions and a buy and build model, gradually sidestepping antitrust review.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
These roll up strategies can eliminate competition, allowing new owners to raise prices to great quality and neutralize rivals without competitive checks. And third, some private equity firms buy stakes and rival firms, reducing the incentives to compete, which harms both the industry and consumers. This practice is not limited to private equity.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Institutional investors and public equity markets also raise such concerns. Private equity investment in the healthcare has increased significantly over the past two decades. Transactions in healthcare alone in 2021 totaled $83 billion, 20 billion of that here in California. These practices and the level of money involved demonstrate the need for stronger oversight to protect the integrity of our healthcare system and ensure that patient care remains top priority. Assembly Bill 3129 seeks to address these issues by ensuring the Attorney General can review private equity acquisitions.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
The Bill includes provisions for expedited review when entities are in financial distress and the concerns about increased scrutiny are unfounded. The Bill does not prevent private equity acquisitions, but ensures appropriate scrutiny to safeguard our healthcare system. Assemblymember Doctor Wood, the Attorney General and I share the same goal, to protect access to care.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
We cannot afford to delay this process because right now there is no review mechanism at all and amendments have been made to address UC concerns that we addressed throughout this chamber. And I'd like to end with the warnings of past leaders like presidents Roosevelt and Wilson are as relevant today as ever.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
The unchecked concentration of economic power continues to pose a significant threat to our democracy. AB 3129 represents a crucial step in protecting our healthcare system from the corrosive effects of unfettered private equity practices, ensuring that quality care remains a top priority for all Californians. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Hurtado, to begin the debate. Senator Ashby.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. My second son was little, about four. We learned that he had a problem with the enamel on his teeth. If we didn't address it, he would have trouble eating, which, of course, would be a real problem for us. Lucky for me, right here in Sacramento, there was an amazing pediatric dentist named Doctor Saladin.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
He performed heroic surgery on my son. It took all day. I was scared to death sitting outside of that dental office, waiting for my little baby who was under and receiving that care. That organization called Children's Choice Dental, started in Natomas, a couple blocks from my house. They've grown, and they now treat over 130,000 young people in California alone, 86% of the kiddos that they help, like my son, receive Medi-Cal.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
The CEO of that company, sent me a note and told me that this Bill alone, just this Bill, would make it impossible for them to continue to grow in California. He said to me that the loss of private equity investment would absolutely kill businesses like his. I know that the author has taken amendments to address the UC's, and I know that there are large organizations that have come on board, but I am asking you colleagues to think about the business owners in California who could never grow without that kind of private investment.
- Angelique Ashby
Legislator
They're the same businesses that show up in the areas where no one else will go, in the communities that we all know, where kids and families have the hardest time getting services. Why? Why would we make it harder? Why would we make it harder for the people who are trying the hardest to find equity to serve our families? I urge a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up is Senator Laird, followed by Senator Niello and Jones. Senator Laird.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Let me speak to the immediate point that was just made, because many of you are tired of hearing me say it, but it applies to the situation. When the Watsonville Hospital went under, it was because a private equity firm with limited experience in running hospitals took it over. They thought it was about business practice. They thought they didn't know anything about running the hospital. Compared to an actual hospital operator. This was 82% Medi-Cal or 82% public payees.
- John Laird
Legislator
And it is going on in Hollister right now, where there is an outside of California business that is going to partner with this hospital that has a similar amount of public payee patients. And it is not the good actors that this Bill gets after. It's if people want to invest in a way that is successful and it is really providing services, it is the places where it doesn't work. And there is a very unique coalition behind this Bill that proves the point.
- John Laird
Legislator
It is rare that the California Labor Federation and the California Teachers Association join with the California Medical Association and the California Dental Association in support of a Bill on this subject. And so what this does is right now, those 86% Medi-Cal people or those 82% Medi-Cal people in the business have no voice.
- John Laird
Legislator
There is no ability that if there is a private equity investment that is not for the long term business health of that health institution, there's nobody to talk about that question. That's what this Bill does. And I do not think that the good actors have things to fear, but I do think the bad actors do. And the real issue here is, because in talking to the past President of the Medical Association in California, who is a physician in my district, his concern is the private equity purchase of medical practices across the state.
- John Laird
Legislator
And if that is the way our medical system is going, going from doctors owning their practices to them being purchased, then we should have a process for talking about that. And that's what this Bill does. And when this Bill came in front of us in Committee, I sort of unfortunately put the author on the spot because I think this Bill has been narrowed too much. I think this Bill should have still been closer to the original to address the genuine questions that are behind this.
- John Laird
Legislator
So ironically, this Bill has been narrowed, that is in front of us today, and yet it still gets at this. And I think that if we are really looking at that 86% Medi-Cal or that 82% Medi-Cal or the physicians that have owned their own practice and it's going to to be owned outside the area by a private equity firm, it is a very appropriate thing for conversation. And that's what this Bill does. I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up, Senator Niello, followed by Senator Jones and Senator Min. Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Question of the author or floor jockey.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Floor manager Hurtado, would you like to take a question?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Niello.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Given the Attorney General's role in a similar situation with regard to the proposed sale of the Madera Community Hospital and the entirely unreasonable conditions that he put on that sale that actually ended up forcing the hospital into bankruptcy, why would we want to delegate this authority to the Attorney General?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado, you can answer the question now or in your close. Your choice.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
I can do it in my close.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Anything else, Senator Niello?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Beg your pardon?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Anything else on your time?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Oh, she will take it in her close. The only other thing that I would say is state policy puts hospitals into distressful situation because we so under reimburse Medi-Cal and Medicare services.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Niello. Senator Jones.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President, Members. While I appreciate the author taking the amendments to remove the UC system from the Bill. There's still plenty of hospital systems that are still affected by this Bill throughout the state. So just in my area in San Diego County is Sharp and Scripps. But north of us up in Riverside is Riverside Community Hospital. Across the state, Cedars-Sinai. United Hospital Association is opposed. Adventist Health. One that's personally important to me is Keck Medicine of USC in LA, who just a year and a half ago saved my mother in law's life. And I was asked to speak on this, and I didn't really realize that's where I was going to go.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
California has the best health care in the world, and we can continue to have the best healthcare in the world, or we can continue to over regulate, we can continue to put up hurdles, we can continue to make it more difficult for hospitals to do business in California, or we can choose today to stay out of the way and maybe come back next year and let's do a robust discussion on the regulations and the policies and the laws that we've passed out of this building that have put the hospitals in the situation that they're in. I ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Jones. Senator Min, followed by Senator Grove.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Thank you, colleagues. Appreciate the robust dialogue. I want to thank my colleague from Bakersfield for presenting this Bill and to the author. Look, I agree with some of the points raised by my colleague from Sacramento. We do want robust financing of healthcare practices and institutions.
- Dave Min
Person
But I would just submit to you that private equity is unique because private equity is not patient capital. They're not trying to make long term investments and wait to see how this turns out. Typically, private equity firms have three to seven year timelines for their returns on healthcare. There's really only one way to get that. It is by cutting costs. It is by increasing revenues. And this is bad for patients, it's bad for doctors, it's bad for healthcare workers. My own sister in law, my brother's wife, was an anesthesiologist. I say was because she's now retired.
- Dave Min
Person
And the reason she's retired is because her firm, a leading firm in the Bay Area, was bought out by a private equity group. And that private equity group she had just vested and made partner, she had to stay until that vested. So she stayed, I think, for three and a half years. It was miserable for her. She felt like she was doing her patients a disservice because they made her have a minimum number of patients. She had to see each day she was required to take on more patients than she felt comfortable with. This made her more stressed out. Anesthesiology is a very stressful field.
- Dave Min
Person
It was bad according to her for her patients experiences. And I think there's a reason that all of the doctors, nurses and healthcare worker groups are against this and importantly why the patient's groups are against this Bill as well. I mean, sorry for this Bill and why only the healthcare facilities are against this. So yes, we do want to have more financing. This is a robust problem. And I had very deep concerns about the earlier iteration of this Bill.
- Dave Min
Person
It was narrowed and I realized that some people here still feel like this revised Bill is over broad. But I would submit to you that private equity is ruining healthcare right now, in this country, in California, we need to deal with this problem. And I think this is an appropriate first step allowing for review. It is not a ban on private equity. It is just simply a review. So I would respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Question of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Will you take a question, Senator Hurtado?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
In your statement that you opened with, you said that you addressed the UC's concerns because they were concerned that they would be wrapped up into this, the UC medical centers and hospitals. Did you address the dermatology concerns?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado, you can answer the question or do it in your close.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Can she provide clarification on the question?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Sure. Dermatologists, the dermatologists were carved out and how did they get that carve out?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Mister President, I can answer that in my closing. If that's okay.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove, on your time.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you. I have another question of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, will you take another question, Senator hurtado?
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Has CHA had concerns with hospitals, the hospitals, has their concerns been addressed because they're still opposed?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado, do you want to answer it now or in your close.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Can you repeat the question? Sorry, I didn't hear it.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
California Hospitals Associations, you addressed the UC concerns for their hospitals. Have you addressed the concerns for all of our hospitals in our districts? Because they're still opposed.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Mister President, I don't have an answer to that specific question at the moment. My last understanding was that the opposition from the hospitals was removed. If they jumped back on in opposition, that's news to me.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I think the concerns are. The definition in the Bill is a health care facility. What's the definition of a health care facility? Through the Chair, through the President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
You're asking one more question, Senator Grove? Restate it please.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Yes, please, sir.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove, can you restate the question? Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Oh, there's a definition as a healthcare facility in the Bill language. Is that Bill language for a health care facility considered to be a hospital?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Again, you can answer it now or in your close.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
I will do the best to answer that question in my closing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you. Okay. Anything else?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
On my own time? No, thank you. Colleagues, a few years ago, came out with a real catchy phrase, healthcare for all. And a lot of it is a Medi-Cal, Medi-Cal for all, healthcare for all. Do I believe that we should provide health care and we should have healthy constituents? Absolutely. But if we don't do a provider reimbursement rate, that is significant, that covers the cost. It's a pathway to bankruptcy for these facilities. They have, like, several of our hospitals, and I have a hospital in Ridgecrest, and then the Tulare. The hospital in Tulare, Kaweah.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
They're grasping at straws, trying to find anything to be able to stay open to provide healthcare services to low socioeconomic disadvantaged communities. In the Central Valley, I don't recall the number completely, but I believe it was over 70% of Medi-Cal patients are served in the Kaweah Hospital. In Ridgecrest, It's Medi-Cal and Medicare because we have the base over there, and then a lot of the population we have in Ridgecrest, the base is very young. And on Medicare, the community is in older, and mostly on Medi-Cal, some Social Security and Medicare.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
They're in a position where they don't get enough reimbursements for either the Federal Government or the state government to provide healthcare services to the communities that they serve. They recently shut down their Labor and Delivery, and they're going to a standby Emergency Room situation. Now picture that.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
170 miles or whatever an hour and a half away from other locations, down a mountain with a river on one side and a rock wall on the other. We, my colleague from, my colleague, my former marine, or the marine, former marine on the budget sub three chair, drove that canyon road. It's a very windy road. So it's not, you're not going to travel at 65 to 70 miles an hour. It's more of a 35 - 40 miles an hour road. It takes a long time to get from one place to the other. They're grasping at straws.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
They're trying to renegotiate, plan things like their plan benefits so that they can have higher rates from plans. They are trying to negotiate, we were trying to get them more money through the MCO tax. We were trying to get them financially distressed hospitals loan programs. But the bottom line is they don't get enough reimbursement, so they are turning to private equity. They're like, you want to invest in this hospital, we need to serve this community. And something like this to stop this would be just, I think, the nail that puts the coffin in a lot of our financially distressed hospitals.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I would love for a private equity group to come in and take over my Ridgecrest hospital so that we could provide medical services to our community. I just. I think that if we don't really look at and reimagine rural healthcare, we're going to be in a lot of trouble. I know my colleague in Beaver hasn't had a hospital in certain areas. I know more rural facilities. When Madera closed, it overburdened Fresno. When Fresno was overburdened, it overburdened Tulare. And so there's a ripple effect.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And so I would just ask for you to vote no on this Bill and let's address the reimbursement rate and stop taking it from the MCO tax that we all voted for in good faith. And then it was taken to backfill the General Fund budget and let's make sure that our hospitals are sustainable and that they can continue to provide the healthcare that our constituents need. Respectfully ask for a no vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. Next up is Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mister President. You know, I think it was. It's a little bit unfair to be asking the floor manager some of these questions, since I think all of you know that probably, I spend more time working on this Bill, to some extent with Senator Umberg than anybody in this room. So I think I'll try to take a swing at some of your questions. This whole business about UC being exempt from the Bill is a little bit of a misstatement. UC, frankly, because I drafted the amendment.
- Richard Roth
Person
UC is subject to Attorney General review under this Bill. When UC engages in transactions with private equity entities where the private equity entity retains control, as control is defined in the Bill. So if UC engages in a transaction with a private equity entity, and the private equity entity does not exercise control as it's defined in the Bill, and it should not be subject to review by the Attorney General.
- Richard Roth
Person
Now, my colleague on the Judiciary Committee, the Senator from wherever he's from, Orange County, somewhere, he acted to and his staff acted to exempt hospitals from this private equity Bill. That was certainly his intent. Now, somewhere along the line, within the last week or so, as we were trying to draft this amendment to deal with UC's concerns about situations where they partner with an entity to operate, a third entity in the middle, whether it's a rehab hospital or a surgery center or somewhere else.
- Richard Roth
Person
And we tried to deal with that either with private equity control or nothing. The hospitals decided that there was the use of a term somewhere in this Bill. Health facility or healthcare facility. Well, hospitals are licensed facilities under HCAI and there's a word they use whether it's healthcare or health facility.
- Richard Roth
Person
And some lawyers somewhere, I am one, decided there was a bit of ambiguity in this process. Unfortunately, they came to the party a little too late to get this issue addressed. Clearly, we like every sentence ending with a period, commas used in the middle and perfection, if we can possibly get it in this house of imperfection. So there may be some piece of ambiguity in this Bill having to do with healthcare facility versus health facility that ultimately may need to be cleaned up.
- Richard Roth
Person
But the intent, I think everyone will agree, and they really agree, is that hospitals are not covered by the review portion of this private equity Bill. I can't address my colleague from Sacramento's concerns, but I'm trying to address those. So it seems to me that if there's any ambiguity, I won't be here. My colleague, the real Chair of the Health Committee from Stockton, won't be here. But the rest of you can clean this up next year and I hopefully will allow the good Senator from the Central Valley somewhere to close out this measure without further questions. Thank you, Mister President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Roth. Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you Mister President, Members. Just want to weigh in on some really things that haven't been talked about, been working on healthcare for the last 12 years and this is a very difficult issue. Private equity is obviously something I think we should be concerned about. Absolutely. But at the end of the day, the way I look at this Bill, first of all, I think you can tell by the support and opposition and quite frankly, lack of information on this subject to move forward I think is a mistake, number one. Number two, why would the Legislature turn our power over to the Attorney General?
- Brian Dahle
Person
We are in the space and we saw last year when we had the hospital in the valley that was closed down, the Attorney General came in and he had sole power over how that hospital was going to go forward. This now lies with the Legislature. If we want to in the future, I should say if you want to, since I won't be here, want to address these issues, I think that's the proper body to do it in because as we've heard earlier today, this is a very unique large state and all health care isn't distributed equally in California.
- Brian Dahle
Person
So I'm going to be voting no on this Bill. I think it needs a lot more work. And I think, obviously, you can tell by the testimony today that it needs some work. And so for those reasons, I think we should stop this Bill and come back next year and give the body another chance. And for all my purposes, I'd rather see it in this body. I don't think we should give the power to the Attorney General to weigh in on those situations. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Dahle. Any further discussion? Any further debate on this measure? See no microphones up. Senator Hurtado, you may close.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I'll try to address as many questions as possible. In my closing, I'll begin with saying that given that I also represent the Central Valley, I deeply care about our healthcare, not just for the Central Valley, but across the state. And what we're seeing is we're seeing private equity engage in ways that we haven't seen them before over the last decade, and they're impacting our communities in harmful ways. The goal of this Bill is not to close hospitals. It's not to reduce patient care.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
The goal of this Bill is to ensure that when there are investments made in our communities, in our healthcare system, that we protect patients. That is what the goal of this Bill is. And I don't believe that there is any intention to say, hey, we don't want private equity money in our investments in our communities. This Bill is not about that. It is to have private equity investments. But we want to make sure that we keep and scrutinize any bad actors. And so with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having seized. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado moves the call.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're next. Moving to file item 82. This is Assembly Bill 2348. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2348 by Assembly Member Ramos, an act relating to the California Emergency Services Act.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Dodd.
- Bill Dodd
Person
Mic drop. Thank you, Mister President and Members. AB 2348 is a bill that follows up on legislation passed earlier this session which deals with the Feather Alert, an alert system for missing indigenous persons in the State of California.
- Bill Dodd
Person
The feather alert is a top recommendation for the California tribes in combating the missing and murdered indigenous person's epidemic. Respectfully asked your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, discussion and debate on this measure. Discussion and debate. See no microphones up. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members. Members, we have a. We have a full house, so we're gonna close the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 37 in favor, none against, the measure passes. 38. Excuse me, 38 in favor, 38-0 the measure passes. Members, we're going to move now to file item 12. This is Senate Bill 549 by Senator Newman. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 549 by Senator Newman, an act relating to gaming.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you, Mister President. I rise to present SB 549, the Tribal Nations Access to Justice Act, which is back on concurrence, and which will provide California's Indian tribes a limited avenue to seek in state court a declaration on the legality of specific games operated by California's licensed card rooms.
- Josh Newman
Person
Prior to the year 2000, California law, as articulated in the state constitution, explicitly prohibited the operation of Nevada and New Jersey-type casinos. With regard to card games, state law prohibited the following. First several specific card games, such as 21, also known as Blackjack, two, so-called banked games where the house has a stake in the outcome of the game, and three, percentage games where the house enjoys better odds than the other players at a table.
- Josh Newman
Person
In the year 2000, the voters of California were explicitly asked under Proposition One A on the ballot that year whether Californians. Whether California's Indian tribes should be granted an exception to those constitutional prohibitions.
- Josh Newman
Person
With their vote, a convincing majority of 64% of California voters chose to grant to the tribes the exclusive right to offer slot machines, lottery games, and bank and percentage card games like Blackjack and Baccarat.
- Josh Newman
Person
Over the course of virtually its entire history as a state, California law has allowed licensed card rooms to operate any card game not otherwise prohibited. Typically, card room players pay a fee on a per hand or per hour basis to play these games.
- Josh Newman
Person
Over the course of the more than two decades since the passage of Prop. One A, however, California's card rooms have steadily added to their offerings a number of games which are, for all intents and purposes, indistinguishable from the card games offered at Las Vegas and tribal casinos.
- Josh Newman
Person
It has long been the tribe's contention that the offering of such games is in direct conflict with the provisions of Prop. One A, but because of the tribe's lack of standing in California courts, no court has been able to rule on the extent or implications of that constitutional grant.
- Josh Newman
Person
This lack of clarity has formed the basis for the long-standing dispute between California's Indian tribes and California's licensed card rooms. Prior attempts to resolve this dispute through the regulatory and legislative processes or by electoral initiative, have failed.
- Josh Newman
Person
SB 549 seeks to definitively resolve this dispute by granting California's Indian tribes circumscribed, time-delimited legal standing to seek a declaratory judgment on whether certain card games offered by card rooms are in violation of the California Constitution. The central question of this bill is actually not about which games card rooms are allowed to offer.
- Josh Newman
Person
Rather, the central question of this bill is simply whether to allow the opportunity for a court of law to address this now decades old question purely on its legal merits and pursuant to the voter approved provisions of Prop. One A. The assertion has been made that this bill is an effort to put the card rooms out of business.
- Josh Newman
Person
This is manifestly untrue. Even if a court, upon the granting of standing under the provisions of the bill, were to rule in the tribe's favor something which is by no means assured, the card rooms would still be free to continue offering those games for which they are explicitly authorized.
- Josh Newman
Person
There has also been a good deal of discussion about the second order impacts in the event that a court ruling were to limit the types of games offered by card rooms, specifically the prospective adverse impacts on jobs as well as the revenues for cities in which card rooms are located.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm among those who are quite sympathetic to those possibilities, especially their effect upon workers. But again, at its essence, this bill is not a matter of our preference. It is a matter of law. Again, and to be clear, SB 549 does not take a side in this regard.
- Josh Newman
Person
It neither vindicates nor codifies the arguments of the tribes, nor does it declare cardrooms in violation of the law. It's also important to note that there is no guarantee as to how a court might rule in this matter.
- Josh Newman
Person
But if the Legislature refuses to grant the legal standing needed for the courts to weigh in, we remain no closer to a resolution on this long dispute. The California tribes do deserve their day in court. And with that, I respectfully urge your aye vote today.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Newman. I have microphones up from Senator Umberg and Senator Min. Senator Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Question of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman, will you take a question?
- Josh Newman
Person
It does strike me as odd. I've been sitting next to this man for about a week, and he's had ample time to ask me all manner of questions. But I'm happy to take that question now.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Mister President, I would have asked earlier. But you see, my colleague from Orange County is so intent on reading every word of every bill that it was very difficult to interrupt him during that week-long period.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Umberg, what's your question?
- Josh Newman
Person
What is your question?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
So, I have two questions. First, we actually didn't have a chance to further refine and define certain terms in Judiciary Committee. And just so we have clarification, as you mentioned a moment ago, the term de novo is used in SB 549.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And as I understand, de novo means that the court is not bound by factual findings of other tribunals or other finders of fact. I'm curious if that's what it means. Is that what it means?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman, you can answer it now. Or you.
- Josh Newman
Person
I'm happy to answer it. So that is, in fact, what it means. So, the addition of the de novo standard was added by Assembly Judiciary, and it was for the avoidance of doubt and sort of to preempt any concern that executive agency's prior decision by influence the outcome or conduct of the court case.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, the addition of the standard was simply to make clear that, as with all Superior Court cases, they would be taken on a de novo basis.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. So that in terms of prior case law, other legal authorities, it doesn't override other legal authorities, it doesn't provide or empower the trial court judge to disregard case law and other legal authorities.
- Josh Newman
Person
That is correct. It was simply to make that clear as a matter of record.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. And, Mister President, a second question concerning consolidation of actions. There are a number of parties that are located throughout the state. I read in the bill that the actions are to be consolidated in Sacramento. Is it your intent that there be one trial that resolves the issues that have been raised by?
- Josh Newman
Person
And so that is the intent of the bill, to have a limited window for any proceeding and one single action. And that was to make sure that we got an answer from a court without exposing any of the parties, especially the courtrooms, to adverse effects from cost litigation.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Okay. Thank you very much, Mister President. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Umberg. I see microphones up from Senator Min, Senator Atkins, Senator Allen, and Senator Grove. Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Earlier today at dinner, I was awarded the medal for the I wasn't planning on speaking award because I say apparently the most. I wasn't planning on speaking, but I wasn't planning on speaking on this bill. My colleague from Fullerton asked me graciously and persistently to speak on this bill.
- Dave Min
Person
But I will just say this. I don't have a dog in this particular fight. I don't have any tribal casinos or card rooms in my district. For me, this bill is about a simple principle, which is that everyone should have the chance to have their day in court to litigate their rights.
- Dave Min
Person
Current loopholes with the way that we treat tribes in this state have prevented the tribes from being able to exercise and try to litigate their rights. So that is why I'll be supporting the bill, and I would encourage my colleagues to do the same.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, I have microphones up from Senator Atkins, Grove, Cortese, and Limon. Senator Atkins.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Thank you, Mister President. Colleagues, I rise in full support of this bill, and I fully intended to speak on this bill. I want to start by acknowledging the hard work of the author who put in more than two years of work on SB 549.
- Toni Atkins
Person
It's not easy authoring legislation that involves a dispute, especially one as long standing as a subject addressed in this bill. As my colleague from Fullerton noted, the purpose of the bill is to provide tribal governments with limited legal standing to seek judicial review on whether certain games operated by the state's card clubs are constitutional and thus, legal or not.
- Toni Atkins
Person
They take a huge risk in bringing this piece of legislation forward. But I would say this legal question needs to be settled one way or another. State gaming regulators have struggled to settle this matter for over 20 years and have failed to address this issue by either regulation or enforcement.
- Toni Atkins
Person
I think my colleagues already have pretty much spoken on the legal aspect of this. But, you know, again, I want to say this has been in process for more than two years. This particular bill, the issue for quite a long time. I want to add my thanks to the pro tem for allowing this process to happen.
- Toni Atkins
Person
I want to thank the Speaker. We're able to be in this moment because the leaders allowed this to move forward, and I want to acknowledge them. But tonight, I want to also acknowledge the sovereign nations and the tribes.
- Toni Atkins
Person
Too many to actually name, but I absolutely must thank one of my local sovereign nations, and that is Viejas and Chairman Chrisman, and certainly, and in particular Tihari Big Knife.
- Toni Atkins
Person
It was their diligence and their drive and dedication to really push this issue forward and not only have discussions with us in the Legislature, but their own fellow tribe Members up and down the state to make the case, to take this chance, take this risk, to settle a legal question.
- Toni Atkins
Person
You know, I know that the voters decided the issue of gaming quite a number of years ago, and I think it is really our responsibility, given that it has not been resolved by previous attorney generals, that we step forward and put this legislation forward and give them their day in court. That is fair. That is just.
- Toni Atkins
Person
That is the right thing to do. Again, I really want to acknowledge my colleague from Fullerton for being the lead on this, and I strongly urge your support, and your aye vote tonight.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Next up, Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I've given this bill a lot of thought over the past few months, especially this last week when both sides were reaching out. I spent numerous conversations and text messages with both our sovereign nation friends and our card rooms that are businesses in the State of California that operate very nice businesses.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I have a great one, a couple in Fresno and one in Bakersfield that are very good to our community. Most of us on this floor recognize that tribal governments are completely and separate sovereign nations inside the state borders of California. But they are very. Their sovereignty has limits and their ability to access instruments like the law enforcement.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I was surprised when we went to a event that the tribal community put on where if there is a missing Indigenous person, that the tribal community cannot cross those lines and go to rescue those individuals that are missing and vice versa.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Our law enforcement in the State of California, regardless of what it is, can't go across the tribe lines. I think these are all things that need to be worked out because sovereignty is so important, but things like this need to be addressed.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
California voters have confirmed that tribes have exclusive rights to operate slot machines and banked card games on Indian lands under the compacts negotiated by the Governor and ratified by this Legislature.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The fight over the scope of the card room gaming authority has been going on for 20 years, with the Department of Justice unwilling or unable to explicitly define what constitutes a banked card game on nontribal lands. Tribes have attempted to sue in court, but have been denied legal standing because of their sovereign status.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
A general rule. I'm not in favor of expanding litigation. You know, I speak against PAGA, and I speak against litigation all the time. But this is a business-to-business relationship. The tribe also has a business that other businesses would sue over for copyright issues or infringement rights or competitive issues from a business-to-business relationship.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The proper venue to sell are these disagreements that we have on a business-to-business relationship is in court. But one of the individuals or one of the entities that is involved in this situation for over 20 years does not have the standing to go to court.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And contrary to the sovereignty that they have, they don't have their own judicial system. SB 549 seeks to address what is at heart is a disagreement between businesses that would allow a narrow business-to-business lawsuit to let the corps decide the status of exclusivity with card games. The card clubs have spoken.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
That I've spoken to are well-run card rooms. They have games that are approved by the Department of Justice, Bureau of Gambling Control.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
They have a lot of guys and people that come in and just rent tables and have fun and eat dinner and eat food, and they're just incredible community members to the people that are in our areas or my district. I'm not familiar with all the card rooms in the state.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
If there's something going on, that should be addressed, because they are the tribal communities, are our tribal partners, are our tribal nations are have exclusivity because the voters allowed that to happen. So, the question for me is, should tribes be given standing in this very narrow window?
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Should tribes be given standing to be able to go to court collectively? Not all of them filing lawsuits, different ones and this is going to go on for another 20 years. I applaud the author for narrowly writing this bill so that there's like a one and done is what I'm calling it, like a one and done.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And this decision that has been grappled with between our sovereign nation partners or communities and the card room situation, because the card rooms have just as much authority to operate when they've given control by the Attorney General's Office. They've also got approval for every game that they have at the table.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
They also get local ordinance control where they say, hey, you can operate in this area, and you can have so many tables, some of that is legislated here in the building as well. But I have to tell you that these sovereign entities also have a business opportunity.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And these, what the voters have allowed these tribal communities to do is to become self-sufficient, buy back land. I just shared and got the compact for Table Mountain. And I read the Chairwoman's statement where they bought back their local cemeteries. So, they've given this opportunity is given to them for self-sufficiency and restoring their cultural heritage.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
And like I said, I think their sovereignty needs to be respected. But I also know that there needs to be exceptions in some cases to where they can have access to basically the three branches of government that we have, and one of them is a judicial branch that needs to be done.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
I thought long and hard about this. I'm not in favor of big lawsuits, but I believe that this particular situation, I will be letting you all know that I'm voting aye on this to give these tribes standing in the State of California so that we can address this issue once and for all.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. It does pain me today to have to rise in opposition to a bill from an author I respect greatly and seem to have been at odds with a couple of times on bills the last couple of days.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
But my city, the City of San Jose, generates currently about $32 million a year from cardroom taxes. The development of those card rooms after having had them grandfathered in for decades and decades, was something that was put to voter approval.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
About the time that I became vice mayor of the City of San Jose, the elected officials in that city, me among them, wanted to make sure that the voters wanted us to allow a steady expansion of the card rooms in order to use those dollars for police services and firefighters.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The City of San Jose is currently understaffed by about 500 police officers and a number of firefighters.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
The concern that we have, and I do associate these comments with our colleague from Bakersfield, is there's an unlevel playing field set up here with one party which has sovereign immunity that is allowed to go into court and get declaratory relief, excuse me, and at least petition for it, where the other party, the card rooms, would not be able to identify the tribe, the gaming tribes, the casinos, as a party to any suit because of sovereign immunity.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
And I'm not sure if that arrangement statutorily will hold up in court later on. Perhaps if this statute gets passed into law, signed into law, I'm sure it'll be litigated and maybe that'll be sorted out at that time.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
But in the meanwhile, if there's any kind of a stay on the current growth of card room services, of card room gaming in the City of San Jose, it's going to be a tremendous hit to the city. It's certainly something that would be devastating for city government that's already dealing with deficits. And with that, I would urge a no vote. Thank you very much, Mister President.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, I know this is a good, robust debate. We have a long night ahead of us still. I have microphones up from Senator Limon, Hurtado, Wilk. So, we'll go to Senator Limon next.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Members. Today I rise in support of SB 549. And I do so as Member who has both a tribal casino and card room in the district.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And my perspective on why I'm here today and supporting this bill is one that looks at past history and looks at times where our laws have not allowed for communities that are underrepresented and communities who have historically had challenges to have clarity.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And when I thought about what it means to be in a district that represents both card rooms and that has a tribe in our district, I went back to a few times where our state has had to weigh in to provide that legal clarity for some of these issues.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
So, for example, in 1946, our state weighed in for Mendes v. Wenzmeister, which found segregated schools to be unconstitutional. That was a decision and clarity that came from our courts. Then in 1948, Pettis v. Sharp decided, which was decided by the California Supreme Court to overturn the state's ban on interracial marriage because our laws were not clear.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
In 1954, Hernandez v. Texas was the first case that recognized an extended constitutional right to Mexican Americans, again, because our laws were absent. In 1978, Madrigal v. Quilligan, which was a landmark case against the unauthorized sterilization of Mexican women in California. And that was decided through the courts.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And most recently, in 2017, we had the courts decide on whether or not DACA students were eligible for loans in our state. In all of these cases, we have had laws that don't clarify, that don't provide answers for our communities.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And I think back to what this means, just for me personally, to know that these laws are part of a history for our state, for our communities, but also for me in many ways.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And I think back to the first people of our country, of our state, of our community, who, unfortunately, don't have the legal standing to bring a case before our judicial system. The inability to access our justice system is injustice. It's unjust. And so, for me, I rise in support of this with this perspective.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
And it's a difficult decision, but I think a really important one because we are at the point over decades of this conversation where it is critical that we have a determination on this ongoing policy issue that we've not been able to solve, and we've not been able to legislate.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
I think that this bill will allow a judge to hear both sides and make a decision and solve for a problem that continues in our community. I also understand that many communities rely on the support from both communities, from both entities, and that this is difficult.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
But we have to turn to the courts, and this is the time to turn to the courts, because our legal system exists for this very reason, to interpret and decide if a law is being followed or broken. With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Next up is Senator Wilk.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Wow, that was loud. Thank you. Thank you, Mister President. I want to thank the author for coming forward with this measure and all of his work on this as the bronze, bronze medal award winner, as most bipartisan.
- Scott Wilk
Person
I'm happy to announce that I'm a co-author of this bill, and I don't think I'll be breaking any new ground here. And I'm going to keep my comments way shorter than I originally intended because I think we've covered a lot of it. But tonight's my last night.
- Scott Wilk
Person
I guess we're going to maybe have a special session, but it's my last night. I've been here 12 years now. And during that time, we've had three attorney generals, Harris in 2017, Becerra in 2020, and now Bonta in 2023, who had issued guidelines on this topic.
- Scott Wilk
Person
But those efforts were derailed by the card rooms, who prefer to operate under the ambiguity of the status quo. SB 549 does not pick winners or losers. It does not, does not debate the merits of either side. It simply allows the Superior Court of California to determine one thing.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Whether certain controlled games operated by California card clubs are banking games that violate California law. The current system that we, the current system has failed us. And the status quo that benefits one side will disadvantage the other is inherently unfair. So, SB 549, all it is about is about fairness.
- Scott Wilk
Person
And this bill will bring objectivity and fairness to the process that clearly is broken. And with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any further discussion or debate on this measure any further? Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Just a question for the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We can take a question. Senator Newman.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
So given some of the substantial judiciary questions that were raised by the Judiciary Chair. Do you have an understanding, Senator, as to why this didn't go through Judiciary Committee?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Newman, go ahead.
- Josh Newman
Person
So, I do. And unfortunately, it's in the nature of, of this house. So, to be clear, this bill was amended last year. It was heard July 5 of last year in the Assembly Committee on the Judiciary. It then sat in the Assembly for a year. It was heard again on July 2 by Assembly GO.
- Josh Newman
Person
Then it had to wait for another month to go through Assembly appropriations. And so, this is in the nature of things here. And so, it's unfortunate, but it would be more unfortunate if we didn't take this up for another two-year session. And so about that. I make no apologies.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen, on your own time.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Well, it is strange that because the bill was so controversial, we're hearing it at 8:30 at night, on the final day. By the way, the bill has a lot of merits, and many of them have been discussed today on the floor.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
But I do think that this would have benefited a great deal from having an opportunity to be heard in judiciary, preferably before the amendment deadline. And I just. It is such a. You're right, Senator.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
What a strange phenomenon that the controversy of this bill led to, it being taken up so late with so little review, when, when I think that the circumstances called for just the opposite.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Hurtado.
- Melissa Hurtado
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I rise in support of SB 549 as a proud co-author. SB 49 would provide the measure of equity to tribal nations by permitting California's tribes to finally have access to the justice system to defend the economic sovereignty that they fought so hard to achieve. Colleagues, I urge an aye vote on this measure.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. Anybody else want to be heard on this? Any other Senator wanted to be heard? Seeing none. Senator Newman, you may close.
- Josh Newman
Person
Thank you. So, I want to thank my colleagues, my colleague from Bakersfield. I mean, from, I'm like, what? Bakersfield.
- Josh Newman
Person
My colleague from Santa Clarita, who was the proud winner of the most, the bronze medal for most bipartisan, and my colleague from Orange County, who will someday win the gold medal for the I'm not planning to ask to speak again award. So, you know, this has been a robust debate.
- Josh Newman
Person
And to be clear, this measure does not seek to resolve this issue via the statute itself. All it simply does is provide an opportunity for a court to rule on this matter definitively.
- Josh Newman
Person
And as my colleague, other colleague from Bakersfield said, the intent here is to have a one-and-done situation where we get resolution from a court of law and put this matter behind us to the benefit of the state as a whole.
- Josh Newman
Person
And as my colleague from Santa Barbara pointed out, one of our most basic rights and fundamental expectations as citizens is the assurance, in the event of injury or injustice, to have our day in court. This is exactly nothing more and nothing less what this measure does. And for that reason, I ask for you aye vote this evening.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All debate having ceased. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have a full house, so we're going to go through the role one last time. Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 32 in favor, 2 against the measure. The Assembly amendments are concurred in Members. We're going to move next to file item 89. File item 89 is SB 1070 by Senator Padilla. Secretary, please read. Hold on moments. Senator Padilla. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1070 by Senator Padilla an accolade to healthcare districts.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Padilla, hold on. Senator Padilla, the floor is yours.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Apologies for the delay. 1070 is back from the Assembly. This Bill authorizes Imperial Valley Healthcare district to place a permanent funding source mechanism on the ballot on or before November 2026 election.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Instead of the March 2024 or November 24 election in 23, the Legislature approved AB 918 to form the Imperial Valley Healthcare district, a countywide healthcare system to stabilize healthcare in one of the state's most underserved communities.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Parties involved here have not provided crucial information needed to recommend a funding source as required by statute in time to have successful stand up. More time is therefore needed. I respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure. Does any Senator want to be heard on it? Seeing no microphones up? Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 in favor, 8 against, the Assembly amendments are are concurred in. We're going to move now to file item 22. This is SB 1283. Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senate Bill 1283 by Senator Stern and act relating to pupils. Senator Stern?
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Members. It is very healthy and I would say, actually can be life saving to just disconnect for a bit. I know I just did it for a day. I was not on social media until about 20 seconds ago.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
When our students are in school on Snapchat or on their Instagram page or on Facebook, checking the status of their likes, or in fact, sometimes using that social media to shame or bully other students, it's not only a distraction, it's a harm.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
This is why the US surgeon General warned that those young people who are spending more than 3 hours a day on social media face two times the mental health risks that those who don't have depression, anxiety, and worse, suicide is on the rise among teens. And there's a proven correspondence.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
This Bill will finally give school districts the clarification in law that they do in fact have the authority to not only limit but ban social media on their campuses altogether. But the amendments taken in the Assembly also importantly clarify that the Bill does not authorize some kind of surveillance of students to enforce this policy.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Specifically, the Bill does not authorize monitoring, collecting, or otherwise accessing students online activities. So with these amendments, both the ACLU Electronic Frontier foundation and the LGBTQ caucus that had concerns that schools could be using this legislation, in other words, to surveil students social media activities, they've all gone neutral.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
So I think we have a really important work product here. We hope that school districts hear our call and step up to the plate because our kids are hurting with that. Respectfully, ask your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion on the measure? It is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 40, noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in Senate third reading. We're going to move next to Senate third reading.
- Steven Glazer
Person
File item 28, SCA two by Senators pass on file Members, I want to thank you for all your attention and patience today. I know you're all excited about finishing up our work. We are doing a little more organizing that's going to require a 10 minute break. We're going to be back here sharp at 8:50.
- Steven Glazer
Person
So you get stay in the building, stay in the Senate Floor or the restrooms. Ask you to be back here at 8:50 sharp. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Reconvening in 45 seconds.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, it the Senate will come back to order. Members, Members, if you can return to your desks, we're going to continue our program this evening with file item 83. Members, we're going to continue our evening session. File item 83. This is ACR 210.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary please read .
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Concurrent Resolution 210 by Assembly Member Bennett relative to coastal waters.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you, Members. On behalf of Assembly Member Bennett, I rise to present ACR 120, which declares the Legislature's support for new and existing marine protected areas and urges state agencies, councils and commissions to prioritize these areas. The Legislature passed the Marine Life Protection act in 1999, which set up a process to establish MPA's using scientific data.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife manages the program and every 10 years solicits input from stakeholders to update the act. Currently, California has 124 protected areas which cover approximately 852 sq mi. Of state waters which equate to about 16% of all coastal waters are covered by mpas. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Limon. Any discussion? Any debate on this resolution? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Steven Glazer
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon moves a call. Next up is file item number five. This is SJR 16. Secretary, please read.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senate joint Resolution 16 by Senator Padilla relative to the Chuckwalla National Monument, the Joshua Tree National Monument, and the Kw'tsán National Monument. Senator Padilla.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. And colleagues, STR 16 is back on concurrence. This resolution urges the United States President to use the Antiquities act of 1906 to establish the Chuckwalla National Monument, the Kw'tsán National Monument and the National Park Service manage Joshua Tree National Monument adjacent to the national park.
- Steve Padilla
Legislator
Assembly amendments added the Kw'tsán monument to the resolution respectfully asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this resolution scene none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
We have Members off the floor. Senator Padilla moves a call. Next up, SJR number. This is file item six, SJR 17. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Joint Resolution by. Senate Joint Resolution 17 by Senator Allen, relative to the Sattitla National Monument.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Members, this bill urges the President of the United States to establish the Sattitla National Monument in the north sacred lands of the Pitt River Tribe in the Shasta area. It's a beautiful land, and I respect for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on the resolution? Any discussion on the resolution? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen moves a call.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We're going to move next to motions and resolutions to recognize the majority leader. Senator Gonzalez. Okay.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President and Members. There is a resolution at the desk requesting permission to invoke the Constitution as it relates to Assembly Bill 2032. Mister Secretary, please read that resolution.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Just a moment. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Resolve that Assembly Bill 2032 presents a case of urgency as that term is used in Article Four, Section Eight B of the Constitution, and the provision of that section requiring that the bill be read on three, separate days in each house is hereby dispensed with, and it is ordered that said bill be read the second and third times considered engrossed and placed upon its passage.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Jones, for what purpose do you rise?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
I support the motion. Ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 37 to zero, the resolution is adopted. Secretary, please read the bill and title the second and third time. This is AB 2032.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 2032, by Assembly Member Jim Patterson, an act relating to tribal gaming and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately. An act relating to tribal gaming and declaring the urgency thereof to take effect immediately.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. The bill having been read a second and third time. We'll now move to file item one. File item one is AB 2032. Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Colleagues, thank you for that rule waiver vote. Today I rise in support of AB 2032 on behalf of Assembly Member Jim Patterson, which ratifies the tribal-state gaming compact between California and Big Sandy Rancheria of western Mono Indians in Fresno County.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
The Big Sandy Rancheria of western Mono Indians is a federally recognized tribe with a rich history in California's Central Valley. The tribe is located on a trust known as the Big Sandy Rancheria in Auberry.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Big Sandy enjoyed strong support from all of its local government leaders and Big Sandy Rancheria has also been a strong supporter and a good neighbor in our communities, investing in fire departments, law enforcement, veterans, crime victims' protections, and groups, libraries, historical historical monuments, and supporting other tribes as well. Respectfully ask you to ratify the compact before you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Grove. Any discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove moves a call. Members, the hour is late, but we are making great progress. But we do need a few minutes to get a few things organized. So we are going to invite you all to take a 15 minutes break that we will resume at 948. 948. Please be back here in the chambers. And we'd like to ask you to stay here in the Senate facility until we can reconvene. So we'll be in recess.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Here with us in the gallery. We welcome you to the night shift with the California State Senate. We hope you're enjoying the evening. We're going to have our presiding officer come on back up. A little bit of a run of show for the rest of the evening. It's going to be a bit of a poke.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We are going to poke around. We have a few measures left that we're going to need to be able to complete. On the Assembly Bill side, we are waiting for measures to be able to arrive back from the California State Assembly. Once we have those, we'll be taking these up in quick order.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We're going to be having a presiding officer come back, take a couple bills off of call. We're going to ask all Senators to please return to their desks and we'll get going here in approximately two minutes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we are coming back to order. I invite all the Senators to come back into the chambers and find their desks. We're going to move to file item 57. Members, this is Assembly Bill 3233. I know you're familiar with it. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Assembly Bill 3233 by Assembly Member Addison an accolade to oil and gas.
- Steven Glazer
Person
We look forward to hearing from Senator Laird. Senator Laird, the floor is yours.
- John Laird
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister President. We considered this bill. It got 20 votes. It's on reconsideration. We had a very robust debate. I think it's a good bill. I asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right. Any further discussion on this measure? Seeing no microphones up, secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Laird moves a. Call it.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we are going to lift the call on file item 57. This is AB 3233. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes 21. Noes 12. The measure passes. Members, I just want to. Members, I want to, first of all, say thank you for your patience during our session today. As the pro tem said at the start, we know these last nights are typically starts and stops, and that's just part of the nature of it.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And we know people are ready to finish up our working and get on back to our districts. But we're going to have a little more time as we await bills to come back from the Assembly. If you wanted to project ahead, I think we're probably here for another hour or so. But I do have some good news.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I do have some good news for those who are big California fans. California beat UC Davis 31 to 13 today. And if you're San Diego State fans, it's even bigger news. They beat Texas, Texas A and M 45-14. So, that's pretty exciting.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And here's another really exciting score for those who are if you're taping this stuff, then close your ears. The University of Northern California. I mean, excuse me. Oregon beat Idaho 24-14. And maybe the most exciting news of the day was not a win, but a good loss.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And that's Fresno State taken on Michigan at Michigan, and Michigan 30, Fresno State 10. But pretty darn impressive to the former national champions right there. So, we're going to have a few. What? Say again? All right, but we will take. Listen, everybody's been really great.
- Steven Glazer
Person
And I know for some of us this is like our final, final night. Looks like it. But I know that we're taking it all in and enjoying this moment. Senator Portantino, what purpose do you rise? What's your point of personal privilege?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I was figuring since you were talking about sports scores, I might ask a sports trivia question.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Who was the first President to throw a pitch out at a major league game? Who was the first President? Sports trivia. Who knows?
- Steven Glazer
Person
There's a Roosevelt suggestion from Senator Laird.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Mister Allen got it right. Taft in 1910 threw it out to Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, and with that, we are going to go back into recess for just a few minutes.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Mister, one more.
- Steven Glazer
Person
I may have lost my job. Sir, we so appreciate you, and in recess you can just use your loud voice and people.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So, I have one more.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Hold on. We're back in recess.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Oh. Oh, you're not gonna let me ask one more question? So, not on the mic? All right.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay. Members, we're back from our recess. Members, we're going to lift the call on file item 76. 76 is AB 3129. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Ayes 21. Noes 11. The measure passes. We're back in recess for a moment. Members, please stay at your desks. Stay in the room.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Can I get everyone's attention, please? Obviously we have a few things to do before the evening's done, so we want everyone's patience and attention and quiet so that the Clerk can hear the roll. That would always be helpful. And for Members to let their voices be heard so we can hear them when the vote is cast.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, we're going to begin with file item 95. This is Senate Bill 422. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 422 by Senator Portantino, an act relating to unemployment insurance.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Portantino.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
SB 422 was amended in this Assembly to clear up the discrepancies with loan out corporations for the entertainment industry. I ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on the measure. It is eligible for unanimous roll call. All right, without objection. Ayes 38. Noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next one up is file item 96. This is SB 572. Clerk, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 572 by Senator Smallwood-Cuevas, an act relating to state property.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Smallwood-Cuevas.
- Lola Smallwood-Cuevas
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. I'm pleased to present 572. This bill would help facilitate the transfer of state property from State Employment Development Department located at 5401 Crenshaw Boulevard to a local community land trust. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion on the measure? Any discussion? All right. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
Please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 to zero, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next step, file item 97. This is SB 615. Clerk, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 615 by Senator Allen. An act relating to hazardous waste.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Allen.
- Benjamin Allen
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. SB 615 is back in the Senate in concurrence. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Seeing none. Please call the roll.
- Reading Clerk
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 33 to one, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, as we go through the remaining Bills, we're only going to go through the roll call once, okay? Just once. So please pay attention so your voice can be heard. All right, next one up is file item 98. This is SB 675 by Senator Limón.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon. Oh. Clerk, please read.
- Reading Clerk
Person
Senate Bill 675 by Senator Limon, an act relating to fire prevention.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Limon.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you. Members. SB 675 is up for concurrence, and it is related to prescribed grazing. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate? This is eligible for unanimous roll call. Without objection. Ayes 38. Noes zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Next up is file item 99. This is SB 961. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 961 by Senator Wiener an accolade to vehicles.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
SB 961 is back on concurrence. I asked for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
It's only going to be read once. Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll. Everyone, please, quiet, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 26 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, please raise your voices so we can hear them on your votes. Okay, we're gonna move to file item 100. This is SB 976. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 976 by Senator Skinner. An act relating to youth addiction.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Senators. My colleagues, this is my last Bill as a Senator. SB 976 is back on concurrence. It is a Bill that will protect our kids from social media addiction without impeding on any content and allowing kids to search for whatever content they choose. And with that, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion, any debate on the matter? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 28 to two, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving to file item 101. This is SB 1037. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1037 by Senator Wiener. An act relating to housing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
1037 is back on concurrence. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 23 to nine, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 102. This is SB 1221.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1221 by Senator Min. An act relating to gas corporations.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister President. This Bill's back on concurrence. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this matter? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 in favor, eight against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item103. This is SB 1223.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1223 by Senator Becker. An act relating to privacy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Members, what am I thinking right now? This is my neural rights Bill. Back on concurrence. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure? Any discussion or debate? This is eligible for a unanimous roll call. Without objections. Ayes, 38. Noes, zero. The Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 104. This is SB 1381. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1381 by Senator Wahab. An act relating to crimes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Wahhab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. SB 1381 is back for concurrence. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate? This is eligible for unanimous roll call without objections. Ayes 38, Nos, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in moving on to file item 105. This is SB 1400.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1400 by Senator Stern an accolade to criminal procedure.
- Henry Stern
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. These amends alter conditions of the dismissal to ensure people deemed incompetent to stand trial get the case care they need. Remove opposition from both the DAs and the public defenders. Respectfully ask for your I vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Stern.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members discussion or debate on the measure. It is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection. Ayes 38. No, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in moving on to file item 106. This is SB 1394. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1394 by Senator Min an accolade to vehicles.
- Dave Min
Person
Thank you, Mister President. This is my last bill and it was amended in the Assembly to add Senator Ashby and Assembly Member Weber as authors, among other things. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Min.
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, any discussion or debate on that measure. Discussion or debate, this is eligible for unanimous roll call without objection . Aye,38. No, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in moving on to file item 107. This is SB 1414.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1414 by Senator Grove an accolade to crimes.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Grove.
- Shannon Grove
Legislator
Thank you, Mister President. Members and Assembly amendments conditionally added 16, 17 year olds back into the bill. I wish children were protected under the bill equally, but we did move the needle forward and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on this measure. Any discussion or debate on this measure. Any discussion or debate, it is eligible for unanimous roll call. Is that an objection? No, that's just a wave. All right. Without objection. Aye's 38. No, 0. The Assembly amendments are concurred in Members moving on to file item 108. This is SB 1420. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1420 by Senator Caballero an accolade to Energy.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Caballero.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
SB 1420 is back from the Assembly. On concurrent I ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion or debate on the measure? Any discussion or debate seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 in favor, 0 against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in moving on to file item 109. This is SB 1162.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1162 by Senator Cortese. An act relating to public contracts.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Cortese.
- Dave Cortese
Legislator
Mister President, I'm pleased to present SB 1162. And I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, any discussion on this measure? Any discussion? All right. Seeing no further debate. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
All right, on a vote of 30 to eight, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Moving on to file item 110. This is Senate Bill 1350. Secretary, please read.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Senate Bill 1350 by Senator Durazo. An act relating to private employment.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Senator Durazo.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Regarding SB 1350, I ask for your aye vote in concurrence.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Any discussion or debate on the measure? Seeing none. Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
Because a very important Member wasn't paying attention. Please call the absentees one more time.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 30 in favor, eight against, the Assembly amendments are concurred in. Members, all these Senate Bills have come back in, and you all were just fantastic in taking care of business. That's out of order. Bernie told me to do that. That's out of order. There's no applause here in the Senate.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Okay, we have a couple bills on call, Members, and we're going to take a moment to adjust the equipment, and we're going to come back and finish those up so we can complete our work tonight. Thank you for your patience. Please stay in your chairs while we just finish this last bit of work. Okay, Members. We're going to get out of here early, guys. It's all a matter of framing.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, let me just note, we're going to lift the calls here. I know that a number of Members have some motions under motions and resolutions. I know that a number of Members want to be recognized under motions and resolutions. We will do that this evening. Don't worry. Don't go home. But we are going to finish those motions. The resolutions on call. So let's go there next. We're going to start with file item 83. This is ACR 210. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 31 to eight, the resolution is adopted. Next up is file item five, SJR 16. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 35 to zero, the resolution is adopted. Moving on to file item six. This is SJR 17. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
On a vote of 36 to zero, the resolution is adopted. Our last item on call is file item one. This is AB 2032. Secretary, please call the absent Members.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Steven Glazer
Person
That's a vote of 39 to zero on the urgency. 39- 0, the measure passes. Members, if I can get your attention, we're going to move back to motions and resolutions, and we're going to ask everybody to be quiet so we can hear them and the desk can hear them, and we can make sure they're recorded correctly and properly. So if I could ask Members to return to their desks, please, and to curb the conversation on the floor. Very good. We'll begin with Senator Dahle.
- Brian Dahle
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Members, I rise to submit a letter to the Senate Daily Journal. This letter is submitted to clarify the intent of SB 1423, which requires DHSC to convene a rural hospitals technical advisory group to analyze the contributions of all existing Medi-Cal reimbursement methodologies employed by California hospitals, including, but not limited to, supplemental payments, fee for service reimbursement, and managed care delivery systems. The letter has been cleared by both sides of the aisle. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Thank you, Senator Dahle. The desk will note. Let's go to Senator Roth.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you, Mr. President. Request we move AB 382, file item number 35, to the inactive file at the request of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. Senator Umberg.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Mr. President, please move Bauer-Kahan, AB 2930, file number 69, to the inactive file at the request of the author.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. Senator Limón.
- Monique Limón
Legislator
Thank you, Members. I request unanimous consent to submit a letter to the journal regarding the intent of SB 675. This request has been approved by both sides.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Desk will note. Senator Wahab.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. On behalf of Assembly Member McCarty, please move file item 34, AB 2593 to the inactive file. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Desk will note. Senator Becker.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
To the journal for SB 942, to clarify the author's intent. Letter clarifies that using the terms user and publicly accessible and the definition of a cover provider. It is not my intent to capture tools using exclusively for business, business purposes. That has been approved by both sides.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Desk will note. Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to submit a letter to the Senate Daily Journal clarifying my intent regarding SB 937 as it relates to 100% affordable housing. The letter has been cleared by both sides of the aisle.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. Can we go to our outstanding Majority Leader, Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I'd like to add file items 39, AB 3021 to the inactive file. File item 41, AB 3172 to the inactive file. File item 50, AB 1082 to the inactive file. File item 51, AB 2441 to the inactive file. File item 54, AB 3211 to the inactive file. File item 55, AB 2416 to the inactive file. And file item 49, AB 2996 to the inactive file.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. Any other matters under motions and resolutions, Members? Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Mr. President. I rise to enter a letter into the journal in regards to SB 366. It has been reviewed and approved. I ask for unanimous consent.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. All right, Members, we want to reconcile the files to make sure we've covered all the measures that are before us this evening. So ask Members to stay, remain in the chambers at your desks while we just do this paperwork.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we still have some business. Members, ask you to return to your desk. We still have a couple things of business to do, Members. Senators, if you can return to your desks, please. Senator Niello, Senator Wiener, Senator Roth. Members, if you could return to your desks, please. We're going to recognize Senator Caballero. Under motions and resolutions, we're going to recognize Senator Caballero.
- Anna Caballero
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to request unanimous consent to submit a letter to the journal for SB 768.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Without objection. Senator Newman, is that a microphone up?
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we still have work to do. Members, if you can return to your desks. Boy, am I going to miss this. Members, we have a few things to do still. We're going to recognize... Everybody, just grab a seat. Grab a seat. We're going to recognize our Majority Leader, Senator Gonzalez.
- Lena Gonzalez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. The following items are ordered to the inactive file. File items 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 38 and 42. Thank you.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The desk will note. All right, we're going to... We're going to finish up our ceremony, our session today, with a couple of remarks. We want to turn first to our leader of the Republicans, Senator Jones. Please give him your attention, Members.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. President. Thank you, Majority Leader. Thank you, Mr. Pro Tem. I want to start with a very important statement I think is the Pro Tem made a promise, and the Pro Tem kept a promise, and I appreciate that very much. Look, it's an honor to be here on the last night of session and be invited to give some closing remarks on our perspective of serving in the Senate. And for me, it is a big deal. And it's an honor to be able to do that.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And I know that in his closing remarks, the Pro Tem is going to recognize the combined staff. I'll call the bipartisan, nonpartisan staff that we all get to work for and with. But I would like to take just a couple of minutes, if I may, and talk about the Republican staff and the work that they do every single day. It's easy, it's probably easy for Democrats to get burned out too, but it's easy for Republicans to get burned out here in this supermajority building, and to be the loyal opposition.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And I hope you all are okay with that self imposed title that we've put on ourselves. Because if you watch parliament, either in Canada or in United Kingdom, the loyal opposition, you know, they're really the ones that help the government run well. And I'm hoping that that's our role here as well in the California State Senate. Each one of us, altogether, the nine of us represent about 9 million constituents. And in our districts, we represent everybody. And I know you all do as well.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Each one of our District and Capitol staffs do that every single day, and their unwavering dedication and passion does not go unnoticed. Our wonderful personal staffs are aided every day by our fantastic caucus staff and our Rules Committee, Julie and Chris, our communications and district services team, led by Maxie Holmberg-Douglas. Our fiscal staff, led by Kirk Feely. Our policy staff, led by Greg Maw, and all of our staff, led by our Staff Director, Jim Kjol.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And no matter your party affiliation, the staff on our side help make this building go around. If you would, please join me in a round of applause for the Republican staff that helped keep this place running. I'll close with some personal thoughts on serving in the Senate. Members, above the rostrum and the President Pro Tem are the words, "It's the Senator's duty to protect the liberty of the people."
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And I think each single, every one of us, when we walk in this room, have that on our mind, whether you're Democrat, Republican, or no party preference. It's an honor to serve in this body. Each one of us represents 931,000 constituents.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
That's more than a Congress Member represents in California or any other state. Some states. But it's more than five states' entire population. Five states have less population than each one of us have as Senators. I'm told that 1199 people have had the honor of being called California State Senator. I will say that this is probably one of the smoothest endings of a session since I've been in the Legislature. Now, look, the Pro Tem doesn't get all the credit for that, by the way.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
There have been some extenuating circumstances in previous ending sessions that he didn't have to put up with this year that the previous Pro Tem did. And we talked about that last time. The Republicans were able to hold the ground on a couple of bills, and we support the Pro Tem statement on the special session. We've had plenty of time to get the work done. We don't need a special session.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
One of the things I would like to encourage each and every single one of us, but especially the Senators that are leaving. As you walk out the building tonight, and you walk across the street to go back to the Swing Space and potentially leave for the last time on this evening, take a moment, turn around, look at this building when it's lit up at night, and recognize how special of a place this is to be in Sacramento, California, on the ending session of 2024. I thank you for your time. Thank you for your service and your friendship. Godspeed, God bless.
- Steven Glazer
Person
Members, we're now going to turn to our President Pro Tempore, the distinguished Senator Mike McGuire. Senator McGuire.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Mr. President, thank you. I want to take a moment just to say thank you to each and every one of you for an incredible year, making a difference for communities up and down this great state. You know, when we first got back into session here this year, we were facing one hell of a storm. A mega one billion dollar deficit that threatened the progress that this body, the Assembly, the Governor, have made over the past decade.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
As I've learned from driving my big and beautiful district, up and down the North Coast, when things look dark, you turn on the bright lights. And it's the same thing here at the Capitol. When things look dark in California, those of us who have the absolute privilege, and I get emotional talking about it, who have the absolute privilege of serving in this historic chamber, have to turn the bright lights on, and we have to work even harder, think even smarter, and do even better. And that's what we did this year.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
And I want to say thank you. No matter if you're a Republican or a Democrat. We secured record funding for our public school kids, record funding, record funding for our firefighters and best firefighting force in America with CAL FIRE, billion dollars for homelessness. We work together to be able to pass a retail theft package.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We had to keep our communities safer. And we continue to focus on the rising costs of electricity and gas rates. I want to say a few thank you's because I know that we're late, and I know folks want to get home to their families. I want to say thank you to my family first and foremost, and so many of our families. I'm going to look at Senator Ochoa-Bogh and start to get blubbery. They make incredible sacrifices for what we do every day.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
And I want to say thank you to Erika and to our son, Corndog, for the incredible work that they do each and every day and keep it all together. I want to take a moment to say thank you to Erika Contreras. You know, she is the glue that keeps this place together.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
And I think we owe her a round of applause. And I want to say thank you so much to Secretary Erika Contreras. Let's give it up. Morning, noon, night, weekends. She is there for us. She's keeping us moving forward. We're grateful. Bernie, we love you. We are going to miss you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
It will never be the same without you. We are so grateful for your work, for your commitment, your friendship, your partnership, and most importantly, the leadership that you show us each and every day. I think we need to get up on our feet and let's give a round of applause to the one, the only, Bernie McNulty.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Can we also give it up to the amazing desk staff as well for all of their hard work? Let me hear you loud and proud. Whether it's the desk staff, engrossing and rolling, Senate TV staff, we are incredibly grateful. One more time, please. Let me hear you loud. Let's give it up for Bernie McNulty.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We want to say thank you to Cara Jenkins and Gabe Petek. We are so grateful to our sergeants, led by sergeant, Chief Sergeant Rodriguez. And to all of the Senate sergeants. They work with us each and every day. We're going to have the sergeants who are here in the chambers step forward.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We need to give them a round of applause. We couldn't do what we do without them. Can we please give a round of applause? Leroy is all over it. Can we say thank you to the California Highway Patrol? Can we say thank you to the parking tenants, Capitol security staff? Let's give them a round of applause.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. We are so grateful to Jennifer Hatfield and the Capitol Health Services team. They have been ground zero, ground zero since the pandemic for all of us. We are so grateful to them. We want to say, Susan DeLaFuente, who is phenomenal for keeping us safe and always giving us a notice.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Let's give her a round of applause. My goodness. Thank you. We love you, Susan. To the DGS and housekeeping staff, the ground staff here, can we please give them a round of applause? To our Legislative Data Center, to the Legislative Travel Office that keep us moving up and down this state. Let's give them a round of applause.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
And ladies and gentlemen, we need to say thank you to the Committee staff here in the Senate. Some of the best and brightest in the United States right here working with all of us. Let's give it up for our Committee staff. We wouldn't be who we are each and every day without the Senate staff team in each of the 40 offices.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We owe them a debt of gratitude for choosing a life of service, choosing a life of working for the people. Can we please stand up? I want to hear you loud and proud one more time. Can we give it up to the Senate staff who make this place go around each and every day? Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
I want to acknowledge Madam Pro Tem Emeritus for her amazing work that she does for this state, for the leadership that she has shown us in some of the most difficult times that we have faced as the state. Can we please give a round of applause to Madam Pro Tem Emeritus, Ms. Toni Atkins. Thank you, Toni.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We love you. I'm going to wrap it up. I want to say thank you to my amazing staff team. And many of us have been together for quite a long time. Rebecca Wachsberg, who is back from maternity leave. And I has a six month old Jude, who is here and happy and excited and the best sleeper that I have ever seen. Makes me jealous. We are so happy to have Rebecca back. Jason Liles has been amazing. I've been a friend of his, one of my best friends in life for 30 years.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
I'm grateful that he stepped in. I want to say thank you to Kerrie Lindecker, our District Director, who I've been with nearly 10 years. Chris Nielsen, who I have been working with since I started. Thank you, Chris. Barbara, I'm getting all blubbery. Oh, man. Barbara Mohondro, who is our Scheduling Manager, couldn't do what we do every day.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
I want to say thank you to Nycole Baruch, who runs the floor for the office. And I also want to acknowledge Kayla from the Majority Leader's Office. They do phenomenal work keeping us moving. Can we give them a round of applause? Nycole, Kayla, thank you so much. Thank you, Diane Griffiths. She is our attorney in the office.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Thank you, K Rod. Kimberly Rodriguez, watch out. We are so grateful. Deputy Chief of Staff, Niesha Fritz, who we just call Fritz, who does all issues of communications. Thank you so much, Fritz, for everything you do. Chris Woods, who is our Budget Lead Budget Director here for Democrats, into the entire Budget team.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
Can we give them a round of applause? Republican and Democrat alike, let's say. Thank you, Kurt, as well. Thank you so much. And I want to end it right here. None of this would happen without a team. And I want to look to Lena Gonzalez, to our Assistant Majority Leaders Ashby and Wahab, and to our entire floor team. We couldn't do what we do each and every day without you. And let's be honest.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
We got done tonight thanks to the organization on this floor, not just delivering for one political party, but delivering for the people of California. I want to say thank you so much to our floor team, to our Caucus Chair, for all the work. Can we please give them a round of applause? Thank you. Thank you.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
I also want to look to Senator Jones. Jonesy, I'm grateful for you. We don't always see eye to eye. Yeah. But here's what I appreciate. We work it through. And in a time of hyper partisanship in this country, we're able to work together, put differences aside, and focus what's important. What's important.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
The people in the communities that we represent. Can we please give a round of applause to Leader Jones? Thank you so much. And to our Republican colleagues. Thank you. All right, 12:16. It is now, Sunday. We spent some quality time together this week.
- Mike McGuire
Legislator
To all of our Members who are going to be retiring this year, I want to take a moment and end it right here and say thank you. Thank you for stepping up to serve. Can we please have all of our retiring Members stand up? Can we please give them a round of applause and say thank you. Thank you for your commitment to California. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Good luck. Thank you. Until next time. December 2, 2024. Mr. President, the desk is clear.
- Steven Glazer
Person
The Senate, my friends, is adjourned.
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