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WECA Political Update March 26, 2026Thursday, March 26, 2026

Legislative Committees Advance Building Trade’s Agenda

It’s been a busy two weeks in the California State Capitol.

The Assembly Labor & Employment committee passed:

AB 1707 (Davies – R) would require the DLSE ECU to permit the application for certification and examination as an electrician to be submitted electronically and would also permit electricians to renew their certifications electronically. The bill would permit an individual who fails the electrician certification examination to reregister for certification and to retake the examination immediately at the next available appointment with the division. Passed 7-0. WECA Supports.

AB 1838 (Berman – D) requires contractors to disclose any history of wage-and-hour violations as part of their bid submission. Contractors who fail to provide these disclosures and supporting documents may be disqualified from the bidding process. Passed 7-0. WECA Opposes

AB 1859 (Ortega – D) requires awarding bodies or owners to grant reasonable access to joint labor-management committees to ensure compliance with prevailing wage and apprenticeship standards. These committees can take legal action if access is denied. Additionally, the bill specifies that courts may impose civil penalties for violations. Passed 7-0. WECA Opposes

The Assembly Education Committee passed AB 1809 (Fong - D). This bill would make certain provisions related to job order contracting for school and community college districts permanent by removing their January 1, 2027 expiration date. Job order contracting allows these districts to hire contractors for project management through a simplified process if they have a PLA that covers all public works. Passed 7-0-1. WECA Opposes

The Senate Labor Committee passed:

SB 909 (Smallwood-Cuevas – D) would exempt contractor DIR registration fee adjustments from the APA, remove the $800 cap, and eliminate the publishing requirement. It also mandates that contractors who violate prevailing wage laws face increased penalties, with 50% of the penalties directed to the State Public Works Enforcement Fund. Passed 4-1. WECA Opposes

SB 1241 (Smallwood-Cuevas D) broadens the circumstances under which skilled and trained workforce requirements apply and includes additional changes. It prohibits the waiver of penalties if monthly compliance reports are incomplete or false. The bill also considers whether a contractor submitted and followed a compliance plan when determining penalties. Additionally, a contractor or subcontractor found guilty of material misrepresentation becomes ineligible for public works contracts. The Commissioner must investigate complaints about workforce violations from labor-management committees. Passed 4-1. WECA Opposes

Frying Higher

According to a report from the Economic Policy Institute, a DC-based “nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank,” California should raise the $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers to keep pace with inflation. They argue that the $20 wage — the result of a 2023 truce between fast-food companies and labor unions — has improved workers' earnings and has not caused significant job losses. Now, they write that the California Fast Food Council should prioritize a cost-of-living adjustment in 2026.



 

But a new study from researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz suggests the policy may be producing unintended consequences. According to the report, while more people are applying for fast food jobs due to higher wages, many are not seeing increased hours or even securing employment at all. Researchers found that businesses are adjusting by cutting shifts, raising menu prices, and increasingly turning to automation such as self-service kiosks and mobile ordering systems. (Full disclosure, Richard is a Banana Slug)

“Based on what we’ve found, I think this legislation is a classic case of ‘no good deed goes unpunished,’” UC Santa Cruz Economics Lecturer Stephen Owen said. “There are unintended consequences and knock-on effects, and overall, I think the results have definitely not been as positive as policymakers had been expecting.”

Who do you suppose the California Fast Food Council will listen to?

Waters Back on Top

Rep. Maxine Waters (CA 43) has all but locked down a second turn as chair of the House Financial Services Committee if Democrats win a majority in November. That means the committee could soon have the oldest leader in its history as it grapples with technological shifts like cryptocurrency, and Democrats look to aggressively ramp up oversight of the president, his family business, and his Wall Street regulators.

Waters faces virtually no opposition, despite a growing chorus of Democrats calling for the end of Capitol Hill’s enduring gerontocracy and a long-shot Democratic challenger back in her district. Privately, some Democrats on and around the committee gripe that she doesn’t do enough to elevate her members or support them with campaign funds from the finance industry. But few are willing to publicly cross her, and she maintains the backing of most senior Democrats on the panel.

But according to the Los Angeles Times, Waters' relatives made ~$1.59 million in 2024 dollars by doing business with companies, candidates, and causes that Waters had helped. They claimed she and her husband helped a company get government bond business, and her daughter, Karen Waters, and son, Edward Waters, profited from her connections. Waters replied, "They do their business, and I do mine." Liberal watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington named Waters to its list of corrupt members of Congress in its 2005, 2006, 2009 and 2011 reports. Citizens Against Government Waste named her the June 2009 Porker of the Month due to her intention to obtain an earmark for the Maxine Waters Employment Preparation Center.

Waters came under investigation for ethics violations and was accused by a House panel of at least one ethics violation related to her efforts to help OneUnited Bank receive federal aid. Waters' husband is a stockholder and former director of OneUnited Bank and the bank's executives were major contributors to her campaigns. In September 2008, Waters arranged meetings between U.S. Treasury Department officials and OneUnited Bank so that the bank could plead for federal cash. It had been heavily invested in Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and its capital was "all but wiped out" after the U.S. government took it over. The bank received $12 million in Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) money. The matter was investigated by the House Ethics Committee, which charged Waters with violations of the House's ethics rules in 2010. On September 21, 2012, the House Ethics Committee completed a report clearing Waters of all ethics charges after nearly three years of investigation.

Waters had already served in the State Assembly for ten years when I arrived in 1986. My first encounter with her was in 1990 when I staffed a jail bond bill moving through the California Legislature. SB 1094, which was Proposition 147 on the November ballot. To get the bill out of the Assembly, my boss was “asked” to include $25 million to fund youth centers and youth shelters. When I took that back to my boss, the Senator from Riverside, he chuckled, “Was that from Maxine?” I said “Yes.” “Draft it,” he said, “we won’t get it out of her committee without it.”

Voters in November 1990 were tired of approving more bonds and voted “no” overwhelmingly 37% to 63%. We weren’t alone:


 

Voters to Decide Fate of 80 Local Tax and Bond Measures in June

In local elections across California in June, voters will consider 80 local tax and bond measures, totaling $738.5 million in direct new taxes if approved, along with additional property taxes to repay $2.6 billion in bonds, plus interest.

This total includes San Francisco’s Measure D, which would raise taxes on businesses based on the difference between executive pay and median employee wages. It does not include tax proposals that have not yet qualified for June and are moving toward the November ballot, including two major business taxes – a similar executive pay tax in Los Angeles and a separate San Francisco measure to fund a public bank by increasing gross receipts taxes on financial institutions.

After reviewing election materials from the 58 counties and consulting local election officials, CalTax found that parcel taxes make up 29 of the 80 measures. School bond measures account for 22, while 19 propose sales or transactions and use taxes, three target businesses, and four would increase transient occupancy (hotel) taxes.

Click here for the complete list of local tax measures, compiled by CalTax.

Only Days to Comply with New Emergency Contact Rule

Employers must provide their employees with the opportunity to designate an emergency contact and to disclose whether that emergency contact should be notified if the employee is arrested or detained under the various circumstances described in Labor Code §1555. More

California Lawmakers' Luxury Freebies

Trips overseas. Free spa treatments. Ritzy resort stays in Hawaii. Fancy dinners and premium seats at sporting events. These are just some of the freebies California lawmakers reported receiving last year in the mandatory reports they file with state ethics regulators. And it's all perfectly legal under California laws, despite giving powerful moneyed interest groups unfettered access to lawmakers that an average voter would never have. Story


 

The United States Is Adding to the National Debt Faster Than Ever

We just passed $39 trillion in national debt, only five months after we passed $38 trillion. It is not your imagination: debt is accumulating at a faster pace. Story

No Solar for You!

A California court ruled that regulators acted within their discretion when they established a less generous system for compensating rooftop solar owners for the power they produce, striking down a challenge from solar advocates. The California First Appellate Court issued an opinion that struck down a lawsuit the Center for Biological Diversity, Environmental Working Group and The Protect our Communities Foundation filed against the California Public Utilities Commission. The suit challenged the third-generation net metering system that the CPUC adopted in 2022 to compensate rooftop solar users less, ensuring they paid a larger share of the fixed costs of maintaining the electricity grid.

The ruling snuffed out a glimmer of hope for the rooftop solar industry, which has been fighting the less-generous so-called NEM 3.0 tariff since its adoption. Rooftop solar installations fell significantly in California after the policy went into effect. “At a time when California needs to accelerate local renewables to combat a federal obsession with fossil fuels, this is a huge step in the wrong direction,” Roger Lin, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement. [Politico]

Trump-Backed Utah Redistricting Repeal Fails to Make Ballot

A Republican-led initiative to repeal an anti-gerrymandering law in Utah will fail to make November’s ballot, despite garnering support from President Donald Trump, Turning Point Action and a host of other GOP influencers and organizations.

The ballot initiative, which sought to repeal a 2018 law that created an independent redistricting commission in the state, fell short of the required signature threshold after a coordinated signature-removal campaign, according to data released Thursday by the state election office.

The initiative’s failure, first reported by the Deseret News, is a major blow to Republicans in the deep-red state, who attempted to overturn a new judge-ordered congressional map that hands Democrats one safe blue seat. Repealing the anti-gerrymandering law would have allowed the Republican-controlled legislature to reinstall a more favorable map ahead of the 2028 elections. [Politico]

 

WECA Political Update March 12, 2026Thursday, March 12, 2026

PLAs for Data Centers?

As OpenAI continues its data center building spree, CEO Sam Altman and the North America’s Building Trades Unions said in a statement that they wanted to ensure AI infrastructure build-outs support union careers and create economic opportunity in the communities where the infrastructure is built.

“No one is better positioned to deliver the scale of construction needed for the advanced AI facilities, modern transmission systems, and new energy generation driving America’s economic growth,” said Sean McGarvey, president of the NABTU, in the joint statement with OpenAI. The statement said the two sides would “seek to foster constructive engagement” on workforce development, labor standards and other issues.

But the agreement does not commit to using union labor at data centers. “Contracting decisions remain the decision of the site developers,” said OpenAI spokesperson Jamie Radice. “We know America's best-trained, skilled workforce is going to help us to get it done," she added.

Altman, speaking at an event that day, highlighted the need for “skilled trades workers.”

“No matter where the choke point in the supply chain is at any one time, when I talk to people about what it would take to accelerate [data center construction], it is more skilled trades workers to build out all of this infrastructure,” Altman said onstage at the BlackRock Infrastructure Summit in Washington D.C.

Speaking at the BlackRock event, McGarvey said he hoped to get his unions involved in long-term planning of data center construction. The building trades union sees the partnership with OpenAI as an opportunity to get its skilled workers in the field on massive, well-funded projects.

“One of the last things that's decided, particularly in hyperscalers and data, is contractor selection and labor strategy," McGarvey said. “We have the people with the prerequisite skill sets in the geography where we need them on the day that we need them on the job site.” [Politico]

In an unrelated but encouraging story, State Senator Stephen C. Padilla amended his Senate Bill 887 to clarify that data centers are not ministerial projects exempt from CEQA and do not qualify as advanced manufacturing facilities. The bill would also allow data centers to be eligible for Environmental Leadership Development Project (ELDP) certification if they meet the criteria, along with additional requirements specific to data centers. As introduced, one of those requirements was, surprise, a PLA. WECA objected, and Padilla struck the requirement. Thanks, Senator Padilla!

Hilton Helps Out

Republican Steve Hilton may be alleviating Democratic fears of a catastrophic lockout in the governor’s race.

A new UC Berkeley Citrin Center for Public Opinion Research-POLITICO poll finds Hilton consolidating GOP support in California’s governor’s race, which would decrease the odds that Democrats fail to place as the top two vote-getters in the June jungle primary.

Hilton leads with 19 percent of likely voters. Behind him is a group of virtually tied candidates— Democrat Tom Steyer at 13%, and Democrats Katie Porter and Eric Swalwell and Republican Chad Bianco each at 11%.

Democrats have panicked that their large field could splinter the party’s vote and have unsuccessfully pressured lower-performing candidates to drop out of the race.

But the prospect of Republican voters coalescing around Hilton could offer Democrats some relief. Democrats outnumber Republicans so heavily in California that they are almost certain to win the governorship as long as one of them advances from the primary. The best chance for Republicans is that Hilton and Bianco split the GOP vote relatively equally, both finishing in the top two and advancing to November.

“If Hilton starts taking votes away from Bianco within that solid Republican pool, that would make it less likely,” said Jack Citrin, a UC Berkeley political science professor and co-director of the poll.

The findings show that Steyer, Swalwell and Porter have firmly established themselves in the top tier of Democratic contenders. The remaining Democrats are stuck in the mid-to-low single digits, with Xavier Becerra at 5%, Antonio Villaraigosa at 4%, Matt Mahan at 3%, Betty Yee at 2% and Tony Thurmond and Bob Bartlett both with 1%. Ian Calderon, who dropped out after the poll was conducted, had 2 %.

The rankings differed substantially from a survey of POLITICO’s audience of key political and policy influencers in the state, including political staffers, lobbyists, policy advisers and others. Swalwell led with 22%, followed by Mahan at 14%, Steyer with 13% and Porter at 12%.

[Politico]

In a related story, Hilton and Gloria Romero, who is running for lieutenant governor, announced that former US Rep. John Duarte was Hilton's "selection for California Secretary for Natural Resources." They explained "their vision for restoring abundance in California's natural resources through improved water management, healthier forests, and policies that support working landscapes such as farms and timberlands," and highlighted "the importance of water infrastructure and the role of expanded storage and better management in addressing California's ongoing water challenges," at an event at Friant Cove Recreational Area.

Nonprofit Paid $3.7 Mil to Jennifer Siebel Newsom

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, reportedly has paid herself and her company more than $3.7 million over the past decade from a nonprofit organization. According to IRS filings obtained by the Daily Mail, Siebel Newsom has funneled the money from the nonprofit organization Representation Project to herself and her company, Girls Club LLC. Story

Time for a Job Search

The White House told Labor Department chief of staff Jihun Han and deputy chief of staff Rebecca Wright to resign or else be fired amid an IG probe into allegations that they mistreated staff and misused tax dollars, New York Post’s Josh Christenson scoops. The senior aides, who were Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s top deputies, left the agency on March 2, after being placed on administrative leave in January. The Post reports that they were given a choice of “resigning or being fired by the White House Monday night.” Han, Wright, and the White House did not immediately respond to the New York Post for comment.

Fresno Concrete Drivers Vote to Remove Teamsters Representation

Cement truck drivers for the CalPortland Ready-mix Fresno facility voted to end their union representation last month. The Ready-mix drivers voted to end their union representation, concluding a month-long effort to remove Teamsters Local 431 from their workplace.

In a Jan. 29 vote, workers voted 9-7 to decertify the union that had represented them for more than two decades, according to results from the National Labor Relations Board. The decertification petition was filed in October 2025 by Ready-mix driver Darrell Dunlap Sr., who received legal assistance from the National Right to Work Foundation. Story

Nix on Penalties

A federal appellate court nixed a landmark National Labor Relations Board ruling that sought to impose steep penalties on employers who break labor law during organizing drives — including ordering them to bargain with units that lose the ensuing election.

A split judge panel ruled Friday that the company behind Woodford Reserve bourbon could not be compelled to bargain with a Teamsters unit representing workers at the whiskey-maker under NLRB’s 2023 Cemex decision, which it said was “created through an improper exercise of the Board’s adjudicatory authority.” The dispute stemmed from the company’s conduct during the 2022 unionization push, which ended in a lopsided loss for the union, which they allege was due to management’s illegal tactics.

The two judges who ruled against the NLRB were appointed by George W. Bush, and the dissent was written by a Joe Biden appointee. The panel had appeared skeptical of the NLRB’s interpretation at the oral arguments late last year.

Coalition for a Democratic Workplace (CDW)’s statement on the decision is available here. CDW filed an amicus brief in the case in April 2025.

LWDA’s New Proposed PAGA Regulations

On February 6, 2026, the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency (“LWDA”) provided a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (“Notice”) to adopt new Private Attorneys General Act (“PAGA”) regulations intended to supplement the legislative reforms to PAGA in 2024. The proposed rulemaking, in its current form, is great news for employers that have been inundated with frivolous PAGA filings. The proposed regulations require stricter notice requirements, apply special requirements to high-frequency and vexatious filers, and call for additional disclosures related to PAGA settlements. Story and Story

Utah Lawmakers Pass Water Reporting Requirement for Large Data Centers

Both the Utah House and Senate signed off on a proposal requiring large data centers relocating to Utah to report their annual water use to state officials. … “The market itself has reacted to the concern nationwide about water use,” said State Representative Jill Koford, R-Ogden, who sponsored the bill. “In the second-driest state in the nation, I think it’s good for us to set the tone nationally.” … Koford’s bill would require data centers that are at least 10,000 square feet and use at least 75 acre-feet of water a year to report their water usage to the state. That water usage data would also be accessible to the public.

Permits? We Don’t Need Stinking Permits!

Those FBI agents NOT fired for their investigations, now deemed offensive, will receive training insights and techniques from UFC fighters this weekend, in what FBI Director Kash Patel is calling a historic seminar. It’s unclear if they will be in a cage, but tickets to watch the training are available at www.trump.com. And over at the White House, the UFC is pushing forward with plans to hold a fight on the South Lawn on June 14 without a permit from the D.C. Combat Sports Commission. 

California State Capitol

Merit Shop Advocacy for California

Richard Markuson, WECA Lobbyist

Richard Markuson

"Merit shop electrical contractors throughout California are under pressure from a political system that limits their ability to compete for and win public works contracts. Through our coordinated efforts to further the interests of the merit shop community, we will make doing business in California fair and profitable again."

WECA Government Affairs

Rex Hime, WECA Lobbyist

Rex Hime

“A fair, competitive, and open construction market is imperative to creating jobs and achieving critical infrastructure and electrification upgrades in a fiscally responsible and timely manner. WECA’s Government Relations works with all levels of government to level the competitive playing field so merit shop electrical contractors can focus more on their bottom line.”

Government Relations Director

Political Advocacy and Government Relations

WECA focuses on the needs of electrical, low voltage, and solar contractors; apprentices, trainees, and journey workers in the Western United States. We are proud to represent thousands of electricians and technicians and hundreds of contractors. Our members believe fair and open competition is the key to a robust and growing economy. Our members embrace the idea that political action is not simply prudent but essential to preserving and enhancing their ability to pursue business opportunities in the public and private marketplace.

WECA’s governmental affairs staff works hard to protect the rights of merit shop business owners and their employees throughout the West. Still, our efforts can only succeed if those in the merit shop community are involved.

Concerns about climate change are rapidly changing the electrical marketplace with new state and Federal emphasis and funding for EV charging, battery energy storage systems, and rapid replacement of carbon-based fuels with electric alternatives. WECA monitors these areas and more to ensure that WECA members are ready to prosper in the growing arena.

Routine activities of the GA staff include:

· Monitoring all Federal and State Legislative and regulatory proposals for beneficial and detrimental changes

· Regular interaction with other business and construction groups in California, Arizona, Utah, and nationwide

· Maintenance of a regular presence in Washington DC through membership in the US Chamber of Commerce and trips to Capitol Hill to lobby on Federal initiatives

· Maintaining close working relationships with other construction and business groups such as state and local chambers of commerce, NFIB, CBIA, California Business Roundtable, CFEC, ABC, AGC, and ASCA

· Routinely monitors more than 305 local agencies, including Cities, Counties, School Districts, and other special districts.

· Evaluates state-wide ballot measures and candidates and recommend support for those causes and candidates that support WECA’s core values

· Encourages appointment of state and local officials who will approach their assignments without prejudice

· This website is designed to both educate our members and empower them to have the greatest possible impact when it comes to effecting political change on the local, state, and federal levels. Check out the latest political news and action alerts, learn more about the WECA Political Action Committee

 

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WECA Political Advocacy