My Environmental Law Wish List For A California Legislative Super-Majority

The presidential election next week is making most of the news these days, but while the rest of the country flirts with electing Donald Trump as the next president, California is going its own progressive way.  The Republican Party has been all but completely marginalized in this state, mostly due to its anti-Latino rhetoric and policies from the 1990s that created a huge voter backlash from that growing segment of the population.  In addition, the state’s more progressive metropolitan areas overwhelm voters in the more-conservative inland areas.

The state legislature briefly had a two-thirds supermajority of Democrats in both houses back in 2012.  But scandals erased that margin in 2012 pretty quickly, with a few lost incumbents.  In the end, not much came of it, policy wise.

So why does two-thirds matter?  The number is significant because with two-thirds votes, the legislature can raise taxes and also put constitutional initiatives on the ballot without having to do an expensive signature-gathering effort.  Otherwise, simple majority votes on revenues and constitutional initiatives are not sufficient.

Now Democrats have another chance at the two-thirds prize, if they can topple a few Republican incumbents with the big presidential-year turnout.  What to do if they get it?  Here’s my wish-list:

  1. Place a constitutional initiative before the voters to lower the voter-approval threshold for local transportation funding measures to 55%, from the current 2/3 requirement.  2/3 is a high bar for locals to attain.  It usually results in overly compromised, watered-down measures that aren’t the most efficient use of funds but are necessary to achieve consensus support.  55% is much more reasonable.
  2. Replace the gas tax with a vehicle miles traveled fee.  The gas tax is declining relative to inflation and as vehicles become more fuel efficient.  As a result, California’s automobile infrastructure is crumbling and lacking sufficient funds from drivers.  A mileage fee would accurately track how much wear drivers actually cause on the roads, plus it would help rein in incentives for sprawl, which autonomous vehicles could exacerbate.
  3. Re-authorize AB 32 (Nunez, 2006) and SB 32 (Pavley, 2016), California’s landmark 2020 and 2030 climate change laws.  With a two-thirds supermajority re-approving those otherwise-majority approved measures, the Air Resources Board (the agency responsible for implementing the law) would be free to continue with its cap-and-trade program or even develop a carbon tax to rein in carbon pollution.  Right now, the cap-and-trade auction is facing litigation because the legislature only approved the authorizing legislation by a majority vote.  And a carbon tax is not legally permissible.  Two-thirds votes would free the program of these legal challenges, particularly post-2020, and give the board more leeway on other carbon pricing mechanisms.

We’ll see what happens next Tuesday, and even with a super-majority it will be hard to keep the Democratic caucus unified.  But if it can work, accomplishing these wish-list items would produce some major environmental wins for the state.

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