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2025 Legislative Package

Building Homes Smarter, Faster, and Greener

AB 253 Permitting Reform – Allows homeowners and developers to use third-party licensed professionals to review certain post-entitlement permits.

AB 368 Passive Housing Standards – Directs the California Energy Commission to evaluate the adoption of certified Passive House energy efficiency standards as an alternative compliance pathway to existing Title 24 building efficiency standards.

AB 474 Shared Housing Act of 2025 (Vetoed) – Supports nonprofit home-sharing by reducing barriers, offering financial incentives and tenant protections for seniors, and allowing caregivers to move in when necessary.

AB 1070 Building Standards (2-year bill) – Directs the Department of Housing and Community Development to create a working group to explore allowing “missing middle” developments between three and 10 units to be built under the requirements of the California Residential Code, rather than the California Building Code.

AB 1406 Condo Deposit Reform Encourages condominium development by increasing the liquidated damages cap from 3% to 6% while maintaining strong consumer protections, giving lenders greater certainty, improving project feasibility, lowering development costs, and ultimately increasing the supply of condominiums and affordable entry-level homeownership opportunities to help address California’s housing crisis.

Protecting Privacy & Civil Rights

AB 82 Health Data Privacy & Safety Protections - Strengthens protections for individuals seeking and providing legally protected health services in California by safeguarding health data privacy and expanding safety measures, particularly for those involved in gender-affirming care.

AB 322 The California Location Privacy Act (2-year bill) – Modernizes the California Consumer Privacy Act to close dangerous loopholes in how precise location data is collected, retained, sold, and disclosed. It ensures that Californians’ movements—especially in sensitive spaces like protests, clinics, houses of worship, and legal service centers—are not quietly tracked or weaponized against them.

AB 446 Surveillance Pricing (2-Year bill) – Prohibits businesses from using the personal information of a consumer to adjust the price of goods based on their individualized data profile, a practice known as surveillance pricing.

AB 1337 The IPA Reform Act of 2025 (2-year bill) - Updates California’s Information Practices Act (IPA) of 1977, which governs how public entities handle our data, to respond to the challenges of today’s digital environment.

 

Reducing Barriers to Green Energy, Recreation, Modernizing School Operations, Improving Forest Fuel Reduction & Electoral Processes

AB 518 Low Impact Camping – Streamlines the permitting process for Low Impact Camping Areas or commercially available campgrounds that are approved by and meet all requirements set by local governments.

AB 629 School Districts: Equipment Inventory (Signed) Updates an old rule that made schools track every item worth over $500 by raising the limit to $1,500, saving time and money by cutting down on unnecessary paperwork and keeping up with today’s prices.

AB 763 Timber Harvest Improvements (2-year bill) Streamlines the Timber Harvest Permitting process to reduce red tape and accelerate forest fuel reduction efforts.

AB 864 Solar Panel Recycling (2-Year bill) Makes it easier to recycle old solar panels in California by removing extra hazardous waste rules, as long as the panels aren't dangerous and are sent to certified recyclers.

AB 930 Electoral Efficiency Act Makes voting and recounts in California more fair and transparent by giving voters more time to return mail ballots, improving how recounts are handled, and requiring clearer public reporting of results.

 

Expanding Access to Health Care

AB 1103 Research Advisory Panel of California (RAP-C) Reform – Streamlines RAP-C’s processes for approving medical and scientific research about medicines used for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, treatment-resistant depression, substance use disorder, and other conditions driving the disproportionate incidence of suicide among veterans.