BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                      



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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                  SB 1394|
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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  SB 1394
          Author:   Lowenthal (D)
          Amended:  4/26/12
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE TRANSPORTATION & HOUSING COMM  :  8-0, 04/17/12
          AYES:  DeSaulnier, Gaines, Kehoe, Lowenthal, Pavley, Rubio, 
            Simitian, Wyland
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Harman

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  Senate Rule 28.8


           SUBJECT  :    Carbon monoxide and smoke detectors

           SOURCE  :     California State Firefighters Association


           DIGEST  :    This bill delays the date by which an owner must 
          install a carbon monoxide device in an existing hotel and 
          motel unit from January 1, 2013 to January 1, 2016, and 
          makes a number of changes to existing laws relating to the 
          installation of smoke detectors in residential dwellings.

           ANALYSIS  :    The California Building Standards Law 
          establishes the California Building Standards Commission 
          (BSC) and the process for adopting state building 
          standards.  Under this process, relevant state agencies 
          propose amendments to model building codes, which the BSC 
          must then adopt, modify, or reject.  The Department of 
          Housing and Community Development (HCD) is the relevant 
          state agency for residential building standards.  
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          Building standards are prospective in that they only to 
          apply to new construction or to existing buildings that 
          undergo alteration or rehabilitation.  In a few instances, 
          however, the Legislature has applied building standard-like 
          requirements to existing buildings.  Current law requires 
          that smoke detectors be installed in all existing 
          multifamily residential dwellings and in existing 
          single-family dwellings that are sold.  To comply with the 
          smoke detector statute, an affected residential property 
          owner must install a smoke detector approved and listed by 
          the State Fire Marshal.  With respect to multifamily rental 
          housing, the smoke detector also must be operable at the 
          time that a tenant takes possession.  The tenant is then 
          responsible for notifying the owner if the smoke detector 
          becomes inoperable.  The owner must correct any reported 
          deficiencies in the smoke detector but is not in violation 
          of the law if he or she has not received notice of any 
          deficiency.  Failure to comply is an infraction punishable 
          by a maximum fine of $200 for each offense.  

          Under SB 183 (Lowenthal), Chapter 19, Statutes of 2010, an 
          owner of an existing dwelling unit must install a carbon 
          monoxide device approved by the State Fire Marshal in each 
          existing dwelling unit having a fossil fuel burning heater 
          or appliance, fireplace, or an attached garage, by the 
          following dates:

                 July 1, 2011 for all existing single-family homes.
                 January 1, 2013 for all other existing dwelling 
               units.

          SB 183 further requires an owner to install the devices in 
          a manner consistent with building standards applicable to 
          new construction for the relevant type of occupancy or with 
          the manufacturer's instructions if it is technically 
          feasible to do so.  Upon discovery of a violation, an 
          enforcement agency must give the owner a 30-day notice to 
          correct.  If the owner fails to correct the violation 
          within that time period, the owner is subject to an 
          infraction punishable by a maximum fine of $200 for each 
          offense.

          This bill: 







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          1.Delays the date by which an owner must install a carbon 
            monoxide device in an existing hotel and motel unit 
            pursuant to SB 183 from January 1, 2013 to January 1, 
            2016.

          2.Requires HCD, on or before July 1, 2014, to submit to the 
            BSC for adoption building standards for the installation 
            of carbon monoxide detectors in hotel and motel units.  
            In developing these standards, HCD must convene and 
            consult a stakeholder group and review and consider the 
            most current national standards available related to the 
            installation of carbon monoxide detection.  

          3.After January 1, 2014, requires that a smoke alarm, in 
            order for the State Fire Marshal to approve and list the 
            device, display the date of manufacture, provide a place 
            where the date of installation can be written, 
            incorporate a hush feature (which allows a resident to 
            manually turn off a sounding alarm), incorporate an 
            end-of-life feature providing notice that the device 
            needs to be replaced, and, if battery-operated, contain a 
            nonreplaceable, nonremovable battery that is capable of 
            powering the smoke alarm for a minimum of 10 years.

          4. Prohibits, for all dwellings intended for human 
             occupancy for which a building permit is issued on or 
             after January 1, 2014, for alterations, repairs, or 
             additions exceeding $1,000, the permit issuer from 
             signing off on the completion of work until the 
             permittee demonstrates that all smoke alarms required 
             for the dwelling are approved and listed by the State 
             Fire Marshal.

          5. Provides that a fire alarm system with smoke alarms 
             installed in accordance with the State Fire Marshal's 
             regulations may be installed in lieu of the devices 
             approved and listed by the State Fire Marshal.

          6. Expands the definition of "dwelling units intended for 
             human occupancy" for these purposes to include 
             factory-built housing, as defined.

          7. Deletes the requirement that a smoke detector be 







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             installed in the common stairwells of apartment 
             complexes and other multiple-dwelling complexes.

          8. Requires, commencing January 1, 2014, owners of 
             single-family dwellings that are rented or leased to be 
             responsible for testing and maintaining smoke alarms, as 
             specified.

          9. Requires an owner of a multi-family rental, at the time 
             a new tenancy is created, to ensure that smoke alarms 
             are operable and located in compliance with current 
             building code standards.

          Comments

          The Task Force recommendations  .  Among the consensus 
          recommendations in the State Fire Marshal's Smoke Alarm 
          Task Force final report from August 2011 are the following:

           Legislation should be introduced to require smoke alarms 
            in existing residential occupancies that are being sold, 
            leased, or rented to conform to current building 
            standards for the location of smoke alarms. The smoke 
            alarms should bear a manufacturer's marking confirming 
            they are less than ten years old and be either AC powered 
            with battery backup or be powered by a long life primary 
            battery. 

           Regulations should be adopted that require smoke alarms 
            and smoke detectors to be replaced when they fail to 
            respond to operability tests or no longer than ten years 
            from the date of manufacture marked on the product. 

           Regulations should be revised to require smoke alarms 
            that are solely battery powered to be packaged and sold 
            with a ten year battery and have a silence feature.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes   
          Local:  Yes

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  5/15/12)

          California State Firefighters' Association (source) 
          California Coalition for Children's Safety and Health







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          California Hotel and Lodging Association
          California Travel Association
          Kidde

           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    According to the author, properly 
          operating smoke alarms can mean the difference between life 
          and death.  Data clearly shows that most fire deaths today, 
          over two-thirds, happen in homes with no smoke alarms or no 
          working alarms.  To enhance the effective utilization of 
          smoke alarms in single and multi-family dwellings in order 
          to better prevent fire related injuries or death, this bill 
          seeks to implement some of the recommendations of the State 
          Fire Marshal's recent Smoke Alarm Task Force.  In addition, 
          the author seeks to give hotel and motel owners more time 
          and more direction on how to comply with recent legislation 
          requiring the installation of carbon monoxide alarms 
          because, according to the author, the current location 
          placement standards may not be appropriate for hotels and 
          motels.


          JJA:nlm  5/15/12   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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