SB 1287, as amended, McGuire. Fishing.
(1) Existing law authorizes the Director of Fish and Wildlife to order the closure of any waters or otherwise restrict the taking under a commercial fishing license in state waters of species of fish if the Director of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, in consultation with the State Public Health Officer, determines that the species or subspecies of fish is likely to pose a human health risk from high levels of toxic substances. The closure or restriction is required to be adopted by emergency regulation, as specified. Under existing law, any violation of the Fish and Game Code, or of any rule, regulation, or order made or adopted under the code, is generally a misdemeanor.
This bill would expand this authority to all fishing.begin insert The bill would require the Director of Fish and Wildlife, after ordering the closure of any waters or restricting the taking of any species of fish, to notify the Fish and Game Commission and request that the commission schedule a public discussion of the closure or restriction at its next scheduled full meeting.end insert The bill would remove the requirement that the closure or restriction be adopted by emergency regulation and would instead exempt a closure or restriction from the Administrative Procedure Act. By expanding the scope of a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(2) Existing law regulates the Dungeness crab fishery and requires the Director of Fish and Wildlife to adopt a program for Dungeness crab trap limits for all California permits. The program requires participants to pay a $5 crab trap tag fee and a $1,000 crab trap limit fee on a biennial basis, as provided, and requires a Dungeness crab trap that is fished to contain a trap tag that is fastened to the main buoy, and an additional tag attached to the trap. Existing law makes the program inoperative on April 1, 2019.
This bill would require the department to issue a waiver from the biennial crab trap tag fee to a participant who is unable to fish due to mandatory military service, as provided. The bill would authorize a vessel to transit state waters with Dungeness crab traps that are not marked in the above-described manner if traps contain either valid Oregon or Washington tags, no crab is onboard the vessel, and the traps are not deployed in state waters.
(3) Existing law prohibits a person from using any vessel to take Dungeness crab for commercial purposes without a Dungeness crab vessel permit. Existing law prohibits a person from taking Dungeness crab for commercial purposes from a vessel in specified ocean waters for 30 days after the opening of the Dungeness crab fishing season if the opening of the season has been delayed in those waters and that person has taken, possessed, or landed Dungeness crab in other specified waters prior to that opening. Existing law requires the Fish and Game Commission to revoke the Dungeness crab vessel permit of any person who violates these provisions. Existing law makes these provisions inoperative on April 1, 2019.
This bill would limit the 30-day start prohibition to a situation in which a person uses the same vessel that was used to take Dungeness crab in specified waters before the delayed opening of the season in the areas subject to the prohibition.
(4) Existing law regulating commercial fishing traps makes it unlawful, except as specified, to willfully or recklessly disturb, move, or damage any trap that belongs to another person and that is marked with a buoy identification number. Existing law, until April 1, 2019, authorizes the department, in consultation with the Dungeness crab task force, to develop regulations as necessary to provide for the retrieval of lost or abandoned commercial crab traps.
This bill would require the department, as part of the above-described regulations, to establish a retrieval permit program that would grant a person who obtains a retrieval permit the authority to retrieve during the closed season of the Dungeness crab commercial fishery lost or abandoned Dungeness crab traps belonging to another person and to receive compensation for that retrieval on a per trap basis. The bill would require the department to establish a fee to be charged to a Dungeness crab vessel permitholder for each trap belonging to the permitholder that is retrieved through the program. The bill would prohibit the department from renewing a Dungeness crab vessel permit until any fee imposed pursuant to the program has been paid.
(5) 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.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(1) The Dungeness crab task force supports the Department of
4Fish and Wildlife issuing citations for abandoning traps in the
5ocean and for fishing during the closed season of the Dungeness
6crab commercial fishery in addition to charging fees for the
7retrieval of Dungeness crab traps pursuant to the program
8established by this act.
9(2) The commercial Dungeness crab fishing industry does not
10tolerate strings of gear left in the ocean after the season closes.
11The program established by this act will
provide an incentive to
12retrieve traps from the ocean.
13(3) Establishing this program will help reduce the risk of whale
14entanglements in commercial Dungeness crab fishing gear.
P4 1(4) The program established pursuant to this act should be
2efficient and cost effective, and should utilize entities in addition
3to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, including nongovernmental
4organizations, to help implement the program.
5(b) This act shall be known and may be cited as the Whale
6Protection and Crab Gear Retrieval Act.
Section 5654 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
8to read:
(a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 5523 and except as
10provided in paragraph (2), the director, within 24 hours of
11notification of a spill or discharge, as those terms are defined in
12subdivision (ad) of Section 8670.3 of the Government Code, where
13any fishing, including all commercial, recreational, and nonlicensed
14subsistence fishing, may take place, or where aquaculture
15operations are taking place, shall close to the take of all fish and
16shellfish all waters in the vicinity of the spill or discharge or where
17the spilled or discharged material has spread, or is likely to spread.
18In determining where a spill or discharge is likely to spread, the
19director shall consult with the Administrator of the Office of Spill
20Prevention and
Response. At the time of closure, the department
21shall make all reasonable efforts to notify the public of the closure,
22including notification to commercial and recreational fishing
23organizations, and posting of warnings on public piers and other
24locations where subsistence fishing is known to occur. The
25department shall coordinate, when possible, with local and regional
26agencies and organizations to expedite public notification.
27(2) Closure pursuant to paragraph (1) is not required if, within
2824 hours of notification of a spill or discharge, the Office of
29Environmental Health Hazard Assessment finds that a public health
30threat does not or is unlikely to exist.
31(b) Within 48 hours of notification of a spill or discharge subject
32to subdivision (a), the director, in consultation with the
Office of
33Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, shall make an
34assessment and determine all of the following:
35(1) The danger posed to the public from fishing in the area where
36the spill or discharge occurred or spread, and the danger of
37consuming fish taken in the area where the spill or discharge
38occurred or spread.
39(2) Whether the areas closed for the take of fish or shellfish
40should be expanded to prevent any potential take or consumption
P5 1of any fish or shellfish that may have been contaminated by the
2spill or discharge.
3(3) The likely period for maintaining a closure on the take of
4fish and shellfish in order to prevent any possible contaminated
5fish or shellfish from being taken or consumed or other
threats to
6human health.
7(c) Within 48 hours after receiving notification of a spill or
8discharge subject to subdivision (a), or as soon as is feasible, the
9director, in consultation with the Office of Environmental Health
10Hazard Assessment, shall assess and determine the potential danger
11from consuming fish that have been contained in a recirculating
12seawater tank onboard a vessel that may become contaminated by
13the vessel’s movement through an area where the spill or discharge
14occurred or spread.
15(d) If the director finds in his or her assessment pursuant to
16subdivision (b) that there is no significant risk to the public or to
17the fisheries, the director may immediately reopen the closed area
18and waive the testing requirements of subdivisions (e) and (f).
19(e) Except under the conditions specified in subdivision (d),
20after complying with subdivisions (a) and (b), the director, in
21
consultation with the Office of Environmental Health Hazard
22Assessment, but in no event more than seven days from the
23notification of the spill or discharge, shall order expedited tests of
24fish and shellfish that would have been open for take for
25commercial, recreational, or subsistence purposes in the closed
26area if not for the closure, to determine the levels of contamination,
27if any, and whether the fish or shellfish is safe for human
28consumption.
29(f) (1) Within 24 hours of receiving a notification from the
30Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment that no threat
31to human health exists from the spill or discharge or that no
32contaminant from the spill or discharge is present that could
33contaminate fish or shellfish, the director shall reopen the areas
34closed pursuant to this section. The
director may maintain a closure
35in any remaining portion of the closed area where the Office of
36Environmental Health Hazard Assessment finds contamination
37from the spill or discharge persists that may adversely affect human
38health.
39(2) The director, in consultation with the commission, may also
40maintain a closure in any remaining portion of the closed area
P6 1where commercial fishing or aquaculture occurs and where the
2department determines, pursuant to this paragraph, that
3contamination from the spill or discharge persists that may cause
4the waste of commercial fish or shellfish as regulated by Section
57701.
6(g) To the extent feasible, the director shall consult with
7representatives of commercial and recreational fishing associations
8and subsistence fishing communities
regarding the extent and
9duration of a closure, testing protocols, and findings. If a spill or
10discharge occurs within the lands governed by a Native American
11tribe or affects waters flowing through tribal lands, or tribal
12fisheries, the director shall consult with the affected tribal
13governments.
14(h) The director shall seek full reimbursement from the
15responsible party or parties for the spill or discharge for all
16reasonable costs incurred by the department in carrying out this
17section, including, but not limited to, all testing.
Section 7715 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
19and renumbered to read:
(a) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insert If the Director of Environmental Health Hazard
21Assessment, in consultation with the State Public Health Officer,
22determines, based on thorough and adequate scientific evidence,
23that any species or subspecies of fish is likely to pose a human
24health risk from high levels of toxic substances, the Director of
25Fish and Wildlife may order the closure of any waters or otherwise
26restrict the taking in state waters of that species.
27
(2) After the Director of Fish and Wildlife orders the closure
28of any waters or restricts the taking of any species of fish pursuant
29to paragraph (1), he or she shall notify the commission and request
30that the commission schedule a public discussion of the closure
31or restriction at its next scheduled full commission meeting.
32(b) (1) When the Director of Environmental Health Hazard
33Assessment, in consultation with the State
Public Health Officer,
34determines that a health risk no longer exists, the Director of
35Environmental Health Hazard Assessment shall notify the Director
36of Fish and Wildlife and shall request that any waters closed
37pursuant to subdivision (a) be reopened for fishing and any
38restrictions imposed pursuant to subdivision (a) be lifted.
39(2) Upon receiving the notification and request pursuant to
40paragraph (1), the Director of Fish and Wildlife shall open any
P7 1waters closed pursuant to subdivision (a) and lift any restrictions
2imposed pursuant to subdivision (a) in a manner that promotes a
3fair and orderly fishery.
4(c) Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of
5Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code does not apply to
6actions taken pursuant
to this section.
Section 8276.5 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
8to read:
(a) In consultation with the Dungeness crab task force,
10or its appointed representatives, the director shall adopt a program,
11by March 31, 2013, for Dungeness crab trap limits for all California
12permits. Unless the director finds that there is consensus in the
13Dungeness crab industry that modifications to the following
14requirements are more desirable, with evidence of consensus,
15including, but not limited to, the record of the Dungeness crab task
16force, the program shall include all of the following requirements:
17(1) The program shall contain seven tiers of Dungeness crab
18trap limits based on California landings receipts under California
19permits between November 15, 2003, and July 15,
2008, as follows:
20(A) The 55 California permits with the highest California
21landings shall receive a maximum allocation of 500 trap tags.
22(B) The 55 California permits with the next highest California
23landings to those in subparagraph (A) shall receive a maximum
24allocation of 450 trap tags.
25(C) The 55 California permits with the next highest California
26landings to those in subparagraph (B) shall receive a maximum
27allocation of 400 trap tags.
28(D) The 55 California permits with the next highest California
29landings to those in subparagraph (C) shall receive a maximum
30allocation of 350 trap tags.
31(E) The 55 California permits with the next highest California
32landings to those in subparagraph (D) shall receive a maximum
33allocation of 300 trap tags.
34(F) The remaining California permits with the next highest
35California landings to those in subparagraph (E), which are not
36described in paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (g) of Section
378276.4, shall receive a maximum allocation of 250 trap tags.
38(G) The California permits described in paragraphs (1) and (2)
39of subdivision (g) of Section 8276.4 shall receive a maximum
P8 1allocation of 175 tags. The tags in this tier shall not be transferable
2for the first two years of the program.
3(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the director shall not remove
4a permitholder
from a tier described in paragraph (1), if, after an
5allocation is made pursuant to paragraph (1), an appeal pursuant
6to paragraph (8) places a permitholder in a tier different than the
7original allocation.
8(3) Participants in the program shall meet all of the following
9requirements:
10(A) Unless a participant receives a waiver pursuant to paragraph
11(4), pay a biennial fee for each trap tag issued pursuant to this
12section to pay the pro rata share of costs of the program, including,
13but not limited to, informing permitholders of the program,
14collecting fees, acquiring and sending trap tags to permitholders,
15paying for a portion of enforcement costs, and monitoring the
16results of the program. The fee shall not exceed five dollars ($5)
17per trap, per two-year period. All of the trap
tags allocated to each
18permit pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be purchased by the
19permitholder or the permit shall be void.
20(B) Purchase a biennial crab trap limit permit of not more than
21one thousand dollars ($1,000) per two-year period to pay for the
22department’s reasonable regulatory costs.
23(C) Not lease a crab trap tag, and transfer a tag only as part of
24a transaction to purchase a California permitted crab vessel.
25(D) A Dungeness crab trap that is fished shall contain a trap tag
26that is fastened to the main buoy, and an additional tag provided
27by the permitholder attached to the trap. The department shall
28mandate the information that is required to appear on both buoy
29and trap tags.
30(4) The department shall issue a participant a waiver from the
31biennial fee for each trap tag described in subparagraph (A) of
32paragraph (3) if the participant is unable to fish due to mandatory
33military service and the participant submits a request for a waiver
34to the department at the same time that the participant renews the
35permit issued pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3). A
36participant who receives a waiver pursuant to this paragraph shall
37not apply to the department to fish for Dungeness crab during the
38first year of the waiver, but may apply to fish for Dungeness crab
39during the second year of the waiver if the participant pays the full
P9 1cost of the biennial fee for each trap tag. The department shall not
2limit the number of times a participant may request a waiver.
3(5) Notwithstanding subparagraph (D) of paragraph (3), a vessel
4
may transit state waters with Dungeness crab traps that are not
5tagged pursuant to subparagraph (D) of paragraph (3) if the traps
6contain either a valid Oregon or Washington trap tag, no crab
7species are onboard the vessel, and the traps are not deployed in
8state waters.
9(6) The department shall annually provide an accounting of all
10costs associated with the crab trap limit program. The department
11shall use excess funds collected to reduce the cost of the crab trap
12limit permit fee or tag fee in subsequent years of the program.
13(7) Permitholders may replace lost tags by application to the
14department and payment of a fee not to exceed the reasonable costs
15incurred by the department. The department may waive or reduce
16a fee in the case of catastrophic loss of tags.
17(8) (A) Any Dungeness crab permitholder may submit to the
18director an appeal of a trap tag allocation received pursuant to this
19section, by March 31, 2014, on a permit-by-permit basis for the
20purpose of revising upward or downward any trap tag allocation.
21Any appeal to revise upward a trap tag allocation shall be based
22on evidence that a permit’s California landings during the period
23between November 15, 2003, and July 15, 2008, inclusive, were
24reduced as a result of unusual circumstances and that these
25circumstances constitute an unfair hardship, taking into account
26the overall California landings history as indicated by landing
27receipts associated with the permit. The director shall initiate the
28appeal process within 12 months of receiving an appeal request.
29The appeal shall be heard and decided by an administrative law
30judge
of the Office of Administrative Hearings, whose decision
31shall constitute the final administrative decision. Except as
32provided in subparagraph (B), any Dungeness crab permitholder
33requesting an appeal to revise upward the permitholder’s trap tag
34allocation shall pay all expenses, including a nonrefundable filing
35fee, as determined by the department, to pay for the department’s
36reasonable costs associated with the appeal process described in
37this paragraph.
38(B) Any Dungeness crab permitholder requesting an appeal may
39apply to the administrative law judge for a waiver of the appeal
40fees. In making the determination, the administrative law judge
P10 1may only consider medical hardship or military service occurring
2during the tier qualifying window period of November 15, 2003,
3through July 15, 2008.
4(C) An appeal to revise downward a trap tag allocation shall be
5decided by the department.
6(b) (1) In addition to criminal penalties authorized by law, a
7violation of the requirements of the program created pursuant to
8this section shall be subject to the following civil penalties:
9(A) Conviction of a first offense shall result in a fine of not less
10than two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and not more than one
11thousand dollars ($1,000) per illegal trap or fraudulent tag.
12(B) Conviction of a second offense shall result in a fine of not
13less than five hundred dollars ($500) and not more than two
14thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per illegal trap or fraudulent
15tag, and the permit may be suspended for
one year.
16(C) Conviction of a third offense shall result in a fine of not less
17than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not more than five thousand
18dollars ($5,000) per illegal trap or fraudulent tag, and the permit
19may be permanently revoked.
20(2) The severity of a penalty within the ranges described in this
21subdivision shall be based on a determination whether the violation
22was willful or negligent and other factors.
23(3) The portion of monetary judgments for noncompliance that
24are paid to the department shall be deposited in the Dungeness
25Crab Account created pursuant to subdivision (e).
26(c) For the purposes of this section, a proposed recommendation
27that
receives an affirmative vote of at least 15 of the non-ex officio
28members of the Dungeness crab task force may be transmitted to
29the director or the Legislature as a recommendation, shall be
30considered to be the consensus of the task force, and shall be
31considered to be evidence of consensus in the Dungeness crab
32industry. Any proposed recommendation that does not receive a
33vote sufficient to authorize transmittal to the director or Legislature
34as a recommendation shall be evidence of a lack of consensus by
35the Dungeness crab task force, and shall be considered to be
36evidence of a lack of consensus in the crab industry.
37(d) (1) The director shall submit a proposed program pursuant
38to this section to the Dungeness crab task force for review, and
39shall not implement the program until the task force has had 60
40days
or more to review the proposed program and recommend any
P11 1proposed changes. The director may implement the program earlier
2than 60 days after it is submitted to the Dungeness crab task force
3for review, if recommended by the task force.
4(2) After the program is implemented pursuant to paragraph
5(1), the director may modify the program, if consistent with the
6requirements of this section, after consultation with the Dungeness
7crab task force or its representatives and after the task force has
8had 60 days or more to review the proposed modifications and
9recommend any proposed changes. The director may implement
10the modifications earlier than 60 days after it is sent to the
11Dungeness crab task force for review, if recommended by the task
12force.
13(e) The Dungeness Crab Account is hereby
established in the
14Fish and Game Preservation Fund and the fees collected pursuant
15to this section shall be deposited in that account. The money in
16the account shall be used by the department, upon appropriation
17by the Legislature, for administering and enforcing the program.
18(f) For purposes of meeting the necessary expenses of initial
19organization and operation of the program until fees may be
20collected, or other funding sources may be received, the department
21may borrow money as needed for these expenses from the council.
22The borrowed money shall be repaid within one year from the fees
23collected or other funding sources received. The council shall give
24high priority to providing funds or services to the department, in
25addition to loans, to assist in the development of the program,
26including, but not limited to, the costs of convening the
Dungeness
27crab task force, environmental review, and the department’s costs
28of attending meetings with task force members.
29(g) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that the department,
30the council, and the Dungeness crab task force work with the
31Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission and the Tri-state
32Dungeness Crab Commission to resolve any issues pertaining to
33moving the fair start line south to the border of California and
34Mexico.
35(2) For the purposes of this subdivision, the resolution of issues
36pertaining to the fair start line shall be limited to assessing the
37positive and negative implications of including District 10 in the
38tri-state agreement, including working with the Tri-state Dungeness
39Crab Commission to amend Oregon and Washington laws
to
40include District 10 in the regular season fair start clause, and
P12 1discussion of providing different rules for District 10 with regard
2to preseason quality testing.
3(h) For purposes of this section, “council” means the Ocean
4Protection Council established pursuant to Section 35600 of the
5Public Resources Code.
6(i) This section shall become inoperative on April 1, 2019, and,
7as of January 1, 2020, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
8that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2020, deletes or
9extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
Section 8279.1 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
11to read:
(a) A person shall not take, possess onboard, or land
13Dungeness crab for commercial purposes from a vessel in ocean
14waters in District 6, 7, 8, or 9 for 30 days after the opening of the
15Dungeness crab fishing season in California, if both of the
16following events have occurred:
17(1) The opening of the season has been delayed pursuant to state
18law in California.
19(2) The same vessel was used to take, possess onboard, or land
20Dungeness crab for commercial purposes, from ocean waters
21outside of District 6, 7, 8, or 9, prior to the opening of the season
22in those districts.
23(b) A person shall not take, possess onboard, or land Dungeness
24crab for commercial purposes from a vessel in ocean waters south
25of the border between Oregon and California for 30 days after the
26opening of the Dungeness crab fishing season in California, if both
27of the following events have occurred:
28(1) The opening of the season has been delayed pursuant to state
29law in California.
30(2) The same vessel was used to take, possess onboard, or land
31Dungeness crab for commercial purposes in Oregon or Washington
32prior to the opening of the season in California.
33(c) A person shall not take, possess onboard, or land Dungeness
34crab for commercial purposes from a vessel in ocean waters north
35of the border between Oregon
and California for 30 days after the
36opening of the Dungeness crab fishing season in Oregon or
37Washington, if both of the following events have occurred:
38(1) The opening of the season has been delayed in Oregon or
39Washington.
P13 1(2) The same vessel was used to take, possess onboard, or land
2Dungeness crab for commercial purposes in California prior to the
3opening of the season in ocean waters off Oregon or Washington.
4(d) A person shall not take, possess onboard, or land Dungeness
5crab for commercial purposes from a vessel in ocean waters off
6Washington, Oregon, or California for 30 days after the opening
7of the Dungeness crab fishing season in California, Oregon, or
8Washington, if both of the following events have
occurred:
9(1) The opening of the season has been delayed in Washington,
10Oregon, or California.
11(2) The same vessel was used to take, possess onboard, or land
12Dungeness crab for commercial purposes in either of the two other
13states prior to the delayed opening in the ocean waters off any one
14of the three states.
15(e) A violation of this section does not constitute a misdemeanor.
16Pursuant to Section 7857, the commission shall revoke the
17 Dungeness crab vessel permit that was issued for use on the vessel
18that was used in violation of this section.
19(f) This section shall become inoperative on April 1, 2019, and,
20as of January 1, 2020, is repealed,
unless a later enacted statute,
21that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2020, deletes or
22extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
Section 9002.5 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
24to read:
(a) Notwithstanding Section 9002, the department, in
26consultation with the Dungeness crab task force, shall develop
27regulations as necessary to provide for the retrieval of lost or
28abandoned commercial crab traps.
29(b) (1) As part of the regulations adopted pursuant to
30subdivision (a), the department shall establish a retrieval permit
31program that facilitates the removal of lost or abandoned crab gear
32in an efficient and cost-effective manner consistent with all of the
33following:
34(A) The department shall establish a retrieval permit that grants
35a person who obtains a retrieval permit the authority to
retrieve
36during the closed season of the Dungeness crab commercial fishery
37lost or abandoned Dungeness crab traps belonging to another
38person and to receive compensation for that retrieval on a per trap
39basis from the revenue generated by the fee established pursuant
40to subparagraph (B).
P14 1(B) The department shall establish a fee to be charged to a
2Dungeness crab vessel permitholder for each trap belonging to the
3permitholder that is retrieved through the program. The department
4shall set the fee at a level sufficient to cover the reasonable
5regulatory costs associated with the program and to provide
6reasonable compensation to a retrieval permitholder on a per trap
7basis. The reasonable regulatory costs associated with the program
8include, but are not limited to, administrative costs, storage costs,
9and costs associated with disposing
unusable traps or traps whose
10owner cannot be identified.
11(C) The department may use entities in addition to the
12department, including, but not limited to, nongovernmental
13organizations, to help implement the program.
14(D) A Dungeness crab trap shall not be returned to the owner
15of the trap until the owner has paid the fee established pursuant to
16subparagraph (B).
17(E) The department shall not renew a Dungeness crab vessel
18permit until any fee imposed pursuant to subparagraph (B) has
19been paid.
20(2) The department may adopt additional requirements necessary
21to implement the program described in this subdivision.
22(3) The department shall submit the proposed program
23developed pursuant to this subdivision to the Dungeness crab task
24force for review, and shall not implement the program until the
25task force has had 60 days or more to review the proposed program
26and recommend any proposed changes. The director may
27implement the program earlier than 60 days after it is submitted
28to the Dungeness crab task force for review, if recommended by
29the task force.
30(c) This section shall become inoperative on April 1, 2019, and,
31as of January 1, 2020, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
32that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2020, deletes or
33extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.
Section 131052 of the Health and Safety Code is
35amended to read:
In implementing the transfer of jurisdiction pursuant
37to this article, the State Department of Public Health succeeds to
38and is vested with all the statutory duties, powers, purposes,
39responsibilities, and jurisdiction of the former State Department
P15 1of Health Services as they relate to public health as provided for
2or referred to in all of the following provisions of law:
3(1) Sections 550, 555, 650, 680, 1241, 1658, 2221.1, 2248.5,
42249, 2259, 2259.5, 2541.3, 2585, 2728, 3527, 4017, 4027, 4037,
54191, 19059.5, 19120, 22950, 22973.2, and 22974.8 of the
6Business and Professions Code.
7(2) Sections 56.17, 1812.508, and 1812.543 of the Civil Code.
8(3) Sections 8286, 8803, 17613, 32064, 32065, 32066, 32241,
949030, 49405, 49414, 49423.5, 49452.6, 49460, 49464, 49565,
1049565.8, 49531.1, 56836.165, and 76403 of the Education Code.
11(4) Sections 405, 6021, 6026, 18963, 30852, 41302, and 78486
12of the Food and Agricultural Code.
13(5) Sections 307, 355, 422, 7572, 7574, 8706, 8817, and 8909
14of the Family Code.
15(6) Sections 217.6, 1507, 1786, 4011, 5523, 5671, 5674, 5700,
165701, 5701.5, and 15700 of the Fish and Game Code.
17(7) Sections 855, 51010, and 551017.1 of the Government Code.
18For purposes of subdivision (s) of Section 6254 of the Government
19Code,
the term “State Department of Health Services” is hereby
20deemed to refer to the State Department of Public Health.
21(8) (A) Sections 475, 1180.6, 1418.1, 1422.1, 1428.2, 1457,
221505, 1507.1, 1507.5, 1570.7, 1599.2, 1599.60, 1599.75, 1599.87,
232002, 2804, 11362.7, 11776, 11839.21, 11839.23, 11839.24,
2411839.25, 11839.26, 11839.27, 11839.28, 11839.29, 11839.30,
2511839.31, 11839.32, 11839.33, 11839.34, 17920.10, 17961,
2618897.2, 24185, 24186, 24187, 24275, 26101, 26122, 26134,
2726155, 26200, and 26203.
28(B) Chapters 1, 2, 2.05, 2.3, 2.35, 2.4, 3.3, 3.9, 3.93, 3.95, 4,
294.1, 4.5, 5, 6, 6.5, 8, 8.3, 8.5, 8.6, 9, and 11 of Division 2.
30(C) Articles 2 and 4 of Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 4 of
31Part 1, Part 2 and
Part 3 of Division 101.
32(D) Division 102, including Sections 102230 and 102231.
33(E) Division 103, including Sections 104145, 104181, 104182,
34104182.5, 104187, 104191, 104192, 104193, 104316, 104317,
35104318, 104319, 104320, 104321, 104324.2, 104324.25, 104350,
36105191, 105251, 105255, 105280, 105340, and 105430.
37(F) Division 104, including Sections 106615, 106675, 106770,
38108115, 108855, 109282, 109910, 109915, 112155, 112500,
39112650, 113355, 114460, 114475, 114650, 114710, 114850,
40114855, 114985, 115061, 115261, 115340, 115736, 115880,
P16 1115885, 115915, 116064, 116183, 116270, 116365.5, 116366,
2116375, 116610, 116751, 116760.20, 116825, 117100, 117924,
3and 119300.
4(G) Division 105, including Sections 120262, 120381, 120395,
5120440, 120480, 120956, 120966, 121155, 121285, 121340,
6
121349.1, 121480, 122410, and 122420.
7(H) Part 1, Part 2 excluding Articles 5, 5.5, 6, and 6.5 of Chapter
83, Part 3 and Part 5 excluding Articles 1 and 2 of Chapter 2, Part
97, and Part 8 of Division 106.
10(9) Sections 799.03, 10123.35, 10123.5, 10123.55, 10123.10,
1110123.184, and 11520 of the Insurance Code.
12(10) Sections 50.8, 142.3, 144.5, 144.7, 147.2, 4600.6, 6307.1,
136359, 6712, 9009, and 9022 of the Labor Code.
14(11) Sections 4018.1, 5008.1, 7501, 7502, 7510, 7511, 7515,
157518, 7530, 7550, 7553, 7575, 7576, 11010, 11174.34, and 13990
16of the Penal Code.
17(12) Section 4806 of the Probate Code.
18(13) Sections 15027, 25912, 28004, 30950, 41781.1, 42830,
1943210, 43308, 44103, and 71081 of the Public Resources Code.
20(14) Section 10405 of the Public Contract Code.
21(15) Sections 883, 1507, and 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.
22(16) Sections 18833, 18838, 18845.2, 18846.2, 18847.2, 18863,
2330461.6, 43010.1, and 43011.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
24(17) Section 11020 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.
25(18) Sections 22511.55, 23158, 27366, and 33000 of the Vehicle
26Code.
27(19) Sections 5326.9, 5328, 5328.15, 14132, 16902, and 16909,
28and Division 24 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Payment
29for services provided under the Family Planning, Access, Care,
30
and Treatment (Family PACT) Waiver Program pursuant to
31subdivision (aa) of Section 14132 and Division 24 shall be made
32through the State Department of Health Care Services. The State
33Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health
34Care Services may enter into an interagency agreement for the
35administration of those payments. This paragraph, to the extent
36that it applies to the Family PACT Waiver Program, shall become
37inoperative on June 30, 2012.
38(20) Sections 13176, 13177.5, 13178, 13193, 13390, 13392,
3913392.5, 13393.5, 13395.5, 13396.7, 13521, 13522, 13523, 13528,
4013529, 13529.2, 13550, 13552.4, 13552.8, 13553, 13553.1, 13554,
P17 113554.2, 13816, 13819, 13820, 13823, 13824, 13825, 13827,
213830, 13834, 13835, 13836, 13837, 13858, 13861, 13862, 13864,
313868, 13868.1, 13868.3, 13868.5, 13882, 13885, 13886, 13887,
4
13891, 13892, 13895.1, 13895.6, 13895.9, 13896, 13896.3,
513896.4, 13896.5, 13897, 13897.4, 13897.5, 13897.6, 13898,
614011, 14012, 14015, 14016, 14017, 14019, 14022, 14025, 14026,
714027, and 14029 of the Water Code.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
9Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
10the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
11district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
12infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
13for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
14the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
15the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
16Constitution.
O
95