(1) Existing law prohibits a person, firm, corporation, or association that is a nongovernmental entity and contracts to perform public health and safety labor or services for a public agency from displaying on a vehicle a logo of the public agency that reasonably could be interpreted or construed as implying that the labor or services are being provided by employees of the public agency, unless the vehicle conspicuously displays a specified statement. Existing law similarly prohibits a person or employee of that entity from wearing a uniform bearing a logo of the public agency that reasonably could be interpreted or construed as making that implication, unless the uniform conspicuously displays the logo and specific additional information. Existing law defines “public health and safety
labor or services” to include emergency medical services.
This bill would revise that definition to include prehospital emergency medical services.
(2) Existing law divides the state into agricultural districts, and provides for the management of these districts by district agricultural associations. Existing law excludes district agricultural associations from preparing or submitting any written report to the Governor, the Legislature, or a state agency, except as specified.
This bill would require a district agricultural association to annually report its real property information to the Department of General Services, as specified.
(3) Existing law, relating to the California Victim Compensation and Government
Claims Board, cross-references an item code number used in administering the annual Budget Act.
This bill would make a technical amendment to update the cross-reference to use the current item code number.
(4) Existing law requires the State Architect to establish a certified access specialist program (CASp) and authorizes the State Architect to require applicants to pay specified fees to meet the costs of administering the program. Existing law imposes, on and after January 1, 2013, and until December 31, 2018, an additional state fee of $1 on any applicant, as specified, and divides the moneys received between the local entity that collected the moneys and the Division of the State Architect, pursuant to specified percentages. Existing law requires a local entity collecting the additional fee and the Division of the
State Architect to each make an annual report to the Legislature and to the chairs of specified committees. Under existing law, a local entity is required to include in the report moneys spent to increase CASp services and to fund programs to facilitate compliance.
This bill would require a local entity collecting the additional fee to instead report to the Division of the State Architect, and would expand the information required in the report to include activities undertaken to increase CASp services and to facilitate accessibility compliance. The bill would also require the Division of the State Architect to include in its report to the Legislature the total fees collected by each city, county, or city and county.
By revising and expanding the duties of local governments with respect to the reporting of CASp fees, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(5) The California Emergency Services Act requires the Governor to coordinate the State Emergency Plan and any programs necessary for the mitigation of the effects of an emergency in this state, as specified.
The act authorizes the Governor, with advice of the Office of Emergency Services, to divide the state into mutual aid regions for the more effective application, administration, and coordination of mutual aid and other emergency-related activities.
This bill would require the Office of Emergency Services to coordinate response and recovery operations in each mutual aid region. The bill would require the office, in consultation with relevant local and state agencies, to develop and adopt a state fire service and rescue emergency mutual aid plan that would be an annex to the State Emergency Plan.
(6) Existing law establishes the Railroad Accident Prevention and Immediate Deployment Force in the California Environmental Protection Agency and designates the force as being responsible for providing immediate onsite response capability in the event of a large-scale release of toxic materials resulting from a surface transportation accident. Existing law requires the agency to develop a state railroad accident prevention and immediate deployment plan, in consultation with specified state entities, other potentially affected state, local, or federal agencies, and affected businesses.
Existing law requires the Office of Emergency Services to serve as the central point in state government for the emergency reporting of spills, unauthorized releases, or other accidental releases of hazardous materials and to coordinate the notification of the appropriate state and local administering agencies that may be
required to respond to those spills, unauthorized releases, or other accidental releases.
This bill would create the Regional Railroad Accident Preparedness and Immediate Response Force in the office, consisting of specified representatives, and would designate this force as being responsible for providing regional and onsite response capabilities in the event of a release of hazardous materials from a railcar or a railroad accident involving a railcar designated to transport hazardous material commodities, as specified. The bill would require the office, in consultation with specified entities, to develop a state regional railroad accident preparedness and immediate response plan that would be an annex to the State Emergency Plan. The bill would require the force and the Office of Spill Prevention and Response to coordinate in their respective authorities and responsibilities to avoid any duplication of effort, ensure cooperation, and promote the sharing of
information regarding the risk of discharge of petroleum by rail into state waters.
This bill would require the Director of Emergency Services to establish a schedule of fees to be paid by a person owning any of the 25 most hazardous material commodities that are transported by rail in California. The bill would require that the fees be fair, as required by the federal Hazardous Materials Transportation Act, and state the intent of the Legislature that the schedule of fees reflect the proportionate risks to both the public safety and the environment resulting from a release of hazardous materials and the expense of preparing to respond to those risks. The bill would authorize the director to exempt from the fee a shipment of hazardous materials that meets certain criteria and prohibit the collection of fees in excess of the reasonable regulatory costs to the state. The bill would require the director to consider adjusting the fee not less frequently than every 3
years. The bill would require the director to create an industry advisory committee to advise the director on setting the fee and other policy matters. The bill would also require every person who operates a railroad that transports hazardous materials by railcar to register with the board and to remit the fees to the board pursuant to the Fee Collection Procedures Law. The bill would create the Regional Railroad Accident Preparedness and Immediate Response Fund in the State Treasury and would require that all revenues, interest, penalties, and other amounts collected pursuant to the bill’s requirements be deposited into the fund, less refunds and reimbursement to the board for expenses incurred in the administration and collection of the fee. The bill would require that moneys in the fund, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used by the director for specified purposes. The bill would provide the director with the authority to collect an amount in fees that does not exceed specified amounts for
specified calendar years. The bill would require the director to contract with the Department of Finance for the preparation of a detailed report on the financial basis and programmatic effectiveness of the plan and fund. The bill would require the director, on or before January 1, 2019, and every 3 years thereafter, to submit the report to the Governor and the Legislature.
The Fee Collection Procedures Law makes a violation of any provision of the law, or of certain requirements imposed by the board pursuant to the law, a crime.
By expanding the application of the Fee Collection Procedures Law, the violation of which is a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(7) Existing law provides that a person who deprives or violates the personal liberty of another with the intent to obtain forced labor or services or for effecting or maintaining
other specified felonies is guilty of the crime of human trafficking. Existing law creates the Office of Emergency Services in the Office of the Governor, under the supervision of the Director of Emergency Services, and commits to it the responsibility for the state’s emergency and disaster services, as specified.
This bill would create the Human Trafficking Victims Assistance Fund and require money in the fund to be used by the Office of Emergency Services for the distribution of grants, as specified, to qualified nonprofit organizations, as defined, providing services to victims of human trafficking and for reimbursement of costs incurred by the office in distributing these grants.
(8) Existing law requires the Department of General Services to dispose of surplus state real property in a specified manner. Existing law requires a local agency or nonprofit
affordable housing sponsor, in order to be considered as a potential priority buyer of surplus state real property, to notify the department of its interest in surplus state real property within 90 days of the department posting on its Internet Web site the notice of availability of the surplus state real property.
This bill would require the department to notify the chairpersons of the fiscal committees of the Legislature within 30 days of the expiration of the 90 day timeframe if no local agency or nonprofit affordable housing sponsor informs the department of its interest in acquiring the property within that period.
(9) Existing law authorizes the Controller, until June 30, 2015, to procure, modify, and implement a new human resource management system that meets the needs of a modern state government, known as the 21st Century Project.
This bill would
extend that authorization for one year, until June 30, 2016.
(10) The Financial Integrity and State Manager’s Accountability Act of 1983 requires state agency heads to be responsible for the establishment and maintenance of systems of internal accounting and administrative controls and makes legislative findings and declarations in this regard. The act requires a system of internal accounting and administrative control to include specific elements, including, but not limited to, a system of authorization and recordkeeping procedures adequate to provide effective accounting control over assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenditures. The act requires a state agency head to conduct a biennial review and report the results to the Legislature, California State Auditor, Controller, Treasurer, Attorney General, Governor, and Director of Finance.
This bill would
rename the act as the State Leadership Accountability Act and consolidate certain terminology in the act under the terms “agency head” and “state agency.” This bill would modify the meaning of “internal control” to include, among other elements, 5 specified components. This bill would eliminate the requirement of submitting a biennial report to the Treasurer, Attorney General, and Governor, and additionally require submission to the Secretary of Government Operations.
(11) Existing law establishes the Missing Children Reward Fund, a continuously appropriated fund in the State Treasury, and authorizes the California Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board to make cash rewards from that fund to persons providing information leading to the location of any child listed in the missing children registry, as provided.
This bill would abolish the continuously appropriated Missing Children Reward Fund and transfer any remaining balance to the Restitution Fund, a continuously appropriated fund. This bill would require the board to instead make the cash rewards from the Restitution Fund. This bill would also make a technical amendment to these provisions.
(12) Existing law authorizes the Treasurer to deposit specified assets in his or her custody into the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco or the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, or a branch thereof.
This bill would, instead, authorize deposit into the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco or any federal reserve bank, or a branch thereof, and would make conforming changes.
Existing law requires that banks, savings and loan associations,
and credit unions deposit specified securities with the Treasurer in order to be eligible to receive and retain demand or time deposits of state funds, including, but not limited to, specified letters of credit issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco.
The bill would authorize an eligible bank headquartered outside of the state to submit letters of credit drawn on its regional federal home loan bank.
(13) The California Constitution requires the state, whenever the Legislature or a state agency mandates a new program or higher level of service on any local government, to provide a subvention of funds to reimburse the local government, with specified exceptions.
This bill would require the Department of Finance, in collaboration with the Secretary of State and the Legislative Analyst’s Office, to convene a
working group to evaluate alternatives for funding elections-related state mandates, and would require the Department of Finance to submit to the Legislature a report that summarizes the findings of the working group, including recommendations to the Legislature. This bill would also require the Department of Finance to conduct a survey of county election officials during years in which a statewide general election is held to determine whether or not counties are carrying out the requirements set forth in specified state mandates relating to elections, and would require the Department of Finance to report the results of the survey to the Legislature, as provided.
(14) Existing law establishes the Department of Human Resources in state government to operate the state civil service system pursuant to Article VII of the California Constitution, the Government Code, the merit principle, and applicable rules duly adopted by the State Personnel
Board. Existing law requires that civil service positions be filled by appointment, except as provided. Existing law, among other things, requires the department to propose legislation, as part of the 2015–16 fiscal year budget proposal submitted to the Legislature in January 2015, to establish the state’s policy regarding the use of additional appointments for state employees.
This bill would define the term “additional appointment,” would require an additional appointment to comply with state civil service laws and rules, and would require the department to adopt policies to advise state agencies regarding the procedures and appropriate use of additional appointments.
(15) The Public Employees Retirement Law (PERL) creates the Public Employees’ Retirement System, which provides pension and other benefits to members of the system and prescribes conditions for
service after retirement. The PERL permits a retired person to serve as an elective officer without reinstatement from retirement or loss or interruption of benefits, provided that his or her retirement allowance is suspended to the extent that the allowance is based on service in that elective office. The PERL also permits a person retired for disability to serve without reinstatement if the person is below the mandatory age for retirement for persons in the job in which the person will serve and he or she is not disabled for that employment. In this circumstance, the PERL prohibits service in a position from which the person retired or a position in the same member classification and requires reduction of the person’s disability retirement pension during the employment to an amount that, when added to his or her compensation, equals the maximum compensation earnable by a person holding the position that he or she held at retirement. Effective on and after January 1, 2013, the California Public Employees’
Pension Reform Act of 2013 (PEPRA) establishes various limits on retirement benefits generally applicable to specified public employee retirement systems and, among other things, prescribes limits on service after retirement without reinstatement that prevail over the provisions in PERL described above.
This bill would reenact the provisions regarding service after retirement in the PERL described above, to apply on and after the effective date of PEPRA.
(16) Existing law, the Electronic Recording Delivery Act of 2004, authorizes a county recorder, upon approval by resolution of the board of supervisors and system certification by the Attorney General, to establish an electronic recording delivery system for the delivery for recording of specified digitized and digital electronic records, subject to specified conditions, including system certification,
regulation, and oversight by the Attorney General. Existing law requires participating counties to pay for the direct cost of regulation and oversight by the Attorney General, and authorizes those counties to impose fees to cover those costs. Existing law also authorizes the Attorney General to charge a fee directly to a vendor seeking approval of software and other services as part of an electronic recording delivery system. Fees paid to the Attorney General under these provisions are deposited in the Electronic Recording Authorization Account, which is in the Special Deposit Fund and is continuously appropriated to the Attorney General for these purposes.
This bill would redesignate the Electronic Recording Authorization Account in the Special Deposit Fund as the Electronic Recording Authorization Fund in the State Treasury.
(17) Existing law establishes the
Naturalization Services Program, administered within the Department of Community Services and Development, to fund community-based organizations in assisting legal permanent residents in obtaining citizenship.
This bill would establish the Statewide Director of Immigrant Integration in the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research, appointed by the Governor, for the purpose of developing a comprehensive statewide report on programs and services that serve immigrants and programs and services currently managed by a state agency or department to support California immigrants. The bill would require the report to be submitted to the Governor and Legislature, on or before January 1, 2016. The bill would further require the office on or before July 10, 2017, to develop an online clearinghouse of immigrant services, resources, and programs. The bill would additionally require the director to monitor the
implementation of statewide laws and regulations that serve immigrants. The bill would also create the Immigration Integration Fund, would authorize the fund to be funded by public and private donations, and would require those donations to be used, as specified.
(18) Existing law requires the Department of Housing and Community Development to provide rental-related subsidies to persons rendered homeless, or at risk of becoming homeless, due to unemployment, underemployment, or other economic hardship resulting from the state of emergency proclaimed by the Governor based on drought conditions. Existing law authorizes the department to administer the housing rental-related subsidies or contract with qualified local government agencies or nonprofit organizations to administer the program. Existing law establishes the Housing Rehabilitation Loan Fund and continuously appropriates
moneys in the fund for specified purposes.
This bill would authorize the department to provide temporary assistance for persons moving out of a housing unit due to a lack of potable water resulting from the state of emergency proclaimed by the Governor relating to drought conditions if the person has exhausted all reasonable attempts to find a potable water source and the housing unit is served by a private well or water utility with fewer than 15 connections that is running out of potable water due to drought conditions. The bill would authorize the department to administer the housing assistance or contract with qualified local government agencies or nonprofit organizations to administer the assistance. The bill would require the department to adopt guidelines to implement these provisions and exempt the department from the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, as specified. The bill would repeal these provisions as of June 30, 2017.
The bill would also authorize the use of moneys in the Housing Rehabilitation Loan Fund, to the extent made available by the Legislature for the purpose of the above-described housing relocation program. This bill would require funds for these purposes that are not encumbered on or before June 30, 2017, to revert to the General Fund. By expanding the authorized use of a continuously appropriated fund, the bill would make an appropriation.
(19) Existing law authorizes the Director of Housing and Community Development to contract with local public and private nonprofit agencies to provide housing services, including shelter, education, sanitation, and day care services, for migrant agricultural workers, through the development, construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, or operation of a migrant farm labor center. Existing law requires the department to make the Office of Migrant Services centers
available for rent by persons or families experiencing economic hardships as a result of the drought.
This bill would require the department to additionally make the Office of Migrant Services centers available for rent by persons or families rendered homeless or at risk of becoming homeless as a result of the drought.
(20) Existing law establishes the California Earthquake Authority, administered by the Insurance Commissioner, and authorizes the authority to transact insurance in this state as necessary to, among other things, create and maintain, in collaboration or jointly with subdivisions and programs of local, state, and federal governments and with other national programs, programs and activities that mitigate seismic risks, for the benefit of homeowners and other property owners. Existing law establishes the Earthquake Loss
Mitigation Fund, a subaccount of the California Earthquake Authority Fund, a continuously appropriated fund. Existing law authorizes the authority to apply money in the Earthquake Loss Mitigation Fund to supply grants and loans or loan guarantees to dwelling owners who wish to retrofit their homes to protect against earthquake damage, as specified.
This bill would recognize the existence of the California Residential Mitigation Program (CRMP), a joint powers authority created in 2012 by agreement between the California Earthquake Authority and the Office of Emergency Services. The bill would require the CRMP to implement a grant program and to give a grant to a qualifying owner of a single-family residential structure to defray the owner’s cost of seismic retrofit work to the structure, as specified. The bill would also require the CRMP to implement a grant program and, on or after July 1, 2017, authorize it to give a grant
to a qualifying owner of a residential structure that contains between 2 and 10 dwelling units to defray the owner’s cost of seismic retrofit work to the structure, as specified. This bill would require the governing board of the CRMP, after providing notice and opportunity for public review and comment, to adopt policies and procedures necessary to implement the grant programs, to establish eligibility criteria for participation in the grant programs, and to establish criteria for determining the amount of a grant awarded under the grant programs.
Existing law, the Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law, provide for various exclusions from gross income in determining tax liability.
This bill would, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2016, exclude from gross income an amount received as a loan, loan forgiveness,
grant, credit, rebate, voucher, or incentive from the California Residential Mitigation Program or the California Earthquake Authority to assist a residential property owner or occupant with expenses or obligations incurred for earthquake loss mitigation, as defined.
(21) Under existing law, the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973, the Division of Occupational Safety and Health investigates complaints that a workplace is not safe, and may issue orders necessary to ensure employee safety. The act requires the division to investigate a complaint as soon as possible, but not later than 3 working days after receipt of a complaint charging a serious violation, as specified, and not later than 14 calendar days after receipt of a complaint charging a nonserious violation. Existing law requires the division to maintain the capability to receive and act upon complaints at all times.
This bill would require the division to prioritize investigations of reports of accidents involving death or serious injury or illness and complaints that allege a serious violation over investigations of complaints that allege a nonserious violation.
(22) Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health to cause the inspection of all public conveyances, including elevators, dumbwaiters, and escalators, at least once a year. Existing law authorizes the division to fix and collect fees to cover the actual costs of having the inspection performed by a division safety engineer, and the costs related to regulatory development. Existing law requires these fees to be set forth in regulations and to be deposited in the Elevator Safety Account in the General Fund.
This bill would, for the 2015–16 fiscal year,
suspend the fee for the annual and biennial inspection of conveyances on a one-time basis. It would, for the 2016–17 fiscal year and for every fiscal year thereafter, authorize the Director of Industrial Relations, upon concurrence of the Department of Finance to suspend or reduce this fee on a one-time basis in order to reduce the amount of moneys in the Elevator Safety Account. The bill would exempt the suspension or reduction of the fee from the Administrative Procedure Act.
(23) Existing law generally requires state agencies to obtain at least 3 competitive bids for each contract. Under existing law, this requirement does not apply under certain circumstances, including, among others, when the contract is with another state agency, a local governmental entity, an auxiliary organization of the California State University, an auxiliary organization of a California community college, a foundation
organized to support the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, or an auxiliary organization of the Student Aid Commission, as provided.
This bill, until January 1, 2019, would additionally authorize a specified contract between the Office of Planning and Research, the Regents of the University of California, or an auxiliary organization of the California State University to include a subcontract that is not subject to certain competitive bidding requirements, as provided.
(24) Existing law requires the Franchise Tax Board to collect certain delinquencies related to vehicles, including, but not limited to, registration fees, transfer fees, and parking violation penalties, as though the delinquencies are taxes, as specified.
This bill would, on or after the effective date of the bill, additionally
require the board to collect unpaid tolls, toll evasion penalties, and related administrative or service fees as though they are taxes.
(25) The Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act generally imposes a surcharge on amounts paid by every person in the state for intrastate telephone service to provide revenues sufficient to fund “911” emergency telephone system costs, and requires the Office of Emergency Services to annually determine the surcharge rate. Commencing with the calculation made October 1, 2015, existing law requires the office to compute the charges applicable to the intrastate portion of prepaid mobile telephony services, as provided.
The Prepaid Mobile Telephony Service Surcharge Collection Act establishes a prepaid MTS surcharge, as defined, based upon a percentage of the sales price of each retail transaction that occurs in this state for
prepaid mobile telephony services, as defined, that is imposed in lieu of any charges imposed pursuant to the Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act and specified Public Utility Commission surcharges. That act requires the prepaid MTS surcharge to be annually calculated by the State Board of Equalization by November 1 of each year, commencing November 1, 2015, by using the emergency telephone user surcharge rate reported by the office and specified Public Utility Commission surcharges.
The Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act requires the office to notify the board of the emergency telephone user surcharge rate and the emergency telephone user surcharge rate applicable to prepaid mobile telephony services by October 15 of each year.
This bill would instead require the office to notify the board of the emergency telephone user surcharge rate by October 1.
(26) The Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act requires, immediately upon notification by the office and fixing the surcharge rate, the board to notify by mail every registered service supplier of the new rate.
This bill would instead require the board to notify every registered service supplier of the new rate by a means, or means determined by the State Board of Equalization, that may include, but is not limited to, mail, electronic mail, or Internet Web site postings.
(27) The Prepaid Mobile Telephony Service Surcharge Collection Act requires, on and after January 1, 2016, and before January 1, 2020, the prepaid MTS surcharge imposed by that act on a prepaid consumer to be collected by a seller from each prepaid consumer at the time of each retail transaction in this state.
This bill would, commencing January 1, 2017, exempt a seller, other
than a direct seller, with de minimis sales of prepaid mobile telephony services of less than $15,000 during the previous calendar year from collecting the prepaid MTS surcharge, and would require the Department of Finance to annually review and adjust that de minimis sales threshold, as provided.
(28) The Prepaid Mobile Telephony Service Surcharge Collection Act creates the Prepaid Mobile Telephony Services Surcharge Fund in the State Treasury, and creates the Prepaid MTS 911 Account and the Prepaid MTS PUC Account in that fund. That act requires the portion of the prepaid MTS surcharge that is for the emergency telephone users surcharge, which are remitted to the board, to be deposited into the Prepaid MTS 911 Account, and those deposited moneys to be transferred to the State Emergency Telephone Number Account in the General Fund. That act also requires that portion of the prepaid MTS surcharge that is for the Public Utilities Commission
surcharges, which are remitted to the board, to be deposited into the Prepaid MTS PUC Account, and those deposited moneys to be allocated and transferred to the respective universal service funds.
This bill would specify that amounts transferred to the State Emergency Telephone Number Account are required to be appropriated pursuant to the Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act. This bill would require the Public Utilities Commission to allocate the moneys deposited into the Prepaid MTS PUC Account to the respective universal service funds and to the Public Utilities Commission Utilities Reimbursement Account and to report to the Controller on its allocation of those funds, as specified.
This bill would authorize the Director of Finance to approve a short-term loan in the 2015–16 fiscal year from the General Fund to the Prepaid Mobile Telephony Services Surcharge Fund to provide adequate cashflow for expenses incurred by
the board in the administration and collection of the prepaid MTS surcharge.
(29) The Prepaid Mobile Telephony Service Surcharge Collection Act requires direct sellers to remit the prepaid portion of the prepaid MTS surcharge that is for the emergency telephone users surcharge to the board in accordance with the Emergency Telephone Users Surcharge Act and to remit the portion of the prepaid MTS surcharge that is for the Public Utilities Commission surcharges to the Public Utilities Commission.
This bill would specify that those remitted amounts to the commission are required to be deposited into the respective universal services funds and the Public Utilities Commission Utilities Reimbursement Account, and that the remitted amounts to the board are required to be deposited into the State Emergency Telephone Number Account.
(30) The Local
Prepaid Mobile Telephony Services Collection Act, on and after January 1, 2016, and before January 1, 2020, suspends the authority of a city, county, or city and county, including any charter city, county, or city and county, to impose a utility user tax on the consumption of prepaid communications service and any charge that applies to prepaid mobile telephony service, on access to communication services or access to local “911” emergency telephone systems, and instead requires those taxes and charges to be applied during that period under any ordinance to be at specified rates. The act requires these local charges imposed by a city, county, or a city and county, on prepaid mobile telephony services to be collected from the prepaid consumer by a seller at the same time and in the same manner as the prepaid MTS surcharge is collected under the Prepaid Mobile Telephony Service Surcharge Collection Act, as specified. Existing law requires all local charges collected to be deposited in the Local Charges for
Prepaid Mobile Telephony Services Fund, and transmitted to the city, county, or a city and county, as provided.
This bill would, commencing January 1, 2017, exempt a seller, other than a direct seller, with de minimis sales of prepaid mobile telephony services of less than $15,000 during the previous calendar year from collecting the local charges, and would require the Department of Finance to annually review and adjust that de minimis sales threshold, as provided.
This bill would authorize the Director of Finance to approve a short-term loan in the 2015–16 fiscal year from the General Fund to the Local Charges for Prepaid Mobile Telephony Services Fund to provide adequate cashflow for expenses incurred by the board in the administration and collection of the local charges.
(31) The California
Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for specified reasons.
(32) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.