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[9] [10] However, the American Bail Coalition, an industry association of bail bondsmen, funded a signature gathering effort for Proposition 25, a referendum on the November 2020 ballot to determine whether Senate Bill 10 should be approved by the electorate. [11] [12] Proposition 25 failed and Senate Bill 10 was rejected.
Wiener authored Senate Bill 10 and Senate Bill 478, and he co-authored Senate Bill 9 as well. [118] [119] [120] SB 9 upzones most of California to allow for up to 4 housing units per lot, and SB 10 makes it easier for local governments to rezone for higher densities near transit rich areas. [121]
SB 10 had been signed into law in August 2018, and had been scheduled to take effect on October 1, 2019. [5] A "yes" vote on Proposition 25 was to uphold the contested legislation to replace cash bail with risk assessments, and a "no" vote was to repeal the contested legislation, and continue the system of cash bail. [3]
Bonta and State Senator Robert Hertzberg co-authored Senate Bill 10, which when passed, made California the first state in the nation to eliminate money bail for suspects awaiting trial and replace it with a risk-assessment system. [25] On August 28, 2018, Governor Jerry Brown signed the bill into law. [26]
In September 2021, Governor Gavin Newsom signed a package of 31 housing bills, including the California HOME Act (SB 9) and SB 10. [152] The California HOME Act (SB 9) upzones most of California to allow building denser housing, up to a fourplex, on a lot. SB 10 streamlines the process for local governments to build dense housing around transit ...
SCA 10 moved through the legislative process at an unusually fast pace. [46] On June 14, SCA 10 passed in a 9–1 vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee, with the lone opposition vote coming from a Republican. [47] The proposed amendment also passed the Senate Elections and Amendments Committee in a 3–1 vote on the same day. [48]
Specifically, the bill would apply to models which cost more than $100 million to train and were trained using a quantity of computing power greater than 10 26 integer or floating-point operations. [2] SB 1047 would apply to all AI companies doing business in California—the location of the company does not matter. [3]
California Senate Bill 1534 (SB 1534, Government Code section 65852.2) is a 1982 California statute law which established statewide options for local governments to promote and regulate secondary suites, also known as "accessory dwelling units" (ADUs) in California. Under the law, local governments were allowed the following options: