logo
Calif. lawmaker weakens Trump-proofing bill on ‘fraudulent' dam releases

Calif. lawmaker weakens Trump-proofing bill on ‘fraudulent' dam releases

E&E News2 days ago

SACRAMENTO, California — A Democratic state lawmaker is weakening her proposal to penalize federal officials for releasing water from dams under false pretenses in a deal with water agencies, farmers and business groups who had previously opposed the bill.
What happened: David Burruto, a spokesperson for Assemblymember Diane Papan, confirmed Thursday that she has agreed to significantly amend her AB 1146 , which was a response to the Trump administration dumping water from two Central Valley dams in January and falsely claiming it would help fight the Los Angeles fires.
Papan has agreed to remove most of the enforcement measures from her bill, according to a Thursday email sent by industry and agricultural groups to assemblymembers and confirmed by Burruto. Those include provisions that would have given state water regulators interim relief power against dam releases deemed fraudulent and required federal officials or water agencies that get water delivered from the federal government to pay fines of up to $10,000 a day.
Advertisement
As a result, the California Chamber of Commerce, the California Farm Bureau, the Association of California Water Agencies and other farming and water groups previously in opposition will no longer fight the bill, according to the email.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Decomposing body found in alley, Colorado police investigate "suspicious death"
Decomposing body found in alley, Colorado police investigate "suspicious death"

CBS News

time15 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Decomposing body found in alley, Colorado police investigate "suspicious death"

Police in the Denver metro area are investigating what they called a "suspicious death" after a body was discovered in an alley. According to Lakewood police, they were contacted around 5 p.m. Friday when someone discovered the body in an alleyway in the 9600 block of W. Colfax Ave. Authorities said the body was in advanced stages of decomposition and could not be identified, but they believe the person was an adult. The Jefferson County Coroner's Office is scheduled to conduct an autopsy tomorrow to determine the cause of death. This is a developing story. More information will be provided as it becomes available.

AMA: Doctors And Patients Hurt By ‘Big Beautiful Bill'
AMA: Doctors And Patients Hurt By ‘Big Beautiful Bill'

Forbes

time18 minutes ago

  • Forbes

AMA: Doctors And Patients Hurt By ‘Big Beautiful Bill'

The American Medical Association says legislation wending its way through the Republican-controlled ... More Congress would 'take us backward' as a country by cutting health benefits for poor and low-income Americans, the group's president said Friday, June 6. In this photo, the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, June 3, 2025. Photographer: Eric Lee/Bloomberg The American Medical Association says legislation wending its way through the Republican-controlled Congress would 'take us backward' as a country by cutting health benefits for poor and low-income Americans. Meeting for its annual policy-making House of Delegates this weekend in Chicago, the AMA is rallying physicians to thwart the legislation now before the U.S. Senate. Legislation known as the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' that narrowly passed the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives two weeks ago 'would reduce federal Medicaid spending by $793 billion and that the Medicaid provisions would increase the number of uninsured people by 7.8 million,' a KFF analysis shows. 'We have to turn our anger into action,' AMA President Bruce A. Scott, M.D. said in a speech to AMA delegates Friday. 'I know our patience is being tested by this new administration and Congress.' The AMA said it has launched a 'grassroots campaign targeted at the Senate' in hopes of making changes to the legislation. The AMA is the nation's largest physician group with more than 200,000 members. 'The same House bill that brings us closer to finally tying future Medicare payments to the rising costs of running a practice, also takes us backwards by limiting access to care for millions of lower-income Americans,' Scott said. 'Medicare, Medicaid, and the Affordable Care Act are literal lifelines for children and families for whom subsidized health coverage is their only real option. We must do all we can to protect this safety net and continue to educate lawmakers on how best to target waste and fraud in the system without making it tougher for vulnerable populations to access care.' Scott, an otolaryngologist from Kentucky, said the Medicare physician payment system is broken and Congress hasn't addressed – as an increasing number of states have – prior authorization, the process of health insurers reviewing hospital admissions and medications. Prior authorization delays needed treatment and puts patient health in jeopardy, doctors say. 'I'm angry because the dysfunction in health care today goes hand in hand with years of dysfunction in Congress,' Scott added. 'I'm angry because physicians are bearing the brunt of a failed Medicare payment system. And while our pay has been cut by more than 33 percent in 25 years, we see hospitals and even health insurance companies receiving annual pay increases.' Meanwhile, the AMA says cuts to physician payments are pushing more physicians away from private practice and exacerbating the nation's doctor shortage. A recent analysis by AMN Healthcare shows only two in five physicians are now in doctor-owned private practices. And Americans in most U.S. cities face waits of at least one month before they can see certain specialists. 'Congress needs to know there is no 'care' in Medicare if there are no doctors," Scott said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store