Slew of California laws take effect Jan. 1
By Associated Press
SACRAMENTO — California’s historic drought prompted the Legislature into action in 2014, leading lawmakers to regulate groundwater for the first time and override homeowners associations that fine members for replacing lawns with more drought-tolerant landscaping.
The most populous state also becomes the first to set a “yes means yes” standard for sex between college students and the first to ban single-use plastic bags, a law the plastic bag industry is seeking to overturn through a voter referendum.
Those are among more than 900 bills passed in 2014 by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown, who also vetoed 143.
Most of the laws take effect Jan. 1. That includes a bill allowing driver’s licenses for people who are in the country illegally, another that will influence the 2016 ballot by modernizing California’s century-old initiative process and others addressing everything from teacher tenure to massage parlors.
Also taking effect with the new year is a ballot initiative approved by voters in 2008 that restricts the confinement of egg-laying hens, breeding sows and veal calves.
The state’s biggest ongoing story of the year led to a series of bills designed to have a lasting effect on California’s water supply.
In the midst of a third year of drought, the Legislature and governor closed a gap in the state’s water oversight that dated to the Gold Rush days, passing and signing bills to regulate groundwater use for the first time.
Although the drought is beginning to ease with early rain and snow, Brown’s signing of SB1168, SB1319 and AB1739 by Assemblyman Roger Dickinson, D-Sacramento, and Sen. Fran Pavley, D-Agoura Hills, ends the state’s pump-as-you-please policy. It also brings California’s groundwater rules in line with those of other Western states.
Specifically, the bills require water districts and other local entities to develop plans to manage their groundwater and allow the state to intervene if necessary.
Brown’s call on Californians to reduce water use by 20 percent led some residents to run afoul of their homeowner association rules. Lawmakers responded by approving bills that prevent associations from punishing residents who cut back on water use, allow plants to die or install drought-resistant landscaping.
“There are moments in legislative time when folks sort of rise to the occasion and we get something done on water,” said Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the State Water Resources Control Board.
She also noted that lawmakers worked together to craft a bipartisan, $7.5 billion water bond measure that voters approved in November. It will let the state expand storage and develop water management plans.
With the new year also comes a first-in-the-nation standard for investigating sexual assaults on college campuses.
SB967, by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, requires “an affirmative, conscious and voluntary agreement to engage in sexual activity,” meaning silence or a lack of resistance can no longer be deemed consent.
The California State University and University of California systems already adopted similar consent standards, which will now apply to all public and private post-secondary schools that receive state money for student financial aid.
The statewide plastic bag ban, SB270 by former state Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Los Angeles, will be phased in starting in July at large grocery stores and supermarkets, unless opponents force a delay while voters consider repealing it. It could be May before the secretary of state’s office — headed by newly elected Padilla — determines whether the industry gathered enough valid signatures to place a referendum on the November 2016 ballot.
Proposition 2, the 2008 ballot initiative restricting the caging of certain farm animals, goes further than any other state when it is coupled with a law signed by former governor Arnold Schwarzenegger that extends the space requirements for egg-laying hens to out-of-state suppliers, said Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive officer of The Humane Society of the United States. The measures helped trigger “a cascade of legislative and corporate reforms” nationwide, he said.
Other laws taking effect include:
- AB215 by Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan, D-Alamo, which makes it easier for school districts to fire abusive teachers. The bill gained traction as a compromise between teachers unions and some education-reform groups after a headline-grabbing case of misconduct in Los Angeles highlighted how difficult it can be to remove problem teachers. The Los Angeles Unified School District paid elementary school teacher Mark Berndt $40,000 to drop the appeal of his dismissal after he was charged with spoon-feeding semen to his students and other lewd acts.
- SB505 by Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, D-Santa Barbara, which requires law enforcement agencies to develop policies that encourage officers to search the state’s database of gun purchases as part of routine welfare checks. The bill was prompted by sheriff’s deputies failure to detect the danger posed by a man who weeks later embarked on a deadly rampage in May near the University of California, Santa Barbara.
- AB1147, by three Democratic lawmakers, allows local governments to revoke the license of any massage parlor that violates the law. It is intended to make it harder for massage parlors to operate as fronts for prostitution.
- AB2048 by Assemblyman Brian Dahle, R-Bieber, gives property owners in fire-prone areas a few breaks on paying the state’s annual $150 fire-prevention fee. It eliminates a requirement that the fee will increase each year based on inflation, lowers the 20 percent late payment penalty to 10 percent and permits exemptions for homes destroyed by natural disasters.
- SB926 by Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, gives sex-abuse victims more time to pursue criminal charges against offenders. It raises the age ceiling from 28 to 40 for childhood sexual abuse victims to file criminal complaints.
Odd; no mention of AB32. Guess the state is trying to hide it?
Correct, the State wrote this article, and left out all of the laws they are trying to hide.
Not sure what you mean about AB32 being hidden? It has been in effect since it was signed into law in September of 2006.
What I meant was, it takes effect this January, yet nobody is mentioning it. I KNOW it was passed several years ago… that is irrelevant. The point is, it will start costing you and me a lot of money starting in a few days. Dead silence from our noble leaders. Because it makes them look so very progressive? And to hell with the working man?
It actually is relevant, because it already has been in effect, not just passed. Since 2006. Are we talking about the same AB32? The Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, signed by Arnold Schwarzenegger? Implementation has been ongoing for the past eight years. This article is about new laws taking effect Jan 1, AB32 doesn’t fall into that category because its already in action. I don’t think there’s any conspiracy here to hide it.
srsly, no 1 cares about the content of the article, what year it is, etc and didn’t you read that the working man is going to hell and that the article was written by the State? Please, stick to the parroting of the political rhetoric. AB32 – AB is part of ur name. That is a liberal conspiracy. Justass will back me up on this one. ~
Sorry, the GAS TAX part starts January. Everybody’s been so happy about affordable gas, I thought that maybe even the leftists would be concerned about the price going up again.
But no, it’s all ideology for you guys. The only way government in general, and California in particular, deals with “problems” is to make the people poorer by stealing more of your money for itself.
Happy New year. Enjoy your enslavement.
The invention of the sexual “contract” has to be the most unenforceable garbage I think ever written into a bill and imagine the wasted police resources for it, this is almost as bad as the multi-trans-gender choice of the day being encouraged for school children relating to sports and bathrooms and the trouble that is causing already. Lunacy of the left and new taxes and no real issues addressed, except for the effort at the destruction of the rule of law and order, like open borders and now instead of the law being enforced, give out free drivers licenses and welfare and voting for people illegally in the country, the word illegal being key, along with the brilliant leftist idea to not build new prisons and unleash hordes of career criminals by sending them to county jails and then letting them out by the tens of thousands for crime sprees out of control along with the real point of nothing of substance is accomplished from leftists when in power.
Wow justas, looks like you and dog are in for another year of whining and bemoaning the fact you live in calif and everyone is out to get you. Its still not too late to hi tail it to texas where nirvana awaits you and your idealogies with open arms. Happy trails…
THIS IS A TAX not a fee and we should not be paying it !
AB2048 by Assemblyman Brian Dahle, R-Bieber, gives property owners in fire-prone areas a few breaks on paying the state’s annual $150 fire-prevention fee. It eliminates a requirement that the fee will increase each year based on inflation, lowers the 20 percent late payment penalty to 10 percent and permits exemptions for homes destroyed by natural disasters.
Not so much, because the good news is people are voting liberals out of power in 99% of the country and locally people think with their bank accounts and the smart ones, see the Welcome to Nevada signs, and will spend their money where it is wanted and not where it is taken for redistribution for all of the leftist lunacy from your favorite holiday cartoon characters and laughing stock like the multi-million dollar tax payer paid vacationing Whacky Baracky Clause and his pal Old Saint. Senile Jerry who has probably never had a real job outside of the public feeding trough.
This new tax is punishing drivers for using gas. It’s as ridiculous as Moonbutt is senile. I will be buying my gas in Nevada.
Justice: Well put.
97.2% of the numbers justass uses are fabricated.
that’s right, ‘kits’ : you really do not get it. just reminding you that it’s time to get off fossil fuel, just as a higher tax on cigarettes will remind cigarette smokers that they are selfish and indulgent. of course, it’s likely they would probably ‘go to nevada’ also, as opposed to ‘getting it’.
How much fossil fuels do you think it takes to make those batteries for electric cars? And how long to they remain in a landfill or something after being discarded? I DO get that, unlike the hypocrites who use them.
Kits is ignorant because:
Point A: Batteries in electric cars are very valuable, and are recycled and taken care of.
Point B: They are obviously unfamiliar with the concept of a Life Cycle Analysis.
Justass is just that just an a$$
99.9 % of what j u s t a n a $ $ spews is fabricated and the rest he dosent even get. Finger pointing is as easy as picking your nose. He seems to be a pro at both.
hahah i am so glad the nickname justass has caught on.
it is the second best thing that happened here in 2014, the first was someone telling the most rapid conservatives to knock it off because they were making all conservatives look bad.
You have to acknowledge the lack of coverage to the upcoming 10c plus tax going into affect. I don’t agree with the fear mongering 40c – $1.30 claims.
Personally if we truly want to address the issue I think we need to stop paying people to have children.
Bingo, Sunriser… point taken.
Kae can you post a more in debth article on the well water regulations on land owners?
Thank you
Groundwater stories:
http://blogs.kqed.org/science/2014/09/17/what-to-know-about-californias-new-groundwater-law/
http://www.latimes.com/local/political/la-me-pc-groundwater-regulation-bills-20140916-story.html
LTN staff