Popular on TelAve
- Starlink Local Installers working with state of Minnesota (now offering digital menu board installs) - 127
- Phinge CEO Ranked #1 Globally by Crunchbase for the Last Week, Will Be in Las Vegas Jan. 4-9, the Week of CES to Discuss Netverse & IPO Coming in 2026 - 102
- Starlink Local Installers helping Wisconsin stay wired (now offering digital menu board installs)
- T-TECH Partners with Japan USA Precision Tools for 2026 US Market Development of the New T-TECH 5-Axis QUICK MILL™
- Local Fiber Announces Graduation from Samsung Next Startup Program, Marks New Phase of Growth
- From Cheer to Courtroom: The Hidden Legal Risks in Your Holiday Eggnog
- Kaufman Development Breaks Ground on Detroit Micro Data Center, Expanding Its National AI Platform
- BRAG Hosts Holiday Benefit — Awards 10 Student Scholarships & Honors Timberland with the Corporate Impact Award
- Talagat Business Academy Announces Joint Certificate Program With The University of Chicago Booth School of Business
- Take Control of Your Color Matching with Boston Industrial Solutions' Newly Expanded Natron® UVPX Series Ink Colors
Similar on TelAve
- 2025: A Turning Point for Human Rights. CCHR Demands End to Coercive Psychiatry
- The 22% Tax Reality: Finland's New Gambling Law Creates a "Fiscal Trap" for Grey Market Casino Players
- Documentary "Prescription for Violence: Psychiatry's Deadly Side Effects" Premieres, Exposes Link Between Psychiatric Drugs and Acts of Mass Violence
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
- The End of "Influencer" Gambling: Bonusetu Analyzes Finland's Strict New Casino Marketing Laws
- NAFMNP Awarded USDA Cooperative Agreement to Continue MarketLink Program Under FFAB
- CCHR Documentary Probes Growing Evidence Linking Psychiatric Drugs to Violence
- Contracting Resources Group Receives 2025 HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion Award from the U.S. Department of Labor
- Finland's Gambling Reform Promises "Single-Click" Block for All Licensed Sites
- Coalition and CCHR Call on FDA to Review Electroshock Device and Consider a Ban
NEW IN 2026: California laws taking effect in the new year
TelAve News/10884789
News
Dec 31, 2025
NEW IN 2026: California laws taking effect in the new year
What you need to know: Starting January 1, a new set of California laws will take effect, impacting health care, housing, workplaces, schools, technology, and corporate disclosure requirements.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced key laws taking effect in 2026 that reflect California's continued focus on public safety, affordability, transparency, and accountability.
The new laws lower prescription drug costs, increase oversight of large corporations, strengthen consumer and worker protections, and protect California's diverse communities. At a time when the Trump administration is attacking our state, California is protecting its people.
California is proving once again that progress isn't something we talk about, it's something we build. While some in Washington remain stuck debating yesterday's problems, we're focused on delivering real solutions for today's families. These new laws reflect who we are: a state that protects workers, respects students, puts people before politics, and isn't afraid to hold powerful interests accountable.
Governor Gavin Newsom
Education
Expanding mental health resources for LGBTQ youth
AB 727 (Gonzalez): Requires that student ID cards issued by public middle and high schools, and public colleges/universities include a 24/7 hotline for the Trevor Project. The hotline provides crisis and suicide prevention support to LGBTQ youth. It ensures state education agencies publish and maintain resources for students who face discrimination or harassment based on sexual orientation, gender identity, or expression.
Ban on ultra-processed foods in schools
AB 1264 (Gabriel): California's first-in-the-nation law will remove the most concerning ultra-processed foods from being served at public schools, giving students healthier, real-food meals to improve nutrition and overall health.
Supporting student literacy
AB 1454 (Rivas): Provides educators and school leaders greater access to the tools, training, and resources needed to help students become better readers.
Streamlining college admissions
SB 640 (Cabaldon): Establishes a California State University (CSU) direct admissions process by notifying eligible high school students of automatic admission to participating CSU campuses. It also requires California Community Colleges to create programs that will support a smoother transfer for community college students to a four-year university.
Health
Alternative birth centers: licensing and Medi-Cal reimbursement
AB 55 (Bonta): Ensures that licensure of alternative birth centers is more accessible to midwives in California by amending or deleting onerous and unnecessary requirements.
State emergency food ban reserve program
AB 798 (Calderon): Expands the state emergency food bank program to include diapers and wipes for families with young children.
Midwifery Workforce Training Act
AB 836 (Stefani): Requires the Department of Health Care Access and Information to administer funding for a statewide midwifery education.
Capping insulin costs
SB 40 (Wahab and Wiener): Beginning January 1, 2026, large state-related health insurers must cap insulin copays at $35 for a 20-day supply, improving affordability for Californians who rely on insulin.
More on TelAve News
Access to prenatal multivitamins
SB 646 (Weber-Pierson): Expands access to prenatal multivitamins to support healthy pregnancies and infant development.
Perinatal services in rural hospitals
SB 669 (McGuire): Requires, by July 1, 2026, the establishment of a 10-year pilot project within up to 5 critical access hospitals on an application basis to establish standby perinatal services.
Immigration
Students – know your rights
AB 419 (Connolly): Requires schools to post information about students' rights regarding immigration enforcement in administrative offices and on school websites, helping families understand that all children have the right to a free public education.
Family Preparedness Act
AB 495 (Rodriguez): Strengthens protections for parents and children by helping families in emergencies, protecting family privacy, and preventing child facilities from collecting immigration-related information, especially if a parent is detained or separated.
Housing
Protecting renters
AB 628 (McKinnor): Requires landlords to provide working refrigerators in rental units beginning January 1, ensuring tenants have access to essential appliances.
Transit-oriented housing development
SB 79 (Wiener): Requires each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the development of the county or city, and specified land outside its boundaries, that contains certain mandatory elements, including a housing element.
Animal welfare
Statewide ban on cat declawing
AB 867 (Lee): Bans non-therapeutic cat declawing statewide. Only medically necessary procedures performed by a licensed veterinarian remain allowed.
Addressing the puppy mill pipeline
AB 506 (Bennett): Holds pet sellers accountable, requiring them to disclose the pet's origin and health information.
AB 519 (Berman): Prohibits third-party pet brokers, particularly online pet brokers, from selling cats, puppies, and rabbits bred by others for profit in California.
SB 312 (Umberg): requires dog importers to submit health certificates electronically to the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) within 10 days of shipment, and requires CDFA to provide those certificates upon request.
Workplace rights & protections
Supporting survivors of workplace sexual assault cover-ups
AB 250 (Aguiar-Curry)- Temporarily lifts the statute of limitations for adult survivors of workplace-related sexual assault cover-ups. From January 1, 2026 through December 21, 2027, survivors may file civil claims regardless of when the incident occurred.
Strengthening equal pay enforcement
SB 642 (Limón): Expands California's equal pay laws by broadening key definitions, extending the statute of limitations to three years (with recovery for up to six years), and clarifying categories of unlawful pay practices.
Technology, AI safety & digital rights
Preventing AI from posing as licensed professionals
AB 489 (Bonta): Prohibits AI chatbots from presenting themselves as doctors, nurses, or other licensed professionals to increase transparency and prevent misrepresentation by AI chatbots.
Addressing artificially generated pornography
AB 621 (Bauer-Kahan and Berman): Strengthens protections against digital sexual exploitation by targeting the creation and distribution of AI-generated sexual content.
Risk-mitigation requirements for large AI companies
More on TelAve News
SB 53 (Wiener): Requires large AI developers to maintain documented risk-mitigation strategies to improve safety and transparency in the deployment of emerging technologies.
Safeguards for minors using AI chatbots
SB 243 (Padilla): Requires AI companies to include disclaimers that chatbots are not real people when used by minors and mandates safety protocols to prevent chatbots from encouraging self-harm.
Transparency in police reports drafted with AI
SB 524 (Arreguin): Requires law enforcement agencies to disclose when AI tools are used to draft official police reports.
Food delivery platforms: customer service
AB 578 (Bauer-Kahan): Strengthens consumer and worker protection on food platforms by prohibiting companies from using tips to offset base pay, requiring clear and itemized pay breakdowns for delivery workers, mandating access to a real customer-service representative when automated systems cannot resolve an issue, and guaranteeing refunds when orders are undelivered, incorrectly or only partially fulfilled.
Climate & environment
Updated plastic bag regulations
SB 1053 (Allen and Blakespear): Strengthens California's plastic bag ban by closing loopholes that allowed thicker plastic film bags to be distributed as "reusable" bags. The law eliminates plastic film checkout bags altogether and requires retailers to transition to truly reusable bags that meet higher durability standards or to paper bags with recycled-content requirements, reducing plastic waste and improving statewide recycling efforts.
Press releases, Recent news
https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkur..." rel="nofollow">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/x?linkurl=https...">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=h...">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/copy_link?linku...">Recent news
NUEVO EN 2026: Leyes de California que entran en vigencia en el nuevo año
Dec 31, 2025
News Lo que necesita saber: A partir del 1 de enero, entra en vigor un nuevo conjunto de leyes de California que impactan la atención médica, la vivienda, los lugares de trabajo, las escuelas, la tecnología y los requisitos de divulgación corporativa. SACRAMENTO – El...
Following LA fires, Governor Newsom extends key provision to fast‑track wildfire safety window, protecting more communities across the state
Dec 31, 2025
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom issued an emergency proclamation on March 1 to streamline wildfire prevention projects following the Los Angeles firestorms, and today he extended a key provision to maintain momentum on that work. To date, California has...
California advances Jobs First agenda, expands career pathways and worker protections statewide
Dec 31, 2025
News What you need to know: This year, California continued to support hundreds of thousands of workers through statewide apprenticeship programs and job opportunities and worked to get tens of millions of wages back into the pockets of hardworking Californians from...
Dec 31, 2025
NEW IN 2026: California laws taking effect in the new year
What you need to know: Starting January 1, a new set of California laws will take effect, impacting health care, housing, workplaces, schools, technology, and corporate disclosure requirements.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced key laws taking effect in 2026 that reflect California's continued focus on public safety, affordability, transparency, and accountability.
The new laws lower prescription drug costs, increase oversight of large corporations, strengthen consumer and worker protections, and protect California's diverse communities. At a time when the Trump administration is attacking our state, California is protecting its people.
California is proving once again that progress isn't something we talk about, it's something we build. While some in Washington remain stuck debating yesterday's problems, we're focused on delivering real solutions for today's families. These new laws reflect who we are: a state that protects workers, respects students, puts people before politics, and isn't afraid to hold powerful interests accountable.
Governor Gavin Newsom
Education
Expanding mental health resources for LGBTQ youth
AB 727 (Gonzalez): Requires that student ID cards issued by public middle and high schools, and public colleges/universities include a 24/7 hotline for the Trevor Project. The hotline provides crisis and suicide prevention support to LGBTQ youth. It ensures state education agencies publish and maintain resources for students who face discrimination or harassment based on sexual orientation, gender identity, or expression.
Ban on ultra-processed foods in schools
AB 1264 (Gabriel): California's first-in-the-nation law will remove the most concerning ultra-processed foods from being served at public schools, giving students healthier, real-food meals to improve nutrition and overall health.
Supporting student literacy
AB 1454 (Rivas): Provides educators and school leaders greater access to the tools, training, and resources needed to help students become better readers.
Streamlining college admissions
SB 640 (Cabaldon): Establishes a California State University (CSU) direct admissions process by notifying eligible high school students of automatic admission to participating CSU campuses. It also requires California Community Colleges to create programs that will support a smoother transfer for community college students to a four-year university.
Health
Alternative birth centers: licensing and Medi-Cal reimbursement
AB 55 (Bonta): Ensures that licensure of alternative birth centers is more accessible to midwives in California by amending or deleting onerous and unnecessary requirements.
State emergency food ban reserve program
AB 798 (Calderon): Expands the state emergency food bank program to include diapers and wipes for families with young children.
Midwifery Workforce Training Act
AB 836 (Stefani): Requires the Department of Health Care Access and Information to administer funding for a statewide midwifery education.
Capping insulin costs
SB 40 (Wahab and Wiener): Beginning January 1, 2026, large state-related health insurers must cap insulin copays at $35 for a 20-day supply, improving affordability for Californians who rely on insulin.
More on TelAve News
- Are You Hiring The Right Heater Repair Company in Philly?
- Appliance EMT Expands Professional Appliance Repair Services to Hartford, Connecticut
- Java Holdings LLC Acquires +Peptide, Expanding Portfolio Across Coffee, Science, and Functional Nutrition
- OneSolution® Expands to Orlando with New Altamonte Springs Implant Center
- Indian Peaks Veterinary Hospital Launches Updated Dental Services Page for Boulder Pet Owners
Access to prenatal multivitamins
SB 646 (Weber-Pierson): Expands access to prenatal multivitamins to support healthy pregnancies and infant development.
Perinatal services in rural hospitals
SB 669 (McGuire): Requires, by July 1, 2026, the establishment of a 10-year pilot project within up to 5 critical access hospitals on an application basis to establish standby perinatal services.
Immigration
Students – know your rights
AB 419 (Connolly): Requires schools to post information about students' rights regarding immigration enforcement in administrative offices and on school websites, helping families understand that all children have the right to a free public education.
Family Preparedness Act
AB 495 (Rodriguez): Strengthens protections for parents and children by helping families in emergencies, protecting family privacy, and preventing child facilities from collecting immigration-related information, especially if a parent is detained or separated.
Housing
Protecting renters
AB 628 (McKinnor): Requires landlords to provide working refrigerators in rental units beginning January 1, ensuring tenants have access to essential appliances.
Transit-oriented housing development
SB 79 (Wiener): Requires each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the development of the county or city, and specified land outside its boundaries, that contains certain mandatory elements, including a housing element.
Animal welfare
Statewide ban on cat declawing
AB 867 (Lee): Bans non-therapeutic cat declawing statewide. Only medically necessary procedures performed by a licensed veterinarian remain allowed.
Addressing the puppy mill pipeline
AB 506 (Bennett): Holds pet sellers accountable, requiring them to disclose the pet's origin and health information.
AB 519 (Berman): Prohibits third-party pet brokers, particularly online pet brokers, from selling cats, puppies, and rabbits bred by others for profit in California.
SB 312 (Umberg): requires dog importers to submit health certificates electronically to the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) within 10 days of shipment, and requires CDFA to provide those certificates upon request.
Workplace rights & protections
Supporting survivors of workplace sexual assault cover-ups
AB 250 (Aguiar-Curry)- Temporarily lifts the statute of limitations for adult survivors of workplace-related sexual assault cover-ups. From January 1, 2026 through December 21, 2027, survivors may file civil claims regardless of when the incident occurred.
Strengthening equal pay enforcement
SB 642 (Limón): Expands California's equal pay laws by broadening key definitions, extending the statute of limitations to three years (with recovery for up to six years), and clarifying categories of unlawful pay practices.
Technology, AI safety & digital rights
Preventing AI from posing as licensed professionals
AB 489 (Bonta): Prohibits AI chatbots from presenting themselves as doctors, nurses, or other licensed professionals to increase transparency and prevent misrepresentation by AI chatbots.
Addressing artificially generated pornography
AB 621 (Bauer-Kahan and Berman): Strengthens protections against digital sexual exploitation by targeting the creation and distribution of AI-generated sexual content.
Risk-mitigation requirements for large AI companies
More on TelAve News
- Dugan Air Donates $10,000 to Indian Creek Schools
- Robert DeMaio, Phinge Founder & CEO, Ranked #1 Globally on Crunchbase, Continues to Convert Previous Debt Owed to Him by Phinge into Convertible Notes
- 2025: A Turning Point for Human Rights. CCHR Demands End to Coercive Psychiatry
- The 22% Tax Reality: Finland's New Gambling Law Creates a "Fiscal Trap" for Grey Market Casino Players
- Phinge Founder & CEO Robert DeMaio Ranked #1 Globally on Crunchbase, Continues to Convert Previous Debt Owed to Him by Phinge into Convertible Notes
SB 53 (Wiener): Requires large AI developers to maintain documented risk-mitigation strategies to improve safety and transparency in the deployment of emerging technologies.
Safeguards for minors using AI chatbots
SB 243 (Padilla): Requires AI companies to include disclaimers that chatbots are not real people when used by minors and mandates safety protocols to prevent chatbots from encouraging self-harm.
Transparency in police reports drafted with AI
SB 524 (Arreguin): Requires law enforcement agencies to disclose when AI tools are used to draft official police reports.
Food delivery platforms: customer service
AB 578 (Bauer-Kahan): Strengthens consumer and worker protection on food platforms by prohibiting companies from using tips to offset base pay, requiring clear and itemized pay breakdowns for delivery workers, mandating access to a real customer-service representative when automated systems cannot resolve an issue, and guaranteeing refunds when orders are undelivered, incorrectly or only partially fulfilled.
Climate & environment
Updated plastic bag regulations
SB 1053 (Allen and Blakespear): Strengthens California's plastic bag ban by closing loopholes that allowed thicker plastic film bags to be distributed as "reusable" bags. The law eliminates plastic film checkout bags altogether and requires retailers to transition to truly reusable bags that meet higher durability standards or to paper bags with recycled-content requirements, reducing plastic waste and improving statewide recycling efforts.
Press releases, Recent news
https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkur..." rel="nofollow">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/x?linkurl=https...">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=h...">https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/copy_link?linku...">Recent news
NUEVO EN 2026: Leyes de California que entran en vigencia en el nuevo año
Dec 31, 2025
News Lo que necesita saber: A partir del 1 de enero, entra en vigor un nuevo conjunto de leyes de California que impactan la atención médica, la vivienda, los lugares de trabajo, las escuelas, la tecnología y los requisitos de divulgación corporativa. SACRAMENTO – El...
Following LA fires, Governor Newsom extends key provision to fast‑track wildfire safety window, protecting more communities across the state
Dec 31, 2025
News What you need to know: Governor Newsom issued an emergency proclamation on March 1 to streamline wildfire prevention projects following the Los Angeles firestorms, and today he extended a key provision to maintain momentum on that work. To date, California has...
California advances Jobs First agenda, expands career pathways and worker protections statewide
Dec 31, 2025
News What you need to know: This year, California continued to support hundreds of thousands of workers through statewide apprenticeship programs and job opportunities and worked to get tens of millions of wages back into the pockets of hardworking Californians from...
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- Leimert Park Announces Weeklong Kwanzaa Festival & Kwanzaa Parade Celebrating Black History, Culture, and Community
- Renowned Alternative Medicine Specialist Dr. Sebi and His African Bio Mineral Balance Therapy Are the Focus of New Book
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
- Why Millions Are Losing Sexual Sensation, And Why It's Not Age, Hormones, or Desire
- Justin Jeansonne An Emerging Country Singer-Songwriter Music Fans Have Been Waiting For…a True Maverick
- Russellville Huntington Learning Center Expands Access to Literacy Support; Approved Provider Under Arkansas Department of Education
- UK Financial Ltd Launches U.S. Operations Following Delaware Approval
- Pinealage: the app that turns strangers into meditation companions — in crowdfunding phase
- "Micro-Studio": Why San Diegans are Swapping Crowded Gyms for Private, One-on-One Training at Sweat Society
- Beycome Closes $2.5M Seed Round Led by InsurTech Fund
- Tru by Hilton Columbia South Opens to Guests
- Christy Sports donates $56K in new gear to SOS Outreach to help kids hit the slopes
- "BigPirate" Sets Sail: A New Narrative-Driven Social Casino Adventure
- Phinge CEO Ranked #1 Globally by Crunchbase for the Last Week, Will Be in Las Vegas Jan. 4-9, the Week of CES to Discuss Netverse & IPO Coming in 2026
- Women's Everyday Safety Is Changing - The Blue Luna Shows How
- Microgaming Unveils Red Papaya: A New Studio Delivering Cutting-Edge, Feature-Rich Slots
- 5-Star Duncan Injury Group Expands Personal Injury Representation to Arizona
- The End of "Influencer" Gambling: Bonusetu Analyzes Finland's Strict New Casino Marketing Laws
- AI-Driven Cybersecurity Leader Gains Industry Recognition, Secures $6M Institutional Investment, Builds Momentum Toward $16M Annual Run-Rate Revenue
- TRIO Heating, Air & Plumbing Now Ranks #1 in San Jose