Highlighting a flurry of signings and vetoes in recent days, Gov. Gavin Newsom headed into a final week to act on hundreds of bills by approving new environmental and fentanyl laws, prohibiting hidden-fees, and making California the first state to ban food dyes and to hold social media firms accountable for child sex trafficking. The governor also rejected a host of proposed laws, including one that would have made the state the first to ban caste discrimination, and others that would have decriminalized psychedelic drugs and evasion of transit fares.
In total, he signed 324 bills and vetoed 144 over the weekend, and has scores left to consider by Saturday’s deadline. Among the notable new laws, California will be the first state to ban four food additives already prohibited in many other countries over possible health risks with signature on a bill critics had lampooned as a “Skittles ban” threatening to take away the popular colorful candy. Newsom in a on signing said he was including a bag of Skittles from Europe where the additives already are banned as “demonstrable proof that the food industry is capable of maintaining product lines while complying with different public health laws, country-to-country.
” The National Confectioners Association said the U. S. Food and Drug Administration considers the ingredients at issue safe and the bill would create a confusing and costly patchwork of state laws.
The banned ingredients are Red Dye No. 3, Potassium Bromate, Brominated Vegetable Oil, or Propyl Paraben. Bill author Jesse Gabriel, an Encino Democrat, boasted support from fitness icon and former Republican Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger. The approved bill removed titanium dioxide — added to brighten colors in foods like candies — from the ban, and delayed implementation until 2027 to give manufacturers time to adjust. Newsom vetoed another bill that would have made California the first state to ban discrimination based upon caste, a classification in South Asian cultures.
Newsom said he didn’t think was needed. The bill by state Sen. Aisha Wahab, a Hayward Democrat, .
The bill had split California’s large South Asian community. Supporters saw it as a necessary clarification that caste discrimination is illegal. But critics argued the state’s antidiscrimination laws are sufficient and .
“In California, we believe everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect, no matter who they are, where they come from, who they love, or where they live,” . “Because discrimination based on caste is already prohibited under these existing categories, this bill is unnecessary. ” Wahab had no comment on the veto.
Newsom , including a first-in-the-nation law requiring large California companies to report their greenhouse gas emissions, a transition to electric school buses, banning bee-killing pesticides and considering solar panels along highways. Newsom also signed some bills aimed at dealing with the fentanyl drug abuse problem. by Assemblyman Carlos Villapudua, a Stockton Democrat, increases penalties for possession of significant amounts of synthetic opioid fentanyl.
by state Sen. Anthony Portantino, a Burbank Democrat, will require amusement parks, concert venues and stadiums to maintain two on-site, unexpired doses of Naloxone, commonly known by the brand name Narcan, which can quickly revive someone who is overdosing on opioids like fentanyl. An earlier provision that also would have required K-12 public schools to stock up on Naloxone was removed.
And by Assemblyman James C. Ramos, a Highland Democrat, will require California community colleges and state universities to make fentanyl test strips available to students, which can warn them if black market drugs or other products are laced with the potent drug. Among other notable bills Newsom signed: Among other notable Newsom vetoes:.
From: eastbaytimes
URL: https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2023/10/09/newsom-signs-modified-skittles-ban-law-vetoes-caste-bias-bill-over-busy-weekend/