SB 1017, as amended, Evans. Education finance: oil and gas severance tax.
(1) Existing law establishes the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, and the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, as the 3 segments of public postsecondary education in this state.
This bill would establish the California Higher Education Endowment Corporation (CHEEC) in state government. The bill would establish an oversight board to govern the CHEEC, and would require that board to appoint the chief executive officer of the CHEEC. The bill would require the CHEEC to annually allocate the moneys in the continuously appropriated California
Higher Education Fund, which would be created by the bill,begin insert firstend insert tobegin insert the Controller, and second toend insert the California Community Colleges, the California State University,begin delete andend delete the University of California, the Department of Parks and Recreation, and to the California Health and Human Services Agency, in specified proportions and for expenditure as provided.begin delete The bill also would authorize the board to invest the moneys in the fund in accordance with prescribed procedures.end delete The bill would require the board to submit a report to the Legislature, on or before April 1 of each year, on specified topics.
(2) Existing law imposes various taxes, including taxes on the privilege of engaging in certain activities. The Fee Collection Procedures Law, the violation of which is a crime, provides procedures for the collection of certain fees and surcharges.
This bill would, commencingbegin delete Januaryend deletebegin insert Julyend insert 1, 2015, impose an oil and gas severance taxbegin delete upon any operator, as defined,end delete for the privilege of severing oil or gas from the earth or water in this state for sale, transport, consumption, storage, profit, or use, as provided, at specified rates, calculated as provided. The tax would be administered by the State Board of
Equalization and would be collected pursuant to the procedures set forth in the Fee Collection Procedures Law. The bill would require the board to deposit all tax revenues, penalties, and interest collected pursuant to these provisions into the California Higher Education Fund.
Because this bill would expand the scope of the Fee Collection Procedures Law, the violation of which is a crime, it would impose a state-mandated local program.
(3) This bill would include a change in state statute that would result in a taxpayer paying a higher tax within the meaning of Section 3 of Article XIII A of the California Constitution, and thus would require for passage the approval of 2⁄3 of the membership of each house of the Legislature.
(4) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
(5) Funds appropriated by this bill and allocated to the California Community Colleges would be applied toward the minimum funding requirements for school districts and community college districts imposed by Section 8 of Article XVI of the California Constitution.
(6) This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
Vote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares:
2(a) California is the nation’s fourth largest producer of oil, after
3only North Dakota, Texas, and Alaska, and it is the only one of
436 oil producing states that does not have a severance tax. For
5example, Alaska employs a minimum severance tax of 25 percent
6that can range up to 50 percent depending on the net value of oil
7and natural gas, while Alabama, Kansas, Texas, North Dakota,
8Mississippi, Oregon, and Florida tax oil and gas at 8 percent, 8
9percent, 7.5 percent, 6.5 percent, 6 percent, 6 percent, and 5
10percent, respectively.
11(b) California is
currently tied with Mississippi for the highest
12unemployment rate in the nation, and is ranked 47 out of 50 in
13quality of education in the United States.
14(c) A recent study prepared by the Public Policy Institute of
15California found that, by the year 2025, the state will experience
16an educated labor shortage of about one million college-educated
17workers. This would leave firms unable to fill vacancies, which
18would potentially raise the unemployment rate in California and
19lead firms to look outside the state for an adequately educated
20workforce.
21(d) A study conducted in April 2012 by the Institute for the
22Study of Societal Issues at the University of California, Berkeley,
23sponsored by the California Chamber of Commerce, the California
24Civil Rights Coalition, and the Campaign for
College Opportunity,
25found that for every dollar the state invests in higher education,
26the state receives a $4.50 return on its investment. Moreover, a
27person with a bachelor’s degree will earn, on average, $1.34 million
28more in his or her lifetime than one without a college education.
29(e) Since the budget cuts enacted in 2010, over 32,000 teachers
30and faculty have been laid off. This has resulted in cuts in classes
31being offered, an increase in the ratio of students to teachers, and
32a reduced quality of education in the state. Moreover, University
33of California student fees have almost doubled in the last five years
34alone, while California State University student tuition fees have
35risen 80 percent, and California Community College student tuition
P4 1fees have risen 130 percent. As a result, over 750,000 students are
2no longer seeking to
attain an advanced degree in California.
3(f) This proposed severance tax is intended to provide at least
4$1 billion of annual revenue that will, among other things, promote
5economic stimulus through the education of our citizens so that
6they can excel, innovate, and become eligible for high-paying
7professional careers.
Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 99500) is added
9to Part 65 of Division 14 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read:
10
As used in this chapter, the following terms have the
17following meanings:
18(a) “Board” means the oversight board described in subdivision
19(a) of Section 99505.
20(b) “Corporation” means the California Higher Education
21Endowment Corporation established pursuant to Section 99502.
22(c) “Director” means the chief executive officer of the
23corporation appointed pursuant to Section 99506.
24(d) “Fund” means the California Higher Education Fund
25established pursuant to Section 42321 of the Revenue and Taxation
26
Code.
The California Higher Education Endowment
28Corporation is hereby established in state government for purposes
29of implementing this chapter.
30
(a) (1) The corporation shall be governed by an
34oversight board, which shall be composed of the following voting
35members:
36(A) Two members appointed by the Board of Trustees of the
37California State University.
38(B) Two members appointed by the Regents of the University
39of California.
P5 1(C) Two members appointed by the Chancellor of the California
2Community Colleges.
3(D) Two members appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules.
4(E) Two members appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly.
5(F) One member appointed by the Treasurer.
6(G) One member appointed by the Superintendent of Public
7Instruction.
8(H) (i) One member who is a student enrolled in the California
9Community Colleges at the time of the appointment. The member
10appointed pursuant to this subparagraph shall be enrolled in the
11California Community Colleges for the duration of his or her term.
12(ii) The Board of Governors of the California Community
13Colleges shall appoint the student member from a list of three
14eligible persons furnished by the Student Senate.
15(I) (i) One member who is a student enrolled in the California
16State University at the time of the appointment. The member
17appointed pursuant to this subparagraph shall be enrolled in the
18California State University for the duration of his or her term.
19(ii) The Trustees of the California State University shall appoint
20the student member from a list of three eligible persons furnished
21by the California State Student Association.
22(J) (i) One member who is a student enrolled in the University
23of California at the time of the appointment. The member appointed
24pursuant to this subparagraph shall be enrolled in the University
25of California for the duration of his or her term.
26(ii) The Regents of the University of California shall appoint
27the student member from a list of three eligible persons furnished
28by the University of California Student Association.
29(2) (A) At least one member appointed pursuant to paragraph
30(1) shall be a nonmanagement employee of the California State
31University.
32(B) At least one member appointed pursuant to paragraph (1)
33shall be a nonmanagement employee of the University of
34California.
35(b) The oversight board shall also include the following ex
36officio, nonvoting members:
37(1) The Chancellor of the California State University.
38(2) The President of the University of California.
39(3) The Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.
P6 1(c) The Legislature requests that the Regents of the University
2of California and the President of the University of California
3comply with the membership requirements in subparagraph (B)
4of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) and paragraph (2) of subdivision
5(b).
6(d) Except as specified in subparagraphs (H), (I), and (J) of
7paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), each of the members identified
8in subdivisions (a) and (b) shall be appointed to serve a term of
9four years.
10(e) The members of the board shall annually select a member
11to serve as the
chairperson of the board.
(a) The board shall appoint a director, who shall be
13the chief executive officer of the corporation. This position is
14designated as a confidential position and is exempt from civil
15service under subdivision (e) of Section 4 of Article VII of the
16California Constitution.
17(b) The director shall serve at the pleasure of the board.
18(c) The board may delegate to the director any power, duty,
19purpose, function, or jurisdiction that the board may lawfully
20delegate, including the authority to enter into and sign contracts
21on behalf of the corporation.
22(d) The director may delegate to his or her designee any power,
23duty, purpose, or jurisdiction that may be lawfully delegated.
(a) On or before April 1 of each year, the board shall
25report to the Legislature on all of the following:
26(1) The revenue and expenditure data for the corporation.
27(2) The revenue and expenditure data for the fund.
28(3) A review of the compliance audits conducted pursuant to
29Section 99508.
30(4) An examination of the level of General Fund appropriations
31the University of California, the California State University, and
32the California Community Colleges in light of the funding provided
33by
the fund.
34(b) The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in
35compliance with Section 9795.
(a) The board shall select an auditing firm to annually
37audit each entity that receives funding pursuant to Section 99512,
38if the entity received moneys in the prior fiscal year, to determine
39if the entity used those moneys for purposes authorized by that
P7 1section. The auditing firm shall submit a report of the results of
2the audit to the board.
3(b) The independent audits shall be funded with investment
4returns from the fund.
5(c)
end delete
6begin insert(b)end insert The board shall select
an auditing firm licensed by, and in
7good standing with, the California Board of Accountancy. The
8board shall not select an auditing firm if that firm’s lead audit
9partner, coordinating audit partner having primary responsibility
10for the audit, or audit partner responsible for reviewing the audit
11has performed audit services for the board for six consecutive
12fiscal years.
13(d)
end delete
14begin insert(c)end insert The auditing firm shall conduct the audit in accordance with
15the Government Auditing Standards issued by the Comptroller
16General of the United States.
17(e)
end delete
18begin insert(d)end insert If the board determines through the audits performed
19pursuant to this section that any campus, entity, or related
20administrative office of any segment that receives funding from
21this chapter is found to have improperly used or otherwise
22improperly administered moneys allocated under this chapter, the
23board shall take the following disciplinary actions:
24(1) Upon a first finding, the board shall bar the recipient campus,
25entity, or related administrative office from receiving funding made
26available under this chapter during the following fiscal year and
27require the recipient campus, entity, or related administrative office
28to submit a remediation plan to the board for approval as a
29
condition of receiving future funding under this chapter.
30(2) Upon a second finding within five years, the board shall bar
31the recipient campus, entity, or related administrative office from
32receiving funds made available under this chapter
for the following
33two fiscal years and require the recipient campus, entity, or related
34administrative office to submit a remediation plan to the board for
35approval as a condition of receiving future funding under this
36chapter.
37(3) Upon a third finding within five years, the board shall bar
38the recipient campus, entity, or related administrative office from
39receiving
future funding under this chapter.
The board may adopt regulations necessary or
2appropriate to implement its powers and duties under this chapter
3in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5
4(commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title
52 of the Government Code).
6
The corporation may hire employees as it deems
11necessary to implement this chapter.
The corporation shall annually allocate the moneys in
13the California Higher Education Fund, for immediate expenditure
14as follows:
15(a) First, upon approval by the corporation of the certification
16described in Section 42320.5 of the Revenue and Taxation Code,
17to the Controller for allocation to counties that incur a reduction
18in property tax revenues resulting from the imposition of the tax
19pursuant to Part 21 (commencing with Section 42301) to Division
202 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as described in Section
2142320.5 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
22(b) Second, after the allocation pursuant to subdivision (a), as
23follows:
24(a)
end delete
25begin insert(1)end insert Fifty percent of the moneys in the fund, in equal shares, to
26the Regents of the University of California, the Trustees of the
27California State University, and the Board of Governors of the
28California Community Colleges. The moneys shall be used only
29for the following purposes:
30(1)
end delete31begin insert(A)end insert Deferred maintenance.
32(2)
end delete33begin insert(B)end insert Instructional equipment replacement.
34(3)
end delete
35begin insert(C)end insert To pay off debt resulting from a statewide general obligation
36bond
issued by the University of California, the California State
37University, or the California Community Colleges, as applicable.
38(4)
end delete39begin insert(D)end insert Minor capital outlay projects.
40(b)
end delete
P9 1begin insert(2)end insert Twenty-five percent of the moneys in the fund to the
2Department of Parks and Recreation for the maintenance and
3improvement
of state parks.
4(c)
end delete
5begin insert(3)end insert Twenty-five percent of the moneys in the fund to the
6California Health and Human Services Agency to fund health and
7human services programs.
(a) The board shall have exclusive control of the
9investment of the fund. Except as otherwise restricted by the
10California Constitution and by law, the board may, in its discretion,
11invest the assets of the fund through the purchase, holding, or sale
12of any investment, financial instrument, or financial transaction,
13if the investment, financial instrument, or financial transaction is
14prudent in the informed opinion of the board.
15(b) The board may itself make any investment authorized by
16law or sell any security, obligation, or real property in which
17moneys in the fund are invested, by affirmative vote of a majority
18of the board, or, by the same affirmative vote, may from time to
19time adopt an investment resolution that shall contain detailed
20
guidelines by which to designate the securities and real property
21that are acceptable for purchase or sale. While the resolution is in
22effect, securities and real property may be purchased for investment
23by an officer or employee of the board designated by it for that
24purpose, and sales of securities may be consummated by the officer
25or employee under the conditions prescribed. Purchases and sales
26of securities shall be reported to the board, on a monthly basis, at
27its next regular meeting.
28(c) Any investment transaction decisions made during a closed
29session pursuant to paragraph (16) of subdivision (c) of Section
3011126 of the Government Code shall be by rollcall vote entered
31into the minutes of that meeting. The board, within 12 months of
32the close of an investment transaction or the transfer of system
33assets for an investment transaction, whichever occurs first, shall
34disclose and report the investment transaction at a public meeting.
35(d) In addition to the other investments authorized by this article,
36the board may invest in real estate, leases of real estate, and
37improvements on real estate for business or residential purposes
38as an investment for the production of income.
Part 21 (commencing with Section 42301) is added to
40Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, to read:
This part shall be known and may be cited as the Oil
4Severance Tax Law.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions shall
6apply:
7(a) “Barrel of oil” means 42 United States gallons of 231 cubic
8inches per gallon computed at a temperature of 60 degrees
9Fahrenheit.
10(b) “California Higher Education Fund” or “CHEF” means the
11fund that is created by Section 42321.
12(c) “Gas” means all natural gas, including casing head gas, and
13all other hydrocarbons not defined as oil in subdivision (f).
14(d) “Division” means the
Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal
15Resources in the Department of Conservation.
16(e) “In this state” means within the exterior limits of the State
17of California and includes all territory within these limits owned
18by or ceded to the United States of America. “In this state” includes
19the mean high tide line to three nautical miles offshore.
20(f) “Oil” means petroleum, or other crude oil, condensate, casing
21head gasoline, or other mineral oil that is mined, produced, or
22withdrawn from below the surface of the soil or water.
23(g) “Operator” means a person that, by virtue of ownership, or
24under the authority of a lease or any other agreement, has the right
25to drill, operate, maintain, or control an oil or
gas well in the earth
26or water in this state, including any person that takes oil or gas
27from the earth or water in this state in any manner, any person that
28owns, controls, manages, or leases any oil or gas well in the earth
29or water of this state, and any person that produces or extracts in
30any manner any oil or gas by taking it from the earth or water in
31this state; and includes the first person that acquires either the legal
32title or beneficial title to oil or gas taken from the earth or water
33in this state by the federal government or a federal instrumentality.
34(h) “Political subdivision of the state” includes any local public
35entity, as defined in Section 900.4 of the Government Code.
36(i) “Severed” or “severing” means the extraction or withdrawing
37from
below the surface of the earth or water of any oil or gas,
38regardless of whether the extraction or withdrawal shall be by
39natural flow, mechanical flow, forced flow, pumping, or any other
40means employed to get the oil or gas from below the surface of
P11 1the earth or water, and shall include the extraction or withdrawal
2by any means whatsoever of oil or gas upon which the tax has not
3been paid, from any surface reservoir, natural or artificial, or from
4a water surface.
5(j) “Stripper well” means a well that has been certified by the
6division as an oil well incapable of producing an average of more
7than 10 barrels of oil per day during the entire calendar month or
8a gas well that is incapable of producing more than an average of
960,000 cubic feet of gas per day during the entire calendar month.
10Once a well has been
certified as a stripper well, that stripper well
11shall remain certified as a stripper well until the well produces an
12average of more than 10 barrels of oil per day during an entire
13calendar month or produces more than an average of 60,000 cubic
14feet of gas per day during an entire calendar month.
15(k) “Unit of gas” means 1,000 cubic feet (Mcf) measured at a
16base pressure of 15.025 pounds per square inch absolute and at a
17temperature base of 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
(a) begin delete(1)end deletebegin delete end deleteCommencingbegin delete Januaryend deletebegin insert Julyend insert 1, 2015, an oil and
19gas severance tax is hereby imposed upon any operator for the
20privilege of severing oil or gas from the earth or water in this state
21at the rate of 9.5 percent of the average price per barrel of
22California oil or 3.5 percent of the average price per unit of gas,
23as calculated pursuant to thisbegin delete section.end deletebegin insert
section, for each barrel of
24oil or unit of gas that is severed from the earth or water of this
25state, or acquired from the federal government or a federal
26instrumentality, or from the state or a political subdivision of the
27state, at the time the barrel of oil or unit of gas is severed or
28acquired.end insert
29(2) (A) On or before December 1, 2014, and
end delete
30begin insert(b)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertOn or beforeend insert June 1, 2015,begin insert
and December 1, 2015,end insert and
31on or before those dates of each year thereafter, the division shall
32determine the average price per barrel of California oil for the
33six-month period ending on the precedingbegin delete October 31 and April begin insert April 30 and October 31,end insert respectively. The price of California
3430,end delete
35oil shall be based on the first purchase price for California
36Midway-Sunset crude oil as determined by the United States
37Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) Domestic Crude Oil
38First Purchase Report. In the event the EIA Domestic Crude Oil
39First Purchase Report is delayed or discontinued, the division may
P12 1base its determination on other sources of first purchase prices of
2California oil.
3(B) On or before December 1, 2014, and
end delete
4begin insert (2)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertOn or beforeend insert June 1, 2015,begin insert and December 1, 2015,end insert and on
5or before those dates of each year thereafter, the division shall
6determine the average price per unit of gas for the six-month period
7ending on the precedingbegin delete October 31 and April 30,end deletebegin insert
April 30 and
8October 31,end insert respectively. The price of gas shall be based on
9California’s price for gas as determined by the United States
10Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) report. In the event
11the EIA report is delayed or discontinued, the division may base
12its determination on other sources of city gate prices of California
13gas.
14(C)
end delete
15begin insert(3)end insert The division shall notify the board of its determinations
16pursuant tobegin delete subparagraphs (A) and (B),end deletebegin insert
paragraphs (1) and (2),end insert
17
on or beforebegin delete December
1, 2014, andend delete
181, 2015,end insert and on or before those dates on each year thereafter.
19(b) Any person that owns an interest, including a royalty interest,
20in oil or its value, is liable for the tax until it has been paid to the
21
board.
The tax imposed by this part shall be in addition to any
23other taxes imposed by law, including, without limitation, any ad
24valorem taxes imposed by the state, or any political subdivision
25of the state, or any local business license taxes that may be incurred
26for the privilege of severing oil or gas from the earth or water or
27doing business in that locality. There shall be no exemption from
28the payment of an ad valorem tax related to equipment, material,
29or other property by reason of the payment of the severance tax
30pursuant to this part.
Two or more operators that are owned or controlled
32directly or indirectly, as defined in Section 25105, by the same
33interests shall be considered as a single operator for purposes of
34application of the tax prescribed in this part.
(a) There shall be exempted from the imposition of
36the oil and gas severance tax imposed pursuant to this part, the
37severance of oil or gas produced by a stripperbegin delete well, unless the well begin insert well.end insert
38produces more than five barrels per month.end delete
39(b) The division shall notify the board of all wells that have
40been certified as stripper wells.
There shall be exempted from the imposition of the tax
2imposed pursuant to this part all oil, gas, or both oil and gas owned
3or produced by the state or any political subdivision of the state,
4including such public entity’s proprietary share of oil or gas
5produced under any unit, cooperative, or other pooling agreement.
Each operator shall prepare and file with the board a
7return in the form prescribed by the board containing information
8as the board deems necessary or appropriate for the proper
9administration of this part. The return shall be filed on or before
10the last day of the calendar month following the calendar quarter
11to which it relates, together with a remittance payable to the board
12for the amount of tax due for that period.
(a) The board shall administer and collect the tax
14imposed by this part pursuant to the Fee Collection Procedures
15Law (Part 30 (commencing with Section 55001)). For purposes
16of this part, the references in the Fee Collection Procedures Law
17to “fee” shall include the tax imposed by this part and references
18to “feepayer” shall include any person liable for the payment of
19the tax imposed by this part.
20(b) The board may prescribe, adopt, and enforce regulations
21relating to the administration and enforcement of this part,
22
including, but not limited to, provisions governing collections,
23reporting, refunds, and appeals.
24(c) The board may prescribe, adopt, and enforce emergency
25regulations relating to the administration and enforcement of this
26part. Any emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced
27pursuant to this section shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter
283.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of
29Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter,
30including Section 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption
31of these regulations is an emergency and shall be considered by
32the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate
33preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general
34welfare.
(a) On or before October 31, 2016, and each October
3630 thereafter, the auditor of a county that has incurred a reduction
37in property tax revenues resulting from the imposition of the tax
38pursuant to this part shall certify to the Director of Finance an
39estimate of the total amount of the reduction in property tax
40revenues on both the regular secured roll and the supplement roll
P14 1for the prior fiscal year, except that the amount certified shall not
2include any estimated property tax revenue reductions to school
3districts, other than basic state aid school districts, and county
4offices of education.
5(b) After the county auditor of the eligible county has made the
6applicable certification to the Director of Finance pursuant to
7subdivision
(a), the Director of Finance shall, within 30 days after
8verification of the county auditor’s estimate, certify this amount
9to the California Higher Education Endowment Corporation. Upon
10approval of the California Higher Education Endowment
11Corporation, that amount shall be allocated from the California
12Higher Education Fund to the Controller for allocation to the
13county, and the Controller shall make the appropriate allocation
14to the county within 30 working days.
15(c) On or before June 30, 2017, and each June 30 thereafter,
16the auditor shall compute and remit to the Controller for deposit
17into the California Higher Education Fund an amount equal to
18the amount allocated to it by the Controller pursuant subdivision
19(b), less the actual amount of reduced property tax revenue
20incurred by the county on the regular secured roll and supplement
21roll as a result of the tax imposed by this part, excluding any
22property tax revenue reduction incurred by
school districts, other
23than basic state aid school districts, and county offices of
24education. If the actual amount of property tax revenue reduction
25incurred by an eligible county in the immediate preceding year,
26as described and limited by this subdivision, exceeds the amount
27allocated by the Controller to that county, the California Higher
28Education Endowment Corporation shall allocate that amount of
29excess from the California Higher Education Fund to the
30Controller for allocation to that eligible county.
31(d) The auditor of a county shall allocate any amounts received
32pursuant to this section to the county, cities, special districts, and
33basic aid school districts in proportion to the amounts of property
34tax revenue otherwise allocated among the county, cities, special
35districts, and basic aid school districts.
36(e) For purposes of this section, “basic state aid school
district”
37means a school district that does not receive a state apportionment
38pursuant to Section 42238.02 of the Education Code, as
39implemented by Section 42238.03 of the Education Code, excluding
40funds apportioned pursuant to the requirements of subdivision (e)
P15 1of Section 42238.03 of the Education Code, but receives from the
2state only a basic apportionment pursuant to Section 6 of article
3IX of the California Constitution.
(a) All taxes, interest, penalties, and other amounts
5collected pursuant to this part, less refunds and costs of
6administration, shall be deposited into the California Higher
7Education Fund, which is hereby created in the State Treasury.
8Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, moneys
9in the fund are continuously appropriated, without regard to fiscal
10year, to the California Higher Education Endowment Corporation
11established by Section 99502 of the Education Code.
12(b) (1) Revenues, less refunds, derived pursuant to Section
1342310 for deposit in the California Higher Education Fund pursuant
14to this section shall be deemed
“General Fund revenues” and
15“General Fund proceeds of taxes” for purposes of Section 8 of
16Article XVI.
17(2) Moneys allocated to the Board of Governors of the California
18Community Colleges pursuant to Section 99512 of the Education
19Code shall be deemed “moneys to be applied by the state for the
20support of school districts and community college districts” for
21purposes of Section 8 of Article XVI.
22(c) Any local property tax reductions that may result from the
23imposition of the tax by this part shall be reimbursed from the
24revenues received from the imposition of the tax.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
26Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
27the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
28district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
29infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
30for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
31the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
32the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
33Constitution.
This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
35immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
36the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
37immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
P16 1 In order to reduce mandatory systemwide tuition and fees as
2quickly as possible, it is necessary that this act take effect
3immediately.
O
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