Law New California laws taking effect in 2022


Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a whopping 770 new laws in 2021, according to Cal Matters. Some of those laws have a buffer window written into them before they take effect – like mandating mental health instruction in schools or requiring gender-neutral toy sections in stores – but most of them kick in on the first day of the next year.

That means lots of new rules (or altered rules) are coming to California on Jan. 1, 2022.

We’re not going to get into the minutiae of all 770 bills signed into law during the last legislative cycle (sorry, but also you’re welcome), but we are breaking down some of the highlights. Here are some of the most important and most bizarre laws taking effect in 2022.

Slower speed limits

A law that takes effect on Jan. 1 gives California cities more local control over how speed limits are set instead of using an old rule that essentially caused speed limits to go up every few years. Cities can start working toward lowering speed limits in 2022, but can’t enforce them until June 30, 2024, or whenever the state creates an online portal to adjudicate the new infractions – whichever comes sooner.

Sleep in, kids

Middle schools and high schools will soon be required to start class no earlier than 8 a.m. and 8:30 a.m., respectively. Supporters say preteens and teenagers need the extra sleep for their health and development. The new law goes into effect on July 1, 2022, so for most students it will impact them in the 2022-23 school year. The law exempts rural school districts.

Compost – or else

Starting in 2022, all California residents and businesses will be required to sort their organic waste from the rest thanks to Senate Bill 1383. The program will take effect in phases depending on where you live. If it takes you some time to get used to it, don’t stress – fines won’t start being issued until 2024.

Mandatory menstrual products in school

Starting in the 2022-23 school year, public schools will be required to stock restrooms with free pads or tampons. The law affects public schools with grades 6 through 12, community colleges, and public universities.

Minimum wage bump

Businesses with 26 or more employees will be required to pay a $15 minimum wage starting in 2022. That’s more than double the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour. California businesses with fewer than 26 employees will have to raise their lowest wage to $15 starting the year after.

Some California cities already have higher minimum wages in effect.

New rules for bacon making

An animal welfare law passed by voters in 2018 takes effect this year. It requires that breeding pigs, egg-laying chickens and veal calves have enough room to stand and turn around. But many in the pork industry haven’t made the necessary changes and there’s a coalition of restaurants and grocers suing, hoping for a two-year delay.

Vote by mail is here to stay

An executive order in 2020 sent mail-in ballots to every registered voter in California as a safety measure during the COVID-19 pandemic and presidential election. Assembly Bill 37 makes that change permanent and expands it to include local elections. People can still vote in person if they choose.

Seizing ghost guns

A new law will make it possible for concerned family members, teachers, coworkers and employers to ask a judge to seize ghost guns from someone they think could be a danger to themselves or others. Ghost guns are guns that are purchased in parts and assembled at home, making them hard to track. The law takes effect on July 1, 2022.

Trimmed training for barbers

Senate Bill 803 cuts down how much training is required of barbers and cosmetologists to 1,000 hours. Previously, 1,600 was required for cosmetologists and 1,500 was required for barbers. Advocates say it’ll cut down on debt and let trainees in the industry get to work faster.

Pour another round for to-go cocktails

Senate Bill 389 extends pandemic-era rules allowing the sale of takeout alcoholic drinks through 2026. It also makes it possible to keep ordering cocktails, beer and wine in outdoor dining parklets for the next five years.

Removing “alien” from the books

Assembly Bill 1096 strikes the word “alien” from the California state code. The word will be replaced with words like “noncitizen” or “immigrant.” Gov. Gavin Newsom said the word alien has “fueled a divisive and hurtful narrative” and this change will allow state laws to better reflect state values.

Ask if you need a fork

Restaurants will soon be prohibited from handing out single-use silverware or condiments without a customer requesting them. That means you’ll need to ask for chopsticks for your takeout sushi or a ketchup packet for your fries if you don’t have those things at home. Restaurants also won’t be able to package plastic silverware in a way that makes it hard for you to just take what you need.

A similar law, also aimed at reducing waste, is already in effect for single-use plastic straws. Cities and counties will start enforcing this new law on June 1, 2022.

Assisted death changes

Starting Jan. 1, terminally ill patients won’t have to wait as long to request fatal drugs. The waiting period between the two required requests will drop from 15 days to 48 hours.

Dog blood donations

A new law changes the way canine blood donations work in California. Prior to 2022, all blood used by veterinarians to treat ailing dogs comes from two companies that raise dogs in cages solely to collect their blood, reports the Los Angeles Times. The new law allows for the establishment of more canine blood banks that can collect donations from dogs, much like people donate blood to blood banks.

“Stealthing” is sexual assault

Assembly Bill 453 makes the non-consensual removal of a condom during sex, also called “stealthing,” a form of sexual battery. California is the first state to ban stealthing.

Duplex law

Senate Bill 9 makes it easier to split a property into a duplex by removing some of the layers of bureaucracy and review. Advocates say it could help with the state’s housing crisis by making it easier to add more units of housing. The details of the law are complicated, but you can read all the clauses here.

More housing near transit

Another law, Senate Bill 10, aims to make it easier to build housing in California. Among other things, this law makes it easier for cities to upzone transit-dense areas, allowing for the development of more dense house of up to 10 units per parcel without a lengthy environmental review process.

Rubber bullets and tear gas

Assembly Bill 48 prohibits police from using rubber bullets or tear gas to disperse crowds at a protest. They also can’t be used against someone just because they’ve violated “an imposed curfew, verbal threat, or noncompliance with a law enforcement directive.”

More women execs

A law passed in 2018 required corporations to add more women to their boards of executives. The final deadline to meet requirements passes Dec. 31, 2021, meaning that by the start of 2022, companies with five directors need at least two of them to be women, and companies with six or more directors need at least three of them to be women.

Feast on roadkill, Californians

Starting Jan. 1, the state is launching a pilot program that will allow people to collect and eat roadkill. The law allows for humans to collect and eat “deer, elk, pronghorn antelope, or wild pig” that have been hit and killed by a vehicle. You’ll have to report the find and secure a permit before digging in, but the state is required to create an online and mobile-friendly way to do that.
 
The only positive thing about all this is that normal people are learning to just say no and leave the state, I know a lot of friends and family living in New York and Pennsylvania that are forced to abide by ridiculous laws and ideals, especially now thanks to covid, and most of them are finally saying enough is enough and leaving their hometowns. Let the dark blue states destroy themselves and move to a red or purple state, your life will improve.
I'll have to respectfully disagree with you on that. I live in a red state that has its own problems, the last thing we need is people from blue states who voted for this shit to move in and vote for those same policies here (which plenty of people who flee from blue states do). Granted I know there are people who leave blue states and head for red who know better than to vote for similar policies that ruined their home state, but it seems like they're outnumbered by the people who can't put 2 and 2 together and just spread the misery.

Can we just make an exchange program where we take all the based Californians and give them our Progs, then quarantine the rest of California from the US?
Now THIS I can support.
 
They really do still think that Spanish people are "vote blue no matter who" don't they?
Most of them are; the illiterate illegals know who butters their bread. I can agree with the idea of "They're here for a better life." But the part they leave out is how that comes at the expense of everyone else, because they're a massive retarded fucking drain on the system.
 
Seems like they're getting rid of the environmental impact review for people who want to build a few houses or a small apartment complex on their land. That's a good thing, those reviews cost money that people who want to build don't have, and I said people, not corporations. The only regulations people should have is for making sure their houses are built to code and that's it, otherwise people should be able to build what they want and nothing wrong with a duplex, which California seems to have a surprising lack of.
 
The business laws are bad, the housing laws are good because less restrictions on what you can do to your own property if you don't have an HOA when it comes to altering your house or how you build it. I hope the pads and tampons stay in the nurse's office, you know teenage girls are either going to be stealing the whole bunch or making a huge mess with them.
I would stand there flushing tampons until the school flooded.
 
What the fuck is that dog law? Is he saying there are going to be permanent blood donor dogs in cages?

E: re-read it. It says that’s how it is now and will switch to voluntary donations so okay. Dogs can’t volunteer but still it’s better than my misread.
 
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What the fuck is that dog law? Is he saying there are going to be permanent blood donor dogs in cages?
No, you misunderstand: there already are.
dogblood.jpg

What this new law does is it allows people to bring in their dogs as temporary donors so the entire blood supply isn't doesn't rely on this practice.
 
Wow, awesome stuff California, any residents who were planning on leaving should totally stay. The same goes for any other blue state residents and illegal immigrants, please stay in or move to California it's for the best!

More women execs

A law passed in 2018 required corporations to add more women to their boards of executives. The final deadline to meet requirements passes Dec. 31, 2021, meaning that by the start of 2022, companies with five directors need at least two of them to be women, and companies with six or more directors need at least three of them to be women.
You guys need to start taking advantage of the tranny legal loopholes for this shit. Just as with lying about your race, it's time to take advantage of the rules of the game.

Sleep in, kids

Middle schools and high schools will soon be required to start class no earlier than 8 a.m. and 8:30 a.m., respectively. Supporters say preteens and teenagers need the extra sleep for their health and development. The new law goes into effect on July 1, 2022, so for most students it will impact them in the 2022-23 school year. The law exempts rural school districts.
This one is actually good.
 
The California Republican Party has been a giant smug failure for the most part. A lot of smug boomer cuckservative faggots who believe any minute now your average retarded Californian will switch to the red team but too smug to actually try to make a difference.

Besides the weather, I don’t understand why anyone would want to move to California with these types of laws. No wonder everyone wants to leave
Most Californians are retarded imbeciles, who have no idea what laws are being passed in Sacramento. Plus the media bubble is heavily oriented towards GOP bad and even suggested California and New Jersey are safe states and Florida and Texas are not safe because you can buy any time of rifle in those two.

They really do still think that Spanish people are "vote blue no matter who" don't they?
There are a lot of hispanic or latinx faggots in the California Democratic Party, that are rising up the ranks and calling a lot of shots.
 
"They(Rubber bullets) also can’t be used against someone just because they’ve violated “an imposed curfew, verbal threat, or noncompliance with a law enforcement directive.”

Gotta use live ammo on curfew violators, more environmentally friendly.
 
I say we just give Commiefornia to the cartels. At least they will grow decent weed and give us fun videos of californians being beheaded in various novel ways. Then we can carpet bomb the place knowing the only retards left are cartel members, cartel associates, or dumbass commiefornians. Frankly if niggers like George W Bush wanted to handle terror he would have started drone striking cartel strongholds in Mexico. They offer more of an actual threat to the US than some turban wearing sandmonkey in the Middle East. Guantanamo was some gay as fuck shit, start cutting cartel heads hearts out and broadcasting it and those retards will either stop in their tracks or continue with their retardation. Drone strike the ones that don't get the message. The fact people don't get how simple this is makes me lose faith in people.
 
I hope the pads and tampons stay in the nurse's office, you know teenage girls are either going to be stealing the whole bunch or making a huge mess with them.
I was thinking the troons would be a bigger problem. You know the Yaniv types and others would probably be hoarding them if they had the chance for freebies.
 
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More women execs

A law passed in 2018 required corporations to add more women to their boards of executives. The final deadline to meet requirements passes Dec. 31, 2021, meaning that by the start of 2022, companies with five directors need at least two of them to be women, and companies with six or more directors need at least three of them to be women.
Is this even enforceable? "Hire this person based solely on their identity or else" seems like it wouldn't pass Constitutional review. Freedom of association and all that.
 
Removing “alien” from the books

Assembly Bill 1096 strikes the word “alien” from the California state code. The word will be replaced with words like “noncitizen” or “immigrant.” Gov. Gavin Newsom said the word alien has “fueled a divisive and hurtful narrative” and this change will allow state laws to better reflect state values.
The absurd and never-ending project of changing the language is now having legal effects. We have noncitizen nationals who are not aliens or immigrants, but California law will apparently treat these American nationals no differently than anyone who hops over the border. I hope a bunch of American Samoans get together and sue them.
 
Don't threaten me with a good time.
Finally, 1800s riot control is back in fashion!
Smh they didn't even mention the law that bans small generators.
Awaiting California's next earthquake/wildfire/clusterfuckmultistorm to be extra destructive.
Besides the weather, I don’t understand why anyone would want to move to California with these types of laws. No wonder everyone wants to leave
The only other sane one is setting public school times later, but honestly why even let your kids go anymore.
 
Also, the tear gas law is dumb because if police can’t use that to disperse crowds during riots, they may as well use live bullets.
That, and beatings with batons. Still haven't banned the Active Denial System yet, though that's stuck in development hell as far as I'm aware
 
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That, and beatings with batons. Still haven't banned the Active Denial System yet, though that's stuck in development hell as far as I'm aware
If we're gonna get the lame version of the "cyberpunk" future then I at least want cops using these.
1640931866464.png1640931879797.png
Imagine that on an SUV shooting microwaves at looters.
 
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