BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



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       Date of Hearing:   June 4, 2013

          ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON JOBS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND THE ECONOMY
                                 Jose Medina, Chair
                   ACR 48 (Allen) - As Introduced:  April 18, 2013
        
       SUBJECT  :   Start a Small Business Month

        SUMMARY  :   Declares May 2013 as "Start a Small Business Month,"  
       expresses the Legislature's support of the Governor's efforts in  
       supporting small businesses, and declares that there are key actions  
       that the Legislature should take to further the success of small  
       businesses in California.  Specifically,  this bill : 

       1)Makes statements which declare, among other things:

          a)   California is home to the most innovative and competitive  
            firms in the world, placing the state consistently among the  
            top-10 economies; 

          b)   Small businesses embody the entrepreneurial spirit that has  
            driven the economy of our state where over half of our  
            private-sector workforce is employed by small businesses;

          c)   Policymakers need to better align workforce and college  
            readiness courses, ensure career technical education is high  
            quality and aligned with academic standards, and promote state  
            and private investments in science, technology, engineering, and  
            mathematics education; 

          d)   The simple threat of litigation, rather than the actual  
            adjudication of a lawsuit, under the California Environmental  
            Quality Act, can be all that is required to create uncertainty  
            for various projects; 

          e)   Policymakers need to take approaches that recognize and  
            encourage California's leadership and innovation in the  
            environmental arena; 

          f)   California has one of the highest tax rates in the nation and  
            was ranked 47th for the fairness of its litigation environment in  
            2012, both of which are significant considerations when a company  
            decides where to locate; 

          g)   California, like 19 other states, is struggling with the  








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            Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund insolvency and the Governor  
            signed a workers' compensation reform package negotiated by  
            employers and labor in September 2012;  

          h)   The Governor, in his 2012 small business proclamation,  
            reaffirmed the state's commitment to seeing small businesses  
            thrive and prosper and that supporting small-scale private-sector  
            job creators is among our most promising strategies to enhance  
            California's human capital, expand job opportunities, and  
            increase our competitive advantage in the global marketplace;  

       2)Resolves that the Assembly and the Senate of the State of California  
         proclaim May 2013 as "Start a Small Business Month" and expresses  
         the Legislature's:

          a)   Support of the Governor's efforts in promoting small  
            businesses and making California a more friendly business  
            climate; and 

          b)   Recognition that there are key opportunities to relieve the  
            uncertainty of doing business in this state including, by keeping  
            taxes low, fair, stable, and predictable; by reducing the  
            regulatory and litigation costs of operating a business; by  
            reducing the cost and improving the certainty and stability of  
            investing in new equipment and technology; by investing in public  
            and private works that provide the backbone for economic growth;  
            and by ensuring the availability of high quality skilled  
            employees.

        EXISTING LAW  :

       1)Finds and declares that it is in the public interest to aid,  
         counsel, assist, and protect the interests of small business  
         concerns in order to maintain a healthy state economy.

       2)Finds and declares that the complexity and lack of clarity in many  
         regulations put small businesses, which do not have the resources to  
         hire experts to assist them, at a distinct disadvantage.

       3)Establishes the Office of the Small Business Advocate (OSBA) within  
         the Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-BIZ)  
         for the purpose of advocating for small businesses including  
         responding to complaints from small businesses concerning the  
         actions of state agencies and the operative effects of state laws  
         and regulations.








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        FISCAL EFFECT  :   None

        COMMENTS  :   

        1)Framing the Policy Issue  :  This resolution seeks legislative support  
         for declaring May 2013 as "Start a Small Business Month."  In making  
         the case for honoring small businesses with a month, the author  
         cites the importance of small businesses to the California economy,  
         the challenges small business face in undertaking business in the  
         state, and the steps the Legislature should undertake in making the  
         state a more business friendly state.  

         This analysis provides information on the role of small businesses  
         within the California economy and a list of the key small business  
         legislation approved by the Assembly Committee on Jobs, Economic  
         Development, and the Economy (JEDE) in 2013.   

        2)The Role of Small Business within the California Economy  :   
         California's dominance in many economic areas is based, in part, on  
         the significant role small businesses play in the state's $1.9  
         trillion economy.  Among other advantages, small businesses are  
         crucial to the state's international competitiveness and are an  
         important means for dispersing the positive economic impacts of  
         trade within the California economy.  California small businesses  
         comprised 96% of the state's 60,000 exporters in 2009, which  
         accounted for over 44% of total exports in the state.  Nationally,  
         small businesses represented only 31.9% of total exports.  These  
         numbers include the export of only goods and not services.

         Business owners, with no employees make up the single largest  
         component of businesses in California, 2.8 million out of an  
         estimated 3.5 million firms in 2010.  As these businesses grow, they  
         continue to serve as an important component of the state's economy.   
         Microenterprises, meaning businesses with less than five employees,  
         represent approximately 93% of all businesses in the state, or  
         approximately 3.2 million of all businesses.  Businesses with 99 or  
         less employees comprise nearly 98% of all businesses and employee  
         approximately 36% of all workers.  Businesses with less 500  
         employees, which is the federal definition of a small business,  
         comprise 99% of all businesses in the state and employ 59.5% of all  
         workers.  These non-employer and small employer firms create jobs,  
         generate taxes, and revitalize communities. 

         In hard economic times, smaller size businesses often function as  








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         economic engines.  In this most recent recession the trend  
         continued, with the number of nonemployer firms increasing from 2.6  
         million firms ($137 billion in revenues) for 2008 to 2.8 million  
         firms ($138 billion in revenues) for 2010.  In the post-recession  
         economy, small businesses are expected to become increasingly  
         important due to their ability to be more flexible and better suited  
         to meet niche market needs.  

         Their small size, however, also results in certain challenges in  
         meeting regulatory requirements, accessing capital, and marketing  
         their goods and services.  Specialized technical assistance, credit  
         enhancements for private sector loans, state procurement incentives,  
         and collaborative marketing opportunities all help small businesses  
         overcome or at least minimize these difficulties.   

        3)Related Legislation  :  Below is a list of key small business  
         legislation approved by JEDE this session.  In total, these measures  
         assist start-up and small businesses in the areas of technical  
         assistance, access to capital, and regulatory reforms.
        
          a)   AB 172 (Weber) Microenterprise Procurement Incentives  :  This  
            bill increases the microbusiness procurement preference from 5%  
            to 7% for state contracts to purchase goods, services, and  
            information technology.  The preference may be awarded to either  
            a microbusiness bidder or a non-microbusiness bidder that uses a  
            microbusiness subcontractor.  Status:  Held on the suspense file  
            in the Assembly Committee on Appropriations.  

          b)   AB 285 (Brown) Self Employment Training  :  This bill requires  
            the California Workforce Investment Board to make recommendations  
            and provide technical assistance on entrepreneurial training  
            opportunities that could be made available through local  
            workforce investment boards.  Status:  Pending in the Senate  
            Committee on Business Professions and Economic Development.  

          c)   AB 305 (V. Manuel P�rez) New Market Tax Credit  :  This bill  
            establishes a $200 million New Market Tax Credit Program for the  
            purpose of stimulating economic development within California's  
            lower income neighborhoods.  Status:  Held on the suspense file  
            in the Assembly Committee on Appropriations.    

          d)   AB 550 (Brown) Microbusiness Preferences  :  This bill sets an  
            annual 25% small business participation level for each state  
            agency's contracting activity.  Status:  Held on the suspense  
            file in the Assembly Committee on Appropriations.  








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          e)   AB 653 (V. Manuel P�rez) Innovation Jobs Act  :  This bill  
            establishes the California Innovation and Jobs Act, which  
            increases the maximum value of the research and development  
            credit, eliminates state sales tax on manufacturing equipment,  
            authorizes a new tax credit for private investments in  
            postsecondary institutions, and codifies the California  
            Innovation Hub Program.  Status:  Pending in the Assembly  
            Committee on Revenue and Taxation.    
             
           f)   AB 780 (Bocanegra) FDC Administrative Funds  :  This bill  
            appropriates $2 million from the General Fund for the purpose of  
            providing administrative funding to the small business financial  
            development corporations (FDC).  Each FDC is eligible to receive  
            $150,000.  The bill also states that it is the Legislature's  
            intent that the FDCs are to be under the jurisdiction of GO-Biz.   
            Status:  Pending in the Senate Committee on Rules.
        
          g)   AB 837 (Compos) Small Business Development Centers  :  This bill  
            requires annual reporting to GO-Biz on Small Business Development  
            Center activities in any year that the state contributes funds.   
            Status:  Pending in the Senate Committee on Rules.  
        
           h)   AB 1098 (Quirk-Silva) Small Business Regulation Report  :  This  
            bill requires the Office of the Small Business Advocate to  
            commission a study regarding the costs of state regulations on  
            small businesses.  Status:  Pending in the Senate Committee on  
            Rules.  

          i)   AB 1247 (Medina) Restructure of the FDC Programs:  This bill  
            repeals and recasts the provisions of the FDC small business  
            financing programs from the Business Transportation and Housing  
            Agency to GO-Biz.  Status:  Pending in the Senate Committee on  
            Rules.

        REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   

        Support 
        
       None received

        Opposition 
        
       None received
        








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       Analysis Prepared by  :    Toni Symonds and Edith Gonzalez / J., E.D. &  
       E. / (916) 319-2090