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Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr.
State Capitol Building Sacramento, CA 95814 |
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
PENSION REFORM BILL SIGNED INTO LAW
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Protecting California's Timber Industrry - Governor Signs AB 1492 Fire Liability Reform
By Thomas L. Sheehy
For the first time in more than a decade a significant piece
of forest legislation has been enacted that enjoys both industry and
environmental community support. This thanks to Governor Brown signing AB
1492 today in Sacramento. The legislation provides critical relief for all
private landowners from excessive liability claims made by the federal
government for wildfires. The legislation is a package deal,
forged through a collaborative process with compromise from all parties –
environmentalists as well as timber industry interest. It is has been controversial
because it makes significant reforms to fire liability provision in current
law, changes to timber harvest plan (THP) regulations and includes a stable
funding source to pay for the regulatory structure. The funding source is a 1%
levy on timber products sold in California estimated to raise up to $30 million
annually (50 cents on the average lumber ticket at a big box retailer in the
state, and less than $150 on a new $300,000 house).
This reform package has been desperately needed. California
is subject to substantial forest fire threat and when public lands are damaged
through negligence occurring on private lands, the damage liability under
current law is eight to ten times the actual commercial value of the property.
No other state in the country has such a fire liability scheme. The result of this is that California timber
operators are facing a terribly difficult time getting liability insurance, and
when they do; it costs more and covers less. Inability to get liability
insurance will simply put many family companies and other operators out of
business. And with them, thousands of good paying jobs with benefits that are
highly coveted in the rural areas of the state. Indeed, the cost of the current
regulatory structure and cost of liability insurance has made California lumber
less competitive. Today, up to seventy percent of lumber consumed in this state
is imported from the Pacific North West, Canada and other areas. California is
exporting thousands of good paying jobs to other areas as our friends and
families in the industry suffer and lose their livelihoods.
Some opponents to this reform package expressed concerns
over limiting fire liability to a more reasonable approach like all the other
states have. Others made a major issue out of the one percent timber fee to pay
for forestry regulation. The fact is,
this new funding source will provide a stable stream of revenue to pay for THP
review, allow the state to eliminate highly regressive regulatory fees now
being paid, and will level the playing field so that all producers of lumber
selling into California have skin in the game. For smaller timber producers in
rural California, it gives them a better opportunity to compete with large out-of-state
producers and to create good jobs in Northern California. Many politicians and
policy makers constantly repeat that they want to help the state’s economy and
create jobs. Well this THP reform legislative package is ground zero in job
creating and economic development. With it, we can expand California’s share of
timber production and consumption in the state and create thousands of new
jobs. Without it, more producers would have been forced out of the business causing
California to import thousands more truckloads of lumber from out of state and
send our coveted jobs across the state’s border.
Friday, September 7, 2012
SB 1118 Mattress Extended Producer Responsiblity - Top 10 Reasons Why It Failed
Top Ten Reasons SB 1118
(Hancock) Was Stopped
Mattress Extended Producer
Responsibility
Lack of mattress recycling fee is
severe financial burden.
Like existing California
recycling programs, mattress recycling must be funded by a uniform fee
collected at retail. It is unfair and completely unworkable to make the
manufacturers pay 100% of the cost to implement an extended producer’s
responsibility (EPR) program in the state. The bill should explicitly require
that the recycling obligations imposed by the law be funded by a fee collected
at retail. California has never enacted an EPR program that did not include a
recycling / disposal fee paid up front by the consumer. This precedent would be
extremely bad policy.
Major new costs imposed on manufacturers.
Mattress manufacturers will face
MAJOR untold costs to set up new recycling centers, pick up and transport
mattresses, store mattress, coordinate with retailers, consumers, waste
companies, police illegal dumping, run a public relations campaign and
otherwise become waste management experts (in areas where they have little or
no expertise) to comply with the bill’s provisions. The cost to implement this
EPR program statewide will be $10’s of millions of dollars.
SB 1118 mandates that mattress
retailers who deliver mattresses to their customers must offer a pickup service
or provide a voucher for mattress recycling. However, it prevents them from
charging for this service thus placing a great burden on the retailers.
On-line versus brick and mortar – unfair competition.
The bill exempts on-line retailers of mattresses from having to participate thus creating an unfair advantage over brick and mortar sellers.
Unlimited fee authority by state Cal Recycle.
The bill grants unlimited fee
authority to CalRecycle to pay for the regulatory scheme. These fees must be
remitted by the manufacturers and the state can set the fees at whatever level
it deems appropriate.
Higher prices to consumers / lost jobs in the economy.
The net effect of the EPR
regulatory scheme in SB 1118 is going to be significantly higher prices for
consumers and lost manufacturing and retail jobs as a result. This is an
anti-business, anti-economic development piece of legislation that will hurt
the state’s economy.
Where’s the problem?;
Retailers already pick up old mattresses.
This bill appears to be a solution in search of a
problem. Mattresses are already collected in a responsible manner. Most retailers offer a collection service
when a new mattress is purchased.
Retailers then dispose of these mattresses through the proper channels
and established mattress recyclers.
Eight new recycling centers
established in California.
The industry has not turned a
blind eye to recycling. In fact, there have been 8 new recycling centers opened
in California in the last decade including a very large and successful one
right in the middle of the author’s district.
Recession hit industry hard in
California.
The mattress industry was hit hard by the
recession. Sales dropped by over 20%,
bankrupting large and small manufacturers and retailers in California and
across the country. As the industry
struggles to recover from this very difficult period, now is not the time to
impose substantial new costs on vulnerable businesses or impede their ability
to sell new products. Higher costs will
jeopardize businesses and jobs. But laws
like SB 1118 will be a step backward for the industry by significantly
increasing costs, reducing demand for new product and killing jobs.
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