Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Legislators Slam Brakes on Newsom's 'Fast Track' Bill Try
By admin
Published 1 year ago on
June 12, 2023

Share

Few people inside or outside the Capitol were paying much attention last year when Assembly Bill 205 popped up on the California Senate floor on June 29.

The measure had been sitting in the Senate for more than four months, one of many so-called “trailer bills” legally connected to the state budget but having little, if any, policy connection to the budget.

Dan Walters with a serious expression

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

Over the previous decade, after voters – perhaps unwittingly – reduced the legislative vote requirement for budgets from two-thirds to a simple majority, it had become common practice for governors and legislative leaders to put sweeping policy changes into trailer bills to make their passage easier.

Trailer bills need just simple majority votes, take effect immediately on being signed by the governor, and are typically taken up in rapid fire order with little or no serious discussion.

Typically, AB 205 was, in fact, a major revision of how regulated utilities, such as Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern California Edison, acquire, distribute and price electric power.

One of its many provisions, under the title of “miscellaneous,” declared it would “authorize the Public Utilities Commission to establish reasonable fixed charges on default residential customer rates to help stabilize rates and equitably allocate and recover costs among residential customers in each electrical corporation’s service territory.

“If the Public Utilities Commission establishes fixed charges on default residential customer rates, ensure that the fixed charges are established to more fairly distribute the burden of supporting the electric system and achieving California’s climate change goals through the fixed charge.”

A Senate staff analysis of the measure was a little more specific. It said that the $10 per month “fixed charge” that utilities charge customers for maintaining their basic systems was repealed. The new fixed charges would be “on an income-graduated basis with no fewer than three income thresholds, such that a low-income ratepayer would realize lower average monthly bill without making any chances in usage, as specified.”

Bills Fly Through Legislature in Hours

In a few hours, AB 205 whipped through both legislative houses and Gov. Gavin Newsom signed it into law a day later.

Two months ago, Californians finally learned what it meant. The state’s utilities had filed plans to replace the $10 fixed charge with variable fees tied to customers’ incomes, ranging from as low as $15 for households with the lowest incomes to as much as $128 for those in upper-income brackets.

The utilities said the new fixed costs would be offset by lower prices for power consumption for low- and moderate-income households.

The revelation garnered national publicity and touched off debate over what was clearly an effort to have higher-income consumers underwrite the utility bills of those with lower incomes.

GOP state senators issued a letter saying, “the tactic of implementing a structured fixed-charge system that diminishes individual responsibility and usage in favor of an ‘identity’ subsidization is not, in our opinion, an answer. More fees are not a solution to already ridiculously high utility bills.”

Setting aside the merits, or lack thereof, of income-based utility pricing, AB 205 is another example of how trailer bills are misused, and while it’s just wrong even more abusive trailer bills have been proposed.

When Newsom unveiled a plan recently to make wide-ranging changes to the California Environmental Quality Act, he wanted it to be a package of trailer bills. The plan drew heat from environmental groups and when it received an initial airing in a Senate budget committee, members balked at giving it the fast-track treatment afforded to trailer bills, saying it needed greater scrutiny.

That was a procedural step in the right direction. AB 205 should have had the same scrutiny.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

49ers Rookie WR Ricky Pearsall Shot in Attempted Union Square Robbery

DON'T MISS

Will Gov. Newsom Call a Special Session to Deal With Gas Prices?

DON'T MISS

Red Wavers Go the Extra Mile to Make It a Party Before the ‘Dogs Play Michigan

DON'T MISS

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

DON'T MISS

Bettors Banking on Eagles Resurgence, Cowboys Regression as NFL Season Begins

DON'T MISS

Abandoned Poodle Mix Adam Survives the Wild and Seeks a Forever Home

DON'T MISS

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

DON'T MISS

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

DON'T MISS

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

DON'T MISS

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

UP NEXT

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

UP NEXT

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

UP NEXT

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

UP NEXT

Trump Film ‘The Apprentice’ Finds Distributor and Will Open Before the Election

UP NEXT

Snark’s in Season as National Park Embraces the Hate on Social Media

UP NEXT

California Treasurer Fiona Ma Cleared of Sexual Harassment Allegations

UP NEXT

How One Brazilian Judge Could Suspend Elon Musk’s X

UP NEXT

How Trump and Georgia’s Republican Governor Made Peace, Helped by Allies Anxious About the Election

UP NEXT

California’s Fast Food Workers Got a $20 Minimum Wage, but Is It Working? It’s Debatable

UP NEXT

Vance Blames Harris for Deaths in Kabul, Tells VP to ‘Go to Hell’

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

9 hours ago

Bettors Banking on Eagles Resurgence, Cowboys Regression as NFL Season Begins

12 hours ago

Abandoned Poodle Mix Adam Survives the Wild and Seeks a Forever Home

13 hours ago

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

14 hours ago

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

14 hours ago

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

1 day ago

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

1 day ago

How a Real Estate Boom Drove Political Corruption in Los Angeles

1 day ago

Big Red Church Hosts Forum on Palestine on Saturday Night

1 day ago

Palestinian TikTok Star Who Shared Details of Gaza Life Under Siege Is Killed by Israeli Airstrike

1 day ago

49ers Rookie WR Ricky Pearsall Shot in Attempted Union Square Robbery

SAN FRANCISCO — 49ers wide receiver Ricky Pearsall was shot Saturday during an attempted robbery in central San Francisco, city authorities ...

22 mins ago

Police officers secure the area and investigate the scene of a shooting at Union Square in San Francisco, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via AP)
22 mins ago

49ers Rookie WR Ricky Pearsall Shot in Attempted Union Square Robbery

Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at an event in anticipation of signing a bill on his proposed oil profit penalty plan in Sacramento on March 28, 2023. (CalMatters/ Miguel Gutierrez Jr.)
1 hour ago

Will Gov. Newsom Call a Special Session to Deal With Gas Prices?

Fresno State dancers cheer on the Bulldogs against Michigan, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
1 hour ago

Red Wavers Go the Extra Mile to Make It a Party Before the ‘Dogs Play Michigan

9 hours ago

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

12 hours ago

Bettors Banking on Eagles Resurgence, Cowboys Regression as NFL Season Begins

A black poodle's face with his tongue sticking out
13 hours ago

Abandoned Poodle Mix Adam Survives the Wild and Seeks a Forever Home

14 hours ago

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

14 hours ago

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend