Advertisement

Pressure builds for bills to get 1st hearing

Share

The pace of lawmaking is speeding up at the Capitol.

With legislators back from spring break, rallies are in full swing on the Capitol steps; lobbyists of all stripes are packing the ornate hearing rooms and overflow crowds are watching television feeds in hallways.

“There’s definitely a push to get bills moving,” said Sarah Swanbeck of California Common Cause, a government reform lobby. “You can feel the pressure.”

Friday is the deadline for bills to get a first hearing.

It’s also an election year, and pressure is on to get early action on proposals on which lawmakers hope to campaign.

Advertisement

Business interests have a lot riding on many of the measures. Here are a few that saw action last week in Senate committees.

--

CEO pay

Multimillion-dollar paychecks for many California chief executives have not gone unnoticed, and some lawmakers are questioning the fairness to workers.

Sens. Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) and Loni Hancock (D-Oakland) want to limit CEO salaries to no higher than 100 times the average salary of their workers. To do so, they have a bill, SB 1372, that would cut corporate income taxes for companies that keep executive pay in line. And it would hike taxes where bosses make over 100 times more than the rank and file.

The bill faces challenges ahead, but last week the Senate Governance and Finance Committee approved it on a 5 to 2 vote.

If it becomes law, the measure could affect hundreds of corporations in the retail, restaurant, fast-food, grocery and construction industries.

“This growing divergence between CEO pay and that of the typical American worker isn’t just wildly unfair,” said supporter Robert Reich, a UC Berkeley professor and President Clinton’s secretary of labor. “It’s also bad for the economy.”

Advertisement

Nonsense, responded business advocates, who said raising corporate taxes would send the wrong message to potential investors in California. Gina Rodriguez of the California Taxpayers Assn. said, “This would launch our corporate tax rate into the stratosphere.”

--

Computer data

Your car holds a trove of valuable information. Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) has a bill, SB 984, to give owners of cars more control over who gets access to computer and Internet data about a vehicle’s performance and how it is driven. But his bill fell three votes shy of what was needed to pass the Senate Transportation and Housing Committee. The proposal was backed by auto clubs. But carmakers and dealers denounced it as a special interest push by the clubs and their insurance arms.

--

Food labeling

Though rejected by California voters in 2012, the issue of genetically engineered food labeling lives on in the Legislature. SB 1381, by Sen. Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa), cleared the Judiciary Committee on a 4 to 2 tally but is expected to run into trouble in the Agriculture Committee. Her bill is supported by small farmers, environmentalists and organic food retailers. It’s opposed by the grocery industry, agribusiness corporations and many scientists.

--

marc.lifsher@latimes.com

Twitter: @MarcLifsher

Advertisement