Subcommittee No. 4 on Climate Crisis, Resources, Energy and Transportation to Meet on Climate Expenditures Proposed by the Administration

February 19, 2025 – Informational Hearing

The subject of the hearing appears to be an examination of how the Governor’s Administration proposes to spend climate funding from Proposition 4, and how the proposal differs from the original proposal crafted by the Legislature.

The hearing can be viewed via live stream on the Assembly’s website at https://www.assembly.ca.gov/schedules-publications/todays-events

Role of Oil Money in the California Legislature

California Environmental Voters (formerly California League of Conservation Voters) has been preparing an environmental score card to rate state legislatures since 1977 and just awarded California a B this year for its 2024 environmental and climate action, noting that many opportunities to reduce emissions were left on the table despite record disasters from fires. They note in a recent OpEd to CalMatters that based on their 50 years of observation: “The main obstacle to government action at the scale this crisis demands are corporate polluters as one of the biggest financial spenders on elections and lobbying in California. The California Environmental Scorecard started tracking legislators that accept money from Big Oil at the turn of the decade.”

Oil money continues to play a potent force in California politics. Based on data from the Secretary of State, CalMatters reports that big oil and big tech spent nearly $168 million to influence California lawmakers in in the fall quarter of 2024 alone. California Environmental Voters notes that legislators who accept oil money are more likely to vote against environmental initiatives than those who refuse such contributions. Just looking at Democratic lawmakers, those who took oil money had an average voting record on environmental legislation that was 25% lower than their peers who did not. To be fair, their scores were penalized just for receiving oil money, but the penalty accounts for only a small difference in the score.  The bulk of the discrepancy stems from their voting history on environmental issues.

On a more hopeful note, the trend of accepting oil money is on the decline. In 2021, 65% of legislators took oil money, while in 2024 that was down to 51%. Only 30% of Democrats in the Senate and 35% in the Assembly took oil money in 2024.

Meeting of the AB 32 Environmental Justice Advisory Committee

The first meeting of the Assembly Bill (AB) 32 Environmental Justice Advisory Committee (EJAC) for 2025 is scheduled for February 13, 2025. The public can attend in person or remotely. Details below.

Date:   Thursday, February 13, 2025
Time:              1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Location:         The meeting is being held in-person in Sacramento and remote via Zoom.
CalEPA HQ Building | Sierra Hearing Room, Second Floor | 1001 ” I ” Street, Sacramento, California

Join Virtually:    Zoom (please register ahead of the meeting)
Passcode:           876719

By Telephone:    888 363 4734 (US Toll Free)
Conference code:    176024