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2017 - 2018 Legislation

This is the second year of the 2017-18 legislative session. Provided here is a summary of the 2018 legislation I authored. To see the legislative text or status of the bills, click on the bill number.

Health Care

As chair of the Assembly Health Committee and a health care provider myself, improving health care is important to me.

AB 180:This bill was vetoed by the Governor on September 27. It addressed an issue brought by the Anderson Valley Health Center located in Mendocino County and would have required the Department of Health Care Services to establish criteria for community clinics to receive quality incentive payments for health care services provided. The Governor's veto message can be found here.

AB 315: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 29. Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are “middle men” that negotiate drug prices between drug companies and health plans. PBMs are currently not regulated, unlike the companies they negotiate with – pharmaceutical manufacturers, health plans, pharmacies and pharmacists – and there is no way to determine whether they are negotiating in the best interest in consumers. This bill would require state oversight of PBMs to better understand how their business model works and determine the impact their services have on increasing drug prices and consumers.

AB 595: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 7. Health plans and insurers are proposing mergers more and more and, as a result, this has reduced competition in many areas across the state. This bill would authorize state regulators to review merger applications to determine how they would affect consumers.

AB 710: This bill was signed by the Governor on July 9. Epilepsy affects approximately 1 in 26 Americans in their lifetime. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved one cannabidiol (CBD)-derived therapy, Epidiolex, that shows promise for the treatment of some rare forms of epilepsy in children. Prior to this bill, California law prevented physicians from prescribing it and this bill allows this drug and other future FDA-approved epilepsy treatments derived from CBD to be prescribed to patients. Before prescriptions can be filled, the Drug Enforcement Administration must change how it classifies the specific compound used. That rescheduling is expected this fall (it won’t be available in dispensaries because FDA-approved drugs can only be sold at places with a pharmaceutical license.

AB 2262: This bill has been held and is not moving forward. Certain areas within Sonoma and Mendocino counties are challenged to provide urgent care and emergency services. A voter-approved tax generates funds that the hospital district can use for this purpose. This bill clarifies the scope of services this hospital district can provide.

AB 2393: This bill was signed by the Governor on July 9. This bill brings existing law into compliance with federal parity regulations which prohibit Medi-Cal from charging beneficiaries more to access mental health services than medical/surgical services.

AB 2416: This bill was eliminated; however, revised language was placed into AB 2472 (see below). It intended to increase access to care by increasing health plan competition. It would have required plans that have Medi-Cal contracts, and offer qualified plans, to negotiate with Covered California, the state’s official health care marketplace, to offer plans in areas where two or fewer plans are available through Covered California.

AB 2427: This bill was vetoed by the Governor. It would have required the Department of Health Services to decline to renew or award a contract, in whole or in part, of a for-profit Medi-Cal managed care plan if the Attorney General determines that the Medi-Cal managed care plan engaged or engages in anti-competitive conduct or practices, or if the department determines that they are not spending enough on patient care rather than overhead and administrative costs, for example, executive pay. The Governor's veto message can be found here.

AB 2472: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 20. It requires the Council on Health Care Delivery Systems to prepare a feasibility analysis for a public health insurance option in order to increase competition and choice for health care consumers, a challenge especially in rural areas where health plan choice can be extremely limited. The bill would require the council to submit the feasibility analysis to the Legislature and the Governor on or before October 1, 2021.

AB 2502: The language in this bill was placed into budget trailer language (AB 1810) and allows for the creation of an all-payer claims data base to obtain information on payments made for services. The data base is the first step in data-driven cost control efforts, promote transparency on healthcare spending and will allow the state to monitor trends in health care spending and pricing. This bill allocates $50 million to allow the state to begin collecting information regarding what is paid for health care services and require the state to prepare an annual report to the Legislature and the Governor that would include, among others, recommendations for containing the cost of health care services and coverage.

AB 2517 (co-authored with Assemblymember Arambula): The language in this bill was placed in budget trailer language (AB 1810) and $5 million was allocated to establish the Council on Health Care Delivery Systems as an independent body to develop a plan that includes options for advancing progress toward achieving a health care delivery system in California that provides coverage and access through a unified financing system for all Californians.This bill would establish the Advisory Panel that would be required to develop a plan to achieve universal coverage and a unified financing health care system in California. The plan would need to outline a timeline and steps necessary, including financial models and any federal laws or state constitutional issues that would need to be addressed.

This country, and our state, is in the midst of an opioid epidemic. Between 2015 and 2017, nearly 10,000 Californians died of a drug overdose, primarily by opioids including heroin and fentanyl. California ranks in the top five states when it comes to the number of drug-overdose deaths.

AB 2760: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 10. It requires that prescribers of opioids offer their patients, who have been determined to be at high risk for overdose, a co-prescription for naloxone, a medication that acts immediately to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. It is a tool that can immediately save lives and provide an opportunity to discuss treatment with individuals who may be suffering from substance use disorder.

AB 2789: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 17. A significant number of opioid prescriptions are being obtained through fraudulent means. This bill would require that all prescriptions be submitted electronically by 2021, with few exceptions. This process can significantly reduce paper-based fraud and forgery, reduce medication errors due to poor prescriber handwriting and allow more timely entry into a statewide data base, which prescribers use before they write a prescription to ensure, for example, to see if the patient is "doctor shopping" or that other people are not fraudulently obtaining prescriptions under the prescriber’s name.

Cannabis

AB 2641: This bill was held in Senate Appropriations and will not move forward this year. In November 2016, California voters approved Prop 64, which allowed a person 21 years or older to purchase and use cannabis for recreational purposes. Although current law allows the sale and consumption of recreational cannabis at certain local events, only those licensed as dispensaries are permitted to sell directly to consumers. This bill would have allowed the state to issue a temporary license so that cultivators and manufacturers could sell directly to consumers during those events. This would have allowed small farmers and manufacturers to introduce customers to their brand and identify new markets.

Communications

AB 1959: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 5. California has a long history of guaranteeing high-quality, affordable and widely available basic phone service and access to 911. In rural and high-cost areas of the state, building telecommunications networks can be expensive due to rough terrain, greater distances between customers and low population density. This bill continues an existing fund to preserve affordable telecommunications services to rural areas.

Education

AB 1962: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 27. Under California law, tribal foster youth are counted differently from other foster youth. This can cause a school district to lose crucial funding. This bill will align the definition of “foster youth” to make sure schools receive appropriate funding.

Environment

AB 2525: This bill was held in the Assembly Appropriations Committee and will not move forward this year. Unlawful cannabis cultivation on public land has damaged property and the environment and kept families out of some of our best State and National Parks for fear of encountering armed growers. This bill would have required the state to survey all state and California national parks annually for unlawful cannabis cultivation activity. It would have also required the state to establish a program to receive funding to restore the damaged public lands and ensure that this activity is eradicated.

AB 2640: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 20. The Klamath hydroelectric dams built before 1964 do not have fish passages, and as a result, the upper Klamath River watershed has been completely inaccessible to certain types of fish. For decades, tribes, environmentalists and the fishing community have worked with stakeholders to open the more than 400 miles of fish spawning habitat upstream of the Klamath dams. In 2016, there was agreement to remove all four dams. Endangered fish, such as the Lost River and short nose sucker, may be impacted during the removal of these dams, and because of that, this bill allows the state to authorize, by permit, the loss of any listed species during the lawful removal of the dams. This bill also includes the taking of Condors if the take is incidental to an otherwise lawful activity and the impacts are minimized and fully mitigated.

Food and Agriculture

AB 2909: This bill was held in the Assembly Appropriations Committee and will not move forward this year. The popularity of California’s farm-to-fork movement is growing and we continue to look for ways to shorten the supply line between the farmer and the consumer in an effort to increase the availability of fresh, locally grown food. Current state regulations prevent some local poultry farmers from successfully operating at a small scale. This bill would have created a farmer-friendly certification program and established sanitary standards, practices and procedures to ensure poultry safety.   

AB 2524: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 18. In the past few years, breweries and wineries have seen an increased demand for food service. To meet these demands, restaurants or small catering businesses will set up a temporary food station in the brewery or winery to sell food directly to customers. Although some counties require permits for this type of food retail, many do not. This bill would create statewide standards for catering operations when working in conjunction with a hosting facility.

Seniors

AB 1953: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 14. Last year, Assemblymember Wood worked with the Humboldt County community to successfully prevent two of three skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), all owned by Brius Healthcare, California’s largest nursing home chain, from closing and displacing more than 100 residents. Through that process, and the findings of an audit requested by Wood and Senator McGuire by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, much was learned about large SNF owners, and how they use other companies they own to obtain a wide variety of goods and services. This bill will require more transparency to ensure that those goods and services are fairly priced, free of conflict of interest and that SNF owners are not gaining profits at the expense of quality care. The report prepared by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee on Brius Healthcare can be found here.

Wildfires/Rebuilding

The wildfires that raged through Northern California in late 2017 caused historic levels of damage and devastation. This quick and sudden firestorm led the Governor to declare a state of emergency in several counties. In total, wildfires burned over 1.2 million acres of land, damaging or destroying over 32,000 homes, 4,300 businesses, and killing 46 people. The following bills intend to address some of the unique and unforeseen challenges.

AB 1875: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 21. After the wildfires of 2017, many homeowners found themselves underinsured. This bill requires the Department of Insurance to develop a Home Insurance Finder tool on its website. It also requires insurers to provide information to an applicant who is denied coverage or a policyholder whose policy is canceled or not renewed. It also requires insurers to keep the Department informed of the amount of extended replacement cost coverage it offers in California, if that information changes from its last report. 

AB 1919: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 21. Price gouging became an issue following the fires, especially in the home rental market. This bill would make it a misdemeanor for a landlord to increase the monthly rental price for residential housing to an existing or prospective tenant by more than 10 percent of the “pre-disaster fair market price.” The bill would also, under certain circumstances, make it a misdemeanor to evict a housing tenant during the same time period.

AB 2228: The language in this bill was placed in budget trailer language and allows school districts to stabilize their ADA funding for 3 years following a declared emergency. While 652 schools serving nearly 300,000 students were closed for some period during the fires, most were reopened within a couple of days. But because so many houses were destroyed, many families and students were displaced, resulting in schools losing students for a prolonged period of time. Because funding is tied to daily attendance numbers, this has had a significant impact on local school budgets. Each year after a declared emergency, the school can qualify for the following:

Year #1: The 2017-18 school year is covered under current law which allows schools to use their previous year’s student numbers to establish ADA funding. 

Year #2: The new bill language allows 2018-19 to use the same numbers as  the first year of a declared disaster.

Year #3: Since current law already allows them to use the previous year’s numbers, school districts could continue to use year #2 numbers.

Each year the Superintendent must prove, through an affidavit, that the funding is essential.

AB 2229: This bill was signed by the Governor on July 9. It requires insurance companies to consider and disclose certain fire prevention incentives for homeowners. The insurers will need to consider features of the property that contribute to increased or decreased fire risk and also requires the insurer to inform the policyholder how the factors are affecting the cost of their insurance policy.

AB 2267: This bill is being held and will not move forward this year. In Sonoma County alone, the wildfires worsened an existing severe housing shortage, destroying more than 5,000 homes. The county will need tens of thousands of new housing units to accommodate forecasted needs. Between 2011 and 2017, the county built less than 5,000 new homes and it is estimated that about 6,300 construction workers will be needed annually over the next three years to rebuild in Sonoma County alone. This bill would, until January 1, 2024, provide for streamlined judicial review for actions or proceedings brought pursuant to CEQA on the adoption or approval of amendments to the Downtown Station Area Specific Plan for the City of Santa Rosa meeting certain requirements or on the approval of residential projects that are consistent with the amended Downtown Station Area Specific Plan.

AB 2333: This bill was held in Senate Appropriations and will not move forward this year. The Office of Emergency Services (OES) has many responsibilities during a natural disaster or state-declared emergency and they have done impressive work this past year. The intent of this bill was to make it easier for OES to provide mental health services following a disaster by establishing a new position of mental health deputy director within the department. This bill would have allowed OES to more easily respond to the mental health needs of those affected by a disaster or declared emergency.

AB 2551: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 21. It authorizes CAL FIRE to collaborate with private parties to execute prescribed burns. It directs the California Natural Resources Agency and CalEPA to develop a plan for forest and watershed restoration investments to improve watershed function and resilience in the area that supplies Shasta, Oroville, and Trinity reservoirs. This region is a priority for state water reliability and supply in the changing climate, and this plan builds on the regional implementation envisioned by the Task Force. The bill requires agencies to propose a pilot project for alignment of permits necessary for restoration actions in the watersheds supplying Trinity, Oroville, and Shasta reservoirs, to maximize efficiency. And finally, it authorizes CAL FIRE to administer the California Forest Improvement Program (CFIP) on a loan basis, rather than strictly as a reimbursement program, addressing the greatest barrier small landowners face in using that program.

AB 2693: This bill was held in Assembly Appropriations and did not move forward. The California wildfires in late 2017 destroyed or damaged many communications networks. This bill would have required the the California Public Utilities Commission to collect information from telecommunications service providers relating to the provider’s efforts and resources used to restore telecommunications service outages caused by, and to repair or replace related network infrastructure or facilities that were damaged as a result of a state emergency or natural disaster.

AB 2913: This bill was signed by the Governor on September 21. Following the 2017 wildfires in Northern California, thousands of people are faced with rebuilding their lives and businesses. Local governments are experiencing a high demand of permitting and planning applications and there are only so many licensed architects, contractors and support services – not nearly enough to meet the demands of such a widespread disaster. As a result, this bill allows additional time for the rebuilding process. It would allow a permit to remain valid if work is commenced within 12 months after its issuance and would authorize a permitee to request one or more extensions of time for periods of not more than 180 days per extension.

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2017 Accomplishments

AB 156: This bill extends the 2018 open enrollment period for Covered California plans effective January 1, 2019, to October 15, 2018 to January 15, 2019. This is in response to the federal government’s recent reduction of open enrollment from three months to six weeks. Federal rules allow states to increase the enrollment period through state legislation. 

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective January 1, 2018.

AB 191: This bill reflects my ongoing commitment to improve access to mental health services, especially in our rural communities. Currently mental health facilities can hold patients who are determined to be a danger to themselves or others at the facility for observation. To legally execute this “mental health hold,” a physician and either a social worker or registered nurse must evaluate the patient and sign the appropriate documents. Unfortunately, in rural communities there may be a shortage of nurses and social workers. AB 191 adds Marriage and Family Therapists and Licensed Professional Clinical Counselors to the list of professionals legally able to evaluate and sign mental health holds in addition to the physician.

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective January 1, 2018.

AB 265: The cost of pharmaceuticals drugs has escalated year after year. Manufacturers use coupons and other discounts to promote the use of new and often expensive drugs by eliminating or reducing a patient’s out-of-pocket cost. Although reducing a patient’s out-of-pocket expenses is significant, it can inadvertently cause patients to use more expensive drugs when a less expensive one would treat their condition just as effectively. Unnecessarily using a higher priced drug will increase health care costs and ultimately raise the cost of health insurance.

This bill prohibits a drug manufacturer from offering any discount, rebate, repayment, product voucher or other reduction in an individual’s out-of-pocket expenses for any drug if a lower cost brand name or non-brand name drug is available that is therapeutically equivalent to, or interchangeable with, the drug or if the active ingredients of the drug are available without prescription at a lower cost. If there is only one drug that will work for a patient, a coupon or discount could still be utilized.

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective January 1, 2018.

AB 275: Last year in Humboldt County several long-term care facilities threatened to close on short notice and move its residents hundreds of miles away. To protect residents of long-term care facilities, this bill increases the notice that facilities must provide before any changes, such as a closure, could occur. Itrequires a facility to provide 60 days’ notice to the affected residents and families and 60 days’ written notice to the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman. It also strengthens requirements to medically and socially assess residents in order to prevent or reduce transfer trauma and require facilities to provide information on the availability of alternative long-term care beds in the community, and the reason for the proposed closure. This information will be reported to the state Department of Public Health which would render a decision on whether the facility could implement the planned changes.

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective on January 1, 2018.

AB 911: As a dentist who practiced for almost 30 years, my practice had certain pieces of equipment, such as radiographic X-ray equipment, that caused my practice to be regulated and monitored by numerous state and federal agencies. I was recently made aware that bomb squads use tiny handheld X-ray devices to see inside suspicious packages. These devices are regulated by the FBI and California’s Department of Public Health (DPH). DPH treats them like the X-ray devices in commercial settings even though they are used in areas that are carefully  cordoned off from public exposure and where law enforcement personnel wear heavily protected garments. The DPH requirements are redundant and impractical and this bill would exempt this equipment from the DPH licensing requirements.

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective January 1, 2018.

AB 980: Too many people in California, especially in rural areas, do not have access to a broadband connection. In addition to individual residents, entire towns, including schools, hospitals, libraries and city governments, have no access. This bill would require the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) install conduit in designated priority areas during planned road work, which can mitigate costs when cable is installed at a future date. Once the conduit is in the ground, installation costs of cable can be reduced to pennies on the dollar.

This bill was not pursued in the 2016-17 session because Caltrans agreed to develop a policy directive to  install conduit for broadband in appropriate projects on priority corridors when the project scope includes trenching.

AB 1410: Air ambulance services provide lifesaving emergency transportation to the most critical patients directly to trauma centers. In addition, emergency helicopter air ambulance providers provide a critical link between rural health facilities and urban hospitals. Some emergency patients transported by air ambulances have no insurance, are not eligible for Medi-Cal and have no ability to pay for the service, yet because of the existing revenue source, these patients are given the same high level care as those with medical insurance. AB 1410 guarantees the state will continue to fund air ambulance services, ensuring anyone in need can access these crucial services, not just those who can afford it.

This bill was signed by the Governor and became effective January 1, 2018.

Funding for Environmental Cleanup: In advance of Prop 64’s implementation, we secured $1.5 million to kick-start environmental cleanup in Humboldt, Trinity and Mendocino counties resulting from damage created by rogue cannabis grows. Those grants are available through the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Cannabis Restoration Grant Program which funds projects that restore salmon habitat in watersheds most heavily impacted by these rogue grows. Once Prop 64 is fully implemented, more funds will be available for this purpose.

Access to Broadband: As a co-author of AB 1665, Internet for All, this bill will provide $300 million in grant funds to build broadband infrastructure with priority given to unserved areas in California or where dial-up is the only access. This continues the California Advanced Services Fund administered by the California Public Utilities Commission which has a goal of reaching 98% coverage, by region, in 5 years.

Prescription Drug Prices: As a co-author of SB 17, this bill will promote transparency in the health care system by requiring drug makers to give prior notice to purchasers before raising prices and requiring health plans to report the proportion of the health insurance that is spent on prescription drugs. The drug industry plays a vital and, at times, life-saving role in patient treatment. Without stifling innovation, this bill puts reasonable parameters around pricing practices that, in the past, have focused too often on what the market will bear. This bill complements my legislation, AB 265 and AB 315, in our fight to stop escalating drug costs.

Parks and Water Bond: I supported SB 5, which provides $4 billion for parks and water projects, and expressed to the Department of Parks and Recreation that funding must be prioritized for the 42 state parks in the North Coast, recognizing that these parks are the primary driver of tourism in our area. The Governor signed this bill, so the bond measure will go before voters in June 2018.

Housing Bond: I supported this legislation, aimed at easing the state's affordable housing crisis. This includes a $4 billion housing bond, a new $75 fee on real estate transaction documents, and a bill to streamline building regulations that often prevents developers from constructing low-cost apartments and homes. The housing bond would provide $3 billion to affordable housing and $1 billion to veterans’ housing. We know that California lacks 1.5 million affordable housing units compared to demand and certainly contributes to the growth of the homeless population. The Governor signed SB 3, and the bond will go before voters in 2018.

Transportation: In April 2017 Governor Brown signed SB 1, known as the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 (RRAA). This bill was created to address a $130 billion in deferred street, road, and highway maintenance at all levels of government in California. RRAA will provide $54 billion over the next 10 years. I supported SB 1 to address the serious deficiencies in roadways in the North Coast area. We saw the devastation created by land and mudslides this year and we need the funds to address the immediate cleanup needs as well as long-term infrastructure improvements.

Cap & Trade Agreement: I supported a package of bills that extends the state’s signature plan to address climate change through 2030. California must continue to lead the nation to fight climate change and is essential to protecting the scenic North Coast while allowing market forces to cut greenhouse gas emissions.This legislation also suspends the State Responsibility Area (SRA) fire prevention fee, which is a huge win for rural California. That fee has placed an unfair burden on rural property owners for years. I have been a coauthor on bipartisan bills to repeal this fee every year since I joined the legislature. Last year this fee cost property owners in our district -- Del Norte, Humboldt, Trinity, Mendocino and Sonoma counties -- roughly $8 million and it has decimated local fire districts. (AB 398 and AB 617)