Note: This Document Is Updated Quarterly, and Lists Contributions Given Since January 1, 2016
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Joint Handbook 2019-20
California Legislature 2019-20 Handbook “I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” I GAVIN NEWSOM GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA III ELENI KOUNALAKIS LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR IV TONI G. ATKINS PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE V ANTHONY RENDON SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY VI KEVIN MULLIN SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE OF THE ASSEMBLY VII Memoranda VIII CALIFORNIA SENATE AT SACRAMENTO Biographies and Photographs of SENATE AND ASSEMBLY MEMBERS AND OFFICERS List of SENATE AND ASSEMBLY MEMBERS, OFFICERS, ATTACHES, COMMITTEES and RULES OF THE TWO HOUSES and Standards of Conduct of the Senate Together With a List of the Members of Congress, State Officers, Etc. 2019–20 REGULAR SESSION (2020 Edition) Convened December 3, 2018 Published September 1, 2020 ERIKA CONTRERAS Secretary of the Senate SUE PARKER Chief Clerk of the Assembly IX SENATE LEADERSHIP Lt. Governor/President of the Senate Eleni Kounalakis (D) President pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins (D) Majority Floor Leader Robert M. Hertzberg (D) Assistant Majority Floor Leader Mike McGuire (D) Majority Whip Nancy Skinner (D) Assistant Majority Whips Maria Elena Durazo (D) and Scott Wiener (D) Chair of the Democratic Caucus Connie M. Leyva (D) Republican Leader Shannon Grove (R) Chair of the Republican Caucus Brian Jones (R) Senate Rules Committee: Toni G. Atkins (D) (Chair); Scott Wilk (R) (Vice Chair); Patricia C. Bates (R); William W. Monning (D); Richard Roth (D). X CONTENTS PAGE California Representatives in Congress ....................... 13 Directory of State Officers ........................................... 16 Constitutional Officers ............................................ -
California State Assembly
January 25, 2021 Honorable Anthony Rendon Honorable Toni G. Atkins Speaker of the Assembly President pro Tempore of the Senate State Capitol, Room 219 State Capitol, Room 205 Sacramento, CA 95814 Sacramento, CA 95814 Dear Speaker Rendon and President Pro Tem Atkins, We respectfully request that the Legislature convene a joint, bi-partisan committee to hold oversight hearings regarding the Newsom Administration’s unwillingness to share COVID-19 data with the public. To regain the public’s trust, it is crucial that we share data with the public, including the formulas and calculations that are being used to guide the Governor’s decisions related to responding to the pandemic. This information is critical to understanding the reasons behind the abysmal vaccine rollout, as well as the seemingly-random issuance of stay-at-home orders and business closures. It is important to hold the Administration accountable when so many lives are at stake. During the Governor’s recent stay-at-home order, his Administration has yet to share the data relied upon to lift the order in the Greater Sacramento region, or information in the recent statewide lift, despite the fact that ICU capacity in some regions is far below the 15% threshold he established when he imposed the order. This has confused communities, counties and businesses, leaving them unprepared to take immediate action. The Administration’s justification that the data and modeling are too complicated is both inadequate and quite frankly, insulting. The public has the right to know what is behind his decision-making process. Specifically we believe the public has a right to the following information: Data, metrics, calculations, and formulas being used to make decisions regarding stay-at- home orders and vaccine distribution. -
California Elections and Community College Measures November 2016 Election Round up November 14, 2016
California Elections and Community College Measures November 2016 Election Round Up November 14, 2016 OVERVIEW While the election was last week, ballots are still being counted and final certified results are due to the Secretary of State for presidential electors on December 6, 2016, and for all other state contests on December 9, 2016. The Secretary of State will certify the statewide results by December 16, 2016. Until the results are certified, the outcome of close races may change from what is presented below. Focusing on results affecting California Community Colleges, the election provided mostly positive results including the passage of the statewide bond measure, Proposition 51, as well as a number of local bonds. Californians passed several tax measures including Proposition 55, which will continue to provide funding for education. Voters in San Francisco passed an extension of the parcel tax to help fund the City College of San Francisco as well as another local measure that increases the transfer tax rate for sales of residential and commercial properties. Proponents state, that with the passage of this measure, the City of San Francisco could provide free community college. Funds from this local measure will go to the City’s general fund; however, in July, the Board of Supervisors passed a resolution making the City College of San Francisco free for residents a top priority for the new revenue. If results hold in the State Assembly, the Democrats will have gained a supermajority with three seats switching party hands. However, this could change because one of those seats remains a close contest in Assembly District 55 and all three changes are needed for a supermajority. -
Memorandum 5.1
Memorandum 5.1 DATE: January 4, 2021 TO: Alameda County Technical Advisory Committee FROM: Carolyn Clevenger, Deputy Executive Director of Planning and Policy Maisha Everhart, Director of Government Affairs and Communications SUBJECT: State and federal legislative activities update and approval of the 2021 Legislative Program Recommendation This item is to provide the Commission with an update on federal, state, regional, and local legislative activities and to approve the 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program. Summary Each year, Alameda CTC adopts a Legislative Program to provide direction for its legislative and policy activities for the year. The purpose of the Legislative Program is to establish funding, regulatory and administrative principles to guide Alameda CTC’s legislative advocacy. It is designed to be broad and flexible, allowing Alameda CTC to pursue legislative and administrative opportunities that may arise during the year, and to respond to political processes in the region as well as in Sacramento and Washington, D.C. Legislative, policy and funding partnerships throughout the Bay Area and California will be key to the success of the 2021 Legislative Program. The 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program retains many of the 2020 priorities and is divided into 5 sections: 1. Transportation Funding 2. Multimodal Transportation, Land Use, Safety and Equity 3. Project Delivery and Operations 4. Climate Change and Technology 5. Partnerships Attachment A details the Alameda CTC proposed 2021 Legislative Program. Background The purpose of the 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program is to establish funding, regulatory and administrative principles to guide Alameda CTC’s legislative advocacy in the coming year. The program is developed to be broad and flexible, allowing Alameda CTC to pursue legislative and administrative opportunities that may arise during the year, and to respond to the changing political processes in the region, as well as in Sacramento and Washington, D.C. -
Assembly District 1
Assembly District 1 CalChiro Recommendation: Brian Dahle (R) Republican Leader Brian Dahle, born in Redding, is a third-generation wheat farmer. Until his election to the Assembly in 2012, he served four terms on the Lassen County Board of Supervisors. Dahle's Lassen County farm was purchased by his grandparents in the 1940s and has remained in the family since then. When his parents retired, he and his wife, Megan, purchased the farm, which is now over 2,000 acres. They also operate and manage Big Valley Seed and Big Valley Nursery. Megan is a board member of the Big Valley Unified School District. They have three children. Assembly District 2 CalChiro Recommendation: Jim Wood (D) Jim Wood was elected to the Assembly in 2014. Before leaving for the Assembly, he was elected to the Healdsburg City Council in 2006 and served as a former member of the city’s planning commission. A family dentist who has maintained a practice in Cloverdale since 1987, Wood is a nationally recognized expert in forensic dentistry and has worked with law enforcement to solve cold cases. He is also the co-founder of the Healdsburg Green City Committee. He and his wife have one son. Assembly District 3 CalChiro Recommendation: Jim Gallagher (R) James Gallagher, at the time of his election to the Assembly in 2014, was a member of the Sutter County Board of Supervisors where he was first elected in 2008. He is the sixth generation of an Irish immigrant family that settled in south Sutter County in the late 1880s. -
2021 Assembly Standing Committees
2021 ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEES COMMITTEE MEMBERS Accountability and Cottie Petrie-Norris (Chair), Jim Patterson (Vice Chair), Autumn Administrative R. Burke, Adam C. Gray, Tom Lackey, Jose Medina, Freddie Review Rodriguez Aging and Long-Term Adrin Nazarian (Chair), Randy Voepel (Vice Chair), Tasha Care Boerner Horvath, Lisa Calderon, Tom Lackey, Eloise Gómez Reyes, Blanca E. Rubio Agriculture Robert Rivas (Chair), Devon J. Mathis (Vice Chair), Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry, Jordan Cunningham, Heath Flora, Adam C. Gray, Jacqui Irwin, Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr., Marc Levine, Carlos Villapudua, Jim Wood Appropriations Lorena Gonzalez (Chair), Frank Bigelow (Vice Chair), Richard Bloom, Rob Bonta, Lisa Calderon, Wendy Carrillo, Ed Chau, Megan Dahle, Laurie Davies, Vince Fong, Jesse Gabriel, Eduardo Garcia, Sydney Kamlager, Marc Levine, Bill Quirk, Robert Rivas Arts, Entertainment, Sharon Quirk-Silva (Chair), Suzette Martinez Valladares (Vice Sports, Tourism, and Chair), David Chiu, Steven S. Choi, Ph.D., Laura Friedman, Internet Media Sydney Kamlager, Adrin Nazarian Banking and Finance Timothy S. Grayson (Chair), Phillip Chen (Vice Chair), Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, Autumn R. Burke, Sabrina Cervantes, Steven S. Choi, Ph.D., Jesse Gabriel, Cristina Garcia, Janet Nguyen, Cottie Petrie-Norris, Mark Stone, Buffy Wicks Budget Philip Y. Ting (Chair), Vince Fong (Vice Chair), Dr. Joaquin Arambula, Steve Bennett, Richard Bloom, Wendy Carrillo, David Chiu, Jim Cooper, Jim Frazier, Laura Friedman, James Gallagher, Cristina Garcia, Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr., Kevin Kiley, Tom Lackey, Alex Lee, Devon J. Mathis, Kevin McCarty, Jose Medina, Kevin Mullin, Adrin Nazarian, Patrick O'Donnell, Jim Patterson, James C. Ramos, Eloise Gómez Reyes, Luz M. Rivas, Blanca E. Rubio, Thurston "Smitty" Smith, Mark Stone, Suzette Martinez Valladares, Jim Wood Budget Richard Bloom (Chair), Steve Bennett, Laura Friedman, Kevin Subcommittee #3 Mullin, Jim Patterson, Luz M. -
California Election Breakdown
California Election Breakdown As campaigning really gears up with less than two weeks until the election, CRA wanted to highlight some races below that our members may find interesting to watch. Additionally, there are more in-depth analyses of competitive races on the following pages. Though there are no projected changes for control of the state legislature, the Democrats are targeting plenty of vulnerable Republican incumbents in the state house where voter registration trends have changed in their favor, which include Assembly Districts 35, 36, 55, and 68 and Senate District 21, 29, and 37. The Republicans, in addition to holding on to their vulnerable seats, are targeting a couple vulnerable Democrats themselves in Assembly Districts 74 and 77. However, the most interesting race may be the one that takes place behind closed doors: Assembly leadership. The end of session fiasco showed some intraparty and interhouse tensions coming to a head with bills dying at midnight as behind the scene squabbles made their way to the floor. The Speaker also came under fire for a proxy voting decision he made, which made national news headlines. Additionally, there is a vacancy in the Assembly leadership with Assembly Majority Leader’s decision to not run for re-election. This will all likely happen outside the public view, but it is something to watch for after the General Election. The story is a little bit different for congressional races. Democrats rode a wave of national enthusiasm to pick up some seats in traditionally Republican strongholds, such as the Central Valley and Orange County. -
February 26, 2021 the Honorable Phil Ting the Honorable Vince Fong
February 26, 2021 The Honorable Phil Ting The Honorable Vince Fong Chair, Assembly Committee on Budget Vice Chair, Assembly Committee on Budget State Capitol, Room 6026 State Capitol, Room 2002 Sacramento, CA 95814 Sacramento, CA 95814 The Honorable Wendy Carrillo Chair, Assembly Budget Subcommittee 4 on State Administration State Capitol, Room 4167 Sacramento, CA 95814 RE: RESTORING NET OPERATING LOSS DEDUCTIONS AND BUSINESS INCENTIVE TAX CREDITS Dear Assemblymembers Ting, Fong, and Carrillo: We, the undersigned Members of the Legislature, respectfully request that this year’s budget restore the net operating loss (NOL) deduction and business incentive tax credits that were suspended and capped in the 2020 budget via AB 85 (Chapter 8, Statutes of 2020). We approved this action last year in order to close an estimated $54.3 billion budget deficit, which thankfully never came to fruition. Sunsetting the suspension and cap would assist employers in their economic recovery and incentivize them to remain in California. The sunset provision is also timely considering California’s General Fund is experiencing a windfall. In July, we approved the Governor’s proposal to suspend the use of personal and business NOLs and limit the use of existing business tax credits to offset their tax liability for years 2020-2022. This proposal was advanced to raise approximately $9.2 billion in revenue to help address the budget shortfall expected as a result of COVID-19. While the tax increases were painful for employers, they were willing to pitch in to support the state’s pandemic response. However, California is not even close to experiencing a budget shortfall in 2021. -
GOC NEW NL 3Rd Qtr D
THIRD QUARTER 2018 The General Election is Tuesday, November leftist. Remember, Newsom is the author would almost be fun to watch them scratch 6, 2018; polls are open from 7 am to 8 pm. of 2016’s Prop 63, which gave us the disas- at each other. De Leon’s anti-gun claim to You can register to vote online at http:// trous ammo and so-called “assault weapon” fame is ushering “Gunmaggedon” through registertovote.ca.gov no later than October registration, plus the prohibition of stan- the legislative process and holding a rifle up 22, 2018. Vote-by-mail ballots must be dard capacity magazines that hold more before cameras, foolishly stating “This right postmarked on or before November 6, 2018 or than ten rounds. What’s more, he has open- here has the ability with a .30-caliber clip to hand-delivered to your polling place before 8 ly mocked “thoughts and prayers” in the disperse with 30 bullets within half a second. pm to be valid. aftermath of tragic shootings, has accused Thirty magazine clip in half a second.” Fein- us of “moral cowardice” when it comes to stein, on the other hand, was the primary GENERAL ELECTION TICKET: stopping gun violence and has emphatical- instigator of the original federal assault WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ly said “We are coming for your guns….” weapons ban. In a word, they are both de- termined 2A foes. This is a no brainer. Clear as glass. GOC has personally interviewed John Cox and we — ATTORNEY GENERAL — have been assured he will stand with us in With the exception of the Governor, the race defense of the 2nd Amendment. -
County of Los Angeles Presidential Primary Election 6
DEM 045 Dean C. Logan Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk I want to be a Permanent Vote By Mail voter. Vote You will automatically receive You a ballot and vote by mail every election Official Sample Ballot Presidential Primary Election June 7, 2016 Polls open at 7 am and close at 8 pm Application to Vote By Mail Application to Vote lavote.net Voting Instructions How to vote at your polling place on Election Day 1 2 3 4 5 6 Voting for write-in candidates How to vote for a person not listed on the ballot Write the name and office of the official write-in candidate in the “write-in” portion of the ballot. A list of “Qualified Write-in Candidates” is available eleven days before the election at lavote.net. You may not writein a candidate and vote for a candidate on the ballot for the same office. At the polling place 001 1 000000 2 OFFICIAL BALLOT Los Angeles County WRITE-IN BALLOT Board School Doe John Assembly State James Smith E FOLD HER By mail 1 2 OFFICIAL BALLOT School Board John Doe School Board John Doe School Board John Doe DEM LA 045-001 TP01 Information for voters About this election The ballot for this election includes both partisan and non-partisan nominating primaries. Your ballot may also include local non-partisan contests (County Board of Supervisors, County District Attorney, Superior Court Judges, Special or School Districts, or/and City offices). Party-Nominated Offices If you indicated a political party preference when you registered to vote, you may only vote for a presidential candidate for that particular party in the Presidential Primary Election. -
POLITICAL REFORM AUDIT REPORTS State Campaigns 1
POLITICAL REFORM AUDIT REPORTS State Campaigns 1. California American Council of Engineering Companies Political Action Committee (CA ACEC PAC) (782143) 2. P. Gregory Conlon Greg Conlon for State Treasurer 2014 (1365051) INDEX 01/31/17 POLITICAL REFORM AUDIT PROGRAM MS F387 PO BOX 651 SACRAMENTO CA 95812-0651 AUDIT REPORT OF THE POLITICAL REFORM AUDIT PROGRAM FOR: California American Council of Engineering Companies Political Action Committee (CA ACEC PAC) (782143) January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2014 AUDIT AUTHORITY AND SCOPE This audit is authorized under Section 90001 of the California Government Code. General purpose committees were selected by the Fair Political Practices Commission. Selected committees that raised or spent more than $10,000 supporting or opposing state candidates or state measures during any calendar year were subject to audit. The audit was performed by the Political Reform Audit Program of the Franchise Tax Board using generally accepted auditing standards and the auditing standards set by the Fair Political Practices Commission. This included tests of disclosure, accounting records, and other auditing procedures considered necessary. This Audit Report was submitted to the Fair Political Practices Commission, the Secretary of State, and the Attorney General on January 31, 2017. ABOUT THE COMMITTEE BACKGROUND INFORMATION The Committee is a general purpose committee sponsored by the American Council of Engineering Companies – California. TREASURERS: Brad Diede Paul J. Meyer (11/02/83 – 02/04/14) Franchise Tax Board Audit Report – California American Council of Engineering Companies Political Action Committee (CA ACEC PAC) Page 2 of 2 FINANCIAL ACTIVITY Total Contributions Received: $ 170,143 Total Expenditures: $ 372,674 The totals for contributions received and expenditures were taken from the unaudited statements as filed in paper and/or electronic format with the Secretary of State for the period indicated above. -
California Council for Affordable Housing Annual Legislative Report October 1, 2020
California Council for Affordable Housing Annual Legislative Report October 1, 2020 Prepared for Patrick Sabelhaus, Executive Director California Council for Affordable Housing Prepared by Political Solutions, LLC TO: Patrick Sabelhaus, Executive Director, California Council for Affordable Housing FROM: Tami Miller, Melissa Werner Political Solutions, LLC RE: 2020 Legislative Summary and 2021 Forecast DATE: October 1, 2020 Political Solutions, LLC enjoyed the opportunity to continue working with and representing the California Council for Affordable Housing (CCAH) this year. As CCAH is aware, 2020 was a very different legislative session, beleaguered by COVID-19, wildfires, and a tanked economy. However, as always, it is our honor and pleasure to work with CCAH, and we look forward to our combined success in 2021! GENERAL The second year of the 2019-2020 legislative session resumed in January with the Executive and Legislative branches setting aggressive policy goals. The enthusiasm behind these goals was also met with the state’s strong economic outlook. With more money to invest in state programs and infrastructure, both branches sought opportunities to close inequities and reinvest in the state and its people. The enthusiasm turned into concern as state leaders watched countries around the world respond to a dangerous virus that was viciously infecting and killing thousands. The virus, COVID-19, was shutting down economies and closing borders to mitigate transmission, and despite worldwide efforts to control the virus it was making its way to California. When COVID-19 reached our state, its impact on residents and the healthcare system was so severe local governments and the state ordered residents to stay home, non-essential businesses were closed, and mask mandates were issued.