Tuesday night, Gov. Gavin Newsom made a shocking U-turn: He withdrew the proposed ballot measure he and Democratic legislative leaders just announced as a smarter way to tackle retail theft and fentanyl trafficking.
Their measure was supposed to win voters' favor over a November ballot measure backed by Republican lawmakers, law enforcement groups and prosecutors to roll back Proposition 47 — a 2014 measure that is blamed by some for retail thefts.
Newsom acted after the Democratic bill cleared the Assembly's public safety committee on a party-line vote earlier Tuesday, but also after a coalition that supported the original proposal pushed back against the Democratic measure and accused the governor and Democratic leaders of political dirty tricks and election interference.
The governor, however, said in a statement that he had the votes in the Legislature to get the measure on the ballot, but not enough time to pass the amendments to make sure it passed. Read more on Newsom's reversal and the hot takes in our story.
Besides finalizing the November ballot before starting their month-long summer recess tonight, legislators are also busy passing or considering several key bills, including:
LGBTQ notification ban: After a spicy Assembly floor debate last week, a bill prohibiting school districts from enacting policies requiring faculty to disclose to parents if their child identifies as LGBTQ or non-binary now awaits Gov. Newsom's decision.
As CalMatters K-12 education reporter Carolyn Jones explains, the bill originated after several school boards imposed parental notification (or forced outing) policies last year, despite pushback from state officials. Opponents of the bill, including Sonja Shaw, the president of the Chino Valley Unified school board who led the board's charge to adopt a notification policy, vowed to continue to fight for parental rights: "The political cartel may have won this round, but they will not win the war," she said.
Power companies vs. CEQA: The state's signature environmental law, known as CEQA, requires developers to pay for impact reports that can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and take years to complete. But power companies argue that CEQA prevents them from speedily upgrading their transmission lines — something they need to do to meet the state's clean-energy goals, explains CalMatters Digital Democracy reporter Ryan Sabalow.
One bill, which the Senate Environmental Quality Committee plans to consider today, would streamline the CEQA process for power companies and exempt mandates for power grid updates on state owned-lands, including parks. It has become a particular sticking point for environmentalists who oppose the bill. Said the executive director of the Anza-Borrego Foundation: "Our campgrounds, our hiking trails, our sacred cultural preserves, endangered wildlife habitat, dark night skies and more. Nothing will be protected."
Gambling battle: Tribal governments on Tuesday won the latest round in a high-stakes and big-money legislative fight over the future of gambling in California. As Ryan and CalMatters data journalist Jeremia Kimelman reported in March, tribal governments that operate major California casinos have been trying for years to get legal standing to sue their competitors, private card rooms. The tribes assert the card clubs are allegedly offering illegal table games such as blackjack.
Tribes have thrown their collective lobbying might and campaign dollars behind Sen. Josh Newman's Senate Bill 549, which would give the tribes a brief window to sue the card clubs. The cardrooms have responded to the Fullerton Democrat's bill with an unprecedented lobbying blitz, spending millions.
On Tuesday, more than 100 different cardroom owners, their employees and local officials whose cities' revenues are tied to card clubs unsuccessfully urged the Assembly Government Organizational Committee to kill the measure. The committee voted 15-1 to advance the bill to the appropriations committee. Six members declined to vote, which counts the same as voting "no."
Artificial intelligence: The Assembly's judiciary committee passed Sen. Scott Wiener's bill to regulate AI that uses massive datasets to train itself and produce content including text and images. The measure calls for establishing security protocols and would hold developers accountable for violations with a civil penalty.
In a statement, the San Francisco Democrat said that while AI can bring "enormous benefits," California has a responsibility to "reduce the risk of severe harm."
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