BILL NUMBER: AB 2495	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  AUGUST 28, 2006
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 26, 2006
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 18, 2006

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member  Nunez   Frommer


                        FEBRUARY 23, 2006

    An act to amend Sections 14502 and 14503 of the
Government Code, relating to transportation.   An act to
amend Section 143 of the Streets and Highways Code, relating to
transportation. 



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2495, as amended,  Nunez   Frommer 
 California Transportation Commission.  
Transportation facilities: public-private partnerships.  
   Existing law, as amended by Chapter 32 of the Statutes of 2006,
authorizes the Department of Transportation and regional
transportation agencies, as defined, until January 1, 2012, to enter
into up to 4 comprehensive development lease agreements with public
and private entities, or consortia of those entities, for certain
transportation projects that may charge certain users of those
projects tolls and user fees, subject to various terms and
requirements. Under these provisions, all negotiated lease agreements
must be submitted to the Legislature for approval or rejection, with
approval to be achieved by enactment of a statute.  
   This bill would modify these provisions to instead provide that
the Legislature has 90 days to act after submittal of a negotiated
lease agreement. The agreement would be deemed approved unless either
house of the Legislature adopts a resolution rejecting the
agreement. The bill would also require the Legislative Analyst's
Office and the Legislative Counsel to review the agreement and report
to the Legislature within 30 days after submittal, as specified.
 
   Existing law creates the California Transportation Commission,
with various powers and duties relative to programming transportation
capital improvement projects in the state transportation improvement
program. Existing law provides for a commission of 11 members, with
9 members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of
the Senate, and 2 ex officio members appointed by the Legislature.
Voting members serve terms of 4 years.  
   This bill would expand the commission to 13 members, with one
additional voting member each appointed by the Speaker of the
Assembly and the Senate Committee on Rules, who would not be subject
to Senate confirmation. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:


   SECTION 1.    Section 143 of the   Streets
and Highways Code   , as amended by Chapter 32 of the
Statutes of 2006, is amended to read: 
  143.  (a) (1) "Regional transportation agency" means any of the
following:
   (A) A transportation planning agency as defined in Section 29532
or 29532.1 of the Government Code.
   (B) A county transportation commission as defined in Section
130050, 130050.1, or 130050.2 of the Public Utilities Code.
   (C) Any other local or regional transportation entity that is
designated by statute as a regional transportation agency.
   (D) A joint exercise of powers authority as defined in Chapter 5
(commencing with Section 6500) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the
Government Code, with the consent of a transportation planning agency
or a county transportation commission for the jurisdiction in which
the transportation project will be developed.
   (2) "Transportation project" means one or more of the following:
planning, design, development, finance, construction, reconstruction,
rehabilitation, improvement, acquisition, lease, operation, or
maintenance of highway, public street, rail, or related facilities
supplemental to existing facilities currently owned and operated by
the department or regional transportation agencies that is consistent
with the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).
   (b) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, only the
department, in cooperation with regional transportation agencies, and
regional transportation agencies, may solicit proposals, accept
unsolicited proposals, negotiate, and enter into comprehensive
development lease agreements with public or private entities, or
consortia thereof, for transportation projects.
   (2) The number of projects authorized pursuant to this section
shall be limited to two projects in northern California and two
projects in southern California. The California Transportation
Commission shall select the candidate projects from projects
nominated by the department or a regional transportation agency. No
less than two of the selected projects shall be nominated by a
regional transportation agency. The projects shall be primarily
designed to improve goods movement, including, but not limited to,
exclusive truck lanes and rail access and operational improvements.
The projects shall address a known forecast demand, as determined by
the department or regional transportation agency.
   (3) All negotiated lease agreements shall be submitted to the
Legislature for  approval or rejection. Any approval shall be
achieved by the enactment of a statute   consideration.
An agreement shall be deemed approved unless within 90 days of its
submittal, not counting days when the Legislature is in adjournment,
either house of the Legislature adopts a resolution rejecting the
agreement  . Prior to submitting a lease agreement to the
Legislature, the department or regional transportation agency shall
conduct at least one public hearing at a location at or near the
proposed facility for purposes of receiving public comment on the
lease agreement. Public comments made during this hearing shall be
submitted to the Legislature with the lease agreement.  The
Legislative Analyst's Office and the Legislative Counsel shall review
the lease agreement for consistency with statutory requirements and
submit comments to the Legislature within 30 days after submittal of
the agreement to the Legislature. 
   (c) For the purpose of facilitating those projects, the agreements
between the parties may include provisions for the lease of
rights-of-way in, and airspace over or under, highways, public
streets, rail, or related facilities for the granting of necessary
easements, and for the issuance of permits or other authorizations to
enable the construction of transportation projects. Facilities
subject to an agreement under this section shall, at all times, be
owned by the department or the regional transportation agency, as
appropriate. For department projects, the commission shall certify
the department's determination of the useful life of the project in
establishing the lease agreement terms. In consideration therefor,
the agreement shall provide for complete reversion of the leased
facility, together with the right to collect tolls and user fees, to
the department or regional transportation agency, at the expiration
of the lease at no charge to the department or regional
transportation agency. At time of reversion, the facility shall be
delivered to the department or regional transportation agency, as
applicable, in a condition that meets the performance and maintenance
standards established by the department and that is free of any
encumbrance, lien, or other claims.
   (d) (1) The department or a regional transportation agency may
exercise any power possessed by it with respect to transportation
projects to facilitate the transportation projects pursuant to this
section. The department, regional transportation agency, and other
state or local agencies may provide services to the contracting
entity for which the public entity is reimbursed, including, but not
limited to, planning, environmental planning, environmental
certification, environmental review, preliminary design, design,
right-of-way acquisition, construction, maintenance, and policing of
these transportation projects. The department or regional
transportation agency, as applicable, shall regularly inspect the
facility and require the lessee to maintain and operate the facility
according to adopted standards. The lessee shall be responsible for
all costs due to development, maintenance, repair, rehabilitation,
and reconstruction, and operating costs.
   (2) In selecting private entities with which to enter into these
agreements, notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
department and regional transportation agencies may, but are not
limited to, utilizing one or more of the following procurement
approaches:
   (A) Solicitations of proposals for defined projects and calls for
project proposals within defined parameters.
   (B) Prequalification and short-listing of proposers prior to final
evaluation of proposals.
   (C) Final evaluation of proposals based on qualifications, best
value, or both. If final evaluation is to be based on best value, the
California Transportation Commission shall develop and adopt
criteria for making that evaluation prior to evaluation of a
proposal.
   (D) Negotiations with proposers prior to award.
   (E) Acceptance of unsolicited proposals, with issuance of requests
for competing proposals.
   (3) No agreement entered into pursuant to this section shall
infringe on the authority of the department or a regional
transportation agency to develop, maintain, repair, rehabilitate,
operate, or lease any transportation project. Lease agreements may
provide for reasonable compensation to the leaseholder for the
adverse effects on toll revenue or user fee revenue due to the
development, operation, or lease of supplemental transportation
projects with the exception of any of the following:
   (A) Projects identified in regional transportation plans prepared
pursuant to Section 65080 of the Government Code and submitted to the
commission as of the date the commission selected the project to be
developed through a lease agreement, as provided in this section,
unless provided by the lease agreement approved by the department or
regional transportation agency and the commission.
   (B) Safety projects.
   (C) Improvement projects that will result in incidental capacity
increases.
   (D) Additional high-occupancy vehicle lanes or the conversion of
existing lanes to high-occupancy vehicle lanes.
   (E) Projects located outside the boundaries of a public-private
partnership project, to be defined by the lease agreement.
   However, compensation to a leaseholder shall only be made after a
demonstrable reduction in use of the facility resulting in reduced
toll or user fee revenues, and may not exceed the reduction in those
revenues.
   (e) (1) Agreements entered into pursuant to this section shall
authorize the contracting entity to impose tolls and user fees for
use of a facility constructed by it, and shall require that over the
term of the lease the toll revenues and user fees be applied to
payment of the capital outlay costs for the project, the costs
associated with operations, toll and user fee collection,
administration of the facility, reimbursement to the department or
other governmental entity for the costs of services to develop and
maintain the project, police services, and a reasonable return on
investment. The agreement shall require that, notwithstanding
Sections 164, 188, and 188.1, any excess toll or user fee revenue
either be applied to any indebtedness incurred by the contracting
entity with respect to the project, improvements to the project, or
be paid into the State Highway Account, or for all three purposes,
except that any excess toll revenue under a lease agreement with a
regional transportation agency may be paid to the regional
transportation agency for use in improving public transportation in
and near the project boundaries.
   (2) Lease agreements shall establish specific toll or user fee
rates. Any proposed increase in those rates during the term of the
agreement shall first be approved by the department or regional
transportation agency after at least one public hearing conducted at
a location near the proposed or existing facility.
   (3) The collection of tolls and user fees for the use of these
facilities may be extended by the commission or regional
transportation agency at the expiration of the lease agreement.
However, those tolls or user fees may not be used for any purpose
other than for the improvement, continued operation, or maintenance
of the facility.
   (4) Tolls and user fees may not be charged to noncommercial
vehicles with three or fewer axles.
   (f) The plans and specifications for each transportation project
developed, maintained, repaired, rehabilitated, reconstructed, or
operated pursuant to this section shall comply with the department's
standards for state transportation projects. The lease agreement
shall include performance standards, including, but not limited to,
levels of service. The agreement shall require facilities on the
state highway system to meet all requirements for noise mitigation,
landscaping, pollution control, and safety that otherwise would apply
if the department were designing, building, and operating the
facility. If a facility is on the state highway system, the facility
leased pursuant to this section shall, during the term of the lease,
be deemed to be a part of the state highway system for purposes of
identification, maintenance, enforcement of traffic laws, and for the
purposes of Division 3.6 (commencing with Section 810) of Title 1 of
the Government Code.
   (g) Failure to comply with the lease agreement in any significant
manner shall constitute a default under the agreement and the
department or the regional transportation agency, as appropriate,
shall have the option to initiate processes to revert the facility to
the public agency.
   (h) The assignment authorized by subdivision (c) of Section 130240
of the Public Utilities Code is consistent with this section.
   (i) A lease to a private entity pursuant to this section is deemed
to be public property for a public purpose and exempt from
leasehold, real property, and ad valorem taxation, except for the
use, if any, of that property for ancillary commercial purposes.
   (j) Nothing in this section is intended to infringe on the
authority to develop high-occupancy toll lanes pursuant to Section
149.4, 149.5, or 149.6.
   (k) Nothing in this section shall be construed to allow the
conversion of any existing nontoll or non-user-fee lanes into tolled
or user fee lanes with the exception of a high-occupancy vehicle lane
that may be operated as a high-occupancy toll lane for vehicles not
otherwise meeting the requirements for use of that lane.
   (l) The lease agreement shall require the lessee to provide any
information or data requested by the California Transportation
Commission or the Legislative Analyst. The commission, in cooperation
with the Legislative Analyst, shall annually prepare a report on the
progress of each project and ultimately on the operation of the
resulting facility. The report shall include, but not be limited to,
a review of the performance standards, a financial analysis, and any
concerns or recommendations for changes in the future.
   (m) No lease agreements may be entered into under this section on
or after January 1, 2012.
   (n) To the extent that the design-build procurement method is
utilized for the award of construction or design contracts for
projects authorized under this section, those contracts shall be
subject to the requirements, parameters, and processes set forth in
Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 6800) of Part 1 of Division 2 of
the Public Contract Code, if that chapter is added by either
Assembly Bill 143 of the 2005-06 Regular Session or Senate Bill 59 of
the 2005-06 Regular Session.   
  SECTION. 1    Section 14502 of the Government Code
is amended to read:
   14502.  The commission consists of 13 members appointed as
follows:
   (a) Nine members shall be appointed by the Governor with the
advice and consent of the Senate. One member shall be appointed by
the Speaker of the Assembly and one member shall be appointed by the
Senate Committee on Rules, with neither of these members subject to
confirmation by the Senate. A member appointed pursuant to this
subdivision shall not simultaneously hold an elected public office,
or serve on any local or regional public board or commission with
business before the commission.
   (b) One Member of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on
Rules and one Member of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the
Assembly shall be ex officio members without vote and shall
participate in the activities of the commission to the extent that
such participation is not incompatible with their positions as
Members of the Legislature.
   (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a voting member of
the commission may serve on the High-Speed Rail Authority as
established in Division 19.5 (commencing with Section 165000) of the
Public Utilities Code.   
  SEC. 2    Section 14503 of the Government Code is
amended to read:
   14503.  (a) Other than ex officio members, the members of the
commission shall hold office for terms of four years, and until their
successors are appointed, except as otherwise provided in this
section.
   (b) In the case of the members initially appointed by the
Governor, three shall be appointed to serve until February 1, 1979,
two until February 1, 1980, two until February 1, 1981, and two until
February 1, 1982.
   (c) The members appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly and the
Senate Committee on Rules pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section
14502 shall hold office for terms of four years, and until their
successors are appointed.