California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1141 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate June 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1141Introduced by Assembly Member Megan DahleFebruary 15, 2023An act to amend Section 2350 of, and to amend the heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, to amend Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 409.5 of the Penal Code, relating to agricultural lands.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, commissioner or other designated agency, agency to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas by a livestock passholder to areas closed by specified public safety personnel where a menace to public health or safety exists during a calamity may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when designee. Existing law requires, when this access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, that the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. access. Existing law provides that a livestock pass issued by a county in which a livestock pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this livestock pass law until the expiration date noted on the livestock pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first. Existing law requires, on or before January July 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. defined, and their managerial employees. The bill would end the exemption that requires a county-authorized pass under an equivalent county program that was established before January 1, 2022, to be deemed in compliance with these state requirements. The bill would instead require the a curriculum for the agricultural pass program to be developed by July 1, 2024. 2024, and would authorize the State Fire Marshal to utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass ProgramSEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1141Introduced by Assembly Member Megan DahleFebruary 15, 2023An act to amend Section 2350 of, and to amend the heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, to amend Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 409.5 of the Penal Code, relating to agricultural lands.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: farmers and agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. Existing law requires, on or before January 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would instead authorize, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, as defined, or employee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. To the extent this bill would impose a new duty on a county board of supervisors in approving the agricultural pass program, the bill would impose a state-mandated program. The bill would no longer require that permission access to specified areas. The bill would make confirming changes to change references made to the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program.Existing law authorizes specified law enforcement and public safety officers and professionals to close an area where a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity, including flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that this provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid livestock pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would instead provide that the above provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. The bill would instead require the curriculum to be developed by July 1, 2024. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass ProgramSEC. 2.Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350.(a)(1)Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, oremployee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2)For purposes of this section, a qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b)(1)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer, or employee of a commercial agricultural producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A)An operator identification number issued by the Department of Pesticide Regulation.(B)An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C)Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D)Agricultural land lease documentation.(E)Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F)Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer.(G)Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(c)(1)Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, irrigating crops, or providing auxiliary support to peace officers and emergency personnel.(2)For purposes of this subdivision, auxiliary support may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local expertise that may assist in firefighting or other emergency response.(d)(1)An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (a) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A)The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B)The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C)The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D)The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2)An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (a) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(e)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.SEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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3- Amended IN Senate June 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1141Introduced by Assembly Member Megan DahleFebruary 15, 2023An act to amend Section 2350 of, and to amend the heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, to amend Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 409.5 of the Penal Code, relating to agricultural lands.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, commissioner or other designated agency, agency to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas by a livestock passholder to areas closed by specified public safety personnel where a menace to public health or safety exists during a calamity may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when designee. Existing law requires, when this access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, that the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. access. Existing law provides that a livestock pass issued by a county in which a livestock pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this livestock pass law until the expiration date noted on the livestock pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first. Existing law requires, on or before January July 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. defined, and their managerial employees. The bill would end the exemption that requires a county-authorized pass under an equivalent county program that was established before January 1, 2022, to be deemed in compliance with these state requirements. The bill would instead require the a curriculum for the agricultural pass program to be developed by July 1, 2024. 2024, and would authorize the State Fire Marshal to utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1141Introduced by Assembly Member Megan DahleFebruary 15, 2023An act to amend Section 2350 of, and to amend the heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, to amend Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 409.5 of the Penal Code, relating to agricultural lands.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: farmers and agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. Existing law requires, on or before January 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would instead authorize, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, as defined, or employee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. To the extent this bill would impose a new duty on a county board of supervisors in approving the agricultural pass program, the bill would impose a state-mandated program. The bill would no longer require that permission access to specified areas. The bill would make confirming changes to change references made to the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program.Existing law authorizes specified law enforcement and public safety officers and professionals to close an area where a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity, including flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that this provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid livestock pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would instead provide that the above provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. The bill would instead require the curriculum to be developed by July 1, 2024. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
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5- Amended IN Senate June 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023
5+ Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023
66
7-Amended IN Senate June 13, 2023
87 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2023
98
109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1110
1211 Assembly Bill
1312
1413 No. 1141
1514
1615 Introduced by Assembly Member Megan DahleFebruary 15, 2023
1716
1817 Introduced by Assembly Member Megan Dahle
1918 February 15, 2023
2019
2120 An act to amend Section 2350 of, and to amend the heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, to amend Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 409.5 of the Penal Code, relating to agricultural lands.
2221
2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2423
2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
27-AB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.
26+AB 1141, as amended, Megan Dahle. Agricultural lands: farmers and agricultural and livestock producers: agricultural pass program: disaster access to farm lands.
2827
29-Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, commissioner or other designated agency, agency to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas by a livestock passholder to areas closed by specified public safety personnel where a menace to public health or safety exists during a calamity may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when designee. Existing law requires, when this access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, that the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. access. Existing law provides that a livestock pass issued by a county in which a livestock pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this livestock pass law until the expiration date noted on the livestock pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first. Existing law requires, on or before January July 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. defined, and their managerial employees. The bill would end the exemption that requires a county-authorized pass under an equivalent county program that was established before January 1, 2022, to be deemed in compliance with these state requirements. The bill would instead require the a curriculum for the agricultural pass program to be developed by July 1, 2024. 2024, and would authorize the State Fire Marshal to utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
28+Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. Existing law requires, on or before January 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.This bill would instead authorize, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, as defined, or employee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. To the extent this bill would impose a new duty on a county board of supervisors in approving the agricultural pass program, the bill would impose a state-mandated program. The bill would no longer require that permission access to specified areas. The bill would make confirming changes to change references made to the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program.Existing law authorizes specified law enforcement and public safety officers and professionals to close an area where a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity, including flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that this provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid livestock pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would instead provide that the above provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, except as provided.This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. The bill would instead require the curriculum to be developed by July 1, 2024. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
3029
31-Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, commissioner or other designated agency, agency to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas by a livestock passholder to areas closed by specified public safety personnel where a menace to public health or safety exists during a calamity may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when designee. Existing law requires, when this access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, that the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. access. Existing law provides that a livestock pass issued by a county in which a livestock pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this livestock pass law until the expiration date noted on the livestock pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first. Existing law requires, on or before January July 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.
30+Existing law authorizes, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county a livestock pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying livestock producer or a managerial employee of the qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying livestock producers ranch property, or to the ranch property owned by another holder of a livestock pass with permission, during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that access to specified areas may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee and that when access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command when they grant the livestock passholder access to the ranch property during a disaster. Existing law requires, on or before January 1, 2023, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, to develop a curriculum for livestock producers eligible for this livestock pass program.
3231
33-This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. defined, and their managerial employees. The bill would end the exemption that requires a county-authorized pass under an equivalent county program that was established before January 1, 2022, to be deemed in compliance with these state requirements. The bill would instead require the a curriculum for the agricultural pass program to be developed by July 1, 2024. 2024, and would authorize the State Fire Marshal to utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.
32+This bill would instead authorize, upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other designated agency, to establish within the county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, as defined, or employee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster, as provided. To the extent this bill would impose a new duty on a county board of supervisors in approving the agricultural pass program, the bill would impose a state-mandated program. The bill would no longer require that permission access to specified areas. The bill would make confirming changes to change references made to the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program.
33+
34+
35+
36+Existing law authorizes specified law enforcement and public safety officers and professionals to close an area where a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity, including flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, as provided. Existing law provides that this provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid livestock pass identification document, except as provided.
37+
38+
39+
40+This bill would instead provide that the above provision does not apply to an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, except as provided.
41+
42+
43+
44+This bill would change the name of the livestock pass program to the agricultural pass program and make conforming changes. The bill would also make the agricultural pass program applicable to qualified agricultural producers, as defined. The bill would instead require the curriculum to be developed by July 1, 2024. To the extent this bill would impose additional duties on a county board of supervisors in approving agricultural passes for qualified agricultural producers, the bill would impose a state-mandated program.
3445
3546 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
3647
3748 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
3849
3950 ## Digest Key
4051
4152 ## Bill Text
4253
43-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass ProgramSEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
54+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass ProgramSEC. 2.Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350.(a)(1)Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, oremployee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2)For purposes of this section, a qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b)(1)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer, or employee of a commercial agricultural producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A)An operator identification number issued by the Department of Pesticide Regulation.(B)An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C)Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D)Agricultural land lease documentation.(E)Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F)Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer.(G)Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(c)(1)Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, irrigating crops, or providing auxiliary support to peace officers and emergency personnel.(2)For purposes of this subdivision, auxiliary support may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local expertise that may assist in firefighting or other emergency response.(d)(1)An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (a) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A)The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B)The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C)The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D)The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2)An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (a) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(e)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.SEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
4455
4556 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4657
4758 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4859
4960 SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read: CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass Program
5061
5162 SECTION 1. The heading of Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 2350) of Division 2 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:
5263
5364 ### SECTION 1.
5465
5566 CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass Program
5667
5768 CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass Program
5869
5970 CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass Program
6071
6172 CHAPTER 4. Agricultural Pass Program
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63-SEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.
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78+(a)(1)Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, oremployee of the qualifying agricultural producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
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82+(2)For purposes of this section, a qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.
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86+(b)(1)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer, or employee of a commercial agricultural producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:
87+
88+
89+
90+(A)An operator identification number issued by the Department of Pesticide Regulation.
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93+
94+(B)An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.
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98+(C)Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.
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102+(D)Agricultural land lease documentation.
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106+(E)Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.
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110+(F)Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer.
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114+(G)Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.
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118+(2)An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.
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122+(c)(1)Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, irrigating crops, or providing auxiliary support to peace officers and emergency personnel.
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126+(2)For purposes of this subdivision, auxiliary support may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local expertise that may assist in firefighting or other emergency response.
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130+(d)(1)An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (a) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:
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134+(A)The name of the applicant and cardholder.
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138+(B)The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.
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142+(C)The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.
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146+(D)The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.
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150+(2)An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (a) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.
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154+(e)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
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158+SEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
64159
65160 SEC. 2. Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code is amended to read:
66161
67162 ### SEC. 2.
68163
69-2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.
164+2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
70165
71-2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.
166+2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
72167
73-2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.
168+2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.(B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(2)(3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.(C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:(A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.(B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.(C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.(D) Agricultural land lease documentation.(E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.(F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.(G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.(4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:(A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.(B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.(C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.(D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
74169
75170
76171
77172 2350. (a) For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
78173
79174 (1) Managerial employee means a person who meets all of the following criteria:
80175
81-(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock. livestock or qualifying agricultural producers operations.
176+(A) Has management authority with responsibility to oversee the care and well-being of the qualifying livestock producers livestock.
82177
83178 (B) Primarily engages in managerial job duties and customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in these duties. These duties shall be specified in a written job description issued no later than 90 days before the date of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
84179
85180 (C) Earns a monthly salary equivalent to no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment at the time of the flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
86181
87182 (2) Qualifying agricultural producer means a commercial agricultural producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.
88183
184+(2)
185+
186+
187+
89188 (3) Qualifying livestock producer means a commercial livestock producer, as determined by the county agency, who has been certified as successfully completing the curriculum developed pursuant to Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code.
90189
91-(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to may establish within that county an agricultural pass program for pursuant to this section. An agricultural pass program created pursuant to this section may be for, but is not limited to, the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
190+(b) (1) Upon the approval of a county board of supervisors, a county agricultural commissioner, or other agency designated by the county board of supervisors, is authorized to establish within that county a livestock an agricultural pass program for the purpose of issuing identification documents granting any qualifying agricultural producer, qualifying livestock producer, or a managerial employee of the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer, access to the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
92191
93-(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.
192+(2) (A) A managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer shall not be required by the qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to obtain a livestock an agricultural pass. Access to a qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch by a managerial employee shall be fully voluntary on the part of the managerial employee.
94193
95-(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.
194+(B) A person shall not require any employee to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. A person shall not in any manner discriminate, retaliate, or take any adverse action against an employee for refusing to obtain or use a livestock an agricultural pass or to enter or be present on the qualifying agricultural producers or qualifying livestock producers farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster. Any person who believes that they have been discriminated or retaliated against in violation of this section may, in addition to any other available remedy, file a complaint pursuant to Section 98.7 of the Labor Code for remedies available under Section 98.6 of the Labor Code.
96195
97196 (C) Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring a managerial employee of a qualifying agricultural producer or qualifying livestock producer to be present on a farm or ranch property during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
98197
99-(c) (1) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:
198+(c) (1) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall provide, or the relevant county agency shall otherwise obtain, documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer, or a managerial employee of a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer. The documentation may include, but is not limited to, any of the following:
100199
101200 (A) An operator identification number issued by a county agricultural commissioner.
102201
103202 (B) An Internal Revenue Service Schedule F (Form 1040) attesting to the applicants Profit or Loss From Farming.
104203
105204 (C) Assessors parcel numbers confirming agricultural zoning for the property or properties upon which access is sought.
106205
107206 (D) Agricultural land lease documentation.
108207
109208 (E) Documentation attesting to the applicants enrollment in a Williamson Act contract as authorized pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 51200) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.
110209
111210 (F) Documentation from the United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency attesting that the applicant is a commercial agricultural producer or commercial livestock producer.
112211
113212 (G) Current registration of a livestock brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.
114213
115-(2) An applicant for an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.
214+(2) An applicant for a livestock an agricultural pass shall furnish to the relevant county agency a description or map of all lands owned or managed by the applicant for which disaster access is sought.
116215
117-(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, following purposes:
216+(d) (1) Access granted pursuant to a livestock an agricultural pass shall be limited to the purposes of sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.
118217
119-(A) Sheltering, moving, transporting, evacuating, feeding, watering, or administering veterinary care to livestock, or providing livestock.
218+(2) A holder of a livestock an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of a livestock an agricultural pass, with permission from that livestock agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
120219
121-(B) Irrigating, harvesting, or other activities necessary for caring for agricultural crops.
122-
123-(C) Providing local expertise to peace officers and emergency personnel. Local expertise shall only be provided upon the request of peace officers and emergency personnel.
124-
125-(2) A holder of an agricultural pass may have access to the farm or ranch property that is owned by another holder of an agricultural pass, with permission from that agricultural passholder, for purposes of providing assistance with those activities specified in paragraph (1) during or following a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, or other disaster.
126-
127-(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the agricultural passholder.
220+(3) Access under this section to areas closed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 409.5 of the Penal Code may only be granted by the incident commander, a law enforcement official having jurisdiction, or their designee. When access is granted by emergency response personnel other than the incident commander, the emergency response personnel shall notify incident command that access has been provided to the livestock agricultural passholder.
128221
129222 (4) For purposes of this subdivision, local expertise may include identifying access roads, water points, and other local knowledge that may assist firefighters or other emergency response personnel.
130223
131-(e) (1) An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:
224+(e) (1) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document issued pursuant to subdivision (b) for the purpose of authorizing access during a disaster shall include, at a minimum, all of the following information:
132225
133226 (A) The name of the applicant and cardholder.
134227
135228 (B) The name or names of the farm or ranch to which the cardholder seeks access in the event of a disaster.
136229
137230 (C) The expiration date of the identification document, if an expiration date was established by the county.
138231
139232 (D) The seal or logo of the authorizing agency and the signature of the issuing officer.
140233
141-(2) An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.
234+(2) A livestock An agricultural pass identification document authorizing access during a disaster that does not include a photograph of the cardholder shall not be a valid document for purposes of subdivision (b) unless accompanied by a valid photo identification document issued by the state or federal government.
142235
143-(f)Notwithstanding this section, an agricultural pass issued by a county in which an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
236+(f) Notwithstanding this section, a livestock an agricultural pass issued by a county in which a livestock an agricultural pass or equivalent program was established before January 1, 2022, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section until the expiration date noted on the livestock agricultural pass or until December 31, 2025, whichever date occurs first.
144237
145-
146-
147-(f) Nothing in this section requires a county to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, pursuant to this section or restricts a countys authority to adopt an agricultural pass program, or similar program, under any other provision of law.
148-
149-SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
238+SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
150239
151240 SEC. 3. Section 13105.6 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
152241
153242 ### SEC. 3.
154243
155-13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
244+13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
156245
157-13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
246+13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
158247
159-13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
248+13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
160249
161250
162251
163-13105.6. (a) On or before July 1, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
252+13105.6. On or before July 1, 2023, 2024, the State Fire Marshal, with the involvement of the Statewide Training and Education Advisory Committee, shall develop a curriculum for agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code. The curriculum shall, at a minimum, provide education regarding basic fire behavior, communications during a disaster emergency, and incident command structure. The curriculum shall provide for the initial certification as well as the continuing education or recertification of agricultural producers and livestock producers eligible for the agricultural pass program. It is the intent of the Legislature that any certification training utilizing the curriculum developed pursuant to this section be no more than four hours in duration, ensuring that commercial agricultural producers and livestock producers may avail themselves of the curriculum.
164253
165-(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the State Fire Marshal may utilize or adopt a curriculum already developed for a program equivalent to the agricultural pass program described in Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
166-
167-SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
254+SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
168255
169256 SEC. 4. Section 409.5 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
170257
171258 ### SEC. 4.
172259
173-409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
260+409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
174261
175-409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
262+409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
176263
177-409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
264+409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.(b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.(c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.(d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
178265
179266
180267
181268 409.5. (a) Whenever a menace to the public health or safety is created by a calamity including a flood, storm, fire, earthquake, explosion, accident, or other disaster, officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, an officer or employee of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated a peace officer by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Parks and Recreation designated a peace officer by subdivision (f) of Section 830.2, an officer or employee of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated a peace officer under subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, and a publicly employed full-time lifeguard or publicly employed full-time marine safety officer while acting in a supervisory position in the performance of their official duties, may close the area where the menace exists for the duration of the menace by means of ropes, markers, or guards to any and all persons not authorized by the lifeguard or officer to enter or remain within the enclosed area. If the calamity creates an immediate menace to the public health, the local health officer may close the area where the menace exists pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section.
182269
183270 (b) Officers of the Department of the California Highway Patrol, police departments, marshals office or sheriffs office, officers of the Department of Fish and Wildlife designated as peace officers by subdivision (e) of Section 830.2, or officers of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designated as peace officers by subdivision (g) of Section 830.2 may close the immediate area surrounding any emergency field command post or any other command post activated for the purpose of abating any calamity enumerated in this section or any riot or other civil disturbance to any and all unauthorized persons pursuant to the conditions set forth in this section whether or not the field command post or other command post is located near the actual calamity or riot or other civil disturbance.
184271
185272 (c) An unauthorized person who willfully and knowingly enters an area closed pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) and who willfully remains within the area after receiving notice to evacuate or leave shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
186273
187274 (d) This section shall not prevent a duly authorized representative of a news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section.
188275
189-(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
276+(e) This section shall not prevent an individual who holds a valid agricultural pass identification document, pursuant to Section 2350 of the Food and Agricultural Code, from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section, unless a peace officer identified in subdivision (a) finds that the disaster presents an imminent harm to the documentholder is of such a nature that it would be unsafe for the documentholder to enter or that the presence of the documentholder would interfere with disaster response.
190277
191278 SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
192279
193280 SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
194281
195282 SEC. 5. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
196283
197284 ### SEC. 5.