Transworld Business Advisors Welcomes New Ontario, California Office

Couple teams up to operate local franchise of brokerage consulting firm that helps entrepreneurs achieve maximum value for their businesses.

ONTARIO, CA – Transworld Business Advisors, a top brokerage consulting firm, has opened a new office serving the vibrant Southern California communities in and around Ontario. The franchise office is run by Jeff Konieczko and Jenna Roesch, a dynamic couple bringing unmatched expertise and passion to the region’s business landscape.

Transworld Business Advisors is a network of brokerage firms offering a standardized approach to buying and selling businesses and commercial properties, ensuring maximum value for clients. Transworld provides a turnkey solution for individuals seeking to build successful businesses while maintaining a fulfilling lifestyle. It’s part of the United Franchise Group® (UFG) family of affiliated brands giving access to a global network and decades in the franchise industry.

Ontario will be the office’s primary focus due to its significant market presence, but advisors will also work with clients in nearby Upland, Chino and Montclair.

“We are thrilled to bring Transworld Business Advisors to Ontario,” said Jeff. “Our mission is to help local businesses and the community with our Win/Win/Win approach: We help sellers win by achieving the highest possible sale price for their business; We help buyers win by providing them with thriving businesses they can make their own; We help the community win by keeping businesses operational, ensuring beloved local icons remain part of the community rather than closing down when owners need an exit strategy. By leveraging Transworld’s proven systems and our dedication to client success, we believe we can make a meaningful impact on our community.”

Jeff, who has lived in the Inland Empire since 1976 and has deep roots in the region, boasts over 30 years of experience in the distribution industry. He turned around a struggling franchise for another brand and was named Rookie Franchise of the Year in his first year of operation before selling it for four times the purchase price. He holds a master’s degree in organizational leadership, a bachelor’s degree in business administration, and is a certified supply chain professional.

Jenna has over 15 years of experience in residential real estate sales. She led her own team of agents in Austin, Texas, for four years before returning to Southern California. A graduate of California Polytechnic University, Pomona, with a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a focus on marketing, Jenna is also a certified mindset coach. She has spent the last four years coaching entrepreneurs through her business, Elite Venture Solutions.

“Our decision to join Transworld Business Advisors was driven by our shared belief in the power of entrepreneurship,” Jenna stated. “Starting from the ground up in both my real estate and coaching businesses, I know how hard it is to build something from scratch. This experience helps me relate to sellers who have invested years into their businesses and to buyers who can see the advantages of acquiring an existing, thriving business rather than starting anew. We are excited to leverage the resources and support provided by Transworld to help businesses thrive and contribute to the economic growth of Ontario and its neighboring communities.”

Jeff and Jenna’s commitment to the community is evident in their active involvement. The couple are not just partners in business but in life as well. They plan to get married soon. They reside in Rancho Cucamonga and spend much of their free time supporting Jeff’s daughter Chloe through her Wrestling and Softball teams.

Contact Information:

3350 Shelby St Suite 200 Ontario CA 91764

Office Phone: 909-552-7003

Jeff Konieczko: JeffK@tworld.com | 951.870.5004 DRE 02233402

Jenna Roesch: Jroesch@tworld.com | 512-592-9172 DRE 02233401

Find Transworld Business Advisors of Ontario on Facebook.

Find Jenna on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Find Jeff on LinkedIn.

Transworld Business Advisors of Ontario is ready to serve the community, fostering growth and success for local businesses. Jeff and Jenna look forward to building strong relationships and contributing to the prosperity of Ontario and beyond.

About Transworld Business Advisors

Transworld Business Advisors is part of the United Franchise Group™ (UFG) family of affiliated brands and consultants representing the best of their industries. With 40 years of business brokerage experience, Transworld Business Advisors helps buyers and sellers connect and conducts franchise consulting and franchise development. The company represents acquisition-minded corporations or individuals interested in owning their own company or franchise. From business brokerage to mergers and acquisitions, Transworld Business Advisors are business sale specialists that represent numerous listings across multiple industries. For more information on owning a Transworld franchise, visit www.tworldfranchise.com.

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Earth Day Celebration 2024 |RCOCN

Save the date! 📅🌎 Our Earth Day Celebration will be taking place on Saturday, April 20 from 9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. at Greenbelt Park (📍 15th Street & Benson Avenue). Get ready to enjoy some educational booths, crafts, games, free services, and giveaways!

Celebrate Earth Day!  Enjoy educational booths, crafts, games, and give-a-ways!  Remember to bring your documents for paper shredding.  Upland residents, free compost and mulch give-a-way will be on site.  Please bring a shovel and container for transport.  No plastic bags are allowed.  While supplies last.

For additional information, please contact Upland Recreation and Community Services, (909) 981-4501.

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Bill Proposes Reparations For Families Displaced by Dodger Stadium

A local legislator is pushing the “Chavez Ravine Accountability Act” to make reparations for families displaced to build Dodger Stadium.

LOS ANGELES, CA — While fans flocked to Dodger Stadium Thursday for the team’s home opener, a local legislator is pushing a bill proposing reparations for families and people who were displaced from their homes for the development of the iconic stadium in the 1950s.

The bill aims to correct “an injustice” that displaced families and has “lingered” in the shadows of L.A. history, according to Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, D-Los Angeles.

Last week, Carrillo announced the “Chavez Ravine Accountability Act,” or AB 1950, during a news conference at Elysian Park’s Los Desterrados (The Uprooted) Historical Marker.

“In the 1950s, the vibrant communities of Palo Verde, La Loma and Bishop were home to mostly Mexican American, as well as Italian American and Chinese American, families (who) saw an upheaval as they were uprooted and displaced in the name of progress with false promises of housing,” Carrillo said.

A representative for the Dodgers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The communities were later called Chavez Ravine, named after Julian Chavez, a rancher who served as assistant mayor, city councilman and eventually as one of the county’s first supervisors.

Carrillo added, “Families were promised a return to better housing, but instead they were left destitute.”

She said her bill would result in what she described as “historical accountability” by creating a public and searchable database detailing events surrounding the land acquisition. Carrillo said she hopes it will foster transparency and educate a broad audience about a pivotal moment in Los Angeles history.

Her bill also outlines various forms of compensation, such as offering city-owned real estate comparable to the original Chavez Ravine land owners, providing fair market value compensation adjusted for inflation and establishing a permanent memorial.

The city of Los Angeles, meanwhile, would be required to form a nine- member task force to oversee and provide such compensation.

Many families owned homes and established themselves in Chavez Ravine at a time when homeownership was difficult. According to reports at the time, Chavez Ravine encompassed about 315 acres with a grocery store, a church and an elementary school. The community was self-sustainable as many residents grew their own food and raised animals.

In the early 1950s, the city of Los Angeles began efforts to acquire the land and urged homeowners to sell — some developers offered money — and in some cases government officials used the power of eminent domain and forced residents out. Many families were taken advantage of and received less than what they deserved for their properties and land, according to Carrillo.

There were plans to develop public housing on the land, called the Elysian Park project, but in 1958 voters approved a measure to trade 352 acres of land at Chavez Ravine to the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Walter O’Malley.

Any remaining families on the land were forcibly evicted from their homes on Friday, May 9, 1959, by sheriff’s deputies, with bulldozers were ready at hand. This day was later called “Black Friday” by residents of Chavez Ravine.

Dodger Stadium officially opened in 1962.

“What we seek to address with AB 1950 is knowledge, understanding and healing that is long overdue,” state Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, a sponsor of the bill, said during the news conference.

Lara said they have an opportunity to address the wrongdoings, and the bill will serve as a “vehicle for reconciliation and healing for all residents of Los Angeles, including the Los Angeles Dodgers.”

Alfred Fraijo, founder and CEO of the law firm Somos Group, said his organization assisted Carrillo and the commissioner on development of the bill.

“I grew up housing insecure in L.A. and grew up with the story of what happened to the residents of La Loma, Bishop and Palo Verde. It was part of our cultural identity in some ways, a part of our own shared stories of discrimination and invisibility,” Fraijo said.

He said the bill is part of a larger movement to address historic injustices, adding, “As a country, we have yet to officially account for how this hostility has limited the economic prosperity of so many people of color.”

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Electric Semis Are Hitting the Road in California

Deep in the Inland Empire, the vast sprawl of suburbia that extends eastward from Los Angeles, the battery-powered semi trucks are about to start their run. They navigate the congested freeways of L.A. County to the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, load or unload, and then complete the round trip to trucking company NFI’s warehouse in Ontario, California. When the day’s run is done, the truck adjourns to the brand-new charging depot next door to fill up its battery for tomorrow’s trip.

These trucks are part of a project called the Joint Electric Truck Scaling Initiative, or JETSI. Funded by a handful of state sustainability agencies, the project aims to prove that electric power really can replace dirty diesel for trucking, at least for regional runs. Soon, about 100 electric trucks divided between two shipping companies will be driving around Southern California, delivering cargo while discovering just how challenging it will be for American trucking to run on battery power.

JETSI took a big leap toward its goal this week as NFI, one of two companies that will operate the electric semis, opened a 50-stall high-power charging depot next to its Ontario warehouse.

Jim O’Leary, vice president of fleet services at NFI, told me his company had already installed a handful of chargers and run a few EV semis as part of early initiatives such as the Daimler Innovation Fleet, a recent test project in which Freightliner EV semi drive hundreds of thousands of test miles. When California wanted a more ambitious test of electric trucking, he said, he thought NFI’s operations were an ideal match.

Electric semis still have a relatively short range and long recharge times, so battery power may not work for long-haul trucking — not for a while anyway. One of NFI’s core businesses, however, is “drayage,” or moving shipping containers on the back of semi trucks between a port and a warehouse. The current slate of EV trucks can make this 110- to 120-mile round trip before needing to recharge. Once they’re done, it takes 90 to 120 minutes to power up again.

“What we realized was going to be the sweet spot for electrification was this short haul, returning to the home base,” O’Leary said. “Electrification would be kind of perfect for that application.”

To streamline the operation, NFI was able to buy the plot of land next to its warehouse for the charging depot, negating the hassle of trucks making a separate trip to plug in. O’Leary said the company plans to install 1 megawatt of solar generating capacity on site. That’s not enough to charge the trucks on sun power, but it is enough to fill up the on-site batteries during the day when the trucks are out working, and then use the saved juice to help charge the vehicles later in the day when the sun has gone down.

While that sounds rosy, the purpose of a pilot project is to discover the pain points. With EV trucking, there are plenty. First: weight. The huge batteries needed to power a semi impart a serious weight penalty. Even though the state gives an extra allowance for zero-emission vehicles, O’Leary said (they may exceed the state’s weight limits by 2,000 lbs), they’re just not a great choice for carrying heavy cargo. That means shippers have to be careful about what they say they can move. “You can’t really haul beverage like you would a diesel,” he said.

Maintenance is a question mark. As Heatmap has noted before, passenger EVs don’t need the same kind of basic upkeep as gasoline cars — no oil changes, no spark plug swaps. But because today’s EVs haven’t gotten old yet, we don’t know for sure how their components will age over a decade or two. The same is true for EV tractor-trailers. “We know that some of the wearables go away — the oil changes and the need to grease,” O’Leary said. But no one can be sure whether electric semis will save money on maintenance in the long term.

Then there’s the question of who’s going to fix them. A trucking company has enough certified mechanics on hand to repair run-down trucks and get them back on the road. Finding enough mechanics with the proper electrical safety certifications and know-how to repair EVs is no easy task.

The big one, of course, is the cost. NFI’s JETSI project cost $45 million all-in, O’Leary said, counting the land purchase, the chargers from Electrify America, the solar power equipment and backup batteries, the trucks, and everything else. California state agencies including California Air Resources Board, California Energy Commission, and South Coast Air Quality Management District gave money to fund this proof-of-concept, and California cap-and-trade dollars could contribute to electrifying the trucking industry in the future. But JETSI shows just how many hurdles are involved.

“I don’t want to say we were shortsighted, because I think you can’t be shortsighted when you undertake a project like this, and you’re obviously looking to the future in some ways,” he said. “But I don’t think any of us, or our partners, realized the complexities that this project is going to have. Not only the complexities, but the capital investment that it takes to actually make a project like this work. And that’s where I think we are still a ways away from this being the norm.”

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The Inland Empire’s once-unstoppable warehousing industry falls into a slump

For years the growth of warehousing in the Inland Empire was relentless. At the confluence of port-bound freeways and rail spurs along the eastern edge of Los Angeles’ sprawl, box-like fulfillment centers popped up in business parks by the millions of square feet. They were an economic engine, a bringer of jobs, a shortener of commutes, and a workhorse during the pandemic.

But now that’s come to a halt — bringing uncertainty for thousands of workers and an industry that has been an economic bellwether for the region.

After the COVID-19 pandemic slammed the nation in spring 2020, the Inland Empire recovered all of the jobs it lost by the summer of 2021 — more than a year ahead of Orange County and almost two years earlier than Los Angeles County. Despite pandemic restrictions, the area’s machinery of storing and transporting goods kicked into high gear, outpacing better-paying and more glamorous sectors in the state, such as entertainment and tech.

But the tables have turned in the last year. Warehousing and storage jobs in the Inland Empire shrank for the first time in more than two decades. Once-booming truck transportation has been down since early in the summer, and the area’s wholesale trade employment is dropping fast, according to year-over-year data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Industrial building vacancies are up and rents are down.

Logistics businesses nationally are cutting back amid declines in freight volume. United Parcel Service said it would shed 12,000 jobs worldwide over the next several months after more than a $9-billion drop in revenue last year. A company spokesman said it didn’t have a breakdown of where those layoffs would hit, but UPS employs tens of thousands of workers in California.

“Everything is different,” said Victor Ramirez, a Pomona resident who’s worked in warehousing for about 20 years. Speaking in Spanish, he remembered when times were better — much better.

The 59-year-old recalled not only getting full 40-hour workweeks in the past but bonuses during the pandemic. These days, things have slowed so much at his current place of employment, a warehouse that builds pallets, that he has taken on additional work as an Uber driver and canvasser for nonprofits.

“One job isn’t nearly enough,” Ramirez said.

With related business services and real estate also down, the Inland Empire’s overall job growth last year averaged just 1.2%, about half the rate for Southern California and the state as a whole. “We could be the weak link,” said John Husing, the region’s longtime economist based in Redlands.

The pandemic-induced surge of consumer purchases, transportation gridlock and prolonged labor negotiations at the ports all played a role in disrupting the flow of goods and exacerbating an oversupply of warehouses. But even before COVID, the industry was feeling increasing strains from environmental regulations, disputes over independent trucking and rising operating costs that have pushed more businesses to leave the state.

The Inland Empire’s troubles come as the U.S. economy faces an expected slowdown and the tech sector continues to shed jobs. California’s tourism industry, another big economic engine, hasn’t fully recovered, and high interest rates have taken a bite out of the housing market. All of that has left the state trailing the nation in job growth. The latest unemployment rate statewide, as well as for the Inland Empire, was 5.1% in December, well above the U.S. figure of 3.7%.

“Right now I am not an optimist on this economy,” Husing said.

The long shadow of logistics

Thanks to lower housing costs than in Los Angeles and Orange counties, the Inland Empire’s population has been growing for decades. Over the years, many residents found work in a logistics industry that has surged along with the region. Since 2000, the Inland Empire’s population has increased by 45% to 4.7 million last year. And jobs during that period have jumped even faster, up 68% to 1.7 million. That’s about as many as in all of Orange County.

A lot of that came on the back of the logistics industry, which got a big boost from soaring trade with China. Today, about 40% of all containers entering the U.S. from Asia are handled by the ports of L.A. and Long Beach. More than 37,000 heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers based in the Inland Empire haul that cargo to rails and some 4,000 warehouses that are scattered across Riverside and San Bernardino counties’ 27,000 square miles, double the land area of the next largest metropolitan area, Phoenix-Scottsdale in Arizona.

The growing number of jobs brought the promise of greater economic security and quality of life as more residents were able to get jobs closer to home. But the growth of the logistics industry has exacerbated environmental concerns in communities with some of the least-healthful air in the United States. And analysts say too many households in the area are struggling to make ends meet as earnings have not kept up with rising costs.

Sheheryar Kaoosji, executive director of the nonprofit advocacy group Warehouse Worker Resource Center in Ontario, said many logistics jobs are still too close to minimum wage, are temporary or seasonal and are often quick to disappear when the economy softens.

“The average worker is always in a position of uncertainty,” he said.

For all occupations, Inland Empire workers made $27.96 an hour on average in 2022, the latest according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is compared with $33.43 for L.A. and Orange counties combined, and $45.37 for the San Francisco Bay Area.

More than 270,000 people in the Inland Empire work in transportation and material moving occupations. Their median hourly pay in 2022: $21.13. Stockers and order fillers made even less — $19.01 an hour, on average.

California’s statewide minimum wage for larger employers was $15 an hour in 2022. It went up to $16 this year, and for fast-food workers it’ll go to $20 an hour in April.

“It’s a good starter job, but as far as long-term, a lot of people think they’re going to do it for life,” said Byron Williams, 48, of Moreno Valley, referring to logistics jobs at Amazon.

Williams once worked at Amazon, though on the finance side of logistics. The e-commerce behemoth operates more than a dozen distribution facilities in the Inland Empire. Williams said he left because of the pay. “It’s not a for-life position.”

The new boom and bust

Going through boom and bust cycles has been part and parcel of life in the Inland Empire. The area tumbled during the early 1990s downturn that was marked by defense cuts and overbuilding. And it was one of the hardest hit by the subprime mortgage crisis that brought the Great Recession in 2007-09.

The pandemic, at first, seemed to be an exception. The Inland Empire’s economy quickly rebounded thanks to surging orders for all kinds of stuff from people stuck in their homes. Rounds of government stimulus checks added fuel to consumer spending.

But in the last year the industry suddenly fell back, in part as consumer spending shifted more to services, such as travel and entertainment , and less on things such as cars and groceries. High inflation also was a factor, as was the unusual situation at the ports.

Early in the pandemic, dozens of ships were lined up at sea waiting to berth in L.A. and Long Beach ports. When the logjam eased, merchandise flooded into the region, prompting wholesalers and distributors to double down on warehouses and workers.

“We couldn’t hire fast enough,” said Jeff Baldassari, who until August was president of U.S. Rubber Recycling in Colton, which got a burst of pandemic orders of rubber mats for in-home gyms and other uses. “Now the party ended, and it’s the hangover the next day,” he said.

Drawn-out labor talks with longshoremen that lasted more than a year prompted some companies to divert cargo to the East and Gulf Coast ports.

In the last few months, warehouses and distribution centers have shut down in Rialto, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Perris and Chino, among other cities, according to WARN Act filings with the state. During the summer, the bankrupt trucking firm Yellow Corp. shuttered several terminals in the Inland Empire that eliminated about 1,000 jobs.

The downturn in logistics has spread to other industries too, including finance and real estate. San Francisco-based Prologis, the world’s biggest warehouse developer and a major player in the Inland Empire, reported a 7% drop in rents in the fourth quarter for Southern California. The company said its construction pipeline in the region was half of what it was at year-end 2022.

During a recent conference call with analysts, Prologis’ chief executive, Hamid Moghadam, said it’s always been difficult for retailers and wholesalers to correctly forecast demand and manage inventories. “They’re schizophrenic. They always have too much or too little. You can never get it right.”

Still, he and other developers said they are bullish on the future. The logistics business in Southern California is getting back on its feet after the pandemic, they said. And key drivers of growth remain intact — e-commerce, global trade, demand for larger, more efficient distribution centers, said Iddo Benzeevi, chief executive of Highland Fairview, a developer working on a massive logistics center in Moreno Valley.

But that will also bring more consolidation, he said. Older, smaller facilities will get phased out, and payrolls aren’t likely to grow as fast as before. In the long term, logistics jobs may require higher skills and pay better as facilities become more automated and employ technologies such as driverless trucks — but they could employ fewer workers.

For truck driver Mauricio Perez, a 15-year veteran at UPS who lives in Rancho Cucamonga, it’s the near term that worries him.

Work usually slows after the busy Christmas season, but he said this year looks different. During the holidays, Perez saw 53-foot trailers stacked to the brim with items and packages to be delivered. Nowadays, 28-foot trailers have barely two or three pallets inside.

What’s more, he said that the work-bidding process at UPS suggests that a lot more truckers in the Inland Empire are likely to be on a more flexible schedule that can vary week to week or shunted to the package hub, where they’d work fewer hours. That means drivers who don’t get assigned work may end up taking a “layoff week,” in which they won’t get paid unless they cash out vacation time or accrue pension benefits.

“It’s not looking like the economy is going to get any better in the next few months,” Perez said. “We just gotta brace ourselves for the worst.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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CITY OF ONTARIO HOLIDAY CLOSURES

All City Facilities will be closed on Monday, February 19, in observance of Presidents Day. We will resume regular business hours on Tuesday, February 20.

In addition, refuse and recycling collection will be provided one day later than your normal pickup day for the remainder of the week.  Police and Fire services will remain available 24/7.

Visit OntarioCA.gov/AboutOntario for more information.

City Hall is open to the public.

 Telephone contact is encouraged.

City Clerk/Records Management (909) 395-2009
Economic Development (909) 395-2005
Business License (909) 395-2022
Fire Plan Check (909) 395-2562
Engineering (909) 395-2025 
Planning (909) 395-2036
Building (909) 395-2023

Book your appointment online. Appointments are available for the following Locations: 

City Hall (Building, Permits, Plan Checks, Business License, Economic Development, Housing, Engineering, Fire, Planning, Passports)

Holiday Schedule

Holiday Trash schedules, please click here. 


In observance of the 2024 holidays listed below, City Hall will be closed on the following days:

New Year’s DayMonday, January 1, 2024 
New Year’s Eve (Observed)Tuesday, January 2, 2024
Martin Luther King, Jr. Monday, January 15, 2024
Presidents’ DayMonday, February 19, 2024
Memorial DayMonday, May 27, 2024
Independence DayThursday, July 4, 2024 
Labor DayMonday, September 2, 2024
Columbus DayMonday, October 14, 2024
Veterans DayMonday, November 11, 2024
ThanksgivingThursday, November 28 and Friday, November 29
Christmas EveTuesday, December 24, 2024
Christmas DayWednesday, December 25, 2024
Holiday Closure (City Hall Offices)December 26-30, 2024
New Year’s EveTuesday, December 31, 2024

Police and Fire services will remain available 24/7.

*Holiday which falls on a Sunday is observed on the following Monday.

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Here’s What California Accomplished in 2023

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: From taking on Big Oil to tackling big challenges — from mental health care to housing — California enacted ambitious efforts to improve the safety, health, and well-being of all Californians in 2023.

WHAT GOVERNOR GAVIN NEWSOM SAID: “From taking on global problems to finding community-based solutions, this year California delivered on critical action to make people’s lives better, safer, healthier, and happier. As the country continues to recover and grow under the leadership of the Biden-Harris Administration, California is closing 2023 as a national leader in putting people first, safeguarding freedoms, and creating economic opportunity.” 

WHAT FIRST PARTNER JENNIFER SIEBEL NEWSOM SAID: “In 2023, California led the nation in bolstering the rights and opportunities of women and in ensuring children have the best start in life. From securing new partnerships to support our work to safeguard reproductive freedom and close the pay gap, to increasing students’ access to free, fresh, and nutritious school meals and behavioral health services, we’re creating a state where all women, children, and families can thrive.”


MENTAL HEALTH

✅ TRANSFORMING MENTAL HEALTH CARE: Governor Newsom and legislative leaders led a historic transformation of the state’s behavioral health care system — putting it on the ballot for voters in March 2024.

✅ INVESTING IN CARE: California invested nearly $1.5 billion to continue to build out the state’s mental health and substance use disorder treatment and housing sites, continued to expandthe state’s workforce, and submitted an innovative waiver to leverage federal funding.

✅ EMPOWERING YOUTH: First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom announced a $100 million anti-stigma campaign by the California Department of Public Health aimed at all California youth, especially those most at risk like LGBTQ+ and Indigenous youth, building on the Governor’s Master Plan for Kids’ Mental Health — which launched additional resources this year.

✅ ENSURING ACCOUNTABILITY: California continued to hold bad actors accountable, including a historic $200 million settlement with Kaiser for unacceptable wait times for access to behavioral health services.

✅ IMPROVING HEALTH OUTCOMES: The Governor’s Advisory Council on Physical Fitness and Mental Well-being launched the Move Your Body, Calm Your Mind campaign — and through the Outdoors for All initiative, more than 50,000 passes were downloaded by families.


PUBLIC SAFETY

✅ MAKING COMMUNITIES SAFER: Governor Newsom announced a new effort to transform San Quentin State Prison into a nation-leading facility — and a scalable model — focused on improving public safety through rehabilitation. The Governor convened a multidisciplinary group of experts to submit recommendations that can help build and inform the California Model.

✅ FIGHTING HATE: Addressing a rise of hate across the nation, California launched the CA v Hateinitiative and hotline to empower diverse communities and fight discrimination and hate. 

✅ ADDRESSING THE FENTANYL CRISIS: Cracking down on fentanyl trafficking, Governor Newsom deployed additional resources and a 50% increase in California National Guard personnel at our border’s ports of entry to fight drug trafficking, and launched a new partnership in San Francisco to hold fentanyl traffickers accountable.

✅ CRACKING DOWN ON ORGANIZED CRIME: California awarded over $267 million to 55 cities and counties to combat and increase prosecutions of organized retail crime in communities across the state.

✅ STOPPING GUN VIOLENCE: California passed multiple new gun safety laws to keep more Californians safe, became the first state in America to call for a Constitutional Convention on the Right to Safety, and launched GunSafety.CA.Gov — a website for the public to access life-saving resources.

✅ LEADING EDGE IN WILDFIRE RESPONSE:Investments and innovation in wildfire resilience reduced the wildfire year’s most catastrophic impacts to California’s communities, in a year where the state was recognized for its world-leading innovation in wildfire response.


INFRASTRUCTURE

✅ FIXING THE 10: After an arsonist ignited a major fire under the I-10 Freeway in Los Angeles, Governor Newsom led an all-hands response that resulted in the major economic artery re-opening to traffic in 8 days — months ahead of original estimates. 

✅ HIGH SPEED RAIL: California was awarded more than $6 billion by the Biden-Harris Administration to build high-speed rail throughout California, investing in the whole system — San Francisco, Los Angeles and the Central Valley, creating connectivity north, south and with our neighbors to the east. This investment was the single largest grant for the program — made possible by President Biden’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

✅ CONNECTING CALIFORNIANS: Thanks to investments by Governor Newsom and the California legislature, the state continues to make progress in connecting all Californians — leading the nation in affordable internet.


BUILDING CALIFORNIA’S FUTURE

✅ ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: With Generative Artificial Intelligence’s (GenAI) wide-ranging potential for Californians and the state’s economy, Governor Newsom earlier this year signed an executive order to study the use cases and risks of GenAI technology throughout the state and to develop a deliberate and responsible process for evaluation and deployment of GenAI within state government. Last month, the Administration released the first report from this Executive Order.

✅ CUTTING RED TAPE: California passed critical legislation to streamline projects — cutting red tape to build green infrastructure — helping meet our state’s aggressive climate goals and creating hundreds of thousands of good-paying jobs.

✅ TRAINING THE NEXT GENERATION OF WORKERS: California has exceeded 160,000 apprenticeships — on track to reach the goal of 500,000 by 2029 — creating strong “earn and learn” career pathways, especially for historically excluded workers, and meeting local economic needs.

✅ CREATING GOOD-PAYING JOBS: California created thousands of new jobs welcomed back Disney investments after the company pulled the plug on $1 billion development in Florida, and continued to invest in California’s innovation economy — securing up to $1.2 billion in federal funding to develop a national hub for clean hydrogen production, a project that will create tens of thousands of jobs, and investing in the development of Lithium Valley as a new global hub for electric battery production.


CLIMATE ACTION

✅ ENERGY OF THE FUTURE: California is set to become a national hydrogen hub thanks to up to $1.2 billion in investments by the Department of Energy. This crucial funding will help accelerate innovation and lead to the development and deployment of clean, renewable hydrogen — critical to cutting pollution and expanding the clean energy economy statewide.

✅ NEW PARTNERSHIPS: Governor Newsom built new climate partnerships across the globe, including a trip to China where he laid the foundation for future collaboration and cooperation. At the state level, public-private partnerships were pivotal to building out green infrastructure across California — from battery storage and clean energy production projects to safeguarding waterways and producing good paying blue-collar jobs.

✅ REACHING GOALS AHEAD OF SCHEDULE:California exceeded zero-emissions vehicle goals — both for cars and heavy-duty trucks — 2 years ahead of schedule.

✅ SUING BIG OIL AND HOLDING THEM ACCOUNTABLE: Governor Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta announced a historic lawsuitagainst Big Oil — taking some of the world’s largest oil companies to court for their decades of deception fueling the climate crisis. And with the state’s new anti-gas price gouging law, the Governor called a special session and championed legislation that established the Division of Petroleum Market Oversight to investigate price gouging and hold Big Oil accountable.

✅ BOOSTING WATER SUPPLIES: California continued the critical work of preparing for a hotter, drier future by advancing more projects to help boost the state’s water supply system.


HEALTH CARE

✅ IMPROVING AFFORDABILITY: The Office of Health Care Affordability (OHCA) launched, holding its first meetings. The Board of the OHCA is charged with providing input and recommendations to help make health care more accessible, affordable, equitable and high-quality for all Californians.

✅ $30 INSULIN: Governor Newsom, during the Tour of the State, announced the CalRx Initiative would be bringing $30 insulin to market.

✅ EXPANDING ACCESS: Thanks to investments made this year, low-income Californians — of all ages and regardless of immigration status – will be able to access Medi-Cal starting in 2024. Older adults and people with disabilities will be able to keep their savings and still qualify for Medi-Cal coverage — another first-in-the-nation expansion. And the reimbursement rate for providers providing Medi-Cal services will be higher, supporting our health care workers like never before.

✅ MASTER PLAN TO ADDRESS FENTANYL CRISIS: Governor Newsom released his Master Plan for Tackling the Opioid & Fentanyl Crisis, which includes the naloxone distribution project, steps to create our own low-cost naloxone supply, and the comprehensive resource: Opioids.CA.Gov.


TACKLING HOMELESSNESS

✅ LAUNCHING CARE COURT: Governor Newsom’s CARE Court program launched in 8 counties across the state, to ensure local governments are held accountable in helping people in need of care for untreated psychosis, including housing. The other counties will launch their CARE Court system by the end of 2024.

✅ CLEAN CALIFORNIA: California is providing $1.2 billion in grants for local governments to clean up blighted areas and create projects that help revive public spaces. Additionally, Governor Newsom continues to find ways to hold local governments accountable like revising their Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention plans to deliver better results.

✅ ENCAMPMENTS TO HOUSING: California has cleared over 5,600 encampments and provided $750 million for encampment resolution grants to move people to housing.

✅ PROVIDING RE-HOUSING: Through Homekey,California has funded the creation of over 14,600 housing units to assist people experiencing or at risk of homelessness.


FREEDOM TO SUCCEED

✅ BANNING BOOK BANS: Governor Newsom and state leaders fought back against book bans and censorship, signed a new law banning inappropriate censorship in schools, and highlighted the state’s Family Agenda to promote freedom in education. 

✅ EXPANDING COMMUNITY SCHOOLS: The California State Board of Education, with the support of Governor Newsom, unanimously approved a $750.5 million investment — the largest allocation of funds yet under California’s nation-leading initiative — to transform thousands of schools into a community school. These innovative sites provide students and their families the resources and support they need to thrive, including counseling, nutrition programs, tutoring, social services, and health care and mental health care services.

✅ WORKFORCE OF TOMORROW: Governor Newsom launched a new career education effort to prepare all of California’s diverse students and adults, especially those historically disconnected or disadvantaged, for the workforce of tomorrow and directed additional steps to reduce employment barriers for state jobs — including college degree requirements unnecessary to job duties.


REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM

✅ SPREADING FREEDOM: Governor Newsom launched the Reproductive Freedom Alliance, which includes 22 governors fighting to protect and advance reproductive health care across the country. Leveraging the Alliance, Governor Newsom sent a joint letter with 13 other Governors to pharmacies across the country asking them to clarify their plans to dispense mifepristone as well as other actions they would take to safeguard reproductive health care — resulting in several independent pharmacies stepping in to provide the drug. 

✅ SAFEGUARDING ACCESS: In the wake of the legal action against medication abortion brought by extreme politicians, Governor Newsom created a stockpile within California to safeguard access and provided additional state resources to continue to make care affordable and accessible.

STRENGTHENING PROTECTIONS: As hostile attacks continue, California invested in protecting health care workers and health care centers — both physical and cyber security — and signed new lawsstrengthening protections for providers and people traveling from other states, establishing first-in-the-nation protections for electronic reproductive health records,, and expanding the reproductive health care workforce.

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New year, new laws for Californians in 2024

 In partnership with the Legislature, Governor Gavin Newsom this year signed landmark legislation to support the reproductive rights of Californians, increase affordable housing, hold Big Oil accountable, and protect the safety, health, and well-being of all Californians.

WHAT GOVERNOR NEWSOM SAID: “California is more than just a state of dreamers, we’re a state of doers. Thanks to the Legislature’s strong partnership in 2023, the state is leading by example to create opportunity, and advance and protect the rights of all Californians.”

Here is a quick look at a few bills that will take effect on January 1, 2024:

FIGHTING FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS

What you need to know: As the country continues to reel after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, California is building on its nation-leading efforts to safeguard reproductive freedom for all Californians.

  • Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan’s AB 352requires companies that manage electronic health records to protect all Californians’ and visitors’ electronic medical records related to abortion, gender-affirming care, pregnancy loss, and other sensitive services. This closes a major loophole in privacy protections for people traveling to California for abortion and gender-affirming care.
  • Senator Skinner’s SB 345 protects providers and people from enforcement action in California of other states’ laws that criminalize or limit reproductive and gender-affirming health care services.

ADDRESSING THE OPIOID CRISIS

What you need to know: To combat the opioid crisis, California is expanding lifesaving treatment to communities in need. Assemblymember Haney’s AB 663 allows for more mobile pharmacies to be created in communities across the state and enables them to dispense treatment medications for opioid use disorder.

WORKERS’ RIGHTS

What you need to know: To help ensure Californians can take the time they need to care for themselves and their families, Governor Newsom signed Senator Gonzalez’s SB 616, which expands the number of sick days available to workers from 3 to 5.

INCREASING VOTER ACCESS

What you need to know: California has some of the strongest voting laws in the nation and continues working to make elections more accessible for all. Assemblymember Pellerin’s AB 545 allows voters with a disability to complete a regular ballot outside of any polling place—known as curbside voting—and removes the requirement for a voter to declare under oath that they are unable to mark their ballot in order to receive assistance doing so.

TAKING ON BIG OIL

What you need to know: The Governor is committed to making big oil more accountable for fleecing Californians at the pump. Senator Skinner’s SBX1-2 grants the California Energy Commission new authority to penalize refineries and set a maximum gross gasoline refining margin if necessary to help combat price gouging. It also creates a new independent state watchdog to investigate market or price manipulation.

INCREASING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

What you need to know:  The state is increasing the amount of affordable housing available for Californians. Legislation signed this year aims to speed up the process to secure permits and meet housing goals.

  • Senator Wiener’s SB 423 extends and expands existing law, requiring local governments that are failing to meet state housing planning goals to streamline affordable housing projects. This will increase affordable housing throughout the state in uncooperative cities.
  • Senator Wiener’s SB 4, known as the “Yes in God’s Backyard” bill, allows housing to be developed on property owned by religious or independent higher education institutions. These groups are given this authority “by right,” which requires no discretionary local governance intervention.

ADDRESSING THE MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS

What you need to know: Addressing our nation’s behavioral health crisis, the Governor signed legislation to improve health care delivery systems and make these services more accessible. These efforts will help tens of thousands of Californians and fill critical needs across the state, from homeless Californians with severe behavioral health issues to kids suffering from depression and everyone in between. Together, these reforms will be proposed to the voters for approval on the March 2024 ballot as Proposition 1.

  • Senator Eggman’s SB 326 reforms the Mental Health Services Act—making better use of Mental Health Services Act funding to address today’s needs and increasing accountability to the public.
  • Assemblymember Irwin’s AB 531 would issue $6.38 billion in bonds to fund 11,150 new behavioral health beds and housing as well as 26,700 outpatient treatment slots.

PUBLIC SAFETY

What you need to know: In September, Governor Newsom signed Senator Grove’s SB 14 to steepen penalties for human trafficking of minors in California. The law designates human trafficking of a minor for purposes of a commercial sex act as a serious felony.

STREAMLINING THE UC TRANSFER PROCESS

What you should know: AB 1291 by Assemblymember McCarty establishes the University of California (UC) Associate Degree for Transfer Pilot Program, beginning with UCLA, to prioritize admission of a student who earns an associate degree for transfer (ADT) from selected community colleges and to redirect a student who meets those requirements but is denied admission to the applicable campus and offer admission to at least one other campus. Expanding ADTs to the UC system allows qualified community college transfer students to fulfill the requirements of an ADT and meet the requirements for participating UC and CSU campuses, streamlining the transfer process and saving students money by being able to earn two degrees in four years.

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