Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Business wants voters to overturn legislativ­e decrees

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Over the last decade, as Democrats solidified their dominance of the state Capitol, they have repeatedly attempted to change how private businesses operate in California.

Those efforts have taken many specific forms, including mandates on employee benefits, making it easier for unions to organize workers, and regulating — or even prohibitin­g — products and services offered to customers.

All such efforts were aimed, their legislativ­e and interest group sponsors said, at expanding equity and accountabi­lity for the benefit of workers and consumers.

Whatever their motives, as those efforts proliferat­e, the affected businesses have done what they could to block or at least modify what was happening. Neverthele­ss, those seeking more government­al regulation of business practices have scored some major victories and in response, affected businesses have increasing­ly used referenda to erase new laws or initiative­s to repeal or modify them.

Those countermea­sures have a mixed record of success, to wit:

— In 2014, the Legislatur­e passed and then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislatio­n to ban single-use plastic bags for groceries or other consumer goods. An industry referendum to block the new law failed in 2016.

— In 2018, the Legislatur­e eliminated cash bail for criminal defendants. Two years later, the bail bond industry persuaded voters to reject the law.

— In 2019, legislator­s passed a sweeping law that reduced the ability of businesses to use freelance workers under contract. Rideshare and delivery companies such as Uber and Lyft placed a measure on the 2020 ballot to exempt themselves from the new law. Voters passed it, but it’s since been challenged in court.

— In 2020 the Legislatur­e prohibited the sale of flavored tobacco products, saying they encourage young people to smoke. However, the tobacco industry’s referendum to block the ban was rejected by voters this year.

Corporate use of the ballot to thwart the Capitol’s Democrats is likely to continue.

The fast food industry has submitted signatures for a referendum to overturn the creation of a new agency, dominated by unions and union-friendly appointees, that would set wages and working conditions for fast food employees. If it qualifies, the law would be suspended until voters decide the issue in 2024.

The oil industry is gathering signatures for a referendum to overturn a newly enacted law that would ban new oil wells within 3,200 feet of schools and other public facilities. If it qualifies, it also would go on the 2024 ballot.

Another oil industry referendum is likely if the Legislatur­e passes Newsom’s proposal to impose limits on its profits from gasoline sales and impose financial penalties for exceeding them.

Newsom’s original proposal was an excess profits tax, which would not have been subject to referendum because the state constituti­on declares that tax measures cannot be challenged via referendum.

However, non-tax laws, unless passed with two-thirds margins as “urgency measures,” are subject to referendum. If Newsom’s limit/penalty law is enacted next year as a non-urgency measure, the industry would have a 90day window in which to qualify a referendum. The law would be suspended until voters had the final word.

The proliferat­ion of business-sponsored ballot measures to overturn what legislator­s and the governor decree has angered groups, such as unions and environmen­tal and consumer rights organizati­ons, that support more oversight of business practices. They are pressing the Legislatur­e to make the qualificat­ion of ballot measures more difficult.

However, Newsom and his predecesso­r, Jerry Brown, have opposed such changes for the simple reason that governors sometimes turn to the ballot themselves to enact laws that the Legislatur­e is unwilling to pass.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man carries plastic single-use bags past the State Capitol in Sacramento. In July 2015, California became the first state to ban single-use plastic bags under a new law passed by the Legislatur­e and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man carries plastic single-use bags past the State Capitol in Sacramento. In July 2015, California became the first state to ban single-use plastic bags under a new law passed by the Legislatur­e and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown.

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