California Assembly Passes Good Government Bills To Close Agency Lobbying Loophole and Bar Destruction of Records, says Consumer Watchdog
AB 1783 (Levine), addressing lobbying of state agencies, and AB 2370 (Levine), requiring retention of public records, both arise from a government corruption scandal involving the
Two former lawmakers—Fabian Nunez and former Assembly Member
At stake were potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in overcharges to small businesses and workers.
The
AB 1783, passed today, closes a loophole by including under the definition of "lobbying" any efforts to influence the
AB 2370, passed Monday, would require all state agencies to retain public records for a minimum of two years.
AB 2370 would simply apply to state agencies the same minimum two-year retention period for public records that is already in place for
Destruction of public records hamstrings government agencies' ability to conduct enforcement actions and is contrary to the basic tenets of transparency.
Yet, just this year the
The policy, which was pulled back in the wake of media attention, was developed following statewide news coverage of the pay-to-play scandal involving Applied Underwriters and cloaked campaign donations to Insurance Commissioner Lara's 2022 re-election campaign.
Failure to retain public records is a problem that reaches beyond the
- As recently reported, a state official shredded documents that she no longer considered "relevant," even though they were central to a contract dispute.
- CalPERS began automatically deleting email older than 60 days in 2011 after a government scandal.
- In 2016,
CalTRANS's 120-day auto delete email policy was determined to constitute spoilation of evidence. - The
California Environmental Protection Agency currently considers emails transmitting "informal information" to be "transitory," and deletes them after 90 days. - The Medical Board destroys "physician licensing files . . . . not necessary to establish qualifications for licensure" upon the time the physician's license is issued.
- The DMV destroys records regarding a driver's failure to establish insurance coverage following an accident after just 30 days.
The Department of Forestry destroys records regarding hazardous material (Hazmat) property upon expiration of the relevant contract regardless of the time period, and records of fire safety inspections after one year.
AB 2370 is supported by
AB 1783 is supported by California Clean Money Campaign,
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/california-assembly-passes-good-government-bills-to-close-agency-lobbying-loophole-and-bar-destruction-of-records-says-consumer-watchdog-301555422.html
SOURCE Consumer Watchdog
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