BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  AB 2064
          Author:   Huber (D)
          Amended:  8/31/10 in Senate
          Vote:     27 - Urgency

           
          PRIOR VOTES NOT RELEVANT 


           SUBJECT  :    State and local government:  salary disclosure

           SOURCE  :     Author


           DIGEST  :    This bill requires, constitutional officers and  
          their exempt or appointed deputies, and most elected or  
          appointed local government officials to make available on  
          the Internet annual salary information.

           Senate Floor Amendments  of 8/20/10 make clarifying changes  
          and add double-jointing language to avoid a chaptering out  
          problem with SB 501 (Correa).

           Senate Floor Amendments  of 8/19/10 (1) delete the contents  
          of the bill relating to the Emergency Housing Shelter  
          Operations Grant Account, and insert provisions that  
          require annual salary information to be made available for  
          state legislators and staff, constitutional officers and  
          their exempt or appointed deputies, and most elected or  
          appointed local government officials; (2) change the author  
          of the bill to Assemblymember Huber; (3) make the bill a  
          majority vote bill by deleting the urgency clause.

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           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law requires all state and local  
          public agencies to provide quarterly revenue, expenditure  
          and related information to the Controller.  The California  
          Public Records Act states that the public is entitled to  
          access to any writing containing information relating to  
          the conduct of the public's business that is used, owned or  
          retained by any state or local agency.

          The California Constitution authorizes cities or counties  
          to adopt a charter by vote of the electors.  Charter cities  
          and counties have authority over "municipal affairs", and  
          under that authority many charter cities have enacted  
          ordinances governing salary and benefits of employees and  
          elected officials.  In contrast, "general law" cities are  
          subject to state law that limits salaries of city council  
          members based on the size of the city.

          This bill:

          1. Requires the Constitutional officers to post on their  
             Internet Web sites the annual salary information for  
             constitutional officers and any appointed or exempt  
             deputies or employees.

          2. Requires each general law or charter city, county,  
             special district, school district, and joint powers  
             agency to post on its Internet Web site the annual  
             salary received by each elected or appointed official,  
             superintendent, deputy, assistant or associate  
             superintendent, general manager, city manager, county  
             administrator and other similar chief administrative or  
             executive officer.

          3. Requires each official or entity listed above shall  
             annually update the salary information posted on the  
             official Internet Web sites.

          4. Requires the Legislature to find and declare that  
             disclosure of salary information for city and county  
             elected and appointed officials directly contributes to  
             the fiscal integrity and stability of local government  
             entities, and is therefore an issue of statewide concern  
             and not a "municipal affair" as that term is used in  
             state constitutional provisions governing charter cities  

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             or charter counties.  

          5. States that it is the intent of the Legislature that  
             each house of the Legislature, pursuant to the adoption  
             of a  house rule or resolution display and regularly  
             update on its official Internet Web site the annual  
             salary of its members, officers, and employees.

          6. Requires that if the Commission on State Mandates  
             determines that this measure contains state mandated  
             costs, reimbursement to local agencies and school  
             districts shall be made according to the Commission's  
             mandate claims procedures. 

          7. Contains double-jointing-language to prevent a  
             chaptering-out problem with SB 501 (Correa).

           Background
           
          Among other things, the author states that, "with the  
          recent controversy over public employee salaries in the  
          City of Bell, it has become painfully clear that  
          transparency of public officials' salaries is severely  
          lacking, and that it is very difficult to determine the  
          salary of most elected and appointed officials.  A first  
          step to making all levels of government more transparent is  
          giving the taxpayers access to basic information on how  
          much their elected and appointed officials are paid.   
          Government has the ability to make more information online  
          than ever before yet our current system serves insiders  
          more than it does every day Californians."  

          The City of Bell, a charter city, spent nearly $1.6 million  
          annually on just three city employees, about half of it  
          going to pay the $800,000 salary of City Manager Robert  
          Rizzo.  Police Chief Randy Adams was paid $457,000, and  
          Assistant City Manager Angela Spaccia earned $376,288.  All  
          have resigned and will not receive severance packages.   
          After the resignations, Bell city council members cut their  
          salaries, which had included compensation for service on  
          multiple city panels, some of which had met very briefly,  
          or at the same time.  Later, the Bell city council voted to  
          lower property taxes after an audit by the state Controller  
          revealed that Bell had overcharged residents, presumably to  

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          cover pension and salary costs for city employees.  In  
          addition, the city of Bell gave nearly $900,000 in loans to  
          its former city administrator, at least two city council  
          members, and other city employees.  

           Charter cities  : There are 119 charter cities included in  
          California's 480 municipalities. Charter cities have more  
          local control over "municipal affairs," meaning a city law  
          on a local topic supersedes the corresponding state law  
          governing the same issue. Many charter cities have specific  
          ordinances on employee salaries.  Less than 400 voters  
          approved a charter for the City of Bell in a 2005 special  
          election, which allowed officials there to avoid compliance  
          with state law that limits salaries of city council members  
          based on the size of the city.
          This bill specifies that disclosure of salary information  
          for city and county elected and appointed officials  
          directly contributes to the fiscal integrity and stability  
          of local government entities, and is therefore an issue of  
          statewide concern and not a "municipal affair." This  
          statement is intended to subject charter cities to the  
          salary disclosure provisions in the bill. 

          Individual privacy interests vs. public interest in salary  
          disclosure:  Article I, section 1 of the California  
          Constitution states that "all people are by nature free and  
          independent and have inalienable rights.  Among these are  
          enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring,  
          possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and  
          obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy."

          The California Supreme Court has held that a party claiming  
          a violation of the constitutional right of privacy under  
          the state constitution must establish (1) a legally  
          protected privacy interest, (2) a reasonable expectation of  
          privacy under the circumstances, and (3) a serious invasion  
          of the privacy interest [  Hill v. National Collegiate  
          Athletic Assn.  (1994) 7 Cal.4th 1].

          The California Supreme Court has also concluded that public  
          employees do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy  
          in the amount of their salaries [  International Federation  
          of Professional and Technical Engineers, Local 21, AFL-CIO  
          v. Superior Court  (2007) 42 Cal.4th 319].  Among other  

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          things, the court has stated that, "to the extent some  
          public employees may expect their salaries to remain a  
          private matter, that expectation is not a reasonable one?A  
          'reasonable' expectation of privacy is an objective  
          entitlement founded on broadly based and widely accepted  
          community norms?The 'broadly based and widely accepted  
          community norm' applicable to government employee salary  
          information is public disclosure."

           Related developments and legislation  :  AB 1955 (De La  
          Torre) would require the State Controller to determine  
          whether a city is an excess compensation city.  Once a  
          community redevelopment agency has been notified by the  
          Controller that the city is an excess compensation city,  
          the agency would be prohibited from adopting a  
          redevelopment plan for a new project area or amending an  
          existing redevelopment plan for existing project areas,  
          from issuing new bonds, notes or other obligations.  AB  
          1955 is in the Senate Rules Committee.

          SB 501 (Correa) would require local government officers and  
          designated employees to annually file a compensation  
          disclosure form that would provide for the disclosure of,  
          among other things, salaries and stipends and  
          reimbursements received by the officer or designated  
          employee, and the employer's cost of providing benefits. SB  
          501 would also require a county, city, city and county,  
          school district, special district, or joint powers agency  
          that maintains an Internet Web site to post the information  
          on the web.  SB 501 is in the Assembly Rules Committee.

          The State Controller announced recently that all California  
          cities must report salary information for elected officials  
          and employees, which will be posted on the Controller's Web  
          site beginning in November, 2010. 

          CalPERS has begun a comprehensive review of its members who  
          earn more than $400,000 annually in salary and has begun to  
          draft new regulations to ensure increased transparency of  
          public agency salaries.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  Yes


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          TSM:do  8/31/10   Senate Floor Analyses 

                       SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  NONE RECEIVED

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