BILL NUMBER: AB 158	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  SEPTEMBER 15, 2008
	AMENDED IN SENATE  AUGUST 4, 2008
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 7, 2008
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JANUARY 24, 2008
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JANUARY 16, 2008
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JANUARY 7, 2008
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 1, 2007
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 10, 2007

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member  Ma   Torrico


                        JANUARY 18, 2007

    An act to amend Section 2191 of the Business and
Professions Code, relating to medicine.   An act to
amend Sections 12712, 12715, 12716, and 12718 of the Government Code,
relating to gaming, making an appropriation therefor, and declaring
the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. 


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 158, as amended,  Ma   Torrico  .
 Medicine: licensing: continuing education requirements.
  Tribal gaming: local agencies.  
   Existing law creates in the State Treasury the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund for the receipt and deposit of moneys
received by the state from certain Indian tribes pursuant to the
terms of gaming compacts entered into with the state. Existing law
authorizes moneys in that fund to be used for specified purposes,
including for grants for the support of state and local government
agencies impacted by tribal government gaming.  
   Existing law, until January 1, 2009, creates a County Tribal
Casino Account in the treasury of each county that contains a tribal
casino. Existing law requires the Controller to divide the County
Tribal Casino Account for each county that has gaming devices that
are subject to an obligation to make contributions to the Indian
Gaming Special Distribution Fund into a separate account, known as an
Individual Tribal Casino Account, for each tribe that operates a
casino within the county. Existing law provides for a certain portion
of funds in an Individual Tribal Casino Account to be used for
grants to local agencies impacted by tribes that are paying into the
Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund, and a certain portion for
grants to local agencies impacted by tribes that are not paying into
that fund. Existing law establishes an Indian Gaming Local Community
Benefit Committee in each county in which gaming is conducted,
specifies the composition of that committee, and requires that
committee to make the selection of grants from the casino accounts.
 
   This bill would modify the composition of an Indian Gaming Local
Community Benefit Committee if only one city is located within 4
miles of a tribal casino, as specified, and would require an Indian
Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee to select only grant
applications that mitigate impacts from casinos on local
jurisdictions. The bill would provide that, if a local jurisdiction
uses a grant for any unrelated purpose, the grant shall terminate
immediately and any moneys not yet spent shall revert to the Indian
Gaming Special Distribution Fund. It would require a local
jurisdiction that receives a grant from an Individual Tribal Casino
Account to deposit all funds received in an interest-bearing account
and use the interest from those funds only to mitigate an impact from
a casino. The bill would require that, as a condition of receiving
further funds, a local jurisdiction, upon request, demonstrate to the
county that all expenditures made from the account have been in
compliance with these provisions.  
   Existing law requires each county that administers grants from the
Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund to provide an annual report
to certain legislative and executive branch members by October 1 of
each year detailing the specific projects funded by all grants in the
county's jurisdiction in the previous fiscal year, as specified.
 
   This bill would provide that a county that does not provide an
annual report pursuant to these provisions shall not be eligible for
funding from the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund for the
following year.  
   This bill would extend the operation of these provisions until
January 1, 2010.  
   This bill would appropriate $30,000,000 from the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund to the California Gambling Control
Commission to provide grants to local government agencies under the
provisions described above. The bill would authorize counties to
utilize the appropriated moneys for expenditures made in the 2007-08
and 2008-09 fiscal years.  
   This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as
an urgency statute.  
   Existing law requires the Medical Board of California to establish
continuing education requirements for physicians and surgeons, and
requires the board to consider including various courses in
determining its continuing education requirements.  

   This bill would, in addition, require the board to consider
including a continuing education course in the diagnosis and
treatment of hepatitis.
   Vote:  majority   2/3  . Appropriation:
 no   yes  . Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

   SECTION 1.    Section 12712 of the  
Government Code   is amended to read: 
   12712.  As used in this chapter:
   (a) "County Tribal Casino Account" means an account consisting of
all moneys paid by tribes of that county into the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund after deduction of the amounts appropriated
pursuant to the priorities specified in Section 12012.85.
   (b) "Individual Tribal Casino Accounts" means an account for each
individual tribe that has paid money into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund. The individual tribal casino account shall be
funded in proportion to the amount that the individual tribe has paid
into the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund.
   (c) "Local  government  jurisdiction"  or "local
jurisdiction"  means any city, county, or special district. 

   (d) "Special district" means any agency of the state that performs
governmental or proprietary functions within limited boundaries.
"Special district" includes a county service area, a maintenance
district or area, an improvement district or improvement zone, or any
other zone, district, or area that meets the requirements of this
subdivision. "Special district" does not include a city, county,
school district, or community college district. 
   SEC. 2.    Section 12715 of the   Government
Code   is amended to read: 
   12715.  (a) The Controller, acting in consultation with the
California Gambling Control Commission, shall divide the County
Tribal Casino Account for each county that has gaming devices that
are subject to an obligation to make contributions to the Indian
Gaming Special Distribution Fund into a separate account for each
tribe that operates a casino within the county. These accounts shall
be known as Individual Tribal Casino Accounts, and funds may be
released from these accounts to make grants selected by an Indian
Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee pursuant to the method
established by this section to local jurisdictions impacted by tribal
casinos. Each Individual Tribal Casino Account shall be funded in
proportion to the amount that each individual tribe paid in the prior
fiscal year to the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund.
   (b) (1) There is hereby created in each county in which Indian
gaming is conducted an Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit
Committee. The selection of all grants from each Individual Tribal
Casino Account or County Tribal Casino Account shall be made by each
county's Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee. In
selecting grants, the Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee
shall follow the priorities established in subdivision (g)  and
the requirements specified in subdivision (h)  . This committee
has the following additional responsibilities:
   (A) Establishing all application policies and procedures for
grants from the Individual Tribal Casino Account or County Tribal
Casino Account.
   (B) Assessing the eligibility of applications for grants from
local jurisdictions impacted by tribal gaming operations.
   (C) Determining the appropriate amount for reimbursement from the
aggregate county tribal account of the demonstrated costs incurred by
the county for administering the grant programs. The reimbursement
for county administrative costs may not exceed 2 percent of the
aggregate county tribal account in any given fiscal year.
   (2)  Except as provided in Section 12715.5, the Indian Gaming
Local Community Benefit Committee shall be composed of seven
representatives, consisting of the following:
   (A) Two representatives from the county, selected by the county
board of supervisors.
   (B) Three elected representatives from cities located within four
miles of a tribal casino in the county, selected by the county board
of supervisors. In the event that there are no cities located within
four miles of a tribal casino in the county, other local
representatives may be selected upon mutual agreement by the county
board of supervisors and a majority of the tribes paying into the
Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund in the county. When there are
no cities within four miles of a tribal casino in the county, and
when the Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee acts on
behalf of a county where no tribes pay into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund, other local representatives may be selected upon
mutual agreement by the county board of supervisors and a majority of
the tribes operating casinos in the county.  However, if only
one city is within four miles of a tribal casino and that same casino
is located entirely within the unincorporated area of that
particular county, only one elected representative from that city
shall be included on the Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit
Committee. 
   (C) Two representatives selected upon the recommendation of a
majority of the tribes paying into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund in each county. When an Indian Gaming Local
Community Benefit Committee acts on behalf of a county where no
tribes pay into the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund, the two
representatives may be selected upon the recommendation of the tribes
operating casinos in the county.
   (c) Sixty percent of each individual tribal casino account shall
be available for nexus grants on a yearly basis to cities and
counties impacted by tribes that are paying into the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund, according to the four-part nexus test
described in paragraph (1). Grant awards shall be selected by each
county's Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee and shall be
administered by the county. Grants may be awarded on a multiyear
basis, and these multiyear grants shall be accounted for in the grant
process for each year.
   (1) A nexus test based on the geographical proximity of a local
government jurisdiction to an individual Indian land upon which a
tribal casino is located shall be used by each county's Indian Gaming
Local Community Benefit Committee to determine the relative priority
for grants, using the following criteria:
   (A) Whether the local government jurisdiction borders the Indian
lands on all sides.
   (B) Whether the local government jurisdiction partially borders
Indian lands.
   (C) Whether the local government jurisdiction maintains a highway,
road, or other thoroughfare that is the predominant access route to
a casino that is located within four miles.
   (D) Whether all or a portion of the local government jurisdiction
is located within four miles of a casino.
   (2) Fifty percent of the amount specified in subdivision (c) shall
be awarded in equal proportions to local government jurisdictions
that meet all four of the nexus test criteria in paragraph (1). If no
eligible local government jurisdiction satisfies this requirement,
the amount specified in this paragraph shall be made available for
nexus grants in equal proportions to local government jurisdictions
meeting the requirements of paragraph (3) or (4).
   (3) Thirty percent of the amount specified in subdivision (c)
shall be awarded in equal proportions to local government
jurisdictions that meet three of the nexus test criteria in paragraph
(1). If no eligible local government jurisdiction satisfies this
requirement, the amount specified in this paragraph shall be made
available for nexus grants in equal proportions to local government
jurisdictions meeting the requirements of paragraph (2) or (4).
   (4) Twenty percent of the amount specified in subdivision (c)
shall be awarded in equal proportions to local government
jurisdictions that meet two of the nexus test criteria in paragraph
(1). If no eligible local government jurisdiction satisfies this
requirement, the amount specified in this paragraph shall be made
available for nexus grants in equal proportions to local government
jurisdictions meeting the requirements of paragraph (2) or (3).
   (d) Twenty percent of each Individual Tribal Casino Account shall
be available for discretionary grants to local jurisdictions impacted
by tribes that are paying into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund. These discretionary grants shall be made available
to all local jurisdictions in the county irrespective of any nexus
to impacts from any particular tribal casino, as described in
paragraph (1) of subdivision (c). Grant awards shall be selected by
each county's Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee and
shall be administered by the county. Grants may be awarded on a
multiyear basis, and these multiyear grants shall be accounted for in
the grant process for each year.
   (e) (1) Twenty percent of each Individual Tribal Casino Account
shall be available for discretionary grants to local jurisdictions
impacted by tribes that are not paying into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund. These grants shall be made available to local
jurisdictions in the county irrespective of any nexus to impacts from
any particular tribal casino, as described in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (c), and irrespective of whether the impacts presented
are from a tribal casino that is not paying into the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund. Grant awards shall be selected by each
county's Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee and shall be
administered by the county. Grants may be awarded on a multiyear
basis, and these multiyear grants shall be accounted for in the grant
process for each year.
   (A) Grants awarded pursuant to this subdivision are limited to
addressing service-oriented impacts and providing assistance with
one-time large capital projects related to Indian gaming impacts.
   (B) Grants shall be subject to the sole sponsorship of the tribe
that pays into the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund and the
recommendations of the Indian Gaming Local Community Benefit
Committee for that county.
   (2) If an eligible county does not have a tribal casino operated
by a tribe that does not pay into the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund, the money available for discretionary grants under
this subdivision shall be available for distribution pursuant to
subdivision (d).
   (f) (1) For each county that does not have gaming devices subject
to an obligation to make payments to the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund, funds may be released from the county's County
Tribal Casino Account to make grants selected by the county's Indian
Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee pursuant to the method
established by this section to local jurisdictions impacted by tribal
casinos. These grants shall be made available to local jurisdictions
in the county irrespective of any nexus to any particular tribal
casino. These grants shall follow the priorities specified in
subdivision (g)  and the requirements specified in subdivision
(h)  .
   (2) Funds not allocated from a county tribal casino account by the
end of each fiscal year shall revert back to the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund. Moneys allocated for the  2003-04
  2003-04  fiscal year shall be eligible for
expenditure through December 31, 2004.
   (g) The following uses shall be the priorities for the receipt of
grant money from Individual Tribal Casino Accounts: law enforcement,
fire services, emergency medical services, environmental impacts,
water supplies, waste disposal, behavioral, health, planning and
adjacent land uses, public health, roads, recreation and youth
programs, and child care programs. 
   (h) In selecting grants pursuant to subdivision (b), an Indian
Gaming Local Community Benefit Committee shall select only grant
applications that mitigate impacts from casinos on local
jurisdictions. If a local jurisdiction uses a grant selected pursuant
to subdivision (b) for any unrelated purpose, the grant shall
terminate immediately and any moneys not yet spent shall revert to
the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund. If a local jurisdiction
approves an expenditure that mitigates an impact from a casino on a
local jurisdiction and that also provides other benefits to the local
jurisdiction, the grant selected pursuant to subdivision (b) shall
be used to finance only the proportionate share of the expenditure
that mitigates the impact from the casino.  
   (h) 
    (i)  All grants from Individual Tribal Casino Accounts
shall be made only upon the affirmative sponsorship of the tribe
paying into the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund from whose
Individual Tribal Casino Account the grant moneys are available for
distribution. Tribal sponsorship shall confirm that the grant
application has a reasonable relationship to a casino impact and
satisfies at least one of the priorities listed in subdivision (g). A
grant may not be made for any purpose that would support or fund,
directly or indirectly, any effort related to the opposition or
challenge to Indian gaming in the state, and, to the extent any
awarded grant is utilized for any prohibited purpose by any local
government, upon notice given to the county by any tribe from whose
Individual Tribal Casino Account the awarded grant went toward that
prohibited use, the grant shall terminate immediately and any moneys
not yet used shall again be made available for qualified nexus
grants. 
   (i) 
    (j)  A local government jurisdiction that is a recipient
of a grant from an Individual County Tribal Casino Account or a
County Tribal Casino Account shall provide notice to the public,
either through a slogan, signage, or other mechanism, stating that
the local government project has received funding from the Indian
Gaming Special Distribution Fund and further identifying the
particular Individual Tribal Casino Account from which the grant
derives. 
   (j) 
    (k)  (1) Each county's Indian Gaming Local Community
Benefit Committee shall submit to the Controller a list of approved
projects for funding from Individual Tribal Casino Accounts. Upon
receipt of this list, the Controller shall release the funds directly
to the local government entities for which a grant has been approved
by the committee.
   (2) Funds not allocated from an Individual Tribal Casino Account
by the end of each fiscal year shall revert back to the Indian Gaming
Special Distribution Fund. Moneys allocated for the  2003-04
  2003-   04  fiscal year shall be
eligible for expenditure through December 31, 2004. 
   (l) Notwithstanding any other law, a local government jurisdiction
that receives a grant from an Individual Tribal Casino Account shall
deposit all funds received in an interest-bearing account and use
the interest from those funds only for the purpose of mitigating an
impact from a casino. If any portion of the funds in the account are
used for any other purpose, the remaining portion shall revert to the
Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund. As a condition of receiving
further funds under this section, a local government jurisdiction,
upon request of the county, shall demonstrate to the county that all
expenditures made from the account have been in compliance with the
requirements of this section. 
   SEC. 3.    Section 12716 of the   Government
Code   is amended to read: 
   12716.   (a)    Each county that administers
grants from the Indian Gaming Special Distribution Fund shall provide
an annual report to the Chairperson of the Joint Legislative Budget
Committee, the chairpersons of the Senate and Assembly committees on
governmental organization, and the California Gambling Control
Commission by October 1 of each year detailing the specific projects
funded by all grants in the county's jurisdiction in the previous
fiscal year, including amounts expended in that fiscal year, but
funded from appropriations in prior fiscal years. The report shall
provide detailed information on the following: 
   (a) 
    (1)  The amount of grant funds received by the county.

   (b) 
    (2)  A description of each project that is funded.

   (c) 
    (3)  A description of how each project mitigates the
impact of tribal gaming. 
   (d) 
    (4)  The total expenditures for each project. 
   (e)
    (5)  All administrative costs related to each project,
excluding the county's administrative fee. 
   (f) 
    (6)  The funds remaining at the end of the fiscal year
for each project. 
   (g) 
    (7)  An explanation regarding how any remaining funds
will be spent for each project, including the estimated time for
expenditure. 
   (h) 
    (8)  A description of whether each project is funded
once or on a continuing basis. 
   (b) A county that does not provide an annual report pursuant to
subdivision (a) shall not be eligible for funding from the Indian
Gaming Special Distribution Fund for the following year. 
   SEC. 4.    Section 12718 of the   Government
Code   is amended to read: 
   12718.  This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1,
 2009   2010  , and as of that date is
repealed, unless a later enacted statute that is enacted before
January 1,  2009   2010  , deletes or
extends that date.
   SEC. 5.    There is hereby appropriated the sum of
thirty million dollars ($30,000,000) from the Indian Gaming Special
Distribution Fund to the California Gambling Control Commission to
provide grants to local agencies pursuant to Section 12715 of the
Government Code. 
   SEC. 6.    Notwithstanding any other law, the moneys
appropriated pursuant to Section 5 may be utilized by the counties
for expenditures made in the 2007-08 and 2008-09 fiscal years. 
  SEC. 7.    This act is an urgency statute necessary
for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety
within the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go
into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
 
   In order to reimburse local agencies for expenditures already made
in the 2007-08 and 2008-09 fiscal years, it is necessary that this
act take effect immediately.  
  SECTION 1.    Section 2191 of the Business and
Professions Code is amended to read:
   2191.  (a) In determining its continuing education requirements,
the board shall consider including a course in human sexuality as
defined in Section 2090 and nutrition to be taken by those licensees
whose practices may require knowledge in those areas.
   (b) The board shall consider including a course in child abuse
detection and treatment to be taken by those licensees whose
practices are of a nature that there is a likelihood of contact with
abused or neglected children.
   (c) The board shall consider including a course in acupuncture to
be taken by those licensees whose practices may require knowledge in
the area of acupuncture and whose education has not included
instruction in acupuncture.
   (d) The board shall encourage every physician and surgeon to take
nutrition as part of his or her continuing education, particularly a
physician and surgeon involved in primary care.
   (e) The board shall consider including a course in elder abuse
detection and treatment to be taken by those licensees whose
practices are of a nature that there is a likelihood of contact with
abused or neglected persons 65 years of age and older.
   (f) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall consider including a course in the early detection and
treatment of substance abusing pregnant women to be taken by those
licensees whose practices are of a nature that there is a likelihood
of contact with these women.
   (g) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall consider including a course in the special care needs of
drug addicted infants to be taken by those licensees whose practices
are of a nature that there is a likelihood of contact with these
infants.
   (h) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall consider including a course providing training and
guidelines on how to routinely screen for signs exhibited by abused
women, particularly for physicians and surgeons in emergency,
surgical, primary care, pediatric, prenatal, and mental health
settings. If the board establishes a requirement for continuing
education coursework in spousal or partner abuse detection or
treatment, that requirement shall be met by each licensee within no
more than four years from the date the requirement is imposed.
   (i) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall consider including a course in the special care needs of
individuals and their families facing end-of-life issues, including,
but not limited to, all of the following:
   (1) Pain and symptom management.
   (2) The psycho-social dynamics of death.
   (3) Dying and bereavement.
   (4) Hospice care.
   (j) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall give its highest priority to considering a course on pain
management.
   (k) In determining its continuing education requirements, the
board shall consider including a course in the diagnosis and
treatment of hepatitis to be taken by those licensees whose practices
may require such knowledge.