summary
Introduced
01/23/2025
01/23/2025
In Committee
02/23/2026
02/23/2026
Crossed Over
03/20/2025
03/20/2025
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
An act to amend the Budget Act of 2023 (Chapters 12, 38, and 189 of the Statutes of 2023) by amending Sections 19.564 and 39.10 of that act, to amend the Budget Act of 2024 (Chapters 22, 35, and 994 of the Statutes of 2024) by amending Items 3125-101-6093 and 6100-488 of Section 2.00 of, and amending Section 39.10 of, that act, and to amend the Budget Act of 2025 (Chapters 4 and 5 of the Statutes of 2025) by amending Items 0250-494, 0509-101-0001, 0540-103-0001, 1700-001-0001, 3125-102-6093, 3360-001-3228, 3360-101-3228, 3480-001-0890, 3540-001-0001, 3540-101-0890, 3760-101-0001, 3790-003-6093, 3790-101-0516, 3790-102-6093, 3900-001-0115, 3900-001-3359, 4260-116-3397, 6100-134-0890, 6120-011-0001, 7600-001-0004, 7600-001-3418, 7760-101-0001, and 8570-001-6093 of, adding Items 3100-001-0890, 3540-002-6093, 3560-101-6093, and 6120-217-0001 to, and repealing Items 1700-101-0001, 3540-102-6093, and 3720-101-0001 of, Section 2.00 of, amending Sections 39.00, 39.10, and 99.50 of, and adding Section 15.01 to, that act, relating to the state budget, and making an appropriation therefor, to take effect immediately, budget bill.
AI Summary
This bill amends the Budget Acts of 2023, 2024, and 2025 to adjust appropriations for state government operations and local assistance across various fiscal years.
* **Department of Housing and Community Development:** Receives $225,000 for the Recovery Café in West Sacramento, $1,250,000 for the Coastside Farmworker Housing Development in Half Moon Bay, $1,250,000 for the same project in San Mateo County, $1,250,000 for the Safe Parking and Homeless Day Center at Alameda Point, $500,000 for the Wende Museum's affordable housing for artists, $1,000,000 for the Culver City – Jubilo Village Affordable Housing Development, $1,000,000 for Plan Adelanto, $500,000 for renovations and security improvements at Huntington Villas in Los Angeles, $2,000,000 for the Tierra de Rosas Infrastructure Project in Sonoma County, $500,000 for Tulare County Homeless Housing, $600,000 for the City of Los Angeles RV Buyback and Disposal Program, $2,000,000 for the San Fernando Valley Economic Development Center by New Economics for Women, $300,000 for rehabilitation at the Sieroty/Howard Johnson Homekey Site in Los Angeles, $1,000,000 for Habitat for Humanity of Butte County Projects, $2,500,000 for San Diego State University Imperial Valley Student Housing, $2,000,000 for the Riverside County Housing Authority Galilee Center Housing Shelter, $1,000,000 for the Yellow Roof Foundation in Concord, $1,000,000 for the GLIDE Modernization Project, $250,000 for the Homeless Prenatal Program, $750,000 for Sigma Beta Xi, Inc.'s Youth Village Project, $1,000,000 for the LACDA Treehouse Leimert Park Housing Project, $500,000 for LACDA's Biddy Mason South Los Angeles Mixed-Use Housing Project, $500,000 for the Los Angeles Skid Row Action Plan, $2,000,000 for the City of San Jose Eviction Diversion Program, $200,000 for Comite Civico Del Valle's Universidad Popular, $750,000 for the San Diego Housing Commission Homelessness Outreach Task Force, $1,000,000 for the City of Los Angeles motel to housing conversion, $2,500,000 for the City of San Leandro Nimitz Motel acquisition and renovation, $200,000 for City of Los Angeles Chatsworth Travelodge Homekey Site safety improvements, $136,000 for Vida Mobile Clinic outreach and medical supplies, $1,250,000 for Bridge to Home Santa Clarita Valley family housing and client service center, $1,000,000 for the City of Orange Homeless Resource Center, $1,500,000 for the City of Anaheim Mobile Family Resource Center, $400,000 for the City of Stockton Loads of Hope mobile laundromat, $1,435,000 for Life Plan Humboldt, $2,500,000 for the town of Danville's ADU Accelerator Program, $500,000 for the City of West Hollywood to refurbish a log cabin structure, $5,000,000 for Stanislaus County infrastructure projects in South Modesto, $2,000,000 for the San Diego Housing Commission predevelopment of Casa Colina Phase 1, $2,000,000 for the City of Half Moon Bay for affordable housing planning and development, $1,000,000 for Alta Housing for senior affordable housing, $5,000,000 for the City of Vista for interim and permanent support housing, $2,000,000 for Fresno County for community improvements, $240,000 for Habitat for Humanity Greater Fresno Area program support, $150,000 for the City of Reedley transitional housing improvements, $500,000 for Hijas del Campo farmworker housing, $150,000 for El Camino Homeless Organization permanent dining structure, $84,000 for the City of Monterey lighting improvement project, $1,000,000 for the County of Sonoma Casa Roseland Project, $500,000 for LA Family Housing to renovate interim housing units, $3,000,000 for Neighborhood Legal Service of Los Angeles to construct a justice and job training center, $1,100,000 for the City of Huntington Beach to support its Navigation Center, $3,000,000 for the City of Imperial for safety improvements, $2,000,000 for Burbank Housing Corporation affordable housing projects, $2,000,000 for the City of Perris to construct a multipurpose/nutrition room, $500,000 for the City of Riverside for historical preservation, $1,000,000 for the San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments for homeless services, education, workforce development, and public safety, $6,500,000 for Lao Family Community Development for infrastructure and capital improvements for unhoused people, $3,000,000 for Eden Housing for the Legacy Court housing project, $2,000,000 for Unity Council for housing and community services, $2,000,000 for St. Mary’s Center for transitional housing for seniors, $2,500,000 for the Los Angeles Black Worker Center to establish a justice campus, $3,000,000 for the City of Los Angeles for historic black neighborhood markers, $3,500,000 for the California Black Freedom Fund for civic engagement and voter education, $4,750,000 for the City of Los Angeles Mayor’s Office for neighborhood improvement and safety projects, $2,000,000 for the City of Orange to support its Homeless Resource Center, $4,000,000 for the City of Garden Grove to support the Central Cities Navigation Center, $2,500,000 for the City of Hayward for the Stack Youth and Family Center Phase II, $1,800,000 for the City of Santa Clara for overnight care locations, $500,000 for the City of Fremont to support its Housing Navigation Center, $1,500,000 for the City of Fremont for commercial district Wi-Fi expansion, $1,600,000 for the City of Milpitas for the SMART program, $1,500,000 for the National AIDS Memorial to establish a Center for Health and Social Justice, $2,500,000 for the Southeast Asian Development Center for building acquisition, $1,000,000 for the City of Modesto for Downtown Streets Teams, $155,000 for Tuolumne County for workforce housing property acquisition, and $435,000 for the City of Turlock for parks and sewer infrastructure. These funds are primarily from the General Fund.
* **California Tahoe Conservancy:** Receives $23,524,000 from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund for projects related to climate change impacts, public access, and technical assistance to disadvantaged communities, available until June 30, 2028. An additional $5,222,000 from the same fund is allocated for climate change impact reduction, public access, and technical assistance, also available until June 30, 2028.
* **State Department of Education:** Reappropriates various unexpended balances from previous budget acts for programs including K-12 Mandated Programs, 21st Century Community Learning Centers, California American Indian Education Centers, Child Nutrition Programs, Special Education, American Indian Early Childhood Education, Career Technical Education Incentive Grant Program, and Inclusive Early Education Expansion Program. A total of $239,395,000 is appropriated for allocation to school districts and charter schools for the 2024-25 fiscal year. Additionally, $5,000,000 is allocated to the Marin County Office of Education for Holocaust and Genocide Education, available until June 30, 2029. $292,000 is appropriated for English Language Development Assessment costs. $1,000,000 is appropriated for the Fiscal Crisis Management and Assistance Team to provide technical assistance to local educational agencies impacted by fires, available until June 30, 2028.
* **Judicial Council:** Reappropriates $3,440,000 from the General Fund for improvements to Incompetent to Stand Trial evaluations, available until June 30, 2028. An additional $1,400,000 from the General Fund is available for implementation of Chapter 539 of the Statutes of 2022, available until June 30, 2027.
* **Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz):** Receives $120,000,000 from the General Fund, with $100,000,000 for the City of Fresno's Public Infrastructure Plan and $20,000,000 for the California Travel and Tourism Commission to promote travel and tourism.
* **Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency:** Receives $61,045,000 from the General Fund for various projects including Clear Lake Restoration ($13,620,000), security and infrastructure for the Jewish Community Center of the East Bay ($5,400,000), the Los Angeles Holocaust Memorial ($5,000,000), facility improvements for the Child and Family Center ($3,095,000), San Diego community park improvements ($2,500,000), vegetation management in San Diego ($1,500,000), infrastructure improvements for the Escondido YMCA ($1,500,000), Portsmouth Square in San Francisco ($1,000,000), Healdsburg Villa Community Center Modernization ($1,500,000), McKinleyville City Incorporation feasibility study ($50,000), ADA improvements for the Cloverdale Veterans Building ($500,000), animal shelter expansion and service K9 training center in La Puente ($1,000,000), McNeil Park Project in San Pablo ($1,000,000), infrastructure projects in City Council District 1 of Sacramento ($500,000), Mission Viejo Oso Creek Trail Improvement project ($1,175,000), expansion of the Oceanside Museum of Art ($3,590,000), La Novia urban garden project in San Juan ($265,000), Coastal Rail Trail extension in Solana Beach ($300,000), planning and construction of the School of Arts and Culture at the Mexican Heritage Plaza in San Jose ($2,000,000), Avalon pier repairs ($1,000,000), Clean and Safe program and small business engagement by the Bixby Knows Community Foundation ($1,000,000), public improvements to San Diego dams and reservoirs ($1,385,000), building and maintaining public trails for mountain biking by the San Diego Mountain Biking Association ($615,000), ADA restroom improvement at the Charity Cultural Services Center in San Francisco ($50,000), archiving LGBTQ+ historical materials by the University of Southern California ($750,000), improvements to Ash Street Park facilities in Newark ($1,000,000), rebuilding and rehabilitating library and recreation facilities affected by the Palisades Fire in Los Angeles ($2,000,000), remediation of homes with lead contamination in the Eaton burn area by the California Community Foundation ($2,000,000), preservation and revitalization of a historic LGBTQ+ venue in San Francisco ($5,000,000), and administrative support costs ($1,500,000).
* **Civil Rights Department:** Receives $70,469,000 from the General Fund, an increase of $6,000,000. Of this, $6,000,000 is allocated to support the implementation of legislation establishing the Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery, available until June 30, 2029. An appropriation of $6,000,000 from the General Fund for local assistance to support the Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery is repealed.
* **Exposition Park:** Receives $1,039,000 from the Federal Trust Fund for support, available until June 30, 2028.
* **State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission:** Receives $2,000,000 from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund for administrative costs to support the deployment of charging or refueling infrastructure for medium- and heavy-duty zero-emission vehicles, available until June 30, 2029. An additional $38,000,000 from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund is for local assistance to support the deployment of charging or refueling infrastructure for medium- and heavy-duty zero-emission vehicles, available until June 30, 2029.
* **Department of Conservation:** Receives $6,143,000 from the Federal Trust Fund for support.
* **Department of Forestry and Fire Protection:** Receives $1,396,397,000 from the General Fund for support. An additional $2,500,000 from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund is for the creation or expansion of a fire training center, available until June 30, 2028. $24,594,000 is allocated from the Federal Trust Fund for local assistance. A $2,500,000 appropriation from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund for a fire training center is repealed. $2,250,000 is available for deferred maintenance and special repair projects at existing facilities to accommodate additional hand crews, available until June 30, 2030. $3,000,000 is available for a home hardening program, contingent on future legislation. $1,804,000 is exempt from competitive bidding for logistical support for additional fire suppression staff. $39,000,000 is allocated to transition Firefighter I positions to a permanent firefighter employment classification, with $5,978,000 available for deferred maintenance, special repairs, or vehicle purchases until June 30, 2029.
* **State Lands Commission:** Receives $20,000,000 from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund for the Hollister Ranch Public Access Plan, available until June 30, 2028.
* **California Coastal Conservancy:** Receives $8,000,000 from the General Fund, with $6,000,000 for the Great Redwood Trail Agency and $2,000,000 for the City of Petaluma for the Petaluma River Foundation.
* **Department of Parks and Recreation:** Receives $56,750,000 from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund for support, available until June 30, 2030, with exemptions from competitive bidding for forest health and fire prevention services. Receives $11,400,000 from the Harbors and Watercraft Revolving Fund for boating facilities and operations, available until June 30, 2027. Receives $85,500,000 from the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Fund for local assistance grants, available until June 30, 2028, including funds for climate impact reduction, outdoor recreation, Hollister Ranch Public Access Plan, Sepulveda Basin Park Cleanup, Eaton Canyon Natural Area, Charles White Park, San Marcos Park improvements, Castaic Lake fire recovery, Rosemead Park improvements, Grove Neighborhood Park project, Don Fernando Pacheco Adobe rehabilitation, and Flat Top Park.
* **State Air Resources Board:** Receives $82,342,000 from the Air Pollution Control Fund for support. Receives $60,673,000 from the Certification and Compliance Fund for support.
* **State Department of Health Care Services:** Receives $2,964,000 from the Opioid Settlements Fund for local assistance, with a provision allowing for an augmentation of up to $15,250,000 for the Naloxone Distribution Project if sufficient resources are available.
* **State Department of Education:** Receives $2,482,363,000 from the Federal Trust Fund for local assistance, including funds for Statewide System of School Support, Title I, and Title IV. A portion of these funds is for grants to local educational agencies with schools identified as requiring support.
* **California State Library:** Receives $28,915,000 from the General Fund for support, including $500,000 for the Braille Institute of America and $800,000 for Braille Institute programming. An additional $750,000 from the General Fund is added for competitive grants for the preservation and public accessibility of LGBTQ+ archives.
* **California Department of Tax and Fee Administration:** Receives $503,000 from the Breast Cancer Fund for support. Receives $1,061,000 from the Covered Battery-Embedded Waste Recycling Fee Subaccount, Electronic Waste Recovery and Recycling Account
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (1)
Other Sponsors (1)
Budget and Fiscal Review (Senate)
Last Action
Re-referred to Com. on BUDGET pursuant to Assembly Rule 97. (on 02/23/2026)
bill text
bill summary
Loading...
bill summary
Loading...
bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location | Created |
|---|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billStatusClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260SB107 | 01/23/2025 |
| BillText | https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260SB107#98AMD | 02/13/2026 |
| BillText | https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260SB107#99INT | 01/23/2025 |
Loading...