Urgent: Assemblymember Chris Holden Trying to Kill California’s 100% Renewable Climate Bill, #ChangeTheClimate, #SB100

SB100CallAssembly9.14.16b

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, including especially Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Irma, and the more than 70 wildfires burning up the Northwest, including the iconic Columbia Gorge, the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced a historic climate change bill designed to turn our climate emissions around by requiring the State move to 100% renewable energy.

SB 100 (De Leon) – California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program

SB 100 accelerates the existing renewable energy targets to 60 percent RPS by 2030, and requires retail energy sellers to plan, model, and invest over the next 28 years to reach the 100% clean, zero carbon, and renewable energy target.

 

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This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in all of California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues.

The State Senate approved SB-100 over the last few months and now it must get through the even tougher Assembly BY TOMORROW.

Assemblymembers, including Chris Holden, Jim Patterson, Autumn Burke, Rocky J. Chavez, Phillip Chen, Brian Dahle, Susan Talamantes Eggman, Vince Fong, Cristina Garcia, Eduardo Garcia, Al Muratsuchi, Bill Quirk, Eloise Gomez Reyes, Miguel Santiago and Philip Ting are all on the Assembly Energy Committee and are reportedly holding up the historic and oh-so-necessary SB-100.  The oil industry is actively swaying Assemblymembers with large contributions and trips to Hawaii, acts which  a couple years ago helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams).

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/.

 

Chris Holden (Chair) – (916) 319-2041 – https://a41.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Holden represents a district that stretches from Pasadena in the West to Upland in the East and includes the communities of Altadena, Claremont, La Verne, Monrovia, Rancho Cucamonga, San Dimas, Sierra Madre, and South Pasadena. 

Jim Patterson (Vice Chair) – (916) 319-2023 – https://ad23.asmrc.org/
Assemblymember Jim Patterson represents the 23rd Assembly District which covers portions of Fresno and Tulare counties.

Autumn Burke – (916) 319-2062 – https://a62.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Burke represents the cities of Inglewood, Hawthorne, Lawndale, El Segundo, and Gardena, the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Westchester, Playa del Rey, Playa Vista, Venice, and Del Rey, and the communities of Del Aire, West Athens, Lennox, Westmont, and Marina del Rey.

Phillip Chen – (916) 319-2055 – https://ad55.asmrc.org/
Assemblymember Chen represents Yorba Linda, La Habra, Rowland Heights, Diamond Bar, and includes parts of Chino Hills State Park.

Brian Dahle – (916) 319-2001 – https://ad01.asmrc.org/
Assemblymember Dahle represents a rural district consisting of Lassen County, Modoc County, Nevada County, Plumas County, Shasta County, Sierra County, Siskiyou County, and parts of Butte County and Placer County.

Susan Talamantes Eggman – (916) 319-2013 – https://a13.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Talamantes Eggman represent the 13th Assembly District, which draws together the San Joaquin Delta communities of Stockton, Tracy, Thornton and Mountain House, and western San Joaquin County.

Vince Fong – (916) 319-2034 – https://ad34.asmrc.org/
Assemblymember Vince Fong was elected to represent the 34th Assembly District, which encompasses most of Kern County including Bakersfield, Bear Valley Springs, China Lake, Frazier Park, Golden Hills, Inyokern, Lebec, Oildale, Ridgecrest, Taft, and Tehachapi.

Rocky Chavez – (916)319-2076 – https://ad76.asmrc.org/
Assemblymember Rocky Chavez represents the 76th Assembly District which includes Camp Pendleton, Carlsbad, Encinitas, Oceanside and Vista.

Cristina Garcia – (916) 319-2058 – https://a58.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Cristina Garcia represents California’s 58th Assembly District, which includes the cities of Artesia, Bellflower, Bell Gardens, Cerritos, Commerce, Downey, Montebello, Pico Rivera and Norwalk.

Eduardo Garcia – (916) 319-2056 – https://a56.asmdc.org/
The 56th Assembly District comprises a number of cities and unincorporated communities in eastern Riverside County and Imperial County, including Blythe, Brawley, Bermuda Dunes, Calexico, Calipatria, Cathedral City, Coachella, Desert Hot Springs, El Centro, Holtville, Imperial, Indio, Mecca, Oasis, North Shore, Salton Sea, Thermal, Thousand Palms, and Westmorland.

Al Muratsuchi – (916) 319-2066 – https://a66.asmdc.org/
The 66th Assembly District includes El Camino Village, Gardena, Harbor City, Harbor Gateway, Hermosa Beach, Lomita, Los Angeles, Manhattan Beach, Palos Verdes Estates, Rancho Palos Verdes, Redondo Beach, Rolling Hills, Rolling Hills Estates, Torrance, and West Carson.

Bill Quirk – (916) 319-2020 – https://a20.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Bill Quirk represents the 20th Assembly District, which consists of Hayward, Union City, Castro Valley, San Lorenzo, Ashland, Cherryland, Fairview, Sunol and North Fremont.

Eloise Gomez Reyes – (916) 319-2047 – https://a47.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Eloise Gomez Reyes represents California’s 47th Assembly District, which includes the communities of Colton, Fontana, Grand Terrace, Rialto, San Bernardino, and the unincorporated communities of Bloomington and Muscoy.

Miguel Santiago – (916) 319-2053 – https://a53.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Miguel Santiago represents California’s 53rd Assembly District, which includes downtown Los Angeles, Koreatown, Mid-Wilshire, Boyle Heights, Pico Union, MacArthur Park, Westlake, Little Tokyo and the cities of Huntington Park and Vernon.

Philip Y. Ting – (916) 319-2019 – https://a19.asmdc.org/
Assemblymember Philip Ting represents the 19th Assembly District, which spans the Westside of San Francisco as well as the communities of Broadmoor, Colma, Daly City, and South San Francisco.

Talking Points for SB-100:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for SB-100 (De Leon, et al).  California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions in time to keep the climate safe, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, which have wreck havoc upon cities, not unlike our own, here in the United States.  Low income and communities of color are and continue to be the most impacted by climate chaos.  The costs to address these disasters are staggering and are affecting all of us.
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.

Republicans Finally Admit Climate Change After 120° in Yuma

Egg frying

After three straight days of extreme heat storms across Arizona, breaking high temperature records from Phoenix to Tucson to Yuma, high ranking officials in the Arizona Republican party finally had to admit they had been wrong…

Why are you looking here?

Of course this is a joke…

Do something to reduce your personal greenhouse gas emissions NOW, or it will continue to get worse.

Get involved in your local politics!!  The oil companies are working to undermine California’s renewable energy gains by trying to throw out legislators who are strong on climate:  http://www.desmogblog.com/2016/06/21/oil-funded-groups-have-spent-2-7-million-defeat-california-candidates-who-want-climate-action

Join the fight at: http://350.org/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2016/06/20/record-heat-scalding-the-southwest-in-extreme-pattern/

http://ktar.com/story/1128298/roasting-phoenix-breaks-yet-another-daily-heat-record/

http://abc13.com/weather/extreme-heat-in-arizona-cooks-egg-on-street/1395383/

http://abc13.com/weather/phoenix-heat-breaks-record-for-june-19/1391923/

Republicans Finally Admit Climate Change After 120° in Yuma

Egg frying

After three straight days of extreme heat storms across Arizona, breaking high temperature records from Phoenix to Tucson to Yuma, high ranking officials in the Arizona Republican party finally had to admit they had been wrong…

Why are you looking here?

 

Of course this is a joke…

Do something to reduce your personal greenhouse gas emissions NOW, or it will continue to get worse.

 

Get involved in your local politics!!  The oil companies are working to undermine California’s renewable energy gains by trying to throw out legislators who are strong on climate:  http://www.desmogblog.com/2016/06/21/oil-funded-groups-have-spent-2-7-million-defeat-california-candidates-who-want-climate-action

 

Join the fight at: http://350.org/

 

 

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2016/06/20/record-heat-scalding-the-southwest-in-extreme-pattern/

http://ktar.com/story/1128298/roasting-phoenix-breaks-yet-another-daily-heat-record/

http://abc13.com/weather/extreme-heat-in-arizona-cooks-egg-on-street/1395383/

http://abc13.com/weather/phoenix-heat-breaks-record-for-june-19/1391923/

Culver City Elections: Göran Eriksson is Misleading Everyone…

…about being environmentally-friendly.

The question is why?

Assemblyman Ridley-Thomas, left, with Britta and Göran Eriksson

Photo courtesy http://www.frontpageonline.com

According to NOAA, in February the planet set a new record for the hottest month on record and, for the first time, “average temperatures over land in February were a mind-boggling 4.16 F/2.31 C above normal, the first time the significant and symbolic 2 degree Celsius bar has been topped.”  (2 degrees Celsius is the internationally-agreed upon level to keep global warming below.  Above that, dangerous and possibly uninhabitable warming is expected).

What does this have to do with a local Culver City election?  Everything.

The last time Culver City residents elected someone of questionable environmental standards, we elected Sebastian Ridley-Thomas to the State Assembly.  Ridley-Thomas, with a substantial oil industry donor base, was one of the so-called “corporate Democrats” in Sacramento who helped kill off the petroleum portion of the ground-breaking California state climate change bill, SB-350, last summer.

Especially at this moment in history, we must not put another person in power who puts corporate profits ahead of the best interests of his or her constituents.

In 2012, for just one example, Göran Eriksson opposed an effort by the City Council to create a citizen’s advisory committee on fracking (see Culver City Observer article).  Regardless of the actual merits of the proposal, he actively spoke against creating another layer of protection against the oil industry that controls the Inglewood Oil Field that lies above us and continues to threaten the health of Culver City and its residents.  That is worth noting from someone who otherwise doesn’t have much of a voting record.  On his website and in the League of Women Voters forum last week, he says he is in favor of “firm guidelines” for oil drilling.  For those of us who have been working on stopping extreme oil extraction in and around Culver City, those words are code meaning he is an oil industry apologist.  We need someone willing to be tough to protect us from extreme oil drillers, not coddle them with guidelines.

On his website, Eriksson further sings the siren song of the fossil fuel industry by calling for the use of “renewable natural gas.”  Again, this is yet another smoke screen that tells an actual environmentalist Eriksson is a fossil fuel industry apologist.  Instead of promoting and building infrastructure for fossil fuels, we need to be closing the tax loopholes the natural gas industry enjoys — all while paving the way for more energy efficiency and investments in truly clean renewable energy sources that are good for our environment, our health, our communities, and our economy.

For another example, on his Eriksson for City Council 2016 website, in the third paragraph, Göran Eriksson calls himself a “lifelong environmentalist.”  Yet he also very publicly opposed Culver City’s plastic bag ban (Eriksson on Why Council Is Sending the Wrong Message – The Front Page Online), an initiative that has successfully cleaned up Culver City neighborhoods of blight and continues to keep plastic bags out of Ballona Creek and therefore out of Santa Monica Bay and the Pacific Ocean beyond.  Plastic bag bans have been considered such effective public policy that they have been implemented by 88 municipalities in California alone.  In his commentary, Eriksson states that “Since the County implemented their plastic bag ban, they have done studies where they concluded that the use of produce bags that you find by the fruits and vegetable displays, has gone up 40 percent. That was not included in the County’s EIR.”  This statement is categorically false because, as a call to the LA County Department of Public Works has shown me, that study he is quoting does not exist.

A further search shows that Eriksson has apparently deleted another blog he wrote opposing the plastic bag ban.  The link to the article by Eriksson, entitled, “Single Use Plastic Bag is Far More Practical” still exists on ink and ashes_ May 2013 – Culver City.

If he’s actively hiding his position on the plastic bag ban, what else is he hiding?

In my opinion, especially after hearing from all the candidates at last week’s League of Women Voters forum at City Hall, if we want to elect truly environmentally-progressive members of the Culver City Council, we need to follow the lead of the Sierra Club, the League of Conservation Voters (LCV), and Bike the Vote, and vote for:

Meghan Sahli-Wells – “Councilmember Meghan Sahli-Wells has been a strong environmental advocate and a thoughtful and effective leader for Culver City,” said LALCV President Tom Eisenhauer. “On the City Council, she has been an extraordinary force for pro-environment priorities vital to quality of life in Culver City – like water conservation, active transportation, affordable housing, services for the homeless, and comprehensive oil drilling regulations.”

Daniel Lee – From “What Distinguishes Daniel Lee” Op Ed:

“Early on, Mr. Lee won the endorsement of the Culver City Democratic Club and the Los Angeles County Democratic Party.

“Later he added the endorsement of the Sierra Club and the Culver City Community Coalition. Now, the campaign can count the endorsements of Culver City’s federal and state representatives, U.S. Rep. Karen Bass (D-Culver City) and state Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Culver City).  Here is one factor that distinguishes Mr. Lee from the other candidates who have been endorsed by Rep. Bass and Sen. Mitchell:  Both elected officials donated to Mr. Lee’s campaign as well.”

Thomas Small – “The Board of the LALCV is proud to endorse Mr. Small because of his passion for sustainable urban design, linked with smart transportation,” said LALCV Vice President Stephanie Molen. “Thomas will be a strong environmental leader on the Culver City Council, fighting for a strong sustainable future for the city.”

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 We’re moving into an uncertain future where we will need strong leaders who understand and actively address climate change, drought and our other looming environmental disasters.

We must actively oppose those like Göran Eriksson who would pretend to support the environment when they clearly do not.

There is far too much at stake.

URGENT: STATE CLIMATE BILLS HANG BY A THREAD – CALL NOW, #SB350, #SB32, #ChangeTheClimate

IMG_California_Climate_C_2_1_4G5MH5SU_L152844475

California’s Historic Climate Bills are dangling by a thread in the Assembly.  SB-32 was voted down yesterday by these ridiculous people, but is available for a reconsideration vote today until Friday (here is the vote count).  SB-350 could get a vote any second.

WE DO NOT ACCEPT SB-350’s amendments from the utility companies.  We DO accept the September 6th, SB-350 amendments from Assemblymember Levine and Senator Leno, which will make the bill much stronger by strengthening community-based clean energy.

We need your help to get this done!!!!!  Talking points are below all the Assemblymember info.

Call them all NOW (some of them DID vote for SB-32 yesterday, but they are still on the fence):  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/.)

Assemblymember Chris Holden (District 41 – Claremont, Pasadena, South Pasadena, East Pasadena, Altadena, Sierre Madre, Monrovia, San Dimas, La Verne)
Phone: (916) 319-2041
Email click here 

Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (District 52 – parts of Claremont, Pomona, Chino, Ontario)
Phone: (916) 319-2052
Email click here

Assemblymember Roger Hernandez (District 48 – West Covina, Covina, Baldwin Park, El Monte, Azusa, Glendora, Duarte)
Phone: (916) 319-2048
Email click here

Assemblymember Ian Calderon (District 57 – City of Industry, Whittier, Hacienda Heights, South El Monte, La Habra Heights, Santa Fe Springs, La Mirada, Norwalk)
Phone: (916) 319-2057
Email click here

Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (District 58 – Downey, Bellflower, Cerritos, Montebello, Commerce, Pico Rivera)
Phone: (916) 319-2058
Email click here 

Assemblymember Mike Gipson (District 64 – Compton, Carson, Willowbrook, Watts, West Rancho Dominguez, Wilmington)
Phone: (916) 319-2064
Email click here

Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (District 59 – University Park, South Los Angeles, USC, South Park, Vermont Harbor, Florence-Graham, Walnut Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2059
Email click here

Did not vote yesterday and may be on the fence.  Push them off:
Talking points: This is no time to stand on the sidelines.

Assemblymember Luis Alejo, (D), (District 30 – Salinas, Watsonville)
Phone: (916) 319-2030

Assemblymember Cheryl Brown, (D), (District 47 – San Bernardino, Fontana)
Phone: (916) 319-2047

Assemblymember Autumn Burke, (D) (District 62 – Westchester, Playa Vista, Inglewood)
Phone: (916) 319-2062

Assemblymember Ian Calderon, (D) (District 57 – City of Industry)
Phone: (916) 319-2057

Assemblymember Nora Campos, (D) (District 27 – San Jose)
Phone: (916) 319-2027

Assemblymember Rocky Chávez, (R) (District 76 – Oceanside)
Phone: (916) 319-2076

Assemblymember Jim Cooper, (D) (District 9 – Elk Grove)
Phone: (916) 319-2009

Assemblymember Bill Dodd, (D) (District 4 – Santa Rosa, Woodland)
Phone: (916) 319-2004

Assemblymember Eduardo Garcia, (D) (District 56 – Coachella, Imperial)
Phone: (916) 319-2056

Assemblymember Mike Gipson, (D) (District 64 – Rancho Dominguez)
Phone: (916) 319-2064

Assemblymember Richard Gordon, (D) (District 24 – Los Altos)
Phone: (916) 319-2024

Assemblymember Roger Hernández, (D) (District 48 – West Covina)
Phone: (916) 319-2048

Assemblymember Jaqui Irwin, (D) (District 44 – Camarillo, Oxnard)
Phone: (916) 319-2044

Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell, (D) (District 70 – Long Beach, San Pedro)
Phone: (916) 319-2070

Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez, (D) (District 52 – Chino)
Phone: (916) 319-2052

VOTED NO YESTERDAY ON RIDLEY-THOMAS’s BAD AMENDMENTS TO SB-32:

Assemblymember Achadjian, (R) (District 35 – San Luis Obispo)
Phone: (916) 319-2035

Assemblymember Travis Allen, (R) (District 72 – Huntington Beach)
Phone: (916) 319-2072

Assemblymember Baker, (R) (District 16 – San Ramon)
Phone: (916) 319-2016

Assemblymember Bigelow, (R) (District 05 – Madera)
Phone: (916) 319-2005

Assemblymember Brough, (R) (District 73 – San Juan Capistrano)
Phone: (916) 319-2073

Assemblymember Ling Ling Chang, (R) (District 55 – Brea)
Phone: (916) 319-2055

Assemblymember Cooley, (D) (District 08 – Rancho Cordova)
Phone: (916) 319-2008

Assemblymember Brian Dahle, (R) (District 01 – Redding)
Phone: (916) 319-2001

Assemblymember Daly, (D) (District 69 – Anaheim)
Phone: (916) 319-2069

Assemblymember Frazier, (D) (District 11 – Fairfield)
Phone: (916) 319-2011

Assemblymember Beth Gaines, (R) (District 06 – Granite Bay)
Phone: (916) 319-2006

Assemblymember Gallagher, (R) ((District 03 – Chico)
Phone: (916) 319-2003

Assemblymember Gray, (D) (District 21 – Merced, Modesto)
Phone: (916) 319-2021

Assemblymember Grove, (R) (District 34 – Bakersfield)
Phone: (916) 319-2034

Assemblymember Hadley, (R) (District 66 – Torrance, Hermosa Beach)
Phone: (916) 319-2066

Assemblymember Harper, (R) (District 74 – Costa Mesa)
Phone: (916) 319-2074

Assemblymember Jones, (R) (District 71 – Santee)
Phone: (916) 319-2071

Assemblymember Kim, (R) (District 65  – Buena Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2065

Assemblymember Lackey, (R) (District 36 – Palmdale)
Phone: (916) 319-2036

Assemblymember Linder, (R) (District 60 – Corona)
Phone: (916) 319-2060

Assemblymember Low, (D) (District 28 – Cupertino)
Phone: (916) 319-2028

Assemblymember Maienschein, (R) (District 77 – San Diego)
Phone: (916) 319-2077

Assemblymember Mathis, (R) (District 26 – Visalia)
Phone: (916) 319-2026

Assemblymember Mayes, (R) (District 42 – Rancho Mirage)
Phone: (916) 319-2042

Assemblymember Medina, (D) (District 61 – Riverside)
Phone: (916) 319-2061

Assemblymember Melendez, (R) (District 67 – Murrieta)
Phone: (916) 319-2067

Assemblymember Obernolte, (R) (District 33 – Hesperia)
Phone: (916) 319-2033

Assemblymember Olsen, (R) (District 12 – Modesto)
Phone: (916) 319-2012

Assemblymember Patterson, (R) (District 23 – Fresno)
Phone: (916) 319-2023

Assemblymember Henry Perea (primary villain), (D) (District 31 – Fresno)
Phone: (916) 319-2031

Assemblymember Salas, (D) (District 32 – Bakersfield)
Phone: (916) 319-2032

Assemblymember Steinorth, (R) (District 40 – Rancho Cucamonga)
Phone: (916) 319-2040

Assemblymember Wagner, (R)  (District 68 – Tustin)
Phone: (916) 319-2068

Assemblymember Marie Waldron, (R) (District 75 – Escondido)
Phone: (916) 319-2075

Assemblymember Wilk, (R) (District 38 – Valencia)
Phone: (916) 319-2038

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson) (off-shore oil drilling).  I strongly support the Sept. 6th amendments to SB-350 by Assemblymember Levine and Senator Leno, because they make the bill much stronger by strengthening community-based clean energy.  I oppose any weakening of the Air Resources Board.  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.
  • The City of Los Angeles and the County of Los Angeles have both taken strong positions of support for SB-350 in the past week.

BILL DETAILS:

  • SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards
    • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
    • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
    • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
    • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

    SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

    • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

SB 788 (McGuire & Jackson): CA Coastal Protection Act of 2015 

  •  Ensure that the Coastal Sanctuary Act and Marine Protection act are able to provide their intended protections by repealing outdated sections of the Public Resources Code, so that the State can no longer lease its tidal and submerged lands in the California Coastal Sanctuary for oil and gas extraction.  Will protect us from oil spills like in Santa Barbara.

Urgent: Mike Gatto Trying to Kill Historic CA Climate Bills, #changetheclimate, #350

ca-cl-ch

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, (including ChileIndiaEgyptChinaIranHawaiiTexasBrazil, oh yeah, and California), the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced an amazing slate of historic climate change bills designed to turn our climate emissions around.

SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards

  • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
  • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
  • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
  • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

  • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

SB 788 (McGuire & Jackson): CA Coastal Protection Act of 2015 

  • Ensure that the Coastal Sanctuary Act and Marine Protection act are able to provide their intended protections by repealing outdated sections of the Public Resources Code, so that the State can no longer lease its tidal and submerged lands in the California Coastal Sanctuary for oil and gas extraction.  Will protect us from oil spills like in Santa Barbara.

*****************

This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues. (The bi-partisan Little Hoover Commission summarized what’s at stake for California in its report here.)

The State Senate approved these measures over the last few months and now they must get through the even tougher Assembly.

Local Los Angeles Assemblymembers, including Mike GattoSebastian Ridley-ThomasMatt DababnehAutumn BurkeMike GipsonChris Holden, Reggie Jones-Sawyer and Cristina Garcia are reportedly actively opposing some of these historic and oh-so-necessary climate change bills.  Ridley-Thomas recently helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams), which was a no-brainer intended to protect underground sources of drinking water from oil and gas wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery treatments, and called for monitoring near certain injection wells.  Ridley-Thomas, Dababneh, Jones-Sawyer, and Garcia signed this letter last year trying to gut cap-and-trade legislation.  It is especially important as we head into the Paris Climate Accords that California takes dramatic action and a worldwide leadership position on rapidly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.  This seems especially short-sighted because 25% of substantial cap-and-trade funds related to these bills are slated for underserved communities, like the ones these Assemblymembers represent.

You know all of this, but, we know climate change is not only here, but here with a vengeance.  2013 was the driest year on record in California history; 2014 was the hottest.  You know about the crazy wildfires raging across Northern California right now, and we’re not alone. This year, across the planet, there are record heat waves all over Europe, Germany, France, many other places, Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, India, and Japan that have killed thousands of people.  Droughts are also hitting in Washington State, in West Africa, Brazil, South Africa and North Korea, having devastating impacts on reservoirs and food production. Puerto Rico is actually rationing water.  It’s getting scary.  And where it is raining, it is flooding, like in Argentina and Myanmar, devastating floods displaced a quarter of a million people and killed hundreds in Malawi in January.  Closer to home, heavy rains caused flash flooding in Colorado Springs and we’re expecting a “Godzilla” of an El Niño in a matter of weeks in California.  This is serious stuff.

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/)

Assemblymember Mike Gatto (District 43 – Silver Lake, La Canada/Flintridge, Burbank, Los Feliz, Atwater Village)
Phone: 
(916) 319-2043
Email click here

Assemblymember Sebastian Ridley-Thomas (District 54 – Mar Vista, Westwood, Culver City, Baldwin Hills, Leimert Park, Beverlywood, Ladera Heights, West Los Angeles)
Phone: 
(916) 319-2054
Email click here

Assemblymember Matt Debabneh (District 45 – Calabasas, Canoga Park, Woodland Hills, Encino, Reseda, Northridge, Tarzana)
Phone: 
(916) 319-2045
Email: Emily.Rice@asm.ca.gov and Matthew.Powers@asm.ca.gov

Assemblymember Autumn Burke (District 62 – Venice, Del Rey, Playa Vista, Marina Del Rey, Westchester, El Segundo, Inglewood, Hawthorne, Lawndale)
Phone:
(916) 319-2062
Email click here

Assemblymember Mike Gipson (District 64 – Compton, Carson, Willowbrook, Watts, West Rancho Dominguez, Wilmington)
Phone: (916) 319-2064
Email click here

Assemblymember Chris Holden (District 41 – Pasadena, South Pasadena, East Pasadena, Altadena, Sierre Madre, Monrovia, San Dimas, Claremont, La Verne)
Phone: (916) 319-2041
Email click here 

Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (District 59 – University Park, South Los Angeles, USC, South Park, Vermont Harbor, Florence-Graham, Walnut Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2059
Email click here 

Assemblymember Patty Lopez (District 39 – Sylmar, San Fernando, Sun Valley, North Hollywood, Pacoima, Sunland-Tujunga, Lake View Terrace, Arleta)
Phone: (916) 319-2039
Email: Kristi.Lopez@asm.ca.gov

Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian (District 46 – Van Nuys, Lake Balboa, Panorama City, Sherman Oaks, Hollywood Hills, Studio City, Toluca Lake, North Hills, North Hollywood)
Phone: (916) 319-2046
Email click here 

Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (District 58 – Downey, Bellflower, Cerritos, Montebello, Commerce, Pico Rivera, )
Phone: (916) 319-2058
Email click here 

AND, PLEASE CONTACT THE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER:

Speaker of the Assembly Toni Atkins (District 78 – San Diego, Chula Vista, Coronado Island, La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Solana Beach, Point Loma)
Phone: (916) 319-2078
Email click here 

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), SB-185 (De Leon) and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson).  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • Senator Darrell Steinberg on why he killed Assemblymember Perea’s bad climate bill and all the climate change impacts in California.
  • California Air Resources Board chair, Mary Nichols’ letter to Assemblymember Perea, Ridley-Thomas, Dabaneh, and the rest, on the importance of cap-and-trade.
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.
  • (A group of 32 Legislature members in response to Ridley-Thomas, Dababneh, Jones-Sawyer, and Garcia’s letter last year sent Brown a letter supporting keeping fuels in cap and trade):”California’s most disadvantaged communities … are already bearing the brunt of the impacts” of warming including “a historic drought, wildfires of unprecedented strength and 12 million people breathing air that does not meet federal health standards,” the letter said. “These impacts result in tens of billions of dollars annually in health and economic losses, while every dollar a Californian spends on gasoline creates one-sixteenth as many jobs as a dollar spent on other goods and services.”Inaction is not an option,” it added. “If we are serious about reducing fuel costs and righting the public health wrongs facing our constituents, we must wean ourselves off fossil fuels by investing in cleaner transportation alternatives as we did in this year’s budget.
  • A group of environmental justice groups responded to  Ridley-Thomas, Dababneh, Jones-Sawyer, and Garcia’s letter last year.
  • The California Business Alliance for a Green Economy makes the economic case for AB-32.
  • A group of economic experts further make the economic case for AB-32.
  • Op Eds by business leaders supporting AB-32.
  • Video on SB-350 from California Environmental Justice Alliance:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2joFsiS6sFQ&feature=youtu.be

Urgent: Assemblymember Chris Holden Trying to Kill California’s Climate Bills, #ChangeTheClimate, #350

ca-cl-ch

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, (including ChileIndiaEgyptChinaIranHawaiiTexasBrazil, oh yeah, and California), the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced an amazing slate of historic climate change bills designed to turn our climate emissions around.

SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards

  • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
  • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
  • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
  • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

  • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

*****************

This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues. (The bi-partisan Little Hoover Commission summarized what’s at stake for California in its report here.)

The State Senate approved these measures over the last few months and now they must get through the even tougher Assembly.

Our local Assemblymembers, including Chris Holden, Freddie Rodriguez, Roger Hernandez, Ian Calderon, Cristina GarciaMike Gipson, and Reggie Jones-Sawyer are reportedly actively opposing some of these historic and oh-so-necessary climate change bills.  The oil industry is actively swaying Assemblymembers with large contributions and trips to Hawaii, acts which recently helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams).  This bill, particularly in the drought, was a no-brainer intended to protect underground sources of drinking water from oil and gas wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery treatments, and called for monitoring near certain injection wells.

It is especially important as we head into the Paris Climate Accords that California takes dramatic action and a worldwide leadership position on rapidly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.  Opposing these bills seems especially short-sighted because 25% of substantial cap-and-trade funds related to these bills are slated for underserved communities, like many of the ones these Assemblymembers represent.

You likely know all of this already, but, we know climate change is not only here, but here with a vengeance.  2013 was the driest year on record in California history; 2014 was the hottest.  You know about the crazy wildfires raging across Northern California right now, and we’re not alone. This year, across the planet, there are record heat waves all over Europe, Germany, France, many other places, Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, India, and Japan that have killed thousands of people.  Droughts are also hitting in Washington State, in West Africa, Brazil, South Africa and North Korea, having devastating impacts on reservoirs and food production. Puerto Rico is actually rationing water.  It’s getting scary.  And where it is raining, it is flooding, like in Argentina and Myanmar, devastating floods displaced a quarter of a million people and killed hundreds in Malawi in January.  Closer to home, heavy rains caused flash flooding in Colorado Springs and we’re expecting a “Godzilla” of an El Niño in a matter of weeks in California.  This is serious stuff.

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/. If at all possible, see if you can schedule a meeting with one of the staffers as soon as possible.  This is very important)

Assemblymember Chris Holden (District 41 – Claremont, Pasadena, South Pasadena, East Pasadena, Altadena, Sierre Madre, Monrovia, San Dimas, La Verne)
Phone: (916) 319-2041
Email click here 

Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (District 52 – parts of Claremont, Pomona, Chino, Ontario)
Phone: (916) 319-2052
Email click here

Assemblymember Roger Hernandez (District 48 – West Covina, Covina, Baldwin Park, El Monte, Azusa, Glendora, Duarte)
Phone: (916) 319-2048
Email click here

Assemblymember Ian Calderon (District 57 – City of Industry, Whittier, Hacienda Heights, South El Monte, La Habra Heights, Santa Fe Springs, La Mirada, Norwalk)
Phone: (916) 319-2057
Email click here

Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (District 58 – Downey, Bellflower, Cerritos, Montebello, Commerce, Pico Rivera)
Phone: (916) 319-2058
Email click here 

Assemblymember Mike Gipson (District 64 – Compton, Carson, Willowbrook, Watts, West Rancho Dominguez, Wilmington)
Phone: (916) 319-2064
Email click here

Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (District 59 – University Park, South Los Angeles, USC, South Park, Vermont Harbor, Florence-Graham, Walnut Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2059
Email click here

AND, PLEASE CONTACT THE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER:

Speaker of the Assembly Toni Atkins (District 78 – San Diego, Chula Vista, Coronado Island, La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Solana Beach, Point Loma)
Phone: (916) 319-2078
Email click here 

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), SB-185 (De Leon) and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson).  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.
  • The City of Los Angeles and the County of Los Angeles have both taken strong positions of support for SB-350 in the past week.

Urgent: Assemblymembers Patrick O’Donnell and David Hadley Blocking CA Climate Bills, #ChangeTheClimate, #350

ca-cl-ch

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, (including ChileIndiaEgyptChinaIranHawaiiTexasBrazil, oh yeah, and California), the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced an amazing slate of historic climate change bills designed to turn our climate emissions around.

SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards

  • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
  • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
  • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
  • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

  • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

SB 185 (De Leon): Investing with Values and Responsibility

  • Focus on the future and lead by example by having CalPERS/STRS, the country’s largest public pension funds move its investments beyond coal.  CalPERS/STRS lost $840 million on coal investments last year.  Even worse, scientists have now proven that pollution from coal burned in Asia blows back over the ocean and pollutes the air in California.  It’s time to halt investments in this dirty energy source.

SB 788 (McGuire & Jackson): CA Coastal Protection Act of 2015 

  • Ensure that the Coastal Sanctuary Act and Marine Protection act are able to provide their intended protections by repealing outdated sections of the Public Resources Code, so that the State can no longer lease its tidal and submerged lands in the California Coastal Sanctuary for oil and gas extraction.  Will protect us from oil spills like in Santa Barbara.

*****************

This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues. (The bi-partisan Little Hoover Commission summarized what’s at stake for California in its report here.)

The State Senate approved these measures over the last few months and now they must get through the even tougher Assembly.

Our local Assemblymembers, including Chris Holden, Freddie Rodriguez, Roger Hernandez, Ian Calderon, Cristina GarciaMike Gipson, and Reggie Jones-Sawyer are reportedly actively opposing some of these historic and oh-so-necessary climate change bills.  The oil industry is actively swaying Assemblymembers with large contributions and trips to Hawaii, acts which recently helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams).  This bill, particularly in the drought, was a no-brainer intended to protect underground sources of drinking water from oil and gas wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery treatments, and called for monitoring near certain injection wells.

It is especially important as we head into the Paris Climate Accords that California takes dramatic action and a worldwide leadership position on rapidly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.  Opposing these bills seems especially short-sighted because 25% of substantial cap-and-trade funds related to these bills are slated for underserved communities, like many of the ones these Assemblymembers represent.

You likely know all of this already, but, we know climate change is not only here, but here with a vengeance.  2013 was the driest year on record in California history; 2014 was the hottest.  You know about the crazy wildfires raging across Northern California right now, and we’re not alone. This year, across the planet, there are record heat waves all over Europe, Germany, France, many other places, Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, India, and Japan that have killed thousands of people.  Droughts are also hitting in Washington State, in West Africa, Brazil, South Africa and North Korea, having devastating impacts on reservoirs and food production. Puerto Rico is actually rationing water.  It’s getting scary.  And where it is raining, it is flooding, like in Argentina and Myanmar, devastating floods displaced a quarter of a million people and killed hundreds in Malawi in January.  Closer to home, heavy rains caused flash flooding in Colorado Springs and we’re expecting a “Godzilla” of an El Niño in a matter of weeks in California.  This is serious stuff.

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/. If at all possible, see if you can schedule a meeting with one of the staffers as soon as possible.  This is very important)

Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell (District 70 – Long Beach, San Pedro, Signal Hill, Lakewood Village, Bixby Knolls)
Phone: (916) 319-2070
Email click here 

Assemblymember David Hadley (District 66 – Manhattan Beach, Redondo Beach, Torrance, Rolling Hills Estates, Carson, Hermosa Beach, Rancho Palos Verdes, Lomita)
Phone: (916) 319-2066
Email click here

Assemblymember Mike Gipson (District 64 – Compton, Carson, Willowbrook, Watts, West Rancho Dominguez, Wilmington)
Phone: (916) 319-2064
Email click here

Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (District 59 – University Park, South Los Angeles, USC, South Park, Vermont Harbor, Florence-Graham, Walnut Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2059
Email click here 

AND, PLEASE CONTACT THE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER:

Speaker of the Assembly Toni Atkins (District 78 – San Diego, Chula Vista, Coronado Island, La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Solana Beach, Point Loma)
Phone: (916) 319-2078
Email click here 

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), SB-185 (De Leon) and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson).  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.

Urgent: Assemblymembers Shirley Weber and Lorena Gonzalez Trying to Kill California Climate Bills, #ChangeTheClimate, #350

ca-cl-ch

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, (including ChileIndiaEgyptChinaIranHawaiiTexasBrazil, oh yeah, and California), the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced an amazing slate of historic climate change bills designed to turn our climate emissions around.

SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards

  • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
  • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
  • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
  • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

  • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

SB 185 (De Leon): Investing with Values and Responsibility

  • Focus on the future and lead by example by having CalPERS/STRS, the country’s largest public pension funds move its investments beyond coal.  CalPERS/STRS lost $840 million on coal investments last year.  Even worse, scientists have now proven that pollution from coal burned in Asia blows back over the ocean and pollutes the air in California.  It’s time to halt investments in this dirty energy source.

SB 788 (McGuire & Jackson): CA Coastal Protection Act of 2015 

  • Ensure that the Coastal Sanctuary Act and Marine Protection act are able to provide their intended protections by repealing outdated sections of the Public Resources Code, so that the State can no longer lease its tidal and submerged lands in the California Coastal Sanctuary for oil and gas extraction.  Will protect us from oil spills like in Santa Barbara.

*****************

This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues. (The bi-partisan Little Hoover Commission summarized what’s at stake for California in its report here.)

The State Senate approved these measures over the last few months and now they must get through the even tougher Assembly.

Our local Assemblymembers, including Shirley Weber, Lorena Gonzalez, and Brian Jones are reportedly actively opposing some of these historic and oh-so-necessary climate change bills.  The oil industry is actively swaying Assemblymembers with large contributions and trips to Hawaii (see link here), acts which recently helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams).  This bill was a no-brainer, particularly in the drought, intended to protect underground sources of drinking water from oil and gas wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery treatments, and called for monitoring near certain injection wells.

It is especially important as we head into the Paris Climate Conference in November that California takes dramatic action and a worldwide leadership position on rapidly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.  Opposing these bills seems especially short-sighted because 25% of substantial cap-and-trade funds related to these bills are slated for underserved communities, like many of the ones these Assemblymembers represent.

You likely know all of this already, but, we know climate change is not only here, but here with a vengeance.  2013 was the driest year on record in California history; 2014 was the hottest.  You know about the crazy wildfires raging across Northern California right now, and we’re not alone. This year, across the planet, there are record heat waves all over Europe, Germany, France, many other places, Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, India, and Japan that have killed thousands of people.  Droughts are also hitting in Washington State, in West Africa, Brazil, South Africa and North Korea, having devastating impacts on reservoirs and food production. Puerto Rico is actually rationing water.  It’s getting scary.  And where it is raining, it is flooding, like in Argentina and Myanmar, devastating floods displaced a quarter of a million people and killed hundreds in Malawi in January.  Closer to home, heavy rains caused flash flooding in Colorado Springs and we’re expecting a “Godzilla” of an El Niño in a matter of weeks in California.  This is serious stuff.

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/. If at all possible, see if you can schedule a meeting with one of the staffers as soon as possible.  This is very important)

Assemblymember Shirley Weber (District 79 – San Diego, Linda Vista, Serra Mesa, Allied Gardens, Mission Valley, Grantville, Del Cerro, La Mesa, Lemon Grove, National City, Bay Terraces, Bonita, Otay Ranch)
Phone: (916) 319-2079
Email click here 

Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez (District 80 – Chula Vista, National City and the San Diego neighborhoods of City Heights, Barrio Logan, Paradise Hills, San Ysidro and Otay Mesa)
Phone: (916) 319-2080
Email click here

Assemblymember Brian Jones (District 71 – Santee, Anza, Aguanga, Idyllwild-Pine Cove, Warner Springs, Borrego Springs, Santa Ysabel, Julian, Octotillo Wells, Ramona, Lakeside, El Cajon, Jamul, Dulzura, Pine Valley, Descanso, Jacumba Hot Springs)
Phone: (916) 319-2071
Email click here

AND, PLEASE CONTACT THE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER:

Speaker of the Assembly Toni Atkins (District 78 – San Diego, Chula Vista, Coronado Island, La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Solana Beach, Point Loma)
Phone: (916) 319-2078
Email click here 

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), SB-185 (De Leon) and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson).  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.

Urgent: Assemblymember Chris Holden Trying to Kill California’s Climate Bills, #ChangeTheClimate, #350

ca-cl-ch

In this year when the climate crisis has stepped on the gas, throwing more and worse extreme weather events at everyone around the world, (including ChileIndiaEgyptChinaIranHawaiiTexasBrazil, oh yeah, and California), the California State Senate, led by President Pro Tem Kevin De Leon, has introduced an amazing slate of historic climate change bills designed to turn our climate emissions around.

SB 350 (De Leon and Leno): Golden State Standards

  • Spur innovation and investment in a sustainable California by setting the following goals for 2030:
  • 50% reduction in petroleum use;
  • 50% utility power coming from renewable energy;
  • 50% increase in energy efficiency in existing buildings.

SB 32 (Pavley): Building for the Future

  • Set the overarching climate pollution reduction target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050.  This goal will provide California businesses with regulatory certainty, improve public health, and strengthen the economy.

SB 185 (De Leon): Investing with Values and Responsibility

  • Focus on the future and lead by example by having CalPERS/STRS, the country’s largest public pension funds move its investments beyond coal.  CalPERS/STRS lost $840 million on coal investments last year.  Even worse, scientists have now proven that pollution from coal burned in Asia blows back over the ocean and pollutes the air in California.  It’s time to halt investments in this dirty energy source.

SB 788 (McGuire & Jackson): CA Coastal Protection Act of 2015 

  • Ensure that the Coastal Sanctuary Act and Marine Protection act are able to provide their intended protections by repealing outdated sections of the Public Resources Code, so that the State can no longer lease its tidal and submerged lands in the California Coastal Sanctuary for oil and gas extraction.  Will protect us from oil spills like in Santa Barbara.

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This is a critically important effort. We need more aggressive cuts in emissions to get us anywhere near the pathways that limit the worst impacts of climate change.  Those impacts will hit home in California’s neighborhoods, affecting our already-stressed water supply, air quality, public health, coasts, fisheries, agricultural communities, power reliability, and many other issues. (The bi-partisan Little Hoover Commission summarized what’s at stake for California in its report here.)

The State Senate approved these measures over the last few months and now they must get through the even tougher Assembly.

Our local Assemblymembers, including Chris Holden, Freddie Rodriguez, Roger Hernandez, Ian Calderon, Cristina GarciaMike Gipson, and Reggie Jones-Sawyer are reportedly actively opposing some of these historic and oh-so-necessary climate change bills.  The oil industry is actively swaying Assemblymembers with large contributions and trips to Hawaii, acts which recently helped kill off an important groundwater protection-from-oil wastewater bill, AB-356 (Williams).  This bill, particularly in the drought, was a no-brainer intended to protect underground sources of drinking water from oil and gas wastewater disposal and enhanced oil recovery treatments, and called for monitoring near certain injection wells.

It is especially important as we head into the Paris Climate Accords that California takes dramatic action and a worldwide leadership position on rapidly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.  Opposing these bills seems especially short-sighted because 25% of substantial cap-and-trade funds related to these bills are slated for underserved communities, like many of the ones these Assemblymembers represent.

You likely know all of this already, but, we know climate change is not only here, but here with a vengeance.  2013 was the driest year on record in California history; 2014 was the hottest.  You know about the crazy wildfires raging across Northern California right now, and we’re not alone. This year, across the planet, there are record heat waves all over Europe, Germany, France, many other places, Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, India, and Japan that have killed thousands of people.  Droughts are also hitting in Washington State, in West Africa, Brazil, South Africa and North Korea, having devastating impacts on reservoirs and food production. Puerto Rico is actually rationing water.  It’s getting scary.  And where it is raining, it is flooding, like in Argentina and Myanmar, devastating floods displaced a quarter of a million people and killed hundreds in Malawi in January.  Closer to home, heavy rains caused flash flooding in Colorado Springs and we’re expecting a “Godzilla” of an El Niño in a matter of weeks in California.  This is serious stuff.

But you can help.

Call them all NOW:  (Also, find your own representative and be sure to let them know you are calling from their district: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/. If at all possible, see if you can schedule a meeting with one of the staffers as soon as possible.  This is very important)

Assemblymember Chris Holden (District 41 – Claremont, Pasadena, South Pasadena, East Pasadena, Altadena, Sierre Madre, Monrovia, San Dimas, La Verne)
Phone: (916) 319-2041
Email click here 

Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (District 52 – parts of Claremont, Pomona, Chino, Ontario)
Phone: (916) 319-2052
Email click here

Assemblymember Roger Hernandez (District 48 – West Covina, Covina, Baldwin Park, El Monte, Azusa, Glendora, Duarte)
Phone: (916) 319-2048
Email click here

Assemblymember Ian Calderon (District 57 – City of Industry, Whittier, Hacienda Heights, South El Monte, La Habra Heights, Santa Fe Springs, La Mirada, Norwalk)
Phone: (916) 319-2057
Email click here

Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (District 58 – Downey, Bellflower, Cerritos, Montebello, Commerce, Pico Rivera)
Phone: (916) 319-2058
Email click here 

Assemblymember Mike Gipson (District 64 – Compton, Carson, Willowbrook, Watts, West Rancho Dominguez, Wilmington)
Phone: (916) 319-2064
Email click here

Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (District 59 – University Park, South Los Angeles, USC, South Park, Vermont Harbor, Florence-Graham, Walnut Park)
Phone: (916) 319-2059
Email click here

AND, PLEASE CONTACT THE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER:

Speaker of the Assembly Toni Atkins (District 78 – San Diego, Chula Vista, Coronado Island, La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Solana Beach, Point Loma)
Phone: (916) 319-2078
Email click here 

Talking Points:

Assemblymember ______, it is vitally important for you to vote yes for the Senate’s package of climate change legislation, including SB-350 (De Leon and Leno), SB-32 (Pavley), SB-185 (De Leon) and SB-788 (McGuire and Jackson).  As we approach the Paris Climate Summit at the end of November, California must continue its strong climate leadership if we are to have any hope for an international agreement on greenhouse gas emissions reductions, which is vital, because…

  • Climate change is getting worse by the day, as evidenced by more extreme weather events around the world, including (pick some of the latest here).
  • The Los Angeles Times reported on a study that came out last week which said that our historic drought has been made from 8% to 27% worse by climate change.
  • UCLA came out with a study called “Mid-Century Warming in the Los Angeles Region,” which says that we will have a drastic increase in the number of extreme heat days over the next few decades: the number of days when the temperature will climb above 95 degrees will increase two to four times, depending on the location. Those days will roughly double on the coast, triple in downtown Los Angeles and Pasadena, and quadruple in Woodland Hills and the inland areas.
  • Extreme heat and drought will severely impact low- and middle-income communities and underserved communities the most.  Sensitive populations such as the elderly and young children will have serious health impacts, including death.
  • The Centers for Disease Control reports that public health can be affected by climate disruptions of physical, biological, and ecological systems, including disturbances originating here and elsewhere. The health effects of these disruptions include increased respiratory and cardiovascular disease, injuries and premature deaths related to extreme weather events, changes in the prevalence and geographical distribution of food- and water-borne illnesses and other infectious diseases, and threats to mental health.
  • According to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other top U.S. security officials, climate change is a top national security threat.