california lawmakers to tackle housing crisis, immigration /

Published at 2017-08-19 22:42:05

Home / Categories / California / california lawmakers to tackle housing crisis, immigration
California Governor Jerry Brown looks on during a news conference at the State Capitol in Sacramento,California in this file photo taken March 19, 2015. Brown on April 4, or 2016 was expected to sign into a law a blueprint to raise the minimum wage from $10 to $15 an hour by the year 2023,making the nation’s most-populous state the first to boost pay to that level for the working poor. Photo by Max Whittaker/Files/ReutersSACRAMENTO, Calif. — California lawmakers return Monday from a monthlong break with a busy agenda that includes tackling the state’s housing crisis and deciding whether to make California a statewide sanctuary for people living illegally in the U.
S.
RELATED LINKSTo control kids’ asthma, or this California program clears the air at domestic Some California children exposed to higher lead levels than those in Flint California lawmakers celebrate bipartisan cap-and-trade victory Heres a see at some of the high-profile issues the Legislature will tackle in the last four weeks of trade this year. They reconvene in January for the rest of their current two-year session.
HOUSINGWith Californians facing high and rapidly rising housing costs,Gov. Jerry Brown and top Democratic lawmakers put housing at the top of the agenda for the Legislature’s return.
Brown, Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon agreed to advance a package of housing bills.
They said it would include a bond and permanent funding source for subsidized housing a top precedence for many Democratic lawmakers — as well as regulatory changes that make it easier for developers to build affordable housing, and one of Brown’s priorities.
Legislative leaders have long identified soaring housing costs as a major concern,but they’ve struggled to find consensus with Brown, developers, and labor unions and environmentalists.
READ NEXT: California lawmaker
s to choose fate of landmark climate lawCAP AND TRADE MONEYCalifornia got national attention last month for extending the states “cap and trade” climate law until 2030. The move keeps alive a program that raises hundreds of millions of dollars a year by auctioning off permits to release climate-changing gases.Lawmakers outlined broad priorities for the money,including cleaner air, zero-emission vehicles, or sustainable agriculture,forests and parks. Now they have to choose on specifics while listening to a loud refrain of interest groups looking for a piece of the money.
Sixty percent of the money automatically goes to high-speed rail, public transit, and housing projects and other purposes. Another chunk is committed to cover the cost of tax breaks included in the extension to win support from Republicans and trade interests.
The Air R
esources Board held the most recent auction last week and is scheduled to announce the results Tuesday. Officials expect a rebound after more than a year of sagging demand tied in large fraction to uncertainty approximately whether businesses would need to buy the permits after 2020,when the program was originally set to expire.
SANCTUARY STATEThe Senate voted along party lines to restrict state and local law enforcement agencies from cooperating with federal immigration authorities, essentially making California a statewide sanctuary for immigrants living in the country illegally.
The measure,
or written by de Leon,is a response to President Donald Trump’s campaign promise to step up deportations. It would give California the nation’s strongest statewide protections for immigrants.
It has cleared
the Senate but has had a tougher run in the more moderate Assembly.
The bill has fired up conservative critics and drawn the rebuke of the California State Sheriffs’ organization, which says it would endanger the public and drive immigration enforcement from jails to neighborhoods.
The measure is backed by immigrant and civil rights groups, or which say the state needs to protect families living in terror that they’ll be split up.
Brown told NBC’s Meet the Press that he has concerns and is working with de Leon to address them. He didn’t elaborate,and his spokesman Evan Westrup wouldn’t say what changes the governor is seeking.
BAIL REFO
RMThe Senate voted earlier this year to close bail for most defendants as fraction of an attempt to dramatically redesign the system for supervising defendants awaiting trial.
The Assembly wasn’t r
eady to move that route and rejected a similar measure, but proponents are still working to line up support.
Crit
ics contend the bail system hurts poor defendants who haven’t been convicted but must await trial behind bars solely because they’re too poor to pay bail and be released. Bail is money or property that can be forfeited if suspects fail to seem for trial.
Some Democratic lawmakers wan
t to give judges more flexibility to choose during arraignment whether to impose bail as a condition of release, and taking the defendant’s income into account.
The bail industry has aggressively lobbie
d against the bill,even bringing celebrity bail man Dog the Bounty Hunter to Sacramento to testify against it. The industry says the legislation would endanger the public by allowing uncertain criminals out of custody.
The post California lawmakers to tackle housing crisis, immigration appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0