Amended
IN
Senate
June 29, 2020 |
Amended
IN
Senate
August 30, 2019 |
Amended
IN
Senate
June 24, 2019 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 29, 2019 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
March 28, 2019 |
Introduced by Assembly (Principal coauthor: Senator Caballero) |
February 21, 2019 |
Existing law, until January 1, 2024, authorizes the governing body of a county, city and county, or city to establish a capital investment incentive program, pursuant to which the county, city and county, or city is authorized to pay, upon request, a capital investment incentive amount that is an amount up to or equal to the amount of ad valorem property tax revenues allocated to that entity, as specified, derived from that portion of the assessed value of a qualified manufacturing facility, as defined, that exceeds $150,000,000 to a proponent of a qualified manufacturing facility for up to 15 years.
This bill would, commencing with the 2020–21 fiscal year, until January 1, 2024, additionally authorize the governing body of a county, city and county, or city to pay a proponent of a qualified targeted manufacturing facility, as defined, a
capital investment incentive amount, for up to 10 consecutive years, that does not exceed the amount of ad valorem property tax revenues allocated to that entity, as specified, derived from that portion of the assessed value that exceeds $5,000,000 of a qualified targeted manufacturing facility located within the jurisdiction of that county, city and county, or city commencing with the first fiscal year after the date upon which the qualified targeted manufacturing facility is certified for occupancy or commences operation, as specified. The bill would require that annual payment of the capital investment incentive amount to be contingent on the proponent’s compliance with a community services agreement, which this bill would require the county, city and county, or city to enter into with the proponent, and the payment of a specified community services fee required to be paid by the proponent to the county, city and county, or city. The bill would prohibit ad valorem property tax revenue amounts with respect
to a facility from being taken into account in calculating more than one capital investment incentive.
The bill would require a county, city and county, and city that has approved the payment of a capital investment incentive amount for either a qualified manufacturing facility or qualified targeted manufacturing facility to provide the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development with specified information. The bill would require the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development to compile the information submitted by each county, city and county, and city and submit a report to the Legislature containing this information, as specified.
(1)The bid or price of the California-grown agricultural product does not exceed by more than 5 percent the lowest bid or price for an agricultural product produced outside the state.
(2)The quality of the California-grown agricultural product is comparable to that agricultural produce produced outside the state.
(b)All California state-owned or state-run institutions, except
public universities and colleges and school districts, that intend to accept a bid or price for agricultural products grown outside the state shall accept the bid or price from a vendor that packs or processes these agricultural products in the state before accepting a bid or price from a vendor that packs or processes these agricultural products outside of the state, when both of the following are met:
(1)The bid or price of the agricultural product grown outside the state and packed or processed in the state does not exceed by more than 5 percent the lowest bid or price for the agricultural product packed or processed outside the state.
(2)The quality of the agricultural product packed or processed in the state is comparable to those packed or processed outside the state.
(c)A school district that solicits bids for the purchase of an agricultural product shall accept a bid or price for that agricultural product when it is grown
in California before accepting a bid or price for an agricultural product that is grown outside the state, when both of the following are met:
(1)The bid or price of the California-grown agricultural product does not exceed the lowest bid or price for an agricultural product produced outside the state.
(2)The quality of the California-grown agricultural product is comparable to that agricultural produce produced outside the state.
(d)This section shall only apply to a contract to purchase agricultural products for a value that is less than the value of the threshold for supplies and services for which California has obligated itself under the Agreement on Government Procurement of the World Trade Organization.