MARCH 24, 2006
California Farm Bureau Friday Review
Beware if you have dust (aka PM 10) on your farm or
ranch . Senator Dean Florez (D-Shafter) has
introduced
SB 1252 that will add an additional layer of civil
penalty up to $25,000 per violation to be
administered by the
state or any of the 35 California air districts for
any discharge of particulate matter in violation of
state or
federal ambient air quality standards.
Existing law already provides sufficient penalty
provisions for violating state air quality statute
and
regulations. In addition to being excessively
punitive by allowing a regulator to impose two fines
for the same
violation, SB 1252 increases the violation threshold
to $50,000 in 2010. Current penalty provisions are
based
on level of intent and occurrence of any injury
resulting from the emission discharge. SB 1252 is
based on
violation of an ambient air quality standard. It is
not clear how this could be monitored since
monitoring
devices for measuring these standards are not
normally placed on private businesses and entities
but in public
areas to measure ambient air quality. SB 1252 is
redundant and punitive. CFBF will oppose this
measure
when it is heard in the Senate Environmental Quality
Committee on April 3.
Another punitive air penalty bill, the Children's
Breathing Rights Act, would increase the civil
penalties for
violations of any air pollution law, regulation,
emission limitation, permit condition, or filing
requirements
from nonvehicular sources from $1,000 to $10,000. Be
careful filling out your permit paperwork because SB
1205 (Martha Escutia, D-Whitter) could soon cost you
a hefty fine. It would eliminate affirmative
defenses
and civil liability provisions relating to
violations of air quality laws so it would not make
any difference if
your mistake was intentional or not. Starting June
1, 2007, an additional civil penalty of up to
$100,000 per
day would be assessed for each violation committed
by a serious and chronic violator of nonvehicular
air
pollution laws. CFBF will be working with a large
business coalition to oppose SB 1205 when it is
heard on
April 4th in Senate Judiciary Committee.
Passing Smog Check does not necessarily mean your
car does not smoke. AB 1870 (Sally Lieber,
D-Mountain
View) would add a visible smoke test to the current
vehicle inspection and maintenance (smog check)
program
by January 1, 2008. Under current California law,
the Department of Consumer Affairs does not require
a
check for visible smoke as part of their routine
smog check, which tests for exhaust emissions
(gaseous
emissions of hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and
oxides of nitrogen) and not the particulate matter
(PM)
found in visible tailpipe smoke. Ironically, after
the vehicle has already sailed through the smog
test, it is up
to citizens to report the offensive vehicle on a
hotline, or the vehicle might be pulled over by the
California
Highway Patrol.
A smoking vehicle emits on average 90% more
particulate emissions than a properly operating
vehicle.
Recent research indicates that this smoke can be one
of the most toxic of vehicular emissions. This bill
basically implements a recommendation identified in
a joint report by the Bureau of Automotive Repair
and
California Air Resources Board (September 2005), as
well as the report prepared by the state’s
Inspection and
Maintenance Review Committee (IMRC). The report
states that the smoke inspection procedure should
not
require additional equipment purchases by smog check
stations and may "add a minute or two to the current
smog check inspection." It was approved by the
Assembly Transportation Committee on 3/20/06 on a
bipartisan vote of 10-2. CFBF supports.
AB 3011 (John Benoit, R-Palm Desert) is a
multi-faceted bill that addresses new requirements
for foreign
motor carriers entering the United States and the
federal load securement rules recently enacted by
Congress.
This bill would make it an infraction for a foreign
motor carrier to operate within California without
registration, proof of financial responsibility and
the required operating authority. Violation could be
punishable by a $1,000 fine, suspension of
registration for all vehicles registered to that
name, impoundment
of the vehicle and cargo and denial of entry into
the U. S. until all requirements have been met.
AB 3011 would also mandate that the California
Highway Patrol (CHP) adopt the new federal rules for
safe
operation of vehicles and cargo securement for
commercial vehicles, including commercial hay
haulers. This
measure will exempt farmers, transporting their own
hay or straw, when using a highway in the course of
their
farming operation, from the new rules. CHP will
continue to enforce the load securement requirements
currently in state law for this exempted group. CFBF
is in support.
SB 1224 (Wes Chesbro, D-Arcata) passed out of the
Senate Transportation and Housing committee on a
12-0
vote. This measure would extend indefinitely the
exemption in current state law, that allows licensed
carriers
of livestock utilizing semi-trailer combinations,
which do not exceed 70 feet in total length and
kingpin to rear
axle settings of 40 feet, access to Humboldt and Del
Norte counties via Highway 101. CFBF is in support.
SB 1237 (Abel Maldonado, R-Santa Maria) was pulled
from the Senate Transportation and Housing
committee agenda and will be heard in committee
sometime in May. This measure would continue
indefinitely
the exemption currently in law that allows
agricultural product haulers to use motor truck
two-pull trailer
combinations up to 75 feet in length. This exemption
is very important to vegetable growers because it
allows
the continued operation of the widely used motor
truck-pull trailer combinations, and have been found
to be
the easiest to handle and connect in the field,
providing greater safety to farm workers. CFBF is in
support.
AB 2479 (David Cogdill, R-Modesto) would reauthorize
the Weed Management Area (WMA) program and
appropriate new funding. The WMA program,
administered by the California Department of Food
and
Agriculture, is a prime example of how state funds
can be leveraged for extensive local efforts to
control and
eradicate noxious weeds. Funding for this very
successful program ended in 2004. Every dollar
provided by
the state at the onset of the program in 2000 was
matched 3-1 over through federal matching funds,
grants,
private donations, and volunteer work. Farm Bureau
is working closely the sponsors in support of AB
2479
The Senate’s Budget and Fiscal Review Subcommittee
on State Administration gave its unanimous support
to
the Williamson Act Subvention program on Thursday,
March 23rd. Chairman Mike Machado (D-Linden),
Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego) and Tom McClintock
(R-Thousand Oaks) all supported the Governor
Schwarzenegger’s recommended General Fund
appropriation of $39,606,000. The Assembly’s
counterpart
budget subcommittee, where there should also be
strong bipartisan support, will take up the item on
March
29th. The members of the Assembly Budget
Subcommittee #4 include: Chairman Rudy Bermúdez (D-
Norwalk), Juan Arambula (D-Fresno), Chuck DeVore
(R-Irvine), Nicole Parra (D-Hanford) and Mike
Villines
(R-Fresno).
Farm Bureau and a broad coalition of other
agricultural organizations have gone on record in
opposition to AB
2443 (Johan Klehs, D-San Leandro) that would repeal
the 65-year-old sales tax exemption on agricultural
fertilizers. This measure would reverse the state’s
long held tax policy of not imposing the sales tax
on basic
necessities of life, such as food, (or feed, seed,
or fertilizer used to produce food for human
consumption). The
repeal would also reverse policy on taxing the
components of other taxable products to be sold by
the
purchaser. Thus, AB 2443 would make the sales tax
more regressive and impose the sales tax twice on
the
same items.
The author intends to use the estimated $60M new
taxes from farmers and ranchers to create two new
programs: one in the Department of Health Services
to fund research on nitrate issues & water quality,
and the
other at Cal-EPA to implement a Fertilizer Research
& Education Program (FREP). The latter would be
duplicative of a program by the exact same name in
the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA)
that is funded through a mill assessment paid by
fertilizer manufacturers and distributors. CDFA has
administered an effective FREP for over 16 years
with nearly $7M funding over 100 research projects,
a third of which have dealt specifically with
irrigation and nitrate issues. The current program
has also provided an educational outreach program
through the creation and implementation of best
management practices on plant production techniques
throughout California on scores of food and
ornamental crops. AB 2443 appears to be a classic
example of a solution in search of problem.
The State Groundwater Regulation Bill returns.
During last year's legislative session, Senator
Sheila Kuehl (D
- Santa Monica) was able to pass a bill which would
have required individual farmers and ranchers to
report
their groundwater pumping to California's water
rights regulators. Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed
the
measure, SB 820, for several reasons. One of the
main reasons for the veto was that the information
generated
by such reports would do little to provide useful
information for groundwater management, and hence
would
impose significant costs on family farms and ranches
without no commensurate benefit to them or the
public.
This year, Senator Kuehl has introduced another
measure, SB 1640, which takes a different approach.
The bill
calls for local monitoring of groundwater basins to
develop a record over time that would show whether
groundwater basins are in recharge, stable, or
overdraft conditions. If local water districts or
voluntary
organizations did not carry out these monitoring
functions, then the State's Department of Water
Resources
would do the monitoring, and would charge a fee to
each well owner in the basin to cover the costs.
The change in focus from individual well production
reporting to basin monitoring is a welcome
improvement
in the Senator's objectives. Improved locally
developed information about groundwater conditions
in basins
that are heavily pumped, particularly those in
overdraft conditions, could significantly improve
local
groundwater management and improve water supply
reliability for family farms and ranchers. Well
developed
baseline and historical information on local
groundwater conditions could also be helpful in
defending the
overlying groundwater rights of farmers and ranchers
against increased pumping by non-overlying users
such
as cities and developers.
But there are several issues that must be resolved
before Farm Bureau could support such legislation.
The first
and most important deals with which basins would
have to be monitored. The Senator's view is that
every
groundwater basin in the state should be monitored
because the State of California owns the groundwater
itself
and has regulatory authority over it under the
public trust doctrine. This is a false view of
groundwater. The
right to pump groundwater for use on overlying
parcels is an intrinsic right that part of owning
the land itself.
The Public Trust doctrine has been applied to many
of the state's water resources, but always to
surface water
that is either navigable or tributary to navigable
water. There is no basis for the state to require
monitoring of
groundwater conditions simply because the state does
not own the groundwater in the first place.
Next, the DWR cannot be granted new fee authority to
fund groundwater monitoring in basins where local
conditions do not justify the expense at a local
level. Farm Bureau's experience with the DWR's
watermaster
program shows that this will simply create upward
spiraling costs with no local control or oversight.
We look forward to working with the Senator to try
to resolve these and other issues, but remain
vigilant to
protect the groundwater rights of California's
family farmers and ranchers from unwarranted state
regulation.
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