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Essential Politics March 21-31 archive: Minimum wage bill passes

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The April edition of Essential Politics can be found here.

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Or visit these links to find news feed items from from March 1 through March 20 here, late February here, updates from early February here, and January’s politics news feed here.

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Video of the scene after the Senate minimum wage vote

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California Chamber of Commerce is disappointed with minimum wage vote

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Gov. Jerry Brown to sign minimum wage legislation on Monday

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Senate passes minimum wage increase

The Senate on a 26 to 12 party-line vote approved the proposal to raise the minimum wage to $15, sending the measure to Gov. Jerry Brown for his signature.

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Senate votes 26-12 to send minimum wage bill to Gov. Jerry Brown

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Ted Cruz courts potential RNC delegates in Golden State

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Flurry of activity outside Capitol building after some at rally are taken to hospital

As debate over the proposed minimum wage bill continued inside the state Capitol on Thursday, an incident that occurred during a rally outside the building drew fire and police officials and quickly raised alarm.

The Sacramento Fire Department initially described the event as a “mass casualty incident,” adding to the concern.

About 7,000 people were gathered outside the Capitol for a rally with Franklin Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham, according to Chris Harvey, public information officer for the Sacramento Fire Department.

Reports of threats made during the rally have not been substantiated, Harvey said. During the event, the fire department and California Highway Patrol received “numerous” calls from people who were feeling lightheaded and experiencing chest pains and dizziness.

Five people were taken to the hospital to be treated, and some passed out, Harvey said. One person was evaluated at the scene and refused treatment.

Fire officials say the injuries were heat-related despite temperatures being in the mid-60s, and may have been caused by the tightly packed crowds gathered on the Capitol grounds.

Debate in the state Senate, which is considering the minimum wage bill that passed the Assembly earlier Thursday, continued uninterrupted.

Earlier in the day, Sacramento police removed a suspicious package found in a parking structure across the street from the Capitol, KCRA-TV reported. No evacuations or street closures were in effect.

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Carly Fiorina is dropped from California’s ballot

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Now the Senate debates the minimum wage deal

State Sen. Mark Leno
State Sen. Mark Leno
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)

State Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) told his colleagues during the lengthy floor debate that his bill would lift many hard-working Californians out of poverty.

“Workers are struggling.” Leno said. “Two point two million Californians are currently earning minimum wage, and they are struggling in poverty because it is a sub-poverty wage.”

Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) added, “Everybody should have a crack at the brass ring, the American dream.”

But Republican Sen. Ted Gaines of Rocklin said the bill is a “death sentence” for struggling businesses in his district.

“Our job in this building is to help people climb the economic ladder, not cut off the bottom rungs,” Gaines said on the floor. “That is exactly what will happen if we shove this unprecedented cost increase on businesses.”

Republican Sen. Jim Nielsen said increasing the minimum wage will hurt new workers and lead to mechanization of jobs. “You will go to the hamburger store and you won’t have a young person or elderly person to wait on you,” he said.

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Assembly’s minimum wage vote breakdown

A final printout of the vote tally:

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Assembly passes minimum wage measure, 48-26

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After passing Assembly, minimum wage deal heads to Senate

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Assemblywoman Shirley Weber: ‘We would be irresponsible if we didn’t take advantage of this opportunity’

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Assemblyman Bill Brough: Minimum wage jobs not the goal

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Crowd gathers outside Capitol as Assembly considers minimum wage bill

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Lopez makes emotional entreaty for minimum wage deal

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Senate waits for Assembly action on bill

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Toni Atkins speaks on behalf of bill

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Eggman: ‘Why are we rushing this bill?’

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Eggman withholds support for deal

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Minimum-wage vote could impact one legislator’s congressional bid

It looks like the vote on the minimum-wage deal is already causing headaches for one Republican legislator in the middle of a race for an open seat in Congress.

Protesters led by supporters of San Luis Obispo Republican K.H. “Katcho” Achadjian’s Democratic opponents are gathering 300 miles away from Sacramento in front of Achadjian’s office this morning to urge him to vote for the deal.

Democrat Salud Carbajal and his supporters are trying to ratchet up the pressure on Achadjian ahead of the June primary to represent California’s 24th Congressional District, a seat opened by the retirement of Rep. Lois Capps (D-Santa Barbara). There are nine candidates on the ballot.

Achadjian has voted against past minimum-wage increases. His chief of staff, Ross Buckley, said the assemblyman “definitely has concerns” with the current bill.

In a statement, Carbajal said he supported the bill and also called for an increase in the federal minimum wage.

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Hadley voices ‘strong opposition’ to deal

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Hadley calls minimum wage bill ‘a backroom deal’

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Patterson cautions against support for bill

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Quick action: Measure unveiled last week could hit Brown’s desk today

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Moderate Democrat comes out in support of bill

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‘An argument about economic justice’

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Minimum wage bill is introduced on Assembly floor

Too many workers are working full time for poverty wages. Enough is enough. 

— Assemblyman Roger Hernandez (D-West Covina)

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Republican Assembly members request to caucus ahead of minimum wage vote

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Union members assemble for vote on landmark deal

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Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon turns to Twitter to make a case for the minimum wage deal

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Legislature expected to approve the minimum wage package today

At a Monday press conference, Gov. Jerry Brown hugs Burger King worker Holly Diaz, 38, of Sacramento, who has worked for the minimum wage for nine years.
At a Monday press conference, Gov. Jerry Brown hugs Burger King worker Holly Diaz, 38, of Sacramento, who has worked for the minimum wage for nine years.
(Renee C. Byer / Associated Press)

Today, state lawmakers are expected to pass the big minimum wage package unveiled this week by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The action begins in the Assembly at 9 a.m. and state Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), who authored the minimum wage bill, told us he expects approval in the Assembly, followed shortly in the Senate.

The deal had broad support among Democrats during its first legislative hearing Wednesday.

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Lawmakers tackle public complaints of lack of transparency in state boards

Whether it’s the California Coastal Commission or the state Public Utilities Commission, residents have been complaining that the panels are operating too much out of public view and are too cozy with businesses.

Legislative committees have moved forward on bills that would shed some light on important state panels, also including the state Board of Equalization.

“People naturally distrust government agencies and bureaucracies,” said Sen. Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo), author of six measures to deal with the issue. “The Legislature has a responsibility to keep those agencies in check and responsible to the citizens.”

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Legislature takes another look at shining light on prescription drug costs

A new bill from state Sen. Ed Hernandez (D-Azusa) takes aim at rising prescription drug prices by forcing manufacturers and health plan providers to make more information public about price increases and costs.

Hernandez said the bill, SB 1010, would address a gap for consumers after the federal Affordable Care Act’s mandate that everyone buy health insurance.

“Because of that we have to make sure that individuals have a cost effective policy,” Hernandez said.

Hernandez’s bill would force drug manufacturers to notify state health care providers — such as CalPERS and Medi-Cal — and private insurers at least two months before they raise prices by more than 10 percent. The bill would also require health plans and insurers to publicize what portion of their prices are attributed to drug costs.

Hernandez cited recent high-profile cases of pharmaceutical companies rapidly increasing drug prices as further impetus for his effort.

“It brings light to where the cost trends are going,” Hernandez said. “There could be public backlash.”

Hernandez, however, does not support government price restrictions on prescription drugs, saying that he believes the market is the better regulating mechanism for the industry. He opposes a measure targeted for the November ballot that would limit state agencies from paying more for drugs than the prices paid by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

SB 1010 is not the only recent attempt in the Legislature to wade into drug pricing transparency. Earlier this year, Assemblyman David Chiu (D-San Francisco) withdrew a bill that would have required drug companies to report costs and profits for certain drugs in the face of opposition from the pharmaceutical industry.

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Proposal would expand law protecting immigrants from deportation for misdemeanors

A state lawmaker proposed Wednesday to expand a law aimed at reducing the number of immigrants in the country who face deportation for committing crimes.

Federal law requires deportation of immigrants who are sentenced to at least 365 days in jail — even if they serve fewer days. State Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) won approval of a law two years ago that says all future misdemeanors carry a sentence of no more than 364 days in jail.

Lara estimates that it has spared hundreds of people in California from deportation.

His new bill, SB 1242, would apply the new standard retroactively to protect immigrants who committed low-level misdemeanors. It is waiting an assignment to a committee for a hearing.

“No family should be torn apart because of a minor legal technicality,” Lara said in a statement. “By applying this change, we will prevent a minor technicality from having drastic and harmful human impact.”

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A ‘no’ vote from moderate Democrat

I will be voting no on this measure.

— Assemblyman Tom Daly (D-Anaheim)

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Sen. Mark Leno: San Francisco economy ‘red hot’

Amid discussion about a regional approach, state Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) talked about the huge economic disparity between the top earners and the lowest-wage workers in his district.

He said if anything, he would dial it back a notch because the wealth created by venture capital has rocketed the economy to “red hot” at the same time others are suffering.

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Wage deal passes by voice vote

With Assemblyman Tom Daly’s opposition noted, Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Lorena S. Gonzalez (D-San Diego) announced the measure to increase the minimum wage to $15 by 2022 had passed.

There was no roll call vote, though several Republican members indicated they do not favor the proposal.

The legislation will head next to the floor of the Assembly tomorrow, according to Speaker Anthony Rendon’s office.

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Favoring a regional approach

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GOP Assemblyman Wagner points out switch

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Minimum wage in Seattle: Has it helped or hurt the city?

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Sen. Mark Leno: High housing costs put pinch on wage earners

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Workers, union officials call for $15 minimum wage

Lawmakers at the Appropriations Committee panel on the minimum wage heard from a few dozen people urging them to pass the proposal.

From low-wage workers to healthcare organizations, a representative for Mayor Eric Garcetti and many reps from labor unions, person after person hailed the compromise plan.

“Conditions need to change,” one person said.

“We desperately need a raise,” said another.

Many of the workers were wearing SEIU T-shirts. The committee cut off an official SEIU representative after she spoke longer than the allotted one sentence.

A man who is helped by in-home care workers called $15 per hour “so important” and also said getting paid sick days is critical.

“They spend all of their holidays with me. They have no sick leave,” he said.

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Fiscal effect of minimum wage deal has been analyzed

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Chamber of Commerce: Plan is a ‘job killer’

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Restaurant Association speaks in opposition

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3 witnesses on minimum wage will get 3 minutes each

People who earn minimum wage are having their say at the Appropriations Committee hearing. Yolanda Toliver of Yuma County is one of the witnesses who spoke on behalf of the bill.

Here is the text of the measure the Legislature is considering.

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View from the room

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An appeal for low-wage workers

This bill will lift people out of poverty.

— Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) at minimum wage hearing

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Minimum wage hike in California: Who wins?

Our Business desk dives into a new analysis by UC Berkeley’s Center for Labor Research and Education to take a detailed look at how a statewide $15-an-hour minimum wage would affect Californians.

If a plan proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown passes, 5.6 million low-income workers would earn $20 billion more in wages by 2023, according to the Berkeley analysis. It assumed that no net jobs would be lost as businesses look to trim costs.

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The governor can be pretty funny

Gov. Jerry Brown gave a speech at a benefit for Cal State Fresno’s Maddy Institute in downtown Sacramento on Tuesday night. He is perhaps the only person to tell a successful joke about a recently passed tax on healthcare plans.

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Californians who vote are less diverse than the population

California is in the throes of a major transformation when it comes to its demography, even as the people who cast ballots look largely the same as they did a generation ago.

That’s the conclusion of a new report by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. The report is actually a follow-up to the organization’s 2006 report on the same topic, concluding that the state has an “exclusive electorate” that doesn’t represent its diverse population.

The report finds that while California’s adult population is only 42% white, its likely voters are 60% white. There are only half as many Latino residents who vote as there are Latinos in the state population.

Similarly, the institute finds 68% of frequent voters are age 45 or older, while an almost equal portion (67%) of California’s nonvoters are younger than 45. And the gap exists, as well, when measuring income, education level and home ownership.

The question, then, is how does this unrepresentative electorate vote compared to the positions taken by Californians from all walks of life? The institute’s report uses its recent statewide public polling to find some pretty surprising results.

Likely voters in the state are evenly split (46%-46%) on whether government should do more to provide equal opportunities. Among nonvoters, the report finds, the desire for more government help wins by 21 percentage points (58% to 37%). And where only 47% of likely voters would restore funding for higher education before paying down government debt, 70% of nonvoters would support that kind of focus.

“California faces the prospect of an electorate making policy decisions that neglect the realities and problems facing large and growing segments of society,” the report concludes.

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Jeb Bush and Chris Christie are scrubbed from California’s presidential primary ballot

Chris Christie, left, and Jeb Bush during a break in a Republican presidential debate this year.
(Chuck Burton / Associated Press)

California’s presidential primary ballot — which just last week was bloated with Republican candidates who’ve dropped out of the race — is slowly being winnowed.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and current New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie officially asked the California secretary of state to remove their names from the June 7 presidential ballot. Their requests come a day after Florida Sen. Marco Rubio had his name scrubbed.

Under California law, candidates who have ended their campaigns can be removed from the ballot only if they file an affidavit with the secretary of state’s office before April 1.

A few former Republican candidates still remain on the ballot alongside Donald Trump, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich: retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, former Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Carly Fiorina and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore.

Since dropping out of the race, Bush has endorsed Cruz, and Christie did the same for Trump.

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Twitter followers weigh in

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New poll offers glimpse of California’s growing Asian American electorate

David Ryu last year became just the second Asian American elected to the L.A. City Council.
David Ryu last year became just the second Asian American elected to the L.A. City Council.
(Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times)

A new poll by a Los Angeles-based civil rights organization found that 65% of Asian American voters in California support providing a “pathway to legalization” for immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally.

The poll, which was conducted by advocacy group Asian Americans Advancing Justice in Los Angeles, highlights the growing political clout of Asian Americans in California.

Two of California’s top statewide officeholders are Asian Americans — Treasurer John Chiang and Controller Betty Yee, both Democrats. And former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has made a concentrated effort to win support from Asian American voters in California and across the nation in her bid for president.

Among the findings of the poll, which surveyed 3,516 Asian American registered voters in the state:

  • A pathway to legalization was favored by 72% of Democrats, 59% of Republicans and 59% of independents.
  • 67% would pay higher taxes to increase student enrollment at University of California and California State University campuses.
  • 76% think the Affordable Care Act is good for the country.

According to the civil rights group, 37% of registered Asian American voters in California are Democrats, 23% are Republican and 35% are independent — registered as “no party preference.”

A few other tidbits about California’s Asian American electorate provided by the organization:

  • 1.7 million Asian Americans were registered to vote in the 2012 presidential election.
  • By the 2016 presidential election in November, Asian Americans will account for nearly 11% of California voters.
  • Asian Americans make up 25% or more of the electorate in 25 legislative districts in California.
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Business group lays out its ‘job killers’ list of 2016 bills

It’s an imperfect measurement, but one way to assess the political muscle of California’s business community in the state Capitol is to track the legislation it brands with the moniker “job killer.”

And for 2016, the list numbers 13.

The list, released by the California Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday afternoon, is like previous years in that the bills are all ones introduced by Democrats.

Two of the more high-profile bills on the chamber’s list are priority items for the Legislative Women’s Caucus: legislation to require up to three months of leave when caring for a new child, and a proposal to require additional notice to workers before changing their schedules.

The state business group also is opposing a bill to allow independent contractors in the “gig economy” to band together when it comes to labor disputes.

And, not surprisingly, they are labeling the new minimum wage plan unveiled by Gov. Jerry Brown as a “job killer.”

The chamber has a pretty good track record on bills placed on the annual list. Of 176 bills given the designation since 2011, all but nine have been killed or vetoed.

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Super PAC formed to back Rep. Loretta Sanchez for U.S. Senate

(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

Supporters of Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Santa Ana) have launched a new super PAC to back her campaign for U.S. Senate.

The initial focus of the political action committee, called California’s New Frontier, will be to ensure that the Democratic congresswoman finishes in the top two in the June 7 primary, which would land her a spot on the November ballot, said political consultant Stu Mollrich of Newport Beach.

The committee formed at the end of 2015 and was launched with a $20,000 contribution from Irvine developer Michael Ray of Sanderson J. Ray Development, according to records filed with the Federal Election Commission. Ray is a longtime supporter of Sanchez and other Democratic candidates.

Mollrich said the money was enough to get to committee up and running, and to start an aggressive fundraising effort.

“Now we’re out raising money to try to make sure that she at least makes it into a runoff,” Mollrich said.

He said he expects the super PAC to receive strong support from Democratic donors, as well as Republicans and members of the business community who are skeptical that a GOP candidate has a chance to win the Senate race.

Under federal law, a super PAC can receive an unlimited amount in donations from individuals and corporations for an independent campaign, but is barred from coordinating with Sanchez’s Senate campaign.

A new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll found that nearly a third of California voters are undecided about who to vote for Senate in the June 7 primary election. Democratic state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris led Sanchez 28% to 19% among those registered voters polled.

Among the Republicans, Tom Del Beccaro had 8% and George “Duf” Sundheim had 6%. Del Beccaro and Sundheim are Northern California attorneys and former chairmen of the California Republican Party.

Republican Ron Unz, who championed a 1998 initiative to end bilingual education in California, jumped into the Senate campaign last week and was not included in the poll.

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Ted Cruz going for votes among state GOP lawmakers

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Some business-aligned Democrats remain wary of minimum-wage hike

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Even some Donald Trump fans like Gov. Jerry Brown’s job performance

Few governors have had as long a streak of good poll numbers as Gov. Jerry Brown.

Today’s new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll finds Brown gets good marks from 60% of those surveyed. And while his support is strongest among his fellow Democrats, the governor has allies in all sorts of unusual voter subgroups.

Almost 1 in 5 supporters of GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump like the job Brown’s doing. Yes, Trump voters.

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Minimum wage deal now in the Legislature’s hands

Gov. Jerry Brown has expressed a desire that California’s action to raise its hourly minimum wage to $15 over time will serve as a model for states across the U.S.

But the package must first pass the Legislature. Some Assembly Democrats — a business-aligned wing that has grown in stature in recent years — haven’t yet embraced the effort, saying they are worried about automatic cost-of-living increases baked into the plan and other issues.

Later today, Democratic Assembly members will meet behind closed doors for what’s expected to be a lengthy discussion about the package.

The first formal hearing on the plan is scheduled for 9 a.m. Wednesday in the Assembly Appropriations Committee.

The language for the minimum wage bill, SB 3, has now been posted. Click here to read it.

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Assembly Republican wants to let domestic violence victims carry concealed weapons on campuses

A Northern California assemblyman is seeking to carve out an exception in state law that would allow victims of domestic violence to carry concealed guns on school and college campuses.

Assemblyman James Gallagher (R-Plumas Lake) has introduced AB 2340, which would allow those who are victims of domestic violence to carry guns on campus if they possess a protective order and a valid concealed weapons permit.

A bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown last year banned concealed weapons at California schools, bringing the state in line with 18 other states that also prohibit the practice.

The measure, SB 707, made exceptions for those who are retired from law enforcement and allowed school officials to grant permission to carry on a case-by-case basis.

California banned open carrying of handguns in 2011.

“Domestic violence victims are some of the most vulnerable people in our community,” Gallagher said in a statement. “Without protection, domestic violence victims would be left defenseless against an attacker on or near school grounds.”

Gallagher’s bill is due for a hearing by the Assembly Public Safety Committee on Tuesday morning.

It is being supported by the Peace Officers Research Assn. of California, the National Rifle Assn., and the Outdoor Sportsman’s Coalition of California.

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‘Mod Caucus’ starts to weigh in on minimum wage

Business-friendly Democrats in the Assembly have taken on an increasingly powerful role at the Capitol and not all of them have pledged their support for the minimum wage hike unveiled by Gov. Jerry Brown, Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León and labor leaders Monday.

“Generally, people support an increase in the minimum wage,” said Assemblyman Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove), the co-leader of the Moderate Caucus. “But what are the details? That’s what we need to know.”

Cooper, who said he was undecided on the proposal, said members were concerned about any unintended consequences of the move and its effect on nonprofits.

Similarly, Assemblyman Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova) said he needed to see the actual language of the bill before he could decide whether to support it. He said he had never previously backed a minimum wage deal that included automatic cost-of-living increases.

“I’m just trying to understand personally how the pieces fit together,” Cooley said. “I can’t say I know where I’m at.”

Assembly Democrats met briefly behind closed doors Monday to discuss the deal and plan to do so again on Tuesday. Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) said members asked about the cost-of-living increases and potential exemptions for nonprofits during the meeting, but were generally in favor of the measure. He said a couple moderate Democrats already have committed their support, but declined to name them.

Rendon, who supports the deal, said the plan will have its first hearing in the Assembly Appropriations Committee on Wednesday.

If centrist Democrats try to scuttle things, they’ll do so knowing that at least one ballot measure – which has a more aggressive timeline to reach a $15 an hour minimum wage than the current six-year plan – will be on the November ballot. Labor leaders, who funded the efforts to get a wake hike before voters, said Monday they’d pull their ballot measures if the Legislature passes the governor’s plan.

Brown said the chances of a more expansive minimum wage measure should convince business groups and business-aligned Democrats to back the current plan.

“Given the fact there’s a more far-reaching $15 minimum wage on the ballot already that can be taken off if this measure passes, I think there will be very few business people that are going to lobby against this bill because then they’d just be cutting their own throat,” Brown said.

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Democratic presidential candidates back state minimum wage increase

Both Democratic presidential candidates made clear their support for California’s proposed $15 an hour minimum wage hike.

First came former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton:

An hour later, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders jumped on Clinton’s response to emphasize that he backs an increase in the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour:

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Marco Rubio asks California to pull his name off the ballot

Former Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida has officially asked the California secretary of state to remove him from the state’s June 7 presidential primary ballot.

Thus far, Rubio is the only former GOP candidate who has asked California to remove his name. Rubio made the request, in writing, to Secretary of State Alex Padilla.

Rubio’s request could help Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, both of whom desperately need to make up ground against GOP front-runner Donald Trump.

Under California law, candidates who have dropped out can be removed from the ballot only if they file an affidavit with the secretary of state’s office before April 1.

The names of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Hewlett-Packard Chief Executive Carly Fiorina and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore will be on the ballot alongside Trump, Cruz and Kasich.

The ballots were set in February under the state’s rules for determining which candidates make the cut.

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Mayor Eric Garcetti reacts to minimum wage deal

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti praised Gov. Jerry Brown and Democratic legislative leaders for taking “decisive action to give more Californians a chance to join the middle class.”

Garcetti said he was glad to see California “following L.A.’s lead” in the minimum wage fight.

In 2015, the city and county of Los Angeles approved changes that will bring the minimum wage to $15 by 2020, two years earlier than the rest of the state under the proposed deal announced Monday.

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Assembly honors San Bernardino first responders

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Brown: 1 in 3 workers will benefit from plan

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Tom Steyer praises plan to raise minimum wage

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California Legislative Women’s Caucus responds

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‘No one who works full time should live in poverty’

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Business groups not at governor’s event

Asked about complaints from business groups that they weren’t included in negotiations, Gov. Jerry Brown said the concerns of industry were taken into account.

He said the deal is the result of “dozens if not more than that” meetings and many phone calls.

“It’s a moving target with a lot of conversation,” Brown said.

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Fact sheet: Who will benefit from the minimum wage hike?

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‘It’s a matter of economic justice’

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Brown joined by minimum wage worker

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Assembly Republican leader responds to minimum-wage deal

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Governor to announce minimum wage deal this afternoon

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Statewide minimum wage hike likely to be finalized this week

(Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)

Over the weekend, we broke the news that California Gov. Jerry Brown and union leaders reached a deal to raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022.

Brown could make a formal announcement of the plan as soon as today and the Legislature could vote by the end of the week to make it official.

We’ll be tracking the deal here.

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Gov. Jerry Brown grants 59 Easter pardons

Continuing his tradition of providing pardons close to Easter, Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday granted clemency to 59 people who have completed their sentences, most of whom were convicted of nonviolent drug-related crimes.

All of those pardoned have obtained a court certificate declaring that they are now rehabilitated.

“These pardons recognize — and even affirm — that people can turn their lives around after making mistakes and become solid members of their community,” Brown said in a statement.

A gubernatorial pardon may be granted to people who have demonstrated exemplary behavior and have lived productive and law-abiding lives following their conviction. A pardon restores the rights lost when people are convicted of felonies.

Brown granted 34 pardons to those convicted of drug offenses, including Tamika Nicole Jenkins, who served 180 days in jail after a 2000 conviction in Los Angeles for bringing a controlled substance into a prison.

Others pardoned served sentences for armed robbery, grand theft, burglary, dumping toxic waste and insurance fraud.

A pardon also went to Oklahoma resident Leona Gamroth Riggins, who served nine months in prison in 1995 after she was convicted of child cruelty. Riggins allowed her 2- and 4-year-old children to leave the house while she was asleep and kept her house “in a state of disarray.”

Brown, who as a young man studied to become a Catholic priest, usually announces pardons around Easter or on Christmas Eve.

Last Christmas, Brown pardoned actor Robert Downey Jr., who spent time behind bars in the late 1990s on drug convictions.

The governor has granted 742 pardons since he took office in 2011, many more than those granted by Republican predecessor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who gave clemency to just 15 people while in office.

Democratic Gov. Gray Davis did not grant any pardons. Former Republican Gov. Pete Wilson granted 13.

California governors previously were more generous. Republican Ronald Reagan granted 574 pardons while he was in office, while Pat Brown, Brown’s father, granted 467.

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No 2016 ballot measure to grab bullet train money

(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)

A Republican-led effort to ask voters to redirect billions of dollars earmarked for high-speed rail has abandoned its effort for 2016.

The reason, in a single word: money.

On Thursday, the political team behind the proposed initiative concluded it’s just too expensive to gather the signatures needed to qualify for the November ballot.

Spokesman Hector Barajas said the decision was “the financially sound thing for the supporters and the donors” and that the group still hopes to place the initiative on the 2018 statewide ballot.

The initiative would redirect billions of dollars in voter approved bonds for high-speed rail construction, sending the money instead to water storage and related projects.

Championed by two Republican lawmakers, the initiative was touted as having plenty of resources to make it to the ballot. The train project, beleaguered by funding and engineering questions, has struggled for support in recent public polls.

But the bottom line of the 2016 initiative season is the high cost of qualifying a measure for the ballot. Some groups are paying as much as $5 per signature, and the anti-bullet train group simply didn’t have that kind of money.

“The committee will continue its efforts to qualify the measure for the 2018 election after the signature-pricing insanity ends,” said Barajas.

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Former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, expected to run for governor, announces that he’s tying the knot

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Ethics watchdog agency opens investigation into top aide to Gov. Brown

The state’s ethics watchdog agency has opened an investigation into whether Nancy McFadden, a top aide to Gov. Jerry Brown, failed to properly report the sale of stock in Pacific Gas & Electric Co., where she worked before joining the administration, officials said Thursday.

But the state Fair Political Practices Commission noted there was “insufficient evidence” shown in a formal complaint filed by activist group Consumer Watchdog about a “possible conflict of interest” involving McFadden, saying it would not pursue an investigation into the allegations.

The complaint alleges that emails from a lobbyist at the state Public Utilities Commission indicate McFadden, the governor’s executive secretary, influenced appointments to the panel while she owned up to $1 million in stock options at Pacific Gas & Electric, a utility regulated by the PUC.

The governor’s office has denied the allegations.

McFadden initially filed required disclosure statements listing the value of her stock options as having dropped to $100,000 or less a year later, but did not fill out a portion of the form providing the date when stock was sold. She also did not report income from the sale of the stock.

A letter sent Thursday to the Consumer Watchdog from Galena West, chief of enforcement for the FPPC, said the agency “has initiated an investigation into the apparent failure of Ms. McFadden to disclose required information about the status of her stock ownership.”

Evan Westrup, a spokesman for the governor, said Thursday that additional disclosure has been provided to the FPPC.

“It’s not surprising that the FPPC found these conflict-of-interest allegations totally baseless and will not pursue an investigation,” Westrup said. “ We have already acknowledged inadvertent filing errors and amended Form 700s have already been refiled with the FPPC to clear this up.”

Documents released by Westrup indicate McFadden sold stock options worth between $100,001 and $1 million on Jan. 3, 2012, and March 9, 2013.

Westrup also reported that McFadden was made aware last June that she had other options of PG&E stock at that time and she immediately ordered them to be sold and reported.

Jamie Court, the president of Consumer Watchdog, said he believes pinning down the sale date of the stock could help determine whether McFadden had a conflict of interest.

“It’s significant that the top aide to the governor is going to be investigated about the timing of the sale of stock,” Court said.

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Ro Khanna says he has far outpaced Rep. Mike Honda in signature gathering for ballot

Democratic challenger Ro Khanna said Thursday that he had submitted more than 30 times the number of signatures filed by incumbent Rep. Mike Honda (D-San Jose) to qualify for the ballot.

A spokesman for Khanna, who submitted 3,174 valid signatures to Honda’s 105, said it was indicative of the candidate’s “genuine grass-roots campaign.”

This year’s race is a rematch from 2014, when Khanna lost to the congressman, 52% to 48%. Since then, Honda battled an ethics investigation while Khanna picked up key endorsements from Senate Pro Tem Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles), the Laborers International Union of North America and California Secretary of State Alex Padilla — both of whom supported Honda in 2014 — among others. President Obama, who previously endorsed Honda, has decided not to weigh in.

Khanna raised more than $500,000 in the last quarter of 2015, ending the year with more than $1.7 million cash on hand, nearly three times what Honda had banked. He’s also lined up a team of high-profile consultants.

But at last month’s California Democratic Party convention, Honda ultimately walked away with his party’s backing.

“Congressman Honda is incredibly proud of his grass-roots support he’s received from teachers, workers and students who are signing on to support his re-election,” Honda campaign spokesman Michael Beckendorf said in a statement. “If there’s any question about the breadth of his support, just look at the 84% he received in the endorsement caucus.”

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GOP assemblyman wants to redirect bullet train funds to local transit

Assemblyman David Hadley (R-Torrance) has introduced a bill that would direct money now allocated to the state’s high-speed rail project to local transit projects.

Hadley said recent changes to move the high-speed rail’s first segment out of Southern California has threatened the project’s reliance on $600 million in state cap-and-trade dollars that must go toward pollution relief in underserved communities. The new initial route from Kern County to San Jose, Hadley said, wouldn’t help enough low-income residents to meet state requirements for the cap-and-trade money.

“My legislation will ensure that cap-and-trade dollars go to the disadvantaged communities they are meant to help,” Hadley said in a release.

Hadley’s effort is not the only GOP-led plan targeting high-speed rail. A well-funded ballot initiative authored by state Board of Equalization member George Runner and state Sen. Bob Huff (R-San Dimas) would redirect bond money set aside for high-speed rail toward water projects.

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Democrats lead the pack in California’s U.S. Senate race, but many voters remain undecided

With just over three months to go before the state’s June primary election, Democrats Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez of Santa Ana have more voter support than their Republican rivals in the race for U.S. Senate, according to a new poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.

Still, nearly 1 in 3 likely California voters polled remained undecided, making the outcome of the election difficult to predict.

The survey showed that among all likely California voters, Harris received support from 26%, compared with 17% support for Sanchez.

Among the Republicans, Tom Del Beccaro received 9% support and George “Duf” Sundheim received 6%. Both Del Beccaro and Sundheim are Bay Area attorneys and have served as chairmen of the California Republican Party.

Republican Ron Unz, who championed a 1998 initiative to end bilingual education in California, jumped into the Senate campaign last week and was not included in the poll.

Under California’s top-two primary system, the two candidates who receive the most votes — regardless of party — will face off in the November election. The election is open, meaning voters can cast ballots for any candidate, not just those in their political party.

The Public Policy Institute of California poll canvassed 1,710 California residents by telephone from March 6 through March 15. The margin of error overall is plus or minus 3.6%.

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Minimum-wage question gets complicated

The odds of an increase to California’s $10-an-hour statewide minimum wage went up considerably late Tuesday. An initiative filed by a healthcare workers union gathered more than enough signatures to be placed on the Nov. 8 statewide ballot.

So what happens next? Lawmakers hope to negotiate a truce on the issue and have the initiative withdrawn from the ballot, but it won’t be easy. Labor and business groups are sharply divided, and all eyes are on Gov. Jerry Brown to strike the deal.

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Republicans blast Democratic plan to earmark funds for potential L.A. Olympics

A proposal by Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) to provide up to $250 million in financial guarantees as part of Los Angeles’ bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics drew strong opposition Wednesday from Republicans.

A bill introduced by De León would create an Olympic Games trust fund to help cover up to $250 million in cost overruns if Los Angeles was selected to host the Games and then went over a proposed $6-billion budget.

“Hosting the games in California is expected to generate billions of dollars for the state’s economy,” states the text of De Leon’s bill. It also notes the organizing committee “has developed a self-sufficient bid and plan for financing the games that is based on realistic and conservative revenue scenarios.”

De León said the organizers expect the Games would produce more revenue than they cost but, just in case, the state would be liable for any financial deficit up to $250 million.

The Assembly Republican Caucus on Wednesday pointed out the Russians spent $51 billion on the 2014 Sochi Games, and other countries have also gone over budget.

“While people outside of greater Los Angeles will see little-to-no fiscal benefits from the L.A.-hosted Olympics, de Leon and his politically-elite friends from Los Angeles don’t mind wagering state revenue to bring glory to their hometown,” said a statement by the GOP lawmakers.

The Republicans also complained the Democrats have proposed tax increases to pay for repairing the state’s crumbling bridges, highways and roads.

“The thought that we should commit a quarter of a billion dollars from California taxpayers to secure the Olympics in L.A. is not acceptable,” said Assemblywoman Catharine Baker (R-San Ramon) in a statement. “This is not how good stewards of taxpayer money act. The state should be committed to fixing our roads and our schools, not dumping hundreds of millions of dollars into hosting the Olympics.”

The International Olympic Committee is set to decide in September 2017 among Los Angeles, Paris, Rome or Budapest.

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New poll shows Trump leads GOP presidential field by wide margin in California

New York billionaire Donald Trump enjoys a sizable lead over other GOP presidential candidates among California Republican voters, according to a new poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.

With the departure of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio from the campaign, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz appears to make up ground by nabbing the bulk of Rubio’s supporters, but he still lags behind Trump.

California’s 172 delegates — 14% of the 1,237 required to win the nomination — will be chosen on June 7, when New Jersey and four other states will also caucus or cast votes.

With the GOP race unlikely to be decided before June, California’s primary election could decide who wins the Republican nomination.

Whether California will tip the scales for Trump is complicated by the fact that the vast majority of delegates are awarded three at a time to the winner of each of the state’s 53 congressional districts.

The survey showed that 38% of California Republicans likely to vote in the June primary support Trump, compared with 19% who support Cruz and 12% who support Ohio Gov. John Kasich. Rubio, who dropped out of the race while the poll was being conducted, also had 12% support.

Republicans also were asked for their second choice in the race. When the second choices of Rubio’s supporters were factored in, Trump’s support remained at 38%. Cruz’s support, however, increased to 27%, and Kasich went up a bit to 14%, the poll found.

Among Californians likely to vote in the Democratic primary election, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton received 48% support and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders 41%, the poll found.

Sanders had strong support among voters between 18 to 44 years old, and among white voters. Clinton has received strong support among voters 45 years old and above and Latino voters.

California’s Republican presidential primary is closed, meaning that only registered Republicans can cast a vote for one of the GOP’s presidential candidates.

Democrats and voters registered as “no party preference” can vote in the Democratic presidential primary.

The Public Policy Institute of California poll canvassed 1,710 California residents by telephone from March 6-15. The margin of error overall is plus or minus 3.6%.

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House OKs placing female WWII pilots’ ashes at Arlington National Cemetery

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White House water summit focuses on California

Tuesday’s White House water summit had a California theme, with several state water districts and officials represented among the few hundred people who gathered in Washington to talk about how the United States should use water.

While Rep. Jerry McNerney (D-Stockton) spoke about water infrastructure and innovation, and Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) spoke about agriculture and forestry’s role in water conservation, there was little discussion from the perspective of farmers.

Huffman said to deal with the ongoing drought, California has been innovative and residents have conserved a lot, but there hasn’t been enough done to conserve in agricultural areas where most of the water is used.

Instead, farmers turned to ground water to meet their needs, he said.

“In too many cases folks just turned on the ground water pumps and created tomorrow’s problem to solve today’s problem,” Huffman said. “So we need to figure out creative ways to [offer incentives] and promote water conservation across the board in agriculture where there are enormous savings to be had.”

McNerney said it would be easier to be innovative if the federal government gave states and municipalities more flexibility in how funds can be used.

“We’re not going to innovate here in Washington, let me tell you,” he said.

Attendees also heard briefly from two California groups.

Californian Victor Griego spoke about WELL, which teaches leaders of school boards, water districts and city councils with high Latino populations about California’s water policy.

Joya Banerjee of the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation in San Francisco spoke about its new Project Water Data program, aimed at modernizing data collected about water systems.

The water summit came on the heels of a White House announcement of public and private commitments to water projects across the country. Some of the California projects include:

  • Free access to maps of hidden aquifers and water pathways in the Central Valley that were created by Stanford University and Aqua Geo Frameworks using a helicopter equipped with geophysical sensors.

  • Natel Energy Inc. and UC Berkeley’s Renewable and Appropriate Energy Lab’s 1–5 megawatt project that will recharge 1.6 million to 3.2 million gallons of groundwater each year.

  • The city of Los Angeles is committing to capture an additional 12 billion gallons of storm water each year for infiltration and reuse by 2025. The city already captures more than 8.8 billion gallons each year.
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Lawmaker proposes influence measure targeting coastal commissioners

The controversial firing of the executive director of the California Coastal Commission last month has inspired a bill that would prohibit members of the panel from having private conversations with those who have business before the commission.

Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) said Tuesday that her proposal to prohibit “ex parte” communications that are currently allowed seeks to blunt private efforts to influence decision making by the commission.

The panel’s firing of executive director Charles Lester has drawn criticism over a perceived lack of transparency by the panel.

“In the wake of the firing of Dr. Lester, it is important that we do all we can to restore the public’s trust in the Coastal Commission,” Jackson said in a statement. “This bill will level the playing field between big-moneyed interests and those without such financial resources, remove the possibility of backroom decision-making or the perception that this is occurring, and help ensure that decisions are made more openly and transparently.”

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Watching the White House water summit

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Percy Pinkney, longtime Los Angeles-based aide to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, dies at 78

Percy Pinkney, the first person to join Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s staff in 1992, has died. He was 78.

As Feinstein’s Los Angeles field representative for 22 years, he oversaw issues affecting the African American community until his retirement in 2014.

Feinstein issued a statement on the March 18 death of her longtime friend, noting the two met in 1969 when he was working as a social worker in San Francisco.

Pinkney was a special assistant to Gov. Jerry Brown from 1975 to 1982, leading his community relations department.

“He was such a caring person, it was amazing. His compassion for others never ceased. No issue was too small or too big for Percy to tackle. When Percy became engaged on an issue, he didn’t rest until the problem was solved. Percy represented the best of public service — an unwavering devotion to the people of California and making their lives better,” Feinstein said. “It was an honor to be Percy’s friend and I will miss him dearly.”

Born in McComb, Miss., Pinkney was a U.S. Army veteran. He earned a degree at San Francisco State and his master’s in social work from Lone Mountain College in San Francisco.

Pinkney founded the Black American Political Assn. of California and was the group’s state president.

A statement on the group’s website lauds the founder as “a loyal friend, a distinguished leader, and a fierce advocate for social justice all over the world.”

He died of natural causes.

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Senators say approve California-to-Cuba flights

Democratic U.S. Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer are asking Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx to approve direct flights from California to Cuba.

In a March 18 letter, the senators write that California should be kept in mind as the Department of Transportation considers applications from U.S. air carriers for the up to 110 daily direct flights that have been approved to the island nation.

There already is a demand for travel to Cuba from Californians, they write.

“The Los Angeles area is home to the nation’s fourth-largest Cuban American population, and the Los Angeles community is already served with a weekly charter flight to Havana,” it states.

Seven members of California’s House delegation are in Cuba today, joining President Obama on the first trip to the country by a sitting U.S. president in nearly 90 years.

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Legislation revived to curb surprise medical bills

(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)

A coalition of consumer groups and unions said Monday they are reviving a proposal to protect patients who go to in-network hospitals from higher out-of-pocket costs if they’re treated by out-of-network physicians.

The bill, which would allow higher charges only if the patient agrees three days in advance, stalled in the Legislature last year amid opposition from physician groups.

The consumer group Health Access California and the California Labor Federation are seeking the change to prevent any surprises of large medical bills for going to an in-network hospital when the medical worker involved is not part of the network.

“Patients who do the right thing and follow the rules of their plan and go to an in-network facility are still dinged for hundreds or thousands of dollars with these surprise medical bills,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of the consumer group Health Access California. “We think it’s unfair.”

The groups put Sarah Ross of Humboldt County on a conference call with reporters to tell her story. She booked her childbirth at an in-network hospital and was surprised to get a bill later from an anesthesiologist who was not part of her network.

“That extra $1,000 bill was a burden on my family’s budget,” she said.

On the last night of the legislative year in 2015, the measure fell three votes short of being sent to the governor, despite having already been approved by the Assembly and Senate.

The measure was opposed by physician groups including the California Orthopaedic Assn., which wrote to lawmakers that the bill “will penalize those providers who cannot accept inadequate rates and will provide no incentive for plans to negotiate fair contracts.”

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Parental notification initiative misses November ballot

Backers of an initiative requiring a 48 hour waiting period before a teenage girl could receive an abortion have failed to get their proposal on the fall statewide ballot.

The measure faced a March 15 deadline to collect more than 585,000 valid voter signatures, and proponent Steve Hicks said in an email on Monday that the volunteer effort came up short.

The initiative faced a particularly high hurdle, as it was written as an amendment to the California Constitution. Even so, some political consultants had put the measure on their watch list, as anti-abortion groups have succeeded in years past with grassroots signature gathering drives. The most recent, 2008’s Proposition 4, lost by almost four percentage points on Election Day.

November’s ballot is likely to be the longest in more than a decade, and Secretary of State Alex Padilla will formally certify the final list of initiatives on June 30.

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Dolores Huerta endorses Rep. Honda

Rep. Mike Honda’s campaign announced Monday that civil rights and labor leader Dolores Huerta has endorsed his re-election bid in California’s 17th Congressional District.

In a statement, Huerta called Honda “a steady, reliable champion for working families.”

As he seeks a ninth term, the Silicon Valley Democrat is in a tight intraparty battle with former Obama administration official Ro Khanna.

It’s a rematch, and both men are expected to clear the top-two primary on June 7.

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Spring break for legislators after 2,172 bills in 2016

It’s going to be a quiet week around the state Capitol, as most legislators are back in their districts for a brief spring break.

But they’ve been pretty busy in 2016 when it comes to introducing bills.

The subscription bill tracking service CapitolTrack reports that there have been 2,172 bills introduced since the Legislature convened on Jan. 4. That works out to an average of about 39 bills a day – which is probably too low, given the number of holidays and Friday adjournments and the fact that the deadline for introducing bills came last month.

The Assembly had led the way with 1,442 bills. Last year was a bit busier; by comparison, legislators introduced 2,772 bills in what was the first year of the two-year legislative session.

Both chambers will gavel back into action next Monday.

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Check out this map on nation’s police body camera rules

The nonprofit Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press is tracking which cities allow the public to see footage from police body cameras and which ones keep it secret.

Almost three-quarters of states, including California, are at least considering legislation on public access to body camera videos.

Lawmakers here punted on major body camera rules last year but passed a law written by Assemblyman Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona) that simply requires agencies to hold on to the videos. At least two pending bills are aiming for broader regulations on public access.

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White House to host water summit

White House officials have scheduled a water summit Tuesday to discuss the country’s long-term water management strategy.

The summit in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House, is scheduled for 6 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. PDT and will be shown at www.whitehouse.gov/live.

El Niño rains this winter helped California’s reservoirs begin to fill, but they were not nearly enough to dig California out of a four-year water deficit.

According to the White House, the event will focus on public and privately funded water initiatives, and maintaining reliable access to water daily needs including for agriculture and energy production.

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Who can see police body camera footage? Even among Democrats, there’s a split

State lawmakers are trying again this year to pass major legislation on police body cameras, which are on the rise across California. Two bills are taking on the difficult issue of who gets to see camera footage and when. But even within the Democratic caucus there’s a big difference of opinion.

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Don’t tell these girls millennial women prefer Sanders

Actresses Lena Dunham and America Ferrera joined Chelsea Clinton at an event in Los Angeles Sunday night to outline their support for Hillary Clinton.

As Amy Kaufman reports, they pulled no punches when explaining how they get angry when people criticize their choice for president.

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Campaigns head to California

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