AB 1098, as amended, Quirk-Silva. Office of Small Business Advocate: regulations: report.
Existing law creates the Office of Small Business Advocate within the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development. Existing law establishes the duties and functions of the advocate, which include advisory participation in the consideration of all legislation and administrative regulations thatbegin delete effectend deletebegin insert affectend insert small businesses.
This bill would require the advocate to commission a study, to be conducted every five years, of the costs of state regulations on small businesses, as specified, and to convene one or more stakeholder meetings to provide advice on the study. The bill would require that the study, upon completion and including recommendations, be posted on the advocate’s Internet Web site. This bill would require the advocate to notify the Department of Finance, at least 30 days prior to commissioning the study, that sufficient funds are available from a non-General Fund source.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature hereby finds and declares:
2(a) Small business remains the backbone of the state’s economy.
3Regulatory burdens and costs continue to be one of the major
4complaints of small businesses.
5(b) The federal Small Business Administration began analyzing
6the cost and burdens of federal regulations on small businesses in
71995. A recent report found that the annual cost of federal
8regulations in the United States totaled $1.75 trillion. It also found
9the costs of federal regulations on firms with fewer than 20
10employees was $10,585 in 2010. For small businesses, the
11regulatory and paperwork costs were found to be more burdensome
12for the small firms than larger
firms.
13(c) Small businesses significantly impact California’s economy.
14They represent 99.2 percent of all employers and employ 50.4
15percent of the private-sector labor force. Small businesses are
16crucial to the fiscal condition of the state and numbered 3.5 million
17in 2010.
18(d) The state does not have a current analysis on state regulatory
19costs similar to that created for federal regulatory costs.
20Understanding the financial effect of state regulations would help
21policymakers reduce or design more cost-effective regulatory
22approaches that achieve desired policy objectives while placing
23the least burden on the regulated industries.
Section 12098.7 is added to the Government Code, to
25read:
The advocate shall do all of the following:
27(a) Commission a study, to be conducted every five years, of
28the costs of state regulations on small businesses, which shall,
29among other things, do all of the following:
30(1) Parallel, to the extent feasible and practical, the scope and
31study on the impact of regulatory costs on small firms conducted
32by the federal Small Business Administration.
33(2) Examine successful models from other states on identifying
34regulatory costs and developing potential alternative approaches
P3 1that meet the same regulatory objectives, but are less burdensome
2on small businesses.
3(b) Convene one or more stakeholder meetings to provide advice
4on the study required pursuant to subdivision (a). The stakeholders
5shall include, but not be limited to, representatives from small
6business associations representing a cross section of the small
7business community.
8(c) No later than January 1, 2015, and every five years thereafter,
9post the completed study required pursuant to subdivision (a),
10including recommendations on the advocate’s Internet Web site
11and the advocate shall provide notice to the Department of Finance,
12the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate President pro Tempore,
13the Chair of the Assembly, Committee on Jobs, Economic
14Development, and the Economy, and the chair of the Senate
15Committee onbegin delete Government Modernization, Efficiency and begin insert
Business, Professions and Economic Developmentend insert
16Accountability,end delete
17 that information is publicly available. The study shall remain
18available on the Internet Web site at least until the next study is
19posted.
20(d) For the purposes of the study, information shall be provided
21based on nonemployer businesses, businesses with five or fewer
22employees, businesses with 99 or fewer employees, businesses
23with 499 or fewer employees, and businesses with more than 500
24employees.
25(e) Prior to commissioning the study, the advocate shall
26determine that sufficient funds to conduct the study are available
27from a non-General Fund source. At least 30 days prior to
28commissioning the study, the advocate shall notify the Department
29of Finance that the advocate has determined that sufficient funding
30is available and that the advocate will commission the
study.
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