Which 2024 California bills will Gavin Newsom sign into law?

Gov. Gavin Newsom, legislators and key stakeholders during a press conference at a Home Depot in San Jose, where Newsom signed retail crime legislation into law on Aug. 16, 2024. [Photo by Florence Middleton, CalMatters]
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For California laws, the buck does really stop at Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk.
While the Legislature approves hundreds of bills each session — and will add to that list before adjourning Saturday — Newsom decides whether they become law.
As of Aug. 15, Newsom had signed 164 bills and vetoed four. He has until Sept. 30 to decide on bills passed in the final days; he sometimes waits until right before the deadline to weigh in on contentious ones.
Newsom gives a few typical reasons for vetoing bills: He deems them redundant, or calculates that their potential cost threatens to worsen the state’s budget situation. But he also blocks bills because they’re controversial, or opposed by powerful special interests.
Last year, Newsom vetoed 156 bills and signed 890, or about 15%, a similar ratio as in 2022, when he blocked some very significant ones. In 2021, he vetoed less than 8%. While the Legislature can override vetoes, it takes a two-thirds vote in both the Assembly and Senate and that rarely happens. Governors can also allow bills to become law without their signature, but that doesn’t occur very often, either.
Here are some noteworthy bills being tracked by CalMatters reporters. Bookmark this page for updates.
Allow civilian officers to testify

By Ryan Sabalow
WHAT THE BILL WOULD DO
Senate Bill 804 would allow community service officers — uniformed police department civilian employees who don’t have arrest powers — to testify at preliminary hearings where authorities present evidence to a judge who decides whether to move ahead with a full felony trial. Witnesses or victims are still required to testify in a trial. As it stands, only sworn officers are allowed to testify at “prelims,” despite community service officers often taking witness statements at crime scenes and during investigations.
WHO SUPPORTS IT
The Redding Police Department brought the issue to the attention of the region’s senator, Republican Brian Dahle, arguing that as police budgets shrink, community services officers should be allowed to testify to free up sworn officers for other duties. The California State Sheriffs Association, the California Police Chiefs Association, San Francisco Mayor London Breed and the state’s police union support the legislation. Proponents say that it would keep officers from having to re-interview witnesses. Plus, they argue that having fewer armed officers interacting with witnesses helps address concerns about over-policing in communities of color.
WHO IS OPPOSED
ACLU California Action, criminal defense attorneys, including the California Public Defenders Association, and social justice groups opposed the legislation. They argue that the changes could lead to shoddy testimony being admitted into legal proceedings where a suspect’s freedom is on the line. They argue that preliminary hearings are already tilted in the favor of police and prosecutors. “The bottom line is that preliminary hearings are so problematic right now,” Ignacio Hernández of California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, told the Assembly Public Safety Committee this summer.
WHY IT MATTERS
Since 1990, the state’s population has grown by nearly 10 million people, yet the numbers of California’s sworn patrol officers have dropped to below where they were in 1991, according to a recent report from the Public Policy Institute of California. Sworn officer staffing shortages are particularly prevalent in rural areas such as those in Dahle’s sprawling Senate district in northeastern California.
At the same time, in the wake of high-profile cases of unjustified police violence, social justice advocates have been urging California lawmakers and local governments to scale back the numbers of armed police patrolling communities of color. Some communities are deploying unarmed social or mental-health workers trained to defuse confrontations in situations where armed officers used to be the sole respondents.
GOVERNOR’S CALL
Expedite gender-affirming care licenses

WHAT THE BILL WOULD DO
AB 2442, authored by Los Angeles Democrat Rick Chavez Zbur, would speed up the licensure process for gender-affirming healthcare providers. The bill does not change the requirements to get a license; rather it prioritizes applicants who intend to practice gender-affirming healthcare or gender-affirming mental health care. As part of a package of new laws on abortion access, the legislature passed a similar law in 2022 to expedite licenses for abortion service providers after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade. AB 2442 has a sunset clause, so the legislature would reevaluate the need for the bill in four years.
WHO SUPPORTS IT
Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California and Equality California are sponsors of the bill, which also has support from organizations that support LGBTQ+ rights, reproductive justice and healthcare access.
WHO IS OPPOSED
The California Family Council, Our Duty Democrat, Protect Kids Initiative and Protection of the Educational Rights of Kids Advocacy are recorded opponents of AB 2442. The latter group says that other providers should also get expedited licensing, and that the bill could hurt other areas of medicine. Instead, they want to add more staff to the Department of Consumer Affairs so that all medical providers can get licensed more efficiently. The other organizations have concerns about the safety of children undergoing gender reassignment surgery or hormone therapy before their brains fully develop, saying it could harm mental health and lead to infertility.
WHY IT MATTERS
Twenty-six states have passed laws that ban gender-affirming care. In a 2022 survey by the National Center for Transgender Equality, 47% of transgender respondents said they had considered moving to another state because of these laws. In California, patients seeking gender-affirming care at Stanford Medical Center often have to wait six to eight months to get an appointment. Supporters say AB 2442 would allow California to keep up with the demand from out-of-state patients while continuing to support in-state patients. In 2022, California passed a law protecting those receiving or providing such treatment from prosecution by other states.
GOVERNOR’S CALL
Stop multiple campaigns by candidates

By Sameea Kamal
WHAT THE BILL WOULD DO
AB 1784 by Democratic Assemblymembers Gail Pellerin and Wendy Carrillo clarifies state law to prevent candidates from filing papers for more than one office in a primary election. It also allows people to withdraw their candidacy until the filing deadline, which they currently can’t do. The bill does not apply to candidates for statewide office, and clarifies that withdrawal is final.
WHO SUPPORTS IT
The bill is supported by Secretary of State Shirley Weber, the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials and California’s League of Women Voters, which said that having someone on the ballot twice can confuse voters and undermine confidence in elections. It could also lead to costly special elections if a candidate wins both contests, the group said.
WHO IS OPPOSED
There is no registered opposition on file
WHY IT MATTERS
This bill seeks to address the very specific debacle that resulted from Assemblymember Vince Fong putting his hat in the ring after Rep. Kevin McCarthy stepped down from Congress. Fong was already on the primary ballot to run for re-election in his Assembly district, so the Secretary of State tried to stop him from running for a second office. Fong sued, and won. Authors of the bill want to clarify for future elections that dual candidacies are prohibited.
GOVERNOR’S CALL
Declare three more state symbols

WHAT THE BILLS WOULD DO
AB 2504 would designate the shell of the black abalone — an endangered marine snail — as California’s official state seashell. AB 1797 would name the Dungeness crab the state crustacean. And AB 1850 would recognize the banana slug as the state slug. These would be the latest additions to the state’s 44 official symbols.
WHO SUPPORTS THEM
The shell bill was authored by Assemblymember Diane Dixon, a Republican from Newport Beach who notes that the black abalone has an important history to Native American tribes in Southern California, who have used the shell for trading and ceremony regalia and eaten the snail for thousands of years. The crab measure was authored by Assemblymember Jim Wood, a Ukiah Democrat. And the slug bill came from Assemblymember Gail Pellerin, a Santa Cruz Democrat. All three bills won overwhelming support in the Legislature.
WHO IS OPPOSED
There is no recorded opposition from advocacy groups to any of the three bills. Assemblymember Tom Lackey, a Republican from Palmdale, was the lone vote against the slug bill, but “in good fun.”
WHY IT MATTERS
The National Marine Fisheries Service designated the black abalone as an endangered species in 2009, as it faces environmental threats such as overfishing, disease and natural disasters. Lawmakers hope the designation will help Californians be more aware of those dangers. The Dungeness crab was chosen because of its positive impact on the commercial fishing industry and coastal economies. Pellerin chose the banana slug not only because it’s the mascot of University of California, Santa Cruz, but it also symbolizes California’s biological diversity.
GOVERNOR’S CALLS
Join the discussion! For rules visit: https://kymkemp.com/commenting-rules
Comments system how-to: https://wpdiscuz.com/community/postid/10599/
Symbolic slugs, shells and crabs – good to know the Cali legislators have their priorities in order!
Or maybe these were the only things the Dems and Reps could agree on?
Republicans have no power in California politics and haven’t for many decades.
Why no mention of this…???
Too controversial…???
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/california-close-approving-150k-loans-illegal-immigrants-help-purchase-homes
“California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has been one of President Biden’s and now Harris’ top surrogates on the campaign trail, has not said whether he will sign the bill into law if it clears the legislature before the Aug. 31 deadline.”
You better Believe it’s controversial. That’s why it’s a secret. The progs don’t like you to know the plans of wealth redistribution. The Biden economy.
It’s hard on everyone, but some people get handouts to compensate for the hardships of the economy..
From this linked article:
Democratic Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula, who authored the bill, has argued that it still requires applicants to meet federal requirements, including needing a taxpayer identification or Social Security number to apply for a loan.
Herein lies the problem. WHY are illegals receiving SSN or TaxIDs at all? Why is this happening? Are we so self-loathing as a nation that we refuse to keep people out who have not reason to be here. I’m ALL FOR legal immigration and once those totally acceptable hurdles are met, then the immigrant gets an ID and SSN like the rest of us citizen schlubs posses.
Honestly, it says so much about our failure as a country that we even have to have these conversations. If one wants to move to Cambodia, or Poland, or Ecuador, etc., they must overcome hurdles on the path to citizenship. There is no reason why entry to the USA should be a free for all. NONE.
Oh, but the refugees! I can practically guarantee you the percentage of those pouring in right now that have true refugee status is at 5% – and even still … tough. Look at all the people being persecuted and murdr3d in South Africa, none of them are getting refugee status in Europe – and that’s where their ancestors were actually from.
The USS Virtue is a sinking ship …
Is this available to veterans also?
No this is only available for illegal aliens.
This is not available for actual American citizens.
It’s not even available for the people who legally immigrated into America and used all of the proper steps to gain American citizenship.
How this is not treasonous is beyond me.
This is BULL!!!!
Would have been so much better an candidate then whom we have now. I held out hope that he would have accepted the nomination. Oh well in 4 years he will be at the top of are ticket.
Better?
Mathematically speaking, 10 x 0 is still 0
Newsom is an elitist opportunist focused like a laser on his personal financial and political interests.
Has anyone else noticed how he looks just like a vampire when he’s speaking?
All that’s missing is his cape.
He is a vampire sucking our wallets and purses dry!
He looks like hunter Biden to me
In your dreams.
I’m reading here and elsewhere about birthing centers closing down for various reasons and others not able to get the proper licenses to open because of the myriad of bureaucratic hurdles. But California government prioritizes and streamlines licenses for abortion services and gender affirming (?) care. Does that really represent the interests of the majority of Californians or are those the powerful special interests mentioned that often determine a bills fate?
Well, at least.
They’re slaughtering their own future voters
The government will just replace them with Venezuelans
They don’t even know that northern California exists they think it stops at Sacramento
Stupid, stupid legislators. Way too much diddling with pet projects. At best they waste everyone’s time if they get vetoed. Worse if they don’t. The only regulation that California needs is one keeping legislators from introducing more regulation,
California has the most regulations by far of any State in the US. Three to five times as much as the nearest other State. But compliance enforcement is irregular, arbitrary and biased. Which leads to perceiving the State as incompetent, unfair and creates even more non-compliance.
“Not all regulations are created equal, but if you have way too many, obviously you present compliance issues and compliance problems,” says Kofi Ampaabeng, author of the report and research fellow and data scientist at the Mercatus Center.”
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/articles/2020-11-03/which-state-has-the-most-regulations
Oh, and beware of Biden’s Administration flooding government with the “I’m-not-getting-reelected-so-don’t-care-if-the-pubic-doesn’t-like-it” flood of regulation creation. It’s typical loose cannon behavior but it going to be a lot worse than normal this year.
https://regulatorystudies.columbian.gwu.edu/reg-stats
Looks to have a criminal element about him. Kym should have put his picture on the jail booking page.
I think the State Slug has an office in Sacramento!
Maybe he will sign AB1840? It allows some sort of facilitation of $150,000 to first time home buyers. Apparently your immigration status cannot be considered! Hooray for Progressive California! Does this mean our taxes will go up? A bigger deficit? Or both? You make the call!
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