SB 874, as amended, Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review. Public resources.
(1) Existing law authorizes a governmental agency to solicit proposals and enter into agreements with private entities for the design, construction, or reconstruction of, and to lease to private entities, specified types of fee-producing infrastructure projects. Existing law prohibits a state agency or specified governmental agencies from using this authorization to design, construct, finance, or operate a state project, as specified.
This bill, until December 31, 2019, would specify that a state project, for these purposes, does not include a governmental agency project financed through the State Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund or the Safe Drinking Water State Revolving Fund.
(2) Existing law creates the Housing Rehabilitation Loan Fund and continuously appropriates moneys in the fund for, among other purposes, making specified deferred payment housing rehabilitation loans. Prior to June 20, 2014, existing law authorized, to the extent no other funding sources were available, $10,000,000 in the fund to be used by the department for the purpose of providing housing rental-related subsidies to persons rendered homeless, or at risk of becoming homeless, due to unemployment, underemployment, or other economic hardship resulting from the state of emergency proclaimed by the Governor based on drought conditions.
This bill would, to the extent no other funding sources are available, reauthorize that $10,000,000 in the fund to be used by the department for the above-stated purposes.
(3) The Energy Conservation Assistance Act of 1979 establishes the State Energy Conservation Assistance Account, a continuously appropriated account, that is administered by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission to provide grants and loans to various public entities to maximize energy use savings in existing and planned buildings and facilities. Existing law, the Budget Act of 2014, transfers, upon order of the Director of Finance, moneys from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to the account for those purposes.
This bill would create a continuously appropriated subaccount within the State Energy Conservation Assistancebegin delete Countend deletebegin insert Accountend insert to track the award and repayment of loans made with moneys transferred from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, as specified. The bill would authorize moneys in the subaccount to be used for loans only for projects in buildings owned and operated by a state agency or entity,
including, without limitation, the University of California and California State University.
(4) Existing law establishes the State Coastal Conservancy in the Natural Resources Agency with prescribed powers and responsibilities for implementing a program of agricultural land protection, area restoration, and resources enhancement within the coastal zone, as defined. Existing law authorizes the conservancy, for the purpose of implementing the provisions governing the conservancy, to award a grant to a for-profit entity to accomplish the removal or alteration of the San Clemente Dam under specified conditions. Existing law limits the total expenditures of state moneys for the removal or alteration of the San Clemente Dam and related activities to not more than $25,000,000.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would increase the limit on the total expenditure of state moneys for the removal or alteration of the San Clemente Dam and related activities to not more than $30,000,000.
end insert(4)
end deletebegin insert(5)end insert Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, as defined. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission to require the administration, until January 1, 2021, of a self-generation incentive program for distributed generation resources. Existing law limits eligibility for incentives under the self-generation incentive program to distributed energy resources that the Public Utilities Commission, in consultation with the State Air Resources Board, determines will achieve reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006.
This bill would modify the eligibility requirements for incentives under the self-generation incentive program, as specified. The bill also would modify the performance measures used in Public Utilities Commission’s evaluation of the overall success and impact of the self-generation incentive program, as specified.
(5)
end deletebegin insert(6)end insert Existing law, the Budget Act of 2014, appropriates the unencumbered balance of specified moneys appropriated in the Budget Act of 2003 for the State Department of Public Health to the State Water Resources Control Board for encumbrance or expenditure until June 30, 2016, for the purposes of providing grants of up to $500,000 per project for public water systems to address drought-related drinking water emergencies or threatened emergencies.
This bill would make those moneys available for liquidation until June 30, 2018.
This bill also would make conforming changes.
(6)
end delete
begin insert(7)end insert The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006begin delete establishesend deletebegin insert
designatesend insert the State Air Resources Board as the state agency responsible for monitoring and regulating sources emitting greenhouse gases. The act requires the state board to adopt a statewide greenhouse gas emissions limitbegin delete, as defined,end delete to be achieved bybegin delete 2020,end deletebegin insert 2020end insert equivalent to the statewide greenhouse gas emissions levels in 1990. Existing law authorizes the state board to adopt a schedule of fees to be paid by the sources of greenhouse gas emissions regulated pursuant to the act and requires those fees to be deposited in the Cost of Implementation Account. The act requires the state board to prepare and approve a scoping plan for achieving the maximum technologically feasible and cost-effective reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions. The act requires the scoping plan to be updated at least once every 5 years.
This bill would appropriate $529,000 from the Cost of Implementation Account to the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency for the purpose of implementing elements of the scoping plan adopted by the State Air Resources Board.
(7)
end deletebegin insert(8)end insert This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 5956.10 of the Government Code is
2amended to read:
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
4chapter, neither the state or any state agency shall directly or
5indirectly use the authority in this chapter nor shall any
6governmental agency, as defined in Section 5956.3, use the
7authority in this chapter to design, construct, finance, or operate
8a state project. For purposes of this section, a state project includes
9any of the following:
10(1) Toll roads on state highways.
11(2) State water projects.
12(3) State park and recreation projects.
13(4) State financed projects.
14(b) These limitations shall not prohibit the state, any state
15agency, or any governmental agency, as defined in Section 5956.3,
16from utilizing authorizations contained in other provisions of law.
17(c) For purposes of this section, a state project does not include
18a governmental agency project financed through the State Water
19Pollution Control Revolving Fund, established pursuant to Section
2013477 of the Water Code, or the Safe Drinking Water State
21Revolving Fund, established pursuant to Section 116760.30 of the
22Health and Safety Code.
23(d) This section shall become inoperative on December 31,
242019, and, as of January 1,
2020, is repealed, unless a later enacted
P5 1statute, that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2020,
2deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and
3is repealed.
Section 5956.10 is added to the Government Code, to
5read:
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
7chapter, neither the state or any state agency shall directly or
8indirectly use the authority in this chapter nor shall any
9governmental agency, as defined in Section 5956.3, use the
10authority in this chapter to design, construct, finance, or operate
11a state project. For purposes of this section, a state project includes
12any of the following:
13(1) Toll roads on state highways.
14(2) State water projects.
15(3) State park and recreation projects.
16(4) State financed projects.
17(b) These limitations shall not prohibit the state, any state
18agency, or any governmental agency, as defined in Section 5956.3,
19from utilizing authorizations contained in other provisions of law.
20(c) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2020.
Section 50661 of the Health and Safety Code is
22amended to read:
(a) There is hereby created in the State Treasury the
24Housing Rehabilitation Loan Fund. All interest or other increments
25resulting from the investment of moneys in the Housing
26Rehabilitation Loan Fund shall be deposited in the fund,
27notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code.
28Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, all
29money in the fund is continuously appropriated to the department
30for the following purposes:
31(1) For making deferred-payment rehabilitation loans for
32financing all or a portion of the cost of rehabilitating existing
33housing to meet rehabilitation standards as provided in this chapter.
34(2)
For making deferred payment loans as provided in Sections
3550668.5, 50669, and 50670.
36(3) For making deferred payment loans pursuant to Sections
3750662.5 and 50671.
38(4) Subject to the restrictions of Section 53131, if applicable,
39for administrative expenses of the department made pursuant to
P6 1this chapter, Article 3 (commencing with Section 50693) of Chapter
27.5, and Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 50775).
3(5) For related administrative costs of nonprofit corporations
4and local public entities contracting with the department pursuant
5to Section 50663 in an amount, if any, as determined by the
6department, to enable the entities and corporations to implement
7a program pursuant to this chapter. The
department shall ensure
8that not less than 20 percent of the funds loaned pursuant to this
9chapter shall be allocated to rural areas. For purposes of this
10chapter, “rural area” shall have the same meaning as in Section
1150199.21.
12(6) To the extent no other funding sources are available, ten
13million dollars ($10,000,000), as provided in Section 4 of Chapter
143 of the Statutes of 2014, may be used for the purposes of Section
1534085.
16(b) There shall be paid into the fund the following:
17(1) Any moneys appropriated and made available by the
18Legislature for purposes of the fund.
19(2) Any moneys that the department receives in repayment of
20
loans made from the fund, including any interest thereon.
21(3) Any other moneys that may be made available to the
22department for the purposes of this chapter from any other source
23or sources.
24(4) Moneys transferred or deposited to the fund pursuant to
25Sections 50661.5 and 50778.
26(c) Notwithstanding any other law, any interest or other
27increment earned by the investment or deposit of moneys
28appropriated by subdivision (b) of Section 3 of Chapter 2 of the
29Statutes of the 1987-88 First Extraordinary Session, or Section 7
30of Chapter 4 of the Statutes of the 1987-88 First Extraordinary
31Session, shall be deposited in a special account in the Housing
32Rehabilitation Loan Fund and shall be used exclusively for
33purposes
of Sections 50662.5 and 50671.
34(d) Notwithstanding any other law, effective with the date of
35the act adding this subdivision, appropriations authorized by the
36Budget Act of 1996 for support of the Department of Housing and
37Community Development from the California Disaster Housing
38Repair Fund and the California Homeownership Assistance Fund
39shall instead be authorized for expenditure from the Housing
40Rehabilitation Loan Fund.
P7 1(e) Effective July 1, 2014, the California Housing Trust Fund
2in the State Treasury is abolished and any remaining balance,
3assets, liabilities, and encumbrances shall be transferred to, and
4become part of, the Housing Rehabilitation Loan Fund.
5Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, all
6transferred amounts are continuously appropriated to
the
7department for the purpose of satisfying any liabilities and
8encumbrances and the purposes specified in this section.
Section 25416 of the Public Resources Code is
10amended to read:
(a) The State Energy Conservation Assistance Account
12is hereby created in the General Fund. Notwithstanding Section
1313340 of the Government Code, the account is continuously
14appropriated to the commission without regard to fiscal year.
15(b) The money in the account shall consist of all moneys
16authorized or required to be deposited in the account by the
17Legislature and all moneys received by the commission pursuant
18to Sections 25414 and 25415.
19(c) The moneys in the account shall be disbursed by the
20Controller for the purposes of this chapter as authorized by the
21commission.
22(d) The commission may contract and provide grants for services
23to be performed for eligible institutions. Services may include, but
24are not limited to, feasibility analysis, project design, field
25assistance, and operation and training. The amount expended for
26those services shall not exceed 10 percent of the unencumbered
27balance of the account as determined by the commission on July
281 of each year.
29(e) The commission may make grants to eligible institutions for
30innovative projects and programs. Except as provided in
31subdivision (d), the amount expended for grants shall not exceed
325 percent of the annual unencumbered balance in the account as
33determined by the commission on July 1 of each fiscal year.
34(f) The commission may
charge a fee for the services provided
35under subdivision (d).
36(g) Notwithstanding any other law, the Controller may use the
37State Energy Conservation Assistance Account for loans to the
38General Fund as provided in Sections 16310 and 16381 of the
39Government Code.
P8 1(h) (1) A subaccount is hereby created within the State Energy
2Conservation Assistance Account to track the award and repayment
3of loans, including principal, interest, and interest earnings on or
4accruing to the subaccount, made with moneys transferred to the
5account from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, created
6pursuant to Section 16428.8 of the Government Code.
7Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the
8subaccount is hereby continuously appropriated to the commission
9
without regard to fiscal year.
10(2) Moneys deposited in the subaccount may be used for loans
11only for projects in buildings owned and operated by a state agency
12or entity, including, without limitation, the University of California
13and California State University.
14(3) Notwithstanding Section 39718 of the Health and Safety
15Code, a repayment of a loan made pursuant to this chapter with
16moneys transferred from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund
17shall be deposited in the subaccount and shall be available for a
18loan made to an entity eligible for these moneys pursuant to this
19subdivision.
begin insertSection 31111.5 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Resources Codeend insertbegin insert is
21amended to read:end insert
(a) In implementing this division, the conservancy
23may award a grant to a for-profit entity to accomplishbegin insert theend insert removal
24or alteration of the San Clemente Dam if the conservancy finds
25that the project is of regional or statewide significance and that a
26grant to a public agency or nonprofit organization would not
27achieve removal or alteration of the San Clemente Dam.
28(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), total expenditures of state
29begin delete fundsend deletebegin insert moneysend insert for the removal or
alteration of the San Clemente
30Dam and related activities shall not exceedbegin delete twenty-five million begin insert
thirty million dollars ($30,000,000)end insert.
31dollars ($25,000,000)end delete
Section 379.6 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
34to read:
(a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that the
36self-generation incentive program increase deployment of
37distributed generation and energy storage systems to facilitate the
38integration of those resources into the electrical grid, improve
39efficiency and reliability of the distribution and transmission
40system, and reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, peak demand,
P9 1and ratepayer costs. It is the further intent of the Legislature that
2the commission, in future proceedings, provide for an equitable
3distribution of the costs and benefits of the program.
4(2) The commission, in consultation with the Energy
5Commission, may authorize the annual collection of not more than
6the
amount authorized for the self-generation incentive program
7in the 2008 calendar year, through December 31, 2019. The
8commission shall require the administration of the program for
9distributed energy resources originally established pursuant to
10Chapter 329 of the Statutes of 2000 until January 1, 2021. On
11January 1, 2021, the commission shall provide repayment of all
12unallocated funds collected pursuant to this section to reduce
13ratepayer costs.
14(3) The commission shall administer solar technologies
15separately, pursuant to the California Solar Initiative adopted by
16the commission in Decisions 05-12-044 and 06-01-024, as modified
17by Article 1 (commencing with Section 2851) of Chapter 9 of Part
182 of Division 1 of this code and Chapter 8.8 (commencing with
19Section 25780) of Division 15 of the Public Resources Code.
20(b) (1) Eligibility for incentives under the self-generation
21incentive program shall be limited to distributed energy resources
22that the commission, in consultation with the State Air Resources
23Board, determines will achieve reductions in emissions of
24greenhouse gases pursuant to the California Global Warming
25Solutions Act of 2006 (Division 25.5 (commencing with Section
2638500) of the Health and Safety Code).
27(2) On or before July 1, 2015, the commission shall update the
28factor for avoided greenhouse gas emissions based on the most
29recent data available to the State Air Resources Board for
30greenhouse gas emissions from electricity sales in the
31self-generation incentive program administrators’ service areas as
32well as current estimates of greenhouse gas
emissions over the
33useful life of the distributed energy resource, including
34consideration of the effects of the California Renewables Portfolio
35Standard.
36(c) Eligibility for the funding of any combustion-operated
37distributed generation projects using fossil fuel is subject to all of
38the following conditions:
39(1) An oxides of nitrogen (NOx) emissions rate standard of 0.07
40pounds per megawatthour and a minimum efficiency of 60 percent,
P10 1or any other NOx emissions rate and minimum efficiency standard
2adopted by the State Air Resources Board. A minimum efficiency
3of 60 percent shall be measured as useful energy output divided
4by fuel input. The efficiency determination shall be based on 100
5percent load.
6(2) Combined heat and power units that meet the 60-percent
7efficiency standard may take a credit to meet the applicable NOx
8 emissions standard of 0.07 pounds per megawatthour. Credit shall
9be at the rate of one megawatthour for each 3,400,000 British
10thermal units (Btus) of heat recovered.
11(3) The customer receiving incentives shall adequately maintain
12and service the combined heat and power units so that during
13operation the system continues to meet or exceed the efficiency
14and emissions standards established pursuant to paragraphs (1)
15and (2).
16(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), a project that does not meet
17the applicable NOx emissions standard is eligible if it meets both
18of the following requirements:
19(A) The project operates solely on waste gas. The commission
20shall require a customer that applies for an incentive pursuant to
21this paragraph to provide an affidavit or other form of proof that
22specifies that the project shall be operated solely on waste gas.
23Incentives awarded pursuant to this paragraph shall be subject to
24refund and shall be refunded by the recipient to the extent the
25project does not operate on waste gas. As used in this paragraph,
26“waste gas” means natural gas that is generated as a byproduct of
27petroleum production operations and is not eligible for delivery
28to the utility pipeline system.
29(B) The air quality management district or air pollution control
30district, in issuing a permit to operate the project, determines that
31operation of the project will produce an onsite net air emissions
32benefit
compared to permitted onsite emissions if the project does
33not operate. The commission shall require the customer to secure
34the permit prior to receiving incentives.
35(d) In determining the eligibility for the self-generation incentive
36program, minimum system efficiency shall be determined either
37by calculating electrical and process heat efficiency as set forth in
38Section 216.6, or by calculating overall electrical efficiency.
P11 1(e) Eligibility for incentives under the program shall be limited
2to distributed energy resource technologies that the commission
3determines meet all of the following requirements:
4(1) The distributed energy resource technology is capable of
5reducing demand from the grid by offsetting or shifting some or
6all
of the customer’s onsite energy load.
7(2) The distributed energy resource technology is commercially
8available.
9(3) The distributed energy resource technology safely utilizes
10the existing transmission and distribution system.
11(4) The distributed energy resource technology improves air
12quality by reducing criteria air pollutants.
13(f) Recipients of the self-generation incentive program funds
14shall provide relevant data to the commission and the State Air
15Resources Board, upon request, and shall be subject to onsite
16inspection to verify equipment operation and performance,
17including capacity, thermal output, and usage to verify criteria air
18pollutant and
greenhouse gas emissions performance.
19(g) In administering the self-generation incentive program, the
20commission shall determine a capacity factor for each distributed
21generation system energy resource technology in the program.
22(h) (1) In administering the self-generation incentive program,
23the commission may adjust the amount of rebates and evaluate
24other public policy interests, including, but not limited to,
25ratepayers, energy efficiency, peak load reduction, load
26management, and environmental interests.
27(2) The commission shall consider the relative amount and the
28cost of greenhouse gas emissions reductions, peak demand
29reductions, system reliability benefits, and other measurable factors
30when
allocating program funds between eligible technologies.
31(i) The commission shall ensure that distributed generation
32resources are made available in the program for all ratepayers.
33(j) In administering the self-generation incentive program, the
34commission shall provide an additional incentive of 20 percent
35from existing program funds for the installation of eligible
36distributed generation resources manufactured in California.
37(k) The costs of the program adopted and implemented pursuant
38to this section shall not be recovered from customers participating
39in the California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) program.
P12 1(l) The commission shall evaluate the overall success
and impact
2of the self-generation incentive program based on the following
3performance measures:
4(1) The amount of reductions of emissions of greenhouse gases.
5(2) The amount of reductions of emissions of criteria air
6pollutants measured in terms of avoided emissions and reductions
7of criteria air pollutants represented by emissions credits secured
8for project approval.
9(3) The amount of energy reductions measured in energy value.
10(4) The amount of reductions of customer peak demand.
11(5) The ratio of the electricity generated by distributed energy
12resource generation projects receiving incentives from
the program
13to the electricity capable of being produced by those distributed
14energy resource projects, commonly known as a capacity factor.
15(6) The value to the electrical transmission and distribution
16system measured in avoided costs of transmission and distribution
17upgrades and replacement.
18(7) The ability to improve onsite electricity reliability as
19compared to onsite electricity reliability before the self-generation
20incentive program technology was placed in service.
Section 62 of Chapter 35 of the Statutes of 2014 is
23amended to read:
It is the intent of the Legislature that the reorganization
25and transfer made by Sections 63 to 127, inclusive, Section 181,
26Section 182, Sections 187 to 191, inclusive, and Section 193 of
27this act be carried out in a manner to preserve state primacy under
28the federal Safe Drinking Water Act and that the terms of this act
29shall be liberally construed to achieve this purpose.
Section 193 of Chapter 35 of the Statutes of 2014 is
32amended to read:
Notwithstanding any other law, the balance of the
34appropriation provided for in Item 4265-111-0001 of Chapter 2
35of the Statutes of 2014, for the purposes specified in Provision 3
36of that item, is hereby appropriated to the State Water Resources
37Control Board, as of June 30, 2014. These funds shall be available
38for encumbrance or expenditure until June 30, 2016, and available
39for liquidation until June 30, 2018, for purposes consistent with
40subdivisions (a) and (c) of Section 75021 of the Public Resources
P13 1Code for grants pursuant to the Public Water System Drought
2Emergency Funding Guidelines adopted by the State Department
3of Public Health on March 28, 2014, for public water systems to
4address drought-related drinking water emergencies. The State
5
Water Resources Control Board shall make every effort to use
6other funds available to address drinking water emergencies,
7including federal funds made available for the drought, prior to
8using the funds specified in this section.
The sum of five hundred twenty-nine thousand dollars
11($529,000) is hereby appropriated from the Cost of Implementation
12Account, established pursuant to Section 16428.95 of the
13Government Code, to the Secretary of the Natural Resources
14Agency for the purpose of implementing elements of the scoping
15plan adopted by the State Air Resources Board pursuant to Section
1638561 of the Health and Safety Code.
This act is a bill providing for appropriations related
19to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section
2012 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified
21as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect
22immediately.
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