HomeMy WebLinkAboutSS3 - League of California Cities MembershipFebruary 27, 2024
Agenda Item No. SS3
Correspondence
LEAGUE OF
CALIFORNIA
CITI ES
Value of League of California Cities (Cal Cities) Membership
Prepared for: City of Newport Beach
City's 2024 Annual Dues: $24,799
Contact: Connor Medina, Regional Public Affairs Manager,
cmedina@calcities.org or (949) 421-9898
Return on Investment
Cal Cities has delivered consistent fiscal benefit to the City of Newport Beach
that far exceeds the dues the city pays annually. The customized return on
investment (ROI) report below details various funding allocations and revenue
protections that Cal Cities secured on behalf of members.
CALIFORNIA Cal Cities Membership — A Great Investment
CITIES
Membership in Cal Cities is an invaluable investment. The fiscal benefit to cities outweighs the annual dues,
providing members with unique opportunities to advocate for the state-wide interests of cities and learn
from each other. Investing in Cal Cities strengthens the collective power of local communities.
Customized Return on Investment Report — December 2023
NEWPORT BEACH
FY2018-19
FY2019-20
FY2020-21
FY2021-22
FY2022-23
FY2023-24
Total
Dues
22,016
22,676
22,676
23,357
24,057
24,779
139,561
VLF/PropertyTaxSwap ill
4,447,635
4,928,178
5,025,426
5,322,388
5,693,806
6,695,711
32,113,144
Local Revenues Protected by Prop. 22 12;
1,763,345
2,194,324
1,724,489
2,1 15,419
2,343,190
2,309,188
12,449,955
SB 89 VLF Shift
-519,837
-543,692
-566,527
-590,321
-615,115
-747,583
-3,583,375
SB 1 - Local Streets and Roads Funds
1,477,319
1,550,370
1,593,608
1,726,128
2,129,176
2,063,464
10,540,065
CARES Act
1,059,137
1,059,137
American Rescue Plan Act 131
10,141,272
10,141,272
Total Return
7,163,463
8,129,180
8,836,133
18,714,8861
9,551,0571
10,320,4801
62,720,198
111111
Rate of Return
326:1
358:1
390:1
801:1
397:1
417:1
449:1
1. Net gain in revenues by virtue of the VLF/Property Tax Swap. Growth in PropTox in Lieu of VLF versus estimated growth in VLF had If remained.
2. Prop. 22 ended the Legislature's ability to borrow or delay HUTA and Prop. 42 gas fax funds.
3. American Rescue Plan Act allocations were allocated in FY2021-22 and distributed as two trenches of funding over two years (2021-22 and 2022-23).
Our mission is to expand and protect local control for cities through
education and advocacy to enhance the quality of life for all Californians.
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• The City's membership has provided a ROI of $449:1 on average since FY
2018-19, with a low of 326:1 that year and a high of 801:1 in FY 2021-222.
• Cal Cities was an essential leader in the development and passage of
Prop 1 A (2004) and Prop 22 (2010) to protect Newport Beach's revenues
from state raids and backfill lost revenue.
• Cal Cities was the primary stakeholder advocating for California cities
during the development of the CARES Act and American Rescue Plan.
Cal Cities also provided a detailed Guide to Local Recovery for its
members to take full advantage of these grants.
Membership Enaaaement
The City continues to take advantage of event, roundtable, and webinar
opportunities. City Clerk Leilani Brown was elected by City Clerks statewide to
serve as 2nd Vice President of the City Clerks Department, where she is on track
to have a substantial role in guiding our City Clerks programming throughout her
tenure as an officer. This includes directing staff in content development for Cal
Cities' annual City Clerks New Law and Elections Seminar. If the City did not
renew its membership, City Clerk Brown would no longer serve as an officer.
Fire Chief Jeff Boyles served as President of the Fire Chiefs Department in 2021-
2022, where he played an instrumental part in the development of the 2021 Cal
Cities Fire Chiefs Leadership Seminar and remains an active participant in
Department activities. Membership is required to be involved in the Fire Chiefs
Department.
Council Member Grant was elected by her peers to serve as the 5th District
Representative on the Orange County Division Board of Directors. Her regular
participation provides the City an important voice on the Board and her
perspective is highly valuable for the entire Orange County Division.
City staff/Council Members have participated in the following conferences:
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• City Managers Conference (Feb. 2024) - City Manager Grace Leung,
Assistant City Manager (ACM) Tara Finnigan, ACM Seimone Jurjis
o City Manager Leung elevated the City's profile among city
managers across the state by speaking on a panel discussing civility
and effective resident engagement. City Manager Leung touted
the City's Citizens' Police Academy, Distinguished Citizens Program,
Community Emergency Response Team and Mayor's Youth
Council.
• Fire Chiefs Leadership Seminar (Dec. 2023) - Fire Chief Jeff Boyles, Assistant
Fire Chief Justin Carr, Fire Marshal James Gillespie, Fire Captain Adam
Novak, Training Battalion Chief Phil Puhek, Fire Captain Chad Spiker
• City Clerks New Law and Elections Seminar (Dec. 2023) - City Clerk Leilani
Brown
• Orange County Q4 Division Meeting at Mission San Juan Capistrano (Dec.
2023) - Council Member Robyn Grant
• Annual Conference (Sep. 2023) - Fire Chief Boyles, Fire Marshal Gillespie,
City Manager Leung, Fire Battalion Chief Brian McDonough, Deputy City
Attorney Chris Sorich, Fire Battalion Chief Nicholas Stocks, Assistant City
Attorney Yolanda Summerhill
• Orange County Q3 Division Meeting at Huntington Beach Senior Center
(Aug. 2023) - Council Member Robyn Grant
• City Attorneys Spring Conference (May 2023) - Asst. City Attorney
Summerhill, Deputy City Attorney Joseph Meeks
• Public Works Officers Institute (Mar. 2023) - Deputy Public Works Director
Jim Houlihan, Public Works Finance/Admin Manager Theresa Schweitzer
• City Managers Conference (Feb. 2023) - City Manager Leung, ACM
Finnigan
• New Mayors and Council Members Academy (Jan. 2023) - Council
Member Robyn Grant
City staff/Council Members have participated in the following recent webinars
at no cost as a member benefit:
• New Legislation Overview (Mar. 2024) - Council Member Grant
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• Understanding California's Fire Insurance Crisis (Dec. 2023) - ACM
Finnigan, Asst. City Attorney Summerhill, Fire Marshal Gillespie, Deputy City
Attorney Jeremy Jung
• Practical Tips for Implementing New Human Resources Laws (Dec. 2023) -
Human Resources Director Barbara Salvini
• Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Grant Opportunities Webinar (Oct. 2023) -
City Engineer Jim Houlihan, Budget Analyst Abigail Marin
• New Laws Impacting Cities (Oct. 2023) - Council Member Grant
• How CA's New Single -Use Packaging and Plastic Pollution Prevention Law
Will Impact Local Governments (Oct. 2023) - Deputy City Attorney Jung
The City has two appointed representatives to Policy Committees this year.
Policy Committees debate, shape, and steer Cal Cities' policy -making process
and advocacy efforts and meet up to four times annually to provide
recommendations to the Board of Directors. It is crucial for Orange County to
have strong voices in these committees to ensure the region's perspective is
conveyed during discussions on bills and regulations. Participation in policy
committees is contingent on membership.
• Council Member Robyn Grant - Community Services Committee
(appointed as Orange County Division representative by Division
President)
• Fire Battalion Chief Brian McDonough - Revenue and Taxation Committee
(appointed as Fire Chiefs Department representative by Department
President)
A representative from the Newport Beach City Attorney's office serves on the
City Attorneys Department ad hoc housing group, where she plays an important
role in determining the content of training provided to city attorneys statewide
on housing and land use laws.
Cal Cities also manages a Coastal Cities Group comprised of 61 cities within the
state's coastal zone. The group works with Coastal Commission representatives
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on issues related to sea level rise mitigation efforts, other land use regulations
that impact cities in the coastal zone, and the updating of local coastal
programs.
Legislative Advocacy
Cal Cities remains actively engaged in legislation with positions that consistently
align with the City's 2023 Legislative Platform. Cal Cities is perceived by
lawmakers and regulators as the premier representative for cities on policy
matters. Cal Cities utilizes a Legislative Director, seven lobbyists covering
different issue areas of municipal interest, and three policy analysts to achieve
legislative victories for cities. Though not intended to be comprehensive, the list
below highlights how Cal Cities has worked recently to support Newport Beach's
legislative platform and cities statewide:
Sober Living Facilities
In 2024, Cal Cities is sponsoring AB 2547 (Valencia), AB XX (Dixon),
and SB XX (Umberg), and co -sponsoring AB 2081 (Davies). Cal Cities
remains committed to pursuing this legislation and supporting
further legislative proposals to empower local governments and
increase accountability among residential recovery facility
operators.
o AB 2547 (Valencia) would codify Dana Point v. New Method
Wellness, Inc., a case that determined that unlicensed sober
living homes that operate a part of a licensed drug treatment
facility located elsewhere may be considered an unlawful
business use within a residential zone (consistent with Platform
Issue 11, section a).
o AB XX (Dixon) would enforce distancing requirements
between sober living facilities licensed by the Department of
Social Services and the Department of Health Care Services
(consistent with Platform Issue 11, section a). Details for this
legislation are in development and the bill number is not yet
determined at the time of writing.
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o SB XX (Umberg) would empower local governments to
enforce existing state licensing laws (consistent with Platform
Issue II, section a). The bill number is not yet determined at the
time of writing.
o AB 2081 (Davies) would require state -licensed and/or certified
programs to disclose, on their own websites, if a legal,
disciplinary, or other enforcement action has been brought
by state regulators, and the program was found to be in
violation (consistent with Platform Issue II, section b). Cal
Cities' strong support of this legislation has already received
coverage via Southern California News Group.
Housing and Land Use:
• In 2023, Cal Cities led a coalition of cities (244), including Newport
Beach, in staunch opposition to SB 423, a bill applying SB 35
mandates to the Coastal Zone (consistent with Platform Issue II and
Platform Issue Vill, section d).
• In 2023, Cal Cities secured veto of AB 309, which would have clearly
authorized he state to build housing on state-owned or state -leased
land without abiding by local zoning standards (consistent with
Platform Issue II).
• In 2023, Cal Cities opposed AB 68 (Ward), AB 1532 (Haney), and SB
634 (Becker). These bills would have bypassed local planning and
zoning and would have mandated cities to approve certain
housing projects, by -right, without public comment or
environmental review (consistent with Guiding Principle I and
Platform Issue II, section i).
• Cal Cities was on the steering committee supporting the 2017
statewide housing bond, which allocated $4 billion for affordable
housing projects and veteran housing (consistent with Platform Issue
II, section g).
• In 2024, Cal Cities is working with key Senators to request an audit of
the entire RHNA process (consistent with Platform Issue II, sections I
and m).
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Labor Relations
• Cal Cities secured Governor's veto on SB 799, which would have
allowed striking city workers to collect unemployment benefits after
two weeks, and AB 504, which would have made sympathy striking
a human right (consistent with Platform Issue IV, sections b and c).
Public Safety
• Cal Cities represents cities as part of a coalition effort to reduce
retail crime. In addition to providing ongoing feedback to legislators
and the Governor with cities' perspectives on this issue, Cal Cities
has testified to the Assembly Select Committee on Retail Theft at
both of their meetings to date.
• Cal Cities sponsored legislation in 2023 (AB 1708) to reform
Proposition 47 and continues to urge the Legislature and Governor
to implement Prop 47 reforms through legislation in 2024 (consistent
with Platform Issue IX, section c).
• Cal Cities strongly supports legislation to increase penalties for
fentanyl distributors, including AB 367 and AB 701 in 2023, the
latterbeing signed by the Governor. Cal Cities rallied nearly 400
local leaders to sign a letter to Assembly leadership urging swift
action to address the fentanyl crisis and continues to be an up-to-
date resource for information on the status of bills related to this
issue (consistent with Platform Issue IX, section a).
• Cal Cities sponsored AB 1 168 (Bennettl, which would clarify a city or
fire district's right to retain its authority over emergency ambulance
services if they are in a Joint Powers Authority. Cal Cities also
supported AB 40 (Rodriguez, 2023, Chapter 793) which will establish
a statewide standard for ambulance patient offload time and
requires a protocol to reduce ambulance patient offload time
(consistent with Platform Issue IX, section j).
• Cal Cities has opposed efforts for the past several years to remove
local control on cannabis related to dispensaries. Cal Cities
supported AB 1448 (Wallis, 2024, Chapter 843) which allows a 50/50
state -local split of the statutory penalties recovered in actions
brought by local jurisdictions for illicit cannabis activity.
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Homelessness
• Since December 2022, Cal Cities has urged the state to allocate a
permanent funding stream of $3 billion annually to local
governments directly to increase affordable housing and reduce
homelessness. This bipartisan effort was supported by Senator Janet
Nguyen (consistent with Platform Issue X, sections a and e).
Environmental Quality
• Cal Cities has taken a Support if Amended position on multiple
legislative climate bonds (AB 1567 and SB 867), which would include
planning and implementation bond funding for local agencies to
address coastal resilience and sea level rise, water supply, water
quality, solid waste, parks and open space access, wildfire
preparedness, and extreme heat planning and implementation
efforts (consistent with Platform Issue VII, section a and Platform
Issue VIII) .
• Cal Cities is sponsoring legislation in 2024 related to improving
organic waste programs statewide (consistent with Platform Issue VI,
section b) .
Cal Cities continues its advocacy on recyclable materials, as SB 54
(2022), the state's single use plastic and packaging material
recyclability law, moves through the formal rulemaking and
regulatory process in 2024. Cal Cities' nominee was appointed to
the SB 54 Advisory Board, representing cities statewide to ensure
local authority and finances are protected in the regulatory and
non -regulatory discussion with the plastic and packaging producer
responsibility organization (PRO). The purpose of this law is to ensure
that plastic producers are responsible for the end -of -life costs
associated with recycling plastic and packaging materials, to fully
reimburse local jurisdictions costs, and to mitigate plastic pollution
with a $5 Billion fund that will be administered over 10 years
(consistent with Platform Issue III, section b, and Section VI, section
b).
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Water Supply and Coastal Resources
• Cal Cities is the lead stakeholder organizing city input to critically
analyze draft regulations that would create long-term water
conservation targets for urban water suppliers. According to the
Municipal Water District of Orange County, these regulations would
cost the City of Newport Beach an additional $22.9M over 1 1 years.
Cal Cities continues mobilizing local jurisdictions and has engaged
in negotiations with the State Water Resources Control Board to
propose alternative local pathways to achieve the water efficiency
goals and reduce the technical and financial challenges
associated with complying with these significant water reduction
targets (consistent with Platform Issue III, section b, and Platform
Issue VII) .
• In 2024, the Cal Cities Coastal Cities Group is organizing Quarterly
Forums and Newport Beach staff and elected officials have been
invited to participate to elevate coastal resilience issues (consistent
with Platform Issue Vill).
• In 2024, Cal Cities will be engaging in advocacy efforts on two sea -
level rise guidance documents: the Ocean Protection Council's SLR
science guidance (which is currently open for public comments)
and California Coastal Commission's SLR planning guidance,
required by SB 272 (2023), as part of Cal Cities' continued
advocacy to protect local control in the coastal zones and support
the development and implementation of city coastal programs
(consistent with Platform Issue VIII).
Revenue and Taxation
• Cal Cities was the lead opposition against SB 584 (Lim6n) which
would have established a statewide transient occupancy tax of
15% on short-term rentals. Cal Cities defeated this measure in 2023
(consistent with Platform Issue III).
• In 2024, the state is facing a substantial budget deficit (ranging
between $38 and $68 billion dollars). Cal Cities will counter any
efforts by the state to skim or erode local revenues and will oppose
efforts to reduce or eliminate existing funds to cities (consistent with
Platform Issue III).
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Transportation, Communications, Public Works
In 2021,Cal Cities took the lead to oppose SB 556 (Dodd, an which
would have undermined local authority in broadband permitting
while making no meaningful progress towards closing the digital
divide in California's unserved and underserved communities. The
bill was vetoed. (consistent with Platform Issue II, section i).
• Between 2021 and 2023, Cal Cities took the lead role among local
government organizations to testify against CARB's Advance Clean
Fleet regulation related to transitioning public fleets to zero emission
vehicles. In doing so, Cal Cities successfully secured nearly a dozen
provisions, extensions and delays to provide local governments
greater flexibility and options when complying.
Lecial AdvocacX
As a member of Cal Cities, Newport Beach may bring legal issues to the Cal
Cities City Attorneys Department to request an amicus brief in support of the
City. The City has consistently taken advantage of this support. Additionally, Cal
Cities has submitted amicus briefs supporting cities engaged in litigation on
matters relevant to the City of Newport Beach and its legislative platform.
• Cal Cities submitted an amicus brief in October 2023 supporting the City
of Costa Mesa in Ohio House LLC v. City of Costa Mesa in the U.S. Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals.
• Cal Cities submitted amicus briefs supporting the City of Newport Beach in
Pacific Shores Properties v. City of Newport Beach, both in the Ninth
Circuit and on petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court.
• Cal Cities supported the City of Newport Beach with amicus briefs in Vos
v. City of Newport Beach and Banning Ranch Conservancy v. City of
Newport Beach.
• Cal Cities submitted amicus briefs supporting the City of Costa Mesa in
two other cases pertaining to sober living facilities: SoCal Recovery LLC v.
City of Costa Mesa and Yellowstone Women's First Step House v. City
Costa Mesa.
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• Cal Cities urged the Los Angeles Superior Court to rule in favor of charter
cities, arguing that SB 9 unconstitutionally interferes with home rule
authority in a 2023 amicus brief.
• Like Newport Beach, Cal Cities submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme
Court for City of Grants Pass v. Johnson on petition for writ of certiorari and
anticipates submitting an amicus brief on the merits of the case soon.