Digital security has become a hotly debated topic in the abortion world following Roe v. Wades overturn. The bill was authored by Democratic Senator Maria Elena Durazo. Though the state is responsible for less than 1% of greenhouse gases emitted globally, it has the fifth largest economy and helps drive global policy changes. Minimum wage bump Businesses with 26 or more employees will be required to pay a $15 minimum. Faculty groups also say the bill comes with no additional funding to hire more tutors who work alongside faculty to help students during class and give faculty more training. Carried by Democrats Lena A. Gonzalez of Long Beach and Monique Limon of Santa Barbara, the bill also would require operators to take certain steps at the thousands of existing wells within that buffer zone. Those taking effect on July 1, 2022 range from school . There's nothing stopping CalGEM, which is the agency responsible for permitting in California, to just stop permitting within the setback zone, Naseck said. On November 3, 2022, the PA legislature passed Act 122 of 2022, amending the reporting requirement for businesses registered in the state. One group was told they were from a country song, the other was told they were from rap. Gavin Newsom's signature. Deb Banks, executive director of the Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates, said it will allow bikers to cross the street at pedestrian signals instead of only at green traffic lights. Theres no official opposition to the bill, though the original version from Jones-Sawyer only called for a judge to instruct the jury to treat artistic expressions with caution and close scrutiny. A revised version from the Senate calls for an entirely separate hearing, away from the jury. It also abolishes the requirement that coroners investigate stillbirths and protects someone who helps a pregnant person end their pregnancy voluntarily from criminal or civil liability. You can find our submission guidelines here. The UC Berkeley Labor Centermaintains a list. The state has a Sept. 6 deadline to apply for federal funding. Many of these wont necessarily intersect with your everyday existence. Just look at historic photos of communities like Huntington Beach and there are forests of oil derricks. The Building and Construction Trades, an umbrella union of 450,000 workers, and the bigger Labor Federation behind them, support SB 6, while the state carpenters union and affordable housing developers backed AB 2011. Living in Southern California means having oil drilling somewhere nearby. Newsom has made this one of his top climate priorities this legislative session. Supporters say few low-income workers can afford the 30% to 40% pay cut to take time off for a disability or to care for a new child or sick family member. Assembly Bill 890, which passed in 2020, and allows nurse practitioners to practice independently. In 2022, the minimum wage in California was $14 an hour for employers with 25 or fewer employees and $15 an hour for employers with more than 25 employees. Photo by Rahul Lal, CalMatters. More than a dozen states have announced plans to model abortion bans on Texas law. SB 352 by Senator Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) The military: sexual harassment. The California District Attorneys Association and other groups say the bill will endanger pedestrians and unnecessarily tie the hands of law enforcement. The new laws address such varied areas as affordable housing, expanding voter access, worker protections, peace officer certification, crimes targeting people due to immigration status, and much more. SACRAMENTO - Governor Gavin Newsom just wrapped up the 2022 legislative session, signing 997 bills into law. People in California who have served time in prison will soon have a chance to appeal to have their criminal records sealed. They also say the bill delays pipelines needed to transport carbon to where it can be injected and sequestered permanently underground. preserve Californias concealed-carry gun limits, Disciplinary action for COVID disinformation, nations poison control centers saw a spike in calls, require judges to balance the value of the evidence with the undue prejudice, Fewer remedial courses at community colleges, classes required to transfer to a UC or Cal State, not a single dissenting vote from lawmakers, couldnt justify their policy of requiring that, how California prisons treat inmates in solitary confinement, who travel to California for what supporters call gender-affirming care, a refuge for minors seeking gender-affirming care, new three-digit federal mental health crisis hotline, Water bill help for low-income Californians, offers state assistance to low income residents, amended to include provisions he supports, much-dreaded California Environmental Quality Act, at least some union labor on every project, the California Environmental Justice Alliance argued, that only 2% of housing development projects, two women in Kings County were imprisoned and charged with murder, positioned the state as a reproductive health safe haven., 'Pink tax:' Gender-based price discrimination, comprise the bulk of the bills supporters, Keeping Diablo Canyon nuclear plant open, Strategies for carbon removal and capture, Courts compelling mentally ill people into treatment, creates a court framework in every county to compel people with serious mental illness, bargaining power for a low-wage workforce, Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic. AB 1287, authored by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer Kahan, an Orinda Democrat, would prohibit an individual or business from charging a different price for a product based on the customers gender. AB 257 creates a state-run council to set labor standards across the fast food sector, including on wages, safety and other workplace conditions. We expanded it to schools because we decided that was a sensitive space where we don't want, especially our young people, to be terrorized.. They say the bill is overly broad, and that setting privacy regulations state-by-state could create confusion for businesses. The Governor vetoed 169 bills, saving the state billions in taxpayer dollars. It would exclude crimes requiring the offender to register as a sex offender. Still others will be phased in over time. The report recommended the district utilize restorative justice as a suspension alternative, to build communities and restore relationships between all affected parties after an incident has occurred.. California providers report already seeing patients from many of those states. AndAB 101by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) whichupon appropriation of funds by the Legislature requires high schools to provide ethnic studies starting in academic year 2025-26 and make completion of a one-semester course a high school graduation requirement beginning with students graduating in 2029-2030. The California Association of Health Plans is opposing the bill, saying amendments to it have created a broad new mandate on insurers without a chance for stakeholders to weigh in. A noose and a swastika and a burning cross were treated differently, both where they could legally be placed and how they were treated as a penalty. These votes took place as campaigns ramp up for 100 of the 120 seats in the Legislature. Among the cases filed, one was of Dr. Elysse Versher, vice principal at West Campus High School, who was subjected to anti-Black hate crimes on school grounds earlier this year. The Sacramento Police Department reported 112 bias-related incidents for the first six months of 2022. Its also backed by California Attorney General Rob Bonta and the former head of monetization at Facebook. New California laws 2022 taking effect on July 1 include new requirements for bars, crack down on ghost guns and later school start times. Some of the new laws became effective immediately and others, including some that were signed into law just weeks ago, take effect January 1, 2023, or later. Nearly 3 million Californians live within 3,200 feet of an active or idle oil or gas well, mostly in Kern and Los Angeles counties. Opponents of this bill point to research showing that only 2% of housing development projects face CEQA lawsuits. If at least two union shops dont bid on the project, union-level wages kick in. Campus projects for student and faculty housing would have to check off a long list of environmental and labor-relations musts to evade CEQAs, which cities and community groups cite in lawsuits to challenge development. Not to give the same speech and expect the same applause, but to begin to do something about it.. In November, California voters approved Prop. Many experts warn that achieving carbon neutrality may not be possible without removing existing emissions from the atmosphere and capturing carbon from smokestacks. Law enforcement and medical groups make up the majority of the bills opponents, including the Peace Officers Research Association of California. The Affordable Housing and High Road Jobs Act identifies areas zoned for parking, retail or office buildings where land could be used for housing. From minimum wage to cracking down on ghost guns -- check . The bill is an effort to ease the path toward collective bargaining and potentially higher wages for the 400,000-member California agricultural workforce. The Sheriffs' Association and Georgia Police Chiefs talked in favor of the legislation. Newsom had until Sept. 30 to either sign or veto the bills that did pass and his choices will likely be more closely watched than ever as speculation builds about whether he is positioning himself to run for president. California needs 2.5 million more homes by 2030 and almost no one wants them in their backyard. The bill would attach a fee to cell phone lines.That fee has been lowered significantly in negotiations with the telecommunications industry, which in turn has dropped its opposition. As other states move to criminalize or severely restrict abortion, a cadre of bills protecting women and medical providers from prosecution are headed to the governor. Newsweek has gone through the new. Discipline could include a public reprimand, probation, suspension, or license revocation. It was part of the climate action plan that Gov. After calling housing affordability the original sin of California, Newsom said that these housing bills would be different. The California Department of Public Health was involved in drafting more recent versions of the bill. But at the same time, we know $15 is barely enough at this point in time.. They say the state could develop targets based on technologies that are not accessible for most farmers and drive small farms out of business. Climate change is causing unprecedented stress on Californias energy system and I appreciate the Legislatures action to maintain energy reliability as the State accelerates the transition to clean energy, he said in a signing statement. Gavin Newsom signed 770 new bills last legislative session, some of which go into effect starting Saturday. No one officially. It applies to a much wider swath of land and doesnt cap rents, but developers must use at least some union labor on every project. Subscribe to CalMatters free daily newsletter to get news and commentary that holds your elected leaders accountable. AB 1757: Farmers and grower associations opposed the bill, saying it would be economically unfeasible for them. Restorative justice practices focus on mediation and community-building, asking students to take responsibility for harm theyve caused. AB 1003 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego) Wage theft: grand theft. Dozens of cities and local control advocates say the bills take away critical neighborhood input to development decisions and worry local governments may lose tax revenue from commercial properties. The UFW says under the current, more rigid voting system, growers hearing of unionization efforts have called immigration authorities on organizing workers. A law to ban new oil drilling within 3,200 feet (975 meters) of homes, schools and other community sites is set to take effect Jan. 1, but it may soon be put on hold by a referendum. The COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing and the virus has killed more than 94,000 people in California. Solitary confinement is the Wild West of carceral regulations there arent many rules in place, so prisons set many of their own. Groups supporting workers rights, child and maternal health, gender equity, retirees, and benefits for low-income Californians are pushing for the bill. Faculty unions, associations and the academic senate, plus Mt. Is CEQA the bogeyman its made out to be? AB 118 by Senator Sydney Kamlager (D-Los Angeles) Department of Social Services: C.R.I.S.E.S. SB 1142, by Democratic senators Anna Caballero of Merced and Nancy Skinner of Berkeley, incubated the Abortion Practical Support Fund, which was established in the budget. Horror stories abound from California and elsewhere of people kept for years in solitary confinement, getting perhaps two hours of time outside their cell a day with little contact with the outside world. Included is a plan to monitor toxic leaks and emissions, and install alarm systems. The law suggests that Oil and Gas interests . They and bill author Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat, say that California has a responsibility to provide a safe environment for transgender youth and their families to get gender-affirming care given a recent rise in legislation in other states that would restrict access. We think 50 cents helps working people in an inflationary economy to at least keep up. But to build out the system as envisioned, including providing mobile crisis response, proponents of the cell phone fee say the state needs ongoing funding. SACRAMENTO Governor Gavin Newsom today highlighted new bills signed into law in 2021 that will go into effect January 1, 2022, including historic measures to expand worker protections, tackle the states housing crisis, redress historical injustices, increase voter access and more. The current law already requires 100% of retail electricity to be fueled by renewables such as wind and solar by 2045. Gavin Newsom signed nearly 1,000 bills into law. He was sentenced to life in prison. The contentious law over farm animals -- specifically bringing bacon and pork products into the conversation -- was passed in 2018. AB 257, or the FAST Recovery Act, would create a first-of-its-kind fast-food council to set rules for chains with a hundred or more restaurants nationally. This state has long fashioned itself as a "planet protector" but in 2022 it's taking it to a new level. A 2022 study from the Institute for Health Policy Studies at UC San Francisco showed that white ex-convicts were more likely to benefit from clean slate laws than Black people, for example. After eight months, Californias legislative session came to a close on Sept. 1 with a final flurry of frantic activity. They say it will prolong the use of fossil fuels and the lifespan of other polluting industries. Two products are considered substantially similar if they share a brand, as well as similar materials, functions and designs. SACRAMENTO - Governor Gavin Newsom today highlighted new bills signed into law in 2021 that will go into effect January 1, 2022, including historic measures to expand worker protections, tackle the state's housing crisis, redress historical injustices, increase voter access and more. The new law requires the California Rehabilitation Oversight Board, part of the Office of the Inspector General, to issue annual reports to the governor and Legislature. Newsom signed this and other climate bills on Sept. 16. Californias fight against climate change requires a massive shift away from fossil fuels. RELATED: California's minimum wage. AB 2147, The Freedom to Walk Act, would allow law enforcement officers to stop a pedestrian for jaywalking only when a reasonably careful person would realize there is an immediate danger of a collision. The Legislature passed, but Newsom vetoed, a similar bill last year that would have repealed the states jaywalking laws and prohibited fines until Jan. 1, 2029. At least 140 organizations and more than 400 individuals registered their opposition to the bill because they say it sets up a system of coerced, involuntary outpatient civil commitment that deprives people with mental health disabilities of the right to make self-determined decisions about their own lives. Instead of building up the critical housing and mental health infrastructure people need, the costly new court process will simply re-traumatize people struggling with mental illness, they say. California created the first Paid Family Leave program in the nation 20 years ago, and today were taking an important step to ensure more low-wage workers, many of them women and people of color, can access the time off theyve earned while still providing for their family, he said in a statement. Apartments would have to be either 100% affordable or mixed-use, meaning market-rate but affordable to at least 15% of lower income earners, or 8% of very low income and 5% of extremely low income earners.SB 6, by Democratic Sen. Anna Caballero of Salinas, would bypass the first step in permitting housing on commercial real estate while allowing other opportunities for local input, like CEQA. Backers and foes of this bill say they want the same thing: more student housing. Proposition 65 became law in November 1986, when California voters . SB 65, the California Momnibus Actby Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) will go into effect in August 2022, helping tackle racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health outcomes by improving research and data collection. A 2017 study by the advocacy and policy organization the Guttmacher Institute found that more than 40% of counties in California dont have a clinic that provides abortions. SB 107 would protect from prosecution patients who travel to California for what supporters call gender-affirming care and doctors who provide that care. Environmental justice advocates supported the bill, including bill sponsor Community Water Center, a safe drinking water advocacy group. Newsom announced Sept. 28 he had vetoed the bill. SB 41 by Senator Thomas Umberg (D-Santa Ana) Privacy: genetic testing companies. The bill was introduced in March by Democratic Assembly member Rebecca Bauer-Kahan and 17 co-authors from every legislative ethnic caucus. Todays action gives hardworking fast-food workers a stronger voice and seat at the table to set fair wages and critical health and safety standards across the industry. Theres also a major catch: The program remains unfunded as final budget negotiations continue. These records, when they appear in background checks, can block access to employment and housing, which are primary factors driving recidivism, costing California $20 billion annually. Californias farmworkers are the lifeblood of our state, and they have the fundamental right to unionize and advocate for themselves in the workplace, Newsom said in a statement. Facing extreme heat, prolonged drought and wildfires, California has increasingly faced challenges in providing reliable electricity. It also was labeled a job killer by the state Chamber of Commerce, a criticism that has been taken up by trade unions. The Western States Petroleum Association and the California Chamber of Commerce were two of the most outspoken opponents, as were farmers and grower associations. Last year, Newsom vetoed a similar bill over the costs, but his administrations been silent on this years version. Garcia said the state needs more environmentally friendly burial options, since traditional methods put chemicals into the ground, or release carbon into the atmosphere. That means companies like Facebook, Apple or Google all of which facilitate private digital communications could not turn those records over to another state where abortion is illegal. Senate Bill 1137 would prohibit new oil and gas wells or extensive retrofitting of existing operations within 3,200 feet of homes, schools, nursing homes and hospitals. California isnt waiting any more, he said in a statement. Its also labors foothold toward bargaining power for a low-wage workforce that has been difficult to unionize because of widespread franchise ownership. A long list of consumer, tech, and children advocacy groups who argue technology is harming kids, and say a similar law has already spurred positive changes in the United Kingdom. Civil liberties groups, immigration advocates and a constellation of criminal justice reform groups, including the California Public Defenders Association. They say protecting and managing forests, grasslands, wetlands and farmland is important so they can serve as a carbon sink. The bill would also extend its regulations to private California prisons that house federal inmates or immigration detainees. Several advocacy organizations for nursing home residents, including the California Association of Long Term Care Medicine, support this bill. It's a tool to educate. California has long been a global leader in tackling climate change, enacting bold policies to reduce its carbon footprint. This month has been a wake-up call for all of us that later is too late to act on climate change. CA Legislation | 2021-2022 | Regular Session | LegiScan CA Legislation | 2021-2022 | Regular Session CA 2023-2024 2021-2022 2019-2020 2017-2018 2015-2016 2013-2014 2011-2012 2009-2010 Filter View [Reset All] Type Both Senate House All Bills Resolutions Other Status Any Introduced Engrossed Enrolled Passed Vetoed Scheduled 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 next The California Department of Finance is opposed to both bills, noting that the fiscal effect is unknown but potentially in the tens of millions of dollars. It is opposed by the Right to Life League, which also opposed AB 2223 and AB 2091. He says that Newsom and state agencies have the power to keep protections in place, regardless. California enacted AB 32 in 2006, which required the state to set strict emission limits, including a target that greenhouse gas emission levels must reach 1990 levels by 2020. SB 109 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) Department of Forestry and Fire Protection: Office of Wildfire Technology Research and Development. Im proud to sign this legislation on Labor Day when we pay tribute to the workers who keep our state running as we build a stronger, more inclusive economy for all Californians.. They would no longer be held in solitary for longer than 15 consecutive days, or 45 days in a 180-day period. Assembly Bill 1909 makes four changes to laws affecting bicyclists, as well as drivers and pedestrians who share California roads. For a select few measures, with urgency clauses that allow them to take effect immediately upon the governors signature, the votes stretched into the wee hours the next day. Kobi Naseck, coalition coordinator for environmental group VISION, says that even if the referendum effort is successful, that doesnt necessarily mean the end for these protections. Notably, law enforcement has not weighed in. Supporters of the bill say if each Californian opted to be composted after death, the carbon saved would be enough to power 225,000 homes for a year. AB 2098 would make it easier for the Medical Board of California to punish doctors who deliberately spread false information about COVID-19, vaccines and treatments. Assembly Bill 2632 from Democratic Assemblymember Chris Holden of Pasadena would overhaul how California prisons treat inmates in solitary confinement. Jay Jordan, the CEO of Alliance for Safety and Justice, a nonprofit that supported SB 731, said the barriers ex-convicts face in life after prison are referred to as collateral consequences., If people who have served their time, who did everything the system said they needed to do, are not given a second chance, thats not democracy, thats not justice, thats just pure punitive, Jordan said. The council also says that children often misunderstand their gender identity and are likely to regret their decision to get irreversible treatments such as hormone replacement therapy and gender-affirming surgery. SB 905: Environmental justice groups are opposed, saying carbon capture, use and storage technology is unproven. In almost all cases, campuses couldnt justify their policy of requiring that. They also argue that access to this care lowers suicide rates among transgender youth. On several bills, the governor not only signaled his support, but lobbied lawmakers to approve them. Here is what you need to know about the new laws coming . Newsom vetoed the bill on Sept. 29, but directed the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to develop regulations to restrict the use of segregated confinement to limited situations, such as where the individual has been found to have engaged in violence in the prison., In his veto message, he said the bill establishes standards that are overly broad and exclusions that could risk the safety of both the staff and incarcerated population within these facilities.. SB 343 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) Environmental advertising: recycling symbol: recyclability: products and packaging. He said housing discrimination against former inmates is rampant throughout our state and pushes many to the streets. My husband called and Sarah gave him numerous excuses to not help him. The intention here is that the minimum wage continues to rise with the cost of inflation, said David Huerta, president of SEIU-United Service Workers West. AB 2134, by Democratic Assemblymembers Akilah Weber of San Diego and Cristina Garcia of Bell Gardens, would establish the California Reproductive Health Equity Fund to offset the cost of free or reduced-cost abortions or contraceptive services for low-income patients. In addition, all state agencies must source their energy from 100% renewable sources by 2035, ten years sooner than the current law requires. The $20 million fund will give grants to groups that help women cover the cost of travel, lodging, child care and other expenses that commonly create barriers to accessing abortion. To say, You cannot write the N-word on the wall at school. This list, which must be updated at least once a year, has grown to include approximately 900 chemicals since it was first published in 1987. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and the California Independent System Operator, which operates the states power grid were supporters. Together, theyll set the minimum wage for fast-food workers with an upper limit of $22 an hour. Participants rated the lyrics they were told was rap as more offensive and more likely to be true to life. So far the states investments in solar and wind have lagged behind its goals. In 2022, the California Legislature passed nearly 1,200 bills and nearly 1,000 became law with Gov. Californians have been struggling to pay their water bills statewide, and it reached a boiling point during the pandemic. The bills original sponsor, California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, yanked its support for the bill after it was amended earlier in the year and has since voiced strong opposition. Among the new laws taking effect January 1 are nation-leading protections for workers and important measures to increase the states supply of affordable housing, create a more inclusive state, expand voter access and protect consumers and the environment from harmful chemicals: In October, Governor Newsom acted on the final bills of 2021, which advanced his historicCalifornia Comeback Planfeaturing the most robust small business relief package in the country, unprecedented direct financial and rent relief for Californians, the largest increase in homeless housing in state history, universal Pre-K and a historic $15 billion climate package to advance Californias nation-leading climate agenda. Newsom announced Sept. 28 he had vetoed the bill was authored by Democratic member... Was rap as more offensive and more likely to be true to Life League, passed... Look at historic photos of communities like Huntington Beach and there are forests of oil derricks care,. 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