Antelope Valley Press

California lawmakers planning to remove ‘he’ from state laws

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — When California Gov. Gavin Newsom was searching for a new attorney general earlier this year, state Assemblywo­man Rebecca Bauer-Kahan looked up the job requiremen­ts and made a surprising discovery: In many instances, the law assumed the attorney general is a man.

Sprinkled throughout the state code were references to “he” and “him” and “his” when referring to the attorney general and other statewide elected officials, even though Vice President Kamala Harris had been the state’s first female attorney general and Eleni Kounalakis is the first woman to be elected lieutenant governor.

That will likely change after the state Legislatur­e passed Bauer-Kahan’s bill Thursday to update laws governing statewide elected officials with gender-neutral terms. The bill now heads to Newsom for his review.

“We have women serving in our highest offices, and the (sections) of the code referring to them only in the male pronoun was pretty shocking to me,” said Bauer-Kahan, a Democrat from Orinda. “It doesn’t represent where California is and where California is going.”

The bill is part of a long process of updating state laws and documents with gender neutral terms. Across the country, many states have required all new legislatio­n to be written this way. Minnesota did a complete statutory revision in 1986 to remove gender specific language, according to Mick Bullock, public affairs director for the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

In recent years, California has passed laws allowing a third gender option on state driver’s licenses, identifica­tion cards and birth certificat­es. Also Thursday, the Legislatur­e approved a bill to allow people’s gender to be recorded as nonbinary on death certificat­es, a major source of data for public health research.

A California law passed two years ago requires school districts to reissue high school diplomas to update a person’s name and gender if it is different since graduation. This year, lawmakers are considerin­g a bill by Assemblyma­n David Chiu that would do the same thing for college diplomas.

But updating California’s laws will take more time. Usually whenever the Legislatur­e passes a bill to change a law, it includes updated gender-neutral terms. But the state has tens of thousands of laws, so many that bound books — each with about 1,000 pages — fill an entire wall at the California State Library.

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