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gvwireThe California Chamber of Commerce calls it a “job killer” bill. State water and agriculture interests have lined up solidly against it. Still, Senate Bill 1 is moving through the California Legislature despite concerns that it threatens water supplies and will result in a flurry of lawsuits.
It passed the Senate in May and faces one more committee hearing in the Assembly before heading to the floor for a final vote.
(GV Wire/Alexis DeSha)
Drafted as a hedge against possible Trump administration actions, SB 1 would essentially freeze state regulations in place if environmental and labor laws are rolled back at the federal level. Supporters say it will allow California to preserve environmental and worker protections until state agencies can evaluate the impact of changes.
Related Story: SB 1: Insurance Policy Against Trump Rollbacks or Job Killer?
The bill’s impact on endangered species regulations is raising the greatest concerns. Voluntary water use agreements allow for some flexibility in protection levels, based on the unique conditions of a given water project.Wade says those agreements have been developed with input from scientists, farmers, environmentalists, and other stakeholders as well as the California Environmental Protection Agency and the California Natural Resources Agency.
“They provide an agreed-upon amount of water for river flows as well as new environmental projects and other improvements — paid for by farmers, water districts, and other users — that will help get maximum benefit from the water,” he says.
Since SB 1 locks in protections that were in place as of January 2017, Wade says the bill would result in the collapse of the agreements.
“I knew this was going to be difficult,” Senate Pro tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) said at a recent committee hearing for the bill, referencing its complexity. She said her goal for the bill is to maintain environmental standards that were established through bipartisan consensus decades ago.
Listing SB 1 on its influential “Job Killer” list, the California Chamber of Commerce says the bill “undermines current state efforts to utilize science-based decision-making to manage and provide reliable water supplies for California and protect, restore, and enhance the ecosystems of the Bay-Delta and its tributaries.
“It further increases the potential for costly litigation by creating new private rights of action under California law.”
SB 1 received approvals in recent weeks in the Assembly’s Environmental Safety, Natural Resources, and Judiciary committees. It now awaits a final hearing by the Appropriations committee. If passed, the bill will move to the full Assembly.
The Legislature will return from summer recess Aug. 12.
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