BILL NUMBER: SB 516 INTRODUCED
BILL TEXT
INTRODUCED BY Senator DeSaulnier
FEBRUARY 26, 2009
An act to add and repeal Article 4 (commencing with Section 18730)
of Chapter 3 of Part 10.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, and to
add Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2200) to Division 2.5 of the
Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to the California Youth
Legislature.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 516, as introduced, DeSaulnier. California Youth Legislature.
Existing law establishes the California Senior Legislature to
provide model legislation for older citizens and advocate for the
needs of seniors. This law establishes in the State Treasury the
California Fund for Senior Citizens to receive contributions from tax
return designations to support the sessions of the California Senior
Legislature.
This bill would establish the California Youth Legislature to
provide model legislation and advocate for the needs of youth. The
California Youth Legislature would be charged with examining and
discussing policy and fiscal issues affecting the interests, needs,
and conditions of the youth of California and to formally advise and
make recommendations to the Legislature and the Governor on specific
issues affecting youth. The bill would authorize the California Youth
Legislature to enter into an interagency agreement with a state
entity to carry out necessary administrative functions. The bill
would create in the State Treasury until January 1, 2015, the
California Fund for Youth to receive contributions from tax return
designations to support the sessions of the California Youth
Legislature. The bill also would authorize the California Youth
Legislature to accept gifts and grants from any source to help
perform its functions.
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. Article 4 (commencing with Section 18730) is added to
Chapter 3 of Part 10.2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:
Article 4. California Fund for Youth
18730. (a) Any individual may designate on the tax return that a
contribution in excess of the tax liability, if any, be made to the
California Fund for Youth established by Section 18731 to be used to
conduct the sessions of the California Youth Legislature and to
support its ongoing activities on behalf of youth.
(b) The contribution shall be in full dollar amounts and may be
made individually by each signatory on the joint return.
(c) A designation under subdivision (a) shall be made for any
taxable year on the initial return for that taxable year, and once
made shall be irrevocable.
In the event that payments and credits reported on the return,
together with any other credits associated with the individual's
account, do not exceed the tax liability, if any, shown thereupon,
the return shall be treated as though no designation has been made.
(d) The Franchise Tax Board shall revise the forms of the return
to include a space labeled the "California Fund for Youth" to allow
for the designation permitted under subdivision (a). The forms shall
also include in the instructions the information that the
contribution may be in the amount of one dollar ($1) or more and that
the contribution will be used to conduct the sessions of the
California Youth Legislature and to support its ongoing activities on
behalf of youth.
(e) A deduction shall be allowed under Article 6 (commencing with
Section 17201) of Chapter 3 of Part 10 for any contribution made
pursuant to subdivision (a).
18731. There is hereby established in the State Treasury the
California Fund for Youth to receive contributions made pursuant to
Section 18730.
The Franchise Tax Board shall notify the Controller of both the
amount of money paid by individuals in excess of their tax liability
and the amount of refund money which individuals have designated
pursuant to Section 18730 to be transferred to the California Fund
for Youth. The Controller shall transfer from the Personal Income Tax
Fund to the California Fund for Youth an amount not in excess of the
sum of the amounts designated by individuals pursuant to Section
18730 for payment into that fund.
18732. (a) All moneys transferred to the California Fund for
Youth pursuant to Section 18731, upon appropriation by the
Legislature, shall be allocated as follows:
(1) To the Franchise Tax Board and the Controller for
reimbursement of all costs incurred by the Franchise Tax Board and
the Controller in connection with their duties under this article.
(2) The balance to the California Youth Legislature, for its
ongoing activities on behalf of youth.
(b) All moneys allocated pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision
(a) may be carried over from the year in which they were received and
encumbered in any following year.
(c) The funds allocated to the California Youth Legislature for
the purpose of funding the activities of the California Youth
Legislature shall be spent pursuant to the purview of the Joint Rules
Committee of the California Youth Legislature in a manner consistent
with the bylaws of the California Youth Legislature, established
through a majority vote of the California Youth Legislature.
18733. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2015, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later-enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2015, deletes or extends
that date.
SEC. 2. Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2200) is added to
Division 2.5 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:
CHAPTER 4. CALIFORNIA YOUTH LEGISLATURE
2200. (a) The Legislature finds and declares that the needs of
youth can best be assessed by California's youth.
(b) The Legislature recognizes that all young people need five key
developmental resources in order to become productive citizens:
caring adults, safe places, a healthy start, an effective education,
and opportunities to help others. The Legislature further recognizes
that young people who receive more of these developmental resources
fare better than young people who receive fewer, and that those young
people are more likely to avoid violence, contribute to their
communities, and achieve high grades in school.
(c) The Legislature is alarmed that hundreds of thousands of
California youth are among the two-thirds of America's children and
youth recently identified by the America's Promise Alliance as not
receiving sufficient developmental resources to safely put them on
the path to adulthood. The Legislature also is concerned that the
high school completion rate is less than 60 percent for low-income
students and students of color in California, that gang and youth
violence continue to be a concern and that after years of declining
numbers, teen pregnancy rates are also on the rise. The Legislature
is encouraged, however, by research indicating that providing more of
the five developmental resources for more young people can help
prevent many of these problems, and that millions of dollars in later
prison, health, and welfare costs can be avoided by providing more
developmental resources for more young people now.
(d) The Legislature also agrees with the America's Promise
Alliance's call for greater collaboration and integration in working
to turn failure into action and improve the lives of young people at
risk and with the actions of the more than 20 states that have
committed their state resources for the creation of statewide
entities charged with improving the developmental well-being of their
children and youth.
(e) The California Youth Legislature shall be established through
this chapter and shall operate according to the procedures set forth
in this chapter to provide model legislation and advocate for the
needs of youth.
2201. (a) The California Youth Legislature shall be composed of
two houses, the California Youth Senate, composed of 40 members, and
the California Youth Assembly, composed of 80 members.
(b) Members of the California Youth Legislature shall serve
two-year terms.
2202. The members of the California Youth Legislature shall be
appointed by the Legislature, with one member appointed by each
Member of the Senate and each Member of the Assembly.
2203. (a) The California Youth Legislature shall have the
authority to define its program and utilize its funds in any way
necessary to carry out the duties of this chapter, as long as the
program or activity is not in violation of a state law or regulation.
(b) The California Youth Legislature shall do both of the
following:
(1) Examine and discuss policy and fiscal issues affecting the
interests, needs, and conditions of the youth of California.
(2) Formally advise and make recommendations to the Legislature
and the Governor on specific issues affecting youth, including, but
not limited to, all of the following:
(A) Education.
(B) Employment.
(C) Access to state and local government services.
(D) The environment.
(E) Behavioral and physical health.
(F) Safety.
(G) Technology.
(H) Criminal justice.
(I) Homelessness.
(J) Foster care.
(K) Child welfare.
(L) Emancipation.
(M) Financial literacy.
(N) Substance abuse.
(O) Driver's license requirements.
(P) Poverty.
(Q) Increased youth participation in state and local government.
(R) Any other policy or fiscal issues deemed appropriate by the
Youth Legislature.
(c) The Youth Legislature shall act as an information center on
California youth policy and fiscal issues, including, but not limited
to, the issues listed in subdivision (b).
2204. (a) The California Youth Legislature shall enter into a
mutually agreed-upon interagency agreement with a state entity to
carry out administrative duties related to its program.
(b) The California Youth Legislature shall identify the state
entity for purposes of subdivision (a) by May 1, 2010, in order to
meet the budget proposal cycle to achieve a transition of
responsibilities in the 2011-12 fiscal year.
(c) This section does not preclude the California Youth
Legislature from entering into mutually agreed-upon interagency
agreements for any subsequent fiscal year.
2205. (a) The funds for the California Youth Legislature shall be
allocated from the California Fund for Youth or private funds
directed to the Legislature for the purpose of funding activities of
the California Youth Legislature.
(b) The California Youth Legislature may accept gifts and grants
from any source, public or private, to help perform its functions,
pursuant to Section 2203.