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California now has mandatory water conservation in urban areas: How will the new rules affect your supplier?

The authors of the bills that required mandatory conservation rules — former state Sen. Bob Hertzberg and Assemblymember Laura Friedman from Burbank — said in a March opinion piece that the water board’s changes “trample on the hard-won work that’s been done so far by allowing water utilities until 2035 or later to implement meaningful reductions.” 

Assembly-passed bill focuses on improving wildlife connectivity

The California Assembly passed the Room to Roam Act recently, bringing improved statewide wildlife connectivity closer to reality. Authored by Assemblymember Laura Friedman, A.B. 1889 is a first-of-its-kind bill that would require local governments to consider and implement measures to protect wildlife connectivity as part of their general plan. The proposed legislation encourages better planned development with wildlife-friendly fencing, lighting and other ways to promote wildlife movement.

Halftime Report: Environmental Bills Moving Forward The UCLA Emmett Institute is tracking California environmental bills. In a year of tough budget choices, here are the notable bills that cleared Sacramento’s first big legislative deadline.

Legislators reached the first deadline of the 2023-2024 legislative season last week—passage of bills out of their house of origin. As the name implies, this refers to Assembly bills working their way through the Assembly, and Senate bills moving through the Senate, culminating with floor votes which concluded last Friday, May 24th. This period is marked as the crossover, where the bills that passed off the floor of their house of origin, move to the other house for the review process to begin again.

Big Oil’s still got some juice

Politico

Another good test of oil’s viscosity is coming up. Assemblymember Laura Friedman was walking the Assembly floor with a checklist Thursday afternoon as she seeks 41 votes for her AB 3155, which would hold oil companies liable for certain respiratory and prenatal ailments within 3,200 feet of a well unless its owner has shown they’re using the best available technologies to prevent air, soil and water pollution. Oil and labor were heavily lobbying against it. More on that tomorrow.