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2008 Legislative Agenda

Reduce Global Warming

Global warming is one of California’s greatest and most urgent environmental problems, with depleted snow pack in the Sierra Nevada impacting our drinking water supplies, rising sea levels threatening our cities along the coast, and increased smog pollution harming our health. 

The threat of global warming is cause for immediate action and the pathway to solving global warming is straightforward: cut the amount of global warming pollution emitted by automobiles, power plants and the other major sources in half.  We support:

1. Make Polluters Pay: Ensure the state auctions 100% of carbon emissions allowances in any cap-and-trade program and invests at least $1 billion-a-year in efficiency and clean energy solutions.

2. Pass a Nationwide Pollution Cap: Build support for a science-based nationwide cap on global warming pollution to reduce emissions 80 percent by 2050.

3. Promote Clean Cars:  Defend California’s vehicle tailpipe emission standards from attacks by automakers and the Bush administration.

Promote Clean Energy

As California grows, the need to continue to pursue energy efficiency and renewable energy aggressively is paramount to protecting our environment and economy. We support:

 

1. Encourage Solar Rebates:  Provide solar system owners’ fair compensation for surplus power sent back to the grid (AB 1920 Assemblymember Jared Huffman).bill language and status

 

2. Promote Green Collar Jobs: Ensure California has enough trained workers to meet the growing demand for solar power (AB 2224 Assemblymember Hector De La Torre). bill langauge and status

3. Increase Use of Renewables: Increase California’s minimum renewable energy goals to at least 33% by 2020 (SB 410 Senator Don Perata and Senator Joe Simitian). Replace California’s aging fossil fuel and nuclear power plants with clean, modern renewable energy.  bill language and status

 

4.  Foster Clean Building Technology: Require all new buildings to be zero-energy by 2030 (AB 1065 Assemblymember Sally Lieber).
bill language and status

Curb Toxics

There are currently over 80,000 chemicals on the market in the United States. We lack even basic information on the potential adverse health effects regarding the vast majority of these chemicals. We do know that at least 1,400 chemicals have known or probable links to cancer, birth defects, reproductive impacts, and other health problems such as learning disabilities. We support:

 

1. Provide the Public Information on Toxics: Require data from large facilities that use chemicals (AB 558 Assemblymember Mike Feuer).

 

2. Phase Out Dangerous Chemicals: Give the state the authority to regulate certain dangerous toxic chemicals (AB 1879 Assemblymember Mike Feuer). Ensure the Governor’s Green Chemistry Initiative phases out the use of dangerous chemicals contaminating wildlife and our bodies. Bill language and status

 

3. Protect Children’s Health:  Minimize the use of dangerous lead in toys (AB 2694 Assemblymember Fiona Ma). Bill status and language

 

4.  Promote Product Labeling: Require manufacturers to disclose the chemicals used in consumer products (SB 509 Senator Joe Simitian).

Protect Our Ocean Environments

California’s coastal and ocean environments are invaluable assets to our state. California has an impressive record of taking bold and innovative actions to protect our coastal natural resources, yet recent studies have shown that our ocean environments need more protection. We support:

 

1. Defend Marine Life:  Establish more Marine Protected Areas.

2. Safeguard our Coasts: Require ships carrying hazardous material to have a tug escort (AB 2441 Assemblymember Sally Lieber). Ban additional offshore oil and gas drilling Bill Language and status

3. Reduce Ocean Pollution: Make all fast-food restaurant packaging biodegradable (AB 904- Assemblymember Mike Feuer).  Remove abandoned fishing gear and driftnets in our oceans (Senator Joe Simitian).

 bill language and status

Encourage Clean Air

Millions of Californians live in places with unsafe levels of air   pollution. Air pollution triggers millions of asthma attacks each year and contributes to serious health problems, particularly among children, senior citizens, and other sensitive groups. We support:

 

1. Reduce Air Pollution: Reduce air pollution from California’s largest sources including vehicles and ports (SB 973 Senator Alan Lowenthal).Bill language and status

Preservation

California is home to some of the country's most beautiful places, with 8 national parks, hundreds of state parks and over 4 million acres of wild forests. Unfortunately, too many of our beautiful places have been lost to logging, mining, oil drilling, and overdevelopment. That’s why we are working to protect California's parks and critical wildlife habitat, and the laws that protect them.

 

1. Protect California’s Wild Areas:  Ensure that only a special exemption by the Department of Parks and Recreation and the legislature can change wilderness areas (SB 404 Senator Christine Kehoe).  Bill language and status

 

2. Preserve State Parks:  Ensure that California state parks are not closed or neglected by budget cuts.  Make sure state parkland is not developed.