(1) Existing law creates the Department of Transportation within the Transportation Agency. The Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 creates the Independent Office of Audits and Investigations within the department, with specified powers and duties, and provides that the director of the office, known as the inspector general, is appointed by the Governor. The act requires the department to develop a plan by January 1, 2020, to increase by up to 100% the dollar value of contracts awarded to small businesses, disadvantaged business enterprises, and disabled veteran business enterprises.
Existing federal law implements the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program to foster equal opportunity for firms owned by disadvantaged individuals on United States Department of Transportation assisted contracts.
This bill would require the department to develop and submit to the Legislature and specified legislative caucuses, by January 1, 2019, a detailed outreach plan intended to increase procurement opportunities for new and limited contracting small business enterprises, as defined, including, but not limited to, those owned by women, minority, disabled veterans, LGBT, and other disadvantaged groups, in all the department’s transportation programs, to undertake specified outreach activities required to be included in the plan, and to update that plan and submit it to specified entities. The bill would require the inspector general to review, audit, and report on the department’s outreach efforts, and to audit contract-seeking businesses as appropriate to ensure that they do not subvert the purposes of these provisions.
This bill would require the department to achieve, at a minimum, 25% certified small
business participation in state-funded contracts and procurements. The bill would require the department, beginning with the 2018–19 fiscal year, to take all lawful and reasonable steps to raise the disparity indices for contracts awarded under the federal Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program to 100 for contracts and procurements subject to federal participation requirements, with particular emphasis on those minorities that exhibit substantial disparities with the indices, and to implement the recommendations from every disparity study undertaken by the department as part of that federal program, consistent with federal laws and regulations and a specified provision of the California Constitution. The bill would require the department to prepare a detailed plan that includes steps the department will take to ensure that it is in conformance with its policies to prevent discrimination or preferences in its employing practices or its practices in bidding and awarding public contracts to provide equal
access to opportunities for all qualified applicants, and would require the department to report the plan to the Legislature and to report updates to the plan, as necessary. The bill would require the department to collect voluntarily reported data on groups of interest awarded public contracts by the department, including, but not limited to, women, minority, LGBT, and disabled veteran business enterprises, and to annually report that information and the percentages of entities receiving public contracts from the department, disaggregated by classifications, including, but not limited to, new and limited contracting small business enterprises, and women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT business enterprises, to the Legislature.
(2) Existing law requires the Chief of the Division of Apprenticeship Standards and the California Apprenticeship Council to report annually through the Director of Industrial Relations on the
activities of the division and the council, and further requires that the report include specified information with respect to apprenticeship programs in this state.
This bill would require the report to include annual demographic data detailing the racial, ethnic, and gender makeup of participants in construction trade apprenticeship programs.
(3) Existing law requires the Department of Transportation to give public notice of a project by publication, as specified, but allows the department to comply with this requirement by publishing the notice on its Internet Web site.
This bill would require the department, if the department publishes the notice on its Internet Web site, to also publish information regarding notices listed on the department’s Internet Web site in trade papers, newspapers, or
magazines, as appropriate, including those whose primary audience consists of underrepresented groups, including, but not limited to, women, minorities, LGBT, and disabled veterans, as specified.
(4) The Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 requires $5,000,000 of the funds made available by the act that are not restricted by Article XIX of the California Constitution to be appropriated each fiscal year to the California Workforce Development Board to assist local agencies to implement policies to promote preapprenticeship training programs to carry out specified projects funded by the Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Account. The act requires the board to also establish a preapprenticeship development and training grant program, beginning January 1, 2019, and requires a grant recipient to, among other things, include plans relating to specified outreach activities.
This bill, as a condition of receiving a grant, would require grantees to collect demographic data from participants and to report this data to the board. The bill would require the board to provide technical assistance to grantees on the manner in which to collect this data, and to annually report demographic data to the Legislature, detailing the racial, ethnic, and gender makeup of participants in the grant programs and including demographic data on participation, completion, and placement.
(5) Existing law creates the Advance Mitigation Program to enhance communications between the Department of Transportation and stakeholders to, among other things, protect natural resources and accelerate project delivery. Existing law requires the department to set aside not less than $30,000,000 annually for 4 years for the program from capital outlay revenues for purposes of the program.
This bill would create the Advance Mitigation Account in the State Transportation Fund as a revolving fund. The bill would require expenditures from the account to later be reimbursed from project funding available at the time a planned transportation project is constructed. The bill would continuously appropriate the moneys in the fund for the purposes of the Advance Mitigation Program and state that the Advance Mitigation Program is intended to become self-sustaining.
The bill would authorize the department to engage in various activities to implement the Advance Mitigation Program, including, among other things, purchasing, or funding the purchase of, credits from mitigation banks, conservation banks, or in-lieu fee programs approved by one or more regulatory agencies. The bill would also authorize the department to establish, or fund the establishment of, those types of activities if the department determines that those
activities would provide appropriate mitigation of the anticipated potential impacts of planned transportation improvements, as defined. The bill would authorize the department to pay or fund the payment of mitigation fees for the department’s or transportation agency’s covered activities under natural community conservation plans approved by the Department of Fish and Wildlife under the Natural Community Conservation Planning Act.
The bill would authorize the department to use, or allow other transportation agencies to use, mitigation credits or values generated or obtained under the program to fulfill the mitigation requirements of planned transportation improvements if the applicable transportation agency reimburses the program for all costs of purchasing or creating the mitigation credits or values, as determined by the department. The bill would exclude high-speed rail projects or projects associated with or interacting with the high-speed rail program from the
definition of “planned transportation improvement,” thereby excluding those projects from participating in the Advance Mitigation Program. The bill would require the department to track all implemented advance mitigation projects to use as credits for environmental mitigation, and would require the department, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife to report to the Legislature on the Advance Mitigation Program.
(6) Existing law authorizes the Department of Fish and Wildlife to approve a regional conservation investment strategy, as defined, upon request of one or more state agencies, under specified circumstances. Existing law provides that the department shall not approve more than 8 regional conservation investment strategies under these provisions before January 1, 2020, and prohibits the department from approving a regional conservation investment strategy, or from entering into a mitigation credit agreement under these provisions, after
that date.
This bill would repeal these restrictions on approving regional conservation investment strategies other than restricting the number of strategies approved to a maximum of 8.
(7) Existing law continues in existence the Trade Corridors Improvement Fund to fund trade corridor improvements consistent with various requirements. Existing law also creates the Trade Corridor Enhancement Account to receive funding from the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 for corridor-based freight projects nominated by local agencies and the state.
This bill would delete these references to the Trade Corridors Improvement Fund, and instead revise and recast the requirements currently applicable to that fund and make them applicable to the Trade Corridor Enhancement Account. The bill would provide that certain federal funds apportioned to the state shall be
expended consistent with these revised requirements. The bill would require the California Transportation Commission to allocate 60% of available funds to projects nominated by regional transportation agencies and other local agencies, with the remaining 40% of available funds to be allocated to projects nominated by the Department of Transportation. The bill would prohibit funding of projects that include the purchase of fully automated cargo handling equipment, as specified. The bill would require the California Transportation Commission to adopt guidelines for the purpose of administering these funds.
(8) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.