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SB 251 - CA Access Bill

ADAguy

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Joined
Sep 11, 2013
Messages
6,307
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California
MH, this is on the governors desk?! It bypassed committee hearings and public comments.

Can you please post it? Its terms and conditions with regards to use of CASp's and time limits should cause a fire storm if Brown signs it.
 
SB-251 Disability access: civil rights:

http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160SB251

ENROLLED SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

PASSED IN SENATE SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

PASSED IN ASSEMBLY SEPTEMBER 10, 2015

AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY SEPTEMBER 04, 2015

AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY AUGUST 20, 2015

AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY AUGUST 18, 2015

AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY JULY 13, 2015

AMENDED IN SENATE JUNE 02, 2015

AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 20, 2015

AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 04, 2015

Not yet signed by Brown
 
Brown rejects business fix for ADA compliance

The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The Latest on California legislation acted upon by Gov. Jerry Brown ahead of a Sunday deadline

One of several bills Gov. Jerry Brown has vetoed was intended to help California businesses avoid costly lawsuits related to the Americans with Disabilities Act.

SB251 would have given businesses time to fix violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act without facing penalties.

It was the latest effort to rein in what some lawmakers say are predatory attorneys who threaten lawsuits against non-complying businesses.

It would have given businesses 15 days to fix signs and 90 days to fix other problems before ADA challenges could begin.

The bill by Democratic Sen. Richard Roth of Riverside also included a tax credit to make improvements.

Brown on Saturday announced vetoing nine bills to offer new tax credits, saying they would collectively make it harder to balance the state budget.

Among the bills Brown vetoed was a measure by Assemblyman David Chiu of San Francisco that would have increased funding for low-income housing tax credits and a measure by Assemblyman Adrin Nazarian of Los Angeles that would have provided credits for seismic retrofitting.
 
ADA: Gov. Brown vetoes Roth bill to aid small businesses meet handicap access

Brown cites SB 251’s tax credits; Sen. Richard Roth says the reasoning in the governor’s statement leaves him ‘confused.’

http://www.pe.com/articles/tax-783233-bill-roth.html

Gov. Jerry Brown has vetoed a bill by State Sen. Richard Roth, a Riverside Democrat, that would have given small business owners tax credits for costs of bringing their businesses up to code with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

The bill, SB 251, provided 10 percent of access-compliance expenditures up to $10,250 annually for defined small businesses.

Brown said in his Oct. 10 veto statement that he could not support providing additional tax credits against a state budget that he called “precariously balanced due to unexpected costs and the provision of new services.”

The bill was one of nine that carried tax credits which the governor vetoed over the weekend.

Roth said in a statement Monday, Oct. 12 that he was “baffled” by the initial voice mail Saturday from Brown’s office that the bill, SB 251, would be vetoed and “confused” by the governor’s statement.

Brown said without the extension of the managed care organization tax that he called for in a special legislative session, next year’s budget faced the prospect of “over $1 billion in cuts.”

Roth was the primary sponsor of the bill, which had bipartisan support and passed the state Senate unanimously in June.

“This governor has signed tax credits into law considerably higher than the one proposed by SB 251,” Roth said Monday. “However... this governor felt a relatively inexpensive tax credit outweighed the need to ensure compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act while protecting small business owners.”

SB 251 was introduced after several small-business owners in Riverside were sued for ADA violations in recent years, often by the same plaintiffs and filed by the same law firms.

They complained that the resolution of the lawsuit was more costly than fixing the violations.

“The disabled community and small business owners agreed the tax credit was a wise and prudent part of this proposal,” Roth said.

Along with tax credits, the bill also set a procedure for small businesses to get 120 days to fix, without facing statutory penalties, any ADA violations cited by a hired Certified Access Specialist (CASp), and 15 days from written notice or lawsuit to fix ADA violations limited to signage, parking lot paint stripes or detectable warning surfaces.

Neither grace period excluded actual damages and injunctive relief, and the law did not eliminate lawsuits as a cure for ADA violations.

“Our region has always had to fight for its fair share from Sacramento,” Roth said, adding, “My job is to fight for Inland Southern California and represent all my constituents.”
 
Again, a failed attempt. They don't get it, maybe Brown does but Roth didn't.

Only by communication on a regular basis with business owners can this be resolved.
 
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