Lawmakers aim to rethink excessive water use penalties in Southern Nevada
Supporters of the bill said they fear the excess use fees would eventually drive the loss of mature tree canopy in Las Vegas, lower air quality, and increase the urban heat island effect — a phenomenon that creates higher temperatures in cities due to an abundance of superheating man-made surfaces like roads and pavement. (Photo: Hugh Jackson/Nevada Current)
The Las Vegas Valley Water District implemented a water rate structure two years ago that imposed hefty levies on the valley's biggest residential water users. Now state lawmakers are seeking to reexamine those fees following years of community pushback.
Residential water use accounts for 60 percent of the water consumed in the Las Vegas Valley. The excessive use fee was designed to affect the 10 percent of single-family residential customers who are the largest water users, and slow the flow of the valley's diminishing water resources.
But critics of the excessive use fee say the measure does not consider the lot size of properties subject to the fees and disproportionately impacts those living in the City of Las Vegas and unincorporated Clark County. The cities of Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Boulder City do not have excess use fees.
The Assembly Committee on Natural Resources heard Senate Bill 143 on Monday, a bill that would authorize the Joint Interim Standing Committee on Natural Resources to evaluate and review the excessive use fees and other water conservation efforts that impact turf and tree canopy.
If passed, lawmakers would be tasked with making recommendations for the 2027 legislative session.
The bill, sponsored by state Sen. Rochelle Nguyen (D-Las Vegas), passed the Senate in April with unanimous bipartisan approval.
Nguyen said the bill's intent is to examine water conservation efforts in Nevada, particularly in older neighborhoods with more mature landscaping and larger lot sizes that may require more water.
'A large part of my district is in older neighborhoods, often historic neighborhoods, and a lot of those older neighborhoods have lots of mature landscaping, including a tree canopy that's often 50 to 75 (years) if not older in age,' Nguyen said. 'These older residential communities are really the closest things that we do have to an urban green space and places that are lacking investment by our municipalities and new parks and green spaces for outdoor recreation.'
Nguyen said residents in her district have repeatedly expressed frustration about the disproportionate impact of excess use fees incurred by maintaining their mature landscaping.
In Southern Nevada, the excessive use charge applies to residential water customers who exceed certain seasonal thresholds. The charge is $9 per 1,000 gallons of water used beyond the threshold.
'We have plenty of people that cannot afford the landscaping and water costs associated with maintaining their existing landscaping,' Nguyen said.
During the hearing, supporters of the bill said they fear the excess use fees would eventually drive the loss of mature tree canopy in Las Vegas, lower air quality, and increase the urban heat island effect — a phenomenon that creates higher temperatures in cities due to an abundance of superheating man-made surfaces like roads and pavement.
Robert Hillsman, an anesthesiologist and one of the top 100 water users in Las Vegas in 2023, spoke in support of the bill. Hillsman said he has landscaped much of his one acre property and his water bill has doubled due to the excessive use fees.
'There are hundreds of thousands of dollars in landscaping, and despite the removal of grass, my water bill now exceeds $3,000 per month. This is due to the very unfair, lowered limited gallons and very abusive excess water surcharges,' Hillsman said.
Hillsman argued the excess use fee does not help mitigate the 'rapidly escalating urban heat island effect.'
Andy Belanger, the director of Public Services at Las Vegas Valley Water District, said the excess use fee is working as intended.
'The excessive use charge was designed to increase water conservation among people who are price insensitive to water conservation, and it has done that,' Belanger said during the hearing.
'It only hits the top 6% of water customers because nearly half of them have changed their behavior. The people who are still paying that, have been resistant to change,' he continued.
Belanger emphasized the importance of water conservation in a state that only receives about 2% of Colorado River flows.
While the Las Vegas Valley Water District testified as neutral on the bill, Belanger said the agency would support the idea of a study on water conservation and was fully prepared to defend the excess use fee in front of the Joint Interim Standing Committee on Natural Resources if the bill passed.
Laura McSwain, Founder and President of the Water Fairness Coalition, said the bill was a good first step in creating oversight for water conservation policies in Southern Nevada.
'For 20 years, [the Southern Nevada Water Authority] and the Las Vegas Valley Water District executive team has focused on the removal of grass from water savings and spends millions of dollars each year in community outreach advertising using Lake Mead levels to convince residents to submit to their policy prescriptions for water savings.'
McSwain, who lives on a half-acre lot in Las Vegas she purchased nine years ago, said current residents should not have to bear the brunt of the water savings if that water is only being conserved in order to fuel more growth in Las Vegas. The district, she said, should be aggressive in pursuing new water saving technologies to address needed conservation.
'Why would the agency responsible for water delivery and water safety so aggressively seek the removal of elements that so much protect our quality of life?' McSwain said.
Nguyen said if the bill passed, she wants the Joint Interim Standing Committee on Natural Resources to investigate the impact of turf removal on urban heat island effects and the benefits of preserving trees and grass.
The committee would also be charged with reviewing advancements in landscape water conservation technologies and considering exceptions for turf grass growing under trees, based on research on the cooling benefits of the combination.
No action was taken on the bill. The bill will need to pass in the State Senate by May 23 before being sent to the governor's desk for final approval.
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CNN
25 minutes ago
- CNN
What are stablecoins? Everything to know about the crypto being debated in Congress
Stablecoins are on the verge of going mainstream, analysts say, as a landmark regulatory bill makes its way through Congress. The Senate is deliberating the GENIUS Act, which would provide a framework for regulating stablecoins. The bill last week passed a major procedural hurdle in the Senate after initial resistance from some Democrats. Stablecoins are a type of crypto asset that is tied to the value of another currency, such as the US dollar or gold. They were initially created as a way for crypto investors to store their money but have grown in popularity in recent years for their use in digital payments. The landmark bill would provide a boost of legitimacy to the crypto industry and is another example of how cryptocurrencies have had a major revival under President Donald Trump's second term. Proponents of crypto have welcomed the focus on advancing stablecoin regulations. Yet critics have pointed to the Trump family's ties to the crypto industry: For example, World Liberty Financial, a company tied to the Trump family, has issued its own stablecoin. 'Stablecoins seem (to be) here to stay,' analysts at JPMorgan Chase said in an April note. 'A few years ago, we probably would have debated the accuracy of that sentence. Not today.' While cryptocurrencies are known for being volatile and fluctuating in value, stablecoins are supposed to be, as their name suggests, stable. This is because stablecoins are pegged one-to-one to another asset. They are most often linked to the US dollar, making one stablecoin worth $1. Companies that issue stablecoins hold other assets to back their coins and assure buyers about their value. For example, a company issuing stablecoins pegged to the US dollar could buy and hold high-quality assets like US government bonds. Two of the major stablecoin issuers are Tether, which issues USDT, and Circle, which issues USDC — and both of these stablecoins are pegged one-to-one to the dollar. Tether accounts for 62% of the total stablecoin market, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank. The total market value of stablecoins surged from $20 billion in 2020 to $246 billion in May 2025, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank. Stablecoins emerged in 2014 as way for crypto investors to park their money while buying and selling other more volatile cryptocurrencies like bitcoin. Since then, Stablecoins have ballooned in popularity particularly for their potential use in digital payments, said Darrell Duffie, a professor of finance at Stanford University. Stablecoins, given their stable value, can serve as a medium of exchange and function as a digital currency. The crypto coins have emerged as useful in helping speed up payments. 'Cross-border payments are providing the most exciting new use cases,' Duffie said. 'Making a payment, such as a remittance or a vendor payment to or from an emerging-market country, can now be made faster and at lower cost than a conventional correspondent banking payment.' While stablecoins are significantly less volatile than other crypto coins, they are not without risks. If the assets backing the coin drop in value and the one-to-one peg falls apart, it could cause the equivalent of a bank run, said Duffie. Stablecoins gained notoriety in 2022 when TerraUSD, an obscure type of coin called an algorithmic stablecoin, crashed in value and caused a panic among investors. There are also security risks like people forgetting the pass-code to their crypto wallet. The GENIUS act stands for 'Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins of 2025.' Circle would likely benefit from increased regulation more than Tether as Circle is a US-based company while Tether is based in El Salvador, Del Wright, a professor at Louisiana State University Law School who specializes in crypto, told CNN. If the legislation passes, it could usher in mainstream adoption of stablecoins for digital payments and spur growth in the stablecoin industry, said Christian Catalini, founder of the cryptoeconomics lab at MIT. He added that traditional Wall Street firms and startups would also compete to offer stablecoins. Visa (V) in May announced a partnership with Bridge, a stablecoin company owned by fintech startup Stripe, to enable payments using stablecoin in countries across Latin America. 'Stablecoins are on the cusp of mainstream adoption in 2025 as the US pushes forward with landmark legislation,' analysts at Deutsche Bank said in a May note. Despite the resistance in the Senate, 'we still expect progress this year.'


The Hill
30 minutes ago
- The Hill
Morning Report — Trump agenda takes on water in sea of red ink
Editor's note: The Hill's Morning Report is our daily newsletter that dives deep into Washington's agenda. To subscribe, click here or fill out the box below. Thank you for signing up! Subscribe to more newsletters here In today's issue: The nation's rising debt, barely more than a talking point in the Capitol in recent years, suddenly poses an ominous risk to President Trump's sprawling legislative agenda. Republican debate in Washington about deficits, debt and lower taxes took a new turn on Wednesday after the Congressional Budget Office released its finding that the mammoth House bill backed by Trump and now pending in the Senate would add $2.4 trillion to the national debt over a decade. Some Senate Republicans insist they cannot support a bill that explodes the debt, which currently totals nearly $37 trillion. Others balk at spending reductions that impact Medicaid and food assistance for the poor to pay for GOP-favored tax cuts. Such legislation, if enacted, would raise annual deficits and pile up levels of debt that, on paper, at least, swallow America's economic output and drag down the economy, according to fiscal hawks and Wall Street investors. Nonpartisan budget experts, examining the House-passed version of Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' have yet to gauge what the Senate has in mind for its own version of legislation this summer. Some Republicans are trying to discredit economists and budget experts who warn that Trump's agenda would inflate the debt by trillions of dollars over nine or 10 years, while others are rattled by the potential election risks of failure to deliver a measure Trump can sign. Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) told reporters as he departed a White House meeting among Trump and GOP leaders on Wednesday that assertions the bill would increase deficits are 'absolutely wrong.' The self-imposed Senate legislative deadline is a month away, on July 4, and the clamor to cut federal spending more deeply to trim the long-term budgetary costs of tax cuts shifted lawmakers' conversation on Wednesday to Medicare, a program Trump promised voters he would not touch. 'I won't do it,' he told NBC's 'Meet the Press' in December. Some Senate Republicans make a distinction between cutting benefit payments and what they call Medicare 'waste, fraud and abuse.' Complicating the endeavor is a GOP plan to use a budget reconciliation procedure that relies solely on Republican votes to simultaneously allow up to $4 trillion in borrowing to cover existing U.S. obligations. The Treasury Department wants Congress to raise the debt limit before August or September, but Trump on Wednesday called for the statutory limit to be abolished altogether, throwing in with progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who also wants to revoke it. The president's newest debt ceiling argument: 'It is too devastating to be put in the hands of political people that may want to use it despite the horrendous effect.' SMART TAKE with NewsNation's BLAKE BURMAN: With the focus on the White House's tariff talks with China, you might have missed an issue between the two countries that's playing out in our backyards — U.S. land owned by citizens of our adversaries. The Texas Legislature just passed a bill that would prevent Texas land sales to people from certain countries. Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham told me the state took up the issue when a Chinese official purchased property too close to a U.S. military site. 'We realized that that was really a mechanism for destabilizing our grid, causing problems for our bases,' Buckingham told me. Think this concern is bipartisan? Not necessarily. A couple states away in Arizona, Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs just rejected a similar bill. While we watch President Trump deal with Chinese President Xi Jinping, this is a reminder that issues involving China rest in the states, as well. Burman hosts 'The Hill' weeknights, 6p/5c on NewsNation. 3 THINGS TO KNOW TODAY: ▪ Individuals from a dozen targeted countries in the Middle East and Africa are banned from traveling into the U.S. beginning Monday, Trump announced, citing national security concerns amid his immigration crackdown. Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen were listed in Wednesday's order. Travelers from seven other nations face restrictions. The Supreme Court in 2018 upheld an amended Trump travel ban. ▪ The administration is considering a premium service fee of $1,000 to fast-track tourist and nonimmigrant visas to jump to the head of the line. The hitch? Supreme Court precedent. ▪ The Trump administration returned a Guatemalan migrant to the U.S. who was wrongly flown to Mexico. And separately, deported Venezuelan migrants held in a Salvadoran megaprison must be allowed to contest U.S. assertions they are gang members, a U.S. federal judge ruled on Wednesday. LEADING THE DAY © Associated Press | J. Scott Applewhite MEDICAID CUTS: Senate Republicans on Wednesday discussed the need to cut out 'waste, fraud and abuse' in Medicare to achieve more deficit reduction in Trump's landmark bill to extend the 2017 tax cuts, provide new tax relief, secure the border and boost defense spending. The House-passed bill would cut more than $800 billion from Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program, but some GOP lawmakers argue that other mandatory spending programs, such as Medicare, should also be reviewed for 'waste' to further reduce the cost of the bill. 'There's a legitimate debate about, 'Can we do more with Medicaid? Are we doing too much with Medicaid? How much waste, fraud and abuse is there in Medicare? Why don't we go after that?' I think we should,' Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said after meeting with colleagues to discuss changes to the House-passed bill. 'Some people are afraid of the topics. I'm not. In my view, this is our moment as Republicans in control of all three branches and we ought to be going after more fiscal responsibility.' Talk of cuts comes after Trump campaigned that he would not 'cut one penny' from Medicare, which currently benefits 68.2 million people 65 and older, but the White House has tried to argue that going after 'waste, fraud and abuse' is not the same as cutting benefits. Members of the Senate Finance Committee — including Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) — met with Trump at the White House on Wednesday to discuss the budget bill. Thune said his colleagues are moving 'in the same direction' and agree 'failure is not an option.' Meanwhile, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), a harsh critic of the bill, said Wednesday that the legislation needs to be overhauled and won't get through the Senate by Trump's July 4 deadline. 'It won't happen,' Johnson said of Trump's goal. SALT: Senate Republicans held a special conference meeting this afternoon to hash out their disagreements over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' Senate conservatives, led by Johnson, will use the session as an opportunity to demand deeper spending cuts. The big problem, however, is that they have yet to agree on what deficit reduction measures need to be added. An obvious target is the deal the Speaker struck with blue state Republicans to raise the state and local tax deduction, or SALT, cap. The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports there's growing momentum in the Senate GOP conference to roll Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) and other members of the SALT Caucus. The Hill: House Republicans warn Senate not to touch the SALT deal. MUSK'S DIGS: Republicans perceive a threat as they push Trump's megabill: Musk — who contributed hundreds of millions of dollars in 2024 to bolster GOP political fortunes — is now a prominent critic of the president's centerpiece second-term legislation. The tensions press Republican lawmakers to toggle between Trump's instructions and debt-focused critiques of the endeavor by the world's richest man, who claims his own public following. Musk, who recently departed the administration with Trump's good wishes, rubbed a number of senior administration officials the wrong way with his criticism of the bill, which he dubbed an 'abomination.' Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Wednesday that Trump is 'not delighted' with Musk's shift to oppose the megabill. 'He's not delighted that Elon did a 180 on that,' Johnson said. The Wall Street Journal: Musk's attacks on Trump's tax bill are fraying his relationship with the president. WHERE AND WHEN ZOOM IN © Associated Press | Carolyn Kaster TRANSGENDER TROOPS: Transgender active-duty service members must decide whether to leave the military on their own or be forced out by June 6 under a Pentagon policy announced last month by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a life-altering decision that trans troops interviewed by The Hill's Brooke Migdon said felt nearly impossible to make. 'It's crushing,' said Cmdr. Emily Shilling, who has served in the Navy for almost two decades. 'It's heartbreaking.' CBS News: This Army document outlines plans for expelling transgender troops from the military. MALE VOTERS: Democrats are increasingly frustrated by their party's approach to luring back men who supported Trump in November's election. In more than a dozen interviews with The Hill's Amie Parnes, Democrats griped that while it's still early, they have been underwhelmed by the initial efforts of their party to understand what went wrong and how they can rebuild. 'We have to refocus the party on what it once was and the reason I joined it 30 years ago which was because it was the party of the working class and working families,' said Democratic strategist Chuck Rocha, who served as a senior adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) during his 2020 presidential campaign. 'When you're not talking about the working family, you're never going to get these men back.' 🚨HIGHER ED: The Education Department on Wednesday said Columbia University in New York appears to have failed to meet an accreditation standard by violating federal antidiscrimination law, which puts it at risk of losing federal student loans and Pell Grants. The Education Department's Office for Civil Rights and the Department of Health and Human Services's (HHS) Office for Civil Rights 'determined that Columbia University acted with deliberate indifference towards the harassment of Jewish students, thereby violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,' according to a department statement. The university in April conceded to a $400 million deal with the administration to try to dodge additional discord focused on last year's student protests on campus about the war in Gaza, described by the administration as antisemitic. 📚 HARVARD: Trump wants to prevent Harvard University's international students from entering the country, he said in a Wednesday proclamation. Trump urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to consider revoking current visas for Harvard's international students, who make up nearly a quarter of enrollment. Stay or go? Trump has aggressively sought to punish Harvard after it publicly refused several of his administration's demands, with the White House targeting the school's federal funding and launching a slew of investigations, writes The Hill's Lexi Lonas Cochran. Two students interviewed by The Hill say Harvard should do more to make international scholars feel safe on campus, pointing out that some of those involved have gotten crucial information from the media or court filings instead of from administration communication. 💉 HHS TURNSTILE: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lost the co-leader of a working group on Tuesday when pediatric infectious disease expert Lakshmi Panagiotakopoulos resigned as co-leader that advises outside experts on COVID-19 vaccines. Her departure from the agency came a week after HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a long-time vaccine skeptic, said the COVID vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women had been removed from the CDC's recommended immunization schedule. 🔬Health research grants cancellation tracker: The New York Times compiled a list of the thousands of research grants ended or delayed by the Trump administration to date, actions that erased $1.6 billion in support for research on Alzheimer's disease, cancer, substance abuse and many other diseases and conditions. The changes impact public institutions across the country, including in red states that backed Trump in the 2024 election. ELSEWHERE © Associated Press | Gavriil Grigorov, Sputnik UKRAINE: Trump said Wednesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin plans to retaliate against Kyiv for drone strikes that targeted Moscow's strategic bomber fleet. Following a call with Putin, Trump said on social media that the two leaders had a good conversation, 'but not a conversation that will lead to immediate Peace. President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields.' The call comes as Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky traded accusations just days after heavy strikes by both sides — as well as a second round of peace talks on Monday, during which a truce remained far out of reach. Ukraine's audacious drone attack on Russian warplanes has shown Kyiv has a few cards up its sleeve to combat Moscow's aggression, even as Trump pressures hard concessions to achieve a ceasefire. But it's not yet clear whether Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb achieved new leverage with Trump, who views the country as on the brink of defeat. ▪ The Wall Street Journal: The U.S. is redirecting critical antidrone technology from Ukraine to U.S. forces. ▪ NBC News: Satellite images of destroyed and damaged military aircraft on Russian bases have provided fresh detail into Ukraine's unprecedented drone attack. ▪ The Washington Post: A drone strike devastated Russia's air force. The U.S. is vulnerable to unconventional, asymmetric warfare, too. GAZA: The Israeli military announced roads leading to Gaza's aid distribution centers were considered 'combat zones' Wednesday, shortly after the controversial organization tasked with running the sites announced they would close for the day. Meanwhile, the Israeli military launched strikes on weapons belonging to the Syrian government in southern Syria, hours after two projectiles were fired from Syria into the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. ▪ NBC News: Israeli forces have recovered the bodies of two hostages with dual Israeli-U.S. citizenship, Judith Weinstein-Haggai and Gad Haggai. ▪ CNN: The U.S. on Wednesday vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution demanding an immediate and permanent Gaza ceasefire because it was not linked to the release of hostages or disarming Hamas. ▪ Reuters: What could happen if Israel's parliament votes on dissolution next week? OPINION ■ A $4.5 trillion tax increase, or not? by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. ■ The GOP budget courts disaster, and for what? by Mark Mellman, opinion contributor, The Hill. THE CLOSER © Associated Press | Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Maxwell Orlosky, U.S. Navy Take Our Morning Report Quiz And finally … It's Thursday, which means it's time for this week's Morning Report Quiz! Alert to the Pentagon's proposal to change the names of some Navy ships, we're eager for some smart guesses about White House renaming policies. Be sure to email your responses to asimendinger@ and kkarisch@ — please add 'Quiz' to your subject line. Winners who submit correct answers will enjoy some richly deserved newsletter fame on Friday. Hegseth ordered one Navy ship to be renamed, and the Pentagon is 'considering renaming multiple naval ships named after civil rights leaders and prominent American voices.' Which ships are on the lists? Trump made waves in the first few days of his second term when he renamed which body of water the Gulf of America? Trump wants North America's tallest peak, Denali, to revert to its prior name, which honored what president? Trump proposed — and then the White House said the suggestion was abandoned — renaming Veterans Day, observed on Nov. 11, as what? Stay Engaged We want to hear from you! Email: Alexis Simendinger (asimendinger@ and Kristina Karisch (kkarisch@ Follow us on social platform X: (@asimendinger and @kristinakarisch) and suggest this newsletter to friends.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Candidates for California governor face off about affordability, high cost of living in first bipartisan clash
In a largely courteous gathering of a half dozen of California's top gubernatorial candidates, four Democrats and two Republicans agreed that despite the state boasting one of the world's largest economies, too many of its residents are suffering because of the affordability crisis in the state. Their strategies on how to improve the state's economy, however, largely embraced the divergent views of their respective political parties as they discussed housing costs, high-speed rail, tariffs, climate change and homelessness on Wednesday evening at the first bipartisan event in the 2026 governor race to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom. "Californians are innovators. They are builders, they are designers, they are creators, and that is the reason that we have the fourth largest economy in the world," said former Rep. Katie Porter., a Democrat from Irvine "But businesses and workers are being held back by the same thing. It is too expensive to do things here. It is too expensive to raise a family. It is too expensive to run a business." Conservative commentator Steve Hilton, a Republican, argued that state leaders need to end the "stranglehold" of unions, lawyers and climate change activists on California policy. "I've been traveling this state. Everywhere I go, it's the same story, this heartbreaking word that I get from every business I meet, every family is in such a struggle in California," he said, with a raspy voice he explained immediately upon taking the stage was caused by a sore throat. The candidates spoke to about 800 people at a California Chamber of Commerce dinner at an 80-minute panel at the convention center in Sacramento. The chamber's decision on who to invite to the forum was based on which ones were leaders in public opinion surveys and fundraising. Making the cut were former Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, Hilton, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, Porter and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. The sharpest exchange of the evening was between Kounalakis, a Democrat, and Bianco, a Republican. After the candidates were asked about President Trump's erratic tariff policies, Kounalakis cited her experience working for her father's reat estate company as she criticized Bianco for arguing for a wait-and-see approach about the president's undulating plans. "You're not a businessman, you're a government employee," she said to Bianco. "You've got a pension, you're going to do just fine. Small businesses are suffering from this, and it's only going to get worse, and it's driven, by the way, it is driven by Donald Trump's vindictiveness toward countries he doesn't like, countries he wants to annex, or states he doesn't like, people he doesn't like. This is hurting California, hurting our people, and it's only going to make things worse, until we can get him out of the White House." Bianco countered that Kounalakis and the other Democrat gubernatorial candidates are directly responsible for the economic woes facing Californians because they have an "unquenchable thirst" for money to fund their liberal agenda. "I just feel like I'm in the Twilight Zone. I have a billionaire telling me that my 32 years of public service is okay for my retirement," he said. "It's taxes and regulations that are driving every single thing in California up. We pay the highest taxes, we pay the highest gas, we pay the highest housing, we pay the highest energy." The Democrats on stage, though largely agreeing about policy, sought to differentiate themselves. The sharpest divide was about whether to raise the minimum wage. On Monday, labor advocates in Los Angeles proposed raising it in Los Angeles County Read more: Labor groups, officials push for a minimum wage of at least $25 an hour in L.A. County Atkins reflected most of her fellow Democrats' views, saying that while she wanted to see higher wages for workers, "now is not the time." Villaraigosa said that while he believes in a higher minimum wage, "we can't just keep raising the minimum wage." Kounalakis, though, said not increasing the minimum wage would be inhumane. "I think we should be working for that number, yes I do," she said. "You want to throw poor people under the bus." California's high cost of living is a pressing concern among the state's voters, and the issue is expected to play a major role in the 2026 governor's face. Nearly half feel worse off now compared with last year, and more than half felt less hopeful about their economic well-being, according to a poll released in May by the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies that was co-sponsored by The Times. Read more: Despite political promises, Californians are stressed about their finances Nearly exactly a year before the gubernatorial primary next year, the event was the first time Democratic and Republican candidates have shared a stage. It was also the first time GOP candidates Bianco and Hilton have appeared together. Although the state's leftward electoral tilt makes it challenging for a Republican to win the race – Californians last elected GOP politicians to statewide office in 2006 — Bianco and Hilton are battling to win one of the top two spots in next year's primary election. The pair expressed similar views about broadly ending liberal policies in the state, such as stopping the state's high-speed rail project and reducing environmental restrictions such as the state's climate-change efforts that they argue have increased costs while making no meaningful impact on the consumption of fossil fuels. Read more: Who is running for California governor in 2026? Meet the candidates A crucial question is whether President Trump, who both Bianco and Hilton fully support, will eventually endorse one of the Republican candidates. The gubernatorial candidates, some of whom have been running more than a year, have largely focused on fundraising since entering the race. But the contest to replace termed-out Gov. Gavin Newsom is growing more public and heated, as seen at last weekend's California Democratic Party convention. Several of the party's candidates scurried around the Anaheim convention center, trying to curry favor with the state's most liberal activists while also drawing contrasts with their rivals. Read more: With Harris on the sideline, top Democratic candidates for California governor woo party loyalists But the Democratic field is partially frozen as former Vice President Kamala Harris weighs entering the race, a decision she is expected to make by the end of the summer. Harris' name did not come up during the forum. There were a handful of light moments. Porter expressed a common concern among the state's residents when they talk about the cost of living in the state. "What really keeps me up at night, why I'm running for governor, is whether my children are going to be able to afford to live here, whether they're going to ever get off my couch and have their own home," she said. Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter. Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond, in your inbox twice per week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.