BILL NUMBER: SB 39 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 7, 2013
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 24, 2013
AMENDED IN SENATE MARCH 21, 2013
INTRODUCED BY Senators De León and Steinberg
(Coauthors: Senators Beall, Block, Calderon, Corbett, DeSaulnier,
Evans, Galgiani, Hancock, Hernandez, Hill, Hueso, Jackson, Lara,
Leno, Lieu, Liu, Negrete McLeod, Padilla, Pavley, Price, Roth, Rubio,
Vargas, Wolk, and Yee)
(Coauthors: Assembly Members Skinner and Torres)
DECEMBER 5, 2012
An act to add Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 26230) to
Division 16.3 of the Public Resources Code, relating to energy.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 39, as amended, De León. Energy: school facilities: energy
efficiency upgrade projects.
The California Clean Energy Jobs Act, an initiative measure
enacted by voters at the November 6, 2012, statewide general
election, establishes the Clean Energy Job Creation Fund and requires
moneys in the fund to be available for appropriation during
specified fiscal years for, among other things, the purposes of
funding energy efficiency projects in school facilities.
This bill would enact the Clean Energy Employment and Student
Advancement Act of 2013 and would require the Office of Public School
Construction, in consultation with the State Energy Resources
Conservation and Development Commission, the Public Utilities
Commission, and the State Department of Education, to establish a
school district assistance program to distribute grants, on a
competitive basis, for energy efficiency upgrade projects pursuant to
the California Clean Energy Jobs Act. The bill would require the
office, upon the approval of the State Allocation Board, to award a
school district grants for energy efficiency upgrade projects meeting
specified conditions. The bill would require the office to develop a
methodology to give priority points to applications meeting
specified criteria. The bill would require the State Energy
Resources Conservation and Development Commission, in consultation
with the office of the Treasurer, to develop guidelines for a
financing program that uses revolving loan funds, reduced interest
loans, or other financial assistance for energy efficiency and clean
energy projects at the campuses of the California Community Colleges,
the University of California, and the California State University.
This bill would state the intent of the Legislature to appropriate
moneys to the Office of Public School Construction from the fund for
the purposes of awarding energy efficiency grants to the most
disadvantaged schools in need of modernization for the purposes of
energy efficiency upgrades.
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. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(1) The people of the State of California voiced their strong
support for the California Clean Energy Jobs Act by enacting
Proposition 39 at the November 6, 2012, statewide general election.
The voters closed an egregious corporate tax loophole that only
benefited out-of-state companies at the expense of expanded
employment in our state.
(2) It is the duty of the Legislature to put these dollars to work
in a manner that voters can see and experience the benefit of.
Proposition 39 enumerated the following key principles in guiding the
expenditure of the revenues raised through the California Clean
Energy Jobs Act (Division 16.3 (commencing with Section 26200) of the
Public Resources Code):
(A) Maximize job creation.
(B) Shrink our carbon footprint.
(C) Minimize bureaucratic costs.
(D) Create full transparency.
(E) Demand rigorous accountability.
(F) Create measurable results.
(3) Since the recession began in late 2007, California has lost
nearly 1.4 million jobs, including 400,000 in the construction
industry alone. Investing in energy efficiency will maximize job
creation and will help the state regain a sense of economic security
and sustainability at a time when unemployment remains high. The
state can further stimulate its economy by putting the industry
segment back to work that is most in need--the construction trades.
(4) Studies show the continuing high cost of energy and utilities
due to inefficient lighting, insulation, heating, ventilation, and
air conditioning systems, plumbing, windows, and irrigation systems
that take local money away from educational programs. For example,
the Los Angeles Unified School District spends $105,000,000 annually
on energy. Energy efficiency improvements for public schools will
reduce long-term energy costs and the savings can be directed to the
classroom.
(5) Substandard physical environments are strongly associated with
truancy and other behavior problems in pupils. Lower pupil
attendance leads to lower scores on standardized tests in English
language arts and mathematics. Schools with better building
conditions have up to 14 percent lower pupil suspension rates.
Improving a school's health and safety standards can lead to a
36-point increase in California Academic Performance Index scores.
(6) Several studies have determined that children suffer
significant health consequences from excessive heat, inadequate
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems, mold and other
biological hazards, pest infestations, lead and other toxic hazards,
and overcrowding beyond the stated capacity of the school structure.
Research repeatedly shows the detrimental impact to the health of
pupils due to poor indoor air quality in classrooms. Increasing
energy efficiency will reduce air pollution that causes asthma and
lung disease.
(7) Economically disadvantaged school communities are often the
same areas that suffer most from high unemployment and destructive or
unlawful conduct by youth. The program funded by revenues generated
by the California Clean Energy Jobs Act will encourage community
participation in, and a greater sense of responsibility toward,
educational, environmental, and fiscal benefits of modernizing
facilities, which will enhance community pride and sustain
neighborhood vitality.
(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that:
(1) First priority for funds made available through the California
Clean Energy Jobs Act should be to award competitive grants
statewide to economically disadvantaged schools to provide
operational cost savings in schools maintaining kindergarten or any
of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and create a healthy indoor environment
for pupils and staff and to offer technical assistance to all
applicants and potential applicants for grant preparation to
encourage full participation in the grant program.
(2) Energy efficiency upgrade projects should also provide
short-term benefits, including the creation of jobs that pay
prevailing wages in communities around the state, and stimulate local
economies.
(3) In addition to grants for economically disadvantaged schools,
to the extent funds are available, funds could be allocated to
finance or provide matching funds for cost-effective energy
efficiency upgrades and clean energy projects at schools maintaining
kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and for projects at
community colleges or at the campuses of the University of
California or the California State University.
(4) Workforce training programs, including the California
Conservation Corps, certified community conservation corps,
YouthBuild, and other existing programs to train and employ
disadvantaged youth, veterans, and others on energy efficiency and
clean energy projects could also be funded.
SEC. 2. It is the intent of the Legislature to make moneys
available to the Office of Public School Construction, upon
appropriation, from the Clean Energy Job Creation Fund to award
energy efficiency upgrade grants to the most disadvantaged schools in
need of modernization for the purposes of energy efficiency upgrades
pursuant to the California Clean Energy Jobs Act (Division 16.3
(commencing with Section 26200) of the Public Resources Code).
SEC. 3. Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 26230) is added to
Division 16.3 of the Public Resources Code, to read:
CHAPTER 5. CLEAN ENERGY EMPLOYMENT AND STUDENT ADVANCEMENT ACT
OF 2013
26230. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Clean Energy Employment and Student Advancement Act of 2013.
26231. As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have
the following meanings:
(a) "Commission" means the State Energy Resources Conservation and
Development Commission.
(b) "Energy efficiency upgrade project" means a school facility
project that reduces energy consumption and operational costs through
means that include, but are not limited to, improvements to one or a
combination of the following:
(1) Ventilation.
(2) Lighting and other system controls.
(3) Air infiltration.
(4) Water use.
(5) Windows and doors (fenestration).
(6) Heating and cooling (HVAC).
(7) Electrical system.
(8) Insulation.
(c) "Office" means the Office of Public School Construction.
(d) "School district" means a school district or a county office
of education.
26232. (a) The office shall, in consultation with the commission,
the Public Utilities Commission, and the State Department of
Education, establish a school district assistance program to
distribute grants, on a competitive basis, prioritizing economically
disadvantaged school communities for energy efficiency upgrade
projects that offer the highest energy efficiency savings, pursuant
to this division.
(b) The commission shall develop criteria for project development,
ranking, approval, and energy savings reporting, and shall establish
guidelines and criteria for all of the following:
(1) Energy audit standards and procedures.
(2) Measurement and verification standards.
(3) Reporting standards.
(4) Project approval criteria relating to energy efficiency
upgrade projects.
(5) Project priorities relative to energy standards.
(c) The office shall administer, process, and distribute funds to
local educational agencies that meet the conditions pursuant to
Section 26234, rank priority for these funds on the basis of criteria
pursuant to Section 26235, and perform expenditure audits, as
specified in subdivision (d) of Section 26234.
26233. (a) The State Department of Education, in consultation
with the office, shall do all of the of the following:
(1) Offer technical assistance to all applicants and potential
applicants for grant preparation to encourage full participation in
the grant program.
(2) Implement outreach and marketing strategies for the program.
(3) Analyze participation to inform and modify outreach and
marketing efforts.
(b) The office shall use existing benchmarking tools to determine
present average energy consumption for a school facility by size and
type.
26234. Upon approval by the State Allocation Board, the office
shall award to a school district a grant pursuant to this chapter
only for an energy efficiency upgrade project that meets all of the
following conditions:
(a) The proposed project meets the qualifications of an energy
efficiency upgrade project.
(b) The school district complies with the required labor
compliance and contractor qualification standards.
(c) The amount of the grant applied for, together with any
matching contribution, will meet all of the costs of implementing the
energy efficiency upgrade project.
(d) The school district allows the office to audit all
expenditures made with grant funds.
(e) The school district agrees to track and report to the office
the number of jobs created as a result of the energy efficiency
upgrade project.
(f) The school district reports to the office the operational cost
savings resulting from the energy efficiency upgrade project, both
at the district level, in aggregate, and school facility site level.
26235. In evaluating and ranking applications for grants that
meet the conditions pursuant to Section 26234, the office shall
develop a methodology to assign priority points to an application
that meets all of the following criteria:
(a) The energy efficiency upgrade project is located at a school
facility with an above average energy consumption, as determined by
the benchmark pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 26233.
(b) The energy efficiency upgrade project is located in an
economically disadvantaged school community, based on the percentage
of pupils eligible for the federal free and reduced-price lunch
program.
(c) The energy efficiency project is located in an area with an
above average unemployment rate as compared to the statewide
unemployment rate.
(d) Pupils and classified school employees receive training and
information to better understand how they can support and maximize
the achievement of energy efficiency savings envisioned by the energy
efficiency upgrade projects.
(e) The energy efficiency upgrade project will enhance workforce
development and employment opportunities, utilize members of the
California Conservation Corps or certified local conservation corps,
if available, or accommodate learning opportunities for school pupils
or at-risk youth in the community.
(f) The energy efficiency upgrade project is a joint partnership
between two or more agencies, including, but not limited to, other
school districts, nonprofit organizations, and local government
agencies to maximize the investment and benefit to the public.
26236. The commission, in coordination with the office of the
Treasurer, shall develop guidelines for a financing program that uses
revolving loan funds, reduced interest loans, or other financial
assistance for energy efficiency and clean energy projects at the
campuses of the California Community Colleges, the University of
California, and the California State University.