BILL ANALYSIS Ó
AB 419
Page 1
Date of Hearing: April 21, 2015
ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON JOBS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND THE ECONOMY
Eduardo Garcia, Chair
AB 419
(Kim) - As Amended: March 26, 2015
SUBJECT: Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development:
regulations
SUMMARY: Requires the Governor's Office of Business and Economic
Development (GO-Biz) to compile annually all regulations adopted by
the state that affect small businesses and report this information to
the Legislature, as specified. Specifically, this bill:
1)Specifies that the Legislature finds and declares, among other
things, that:
a) GO-Biz serves as the state's lead entity on for economic
strategy and marketing of California on issues relating to
business development, private sector investment, and economic
growth.
b) The Office of the Small Business Advocate (OSBA), located
within GO-Biz, serves as a liaison between the small business
community and state government.
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c) GO-Biz with the assistance of OSBA is well placed to review
all new regulations adopted by the state that affect small
businesses and to efficiently and effectively report that
information to the Legislature.
d) The Legislature should be informed on the impact of new
regulations on California's small business community.
2)Requires GO-Biz to compile annually a full set of the new state
regulations adopted in the preceding year that affect small
businesses.
3)Requires GO-Biz to organize these regulations in such a manner as to
be presented to the Legislature annually, beginning on January 1,
2017, as specified.
EXISTING LAW:
1)Establishes GO-Biz to serve the Governor as the lead entity for
economic strategy and the marketing of California on issues relating
to business development, private sector investment, and economic
growth. Among other duties, GO-Biz is authorized to make
recommendations to the Governor and the Legislature on new state
policies, programs, and actions, or amendments to existing programs
in order to advance statewide economic goals, respond to emerging
economic problems, and to ensure that all state policies and
programs conform to the state economic and business development
goals.
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2)Establishes the Office of the Small Business Advocate to serve,
among other things, as the principal advocate in the state on behalf
of small businesses, including, but not limited to, advisory
participation in the consideration of all legislation and
administrative regulations that affect small businesses.
3)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.
4)Finds and declares that there has been an unprecedented growth in
the number of administrative regulations in recent years and that
correcting the problems requires the direct involvement of the
Legislature, as well as that of the executive branch of the state
government. Further, the statute 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.
5)Establishes basic minimum procedural requirements for the adoption,
amendment, or repeal of administrative regulations, including
assessing the potential adverse impact of an action on California
businesses and individuals with the purpose of avoiding the
imposition of unreasonable and unnecessary regulations, reporting,
recordkeeping, or compliance requirements. Among other
requirements, an agency is required to:
a) Base decisions on adequate information;
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b) Consider the impact of a proposed rule on an industry's
ability to compete with businesses in other states; and
c) Assess its impact on the creation or elimination of jobs and
new and expanding businesses.
6)Directs the Office of Administrative Law to compile, print, and
distribute the California Code of Regulations. The document is
required to be posted on the internet along with a list of pending
regulations with hyperlinks to the rulemaking agency, as specified.
FISCAL EFFECT: Unknown
POLICY FRAME:
Although the state has a vigorous public process that is designed to
allow the rulemaking agency to fully consider the comments,
suggestions, and economic impacts of proposed regulations on all
business - especially small businesses - state agencies are often
unable to identify and mitigate the challenges small businesses face
in meeting the process requirements of implementation. An intrinsic
conflict to California's rulemaking process is that those businesses
that may be most affected have the least ability to monitor the broad
range of state rulemaking entities, recommend appropriate alternative
implementation models or engage meaningfully in the often complex and
highly technical rule making proceedings.
Given that nearly 3 million firms in California have no employees and
90% of firms with employees have less than 20, having implementation
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methods that are appropriate for small businesses in terms of time,
money, and expertise is important to the state's economic growth.
This measure proposes to have GO-Biz and the Small Business Advocate
annually compile all regulations adopted by the state that affect
small businesses and report this information to the Legislature.
The Comment section of the analysis explores these issues more fully
and includes information on California small businesses, studies on
the cost of regulations, legislative attempts to reform state
rulemaking practices, small business advocacy, and summary of prior
legislation. Suggested technical amendments are included in Comment
7.
COMMENTS:
1)Author's Purpose: According to the author, "California's small
businesses are the backbone of the state's economy and an engine of
job creation, representing over 99% of the state's employers and
employing over half of all private-sector workers. The regulatory
environment disproportionately affects small businesses. Pending
regulations at the state and federal level provide uncertainty and
detrimentally affect future growth. Often California is ranked dead
last for the ability to start a business and expand a business.
Many of these small business owners point to regulations as their
single most important problem and call for reforming the regulatory
process. AB 419 accompanies GO-Biz's mission by informing the
Legislature annually on the entirety of these new requirements on
California's small businesses. This will provide greater
transparency to the rule-making ad regulatory environment. GO-Biz
is tasked with assisting hundreds of small businesses every year,
among these is to provide information on legal and state regulatory
requirements for greater compliance. It is important to ensure
compliance of the law, rather than aggressively penalizing small
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businesses with fines and penalties when often non-compliance is a
result of confusion."
2)California's Small Business Economy: Small businesses form the core
of California's $2.2 trillion economy. Research shows that net new
job creation is strongest among businesses with less than 20
employees, that small businesses have historically led the state's
local and regional economies out of recessions, and that these
businesses are essential to the state's global competitiveness by
meeting niche industry needs.
Businesses with no employees make up the single largest component of
businesses in California, 2.9 million out of an estimated 3.6
million firms in 2012, representing over $149 billion in revenues
with highest number of businesses in the professional, scientific,
and technical services industry sector. As these non-employer
businesses grow, they continue to serve as an important component of
California's dynamic economy.
Excluding non-employer firms, businesses with less than 20 employees
comprise nearly 90% of all businesses and employ approximately 18%
of all workers. Businesses with less than 100 employees represent
97% of all businesses and employ 36% of the workforce. These
non-employer and small employer firms create jobs, generate taxes,
and revitalize communities.
----------------------------------------------------------------
| 2011 Business Profile By Size (excludes non-employer firms) |
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|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
| Area | Employment | Number of | Percent of | Employees | Percent of | Annual |
| Description | Size | Firms | Firms | | Jobs | Payroll |
| | | | | | | ($1,000) |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|United States | Total | 5,684,424| | 113,425,965| |$5,164,897,905|
| | | | | | | |
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|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | Total | 689,568| 12% of | 12,698,427| 11% of all | $663,570,657|
| | | | U.S. Firms | | U.S. Jobs | |
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| |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|United States | 0-4 | 3,532,058| 62% of | 5,857,662| 5% of U.S. |$230,422,086 |
| | | | U.S. Firms | | Jobs | |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | 0-4 | 429,139| 62% of | 702,508| 5.5% of | $35,472,447|
| | | | CA Firms | | CA Jobs | |
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| |
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|United States | <20 | 5,104,014|89.7% of U.S. | 20,250,874| 17.8% of | $732,759,369|
| | | | Firms | | U.S. Jobs | |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | <20 | 614,538| 89.1% of CA | 2,386,296| 18.7% of | $99,417,066|
| | | | Firms | | CA Jobs | |
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| |
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|United States | 0-99 | 5,585,510|98.2% of U.S. | 39,130,875| 34% of | 1,478,844,420|
| | | | Firms | | U.S. Jobs | |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | 0-99 | 672,360| 97% of | 4,587,628| 36.1% of | 194,611,832|
| | | | CA Firms | | CA Jobs | |
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| |
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|United States | <500 | 5,666,753| 99.6% of U.S | 54,998,312| 48.4% of |$2,169,353,973|
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| | | | Firms | | U.S. Jobs | |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | <500 | 683,999| 99.1% of CA | 6,331,871| 49.8% of | $280,857,823|
| | | | Firms | | CA Jobs | |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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| |
----------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|United States | 500+ | 17,671| 0.3% of | 58,427,653| 51.5% of |$2,995,543,932|
| | | | U.S. Firms | | U.S. Jobs | |
|--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------|
|California | 500+ | 5,569| 0.8% of | 6,366,556| 50.1% of | $382,712,834|
| | | | CA Firms | | CA Jobs | |
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|Source: U.S. Census |
|http://www.census.gov/econ/susb/index.html |
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Reflective of their important role, the JEDE Committee members
regularly hear about the challenges small businesses face meeting
the implementation requirements of state, local, and federal
regulations. While opponents of regulatory reform accuse small
businesses of trying to avert their responsibilities, businesses
that have testified before the Committee have repeatedly stated that
their goal is to achieve a regulatory environment that encourages
small business development, while still maintaining public health
and safety standards.
3)Cost of Regulations on Business: There are two major sources of
data on the cost of regulatory compliance on businesses, the federal
SBA and the Office of the Small Business Advocate (OSBA). For the
last 10 years, the federal SBA has conducted a peer reviewed study
that analyzes the cost of federal government regulations on
different size businesses. This research shows that small
businesses continue to bear a disproportionate share of the federal
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regulatory burden. On a per employee basis, it costs about $2,400,
or 45% more, for small firms to comply with federal regulations than
their larger counterparts.
The first study on the impact of California regulations on small
businesses was released by the OSBA in 2009. This first
in-the-nation study found that the total cost of regulations to
small businesses averaged about $134,000 per business in 2007. Of
course, no one would advocate that there should be no regulations in
the state. The report, however, importantly identifies that the
cost of regulations can provide a significant cost to the everyday
operations of California businesses and should therefore be a
consideration among the state's economic development policies.
Regulatory costs are driven by a number of factors including
multiple definitions of small business in state and federal law, the
lack of e-commerce solutions to address outdated paperwork
requirements, procurement requirements that favor larger size
bidders, and the lack of technical assistance to alleviate such
obstacles that inhibit small business success.
4)Different Approaches to Regulatory Reform: In general, the
Legislature's engagement on regulatory reforms has taken two basic
approaches. One set of policies have addressed specific regulatory
challenges on a case-by-case basis. The other approach makes
systemic change to the way in which rules are adopted, often adding
a supplemental more targeted review pre- or post-adoption.
Recommendations for systemic change have included:
a) Dynamic Fiscal Analysis in Appropriations Committee: These
bills required an analysis of bills before the Legislature on
their impact on business and the economy. Currently, the
Legislature's fiscal committee reviews focus on the bill's direct
impact on state funds, and most specifically on the General Fund.
The fiscal committee's analysis is not intended to include
legislations' potential economic impact on the state.
b) Substantive Administrative Review: These bills shifted the
review of the Office of Administrative Law from a procedural
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review of the regulation package to a substantive review of its
impact on business and the economy, including the sufficiency of
the assessment of alternatives. Alternatively, legislation has
suggested that another state entity, such as the State Auditor or
Legislative Analyst's Office, could be designated to undertake an
expanded review of proposed regulations.
c) Enhanced Analysis of Alternatives: These bills required a
more meaningful consideration of alternative implementation
models, which could lower costs or reduce the implementation
burden on small businesses.
d) Post Implementation Analysis: These bills required a review
of a regulation's impact five-years after its implementation.
Alternatively, legislation has been suggested that all
regulations have a sunset date, which would allow for full review
once the actual impacts could be identified.
Until now, the first approach has been the most successful, although
by its nature it has had very limited overall impact on California's
regulatory business climate. Due to their potential implementation
costs, a majority of the bills advancing the systemic approach to
regulatory reform have failed to move from the fiscal committees -
as illustrated in the comment on related legislation.
The most significant systemic change in recent years was approved in
SB 617 (Calderon), Chapter 496, Statutes of 2011, which required an
enhanced economic impact analysis for regulations, anticipated to
have an impact of $50 million or more. The SB 617 process follows
the federal regulatory model (described below), however, it should
be noted that the state process is silent as to the assessment of
costs based on size of business.
The Legislature heard several bills to refine the SB 617 process in
2013-14 session including AB 2723 (Medina), which would have
required rulemaking entities to consider the specific impact of
major regulations on sole proprietorships, and AB 1711 (Cooley)
which moved up the economic impact assessment to the initial
statement of reasons for all regulations. Ultimately, the Governor
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signed AB 1711 (Cooley), Chapter 779, Statutes of 2014 and vetoed AB
2723 (veto message below).
5)Federal and State Small Business Advocacy: In 1976, the federal
government established the Federal Office of Advocacy (FOA) within
the Small Business Administration for the purpose of protecting and
effectively representing the nation's small businesses within the
federal government's legislative and rule-making processes. A few
years later, the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 was enacted,
which provided a specific process for assessing and mitigating the
potential impact of federal regulations on small businesses. The
federal process, which has been updated over the years, includes the
annual publication of a regulatory agenda, an initial and final
regulatory flexibility analysis, a mandatory periodic review of
adopted rules, and direction for a possible judicial review of
regulations. The FOA serves as the "watchdog" agency for the
Federal Regulatory Flexibility Act.
In carrying out its duties, the FOA regularly reviews federal
regulations and makes recommendations on how to reduce the burden on
small firms and maximize small business participation within the
federal government. In 2013, the FOA issued 19 letters to federal
agencies requesting alternative implementation methods and
encouraging better technical review of proposed regulations.
Another FOA activity is the convening of issue-specific Small
Business Advocacy Review Panels. Utilizing the FOA as a facilitator
has proven to be particularly useful in developing more detailed
comments and making specific and technical recommendations to assist
the rulemaking entity in modifying a rule to lessen its impact on
small businesses, without reducing its policy objective.
Adopted over a series of years, California law currently has several
but not all of the key elements of the federal model. As an
example, existing state law sets forth an extensive process for the
development and adoption of regulations, including requiring the
identification of potential adverse impacts on small businesses and
individuals, as well as the consideration of alternative.
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The process, however, places the primary responsibility for
developing alternative implementation methods on the impacted
parties. As noted above, small businesses do not have the capacity
in terms of time nor expertise to follow every rulemaking process
that the state is undertaking in a given year, nor the expertise to
offer alternatives.
While California has an Office of the Small Business Advocate, the
state advocate does not currently have the staff to formally comment
on pending state regulations. On a case-by-case basis, the
Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development has been able
to engage with other agencies on current and proposed regulatory
proposals through its Office of Permit Assistance, but again, state
statutory direction is permissive and not mandatory.
6)Possible Similar Functions: Existing law requires the Office of
Administrative Law to compile, print, and distribute the California
Code of Regulations, which includes all existing rules, and the
California Regulatory Notice Register, which includes notices of
proposed rulemaking actions. These documents are required to be
posted on the internet along with a current list of pending
regulations with hyperlinks to the rulemaking agency.
The Office of Administrative Law is also directed to prepare a
weekly update on new or amended regulations in a document called the
California Code of Regulations Supplement. As noted, earlier in the
analysis, California has a robust and fairly transparent rulemaking
process. The challenge some small businesses have identified is how
to effectively sift through all the public information and recognize
those things that are most relevant to business. New rules are
created every year, some with penalties for noncompliance and others
that require new forms to be completed or equipment bought. AB 419
could leverage the expertise of the Small Business Advocate to make
the accessing the Office of Administrative Law more understandable.
7)Proposed Amendments: Below is a list of implementing and technical
amendments the author may wish to consider.
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a) Clarify the intended user and purpose of the set of
regulations, i.e. is it to inform the Legislature or to inform
small businesses of new regulations.
b) Clarify whether the regulations need to be in print, or would
an electronic version or e-commerce platform for accessing
regulations be acceptable.
c) Clarify how the work of GO-Biz would be different than that of
the Office of Administrative Law.
d) Based on the intended purpose, limit the scope of new duties
to a scale that would be manageable for the staff of GO-Biz.
e) Consider a sunset so that the effectiveness of the work can be
evaluated.
8)Related Legislation: Below is a list of bills from the current and
prior sessions.
a) Legislation from the current session:
i) AB 19 (Chang) Review of Regulations by Advocate: This
bill requires the Governor's Office of Business and Economic
Development, under the direction of the Small Business
Advocate, to review all regulations affecting small businesses
adopted on or after January 1, 2016, in order to determine
whether the regulations need to be amended in order to become
more effective, less burdensome, or to decrease the cost impact
to affected sectors. Status: scheduled to be heard on April
21, 2015, in the Assembly Committee on Jobs, Economic
Development, and the Economy.
ii) AB 582 (Calderon) Professionals in Public Service: This
bill establishes the Professionals in Public Service Program,
under the administrative oversight of the Board of Equalization
(BOE), for the purpose of utilizing the expertise of private
sector professionals to help make BOE practices more accessible
to small businesses. Status: scheduled to be heard on April
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21, 2015, in the Assembly Committee on Jobs, Economic
Development, and the Economy.
iii) AB 866 (E. Garcia) Small Business Impact Data: This bill
expands the duties of the Small Business Advocate to include
assisting state rulemaking agencies in identifying the
aggregate number and size of business which may be affected by
a proposed new or amended regulation. Status: scheduled to be
heard on April 21, 2015, in the Assembly Committee on Jobs,
Economic Development, and the Economy.
iv) AB 1286 (Mayes) California Regulatory Reform Council:
This bill establishes the California Regulatory Reform Council
(Council) for the purpose of analyzing the holistic impact of
all levels of state and local regulations on specific
industries operating within the state. The Council's
recommendations may be made to the Governor and the
Legislature, as appropriate. Status: scheduled to be heard on
April 21, 2015, in the Assembly Committee on Jobs, Economic
Development, and the Economy.
b) Legislation from prior sessions:
v) AB 393 (Cooley) GO-Biz Website: This bill requires the
Director of GO-Biz to ensure that the GO-Biz website contains
information on the fee requirements and fee schedules of state
agencies. Status: Signed by the Governor, Chapter 124,
Statutes of 2013.
vi) AB 1098 (Quirk-Silva) Small Business Regulation Report:
As passed by JEDE, this bill would have directed the Office of
the Small Business Advocate within GO-Biz to commission a study
of the costs of state regulations on small businesses every
five years. Amendments taken in the Senate deleted the content
of the bill and added language relating to legal documents
provided over the internet with Assemblymember Gray as the
author. Status: Died in the Senate Committee on Rules, 2014.
vii) AB 1400 (Assembly Committee on Jobs, Economic Development,
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and the Economy) Export Document Certificates: This bill
modifies the state's Export Document Program to accept requests
electronically, expedite approval of existing labels, and
extend the term of the export labels from 180 days to 365 days,
in order to alleviate backlog of exports of food, drug, and
medical devices. Status: Signed by the Governor, Chapter 539,
Statutes of 2013.
viii) AB 1711 (Cooley) Economic Impact Assessment: This bill
requires an economic impact assessment to be included in the
Initial Statement of Reasons that a state agency submits to the
Office of Administrative Law when adopting, amending, or
repealing a non-major regulation. Status: Signed by the
Governor, Chapter 779, Statutes of 2014.
ix) AB 2723 (Medina) Small Businesses and Major Regulations:
This bill would have added statutory protections to ensure that
the costs of major regulations on the state's smallest size
businesses are considered when state agencies undertake their
economic impact assessment for major regulations. Status:
Vetoed by the Governor, 2014. The veto message reads: "This
bill would require the economic analysis for major regulations
to include a separate assessment of the impact on sole
proprietorships and small businesses. I signed legislation in
2011 to require a comprehensive economic analysis of proposed
major regulations. The analysis must assess whether, and to
what extent, the proposed regulations will affect all
California jobs and businesses. Agencies must also identify
alternatives that would lessen any adverse impact on small
businesses. I am not convinced that an additional layer of
specificity based solely on the legal structure of a business
would add value to the comprehensive economic analysis already
required."
x) SB 176 (Galgiani) Outreach on Administrative Procedures:
This bill would have amended the Administrative Procedure Act
by requiring state agencies to make a reasonable effort to
outreach and provide notice to affected entities when
developing regulations. Statutes: Held on the Suspense File
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of the Assembly Committee on Appropriations, 2013.
xi) SB 560 (Wright) Small Business Regulations: This bill
would have made a number of reforms to help small businesses
grow encouraging more realistic regulations and a real
assessment of the actual costs of regulations to the business
community. The bill would have: (1) authorized a state agency
to consult with "parties who would be subject to the proposed
regulations" rather than "interested persons." It also would
have required the agency to notify in writing the Office of
Small Business Advocate and the Department of Finance (DOF) if
the agency does not, or is unable to, consult with parties
subject to the regulation and reasons for not consulting the
impacted businesses; (2) revised the economic impact assessment
to include a small business economic impact statement as
specified; (3) required the notice of proposed adoption,
amendment, or repeal of a regulation to also include the small
business impact statement and removes the requirement for an
agency to make a specified statement in the notice of proposed
adoption, amendment, or repeal of a regulation if the agency is
not aware of any cost impacts that a representative private
person or business would incur in compliance with the
regulation, and instead required the agency to include a
statement describing how a private person or business could
comply with the proposed regulation without incurring a cost;
(4) required Office of Administrative Law to also return any
regulation to the adopting agency if the adopting agency has
not provided the above cost estimate and small business
economic statement; and (5) added restrictions for regulations
relating to a new or emerging technology, as specified.
Status: Held in the Senate Committee on Environmental Quality,
2012.
xii) SB 617 (Calderon) State Government and Financial and
Administrative Accountability: This bill revises the state
Administrative Procedure Act to require each state agency
adopting a major regulation to prepare an economic impact
analysis and requires state agencies to implement ongoing
monitoring of internal auditing and financial controls and
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other best practices in financial accounting. Status: Signed
by the Governor, Chapter 496, Statutes of 2011.
xiii) SB 981 (Huff) Review of Prior Regulations: This bill
would have required each state agency to review each regulation
adopted prior to January 1, 2014, and to develop a report to
the Legislature containing prescribed information. Among other
information, the report would have included the regulations
purpose, identification of impacted sectors, direct costs by
sector, and an assessment as to whether the regulation needs
updating. Status: Died in Senate Committee on Governmental
Organization, 2014.
xiv) SB 1099 (Wright) Streamline Implementation of Regulations:
This bill requires new regulations to become effective on one
of four dates in any given year. This limitation is designed
to create a regulatory environment that is more predictable. In
addition, the bill requires regulations to be posted on the
internet web site in an easily identifiable location for a
minimum of six months. Status: Signed by the Governor,
Chapter 295, Statutes of 2012.
REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION:
Support Opposition
None received None received
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Analysis Prepared by:Toni Symonds / J., E.D., & E. / (916) 319-2090