BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 2486
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          CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS
          AB 2486 (Feuer)
          As Amended June 29, 2010
          Majority vote 
           
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          |ASSEMBLY:  |73-0 |(April 22,      |SENATE: |35-0 |(July 1, 2010) |
          |           |     |2010)           |        |     |               |
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           Original Committee Reference:    JUD.  

           SUMMARY  :  Seeks to enact the narrowly-crafted Teen Alcohol  
          Safety Act of 2010, adding California to the large preponderance  
          of states that impose potential "social host" liability on  
          adults who knowingly provide alcohol to minors who are  
          subsequently injured or killed as a result of this lack of  
          parental care.  Specifically,  this bill  :
           
           1)Provides that a social host, as narrowly defined, who is 21  
            years of age or older and who knowingly furnishes alcoholic  
            beverages to a person under 21 years of age, may be held  
            legally accountable for damages suffered by that young person,  
            or for injury to the person or property, or death of, any  
            third person resulting from the consumption of those  
            beverages.

          2)Carefully limits the measure's scope by defining a "social  
            host" as only a natural person who provides alcohol to guests  
            at his or her residence with no motive for pecuniary gain  
            regardless of whether any remuneration is given for the  
            alcohol.  However, a licensed or commercial vendor of alcohol  
            or anyone who is required to obtain a license or permit to  
            provide alcohol for a social function, is not a social host  
            for purposes of the bill. 

           The Senate amendments  make a technical clarification only.
           
          EXISTING LAW  :

          1)Provides (unlike the approach of the great majority of states)  
            that no social host in California who furnishes alcoholic  
            beverages to any person, including minors, may be held legally  
            accountable for damages suffered by that person, or for injury  
            to the person or property of, or death of, any third person,  








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            resulting from the consumption of those beverages.  

          2)Provides that an insurer is not liable for a loss caused by  
            the willful act of the insured.  
             
           AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY  , this bill was substantially similar  
          to the version approved by the Senate.
           
          FISCAL EFFECT  :  None

           COMMENTS  :  This non-controversial and bi-partisan parental  
          responsibility bill seeks to enact the Teen Alcohol Safety Act  
          of 2010, which would add California to the large preponderance  
          of states who impose potential "social host" liability on those  
          adults who knowingly provide alcohol to minors who are  
          subsequently injured or killed as a result of this lack of  
          parental responsibility.  Currently, unlike the approach of the  
          great majority of states, a social host in California who  
          provides alcoholic beverages to any person, including even  
          minors, surprisingly to many, may not be held legally  
          responsible for any damages suffered by that person or by any  
          third person resulting from consumption of those beverages -  
          even if serious injuries or deaths result to minors.  

          In support of this measure the author states, "The Teen Alcohol  
          Safety Act of 2010 is all about parental responsibility.  It is  
          a measure designed to save young lives by acting as a  
          long-needed disincentive to irresponsible adults who knowingly  
          provide underage teens with alcohol in their homes.  California  
          has seen a spate of heart-wrenching tragedies in recent years,  
          including the preventable recent death of Shelby Allen, as teens  
          have increasingly engaged in bouts of binge drinking that have  
          led to hospitalizations and deaths. The most shocking episodes  
          involved parents or other adults who knowingly provide alcohol  
          to underage minors - and this bill only targets those most  
          egregious situations. ?Although it is a crime under state law to  
          supply alcohol to a minor, California is one of only a small  
          handful of states that do not provide for parental  
          responsibility in such shocking cases." 

          In support of the narrow approach taken in the bill, the author  
          underscores the measure is not about somehow imposing "automatic  
          liability" on any adult who may have inadvertently provided  
          access to alcohol by a minor.  The bill simply removes the  
          absolute bar to any potential liability in any situations for  








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          adult social hosts who knowingly provide alcohol to minors.   
          Under the bill, the families of a minor injured or killed by  
          alcohol will still need to prove in court all the elements of  
          negligence - that an adult social host, as narrowly defined  
          below, breached his or her responsibility to uphold the law,  
          knowingly provided alcohol to the child, and injuries or death  
          thereby resulted from this action. 

          The recent tragedy of Shelby Allen has helped inspire this  
          measure.  In December of 2008, Shelby Allen, a 17-year-old high  
          school student, died of acute alcohol poisoning the morning  
          after an overnight gathering with other teenagers at a friend's  
          house.  Shelby became violently ill and lapsed into a  
          semiconscious state during the night, and when she was  
          discovered the next morning, this very promising teenager passed  
          away.  Though the friend's parents were home that night, the  
          facts of the case remain unclear.  Shelby's parents considered  
          using the California civil courts in an attempt to gain answers  
          about this tragedy, but were shocked to discover, as many other  
          parents have, that unlike most other states, California's  
          current law continues to grant all social hosts complete and  
          unqualified immunity from all legal responsibility, even in  
          cases involving the deaths of minors.

          Shelby's tragic death is just one example of the devastating  
          consequences that can follow underage drinking.  As a result,  
          many groups, such as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the  
          PIRE Institute noted earlier, recommend our legal system should  
          discourage parents from allowing underage drinking in the home,  
          and they strongly support the establishment and enforcement of  
          targeted social host laws like the one proffered in this measure  
          to reduce access to alcohol by underage youth.    


           Analysis Prepared by  :    Drew Liebert / JUD. / (916) 319-2334 


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