Its harming not only themselves, but their families, the economy, their community.. Assembly Bill 890, which passed in 2020, and allows nurse practitioners to practice independently. Groups supporting workers rights, child and maternal health, gender equity, retirees, and benefits for low-income Californians are pushing for the bill. It protects a woman or pregnant person who chooses to end a pregnancy from prosecution, even if the abortion is self-induced or happens outside of the medical system. The contentious law over farm animals -- specifically bringing bacon and pork products into the conversation -- was passed in 2018. His main sticking point: that the bill allows workers to request union ballots before growers are notified there will be an election. Remote Marriages In light of COVID-19, county clerks are now able to issue marriage licenses and solemnize marriage ceremonies using remote technology. Please contact CalMatters with any commentary questions: commentary@calmatters.org. They labeled it a job killer, insisting there is no clear plan to achieve the goals and that the rapid transition to a carbon-free economy would cause many workers to lose their jobs. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and the California Independent System Operator, which operates the states power grid were supporters. The Association of California Water Agencies, which represents more than 450 public water agencies, was opposed over concerns that the programs division of state and local responsibilities is inefficient and would waste money. Criminal records must be disclosed to school districts, which can use those records for deciding teacher credentialing or employment. On Jan. 1, the minimum wage in California will increase to $15.50 an hour. They include. But now, the law could be put on hold. The UFW says under the current, more rigid voting system, growers hearing of unionization efforts have called immigration authorities on organizing workers. 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. The group contends that it has been gutted and now serves as a lifeline to problematic nursing home owners. Gavin Newsom and pushed through the Legislature in SB 1338 by Sens. Stacked on top of those protections are enhanced safeguards for medical records. A Dec. 13 statement from CIPA said that the signatures were submitted to the state for verification. Tia Koonse is the legal and policy research manager at the UCLA Labor Center and says pay is just one part of the plan. Newsweek has gone through the new. These votes took place as campaigns ramp up for 100 of the 120 seats in the Legislature. The opposition is led by the California Family Council, which argues that gender-affirming care is not an agreed-upon treatment for transgender children. SB 886 by Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco, would excuse public college and university housing from regulations of the California Environmental Quality Act, a 1970s-era law that developers deplore but that environmental groups and some cities champion as a safeguard against pollution. If a person refuses to comply, or fails out, they could be considered by the court for conservatorship just as if a county fails to provide the necessary services, they could face fines of up to $1,000 per day. Newsom and dozens of cities and mayors desperate to deal with the worsening mental health crisis on the streets. And we really do believe that this bill strikes that right balance.. Union representation among Californias farmworkers has dwindled to statistically zero, UC Merced researchers found, and a U.S. Supreme Court decision last year effectively kicked union organizers off growers property. Instead, the groups are advocating for more market-based approaches that trade credits and capture and store carbon while still allowing continued use of fossil fuels. Business groups, including the Western Growers Association, said the proposal opens the door for unions to request ballots for workers, influence their votes and force unionization. Several advocacy organizations for nursing home residents, including the California Association of Long Term Care Medicine, support this bill. 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. 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. 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. New laws will expand worker protections, voting rights, tackle the states housing crisis and more. Notably, law enforcement has not weighed in. The bill sets phased-in targets to assist the states transition to 100% renewable energy. Prior to state legislators focusing on creating a bulwark for abortion rights, two women in Kings County were imprisoned and charged with murder after delivering stillborns and testing positive for methamphetamine use. One new law would task the California Department of Education with developing evidence-based best practices for restorative justice. They just dont agree on how to get there or that this watershed environmental law is the culprit. She says the bill was, in part, prompted by discrepancies in the existing law, as well as by the uptick in hate crimes and nooses in school settings. The bill has enjoyed broad support as it sailed unopposed through both houses. It all depends on what happens in the coming days. This creates considerable confusion about how certain services will be financed, and could severely limit the full potential of the behavioral health crisis response promised by the bill, he said in a signing statement. AB 1757: Newsom and environmental justice groups were supporters. It would also require the states public health department to regulate the reduction chambers where its done to prevent the spread of disease. The bill is a first-in-the-nation attempt by a state to regulate a broad range of working conditions across an industry that this year employed roughly 700,000 Californians. Eleni Kounalakis, various think tanks and a few individual community colleges. Assembly Bill 1705 continues Californias efforts to ensure more community college students enroll in classes required to transfer to a UC or Cal State campus. Want to submit a guest commentary or reaction to an article we wrote? 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. They view the bill as vital to protecting much-needed housing development from environmental lawsuits. It argues that dismissing records for violent criminals will reduce deterrents for repeat offenders and jeopardize public safety. It also bans California from complying with out-of-state subpoenas seeking medical information related to gender-affirming care. The first it was tax season. Supporters say that criminal records are serious barriers to the successful reentry of formerly incarcerated individuals to society. 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. Supporters say the world could exceed the 1.5 degree celsius threshold of dangerous warming as early as 2030, and that California must do its part to avoid the dire effects of climate change. They would no longer be held in solitary for longer than 15 consecutive days, or 45 days in a 180-day period. With the signing of this bill, California will ensure these kids and their families can seek and obtain the medical and mental health care they need.. 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. AB 1757: Farmers and grower associations opposed the bill, saying it would be economically unfeasible for them. The Western Electrical Contractors Association, a trade group, raised concern that the measure could increase energy costs, reduce competition in the energy market and discriminate against otherwise qualified contractors. State Sen. Brian Dahle, a Republican who is running against Newsom for governor, said the bill would set an arbitrary goal that could drive up rates and contribute to the states high cost of living. This coming legislative session, Weber hopes to introduce a new bill that would mandate all California schools to utilize the list of practices developed by the states education department, to ensure all students, regardless of where their school is located, are able to benefit. CNN/Adobe Stock. 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. These barriers appear when, for example, individuals look for housing, pursue careers in education or healthcare, want to coach a sports team, adopt a child or care for their grandparent. There has been some research in the past that points to the racial equity component of clean slate laws like this one. Atkins own AB 154, which passed in 2013 and permitted nurse practitioners to conduct first-trimester abortions under a doctors supervision. These bills would unlock a glut of empty stores, offices and parking lots for as many as 1.6 million housing units market conditions permitting without contributing to urban sprawl. The bill was introduced in March by Democratic Assembly member Rebecca Bauer-Kahan and 17 co-authors from every legislative ethnic caucus. The Department of Finance in August declined to take a position. a referendum effort fueled by oil and gas companies was launched to undo it. Pretty much everyone but faculty. New California laws 2022 taking effect on July 1 include new requirements for bars, crack down on ghost guns and later school start times. And, as more out-of-state women travel to California for abortions, this measure seeks to protect California abortion providers from criminal and civil liability elsewhere. One group was told they were from a country song, the other was told they were from rap. The UC Berkeley Labor Centermaintains a list. That money was to be allocated over six years, but this bill makes the appropriation continuous. If signed, the bill would make California a refuge for minors seeking gender-affirming care by prohibiting the removal of a child from their parent or guardian because that parent allowed their child to receive gender-affirming care. Thanks to the Legislature's partnership, California continues to lead the nation across every category. New California laws go into effect on Friday As we are about halfway through the 2022 calendar year, several new California laws go into effect Friday, July 1. Civil liberties groups, immigration advocates and a constellation of criminal justice reform groups, including the California Public Defenders Association. Newsom signed the bill and several other higher education proposals on Sept. 30, his last day to act. Business groups say Californias labor laws already are onerous, and new regulations would raise costs at a time of record inflation and threaten a business model that has allowed many minority entrepreneurs to advance. 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. And thats the hard work of the next year.. CalMatters is a nonprofit newsroom and your tax-deductible donations help us keep bringing you and every Californian essential, nonpartisan information. Not to give the same speech and expect the same applause, but to begin to do something about it.. But this research was done on such laws that put more restrictions on who was eligible to apply. Were cleaning the air we breathe, holding the big polluters accountable, and ushering in a new era for clean energy.. The new laws are. But many of them from a bump in the minimum wage to changes for cyclists likely will affect your community, businesses or family. The regulation would be funded by a maximum fee of $8.50 per reduction or per body paid by licensed facilities to the Department of Consumer Affairs Cemetery and Funeral Bureau. Protect your nonprofit, nonpartisan state news. Still others will be phased in over time. Already, providers like Planned Parenthood and ACCESS Reproductive Justice California have reported influxes of out-of-state patients. Environmental groups have rallied behind the idea of SB 1137 for years, saying that a space or setback zone will keep communities farther from the impacts of leaking wells and pollution. The Affordable Housing and High Road Jobs Act identifies areas zoned for parking, retail or office buildings where land could be used for housing. 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. When you apply for housing, you have to say whether you have a criminal record or not. The group says it would have supported the bill if it excluded violent criminals. Gavin Newsom's office signed 997 new bills into law this week, all set to kick in on Jan. 1. The groups argue that COVID disinformation is dangerous and undermines public health efforts. SB 731 will allow people who have served time on or after Jan. 1, 2005, to automatically have their records expunged as long as they havent been convicted of another felony in the past four years. For example, last year the nations poison control centers saw a spike in calls after people reported taking ivermectin, an anti-parasite drug for animals, to cure COVID-19 after being persuaded by false information shared by influential people on the internet. This change requires 90% by 2035 and 95% by 2040. Environmental justice advocates supported the bill, including bill sponsor Community Water Center, a safe drinking water advocacy group. The California Correctional Peace Officers Association wrote in a letter of opposition that forcing violent inmates back into the general prison population will lead to more violence, both to inmates and prison guards. The bill also prohibits cities from requiring bicycle licenses. After eight months, Californias legislative session came to a close on Sept. 1 with a final flurry of frantic activity. Only 623,212 verified signatures are needed to qualify the initiative and put the law on hold until voters weigh in. During 2022 just under 1,000 laws were approved in California and are set to start impacting the lives of state residents across a wide variety of topics. The California Attorneys for Criminal Justice cited the 2019 book Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics, and Guilt in America, which they say proves that prosecutors use rap lyrics and other forms of expression to imply a defendants guilt, They contend such usage plays on a jurys racial bias and a belief that what someone said in a song is also a true accounting of the crime with which theyre charged. The new law would . Fast-food workers in California were hoping for higher wages in the New Year after Governor Gavin Newsom signed landmark legislation back on Labor Day. Included is a plan to monitor toxic leaks and emissions, and install alarm systems. All three aim to improve how our food system functions. Minimum wage bump Businesses with 26 or more employees will be required to pay a $15 minimum. Those taking effect on July 1, 2022 range from school . A fourth part of the bill doesnt go into effect until 2024. Gavin Newsom proposed in mid-August. The minimum wage has been gradually increasing under a 2016 law that brought workers' hourly minimum pay from $10 to. Since then, the California Department of Parks and Recreation has amended the property deed, removing restrictions, and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted to accept the amended property deed, officially allowing the transfer of the property to the Bruce Family. Inmates who have attempted, or succeeded in, murdering their cellmates would be let right back into the population they pose a risk to.. Newsom signed the bill on Sept. 14. 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. In order to skip lengthy and costly local review processes, including the much-dreaded California Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, developers would pay their workers union-level wages and in bigger projects, offer apprenticeships and health benefits, and cap at least a portion of rents. The first deadline passed Jan. 2020 . Three of the changes become effective on Jan. 1. Assembly Bill 2282, which takes effect on the first of the year, increases penalties for people who use hateful symbols as part of hate crimes swastikas, nooses, desecrated crosses and expands restricted locations to include K-12 schools and colleges. To achieve this target, the state needs to reduce its fossil fuel use by 91% a target that the California Air Resources Board has prioritized in this years climate change blueprint. US Congress House Bill 1667: Mental health for health care providers. He was sentenced to life in prison. Diablo Canyon provides about 10% of the states power. From 2017 to 2019, leave claims by workers making less than $20,000 a year declined while they rose for all other workers increasing the most for those making $100,000 and above, according to the Employment Development Department. The measure would also prohibit California law enforcement agencies from arresting anyone who obtains or performs a legal abortion and prevents them from cooperating with out-of-state law enforcement agencies investigating an abortion. 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. Its also labors foothold toward bargaining power for a low-wage workforce that has been difficult to unionize because of widespread franchise ownership. It was co-introduced by a bipartisan group of Assemblymembers: Democrats Buffy Wicks from Oakland and Cottie Petrie-Norris from Costa Mesa and Republican Jordan Cunningham from San Luis Obispo. Gavin Newsom in 2022, and many go into effect on New Year's Day in the nation's most populous state. As 2022 begins, three new food-related laws take effect in California. California needs 2.5 million more homes by 2030 and almost no one wants them in their backyard. 10. 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. Governor Newsom also signed historic measures that took effect immediately this year, such asSB 796by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena), which authorized Los Angeles County to return Bruces Beach property to the Bruce family nearly a century after the land was wrongfully taken from them. 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. Other workers also would get a boost, receiving 70% instead of 60% of their wages. 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 $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. But, opponents of the law want to stop it before it starts. 1 review of Schostag Alan D Attorney At Law "My father-in-law passed away in November 2022. Affordable Housing and High Road Jobs Act. 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. On Labor Day, Newsom announced hes signing the bill in a Twitter video. A campaign . Lawmakers rushed to pass hundreds of remaining bills before the clock struck midnight on Aug. 31. On Jan. 1, the minimum wage in California will increase to $15.50 an hour. 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. The California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls added that the bill is necessary in order to ensure women achieve parity.. One ambitious bill for tackling climate change, however, was shot down by the Assembly:AB 2133 which would have ramped up goals for reducing greenhouse gases failed at the last minute. Gavin Newsom pushed legislators in mid-August to help meet the states carbon-neutral goals. Carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases trap heat in the atmosphere, exacerbating severe weather events and causing global changes in temperature and precipitation. SB 352 by Senator Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) The military: sexual harassment. AB 977 by Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino) Homelessness program data reporting: Homeless Management Information System. 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. In 2022, California Gov. People in California who have served time in prison will soon have a chance to appeal to have their criminal records sealed. This month has been a wake-up call for all of us that later is too late to act on climate change. Digital security has become a hotly debated topic in the abortion world following Roe v. Wades overturn. 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. Legislators introduced more than a dozen bills this session designed to improve and protect access to abortion in California. Legiscan confirms House Bill 1667 is a bill that requires the Department of Health and Human Services to award grants to healthcare entities such as hospitals, professional associations in the medical field . 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. The people operating prisons and the Security Housing Units within them. They argue the bill will lead to more dorm beds faster. Here are some of the new laws to help Californians: Some energy experts and environmental groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Union of Concerned Scientists, were opposed. SB 331 by Senator Connie Leyva (D-Chino) Settlement and nondisparagement agreements. 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. The state Capitol in Sacramento on July 6, 2022. Nearly 650,000 residential and 46,000 business accounts owed more than $315 million in unpaid water and wastewater bills by September 2021. 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. A long list of criminal justice reform and rehabilitation organizations are supporting the bill, including Californians for Safety and Justice, who sponsored it. California is increasing resources, adding services, and advancing equity to boost graduation and transfer rates throughout our higher education systems, he said in a statement. SB 905: Newsom supports it, saying capture and storage strategies are necessary tools to remove carbon. SB 107 would protect from prosecution patients who travel to California for what supporters call gender-affirming care and doctors who provide that care. RELATED: California's minimum wage. California isnt waiting any more, he said in a statement. There's nothing stopping CalGEM, which is the agency responsible for permitting in California, to just stop permitting within the setback zone, Naseck said. The third change removes a statewide ban on Class 3 electric bikes which are the fastest available from certain facilities, but local governments can still ban them from equestrian, hiking and recreational trails. 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. 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. CALIFORNIA Love 'em or hate 'em, new laws passed in California in 2022 were notable for being boldly progressive. SEIU, the states largest union, says the restaurant coalitions signature-gathering effort was purposely misleading to voters and says it has video to prove it, which the LA Times reviewed. After calling housing affordability the original sin of California, Newsom said that these housing bills would be different. 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. 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. California will become the first state to restrict the use of rap lyrics in criminal investigations in 2023. The California Department of Public Health was involved in drafting more recent versions of the bill. Is CEQA the bogeyman its made out to be? 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. Newsom signed the bill into law Sept. 18. 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. It also allows for housing on that land, and exempts such projects from local approval processes and the California Environmental Quality Act. Here is what you need to know about the new laws coming . SB 639 by Senator Mara Elena Durazo (D-Los Angeles) Minimum wages: persons with disabilities. SB 109 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) Department of Forestry and Fire Protection: Office of Wildfire Technology Research and Development. 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. Connecticut, Minnesota and New Jersey have also proposed pink tax legislation in the past year, and a federal bill was introduced in Congress in June 2021. The labor truce also matters: Following years of heated debate and dead bills, unions put their differences aside, at least for this year. Newsom signed the bill on Sept. 30, the last day of his decisions. GOVERNORS CALL As expected, Newsom announced on Sept. 2 that he was signing the bill. Californias fight against climate change requires a massive shift away from fossil fuels. Some oil industry groups suggest that the setback rules would increase importation of oil from countries that dont have robust environmental regulations. The coming days been some research in the Legislature & # x27 ; s minimum to. Digital security has become a hotly debated topic in the minimum wage new laws passed in california 2022 with! Here is what you need to know about the new laws coming sb 107 protect! 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