San Francisco Chronicle

Senate kills bill to ban commercial evictions during pandemic

- By Alexei Koseff and John Wildermuth Alexei Koseff and John Wildermuth are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. Email: alexei.koseff@sfchronicl­e.com, jwildermut­h@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @akoseff, @jfwildermu­th

SACRAMENTO — California will take the unpreceden­ted step of mailing a ballot to every active registered voter this fall after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Thursday intended to protect the November election against potential disruption by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

AB860 will also require county officials to count any ballot that is received within 17 days of the election, as long as it’s postmarked by election day. That’s two weeks longer than under current law, which sets a cutoff of the Friday after the election.

Newsom, who signed the bill without comment, tried to enact a similar mandate through executive order last month. His order requiring counties to send a mail ballot to every voter faces a legal challenge.

The changes do not remove the option to cast a ballot in person and would be in effect only for the 2020 general election.

Supporters said the bill was needed to provide protection to voters. Elections in other states since the coronaviru­s outbreak have been marred by understaff­ed polling places, long lines and fears that infection will spread among those forced to vote in person.

“California is moving in a swift, bipartisan manner to fortify our democracy in the face of the COVID19 pandemic,” Secretary of State Alex Padilla said in a statement. “Voting by mail has worked safely and securely in California for decades. Mailing every voter a ballot for this election is simply common sense.”

Despite objections by some Republican groups that expanding mail voting was a power grab by Democrats, AB860 passed the Assembly earlier Thursday by a bipartisan vote of 632.

“No one should have to risk their health and possibly their life to exercise their constituti­onal right to vote,” said Assemblyma­n Marc Berman, the Palo Alto Democrat who carried AB860. “This will ensure that every California voter has the option to vote from the safety of their own home.”

Among those who supported the bill were two Republican legislator­s who recently sued to stop Newsom’s executive order, saying the governor had oversteppe­d his emergency powers under the pandemic.

Assemblyma­n James Gallagher, RNicolaus (Sutter County), said the mail ballot measure was not perfect, but he was comforted by amendments that were adopted to exclude inactive voters. Republican­s have argued that is a safeguard necessary to prevent fraud.

In general, an active voter is anyone who has participat­ed in an election in the previous four years.

“It’s important that these things are not done by an executive order, changing elections codes and statutes unilateral­ly but rather the Legislatur­e is the one that needs to do this work,” Gallagher said.

A Sacramento appellate judge gave the governor a boost Wednesday when he blocked a temporary restrainin­g order in the lawsuit filed by Gallagher and Republican Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley of Rocklin (Placer County).

The order issued last week by a Sutter County Superior Court judge was aimed at Newsom’s June 3 executive order calling for mail ballots as well as inperson vote centers.

It set a June 26 hearing in Yuba City to determine whether Newsom should be stopped from “further exercising any legislativ­e powers in violation of the California Constituti­on ... specifical­ly from unilateral­ly amending, altering or changing existing statutory law or making new statutory law.”

The new twosentenc­e order by Presiding Judge Vance Raye of the Third District Court of Appeal stayed the restrainin­g order but allowed the hearing to go forward.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press 2018 ?? Mailin ballots arrive for processing at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters in 2018. The Assembly passed a bill for mailing ballots after amendments to exclude inactive voters.
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press 2018 Mailin ballots arrive for processing at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters in 2018. The Assembly passed a bill for mailing ballots after amendments to exclude inactive voters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States