Daily News (Los Angeles)

California's environmen­tal grade slips in statewide report

- By Ari Plachta The Sacramento Bee

Despite embracing the role of global climate champion this year, Gov. Gavin Newsom is taking home a weaker environmen­tal report card. That's according to a statewide report released Thursday by one of the state's largest environmen­tal advocacy groups.

Newsom received a Bfrom the California Environmen­tal Voters in its annual scorecard, his lowest marks since he took office 5 years ago. It's a slightly lower grade than California as a whole, which came in at a B — last year both earned an A.

“Last year we took two steps forward, one step back,” said Melissa Romero, deputy legislativ­e director at the organizati­on. “There's some really, really big things that happened that were very positive, and there were bad things too.”

State lawmakers lined up mostly on party lines, the scorecard reported, with some surprising­ly dismal grades for Sacramento-area Democrats who accepted contributi­ons from fossil fuel industry.

The California Environmen­tal Voters scorecard is based on lawmaker votes, authorship of consequent­ial proposals and whether they accept contributi­ons from fossil fuel companies. For the governor, regulatory actions and vetoes of bills are also incorporat­ed.

Overall, Democrats who neglected to take oil industry contributi­ons scored the highest and Republican representa­tives were graded least favorably. Voters can search their address to see how their representa­tive measured up.

Romero of California Environmen­tal Voters said the scorecard is meant to help voters peel behind the curtain of Sacramento policy making on climate, and raise awareness about policy decisions that pull the state further away from meeting its ambitious goals.

“We need to be doing far more, far faster on climate. We can't be at this pace. We need to be taking five, 10, 20 steps forward every year,” Romero said. “This low B score represents room for improvemen­t.”

Under Newsom's leadership, the scorecard noted significan­t California climate wins. The governor signed corporate emissions disclosure laws with global impact, launched a lawsuit against fossil fuel companies for causing the climate crisis and sought to hold oil companies accountabl­e for possible price gauging.

But there were also demerits. The scorecard said

Newsom jammed an infrastruc­ture package through the legislatur­e to weaken environmen­tal protection­s, extended the life of fossil gas plants and expanded the Aliso Canyon gas storage facility, cut $2 billion from the climate budget, vetoed 11 climate bills and streamline­d Sites Reservoir.

“Governor Newsom's environmen­tal record was a complex blend of achievemen­ts and rollbacks,” said the report. “As California faces escalating climate impacts, 2024 demands a bold vision and unwavering commitment to climate justice and action from our state's governor.”

In response, governor's office spokespers­on Alex Stack said in an email that “California is doing more than any other state to fight climate change, and it's not even close — investing more dollars than what most countries spend, transition­ing our entire grid to 100% clean energy, holding Big Oil accountabl­e with the nation's only gas price gouging law, and more.”

Other Democratic state leaders received far more sparkling reviews. Former Senate Pro Tem Toni Atkins, who just announced a future bid for governor, received a 96% score, as did assembly speaker Robert Rivas.

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