
Salmon fishermen joined environmentalists and other public trust advocates in praising the introduction of SB 49, the California Environmental Defense Act, in the California State Senate on February 23.
The Senate leadership unveiled SB 49 as part of the Preserve California legislative package to insulate the state from dangerous rollbacks in federal environmental regulations and public health protections proposed by the Trump administration and Congress.
SB 49, authored by Senate Pro Tempore Kevin de León and Senator Henry Stern, does the following:
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Makes current federal clean air, climate, clean water, worker safety, and endangered species standards enforceable under state law, even if the federal government rolls back and weakens those standards.
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Directs state environmental, public health, and worker safety agencies to take all actions within their authorities to ensure standards in effect and being enforced today continue to remain in effect.
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Federal laws in these areas set baselines, but allow states to adopt more stringent standards. This bill simply ensures California does not backslide as a result of rollbacks and damage done by the new regime in Washington DC.
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In 2003, when the Bush Administration attempted to enact similar rollbacks of federal clean air standards, the Legislature passed SB 288, the Protect California Air Act. This measure builds on that platform.
Salmon fishermen and women are breathing a little easier with the introduction of SB 49, the California Environmental Defense Act, said John McManus, executive director of the Golden Gate Salmon Association. This bill will protect California salmon fishing jobs.
Mr. Trump last year declared there was no drought and promised to eliminate salmon protections, he explained. The former chief lobbyist for the western San Joaquin Valley Westlands Water District is the leading candidate to take over the number two spot in the Trump Administration's Department of Interior. He's certain to push a bill in the House demanding diversion of even more northern California water needed by salmon to agribusiness in the arid western San Joaquin Valley.
The California Environmental Defense Act protects the salmon industry and is just in time to stop the loss of any more salmon fishing jobs.