Three Bills Sponsored
by California Chamber of Commerce Pending in
Legislature
Three bills
sponsored by the California Chamber of
Commerce proposing to amend Proposition 65
were introduced this session. Each of these
bills are designed to reform Proposition 65.
Depending on your definition of reform,
that could mean improve, or gut the statue.
At this writing each of the bills are
designated as two-year bills.
AB 1447
AB 1447 (Matthews), as
originally
introduced, would have allowed a company
receiving a notice of violation to offer to
settle the matter by providing a warning or
eliminating the exposure, and paying the
enforcer's reasonable investigation costs.
The bill was amended on
April 10, 2003 to remove this
provision, and to allow the Attorney General
to extend the 60-day pre-enforcement period
if he needed more time to review the
allegations made by the private enforcer.
Additional
amendments were proposed on May 1 to
address concerns that the bill might stifle
enforcement. The April 23, 2003
analysis from the Assembly Environmental
Safety and Toxic Materials Committee
provides a good discussion of the merits and
pitfalls of this legislation.
AB 1447 was
passed by the Environmental Safety and Toxic
Materials Committee, but will not be heard
in the Judiciary Committee before the
deadline for fiscal review, and as a result
was put on two-year status.
AB 1447
Bill Status |
Bill History
AB 1176
AB 1176
(Campbell) proposes to modify the
Proposition 65 settlement review process
established in the 2001 SB 471 amendments.
The bill would require the court to make the
additional finding that a proposed
settlement is "fair, reasonable, and in the
public interest." It would require the
Attorney General to make the terms of a
proposed settlement publicly available, and
would allow any person with an interest in
the proceeding the right to intervene for
the limited purpose of appearing and
participating in a motion to approve a
settlement. An approved settlement would bar
any subsequent private enforcement actions,
and would limit a private enforcer to
enforcing the terms of a settlement, rather
than filing a new enforcement action. As
always, these terms would not apply to the
Attorney General.
AB 1176
Bill Status |
Bill History | Text as
Introduced
AB 1380
AB 1380
(Pacheco) combines several proposals from AB
1176 and AB 1447, as well as several
additional reforms, including the following:
-
the bill
would prohibit public and private
enforcers from bringing an enforcement
action under the warning provision
"against a retail seller of consumer
products";
-
the bill
would replace the automatic 1000-fold
safety factor with a floating safety
factor of 10, 100, or 1000, depending on
the nature and quality of the underlying
data.
-
the bill
would exempt government contractors from
liability for exposure to Proposition 65
listed chemicals where the chemicals
were present as a result of government
specifications, and the government
entity was provided a warning about the
exposure.
AB 1380
Bill Status |
Bill History | Text as
Introduced
AB 623
Assembly Bill Proposes
Criminal Penalties for Violation of
Proposition 65
AB 623, introduced by Assembly Member
Lieber on February 19, 2003, would create
criminal penalties for violation of
Proposition 65's discharge prohibition and
warning requirements.
Any person who
"negligently" causes an exposure or
discharge is subject to a fine of
$2,500-$10,000 for each day in which the
violation occurs, or by imprisonment for up
to six months, or both, for a first
conviction. Subsequent convictions carry
fines of up to $25,000 per day, and
imprisonment of up to one year. Any person
who "knowingly" causes an exposure or
discharge is subject to a fine of
$5,000-$25,000 per day, or by imprisonment
of up to two years. Subsequent convictions
carry fines of up to $50,000 per day, and/or
imprisonment up to 3 years. A corporation
that commits a second "knowing" violation
may be fined up to $1 million, and a
mandatory revocation of its authority to act
as a corporate entity in California by the
Secretary of State.
The court sentencing any
defendant shall consider whether the
defendant has expressed remorse for the acts
and whether the defendant has made an
"appropriate public apology that reflects
the nature of the violation and the number
of potential victims." Such an apology,
however, shall not exempt the defendant from
the penalties provided for knowing
violations.
As this is a
genuine enforcement bill, Prop 65 News will
monitor its progress in the legislature
closely.
AB 623
Bill Status |
Bill History | Text as
Introduced
Legislature
Considers Unfair Competition Reforms
A series of
private attorney general actions brought by
law firms against auto repair shops,
restaurants, nail salons, and other
businesses has caused a number of California
legislators to call for reforms of the
unlimited standing provisions of the
California Unfair Competition Law (Business
& Professions Code 17200). Currently
pending are
AB 69 (Correa) and
AB 95, (several co-authors), and an
additional bill that seeks to resurrect a
1998 California Law Revision Commission
recommendation on unfair competition reform,
AB 102 (Pacheco/Harman).
AB 95 and
AB 102 are currently pending in the
Assembly Judiciary Committee.
Only
AB 102 at this time has any substantive
provisions. The bill would create the
following requirements for plaintiffs who
seek to sue in the capacity of a private
attorney general under the UCL:
-
the
plaintiff has suffered distinct and
palpable injury as a result of the acts
or practices complained of
-
the
plaintiff is an adequate representative
of the interests of the general public
-
the
plaintiff's attorney will adequately
represent the interests of the general
public,
-
the
plaintiff has claims typical of the
claims of the general public.
Similar to
Proposition 65, the bill would require a
90-day notice of intent to sue, and would
prohibit a private action if a public
prosecutor or other private party was
enforcing the same alleged violation. It
would also require the court to determine
"as soon as practicable after the bringing
of a representative civil action . . .
whether the action may be maintained." It
imposes strict limitations on discovery, and
requires the plaintiff's attorney to certify
that the discovery is proper. The bill would
also allow the court to consider any
mitigating or corrective actions taken by
the defendant after receiving the notice of
intent to sue.
AB 102 is not intended to impose any
limitations on public prosecutors.
Recently, the
chairs of the two Judiciary Committees
(Assembly Member Corbett and Senator Escutia)
took the questionable step of sending a
letter to California Supreme Court Chief
Justice Ronald George in his capacity as the
chair of the California Judicial Council.
The letter asked what remedies judges had
available to protect defendants in the
pending lawsuits. The letter stated that
"The Legislature intends to correct any
statutory flaws that may be providing an
incentive to use the UCL as an extortion
tool."