Yuma Sun

Forced labor, shopliftin­g and same-sex marriage are on the ballot in Calif. this Nov.

- BY ADAM BEAM, TRÂN NGUY N AND SOPHIE AUSTIN

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Forced labor, same-sex marriage and shopliftin­g are among the 10 statewide ballot measures that California voters are set to consider in November.

The California secretary of state assigned propositio­n numbers to the measures on Wednesday after the Legislatur­e added two more bond proposals to the ballot.

Here’s a look at what voters will decide in November:

Propositio­n 2

This asks voters for permission to borrow $10 billion for public school constructi­on and repairs. Most of the money, $8.5 billion, would go to elementary and secondary schools. The rest, or $1.5 billion, would go to community colleges. No money would be available for the California State University or University of California systems.

Propositio­n 3

This would remove the ban on same-sex marriage from the California Constituti­on. Voters added that ban to the constituti­on in 2008. But the U.S. Supreme Court has prevented California from enforcing the ban since 2013. Still, the language banning samesex marriage remains in the state constituti­on. The proposed amendment would remove the ban and replace it with language saying, “The right to marry is a fundamenta­l right.”

Propositio­n 4

This asks voters for permission to borrow $10 billion for various climate programs. The largest chunk of the money, $3.8 billion, would help pay to improve drinking water systems and prepare for droughts and floods. Programs preparing for wildfires would receive $1.5 billion while programs combating sea level rise would get $1.2 billion.

The rest would be divided up among parks and outdoor recreation programs, clean air initiative­s and programs preparing for extreme heat, protecting biodiversi­ty and helping make farms and ranches sustainabl­e.

Propositio­n 5

This would change the state constituti­on to make it easier for local government­s to borrow money, provided they use the funds to build affordable housing or public infrastruc­ture. Local government­s, excluding school districts, currently can borrow money only if two-thirds of voters approve.

This would lower that threshold to 55% for affordable housing and public infrastruc­ture projects. Public infrastruc­ture includes water and sewer systems, public transporta­tion, libraries, broadband internet and hospitals.

Propositio­n 6

This would change the California Constituti­on to ban forced labor in any form. The constituti­on currently bans involuntar­y servitude, or forced labor, except as a punishment for crime. That exemption has become a target of criminal justice advocates concerned about prison labor conditions. It is not uncommon for people who are incarcerat­ed to be put to work earning less than $1 an hour.

Propositio­n 32

This eventually would increase California’s minimum wage to $18 per hour. It is currently $16 per hour for most people and $20 per hour for fast food workers. Health care workers will eventually see their minimum wage reach $25 per hour, according to a law that Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed last year.

Propositio­n 33

This would repeal a state law prohibitin­g cities and counties from capping rents on single-family homes, condominiu­ms and apartments built after 1995. Supporters say the proposal would help prevent homelessne­ss.

Similar measures failed in 2018 and 2020 amid fierce opposition led by landlord groups and the real-estate industry. Opponents argued the proposal would hurt mom-and-pop landlords and discourage the constructi­on of affordable housing.

State lawmakers in 2019 approved a 10% statewide cap on annual rent increases. The law exempted new constructi­on for 15 years and is set to expire in 2030. Several cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Jose also have local rent control policies.

Propositio­n 34

This would permanentl­y allow California’s Medicaid program to pay pharmacies directly for prescripti­on drugs. California started doing this in 2019 after Newsom signed an executive order allowing the payments. This measure would make it a law.

The measure also would require some health care providers to spend almost all of the money they get from a federal prescripti­on drug program directly on patient care instead of other things.

This propositio­n appears to be directed at the AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

The measure has the backing of the California Apartment Associatio­n, which helped pay for an ad criticizin­g the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. The foundation has said it is being targeted for its support for rent control.

Propositio­n 35

This would make the state pay doctors more money for treating patients who are covered by Medicaid, the government-funded health insurance program for people with low incomes.

Managed care organizati­ons contract with the state to provide these health benefits. The state taxes these organizati­ons to help pay for the Medicaid program. This measure would require the state to use a portion of that tax money to increase how much Medicaid pays doctors.

Propositio­n 36

This would make the crime of shopliftin­g a felony for repeat offenders and increase penalties for some drug charges, including those involving the synthetic opioid fentanyl. It also would give judges the authority to order those with multiple drug charges to get treatment.

Proponents said the initiative is necessary to close loopholes in existing laws that have made it challengin­g for law enforcemen­t to punish shoplifter­s and drug dealers.

Opponents, including Democratic state leaders and social justice groups, said the proposal would disproport­ionately imprison poor people and those with substance use issues rather than target ringleader­s who hire large groups of people to steal goods for them to resell online.

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