SB649 Testimony

CA Senate SB-649 April 4 Testimony

Testimony by Scientists for Wired Technology during the 4/4/17 Senate Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee Hearing regarding SB.649 Wireless Telecommunications Facilities

Today, I will be entering substantial scientific evidence into the public record in my testimony. I have read and quantitatively evaluated many peer reviewed Supreme Court Daubert-rule-admissible, scientific studies that conclude direct damages to humans and other living organisms from pulsed, radiofrequency microwave radiation, RFR for short.

I am not speaking about issues of concern, worry or risk, but about established biological hazards from RFR exposures. I attest and affirm my statements are true, accurate and within my personal knowledge.

The four studies I will introduce today supplement over 100 studies about adverse bio-effects from RFR exposures many times lower than current Federal RFR guidelines — studies that we entered into the public record in July 2015 in opposition to Assembly Bill 57 as one can view on Youtube here and here. House AB-57 is very similar to today’s bill, Senate Bill-649; both bills were co-authored by the same CA Assembly Member, Bill Quirk.

Part 1: Testimony Against CA Assembly Bill 57 (the Wireless Telecommunications Facilities Shot Clock Bill)

https://youtube.com/watch?v=W8Q3tifo-3o%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den-US%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent

Part 2: Testimony Against CA Assembly Bill 57 (the Wireless Telecommunications Facilities Shot Clock Bill)

https://youtube.com/watch?v=vZ58zMLN4OA%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den-US%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent

Both AB-57 and SB-649 are Ready Fire, Aim bills — unnecessary gifts to the Wireless industry because mobile wireless coverage in CA is complete: 99% of Californians can make calls and texts from multiple carriers. These two bills are about capacity, not coverage, and for frivolous activities, not essential activities. Only essential activities, making emergency calls and texts, justifies preemption of local ordinances and controls over placement of wireless antennas. So-called “small cells” and 5G frequencies (600 MHz to 90,000 MHz) are not necessary for making calls or sending texts — 2G, 3G and 4G technologies already handle those tasks just fine. 5G frequencies are for frivolous entertainment, such as viewing videos wirelessly.

In addition, the total equipment needed for so-called “small cells”, makes these installations huge: refrigerator-size electrical power supplies (28 to 35 cubic feet) — which will be allowed to be installed unfettered in the public right of way by SB.649. Local counties, cities and towns must retain their rights to refuse installation of this ugly, unnecessary and dangerous equipment because doing so is excessive and does not best serve the needs of its local community, as evidenced by recent legal actions in Ohio.

On March 20, 2017, 80 Ohio Cities filed law suits against the State of Ohio for Senate Bill 331, a bill very similar to California SB.649.

Please see the photos and captions submitted to Committee member staffers by email on 4/3/17 and included at the end of this written testimony, illustrating the allowed sizes of the so-called “small cell” electrical supply cabinets per SB.649 — as large as 35 cubic feet, which is an excessive nuisance in the public right of way.

Four Important Scientific Studies Entered Into the Public Record on 4/4/17

In May 2016, the US National Toxicology Program (NTP), part of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), released substantial scientific proof of carcinogenesis caused by RFR in its $25 million. 16-year toxicology study, the largest and most complete toxicology study ever completed. Dr. Ronald L. Melnick, the lead designer of the NTP study stated:

So, what’s the message from all of this? We tested the hypothesis that [radio-frequency microwave] radiation could not cause health effects and we feel that the hypothesis has now been disproved because these results clearly show that [radio-frequency microwave] radiation can cause adverse health effects. . .

The finding of increases of gliomas and schwannomas of the heart in rats exposed to the radio-frequency radiation provides consistency with the epidemiological reports of increases of gliomas and acoustic neuromas, which are tumors of Shwann cells among humans exposed to [radio-frequency] radiation. Those were the findings that provided the basis for the IARC evaluation of 2011, because the same cells that became cancerous in rats are the cells that have been reported to develop into tumors in [human] epidemiological studies . . .

The incidence of tumors is not the measurement of risk alone. Risk is determined from both the dosimetry, which is the absorbed power [multiplied by] time [of exposure], versus the tumor response . . . because of the large number of [exposed human] users worldwide, even a small increase in risk at exposure propensities that may be close to what humans experience, could result in a large number of people developing a RF-radiation-induced tumor with long-term exposure.

Conclusion: It is inappropriate to greenlight SB.649 today without full consideration of these substantial scientific data and the additional data from the NTP study which will be reported later in 2017. Please vote NO to stop SB.649 today and wait to first carefully consider these research results before taking action.

Dr. Trevor Marshall reports the following in his 2016 paper Electrosmog and Autoimmune Disease:

The experiments described in this paper confirm that biological molecules are constantly moving and interact with timescales measured in picoseconds. As a result, forces will be exerted on the charged atoms within these molecules by incident electromagnetic fields, including Electrosmog, including Microwave Radio-Frequency Radiation (RFR) from cellular phone base stations. Pulsed RFR often occurs as steep, needle-like peaks that are 1 micro-second in duration (1000 times slower than a typical molecular response). It is important to have very-fast-acting peak reading signal level meters when measuring the biological interaction potential of electromagnetic waves.

Conclusion: Research for RF/MW radiation bio-effects will only move forward when scientists start to use Faraday cages for test and control animals, like they did in the $25 million, 16-year NTP Study. Signals a million times lower than those currently being used in US Cities may be sufficient to elicit tangible changes in human biology.

Dr. W. Ross Adey reports the following in his 1993 paper Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields:

[My] conclusion is that many observed interactions are not based on tissue heating. Modulation of cell surface chemical events by weak EM fields indicates a major amplification of initial weak triggers associated with binding of hormones, antibodies, and neurotransmitters to their specific binding sites. Calcium ions play a key role in this amplification. These studies support new concepts of communication between cells across the barriers of cell membranes; and point with increasing certainty to an essential physical organization in living matter, at a far finer level than the structural and functional image defined in the chemistry of molecules . . . The evidence indicates mediation by highly nonlinear, nonequilibrium processes at critical steps in signal coupling across cell membranes. There is increasing evidence that these events relate to resonant responses in bio-molecular systems, and not to equilibrium thermodynamics associated with thermal energy exchanges and tissue heating.

Conclusion: Federal RF/MW radiation guidelines are scientifically unsound and cannot be relied upon to protect humans or other living organisms. So called “Small Cell” Distributed Antenna Systems (DAS) installed on utility/light poles and nonpole structures in the public right-of-way will place sources of RF/MW radiation as close as 10 feet from second-story bedroom windows, which will harm residents, especially since the antennas will run 24/7/365, causing widespread microwave radiation sickness.

Yakymenko et al reports in this 2011 paper Long-Term Exposure To Microwave Radiation Provokes Cancer Growth: Evidence From Radars And Mobile Communication Systems:

[We are reporting] carcinogenic effects of long term exposure to low intensity microwave radiofrequency/microwave (RF/MW) radiation . . . a number of reports revealed that under certain conditions the irradiation by low intensity RF/MW radiation can substantially induce cancer progression in humans and in animal models. The carcinogenic effect of MW irradiation is typically manifested after long term (up to 10 years and more) exposure. Nevertheless, even a year of operation of a powerful base transmitting station for mobile communication reportedly resulted in a dramatic increase of cancer incidence among population living nearby.

Conclusion: It would be a public health crisis to approve this invasion of so-called “Small Cell” Distributed Antenna System Antennas/Electrical Supplies into residential neighborhoods, near schools, hospitals, elder-care facilities or public parks.


Electrical Supply Cabinets: 28-35 Cubic Feet ALLOWED FOR EACH Utility Pole or Nonpole Structure





Documents Entered into the Public Record during the 4/4/17 Senate Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee Hearing regarding SB.649 Wireless Telecommunications Facilities









CA Senate SB-649 April 26 Testimony

4/26/17 Mark Graham Testimony to the CA Senate the Governance and Finance Committee

Good morning, Senators. My name is Mark Graham and I represent Scientists for Wired Technology. In the Science marches across the country this past weekend one sign read, “At the start of every disaster movie is a scientist being ignored.”

SB649 is a disaster movie. It would bring cell phone tower antennas from where they are currently placed, 200 feet in the air and thousands of feet away from homes, to only 20 feet in the air and 20 feet from homes – 2nd story bedroom windows.

Please . . . don’t ignore . . . our best scientists. This will create a public health nightmare with a wide range of short term and long term health impacts.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/naYx3OkEMGw?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en-US&autohide=2&wmode=transparent

Small cell radiation is pulsed, modulated radiofrequency microwave radiation. I will call it RFR for short.

In December, 2014, a California Medical Association resolution stated that peer-reviewed scientific evidence demonstrates adverse biological effects of RFR including immune system dysfunction, altered brain development, sleep and memory disturbances, sperm dysfunction, heart damage and brain tumors.

In May 2016, Dr. Ronald Melnick, the lead designer of the National Toxicology Program’s 16-year, $25 million study of the cancer causing properties of cell phone RFR, said that . . .

“The hypothesis that RFR causes health effects has now been proved . . . we saw increases of gliomas, brain cancers, and schwannomas of the heart … [pause] . . . The same cells that became cancerous in rats are the cells that have been reported to develop into tumors in [humans].”

The Committee should reject this bill because RFR is hazardous to human health. [pause] It penetrates the brain, the heart, and the reproductive organs, causing injury to all of them. It also causes early dementia for people in their 40’s and 50’s. This bill will create chronic health problems for millions of Californians every day.

Imagine if you cannot sleep in your home, you have a pounding migraine headache and ringing in your ears because of radiation from a small cell. You can’t function at work or at school the next day. The Committee should require the bill’s author to prove that, as they will be installed and operated, these small cells will not create a public health hazard. Californians need that assurance before you vote SB.649 through today.

DDT, Vioxx, and tobacco are all products that were claimed to be safe but were known by industry at that time to be hazardous.

The best reason a local government could have for saying NO to small cells is to protect the health and safety of its residents. This bill would violate Article 1, Section 1 of the California Constitution, which guarantees our inalienable right to pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy.

Last Friday, I hand delivered to each of you this list of over 100 scientific studies, including the NTP study and other studies from 2016: studies we entered into the public record on 7/15/15 and 4/4/17. This substantial scientific evidence in the public record was ignored by the SB.649 bill analysts.

Russia well understands the hazards of RFR and is not installing small cells or 5G. Instead, it is bringing a fiber optic to every home and business, like the city of San Francisco. We need to face the truth in order to avoid the disaster movie of small cells in residential neighborhoods.

SB649 is unconstitutional because it would violate Article 1, Section 1 of the California Constitution, which says, “All people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights. Among these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy.” The hazardous radiation allowed by SB.649 would harm California residents’ health and safety.

Federal RFR guidelines do not protect against health hazards. Please don’t ignore the scientists. Don’t create a public health disaster.

Scientists For Wired Technology: 4/26/17 More Testimony to the CA Senate the Governance and Finance Committee

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Tk_MlDSozdk%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den-US%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent

CA Senate SB-649 May 15 Testimony

View the Video Testimony

https://youtube.com/watch?v=9q5icSeNyyA%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den-US%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent

Speaker One

Please vote NO on SB.649, an extremely costly bill that robs the public of their wealth and health to further enrich private wireless companies, who have over a decade of broken promises to use funds that the public already paid nine times over on their wireline phone bills to install fiber optic to their homes. Instead of upgrading wireline with fiber optics as they were required to do — these companies fraudulently transferred these funds to their unregulated wireless divisions. That’s right. Grandma’s landline phone bill financed the build out of 4G/LTE.

With the continuing list of due process violations of SB.649, starting at 9:31 am on April 21, [we must halt SB.649] These violations include

  • improper notice on CA government web sites of record for SB.649
  • language in the current bill from 5/2/17 that is not consistent with the language voted on by the Governance and Finance Committee on 4/26/17
  • And we have a subcommittee created on that date to conduct dark room deals outside of public view.

The current [SB.649] language has loopholes in it. It does not match what was voted [through on 4/26/17]. The suggested fix is clear and I gave it to the [bill] consultants, but it was ignored.

Finally, the Wireless bonanza has also created a large disabled population in California. Radio Frequency Microwave Radiation currently disables 1.2 million Californians and that will grow exponentially with the passage of SB.649, resulting in many tens of millions of dollars in State disability benefits, and increased medical and other state health insurance costs.

We have over 175 people — online in a conference call right now — that would love to participate and answer the following question: Are you electromagnetically sensitive, and have you been harmed physically and financially by RF/microwave radiation from wireless facilities?. The resounding answer would be YES.

SB.649 states: A small cell shall be a permitted if it satisfies compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act” Quite simply, cell phone towers 10-20 feet from second story bedroom windows violates the ADA.

Our next speaker, a disabled Electromagnetic Sensitive person, will give her personal testimony.

The following was edited out for time:

CURRENT LANGUAGE OF SB.649 = A LOOPHOLE:

The associated equipment on pole structures does not exceed 21 cubic feet provided that any individual piece of associated equipment on pole structures do not exceed nine cubic feet.

What does this language really mean? The language now only deals with associated equipment on pole structures, but most of the associated equipment is off the pole and there are also a separate class of non-pole structures, and neither is regulated by this language — which was not the intent of Chairman Mike McGuire or the language the Senators voted through on 4/26/17. Also the use of ‘provided’ creates unnecessary ambiguity. What happens if an individual piece of associated equipment on pole structures exceeds nine cubic feet? The language says, the regulation does not apply in that case.

SUGGESTED FIX NEEDED BEFORE SB.649 IS VOTED TO THE SENATE FLOOR:

All equipment (antenna and associated equipment) either on or within 100 feet of each pole or non-pole wireless telecommunications facility will not exceed a total of 27 cubic feet, with the following additional requirements:

  • The antenna does not exceed six cubic feet
  • The associated equipment for this antenna does not exceed 21 cubic feet
  • No individual associated equipment item will exceed nine cubic feet

Conclusion: SB.649 bill should be halted in 2017 to give the Senators sufficient time to complete their due diligence and to ensure that all due process rules are properly respected and followed.

Speaker Two

My name is Nina Beety. Thank you for this disabled accommodation so I can speak.

I am disabled by electromagnetic sensitivities — to cell towers , cell phones, Wi-Fi, and Smart Meters. EMS is recognized by the U.S. Access Board and is a protected disabled characteristic. California’s 1998 survey found 3.2% of respondents were very sensitive to electromagnetic radiation. That was 1.1 million Californians in 1998. This is not an orphan illness.

This bill does not comply with ADA. Small cell towers are an access barrier for the EMS-disabled to their homes and communities.

Since 1998, radiation levels have soared. How many more Californians have EMS? You don’t know because industry is moving too fast. My symptoms include heart arrhythmia, severe sleep disruption, migraines, nausea, and loud ringing in my ears. U.S. and international experts warn about the public health cost. Other countries are taking protective steps. This bill mandates more public exposure – liability for the state. Halt this bill so you can examine these issues.

They say this bill costs California nothing. That’s false.

My costs include at least $500,000 in lost income, which costs the state in tax revenue. If 10,000 Californians are EMF-disabled with $50,000 per year lost income, that’s $500 million dollars of economic impact including taxes.

Local economic losses to stores, restaurants, coffee shops, businesses from the $4 coffee and $25 meal once a month, and $40 concert ticket three times a year I don’t buy is $568 per year. 100,000 people like me means $56 million dollars less for local economies.

I’ve lost access to most of these places, too, due to their wireless.

I’ve also lost access to ambulance services and the hospital.

Small Cell cell phone towers as close as 10 to 20 feet from my home will be an access barrier to my home and to my community.

There are many other unfunded costs to this bill. Please halt SB.649 or at least delay a Senate vote until 2018 to give the California Senate enough time to first examine these important issues. Thank you.

Speaker Three

Thank you. My name is Harry Lehmann. I am a trial lawyer by experience, but an old one doing other work now. I have dedicated the last six years of my life to this particular issue based on scientific study. My background was in engineering cases, including the Yuba flood cases, for example.

I would speak as to those as an example where a fiscal catastrophe resulted from litigation that should have been avoided because I know the inside of that one because I was one of the plaintiff’s lawyers. I will tell you that the eventual $423 million settlement that took 12 years that never should have been wasted, that could have been settled, in my view, having been one of the plaintiff’s lawyers, for probably $90 million, except for this unfortunate decision to fight.

The relevance of that here, fiscally, now is that there has been notice violation here in multiple ways. There were simultaneous issuances of contradictory positions from two separate state web sites as to whether or not the bill was, in fact, going to be on. As a result, we hadn’t nearly the attendance and the quality of testimony that we would have otherwise had.

In addition to that, it is my understanding that with regard to profuse amendments involved, that there is a Senate rule requiring that the amendments be supplied in writing to the other committee members two days before the Hearing upon which those amendments were approved. That was not complied with, so rather than this just being a toss-up or a close call for a sitting judge, I think it’s actually, unfortunately, a strong case in terms of lack of notice.

I would like to give up that sword. I would like to say to you, ‘take it’ and the way to ‘take it’ is to do this correctly with the correct notice so I don’t have that tool. I’d like to give it up.

But speaking of swords and fiscal consequences, this is what I said in my letter a couple of days ago that you have: this is really a wonderful moment for the fiscal health of California to pull the sword of courage out of the stone of apathy because the damage being done to people here is being done acoustically. That is to say in physics, acoustic means that there is a transmission mechanically through a medium having an effect. It’s not ionic.

This is well-established through the work at the University of Maryland in 1983 of Swicord and Davis, showing that when they put a 7.43 concentration of DNA salts into water, the resulting fluid had a 24-fold increase in specific absorption rate. That, in turn, was not ionic and that’s what’s happening to people here as a result of these machines [Wireless Small Cell antennas].

The consequence of this, fiscally, is going to be a disaster for California. People are going to die and be very sick if this is allowed to go forward in its current form. So I plead for further study. Thank you.

CA Assembly SB-649 June 28 Testimony

View the video of the 6/28/17 Local Government Hearing

https://www.youtube.com/embed/OgNLR9fQOX4?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en-US&autohide=2&wmode=transparent Go to http://www.calchannel.com/video-on-demand Click on VIDEO for Assembly Local Government Committee — Jun 28, 2017 View from 0:19:28 to 3:05:10

A. Key Testimony From Verizon and AT&T Executives:

Rudy Reyes, Verizon @ 2:36:20:

A cell tower might give you five to ten miles radius of coverage, but the small cells for 4G/LTE densification goes a few blocks . . . for 5G, the spectrum is going to be millimeter wave spectrum. That spectrum goes much shorter distances, maybe 100 feet and requires a line of sight . . . we are going to need about five to ten times the number of 5G nodes, as we will 4G/LTE nodes . . . so it is really about p times q, price times quantity. So this cost formula needs to pencil out in order to bring 5G to California . . . just for downtown LA, Verizon alone is going to need 200 to 300 small cells just to densify for 4G/LTE. Then you have to multiply that for five to ten times for when we get to 5G.

Comment:
This means 1,000 to 3,000 5G small cells in downtown LA, which according to Dr. Google is 4.75 square miles. This would spread 300 4G Small cells + 3,000 5G Small Cells over 4.75 square miles for Verizon alone. If each major Wireless Carrier does the same (AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile), that’s 3300 x 4 = 13,200 small cells in roughly an area 11,500 feet by 11,500 feet or one small cell for every 10,000 square feet – understanding that an average Safeway is 50,000 square feet

Assemblymember Ridley-Thomas @ 2:39:18:

With respect to the liability associated with potential either health impacts or some other safety impacts, does that rest with the Companies or does that shift to the Cities, if we make this a ministerial permit instead of a discretionary permit.

Senator Hueso @ 2:40:02:

There is nothing precluding the local municipal agency from enforcing all building code requirements. Public safety is extremely important. This doesn’t exempt the industry from following the building code requirements. They are still in place, they must be followed . . . They have to conform to the codes that are imposed by the US standards.

Comment:
Hueso didn’t answer the question.

Bill Devine, AT&T @ 2:40:38:

May I add an additional comment . . . on page 4, line 38 of the Bill, ‘Small Cells must apply with all applicable Federal State and local health and safety regulations including the Federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.’ So it reinforces that in the Bill and that was an amendment that was added in the Senate

Assemblymember Ridley-Thomas @ 2:41:04:
And Liability would rest with the Telecomm Carrier.

Bill Devine, AT&T @ 2:41:08:

With the company.

Assemblymember Ridley-Thomas @ 2:41:31:

The issue with community facilities and safety is not, in my opinion, one that has received as much attention as I’d like in this bill. I read the fire piece a couple of times and it said [not] on a fire department building, does that at all extend that concern into schools, in any sense? . . . Land use goes to the local jurisdiction, even at local schools.

Hueso @ 2:42:35:

In the public right of way, there is nothing stopping; if there is a vertical pole within the public right of way of a fire station, there is nothing that preempts [a small cell] from being sited there.

Assemblymember Ridley-Thomas @ 2:41:04:

For me, that would be an on-going concern if this bill moves forward.It would be schools and fire facilities.

Senator Hueso @ 2:44:35:

Not all cities oppose this bill, not even a majority of the cities. It’s a very high number. It’s like 197, but it’s not a majority — there are over 400 cities [in California].

Assemblymember Ridley-Thomas @ 2:41:31:

Understood. All of the cities in the jurisdiction I represent do not support this bill and the county which is the largest in the state does not support this measure.

B. Fair Treatment at 6/28/17 Local Government Hearing For Proponents and Opponents of SB.649?

The 60 minutes for testimony on 6/28/17 was apportioned fairly (30 minutes for Support, 30 minutes for Opposition), but the 100+ minutes of discussion among/questions from of the Assembly Local Government Committee (from 1:24:45 to 3:05:55) was not apportioned fairly. Virtually all of the post-testimony discussion was with SB.649 Supporters: Bill Author Ben Hueso and Industry representatives from AT&T, Verizon and the CTIA — the Wireless Association. There was not a single follow up question from the members of the Assembly Local Government Committee about the unconstitutional consequences of SB.649 resulting from placing so-called Small Cell antennas in residential zones.

On 6/27/17 after 5:00 pm, we received confirmation from the California Assembly regarding a second accommodation from the California Legislature (the first was on 5/15/17 at the Senate Appropriations Committee Hearing) for Electromagnetically Sensitive (EMS) California residents to speak to their government face-to-face. We used this accommodation to secure a time-certain start (2:00 pm), a directive by the chair for everyone in the hearing room to turn off the wireless antennas on their wireless devices and a metering of the peak Radio-Frequency Microwave Radiation (RF/MW radiation) levels at the testimony table in the Hearing room.

6/28/17 Remarks by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, Chair of Local Government Committee

(Emphases added.)

0:19:28 (at start of the SB.649 Hearing): We will also have a Special Order of Business to hear SB.649 (Hueso), which we will start in just a few minutes. I would like to go over a few rules of this Special Order of Business so we can all be clear on the Committee’s expectations any my expectations as Chair.

First, I requested that we hear this Bill as a Special Order with a dedicated time-certain so that all stakeholders can be present, listen and participate in the hearing. It is my hope that all of the Committee members can ask the questions they need to and we can have a full discussion in the Committee.

. . . Here are my expectations for the Special Order of Business. No more than two minutes per speaker. Talking for less is actually OK and appreciated . . . No more than 30 minutes per side. We’ll have 30 minutes for the Opposition and 30 minutes for the Support . . . I also have a request from the EMS-sufferers, to turn wireless on your phone off and put phones in airplane mode.

2:59:28 (near the end of the SB.649 Hearing, just before the vote): I want to assure you that we have worked really hard with the author, with Industry, we have asked for the League [of California City’s] input. We haven’t, again, received any kind of amendments. Even from my locals, just other than oppose the bill.

What about the following Proposed SB.6498 Amendments that the Local Government and Chair Aguiar-Curry received on 6/22/17 @ 4:59 pm and again on 6/27/17 @ 12:05 pm? Did she forget about these or did she never see them? How could that happen?

From Email 6/27/17 @ 12:05 pm Scientists from Wired Technology to Aguiar-Curry

Scientists For Wired Technology Recommended SB.649 amendments

1. Change the language of 65964.2. to the following:

65964.2.

(a) A small cell shall be a permitted use subject only to a permitting process adopted by a city or county pursuant to subdivision

(b) if it satisfies the following requirements:

  1. The small cell is located in the public rights-of-way in any zone or in any zone that includes a commercial or industrial use.
  2. The small cell complies with all applicable federal, state, and local health and safety regulations, including the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 12101 et seq.).
  3. The small cell is not located any closer than 2,500 feet from a fire department facility, police facility, medical facility, residence, school, elder care facility, park or wilderness area, which along with historic and coastal zones need to be protected from the densification of wireless communication facilities or wireless co-location facilities.

2. Change the language of 65964.2. (3)(2) (A) to the following:

65964.2. (3)(2)

(A) “Small cell” means a wireless telecommunications facility, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 65850.6, or a wireless facility that uses licensed or unlicensed spectrum and that meets the following qualifications:

  • (i) The small cell antennas on the structure, excluding the associated equipment, total no more than two cubic feet in volume and accepts no more than 10 watts of input power, whether an array or separate.
  • (ii) Any individual piece of associated equipment on pole structures does not exceed one cubic foot in volume and cannot produce any more than 10 watts of output power.
  • (iii) The cumulative total of associated equipment on pole structures does not exceed one cubic foot in volume and cannnot produce any more than 10 watts of output power.
  • (iv) The cumulative total of any ground-mounted equipment along with the associated equipment on any pole or nonpole structure does not exceed one cubic foot in volume and cannot produce any more than 10 watts of output power.
Email on June 28 @ 9:44 am

Hello . . . Is Anyone Listening?

Date: 6/28/17

To: Members and Staff of the Assembly Local Government Committee

CA Assembly SB-649 July 12 Testimony

Watch the Video of the 7/12/17 Communications and Conveyance Hearing

Speaker One at 1:03:40 in the video

I’m a current city council member and former Mayor of Nevada City, California. I speak with you as an elected official and as an early adopter of wireless technology; as I had opened the first cellular phone store in Nevada County in 1990.

However, I have learned enough about 4G/5G technology that I cannot support the expansion of these co-called “Small Cells” into residential zones, particularly not SB.649. So today I speak about this bill through the eyes of local authority.

Local governments typically encourage new technology based on claims it will improve the quality of life for its businesses and residents. However, this proposal goes too far by requiring local government to approve these “small cells”, macro-cells and large power supplies in all land-use zones, including private property, barring the public from decisions that will dramatically, adversely affect the aesthetics of the community, property values, property tax, and the quality of our constituents’ health and environment.

Simply put, SB.649 is a Pandora’s Box for California cities, one that blatantly strips local government of the authority to PROTECT the quality of life of our residents, their environment and the public right-of-way.

The de facto exemption of CEQA sets a very dangerous precedent, opening the door for any other industry to annihilate local government control in order to deploy any kind of corporate undertaking without public or elected officials’ consent or lease agreement of publicly owned property: a dangerous condition of public property.

SB.649 utilizes Eminent Domain for its hostile takeover of our communities and is unconstitutional.

The 4G/5G network is being deployed with very limited standards, no monitoring, and without protective agency oversight. It also is in violation of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act.

Governments and representatives, including Assembly Members and myself, have a responsibility to protect the quality of life of our constituents, protect public property in the public right-of-way, AND stop this corporate overreach.

This bill throws every human – even our honeybees, birds, agricultural animals and wildlife – under the bus, for unabated control of our communities by the telecom industry.

Lastly, Senator Hueso has stated numerous times that this is what telecom industry customers want, but Californians know not pass this and reject it.

Speaker Two at at 1:06:10 in the video

May 25 Senate Appropriations Committee Hearing Results: Suspense Items

The data below is from this official California Legislature source.

Electromagnetically Sensitive or Disabled Californians Are Facing Discrimination at the 8/23/17 Assembly Appropriations Hearing

  1. The 5/15/17 Senate Appropriations Committee handled in excess of 285 Bills and still allowed 17 minutes of testimony in Opposition to SB.649; 8.5 minutes as part of a “Special Order of Business” as an accommodation for over 175 Electromagnetically Sensitive or Disabled Californians who called into the agreed-to Committee conference call number.
  2. The Current plan for the Assembly Appropriations Committee, projecting to handle only 150 bills, will allow only four minutes of testimony in Opposition to SB.649 two minutes as part of a “Special Order of Business” as an accommodation for an estimated 1 to 4 million Electromagnetically Sensitive or Disabled Californians who would be displaced from their homes if SB.649 becomes law.

On 8/21/17 @ 12:24 pm, Maria Daniells wrote:

Hello [Electromagnetically Sensitive or Disabled Californian],

Unfortunately, we are unable to accommodate your request for additional time to speak to the merits of Senate Bill 649. Since the Appropriations Committee is scheduled to hear over 150 bills on August 23rd, the Committee is following its policy of allowing two people to speak for two minutes in support and opposition of each bill on the committee’s calendar. However, individuals who are interested in Senate Bill No. 649 are encouraged to send their views directly to the committee. The committee’s mailing address is Assembly Committee on Appropriations, State Capitol, Room 2114, Sacramento, CA 95814, and its telephone number is (916) 319-2081. You may also contact the committee members’ offices. The committee’s current membership may be found at http://apro.assembly.ca.gov/.

For your reference, a copy of the Assembly’s ADA notice and grievance procedure are available on the Assembly’s Internet web site at http://assembly.ca.gov/accessibility.

Please let me know if you have any questions, and I’ll be happy to help,

Maria Daniells
Human Resources
Assembly Rules Committee
Direct Line: (916) 319-3557
Main Office: (916) 319-3700
Email: Maria.Daniells@asm.ca.gov

Gov. Jerry Brown Watch
Finally, on Sun Oct 15 @ Midnight, CA Governor Brown vetoed SB.649!
Through Sun Oct 15 @ Midnight, Governor Brown signed 607 Bills and vetoed 101 Bills


2017-1015 AB 22 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — Secretary of State: storing and recording electronic media.
2017-1015 AB 83 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Collective bargaining: Judicial Council.
2017-1015 AB 132 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Public contracts: 2028 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games.
2017-1015 AB 203 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — School facilities: design and construction: report: regulations. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1015 AB 250 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — State Coastal Conservancy: Lower Cost Coastal Accommodations Program.
2017-1015 AB 469 by Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) — Candidates: nomination documents.
2017-1015 AB 474 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) — Hazardous waste: spent brine solutions. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1015 AB 512 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — Public employees’ retirement: safety members: industrial disability retirement.
2017-1015 AB 707 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Clear Lake.
2017-1015 AB 841 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Pupil nutrition: food and beverages: advertising: corporate incentive programs.
2017-1015 AB 848 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) — Public contracts: University of California: California State University: domestic workers.
2017-1015 AB 918 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — California Voting for All Act.
2017-1015 AB 967 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Human remains disposal: alkaline hydrolysis: licensure and regulation.
2017-1015 AB 1221 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Alcoholic beverage control: Responsible Beverage Service Training Program Act of 2017.
2017-1015 AB 1367 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Improper signature-gathering tactics.
2017-1015 AB 1414 by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) — Solar energy systems: permits.
2017-1015 AB 1424 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — University of California: Best Value Construction Contracting Program.
2017-1015 AB 1665 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) — Telecommunications: California Advanced Services Fund.
2017-1015 SB 5 by Senator Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) — California Drought, Water, Parks, Climate, Coastal Protection, and Outdoor Access For All Act of 2018.
2017-1015 SB 179 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Gender identity: female, male, or nonbinary.
2017-1015 SB 201 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) — Higher Education Employer-Employee Relations Act: employees.
2017-1015 SB 226 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Political Reform Act of 1974: slate mailers.
2017-1015 SB 310 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Name and gender change: prisons and county jails.
2017-1015 SB 334 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Enhanced industrial disability leave.
2017-1015 SB 396 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Employment: gender identity, gender expression, and sexual orientation.
2017-1015 SB 615 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Salton Sea restoration
2017-1015 AB 262 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) – Public contracts: bid specifications: Buy Clean California Act.
2017-1015 AB 460 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals — Horse racing: satellite wagering facilities: fairs: funding.
2017-1015 AB 634 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton — Real property: solar energy systems.
2017-1015 AB 837 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell — No party preference voters: partisan primary elections.
2017-1015 AB 840 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward — Elections: vote by mail and provisional ballots.
2017-1015 AB 851 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas — Local agency contracts.
2017-1015 AB 857 by Assemblymember Philip Y. Ting (D-San Francisco — State highways: property leases.
2017-1015 AB 906 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica — Beverage containers: polyethylene terephthalate.
2017-1015 AB 1111 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella — Removing Barriers to Employment Act: Breaking Barriers to Employment Initiative.
2017-1015 AB 1525 by Assemblymember Catharine Baker (R-Dublin — Firearms warnings.
2017-1015 SB 31 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens — California Religious Freedom Act: state agencies: disclosure of religious affiliation information.
2017-1015 SB 45 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia — Political Reform Act of 1974: mass mailing prohibition.
2017-1015 SB 173 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa — Real estate: Bureau of Real Estate.
2017-1015 SB 233 by Senator Jim Beall (D-San Jose — Foster children: records.
2017-1015 SB 258 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens — Cleaning Product Right to Know Act of 2017.
2017-1015 SB 490 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena — Wages: Barbering and Cosmetology Act: licensees.
2017-1015 SB 542 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino — Manufactured Housing Act of 1980: notice of transfer and release of liability.
2017-1015 SB 634 by Senator Scott T. Wilk (R-Lancaster — Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency.
2017-1014 AB 46 by Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) — Employers: wage discrimination.
2017-1014 AB 74 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Housing.
2017-1014 AB 208 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Deferred entry of judgment: pretrial diversion.
2017-1014 AB 424 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) — Possession of a firearm in a school zone.
2017-1014 AB 434 by Assemblymember Catharine Baker (R-Dublin) — State Web accessibility: standard and reports.
2017-1014 AB 616 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Pupil instruction: California State Summer School for Mathematics and Science: funding: tuition.
2017-1014 AB 651 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Nonprofit health facilities: sale of assets: Attorney General approval.
2017-1014 AB 693 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Firearms.
2017-1014 AB 785 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Firearms: possession of firearms by convicted persons.
2017-1014 AB 822 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Institutional purchasers: sale of California produce.
2017-1014 AB 932 by Assemblymember Philip Y. Ting (D-San Francisco) — Shelter crisis: homeless shelters. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 954 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Food labeling: quality and safety dates.
2017-1014 AB 997 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Alcoholic beverage licensees: winegrowers and beer manufacturers.
2017-1014 AB 1008 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) — Employment discrimination: conviction history.
2017-1014 AB 1022 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Information technology: Technology Recovery Plans: inventory.
2017-1014 AB 1137 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Housing developments: pet permissibility.
2017-1014 AB 1145 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) — Conversion of existing overhead electric and communication facilities to underground locations: cable television corporations and cable operators.
2017-1014 AB 1153 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Podiatry.
2017-1014 AB 1158 by Assemblymember Kansen Chu (D-San Jose) — Carpet recycling.
2017-1014 AB 1194 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — Elections: local bond measures: tax rate statement.
2017-1014 AB 1344 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Voting rights: inmates and persons formerly incarcerated.
2017-1014 AB 1403 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) — Military and overseas voters.
2017-1014 AB 1499 by Assemblymember Adam Gray (D-Merced) — Horse racing: state-designated fairs: allocation of revenues: gross receipts for sales and use tax.
2017-1014 AB 1556 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Employment discrimination: unlawful employment practices.
2017-1014 AB 1620 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — Political Reform Act of 1974: postgovernment employment.
2017-1014 AB 1637 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — City of San Diego: County of Santa Clara: housing authority: middle-income housing projects.
2017-1014 AB 1655 by Assemblymember Tim Grayson (D-Concord) — University of California: requests from the California State Auditor’s Office: prohibition on coordination.
2017-1014 AB 1674 by Assemblymember Tim Grayson (D-Concord) — University of California: nonresident student enrollment.
2017-1014 AB 1701 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Labor-related liabilities: original contractor. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 230 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Evidence: commercial sexual offenses.
2017-1014 SB 286 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — Elections: voting.
2017-1014 SB 302 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — Joint powers agencies: Orange County Fire Authority: funds.
2017-1014 SB 368 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Horse racing: fairs: funding.
2017-1014 SB 497 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Ca�ada Flintridge) — Firearms.
2017-1014 SB 536 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Firearm Violence Research Center: gun violence restraining orders.
2017-1014 SB 541 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) — Water: school facility water capture practices.
2017-1014 SB 550 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Public school employment: meeting and negotiating: legal actions: settlement offer: attorney’s fees.
2017-1014 SB 673 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — Pet Lover’s specialized license plates.
2017-1014 SB 801 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility: electrical grid data: electricity demand reduction and response: energy storage solutions.
2017-1014 SB 814 by the Committee on Governmental Organization — State real property: surplus.
2017-1013 AB 7 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) — Firearms: open carry. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1013 AB 19 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Community colleges: California College Promise.
2017-1013 AB 44 by Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) — Workers’ compensation: medical treatment: terrorist attacks: workplace violence.
2017-1013 AB 179 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — California Transportation Commission.
2017-1013 AB 205 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Medi-Cal: Medi-Cal managed care plans.
2017-1013 AB 365 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Pupil instruction: coursework and graduation requirements: children of military families.
2017-1013 AB 485 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — Pet store operators: dogs, cats, and rabbits.
2017-1013 AB 503 by Assemblymember Tom W. Lackey (R-Palmdale) — Vehicles: parking violations: registration or driver’s license renewal.
2017-1013 AB 504 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — Community colleges: Student Success and Support Program funding.
2017-1013 AB 637 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — Community colleges: cross-enrollment in online education.
2017-1013 AB 677 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Data collection: sexual orientation.
2017-1013 AB 705 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Seymour-Campbell Student Success Act of 2012: matriculation: assessment.
2017-1013 AB 746 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Public health: potable water systems: lead testing: schoolsites.
2017-1013 AB 758 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Transportation: Tri-Valley-San Joaquin Valley Regional Rail Authority.
2017-1013 AB 765 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Local initiative measures: submission to the voters.
2017-1013 AB 867 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — Political Reform Act of 1974: contributions.
2017-1013 AB 926 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Cemeteries: endowment funds.
2017-1013 AB 1018 by Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) — Community colleges: student equity plans.
2017-1013 AB 1035 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — Pupil assessments: interim assessments: purposes of use.
2017-1013 AB 1069 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Local government: taxicab transportation services.
2017-1013 AB 1124 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Juvenile court school pupils: graduation requirements and continued education options.
2017-1013 AB 1127 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Baby diaper changing stations.
2017-1013 AB 1193 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Property tax: welfare exemption: low-income housing.
2017-1013 AB 1299 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) — Community colleges: Compton Community College District.
2017-1013 AB 1328 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Oil and gas: water quality.
2017-1013 AB 1340 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Continuing medical education: mental and physical health care integration.
2017-1013 AB 1360 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — Charter schools: pupil admissions, suspensions, and expulsions.
2017-1013 AB 1491 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Sales of dogs and cats: contracts.
2017-1013 AB 1533 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — Pupil instruction: College Promise Partnership Act.
2017-1013 AB 1567 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — Public postsecondary education: California State University: California Community Colleges: foster youth: Higher Education Outreach and Assistance Act for Foster Youth.
2017-1013 AB 1598 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — Affordable housing authorities.
2017-1013 AB 1651 by Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) — Community colleges: academic employees: involuntary administrative leave.
2017-1013 SB 136 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) — Mobilehome parks: mobilehome park program funding.
2017-1013 SB 147 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Mobilehome parks: residency.
2017-1013 SB 171 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) — Medi-Cal: Medi-Cal managed care plans.
2017-1013 SB 182 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Transportation network company: participating drivers: single business license.
2017-1013 SB 189 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Workers’ compensation: definition of employee.
2017-1013 SB 223 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Health care language assistance services.
2017-1013 SB 379 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Pupil health: oral health assessment.
2017-1013 SB 523 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) — Medi-Cal: emergency medical transport providers: quality assurance fee.
2017-1013 SB 613 by Senator Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) — Immigration status.
2017-1013 SB 798 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Healing arts: boards
2017-1012 AB 41 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — DNA evidence.
2017-1012 AB 90 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Criminal gangs.
2017-1012 AB 228 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Collectibles: sale of autographed memorabilia.
2017-1012 AB 258 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Child care and development services: individualized county child care subsidy plan: County of Fresno. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 280 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Personal income taxes: voluntary contributions: Rape Kit Backlog Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund.
2017-1012 AB 300 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Child care and development services: individualized county child care subsidy plans: Counties of Monterey, San Benito, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 340 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment Program: trauma screening.
2017-1012 AB 377 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — Child care subsidy plans: Counties of San Diego and Solano. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 404 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Foster care.
2017-1012 AB 422 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — California State University: Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree Program.
2017-1012 AB 435 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Child care subsidy plans: Counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, and Sonoma. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 501 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) — Mental health: community care facilities.
2017-1012 AB 507 by Assemblymember Blanca E. Rubio (D-Baldwin Park) — Resource families: training topics.
2017-1012 AB 603 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Child care: alternative payment programs: child care providers: electronic payments: notice of service changes.
2017-1012 AB 604 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) — Nonminor dependents: extended foster care benefits.
2017-1012 AB 752 by Assemblymember Blanca E. Rubio (D-Baldwin Park) — Child care: state preschool programs: expulsion.
2017-1012 AB 755 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) — Local agencies: capital investment incentive program.
2017-1012 AB 766 by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) — Foster youth: students of the California State University and California Community Colleges.
2017-1012 AB 801 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — County of San Diego Citizens Redistricting Commission.
2017-1012 AB 819 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — California State University: regulations.
2017-1012 AB 901 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — County of San Diego: local elections.
2017-1012 AB 1006 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Foster youth.
2017-1012 AB 1104 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — The California Political Cyberfraud Abatement Act.
2017-1012 AB 1106 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Child care and development services: alternative payment programs.
2017-1012 AB 1157 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — School property: school district advisory committees: teacher and school district employee housing: property tax exemption.
2017-1012 AB 1410 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Penalty assessments: emergency services and children’s health care coverage funding. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 1444 by Assemblymember Catharine Baker (R-Dublin) — Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority: demonstration project.
2017-1012 AB 1530 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Urban forestry.
2017-1012 AB 1535 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Corporations: dissolutions: separate shareholder agreements.
2017-1012 SB 12 by Senator Jim Beall (D-San Jose) — Foster youth: postsecondary education: financial aid assistance.
2017-1012 SB 61 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Personal income taxes: voluntary contributions: Emergency Food for Families Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund.
2017-1012 SB 138 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — School meal programs: free and reduced-price meals: universal meal service.
2017-1012 SB 145 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Autonomous vehicles: testing on public roads.
2017-1012 SB 213 by Senator Holly J. Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) — Placement of children: criminal records check.
2017-1012 SB 250 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Pupil meals: Child Hunger Prevention and Fair Treatment Act of 2017.
2017-1012 SB 329 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) — Manufactured homes: financial assistance programs.
2017-1012 SB 336 by Senator Joel Anderson (R-Alpine) — Exonerated inmates: transitional services.
2017-1012 SB 380 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — CalWORKs: child support.
2017-1012 SB 469 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) — Child support guidelines: low-income adjustments.
2017-1012 SB 612 by Senator Holly J. Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) — Foster care: transitional housing.
2017-1011 AB 23 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) – Educational programs: single gender schools and classes.
2017-1011 AB 454 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) – Personal income taxes: exclusion: wrongfully incarcerated individuals.
2017-1011 AB 606 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) – State voter information guides.
2017-1011 AB 733 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) – Enhanced infrastructure financing districts: projects: climate change.
2017-1011 AB 805 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) – County of San Diego: transportation agencies.
2017-1011 AB 864 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) – California Conservation Corps: applicant selection.
2017-1011 AB 878 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) – Juveniles: restraints.
2017-1011 AB 957 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) – Higher education regional workforce coordination: California Workforce Development Board.
2017-1011 AB 1070 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) – Solar energy systems: contracts: disclosures.
2017-1011 AB 1176 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) – High school equivalency tests.
2017-1011 AB 1294 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) – Solid waste: plastic products.
2017-1011 AB 1332 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) – Juveniles: dependents: removal.
2017-1011 AB 1371 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) – Juveniles: ward, dependent, and nonminor dependent parents.
2017-1011 AB 1379 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) – Certified access specialist program: funding.
2017-1011 AB 1542 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) – Violent felonies: video recording.
2017-1011 AB 1705 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) – State Board of Guide Dogs for the Blind: guide dog instructors.
2017-1011 SB 442 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) – Public health: pools: drownings.
2017-1011 SB 563 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) – Residential wood smoke.
2017-1011 SB 582 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) – Alcoholic beverages: tied-house restrictions: advertising.
2017-1011 SB 605 by Senator Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) – Small Business Procurement and Contract Act: small business.
2017-1011 SB 751 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) – School finance: school districts: annual budgets: reserve balance.
2017-1010 AB 467 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) – Local transportation authorities: transactions and use taxes.
2017-1010 AB 830 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) – High school exit examination: repeal.
2017-1010 AB 1189 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) – Riverside County Transportation Commission: transactions and use tax.
2017-1010 AB 1282 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) – Transportation Permitting Task Force.
2017-1010 AB 1553 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Economic development: Capital Access Loan Program.
2017-1010 SB 44 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) – State lands: coastal hazard and legacy oil and gas well removal and remediation program.
2017-1010 SB 150 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) – Regional transportation plans.
2017-1010 SB 443 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) – Pharmacy: emergency medical services automated drug delivery system.
2017-1010 SB 458 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) – Beverage container recycling: pilot projects.
2017-1010 SB 510 by Senator Jeff E. Stone (R-Temecula) – Pharmacies: compounding.
2017-1010 SB 595 by Senator Jim Beall (D-San Jose) – Metropolitan Transportation Commission: toll bridge revenues: BART Inspector General: Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority: high-occupancy toll lanes.
2017-1010 SB 703 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) – Transactions and use taxes: Counties of Alameda and Santa Clara and City of Santa Fe Springs.
2017-1010 SB 724 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) – Oil and gas: wells and production facilities.
2017-1010 SB 797 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) – Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board: transactions and use tax.
2017-1009 AB 24 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Instructional programs: State Seal of Civic Engagement.
2017-1009 AB 31 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — Whistleblowers: California State Auditor.
2017-1009 AB 32 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — California State Auditor.
2017-1009 AB 40 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — CURES database: health information technology system.
2017-1009 AB 55 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Hazardous materials management: stationary sources.
2017-1009 AB 81 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — English learners: identification: notice.
2017-1009 AB 199 by Assemblymember Kansen Chu (D-San Jose) — Public works: private residential projects.
2017-1009 AB 265 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Prescription drugs: prohibition on price discount.
2017-1009 AB 367 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) — Water supply: building permits.
2017-1009 AB 713 by Assemblymember Kansen Chu (D-San Jose) — Continuing care retirement facilities: transfers of residents.
2017-1009 AB 738 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Pupil instruction: Native American studies: model curriculum.
2017-1009 AB 1048 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Health care: pain management and Schedule II drug prescriptions.
2017-1009 AB 1066 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Public works: definition.
2017-1009 AB 1180 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — Los Angeles County Flood Control District: taxes, fees, and charges.
2017-1009 AB 1200 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Aging and Disability Resource Connection program.
2017-1009 AB 1219 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Food donations.
2017-1009 AB 1348 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Farmer Equity Act of 2017.
2017-1009 SB 184 by Senator Mike L. Morrell (R-Rancho Cucamonga) — Social security number truncation program.
2017-1009 SB 267 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Political Reform Act of 1974: City of Sacramento.
2017-1009 SB 351 by Senator Richard D. Roth (D-Riverside) — Hospital satellite compounding pharmacy: license: requirements.
2017-1009 SB 358 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — Political Reform Act of 1974: Secretary of State: online filing and disclosure system.
2017-1009 SB 450 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Public bodies: bonds: public notice.
2017-1009 SB 575 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) — Patient access to health records.
2017-1009 SB 793 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Competitive bidding: design-build and best value construction contracting.
2017-1008 AB 20 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) – Public employee retirement systems: divestment: Dakota Access Pipeline.
2017-1008 AB 153 by Assemblymember Rocky Chavez (R-Oceanside) — Military fraud.
2017-1008 AB 307 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Allocation of principal or income.
2017-1008 AB 314 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — Dating service contracts: online services.
2017-1008 AB 363 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Driver’s licenses: veteran designation.
2017-1008 AB 494 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) — Land use: accessory dwelling units.
2017-1008 AB 500 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) — Employee codes of conduct: employee interactions with pupils.
2017-1008 AB 597 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Child abuse and neglect: information: computerized database system.
2017-1008 AB 670 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Classified employees: part-time playground positions.
2017-1008 AB 828 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) — Civil actions: fee recovery.
2017-1008 AB 1197 by Assemblymember Monique Limon (D-Santa Barbara) — Oil spill contingency plans: spill management teams.
2017-1008 AB 1223 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Construction contract payments: Internet Web site posting.
2017-1008 AB 1229 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Healing arts: Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians of the State of California.
2017-1008 AB 1384 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Victims of violent crimes: trauma recovery centers.
2017-1008 AB 1646 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Hazardous materials: unified program agency: integrated alerting and notification system.
2017-1008 AB 1647 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Petroleum refineries: air monitoring systems.
2017-1008 AB 1649 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Oil refineries: public safety.
2017-1008 AB 1710 by the Committee on Veterans Affairs – Prohibited discrimination against service members.
2017-1008 AB 1718 by the Committee on Revenue and Taxation – Property taxation: leach pads, tailing facilities, and settling ponds: base year value: separate appraisal.
2017-1008 SB 20 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Vehicles: buses: seatbelts.
2017-1008 SB 229 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) — Accessory dwelling units.
2017-1008 SB 339 by Senator Richard D. Roth (D-Riverside) — Veterans treatment courts: Judicial Council assessment and survey.
2017-1008 SB 728 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — State public employees: sick leave: veterans with service-related disabilities.
2017-1008 SB 731 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — Public school employees: former or current members of the Armed Forces of the United States or California National Guard: leave of absence for illness or injury.
2017-1008 SB 752 by Senator Jeff E. Stone (R-Temecula) — Pharmacy: designated representative-reverse distributors.
2017-1008 SB 776 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — Corrections: veterans’ benefits.
2017-1008 SB 796 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Uniform Standards: Naturopathic Doctors Act: Respiratory Care Practice Act.
2017-1008 SB 812 by the Committee on Governance and Finance – Property taxation: tax-defaulted property sales: minimum price.
2017-1007 AB 210 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) – Homeless multidisciplinary personnel team.
2017-1007 AB 236 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) – CalWORKs: housing assistance.
2017-1007 AB 249 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) – Political Reform Act of 1974: campaign disclosures.
2017-1007 AB 260 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) – Human trafficking.
2017-1007 AB 401 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) – Pharmacy: remote dispensing site pharmacy: telepharmacy: shared clinic office space.
2017-1007 AB 443 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) – Optometry: scope of practice.
2017-1007 AB 470 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) – Medi-Cal: specialty mental health services: performance outcome reports.
2017-1007 AB 523 by Assemblymember Eloise G�mez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) – Electric Program Investment Charge: allocation.
2017-1007 AB 560 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) – Safe Drinking Water State Revolving Fund: project financing: severely disadvantaged communities.
2017-1007 AB 581 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) – Apprenticeships on public works projects.
2017-1007 AB 643 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) – Pupil instruction: abusive relationships.
2017-1007 AB 789 by Assemblymember Blanca E. Rubio (D-Baldwin Park) – Criminal procedure: release on own recognizance.
2017-1007 AB 1094 by Assemblymember Steven Choi (R-Irvine) – Vehicles: automated traffic enforcement systems.
2017-1007 AB 1131 by Assemblymember Tom W. Lackey (R-Palmdale) – District agricultural associations: joint powers agreements: audits.
2017-1007 AB 1188 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) – Health professions development: loan repayment.
2017-1007 AB 1227 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) – Human Trafficking Prevention Education and Training Act.
2017-1007 AB 1351 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) – District agricultural associations: authorized activities.
2017-1007 AB 1455 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) – The California Public Records Act: exemptions.
2017-1007 AB 1516 by Assemblymember Jordan Cunningham (R-Templeton) – Maintenance of the codes.
2017-1007 AB 1568 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) – Enhanced infrastructure financing districts.
2017-1007 AB 1593 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) – Personal income tax.
2017-1007 AB 1708 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) – State Board of Optometry: practice of optometry: licensure.
2017-1007 SB 225 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) – Human trafficking: notice.
2017-1007 SB 238 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) – Criminal procedure: arrests and evidence.
2017-1007 SB 285 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) – Public employers: union organizing.
2017-1007 SB 400 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Ca�ada Flintridge) – Highways: surplus residential property.
2017-1007 SB 559 by Senator Mike L. Morrell (R-Rancho Cucamonga) – Private Investigator Act: license: limited liability company.
2017-1007 SB 597 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) – Human trafficking: victim confidentiality.
2017-1007 SB 730 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) – Pupil nutrition: National School Lunch Act: Buy American provision: compliance.
2017-1007 SB 743 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) – Medi-Cal: family planning providers.
2017-1007 SB 800 by the Committee on Business, Professions and Economic Development – Professions and vocations.
2017-1006 AB 246 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Environmental quality: Jobs and Economic Improvement Through Environmental Leadership Act of 2011.
2017-1006 AB 335 by Assemblymember Kevin Kiley (R-Roseville) — Parole: placement at release.
2017-1006 AB 355 by Assemblymember Kansen Chu (D-San Jose) — Water pollution: enforcement.
2017-1006 AB 461 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Personal income taxes: exclusion: forgiven student loan debt.
2017-1006 AB 484 by Assemblymember Jordan Cunningham (R-Templeton) — Sex offenses: registration.
2017-1006 AB 490 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Taxation: credits: College Access Tax Credit.
2017-1006 AB 574 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) — Potable reuse.
2017-1006 AB 688 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Enforcement of money judgments: exemptions.
2017-1006 AB 1159 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Cannabis: legal services.
2017-1006 AB 1206 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) — Vehicles: impoundment: pilot program.
2017-1006 AB 1450 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) — Court reporters: electronic transcripts.
2017-1006 AB 1671 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Backflow protection and cross-connection controls: standards.
2017-1006 AB 1699 by the Committee on Insurance – Insurance: fees and charges.
2017-1006 SB 50 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) — Federal public lands: conveyances.
2017-1006 SB 231 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Local government: fees and charges.
2017-1006 SB 239 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) — Infectious and communicable diseases: HIV and AIDS: criminal penalties.
2017-1006 SB 252 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Water wells.
2017-1006 SB 272 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — State Compensation Insurance Fund: executive and management appointments.
2017-1006 SB 323 by Senator Holly J. Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) — Medi-Cal: federally qualified health centers and rural health centers: Drug Medi-Cal and specialty mental health services.
2017-1006 SB 384 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) — Sex offenders: registration: criminal offender record information systems.
2017-1006 SB 507 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Tijuana River Valley.
2017-1006 SB 667 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Department of Water Resources: riverine and riparian stewardship improvements.
2017-1005 AB 21 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) — Public postsecondary education: Access to Higher Education for Every Student.
2017-1005 AB 291 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Housing: immigration.
2017-1005 AB 299 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Hiring of real property: immigration or citizenship status.
2017-1005 AB 343 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) — Public postsecondary education: holders of certain special immigrant visas.
2017-1005 AB 450 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Employment regulation: immigration worksite enforcement actions.
2017-1005 AB 699 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — Educational equity: immigration and citizenship status.
2017-1005 SB 29 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Law enforcement: immigration.
2017-1005 SB 54 by Senator Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles) — Law enforcement: sharing data. A signing message can be found here.
2017-1005 SB 68 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Public postsecondary education: exemption from nonresident tuition.
2017-1005 SB 156 by Senator Joel Anderson (R-Alpine) — Military and veterans: transition assistance: citizenship.
2017-1005 SB 257 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — School admissions: pupil residency: pupils of departed parents: residents of adjoining state or foreign country: school district reimbursement.
2017-1004 AB 156 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Individual market: enrollment periods.
2017-1004 AB 317 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — Napa County: farmworker housing.
2017-1004 AB 384 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — The Qualified ABLE Program: tax-advantaged savings accounts.
2017-1004 AB 589 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Water diversion: monitoring and reporting: University of California Cooperative Extension.
2017-1004 AB 669 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Department of Transportation: motor vehicle technology testing.
2017-1004 AB 797 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Solar thermal systems.
2017-1004 AB 959 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — Developmental services: regional centers.
2017-1004 AB 1284 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — California Financing Law: Property Assessed Clean Energy program: program administrators.
2017-1004 AB 1400 by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) — Public Interest Research, Development, and Demonstration Program and Electric Program Investment Charge program: microgrid projects: diesel backup generators.
2017-1004 AB 1641 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Surplus line brokers: surplus line advisory organization.
2017-1004 AB 1724 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Alcoholic beverages: licenses: suspension and revocation tied-house exception.
2017-1004 SB 4 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — Medi-Cal: county organized health system: County of Orange.
2017-1004 SB 33 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Arbitration agreements.
2017-1004 SB 133 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) — Health care coverage: continuity of care.
2017-1004 SB 218 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — The Qualified ABLE Program: tax-advantaged savings accounts.
2017-1004 SB 219 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) — Long-term care facilities: rights of residents.
2017-1004 SB 242 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) — Property Assessed Clean Energy program: program administrator.
2017-1004 SB 611 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Vehicles.
2017-1004 SB 664 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Alcoholic beverages: tied-house restrictions: advertising.
2017-1004 SB 788 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Insurance: licensing: requirements.
2017-1003 AB 174 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 226 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Teacher credentialing: spouses of active duty members of the Armed Forces: expedited application process.
2017-1003 AB 253 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 277 by Assemblymember Devon J. Mathis (R-Visalia) — Water and Wastewater Loan and Grant Program.
2017-1003 AB 339 by Assemblymember Devon J. Mathis (R-Visalia) — State Water Pollution Cleanup and Abatement Account.
2017-1003 AB 394 by Assemblymember Devon J. Mathis (R-Visalia) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 458 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — Vehicle registration.
2017-1003 AB 471 by Assemblymember Philip Y. Ting (D-San Francisco) — Alcoholic beverages: licenses: new original on-sale general licenses for bona fide public eating places: neighborhood-restricted special on-sale general licenses.
2017-1003 AB 519 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Personal income tax: California Senior Citizen Advocacy Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund.
2017-1003 AB 522 by Assemblymember Jordan Cunningham (R-Templeton) — Alcoholic beverages: nonprofit corporations: raffles.
2017-1003 AB 667 by Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) — Pupil discipline: suspension: informal conference.
2017-1003 AB 718 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — Mosquito abatement and vector control districts: managed wetland habitat: memoranda of understanding.
2017-1003 AB 891 by Assemblymember Chad J. Mayes (R-Yucca Valley) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 1178 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Postsecondary education: student loans.
2017-1003 AB 1361 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) — Municipal water districts: water service: Indian tribes.
2017-1003 AB 1378 by Assemblymember Adam Gray (D-Merced) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 1550 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — School finance: school bonds: small school district.
2017-1003 AB 1558 by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) — Los Angeles River: river ranger program.
2017-1003 AB 1606 by Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 AB 1706 by the Committee on Business and Professions – Healing arts: chiropractic practice: speech-language pathology and audiology and hearing aid dispensing: occupational therapy: physical therapy.
2017-1003 SB 6 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 SB 159 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) — Off-highway vehicles.
2017-1003 SB 161 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Fish and Game Commission: tribal committee.
2017-1003 SB 178 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) — Parklands: Centerville Park.
2017-1003 SB 249 by Senator Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) — Off-highway motor vehicle recreation.
2017-1003 SB 306 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Retaliation actions: complaints: administrative review.
2017-1003 SB 344 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — School attendance: interdistrict attendance.
2017-1003 SB 462 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Juveniles: case files: access.
2017-1003 SB 570 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — CalWORKs.
2017-1003 SB 585 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 SB 626 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Tribal gaming: compact ratification.
2017-1003 SB 693 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — Lower San Gabriel River Recreation and Park District.
2017-1003 SB 711 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Electrical corporations and gas corporations: rates and charges.
2017-1002 AB 149 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Personal income taxes: Habitat for Humanity Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund.
2017-1002 AB 331 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — County recorders: veterans: recorded documents.
2017-1002 AB 352 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — State Housing Law: efficiency units.
2017-1002 AB 360 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — The State Bar: pro bono legal assistance: veterans.
2017-1002 AB 390 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Pedestrian crossing signals.
2017-1002 AB 462 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability Commission: wage information data access.
2017-1002 AB 527 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Pest control aircraft pilot’s certificate: unmanned aircraft.
2017-1002 AB 556 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — County ordinances: violations: fines.
2017-1002 AB 562 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — California State Auditor: interference.
2017-1002 AB 575 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Elder and dependent adult abuse: mandated reporters: substance use disorder counselors.
2017-1002 AB 611 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — Mandated reporters of suspected financial abuse of an elder or dependent adult: powers of attorney.
2017-1002 AB 722 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Isla Vista Community Services District: board of directors.
2017-1002 AB 727 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) — Mental Health Services Act: housing assistance.
2017-1002 AB 974 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Mental Health Services Act: reporting veterans spending.
2017-1002 AB 1134 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability Commission: fellowship program.
2017-1002 AB 1277 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Dentistry: Dental Board of California: regulations.
2017-1002 AB 1315 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — Mental health: early psychosis and mood disorder detection and intervention.
2017-1002 AB 1520 by Assemblymember Autumn R. Burke (D-Inglewood) — Lifting Children and Families Out of Poverty Task Force.
2017-1002 AB 1618 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Veteran service providers.
2017-1002 AB 1696 by the Committee on Insurance – Insurance omnibus: developmental services.
2017-1002 AB 1714 by the Committee on Housing and Community Development – Income taxes: credits: low-income housing: farmworker housing: building standards: housing and home finance.
2017-1002 AB 1722 by the Committee on Governmental Organization — Alcoholic beverage licensees: restrictions: coupons.
2017-1002 AB 1723 by the Committee on Governmental Organization — Horse Racing Law.
2017-1002 SB 19 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Public Utilities Commission: duties and responsibilities: governance.
2017-1002 SB 36 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Attorneys: State Bar: Sections of the State Bar.
2017-1002 SB 52 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — State Route 39.
2017-1002 SB 295 by Senator William W. Monning (D-Carmel) — Farm labor contractors: sexual harassment prevention.
2017-1002 SB 385 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Public Utilities Commission: reports: programs: studies: ex parte communications.
2017-1002 SB 432 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Emergency medical services.
2017-1002 SB 440 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Personal income taxes: voluntary contributions: California Breast Cancer Research Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund and California Cancer Research Voluntary Tax Contribution Fund.
2017-1002 SB 512 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) — Health care practitioners: stem cell therapy.
2017-1002 SB 547 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Professions and vocations: weights and measures.
2017-1002 SB 564 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Joint powers authorities: Water Bill Savings Act.
2017-1002 SB 618 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Load-serving entities: integrated resource plans.
2017-1002 SB 672 by Senator Jean Fuller (R-Bakersfield) — Traffic-actuated signals: motorcycles and bicycles.
2017-1002 SB 690 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — State Bar of California: disclosures.
2017-1002 SB 732 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — General plan: agricultural land.
2017-1002 SB 11 by Senator Ted Gaines (R-El Dorado Hills) — Taxes: interest: penalties.
2017-0928 AB 184 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Sea level rise planning: database.
2017-0928 AB 333 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) — State Highway Route 185: relinquishment: County of Alameda.
2017-0928 AB 415 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — CalFresh: employment social enterprises.
2017-0928 AB 466 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) — Upper Los Angeles River and Tributaries Working Group.
2017-0928 AB 539 by Assemblymember Dante Acosta (R-Santa Clarita) — Search warrants.
2017-0928 AB 563 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — CalFresh Employment and Training program.
2017-0928 AB 579 by Assemblymember Heath Flora (R-Ripon) — Apprenticeship: fire protection: firefighter preapprenticeship program.
2017-0928 AB 658 by Assemblymember Marie Waldron (R-Escondido) — Clinical laboratories.
2017-0928 AB 659 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) — Medi-Cal: reimbursement rates.
2017-0928 AB 720 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Inmates: psychiatric medication: informed consent.
2017-0928 AB 790 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Identification cards: replacement: reduced fee.
2017-0928 AB 794 by Assemblymember James M. Gallagher (R-Yuba City) — County officers: recorder: record correction.
2017-0928 AB 908 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — Hospitals: seismic safety.
2017-0928 AB 1172 by Assemblymember Dante Acosta (R-Santa Clarita) — State highways: relinquishment.
2017-0928 AB 1625 by Assemblymember Blanca E. Rubio (D-Baldwin Park) — Inoperable parking meters.
2017-0928 AB 1725 by the Committee on Local Government — Local agency formation.
2017-0928 AB 1729 by the Committee on Elections and Redistricting — Examination of petitions.
2017-0928 SB 112 by the Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review — State government.
2017-0928 SB 282 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) — CalFresh and CalWORKs.
2017-0928 SB 313 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Advertising: automatic renewal and continuous service offers.
2017-0928 SB 372 by Senator Anthony J. Cannella (R-Ceres) — San Joaquin River Exchange Contractors Groundwater Sustainability Agency.
2017-0928 SB 403 by Senator Anthony J. Cannella (R-Ceres) — Sale of county courthouses.
2017-0928 SB 492 by Senator Jim Beall (D-San Jose) — Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District: purchase of property: San Jose Water Company.
2017-0928 SB 534 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — California Victim Compensation Board: claims.
2017-0928 SB 569 by Senator William W. Monning (D-Carmel) — Insurance: disasters: identification of insurer.
2017-0928 SB 598 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Public utilities: gas and electric service disconnections.
2017-0927 AB 25 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) — Tour buses: modified tour buses.
2017-0927 AB 218 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — Local agencies: airports: customer facility charges.
2017-0927 AB 326 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) — State Board of Barbering and Cosmetology: physical and sexual abuse awareness training.
2017-0927 AB 465 by Assemblymember Philip Y. Ting (D-San Francisco) — Urban agricultural incentive zones.
2017-0927 AB 515 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — State Highway System Management Plan.
2017-0927 AB 661 by Assemblymember Chad J. Mayes (R-Yucca Valley) — Magnesia Spring Ecological Reserve: Mirage Trail.
2017-0927 AB 712 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) — Civil actions: change of venue.
2017-0927 AB 804 by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) — Controller: internal control guidelines.
2017-0927 AB 910 by Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) — CalWORKs: welfare-to-work activities: hours.
2017-0927 AB 976 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Electronic filing and service.
2017-0927 AB 993 by Assemblymember Catharine Baker (R-Dublin) — Examination of victims of sex crimes.
2017-0927 AB 994 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — Health care districts: design-build.
2017-0927 AB 1034 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Government interruption of communications.
2017-0927 AB 1119 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Developmental and mental health services: information and records: confidentiality.
2017-0927 AB 1149 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Workforce investment boards: funding.
2017-0927 AB 1286 by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) — Airports: alternative customer facility charges.
2017-0927 AB 1396 by Assemblymember Autumn R. Burke (D-Inglewood) — Surrogacy.
2017-0927 AB 1438 by the Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials — State Water Resources Control Board: environmental laboratories: public water systems: certificates and permits: procedures.
2017-0927 AB 1518 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Criminal justice information.
2017-0927 AB 1636 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — California Finance Lenders Law: California Deferred Deposit Transaction Law.
2017-0927 AB 1692 by the Committee on Judiciary — Judiciary omnibus.
2017-0927 SB 40 by Senator Richard D. Roth (D-Riverside) — Domestic violence.
2017-0927 SB 367 by Senator Patricia C. Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) — Tidelands and submerged lands: County of Orange.
2017-0927 SB 420 by Senator William W. Monning (D-Carmel) — State summary criminal history information: sentencing information.
2017-0927 SB 448 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) — Local government: organization: districts.
2017-0927 SB 568 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Primary elections: election date.
2017-0927 SB 653 by Senator John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa) — County tax collectors: notices: publication.
2017-0927 SB 658 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) — Jury selection.
2017-0926 AB 56 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank: housing.
2017-0926 AB 411 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) — Witness testimony: therapy and facility dogs.
2017-0926 AB 459 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Public records: video or audio recordings: crime.
2017-0926 AB 491 by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) — California Civil Liberties Public Education Act.
2017-0926 AB 492 by Assemblymember Tim Grayson (D-Concord) — Advertising and solicitations: government documents.
2017-0926 AB 552 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — United Water Conservation District.
2017-0926 AB 609 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Alcoholic beverages: licensee promotion events: sunset.
2017-0926 AB 618 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Local Agency Public Construction Act: job order contracting: school districts: community college districts.
2017-0926 AB 1222 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) — Vehicles: electronic wireless communications devices.
2017-0926 AB 1325 by the Committee on Public Employees, Retirement, and Social Security – State teachers’ retirement.
2017-0926 AB 1418 by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) — City prosecutors.
2017-0926 AB 1422 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Workers’ compensation insurance: fraud. A signing message can be found here.
2017-0926 AB 1439 by the Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials — Hazardous materials: reporting.
2017-0926 AB 1541 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) — Examination of prospective jurors.
2017-0926 AB 1604 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) — CalWORKs: welfare-to-work: education.
2017-0926 AB 1709 by the Committee on Veterans Affairs — Armories: sales: local agencies.
2017-0926 SB 144 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Fish and wildlife: steelhead trout: fishing report-restoration card.
2017-0926 SB 214 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — San Diego River Conservancy.
2017-0926 SB 438 by Senator Richard D. Roth (D-Riverside) — Juveniles: legal guardianship: successor guardian.
2017-0926 SB 486 by Senator William W. Monning (D-Carmel) — Contractors’ State License Law: letter of admonishment.
2017-0926 SB 580 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Water development projects: Sacramento-San Joaquin watersheds.
2017-0925 AB 264 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Protective orders.
2017-0925 AB 290 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) — Collateral recovery: repossession agencies.
2017-0925 AB 525 by Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) — State Board of Equalization: California Department of Tax and Fee Administration: offer in compromise: extension.
2017-0925 AB 644 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Civil procedure: pleadings.
2017-0925 AB 940 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego) — Long-term health care facilities: notice.
2017-0925 AB 1102 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — Health facilities: whistleblower protections.
2017-0925 AB 1133 by Assemblymember Brian Dahle (R-Bieber) — California Endangered Species Act: experimental populations.
2017-0925 AB 1243 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Public Employees’ Retirement System: replacement benefits plan.
2017-0925 AB 1412 by Assemblymember Steven Choi (R-Irvine) — Common interest developments: notices: volunteer officers: liability.
2017-0925 AB 1590 by Assemblymember Phillip Chen (R-Diamond Bar) — Structural Pest Control Board: complaints: structural pest control operators.
2017-0925 SB 220 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Medi-Cal Children’s Health Advisory Panel.
2017-0925 SB 330 by Senator Tom Berryhill (R-Modesto) — Building permit fees: waiver.
2017-0925 SB 449 by Senator William W. Monning (D-Carmel) — Skilled nursing and intermediate care facilities: training programs.
2017-0925 SB 468 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) — School districts: governing boards: pupil members.
2017-0925 SB 549 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Public utilities: redirection of moneys authorized for maintenance, safety, or reliability.
2017-0925 SB 557 by Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) — Food donations and pupil meals: schools.
2017-0925 SB 587 by Senator Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego) — Emergency vehicles: blue warning lights.
2017-0925 SB 670 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Sentencing: county of incarceration and supervision.
2017-0925 SB 813 by the Committee on Governance and Finance — Franchise Tax Board: voluntary disclosure agreements.
2017-0923 AB 213 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Claims against the state.
2017-0923 AB 261 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — School districts: governing boards: pupil members: preferential voting.
2017-0923 AB 295 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Skydiving or sport parachuting operations.
2017-0923 AB 836 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Vending machines: bulk food.
2017-0923 AB 868 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) — Private postsecondary education: community-based organizations.
2017-0923 AB 1309 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — Employment without reinstatement: failure to enroll or report: fee.
2017-0923 AB 1401 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Juveniles: protective custody warrant.
2017-0923 AB 1538 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — Alameda Health System Hospital Authority: physician services.
2017-0923 AB 1540 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) — State dinosaur: Augustynolophus morrisi.
2017-0923 AB 1728 by the Committee on Local Government — Health care districts: board of directors.
2017-0923 SB 314 by Senator Janet Nguyen (R-Garden Grove) — Massage therapy: certification: credit hours.
2017-0923 SB 340 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Corporations: dissolution: bankruptcy.
2017-0923 SB 430 by the Committee on Insurance — California Insurance Guarantee Association: covered claims.
2017-0923 SB 811 by the Committee on Public Safety — Public safety: omnibus.
2017-0916 AB 109 by Assemblymember Philip Y. Ting (D-San Francisco) — Budget Act of 2017.
2017-0916 AB 129 by the Committee on Budget — Education finance.
2017-0916 AB 130 by the Committee on Budget — Health and human services.
2017-0916 AB 131 by the Committee on Budget — Taxation.
2017-0916 AB 133 by the Committee on Budget — Cannabis Regulation.
2017-0916 AB 134 by the Committee on Budget — Budget Act of 2017.
2017-0916 AB 135 by the Committee on Budget — Transportation.
2017-0911 AB 242 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Certificates of death: veterans.
2017-0911 AB 395 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) — Substance use treatment providers.
2017-0911 AB 400 by Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) — Crimes: alcoholic beverages: State Capitol.
2017-0911 AB 593 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Structural Fumigation Enforcement Program.
2017-0911 AB 711 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Beer manufacturers: free or discounted rides.
2017-0911 AB 1108 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Self-service storage facilities.
2017-0911 AB 1398 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) — Annuities: cash surrender benefits.
2017-0911 AB 1487 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — Public Employees’ Retirement System: limited term appointments.
2017-0911 AB 1504 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — State parks: concessions: contracts.
2017-0911 AB 1613 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — San Mateo County Transit District: retail transactions and use tax.
2017-0911 SB 65 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Vehicles: alcohol and marijuana: penalties.
2017-0911 SB 157 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) — Invasion of privacy: distribution of sexually explicit materials: protection of plaintiff’s identity.
2017-0911 SB 335 by Senator Anthony J. Cannella (R-Ceres) — Nursery Advisory Board.
2017-0911 SB 401 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Child care facilities: state employees.
2017-0911 SB 407 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) — Common interest developments: noncommercial solicitation.
2017-0911 SB 410 by Senator Janet Nguyen (R-Garden Grove) — Civil service: veterans’ hiring preference: active duty members.
2017-0911 SB 427 by Senator Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino) — Public water systems: community water systems: lead user service lines.
2017-0911 SB 455 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — Pupil enrollment: military dependents.
2017-0911 SB 489 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Workers’ compensation: change of physician.
2017-0911 SB 525 by Senator Richard Pan (D-Sacramento) — Public employees’ retirement.
2017-0911 SB 554 by Senator Jeff E. Stone (R-Temecula) — Nurse practitioners: physician assistants: buprenorphine.
2017-0911 SB 628 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — Local educational agencies: governing board elections: Los Angeles Community College District.
2017-0911 SB 654 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Local moratorium: gambling tables.
2017-0911 SB 666 by Senator Andy Vidak (R-Hanford) — California Gambling Control Commission and Department of Justice: postemployment restrictions.
2017-0911 SB 684 by Senator Patricia C. Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) — Incompetence to stand trial: conservatorship: treatment.
2017-0911 SB 704 by Senator Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) — Division of Boating and Waterways: invasive aquatic plants control programs.
2017-0911 SB 764 by Senator John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa) — Real estate trust fund accounts: fidelity insurance.
2017-0901 AB 89 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Psychologists: suicide prevention training.
2017-0901 AB 187 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Political Reform Act of 1974: local ballot measure contribution and expenditure reporting.
2017-0901 AB 191 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Mental health: involuntary treatment.
2017-0901 AB 275 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Long-term care facilities: requirements for changes resulting in the inability of the facility to care for its residents.
2017-0901 AB 297 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Alcoholic beverages: licenses: wine and food cultural museum and educational center.
2017-0901 AB 356 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Human remains: disposition.
2017-0901 AB 376 by Assemblymember Rocky Chávez (R-Oceanside) — Veterans benefits: veteran farmers or ranchers.
2017-0901 AB 383 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Civil actions: discovery status conference.
2017-0901 AB 407 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Fraternal fire insurers: coverage.
2017-0901 AB 413 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Confidential communications: domestic violence.
2017-0901 AB 468 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Transit districts: prohibition orders.
2017-0901 AB 475 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Department of Technology.
2017-0901 AB 493 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Crime: victims and witnesses: immigration violations.
2017-0901 AB 508 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) — Health care practitioners: student loans.
2017-0901 AB 551 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Political Reform Act of 1974: postemployment restrictions.
2017-0901 AB 671 by Assemblymember Rocky Chávez (R-Oceanside) — Veterans: services.
2017-0901 AB 679 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — Public employees’ retirement: investments: security loans.
2017-0901 AB 681 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Teacher credentialing: teacher preparation outside of the United States: temporary certificates.
2017-0901 AB 772 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Unclaimed property: publication of notice.
2017-0901 AB 866 by Assemblymember Jordan Cunningham (R-Templeton) — State highways: gateway monuments.
2017-0901 AB 938 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — Reinsurance.
2017-0901 AB 979 by Assemblymember Tom W. Lackey (R-Palmdale) — Local agency formation commissions: district representation.
2017-0901 AB 1024 by Assemblymember Kevin Kiley (R-Roseville) — Grand juries: peace officers: proceedings.
2017-0901 AB 1027 by Assemblymember Dante Acosta (R-Santa Clarita) — Driver’s licenses: examinations: motorcycle licenses.
2017-0901 AB 1086 by Assemblymember Tom F. Daly (D-Anaheim) — Housing: regional housing needs.
2017-0901 AB 1115 by Assemblymember Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) — Convictions: expungement.
2017-0901 AB 1142 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — High school diplomas: State Seal of Biliteracy: English learners.
2017-0901 AB 1285 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) — Alcoholic Beverage Control Act: administrative hearings: records.
2017-0901 AB 1303 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) — Vehicles: window tinting.
2017-0901 AB 1336 by Assemblymember Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) — California Workforce Development Board.
2017-0901 AB 1355 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) — State parks: fees.
2017-0901 AB 1387 by Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula (D-Fresno) — Home medical device retail facility business: licensing: inspections.
2017-0901 AB 1459 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Murder: peace officers.
2017-0901 AB 1726 by the Committee on Health – Vital records: confidentiality.
2017-0901 SB 365 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa) — Regional park and open-space districts: County of Solano.
2017-0901 SB 479 by Senator Mike L. Morrell (R-Rancho Cucamonga) — Mortgages: default procedures: trustee’s or attorney’s fees.
2017-0901 SB 565 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge) — Mental health: involuntary commitment.
2017-0901 SB 614 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Public transportation agencies: administrative penalties.
2017-0901 SB 639 by Senator Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) — Property taxation: assessment: electric generation facilities.
2017-0901 SB 747 by Senator Josh Newman (D-Fullerton) — State military: officer commissions.
2017-0824 SB 113 by the Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review — Budget Act of 2017.
2017-0824 SB 117 by the Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review — Elections.
2017-0807 AB 172 by Assemblymember Rocky Chávez (R-Oceanside) — Public postsecondary education: residency: dependents of armed forces members.
2017-0807 AB 436 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — San Lorenzo River.
2017-0807 AB 872 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — School employees: employment: sex offenses.
2017-0807 AB 905 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Money judgments of other jurisdictions.
2017-0807 AB 984 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Courts: frivolous actions or tactics.
2017-0807 AB 990 by Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) — Public postsecondary education: California State University: University of California: estimates of off-campus housing costs.
2017-0807 AB 1132 by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) — Nonvehicular air pollution: order for abatement.
2017-0807 AB 1443 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Court records.
2017-0807 AB 1453 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) — Schoolbuses: adult volunteer transportation.
2017-0807 AB 1707 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Registered dental assistants: practical examination.
2017-0807 AB 1717 by the Committee on Revenue and Taxation — Sales and use taxes: administration: qualified use tax: acceptable tax return.
2017-0807 AB 1719 by the Committee on Revenue and Taxation — Taxation.
2017-0807 AB 1720 by the Committee on Revenue and Taxation — Income and corporation taxes: Franchise Tax Board: administration: electronic communication.
2017-0807 SB 331 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Evidentiary privileges: domestic violence counselor-victim privilege.
2017-0807 SB 725 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Veterans: pretrial diversion: driving privileges.

Through Sun Oct 15 @ Midnight, Governor Brown vetoed 101 Bills

2017-1015 AB 17 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — Transit Pass Pilot Program: free or reduced-fare transit passes.
2017-1015 AB 233 by Assemblymember Todd Gloria (D-San Diego) — Pupils: right to wear religious, ceremonial, or cultural adornments at school graduation ceremonies.
2017-1015 AB 313 by Assemblymember Adam Gray (D-Merced) — Water.
2017-1015 AB 432 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Personal care services.
2017-1015 AB 568 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — School and community college employees: paid maternity leave.
2017-1015 AB 569 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Discrimination: reproductive health.
2017-1015 AB 890 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — Land use: planning and zoning: initiatives.
2017-1015 AB 894 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — Candidates’ statements: false statements.
2017-1015 AB 973 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — Remote accessible vote by mail system.
2017-1015 AB 1249 by Assemblymember Adam Gray (D-Merced) — Property taxation: exemptions: veterans’ organizations.
2017-1015 AB 1513 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) — Registered home care aides: disclosure of contact information.
2017-1015 AB 1660 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) — Court reporter providers.
2017-1015 SB 149 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Presidential primary elections: ballot access.
2017-1015 SB 169 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Education: sex equity.
2017-1015 SB 574 by Senator Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) — University of California: contracts: bidding.
2017-1015 SB 599 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge) — Public Employees’ Medical and Hospital Care Act: Peace Officers Research Association of California Insurance and Benefits Trust.
2017-1015 SB 649 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Wireless telecommunications facilities.
2017-1015 AB 45 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond — California School Employee Housing Assistance Grant Program.
2017-1015 AB 1019 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco — California Uniform Construction Cost Accounting Commission.
2017-1015 AB 1029 by Assemblymember Shirley N. Weber (D-San Diego — Comprehensive school safety plans.
2017-1015 AB 1209 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego — Employers: gender pay differentials.
2017-1015 AB 1264 by Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella — Special education pupils: individualized education program: meetings: school records.
2017-1015 AB 1408 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier — Crimes: supervised release.
2017-1015 SB 80 by Senator Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont — California Environmental Quality Act: notices.
2017-1015 SB 357 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego — International trade and investment office: Mexico.
2017-1014 AB 530 by Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) — Public employment: collective bargaining: peace officers. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 531 by Assemblymember Jacqui V. Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) — Office of Information Security: information security technologies. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 863 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities Program. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 952 by Assemblymember Eloise G�mez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) — Teachers: Bilingual Teacher Professional Development Program: bilingual teacher shortage pathways. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 978 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Employment safety: injury and illness prevention program. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 1004 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — Secretary of State: voter information Internet Web site. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 1068 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Prison Industry Authority: private employer: pilot program. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 AB 1269 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Mobilehome Residents and Senior Protection Act. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 304 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Ca�ada Flintridge) — Juvenile court school pupils: joint transition planning policy: individualized transition plan. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 345 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Law enforcement agencies: public records. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 390 by Senator Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia) — Local control and accountability plans: annual goals: state priorities: model school library standards. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 491 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Civil rights: discrimination: enforcement. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 494 by Senator Ben Hueso (D-San Diego) — Language arts: reading: grant program. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1014 SB 687 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) — Health facilities: emergency services: Attorney General
2017-1013 AB 247 by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) — Public health: childhood lead poisoning: Lead Advisory Task Force.
2017-1013 AB 296 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Corona) — Task force: health of women veterans.
2017-1013 AB 391 by Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco) — Medi-Cal: asthma preventive services.
2017-1013 AB 447 by Assemblymember Adam Gray (D-Merced) — Medi-Cal: covered benefits: continuous glucose monitors.
2017-1013 AB 570 by Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) — Workers’ compensation: permanent disability apportionment.
2017-1013 AB 935 by Assemblymember Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) — Juvenile proceedings: competency.
2017-1013 AB 961 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton) — Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise Program.
2017-1013 AB 1138 by Assemblymember Brian Maienschein (R-San Diego) — Sale of cats or dogs.
2017-1013 AB 1479 by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) — Public records: custodian of records: civil penalties.
2017-1013 AB 1607 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) — Developmental services: integrated competitive employment.
2017-1013 SB 51 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) — Professional licensees: environmental sciences and climate change: whistleblower and data protection.
2017-1013 SB 464 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Firearms dealers: storage and security.
2017-1013 SB 478 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge) — Public postsecondary education: transfer of community college students to the California State University or University of California.A veto message can be found here.
2017-1013 SB 527 by Senator Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) — Education finance: local control funding formula: home-to-school transportation: cost-of-living adjustment
2017-1012 AB 26 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Child care and development: child care resource and referral programs: assistance to license-exempt child care providers. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 1064 by Assemblymember Ian C. Calderon (D-Whittier) — California State University: student discretionary expenses survey. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1012 AB 1239 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) — Building standards: electric vehicle charging infrastructure. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1012 SB 318 by Senator Anthony Portantino (D-La Ca�ada Flintridge) — California State University: personal services contracts. A veto message can be found here.
2017-1011 AB 61 by Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena) – State Compensation Insurance Fund: board.
2017-1011 AB 811 by Assemblymember Mike A. Gipson (D-Carson) – Juveniles: rights: computing technology.
2017-1011 AB 1306 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) – California Cybersecurity Integration Center.
2017-1011 AB 1461 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) – Food facility employee: food handler cards.
2017-1010 AB 248 by Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D-San Bernardino) – Hazardous waste: facilities: permits.
2017-1010 AB 547 by Assemblymember Rocky Chávez (R-Oceanside) – California Prompt Payment Act: disabled veteran business enterprises.
2017-1010 AB 1179 by Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) – Hazardous waste facilities: inspections.
2017-1010 AB 1399 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) – Teacher credentialing: recognition of study in genocide, atrocities, and human rights.
2017-1010 SB 290 by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) – Marine mammals and sea turtles: entanglement and stranding: emergency rescue services: grants.
2017-1009 AB 36 by Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (D-Sherman Oaks) — Eligible fuel cell electrical generating facilities: energy metering.
2017-1009 AB 82 by Assemblymember Jose Medina (D-Riverside) — Vital records: diacritical marks.
2017-1009 AB 189 by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell) — School curriculum: model curriculum: service learning.
2017-1009 AB 402 by Assemblymember Tony Thurmond (D-Richmond) — Occupational safety and health standards: plume.
2017-1009 AB 715 by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) — Workgroup review of opioid pain reliever use and abuse.
2017-1009 AB 858 by Assemblymember Matthew M. Dababneh (D-Encino) — Pupil instruction: California Financial Literacy Initiative.
2017-1009 AB 1122 by Assemblymember Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) — Teachers: best practice guidance: dual-language and multilanguage educational programs.
2017-1009 SB 702 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — State vehicles: bicycles.
2017-1008 AB 621 by Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) — Classified employees: Classified School Employees Summer Furlough Fund.
2017-1008 SB 42 by Senator Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) — Public lands: Martins Beach: property acquisition.
2017-1007 AB 63 by Assemblymember Jim L. Frazier Jr. (D-Discovery Bay) – Driver’s licenses: instruction permits and provisional licenses.
2017-1007 AB 1190 by Assemblymember Jay P. Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake) – Department of Consumer Affairs: BreEZe system.
2017-1007 AB 1228 by Assemblymember Richard H. Bloom (D-Santa Monica) – Marine fisheries: experimental fishing permits.
2017-1007 AB 1591 by Assemblymember Marc Berman (D-Menlo Park) – Medi-Cal: federally qualified health centers and rural health centers: licensed professional clinical counselor.
2017-1006 AB 350 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) — Cannabis edibles: appealing to children.
2017-1006 AB 725 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — State beaches and parks: smoking ban.
2017-1006 AB 778 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Community development investment tax credits.
2017-1006 SB 289 by Senator Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) — Personal income taxes: gross income exclusion: reservation-sourced income.
2017-1006 SB 386 by Senator Steven M. Glazer (D-Orinda) — State beaches and parks: smoking ban.
2017-1004 AB 696 by Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) — Department of Transportation: Prunedale Bypass: County of Monterey: disposition of excess properties.
2017-1004 AB 810 by Assemblymember James M. Gallagher (R-Yuba City) — Local alternative transportation improvement program: Feather River crossing.
2017-1004 AB 1393 by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) — Reckless driving: speed contests: vehicle impoundment.
2017-1004 SB 513 by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) — Assault and battery of a public utility worker.
2017-1004 SB 784 by Senator Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) — Crimes: disorderly conduct: invasion of privacy.
2017-1003 AB 79 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Electrical generation: hourly greenhouse gas emissions: electricity from unspecified sources.
2017-1003 AB 1279 by Assemblymember Rudy Salas Jr. (D-Bakersfield) — Valley fever.
2017-1003 AB 1358 by Assemblymember Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) — State parks: California Admission Day: discounted admission.
2017-1002 AB 524 by Assemblymember Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals) — Public utilities: fines and settlements: 2015 Butte Fire.
2017-1002 AB 850 by Assemblymember Ed Chau (D-Monterey Park) — Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability Commission.
2017-1002 AB 859 by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) — Elders and dependent adults: abuse or neglect.
2017-0928 AB 532 by Assemblymember Marie Waldron (R-Escondido) — Drug courts: drug and alcohol assistance.
2017-0928 SB 596 by Senator Henry Stern (D-Agoura Hills) — Civics education: Student Empowerment Commission.
2017-0925 AB 154 by Assemblymember Marc B. Levine (D-Marin County) — Prisoners: mental health treatment.
2017-0911 AB 662 by Assemblymember Steven Choi (R-Irvine) — Restitution: tracking.
2017-0911 SB 663 by Senator Jim W. Nielsen (R-Gerber) — Packages and labels of cannabis or cannabis products: children.

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Open Letter to Gov Jerry Brown

October 12, 2017

The Honorable Governor Jerry Brown
State Capitol, Suite 1173
Sacramento, California 95814
tel 916-445-2841
fax 916-558-3160

Dear Governor Brown:

Veto SB.649 — Fire Hazard

As firestorms rage across California, I implore you to veto a bill that is currently on your desk: SB.649. This bill carries the promise of a hidden and unprecedented fire hazard. In this moment, it is preventable.

This bill has met with increasing opposition as more cities, counties, and residents have come to understand what SB.649 truly represents. As you know, more than 300 cities and 47 of 58 counties have told you they do not want to relinquish the last vestiges of local control over Telecom in exchange for a capped compensation formula.

Many residents are aware of the hazards of 4G LTE/AWS and 5G millimeter waves boosted through previously impenetrable barriers by phased array software. Our own military science and well as Soviet science shows harm: eyes, skin and testes are subject to damage from these high-frequency microwaves.

Cities, counties, and residents are united in strong opposition to SB.649, yet they come from different perspectives. There is a third perspective that begs for your veto of this bill, and that is the design of the cell towers that will be seen every five to ten homes, in front of our schools, hospitals, places of worship, places of work, in public parks, along median strips, and along our roadways.

These new cell towers have been estimated to number 50,000 for our state, though that number will rise, unchecked, as the 50,000 so-called “Small Cell” cell towers cannot fulfill the Telecom firms’ service promises. Indeed, the so-called 50,000 cell tower projection is only 1.25% of California’s 4,000,000 utility/light poles. A more accurate projection would be one to two million utility/light pole cell towers across California in the near-term. This projection is based on an August 2017 California Public Records Act (CPRA) request from the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD), which shows 142,000 utility/light poles in the SMUD service area, which serves 1.4 million people.

Each one of these cell towers represents a fire hazard. The flaw is in the design, and if these towers were currently in place as fires rage across our state, we would have explosion after explosion as fire reached the backup systems for each cell tower. Here’s why:

  1. Every cell tower needs backup batteries or a backup generator, and many of these generators will be full of diesel fuel. There will be many more such generators than the Telecom firms have led us to believe.
  2. Federal rule 6409 allows each Telecom carrier to come back the day after a so-called “Small Cell” site is approved and add 10-foot height and width extensions including more antennas up to six cubic feet, or additional 35 cubic foot refrigerator-sized cabinets on the ground next to the pole.
  3. Each of these cabinets has a backup battery or generator; many of these generators will contain diesel fuel, particularly those in rural areas.

In addition to rural areas, AT&T cell towers are more likely to use diesel backup generators in hilly areas, suburban and exurban communities as they will carry FirstNet signals.

California will, therefore, be dotted not just with cell towers every five to ten homes, but with batteries and diesel generators waiting for the next firestorm to hit. You have accurately warned those of us who live in this state, in this country, and around the world that climate change is real, the earth’s temperature is rising, and more fires will result. This is a fact of life for us, and the inferno we are witnessing at this moment drives home the need to take precautions where we can. Vetoing this bill is absolutely essential to preventing future hellholes.

I urge you to not only veto this bill, but to consider an alternative which legislatively was this state’s first choice – fiber optics.

Further, I would urge you to call for an investigation as to why consumers’ payments for fiber were diverted to expedite the wireless build out. AT&T and Verizon have admitted that the funds for building much of the Wireless infrastructure has come from the fees paid by customers to upgrade Wireline from copper to fiber optic cables.

Fiber optics were part of the 1993 “California First” plan calling for spending $16 billion to rewire the state with fiber optics cable to replace copper wiring. Fiber has already been laid underneath the centers of streets and along gas lines in most cities and even rural areas in the late 1990s. This is the time to examine fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) as a utility right.

Cell towers with built-in fire risks in every facet of our lives are not needed when we have a safe, secure, high-speed, reliable, energy-efficient option: FTTP. In truth, this option may be not only a safer alternative, but our right — legislated and paid for.

Please veto SB.649.

Thank You, Gov. Brown, for Coming to Santa Rosa

What I Saw Yesterday at the Community Meeting at Santa Rosa High from 2:30 to 5:30 pm:

This is great information from start to finish. If you could not attend, please view the videos at the following links (unedited video).

Thank you Governor Brown for joining U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris at a Community meeting in Santa Rosa, hosted by CA Senator Mike McGuire and Assemblymember Jim Wood and partners including the City of Santa Rosa Fire Department, Sonoma County Board of Supervisors, CAL FIRE, the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services and the City of Santa Rosa. You spoke to the community with sincerity and conviction in recognizing the tragic loss of loved ones and property in the largest fire in California history, in providing the real assistance needed to continue the fight against the devastating fires still burning across the State and asking each of us to call your office (not your cell phone) if things are not proceeding in the recovery, as planned.

Statewide Fire Map October 15 2017

Here are some other observations from yesterday’s meeting:

  1. We Don’t Need to Make America Great Again . . . AMERICA IS ALREADY GREAT; it’s been that way for a long time. The evidence was the tremendous 10/14/17 Community Meeting in Santa Rosa attended by victims of the tragic California fires that started on 10/8/17 (and are still burning) and our elected leaders and emergency responders who responded to this disaster with precision, action and wisdom.
  2. The victims of this fire showed up yesterday in every sense of the phrase. They supported each other, asked relevant, thoughtful questions, and shared good information about available rentals and ways to get assistance. There was no whining or complaining — just Americans focused on solving problems, continuing to fight the fires, mourning the loss of loved ones, homes and treasured items and focused on rebuilding. All of us from We the People of the United States were the stars of yesterday’s meeting.
  3. Yesterday, We the People expressed our gratitude to the thousands of men, women, military, civilians (and even inmates) from many different states who have responded to set up camps and fight this fire across many fronts, line by line. I met a crew from Oregon checking in to the Motel 6 in West Sacramento at 2:00 am early Friday morning for three hours of sleep before getting deployed in the morning. Our hats go off to each and every one of you who are out there fighting the flames and smoke for all of us.
  4. Our elected officials, hit all the right points in conducting a smart and sensitive meeting that provided very relevant information, gave everyone a chance to ask questions (mine was just about the last question at 5:15 pm) and provided great perspective from responses to previous disasters. Senator McGuire and Assemblymember Wood stayed to the very end. Thank you, gentlemen.

Before the meeting started, I was in the second row. As Governor Jerry Brown entered, he asked for my name, shook my hand and spoke to me briefly before taking his seat in the front row. We discussed how communications during the first few critical hours of a disaster need to be robust and not fragile. We discussed that Wireline not Wireless communications technology performed better in this fire disaster and that One Big Dig for California i.e. undergrounding Fiber-Optic, Coaxial and Copper lines in the rebuild would make this public utility asset more defensible from attack from future disasters or terrorism. Finally, I mentioned that a bill on his desk right now, SB.649 — Wireless Tools of Commerce, would present a new, potent fire hazard to every community in California — the 35 cubic foot ancillary equipment boxes next to each utility-pole-mounted cell phone antenna would contain back up power systems (lithium-ion batteries, like the ones in Tesla cars that catch fire, or propane/diesel generators) that would become bombs on the sidewalks in a fire. I asked him to veto this unnecessary Bill, SB.649, because it would be a fire hazard and take away local communities’ abilities to plan and execute the best future for their residents.

My Questions Transcribed from From 10/14/17 Community Meeting Video — Questions That Still Needs Answers

My name is Paul and I am from Petaluma, Our city loves Santa Rosa and wants to help you in anyway that we can . . . I have a question for all of us, for Senator Harris and for Governor Brown.

  1. The first question is, if you need reliable notification for emergency and disasters, why can’t we all retain our landlines that are copper and they are the ones that work in a power outage, because the Wireless Nixle alerts and all of the other Wireless means of communication instantly go down as soon as the fire arrives. Your landlines will continue to work because the [remote power] on these copper lines still operates [during a disaster].
  2. I have a question for Kamala Harris: will you help us to report AT&T for price gouging on those landline services that prevents people from keeping this very import emergency service. As a carrier of last resort, AT&T must provide these landlines to everyone who wants one [and do so at an affordable price]. It’s the 175% price increase over eight years that pushes people away.
    [APPLAUSE](Note: actually, as you can read here the price of the basic AT&T California state utility phone service went up 138% from 2008-2016 and ancillary services went up 60%-525%).
  3. And finally for Governor Brown, you have legislation on your desk right now that is a fire hazard. If SB.649 [Wireless Tools of Commerce] gets signed by Governor Brown, it would place at residents’ doorsteps — right next to every utility pole in every residential neighborhood — a refrigerator-sized 35-cubic foot ancillary equipment cabinet which will contain lithium ion batteries as backup [power for the proposed cell phone antenna to be installed on these utility poles] or possibly propane or diesel generators. These will explode in any fire.

What I am suggesting is that, as we rebuild, we put all of this infrastructure underground to make it safe for everybody in residential neighborhoods [for any future fire or earthquake and we do not install the unnecessary, fragile and not-dependable-in-a-disaster, so-called “Small Cell” cell towers in front of homes in residential neighborhoods. We would be better served by undergrounded Wireline fiber-optic internet to every home — the fastest, highest-bandwidth, most reliable, most secure and most energy-efficient way to close the Digital Divide.]
[APPLAUSE]

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SB.649 Vetoed by Gov. Brown

From the League of California Cities:

While over 300 cities opposed SB 649 (Hueso), the telecom bill, the Governor’s decision was uncertain until midnight on Sunday, Oct. 15. City officials were relieved to discover the Governor vetoed the measure stating: “I believe that the interest which localities have in managing rights of way requires a more balanced solution than the one achieved in this bill.”  The League thanks the Governor for recognizing the value of local authority in this important policy area. We also thank the many legislators who abstained or voted against the bill.

From the San Jose Mercury News:

California: Gov. Jerry Brown Vetoes Bill Easing Permits on Cell Phone Towers

http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/10/16/california-gov-jerry-brown-vetoes-bill-easing-permits-on-cell-phone-towers/

By TRACY SEIPEL | tseipel@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: October 16, 2017 at 12:25 am | UPDATED: October 16, 2017 at 10:50 am

SEIPEL:

Gov. Jerry Brown late Sunday vetoed Senate Bill 649, which proposed to scale back local government permit processes for antennas and equipment for wireless services . . . that would have made it easier to install microwave radiation antennas.

Senate Bill 649, authored by Sen. Ben Hueso, D-San Diego, and co-authored by Assemblyman Bill Quirk, D-Hayward, proposed to scale back the permitting process for antennas and other equipment in an effort to meet demand for wireless services.

In a veto message, Brown wrote that while he saw the value in “extending this ​innovative technology rapidly and efficiently,” the bill took too much control away from cities and counties.

The bill was primarily supported by the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association, the main trade group for the U.S. wireless telecommunications industry. The group said SB 649 would help boost the economy.

Yet the bill had alarmed many local government officials around the state. They worried if SB 649 became law, it would cap how much they could charge phone companies for leases to $250 a year. Others raised concerns about the risk to public health from cell towers.

Not risks, but proven hazards. Return for details, later today . . .

SEIPEL:

Grass-roots activists and scientists said that if SB 649 became law, a projected 50,000 new
cellular antennas would be installed on public buildings and utility poles in California neighborhoods, creating a risk to public health because of the dangers of radiation and electromagnetic frequencies emitted by cell towers.

Not 50,000 towers but two to three million towers. Return for details, later today . . .

SEIPEL:

“I am thrilled that Governor Brown showed strength and stood up to this powerful wireless industry and said no — you are not going to do this in my state!” Ellen Marks, a San Francisco-based leader of the California Alliance for Safer Technology, wrote in an email after Brown’s decision was posted online. “This is a tremendous victory for democracy,” said Marks, whose group is trying to keep cellular antennas away from homes, schools, offices and parks.

An industry spokeswoman said the bill maintained local authority for “small cell” antennas, particularly in historical or coastal areas, and that governments could recover capital and administrative costs.

This is industry misinformation. Return for details, later today . . .

SEIPEL:

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo was among several Bay Area leaders who voiced their opposition to the bill.

Quirk and Hueso called the health concerns overblown, saying the cell towers are safe.

This is more industry misinformation. Return for details, later today . . .

SEIPEL:

Joel Moskowitz, director of the Center for Family and Community Health at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, was heartened by Brown’s veto, coming on the heels of a federal appeals court ruling last week that supports Berkeley’s landmark cell phone “right to know” ordinance. The city law, which took effect in 2016, requires retailers to warn cellphone customers that wearing their device next to the body could result in exposure to radio frequency radiation exceeding federal guidelines. Cellphone retailers must either post the message or provide a paper copy to anyone who buys or leases phones.

“The Governor’s veto of SB 649 protects Californians from exposure to millimeter radiation from as many as 50,000 new cell towers,” Moskowitz wrote in an email Sunday night. He noted that more than 180 scientists and doctors have signed a declaration calling for a moratorium on the increase of cell antennas required for 5G deployment, “as we are concerned about the health effects including neurological impacts, infertility, and cancer.”

The science concludes substantial harm from exposures to pulsed, data-modulated Wireless Radiofrequency Microwave Radiation (‘RF microwave radiation’). Return for details, later today . . .

CA Mayors Oppose SB.649

Veto of Cell Antenna Bill, SB.649, Urged By Five California Mayors

September 22, 2017
by Dominic Fracassa, San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.
Email: dfracassa@sfchronicle.com
Twitter: @dominicfracassa

The mayors of five California cities — San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, Oakland and Bakersfield — urged Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday in a letter to veto a bill that would shift much of the power to regulate the placement of wireless communication equipment from local municipalities to the state.

Senate Bill No. 649 (SB.649), introduced by Sen. Ben Hueso, D-San Diego, establishes a uniform set of rules that cities and towns would have to follow when considering a company’s request to install small-cell devices — compact antennas usually affixed to street lights and telephone poles [that also include refrigerator-size ancillary equipment boxes on the sidewalk next to every pole with an antenna].

Telecommunications companies such as Verizon and AT&T say small-cell antennas are essential tools in meeting growing demand for mobile bandwidth, particularly in dense, urban areas located far from large cellular towers. There are perhaps as many as 10,000 small-cell antennas in San Francisco alone, city officials estimate.

Hueso, who could not be reached for comment Thursday, has framed the bill as a way to streamline the permitting process, allowing companies to deploy the devices faster and improve their services. Creating a statewide framework for small-cell permitting, proponents of the bill argue, is preferable to the cumbersome process of getting permission to deploy the devices city by city.

But the legislation, which Senate passed last week, has been assailed by critics as an end-run around local sovereignty that sharply curbs the ability of cities to manage public property.

The five mayors said in a letter to Brown:

“This bill quite literally takes the authority over local permitting away from local governments and hands it to a private, for-profit industry,”

Many cities, including San Francisco, are also concerned about the prospect of losing out on millions of dollars of revenue because the bill caps the amount cities can charge to host the antennas at $250 per installation each year, in addition to other fees. Currently, cities could charge higher rates for antennas installed in high-population areas.

San Francisco’s Public Utilities Commission estimates the city would lose $33 million over 10 years if Brown signs the bill. The bill would also throw thousands of existing small-cell agreements into question, according to Barbara Hale, the assistant general manager for power at the PUC.

“We have a process, and it’s been working,” Hale said. “The bill is a huge overreach. It puts the historical agreements into question and constrains what cities can do going forward, to the detriment of the cities.”

In April, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution opposing the bill. More than 300 cities statewide have formally opposed SB.649, according to the League of California Cities, transforming an otherwise tedious bill into a power struggle pitting the state and local governments against each other.

The letter from the five mayors state:

“This measure is a broad overreach of our local authority and will have significant negative impacts on our communities.

Our cities have developed reasonable regulations that balance the desire for rapid expansion of services with the need to protect public health, safety and quality of life”

CA State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, voted in favor of the after several amendments aimed at protecting “local decision-making” were added, Weiner said in a text message. Those amendments included provisions that would allow cities to establish design standards for the antennas and set aside space on city poles exclusively for municipal use.

Weiner said:

“The author accepted my amendments, so I voted for the bill. Asking for amendments and then voting ‘no’ after they are accepted guarantees people won’t work with you on amendments in the future.”

Experts Worldwide Oppose SB.649
TO: MEMBERS OF THE CALIFORNIA ASSEMBLY FROM EXPERTS WORLDWIDE IN OPPOSITION TO SB 649
September 5, 2017
To Honorable California Assemblymembers:
Within a matter of days Senate Bill 649, Wireless Tools of Commerce (‘SB 649’) will come before the Assembly for a vote. This bill denies citizens and local governments the right to a voice as to where 50,000 or more new cell towers (more likely 2 to 3 million new cell towers), spaced every two to ten homes, will soon be placed.
The Telecomm Industry will be erecting towers in the public rights-of-way, placing them on utility poles and lampposts in front of our homes, schools, places of worship and businesses. There will be no escaping the cell towers or the radiation emitted from them. SB 649 fails to mandate monitoring of radiation levels from these cell towers at a time when the FCC is closing their regional monitoring offices. A failure to monitor is a failure to regulate.
SB 649 has flown through the Senate and Assembly committees thus far despite opposition from the cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Jose as well as 294 other cities, the Teamsters, AARP, Environmental Working Group, Environmental Health Trust, Communications Workers of America, the League of Cities, California Brain Tumor Association, and a host of environmental and justice groups, and leaders of 47 California counties.
We are asking you to vote NO on SB 649. There is a substantial body of evidence that this technology is harmful to humans and the environment. The 5G millimeter wave is known to heat the eyes, skin and testes, and the ubiquitous placement of these towers will expose California’s population 24/7. The most vulnerable among us — the unborn, children, the infirm, the elderly and the disabled will be affected. It is also expected that populations of bees and birds will drastically decline.

Ironically, the strongest among us, the firefighters, received an exemption from SB 649. After years of their stations being targeted for cell tower placement, SPECT brain scan testing among a group of California firefighters revealed abnormalities that included cognitive impairment. This translated to firefighters occasionally getting lost while driving their emergency equipment through the streets in the same town they grew up in. Infertility and miscarriages plagued the department. Perhaps most shocking of all, the cell tower near the station was measured at 1/1000th of the allowed limit set by the FCC.
We support the fire station exemption of SB 649. If the firefighters are impaired, we are all at risk. Yet this exemption protects the strongest of the strong and forces the most vulnerable among us to live with the greatest exposure. We find these well-documented health hazards both real and unacceptable.
In May 2016 the National Toxicology Program, part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, released its final first-wave results of a $25,000,000 study on laboratory animals which showed a link between the RF/MW radiation and two types of cancer, prompting the American Cancer Society’s chief medical officer to note that the results “mark a paradigm shift in our understanding of radiation and cancer risk.” The NTP study also found DNA breakage in brain cells, confirming multiples studies dating back to 1994. The NTP study follows the 2011 classification by IARC, the World Health Organization’s cancer committee, of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (RF/EMF) — including cell tower radiation — as possibly carcinogenic to humans. This puts RF/MW radiation in the same category as DDT.
Our children are not just our progeny but the future of our state and our country. Keeping them safe must be a priority. Our homes must remain our sanctuaries. We currently have the option to turn wireless off at night, or to not use it at all. With SB 649 there is no “off” switch. Not only will SB 649 tie our hands as parents and private citizens, but this bill usurps ALL local control.
In a time that begs for strong compassionate leaders, we are turning to you to reject this bill, and work with independent health and technology experts from around the world to devise a better, safer solution (fiber-optic to every business and home) so that we can stay connected and protected.
Respectfully,
Lennart Hardell, MD, PhD
Senior Consultant
Department of Oncology
University Hospital
Orebro, Sweden
Frank Clegg
CEO, Canadians for Safe Technology (C4ST)
Oakville, Canada
Former President, Microsoft Canada
Cindy Sage
Sage Associates
Co-Editor, BioInitiative Reports
Montecito, California
Martin Blank, PhD
Department of Physiology (Retired)
Columbia University
New York City, New York
Anthony B. Miller, MD
Professor Emeritus
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
University of Toronto
Toronto, Canada
Devra Davis, PhD, MPH
Visiting Professor, Hebrew University Hadassah Medical Center
Ondokuz Mayis University Medical School
President, Environmental Health Trust
Teton Village, Wyoming 83025
Beatrice A. Golomb, MD, PhD
Professor of Medicine
UCSD School of Medicine
San Diego, California
Cindy Russell, MD

Physicians for Safe Technology
Menlo Park, California
Susan Foster
Medical Writer & Organizer
SPECT Brain Scan Study of California Firefighter (2004)
Honorary Firefighter
San Diego Fire Department
Rancho Santa Fe, California
Ellie Marks
Director, California Brain Tumor Association
San Francisco, California
Andrew A. Marino, PhD, JD
Professor, Department of Neurology (Retried)
LSU Medical School
Shreveport, Louisiana
Jerry L. Phillips, PhD
Executive Director, Excel Centers
Professor Attendant, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
University of Colorado
Colorado Springs, Colorado
Martin L. Pall, PhD
Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry and Basic Medical Sciences
Washington State University
Pullman, Washington
Link to 2017-0905-SB649-Experts-Worldwide-Opposition-Letter.pdf
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