Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Fourteen new laws written by Bill Dodd will begin in 2024

- By Thomas Gase tgase@timesheral­donline.com

Fourteen new laws written by State Senator Bill Dodd, D-Napa, will take effect in 2024 including those to increase accountabi­lity and oversight of sexual harassment cases on California State University campuses.

“These are all commonsens­e measures that will improve life for all California­ns,” Sen. Dodd said in a news release. “They are a response to some of the most pressing issues in our state — whether it is college campus safety or consumer protection. I look forward to positive results as they go into effect in the year ahead.”

The 14 new laws received Assembly and Senate support before they were signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. They bring the total number of laws passed by Sen. Dodd in his nine years in the Legislatur­e to 113 — making him the most prolific lawmaker over that period.

Among the new laws taking effect Jan. 1 are:

Senate Bill 3 Water Shutoff Protection: Extends protection­s from Senator Dodd's 2018 Water Shutoff Protection Act to those served by small water systems.

SB 329 Council Pay

Caps: Increases pay caps for city council members to increase diversity and representa­tion on city councils.

SB 353 Recycling: Adds large juice containers to state recycling program; Improves processing payments and supports expansion of recycling opportunit­ies.

SB 387 Broadband on State Property: Allows state properties to be utilized to help incentiviz­e broadband deployment.

SB 478 Hidden Fees: Starting July 1, outlaws hidden fees set by companies to deceive consumers with incomplete advertised prices.

SB 667 Nurse Midwives: Clarifies scope of practice for Nurse Midwives, ensuring patient access and care for pregnant women.

SB 668 State Parks: Allows nonprofit operating and co-management agreements at state parks to continue

SB 808 CSU Harassment: Increases tracking, transparen­cy and reporting of cases and settlement

SCR 17 Artificial Intelligen­ce: Endorses the blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights, while underscore the power of AI and risks as the first AI-drafted state resolution to pass a legislatur­e.

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