BILL NUMBER: AB 54 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY MARCH 29, 2011
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Solorio
DECEMBER 6, 2010
An act to amend Sections 56375 and 56430 of the
Government Code, and to add Section 116760.65 to the Health and
Safety Code, relating to drinking water. An act to
amend Section 14300 of, and to add Sections 14301.1,
14301.2, and 14301.3 to, the Corporations Code, to amend Sections
56375 and 56430 of the Government Code, and to amend Section 116725
of, to add Section 116760.65 to, and to add Article 12 (commencing
with Section 116755) to Chapter 4 of Part 12 of Division 104 of, the
Health and Safety Code, relating to drinking water.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 54, as amended, Solorio. Drinking water.
(1) Existing law authorizes any corporation organized for or
engaged in the business of selling, distributing, supplying or
delivering water for irrigation purposes, and requires any
corporation organized for or engaged in the business of selling,
distributing, supplying, or delivering water for domestic use, to
provide in its articles or by laws that water shall be sold,
distributed, supplied or delivered only to owners of its shares and
that those shares are appurtenant to certain lands, as specified.
This bill would specify that any corporation organized for or
engaged in the business of selling, distributing, supplying, or
delivering water for irrigation purposes, and any corporation
organized for or engaged in the business of selling, distributing,
supplying, or delivering water for domestic use shall be known as a
mutual water company.
The bill would also require each mutual water company operating as
a public water system to, by December 31, 2012, submit a map
depicting the boundaries of the property that the municipal water
company serves to the Secretary of State and the local agency
commission within the county in which the mutual water company
operates. The bill would prohibit a mutual water company from
expanding its boundaries without approval from the appropriate local
agency formation commission. The bill would require a mutual water
company to supply certain information to a local agency formation
commission or a county department upon request, as specified. The
bill would require a mutual water company to submit an annual
certification, under penalty of perjury, regarding the amount of time
spent operating the public water system. By expanding the scope of
the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local
program.
The bill would also require each board member of a mutual water
company that is operated as a public water system to, within 6 months
of taking office, complete a 4-hour course offered by a public water
agency, as specified. The bill would also specify that fines imposed
pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act may be imposed on directors
of a mutual water company if the mutual water company receives a
notice of violation, more than one year has elapsed, and the mutual
water company has not taken action to resolve the violation.
Existing
(2) Existing law, the California
Safe Drinking Water Act, requires the State Department of Public
Health to administer provisions relating to the regulation of
drinking water to protect public health, including, but not limited
to, conducting research, studies, and demonstration programs relating
to the provision of a dependable, safe supply of drinking water,
enforcing the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, adoption of
enforcement regulations, and conducting studies and investigations to
assess the quality of water in domestic water supplies.
Existing law establishes the Safe Drinking Water State Revolving
Fund, continuously appropriated to the department for the provision
of grants and revolving fund loans to provide for the design and
construction of projects for public water systems that will enable
suppliers to meet safe drinking water standards. Existing law
requires the department to establish criteria to be met for projects
to be eligible for consideration for this funding.
This bill would allow the department to issue a letter of no
prejudice, as defined, to a public water system that is a lead
applicant for a project that may be funded by the Safe Drinking Water
Revolving Fund and would make expenditures related to the project
reimbursable in specified circumstances.
Existing
(3) Existing law, the
Cortese-Knox-Hertzberg Local Government Reorganization Act of 2000,
sets forth the powers and duties of a local agency formation
commission, including, among others, the powers to review and approve
or disapprove with or without amendment, wholly, partially, or
conditionally, proposals for changes of organization or
reorganization, consistent with written policies, procedures, and
guidelines adopted by the commission.
This bill would additionally authorize the commission to review
and approve or disapprove, at the commission's discretion, the
consolidation of territory within the jurisdiction of a mutual water
company into the jurisdiction of a city as a special district that
operates a public water system, with the consent of the respective
city and mutual water company.
Under
(4) Under the
Cortese-Knox-Hertzberg Local Government Reorganization Act of 2000,
each local agency formation commission is required to develop and
determine the sphere of influence of each local governmental agency
within the county and enact policies designed to promote the logical
and orderly development of areas within the sphere of influence. In
order to prepare and update spheres of influence, the commission is
required to conduct a service review, including the review of growth
and population projections for the affected area, present and planned
capacity of public facilities and adequacy of public services,
financial ability of agencies to provide services, the status of, and
opportunities for, shared facilities, accountability for community
service needs, and any other matter related to effective or efficient
service delivery, as required by commission policy.
This bill would authorize the commission to include in the service
review, a review of whether the available drinking water sources
within the area of review comply with safe drinking water standards.
(5) Existing law provides for the imposition of civil fines in
amounts up to $5,000 or $25,000 for specified violations of the
California Safe Drinking Water Act.
This bill would authorize the department, in lieu of assessing all
or a portion of the civil penalties for those violations against a
publicly owned water system serving a small community, as specified,
to require the public water system to spend an equivalent dollar
amount toward the completion of a compliance project proposed by the
public water system, in specified circumstances.
(6) 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: no yes .
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(a) Californians rely on a broad diversity of public and private
organizations to deliver clean and safe drinking water to their home
water taps. Regardless of the form of the organization that operates
a public water system, these organizations provide a public service
that remains one of the core duties of the people's government.
(b) While the state's goal is to ensure clean and safe drinking
water, California's drinking water quality has deteriorated and some
public water systems continue to suffer poor water quality that are
inconsistent with safe drinking water standards.
(c) The state provides funding to public water systems to improve
drinking water quality through the Safe Drinking Water Revolving
Fund, but demand far exceeds the available funding. The United States
Environmental Protection Agency's Drinking Water Infrastructure
Needs Survey and Assessment, which was performed in 2007, State
Department of Public Health estimates that the 20-year drinking water
infrastructure need for California is $39 billion. Funding for such
projects, however, for 1997-2008 totaled only 1.2 billion.
(d) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that
would impose consistent fines and penalties on public water systems
across the state to ensure compliance with safe drinking water
standards.
SEC. 2. Section 14300 of the
Corporations Code is amended to read:
14300. Any (a) Any
corporation organized for or engaged in the business of
selling, distributing, supplying , or delivering water for
irrigation purposes may provide, and any corporation organized for
or engaged in the business of selling, distributing, supplying, or
delivering water for domestic use shall provide, in its articles or
bylaws that water shall be sold, distributed, supplied ,
or delivered only to owners of its shares and that the shares shall
be appurtenant to certain lands when the same are described in the
certificate issued therefor; and when the certificate is so issued
and a certified copy of the articles or bylaws recorded in the office
of the county recorder in the county where the lands are situated
the shares of stock shall become appurtenant to the lands and shall
only be transferred therewith, except after sale or forfeiture for
delinquent assessments thereon as provided in Section 14303.
Notwithstanding this provision in its articles or bylaws, any such
corporation may sell water to the state, or any department or agency
thereof, or to any school district, or to any public agency, or, to
any other mutual water company or, during any emergency resulting
from fire or other disaster involving danger to public health or
safety, to any person at the same rates as to holders of shares of
the corporations; and provided further, that any corporation may
enter into a contract with a county fire protection district to
furnish water to fire hydrants and for fire suppression or fire
prevention purposes at a flat rate per hydrant or other connection.
In the event lands to which any stock is appurtenant are owned or
purchased by the state, or any department or agency thereof, or any
school district, or public agency, the stock shall be canceled by the
secretary, but shall be reissued to any person later acquiring title
to the land from the state department, agency, or school district,
or public agency.
(b) A corporation described in subdivision (a) shall be known as a
mutual water company.
SEC. 3. Section 14301.1 is added to the
Corporations Code , to read:
14301.1. (a) No later than December 31, 2012, each mutual water
company operating as a public water system shall submit to the
Secretary of State and the local agency formation commission a map
depicting the boundaries of the property that the corporation serves.
After December 31, 2012, the area served by that mutual water
company shall not expand unless the local agency formation commission
approves the expanded service area.
(b) If the local agency formation commission or a county
department requests information from a mutual water company, the
corporation shall, within 45 days of the request, provide all
reasonably available information and explain, in writing, why any
requested information is not reasonably available. Nothing in this
subdivision shall be interpreted to require a mutual water company to
undertake any study or investigation.
(c) Each mutual water company operating a public water system
shall submit, on July 1 of each year, an annual certification to the
State Department of Public Health, or its representative, as to the
amount of time that its certified operator spent operating the public
water system in the prior year. The certification, executed under
penalty of perjury, shall also include a statement as to the mutual
water company's financial reserves for contingencies and backup
equipment in case its system fails. The mutual water company shall
attach a certification by a registered engineer that the company's
public water system is in good working order.
(d) All Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) standards
apply to mutual water companies. Each mutual water company shall set
aside sufficient funding to pay for the depreciation of
infrastructure, as required by GASB standards.
SEC. 4. Section 14301.2 is added to the
Corporations Code , to read:
14301.2. (a) Each board member of a mutual water company operated
as a public water system shall, within six months of taking office,
complete a four-hour course offered by a public water agency or a
public utility that operates a public water system regarding the
duties of board members of public water systems and the duties of
public water systems to provide clean drinking water that complies
with the federal and state Safe Drinking Water Acts. If no public
water agency in the county where the mutual water company operates
offers a course, the director shall certify to the State Department
of Public Health, within nine months of taking office, that no such
training was available.
(b) Fines pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act may be imposed
on directors of a mutual water company if the mutual water company
has received notice of a violation of the Safe Drinking Water Act
more than one year previously and has not taken action to resolve the
violation.
SEC. 5. Section 14301.3 is added to the
Corporations Code , to read:
14301.3. (a) All improvements to public water systems operated by
a mutual water company shall be designed and constructed to comply
with the applicable California Water Works standards.
(b) All construction projects with a cost in excess of one
thousand dollars ($1,000) shall comply with prevailing wage
standards.
SEC. 2. SEC. 6. Section 56375 of the
Government Code is amended to read:
56375. The commission shall have all of the following powers and
duties subject to any limitations upon its jurisdiction set forth in
this part:
(a) (1) To review and approve or disapprove with or without
amendment, wholly, partially, or conditionally, proposals for changes
of organization or reorganization, consistent with written policies,
procedures, and guidelines adopted by the commission.
(2) The commission may initiate proposals by resolution of
application for any of the following:
(A) The consolidation of a district, as defined in Section 56036.
(B) The dissolution of a district.
(C) A merger.
(D) The establishment of a subsidiary district.
(E) The formation of a new district or districts.
(F) A reorganization that includes any of the changes specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), (C), (D), or (E).
(3) A commission may initiate a proposal described in paragraph
(2) only if that change of organization or reorganization is
consistent with a recommendation or conclusion of a study prepared
pursuant to Section 56378, 56425, or 56430, and the commission makes
the determinations specified in subdivision (b) of Section 56881.
(4) A commission shall not disapprove an annexation to a city,
initiated by resolution, of contiguous territory that the commission
finds is any of the following:
(A) Surrounded or substantially surrounded by the city to which
the annexation is proposed or by that city and a county boundary or
the Pacific Ocean if the territory to be annexed is substantially
developed or developing, is not prime agricultural land as defined in
Section 56064, is designated for urban growth by the general plan of
the annexing city, and is not within the sphere of influence of
another city.
(B) Located within an urban service area that has been delineated
and adopted by a commission, which is not prime agricultural land, as
defined by Section 56064, and is designated for urban growth by the
general plan of the annexing city.
(C) An annexation or reorganization of unincorporated islands
meeting the requirements of Section 56375.3.
(5) As a condition to the annexation of an area that is
surrounded, or substantially surrounded, by the city to which the
annexation is proposed, the commission may require, where consistent
with the purposes of this division, that the annexation include the
entire island of surrounded, or substantially surrounded, territory.
(6) A commission shall not impose any conditions that would
directly regulate land use density or intensity, property
development, or subdivision requirements.
(7) The decision of the commission with regard to a proposal to
annex territory to a city shall be based upon the general plan and
prezoning of the city. When the development purposes are not made
known to the annexing city, the annexation shall be reviewed on the
basis of the adopted plans and policies of the annexing city or
county. A commission shall require, as a condition to annexation,
that a city prezone the territory to be annexed or present evidence
satisfactory to the commission that the existing development
entitlements on the territory are vested or are already at build-out,
and are consistent with the city's general plan. However, the
commission shall not specify how, or in what manner, the territory
shall be prezoned.
(b) With regard to a proposal for annexation or detachment of
territory to, or from, a city or district or with regard to a
proposal for reorganization that includes annexation or detachment,
to determine whether territory proposed for annexation or detachment,
as described in its resolution approving the annexation, detachment,
or reorganization, is inhabited or uninhabited.
(c) With regard to a proposal for consolidation of two or more
cities or districts, to determine which city or district shall be the
consolidated successor city or district.
(d) To approve the annexation of unincorporated, noncontiguous
territory, subject to the limitations of Section 56742, located in
the same county as that in which the city is located, and that is
owned by a city and used for municipal purposes and to authorize the
annexation of the territory without notice and hearing.
(e) To approve the annexation of unincorporated territory
consistent with the planned and probable use of the property based
upon the review of general plan and prezoning designations. No
subsequent change may be made to the general plan for the annexed
territory or zoning that is not in conformance to the prezoning
designations for a period of two years after the completion of the
annexation, unless the legislative body for the city makes a finding
at a public hearing that a substantial change has occurred in
circumstances that necessitate a departure from the prezoning in the
application to the commission.
(f) With respect to the incorporation of a new city or the
formation of a new special district, to determine the number of
registered voters residing within the proposed city or special
district or, for a landowner-voter special district, the number of
owners of land and the assessed value of their land within the
territory proposed to be included in the new special district. The
number of registered voters shall be calculated as of the time of the
last report of voter registration by the county elections official
to the Secretary of State prior to the date the first signature was
affixed to the petition. The executive officer shall notify the
petitioners of the number of registered voters resulting from this
calculation. The assessed value of the land within the territory
proposed to be included in a new landowner-voter special district
shall be calculated as shown on the last equalized assessment roll.
(g) To adopt written procedures for the evaluation of proposals,
including written definitions consistent with existing state law. The
commission may adopt standards for any of the factors enumerated in
Section 56668. Any standards adopted by the commission shall be
written.
(h) To adopt standards and procedures for the evaluation of
service plans submitted pursuant to Section 56653 and the initiation
of a change of organization or reorganization pursuant to subdivision
(a).
(i) To make and enforce regulations for the orderly and fair
conduct of hearings by the commission.
(j) To incur usual and necessary expenses for the accomplishment
of its functions.
(k) To appoint and assign staff personnel and to employ or
contract for professional or consulting services to carry out and
effect the functions of the commission.
(l) To review the boundaries of the territory involved in any
proposal with respect to the definiteness and certainty of those
boundaries, the nonconformance of proposed boundaries with lines of
assessment or ownership, and other similar matters affecting the
proposed boundaries.
(m) To waive the restrictions of Section 56744 if it finds that
the application of the restrictions would be detrimental to the
orderly development of the community and that the area that would be
enclosed by the annexation or incorporation is so located that it
cannot reasonably be annexed to another city or incorporated as a new
city.
(n) To waive the application of Section 22613 of the Streets and
Highways Code if it finds the application would deprive an area of a
service needed to ensure the health, safety, or welfare of the
residents of the area and if it finds that the waiver would not
affect the ability of a city to provide any service. However, within
60 days of the inclusion of the territory within the city, the
legislative body may adopt a resolution nullifying the waiver.
(o) If the proposal includes the incorporation of a city, as
defined in Section 56043, or the formation of a district, as defined
in Section 2215 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, the commission
shall determine the property tax revenue to be exchanged by the
affected local agencies pursuant to Section 56810.
(p) To authorize a city or district to provide new or extended
services outside its jurisdictional boundaries pursuant to Section
56133.
(q) To enter into an agreement with the commission for an
adjoining county for the purpose of determining procedures for the
consideration of proposals that may affect the adjoining county or
where the jurisdiction of an affected agency crosses the boundary of
the adjoining county.
(r) To review and approve or disapprove, at the commission's
discretion, the consolidation of territory within the
jurisdiction of annexation of territory served by
a mutual water company formed pursuant to Chapter 2
(commencing with Section 14310) of Part 7 (commencing
with Section 14300) of Division 3 of Title 1 of the
Corporations Code into the jurisdiction of a city as
, a public utility, or a special district that
operates a public water system, with the consent of the respective
city public agency or public utility
and mutual water company.
(s) To request information, as part of a municipal service review
under Section 56430, from identified public or private entities that
provide wholesale or retail supply of drinking water, including
mutual water companies formed pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with
Section 14300) of Division 3 of Title 1 of the Corporations Code, and
private utilities, as defined in Section 1502 of the Public
Utilities Code.
SEC. 3. SEC. 7. Section 56430 of the
Government Code is amended to read:
56430. (a) In order to prepare and to update spheres of influence
in accordance with Section 56425, the commission shall conduct a
service review of the municipal services provided in the county or
other appropriate area designated by the commission. The commission
shall include in the area designated for service review the county,
the region, the subregion, or any other geographic area as is
appropriate for an analysis of the service or services to be
reviewed, and shall prepare a written statement of its determinations
with respect to each of the following:
(1) Growth and population projections for the affected area.
(2) Present and planned capacity of public facilities and adequacy
of public services, including infrastructure needs or deficiencies.
(3) Financial ability of agencies to provide services.
(4) Status of, and opportunities for, shared facilities.
(5) Accountability for community service needs, including
governmental structure and operational efficiencies.
(6) Any other matter related to effective or efficient service
delivery, as required by commission policy.
(b) In conducting a service review, the commission shall
comprehensively review all of the agencies that provide the
identified service or services within the designated geographic area.
(c) In conducting a service review, the commission may include a
review of whether the available drinking water sources
within the area of review comply with safe drinking water standards.
agencies under review, including any public water
system as defined in Section 116275, are in compliance with the Safe
Drinking Water Act.
(d) The commission shall conduct a service review before, or in
conjunction with, but no later than the time it is considering an
action to establish a sphere of influence in accordance with Section
56425 or Section 56426.5 or to update a sphere of influence pursuant
to Section 56425.
SEC. 4. SEC. 8. Section 116760.65 is
added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:
116760.65. (a) A public water system, as defined in Section
116275, that is a lead applicant for a project that may be funded
pursuant to this chapter may apply to the department for a letter of
no prejudice for the project or a component of the project. The
department may approve the letter of no prejudice for one or more
projects or project components that the department has determined to
be eligible for federal or state funding pursuant to established
funding priorities and has issued an invitation to apply for funding
from the Safe Drinking Water Revolving Fund. The letter of no
prejudice shall reference the project or component thereof and the
maximum amount of bond funding that may be allocated for that project
or project component.
(b) Expenditures for the costs, up to the amount set forth in the
letter of no prejudice, of a project or project component for which a
letter of no prejudice has been issued shall be eligible for
reimbursement from the Safe Drinking Water Revolving Fund if all of
the following apply:
(1) The project or project component for which the letter of no
prejudice was requested has commenced and expenditures on the project
or project component have been incurred by the local agency.
(2) The expenditures made by the local agency are eligible for
reimbursement in accordance with state and federal laws and
procedures, and are permitted expenditures under the applicable
provisions of the federal Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.
300f et seq.) or the California Safe Drinking Water Act. If
expenditures made are determined to be ineligible, then the state has
no obligation to reimburse for those expenditures.
(3) The public water system complies with all legal requirements
for the project, including the requirements of the California
Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section
21000) of the Public Resources Code).
(4) The expenditures were incurred after the project or project
component was determined to be eligible for funding by the
department.
(5) There is in the Safe Drinking Water Revolving Fund an amount
sufficient to make the reimbursement payment. Nothing in this section
requires the fund to be funded at a particular time or in a
particular amount.
(c) The department and the public water system may enter into an
agreement or agreements governing reimbursement as described in this
section.
(d) Without limiting the foregoing, nothing in this section or in
a letter of no prejudice shall eliminate or modify any condition or
requirement for granting, allocating, or reallocating funds or any
other provision relating to loans, grants, allocations, or
reallocations in the California Safe Drinking Water Act or related
statutes.
(e) For purposes of this section, "letter of no prejudice" means
an agreement between a public water system and the department that
makes eligible for future reimbursement from the Safe Drinking Water
Revolving Fund the expenditure of funds under the control of the
public water system, subject to availability of bond funds, as
provided in this section. The timing and final amount of
reimbursement is dependent on the terms of the agreement and the
availability of funds. The final amount of reimbursement may be less
than the amount stated in the letter of no prejudice.
SEC. 9 . Section 116725 of the
Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
116725. (a) Any person who knowingly makes any false statement or
representation in any application, record, report, or other document
submitted, maintained, or used for purposes of compliance with this
chapter, may be liable, as determined by the court, for a civil
penalty not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each
separate violation or, for continuing violations, for each day that
violation continues.
(b) Any person who violates a citation schedule of compliance for
a primary drinking water standard or any order regarding a primary
drinking water standard or the requirement that a reliable and
adequate supply of pure, wholesome, healthful, and potable water be
provided may be liable, as determined by the court, for a civil
penalty not to exceed twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each
separate violation or, for continuing violations, for each day that
violation continues.
(c) Any person who violates any order, other than one specified in
subdivision (b), issued pursuant to this chapter may be liable, as
determined by the court, for a civil penalty not to exceed five
thousand dollars ($5,000) for each separate violation or, for
continuing violations, for each day that violation continues.
(d) Any person who operates a public water system without a permit
issued by the department pursuant to this chapter may be liable, as
determined by the court, for a civil penalty not to exceed
twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each separate violation
or, for continuing violations, for each day that violation continues.
(e) Each civil penalty imposed for any separate violation pursuant
to this section shall be separate and in addition to any other civil
penalty imposed pursuant to this section or any other provision of
law.
(f) (1) In lieu of assessing all or a portion of the civil
penalties pursuant to this section against a publicly owned water
system serving a small community, the department may elect to require
the public water system to spend an equivalent dollar amount towards
the completion of a compliance project proposed by the public water
system, if the department finds all of the following:
(A) The compliance project is designed to correct the violations
within five years.
(B) The compliance project is in accordance with the enforcement
policy of the department, excluding any provision in the policy that
is inconsistent with this section.
(C) The public water system has prepared a financing plan to
complete the compliance project.
(2) For the purposes of this subdivision, "a publicly owned water
system serving a small community" means a public water system
operated by a city, county, or special district serving a population
of 10,000 persons or fewer or a rural county, with a financial
hardship as determined by the department after considering factors
including median income of the residents, rate of unemployment, and
low population density in the service area of the public water
system.
SEC. 10. Article 12 (commencing with Section
116755) of Chapter 4 of Part 12 of Division 104 is added to the
Health and Safety Code , to read:
Article 12. Board Member Training
116755. (a) Each board member of a mutual water company operating
a public water system shall, within six months of taking office,
complete a four-hour course offered by a public water agency or
public utility regarding the duties of board members of public water
systems and the duties of public water systems to provide clean
drinking water that complies with federal and state Safe Drinking
Water Acts. If no public water agency in the county where the mutual
water company operates offers a course, the director shall certify to
the State Department of Public Health, within nine months of taking
office, that no such training was available.
(b) Fines pursuant to the Safe Drinking Water Act may be imposed
on directors of a mutual water company if the mutual water company
has received notice of
a violation of the Safe Drinking Water Act, more than one year has
elapsed since the mutual water company received the notice, and the
mutual water company has not taken action to resolve the violation.
SEC. 11. No reimbursement is required by this act
pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local
agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a
new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or
changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of
Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a
crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution.