Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1271Introduced by Assembly Member BontaFebruary 21, 2025 An act to add Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1271, as amended, Bonta. Communications: broadband internet service providers.Existing law, the Digital Equity Bill of Rights, provides that it is the principle of the state to ensure digital equity for all residents of the state, that, among other things, residents have access to broadband that meets specific requirements, and provides that it is the policy of the state that, to the extent technically feasible, broadband internet subscribers benefit from equal access to broadband internet service within the service area of a broadband provider.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider, on or before January 1, 2027, and annually thereafter, to submit to the Department of Consumer Affairs a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data that includes, among other information, the advertised speeds offered to consumers and the advertised and total prices paid by consumers. The bill would require the department to publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted by the broadband internet service providers and would require the department to make the data submitted by broadband internet service providers available to the public, as specified. The bill would make a broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with the bills these provisions subject to an administrative penalty not to exceed $1,000 per violation per day until compliance is achieved.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider to establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows consumers to submit complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal, and would require a broadband internet service provider to respond to a complaint within 7 business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within a specified timeframe. The bill would prescribe remedies for a consumer if a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a complaint within the specified timeframe or refuses to act in good faith, including the issuance of a minimum credit of $50 for a complaint that remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to report quarterly complaint statistics to the department, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares as follows:(a) Californians receive their broadband internet access service from a variety of providers utilizing various technologies to deliver the service to residences and businesses.(b) A variety of factors may negatively impact the speed performance of a subscribers broadband internet access service including the type of device being used, other hardware issues, equipment, network traffic, software issues, signal interference, physical obstructions, and user error.(c) While not all factors that influence a subscribers speed performance are directly attributable to the broadband internet service provider, customers have a reasonable expectation that their provider will reliably provide the advertised speeds for their contracted plan that is purchased so that the service can be accessed with their devices.(d) It is in the public interest to ensure that subscribers of broadband internet access service reliably receive the speeds they pay for, are fully informed about the pricing structure for their plans, and have access to affordable broadband that meets their connectivity needs.SEC. 2. Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer.21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section.21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222.21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission.21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification.21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of this act, which adds Section 21222 to the Business and Professions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the confidentiality of consumers and the proprietary information of businesses subject to this act, it is necessary that this act limit the publics right of access to proprietary business information, protected personal information, and personally identifiable information. Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1271Introduced by Assembly Member BontaFebruary 21, 2025 An act to add Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1271, as amended, Bonta. Communications: broadband internet service providers.Existing law, the Digital Equity Bill of Rights, provides that it is the principle of the state to ensure digital equity for all residents of the state, that, among other things, residents have access to broadband that meets specific requirements, and provides that it is the policy of the state that, to the extent technically feasible, broadband internet subscribers benefit from equal access to broadband internet service within the service area of a broadband provider.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider, on or before January 1, 2027, and annually thereafter, to submit to the Department of Consumer Affairs a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data that includes, among other information, the advertised speeds offered to consumers and the advertised and total prices paid by consumers. The bill would require the department to publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted by the broadband internet service providers and would require the department to make the data submitted by broadband internet service providers available to the public, as specified. The bill would make a broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with the bills these provisions subject to an administrative penalty not to exceed $1,000 per violation per day until compliance is achieved.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider to establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows consumers to submit complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal, and would require a broadband internet service provider to respond to a complaint within 7 business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within a specified timeframe. The bill would prescribe remedies for a consumer if a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a complaint within the specified timeframe or refuses to act in good faith, including the issuance of a minimum credit of $50 for a complaint that remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to report quarterly complaint statistics to the department, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1271 Introduced by Assembly Member BontaFebruary 21, 2025 Introduced by Assembly Member Bonta February 21, 2025 An act to add Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 1271, as amended, Bonta. Communications: broadband internet service providers. Existing law, the Digital Equity Bill of Rights, provides that it is the principle of the state to ensure digital equity for all residents of the state, that, among other things, residents have access to broadband that meets specific requirements, and provides that it is the policy of the state that, to the extent technically feasible, broadband internet subscribers benefit from equal access to broadband internet service within the service area of a broadband provider.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider, on or before January 1, 2027, and annually thereafter, to submit to the Department of Consumer Affairs a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data that includes, among other information, the advertised speeds offered to consumers and the advertised and total prices paid by consumers. The bill would require the department to publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted by the broadband internet service providers and would require the department to make the data submitted by broadband internet service providers available to the public, as specified. The bill would make a broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with the bills these provisions subject to an administrative penalty not to exceed $1,000 per violation per day until compliance is achieved.This bill would require a broadband internet service provider to establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows consumers to submit complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal, and would require a broadband internet service provider to respond to a complaint within 7 business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within a specified timeframe. The bill would prescribe remedies for a consumer if a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a complaint within the specified timeframe or refuses to act in good faith, including the issuance of a minimum credit of $50 for a complaint that remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to report quarterly complaint statistics to the department, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect. Existing law, the Digital Equity Bill of Rights, provides that it is the principle of the state to ensure digital equity for all residents of the state, that, among other things, residents have access to broadband that meets specific requirements, and provides that it is the policy of the state that, to the extent technically feasible, broadband internet subscribers benefit from equal access to broadband internet service within the service area of a broadband provider. This bill would require a broadband internet service provider, on or before January 1, 2027, and annually thereafter, to submit to the Department of Consumer Affairs a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data that includes, among other information, the advertised speeds offered to consumers and the advertised and total prices paid by consumers. The bill would require the department to publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted by the broadband internet service providers and would require the department to make the data submitted by broadband internet service providers available to the public, as specified. The bill would make a broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with the bills these provisions subject to an administrative penalty not to exceed $1,000 per violation per day until compliance is achieved. This bill would require a broadband internet service provider to establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows consumers to submit complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal, and would require a broadband internet service provider to respond to a complaint within 7 business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within a specified timeframe. The bill would prescribe remedies for a consumer if a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a complaint within the specified timeframe or refuses to act in good faith, including the issuance of a minimum credit of $50 for a complaint that remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website. The bill would require a broadband internet service provider to report quarterly complaint statistics to the department, as specified. Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest. This bill would make legislative findings to that effect. ## Digest Key ## Bill Text The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares as follows:(a) Californians receive their broadband internet access service from a variety of providers utilizing various technologies to deliver the service to residences and businesses.(b) A variety of factors may negatively impact the speed performance of a subscribers broadband internet access service including the type of device being used, other hardware issues, equipment, network traffic, software issues, signal interference, physical obstructions, and user error.(c) While not all factors that influence a subscribers speed performance are directly attributable to the broadband internet service provider, customers have a reasonable expectation that their provider will reliably provide the advertised speeds for their contracted plan that is purchased so that the service can be accessed with their devices.(d) It is in the public interest to ensure that subscribers of broadband internet access service reliably receive the speeds they pay for, are fully informed about the pricing structure for their plans, and have access to affordable broadband that meets their connectivity needs.SEC. 2. Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer.21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section.21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222.21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission.21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification.21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days.SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of this act, which adds Section 21222 to the Business and Professions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the confidentiality of consumers and the proprietary information of businesses subject to this act, it is necessary that this act limit the publics right of access to proprietary business information, protected personal information, and personally identifiable information. The people of the State of California do enact as follows: ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows: SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares as follows:(a) Californians receive their broadband internet access service from a variety of providers utilizing various technologies to deliver the service to residences and businesses.(b) A variety of factors may negatively impact the speed performance of a subscribers broadband internet access service including the type of device being used, other hardware issues, equipment, network traffic, software issues, signal interference, physical obstructions, and user error.(c) While not all factors that influence a subscribers speed performance are directly attributable to the broadband internet service provider, customers have a reasonable expectation that their provider will reliably provide the advertised speeds for their contracted plan that is purchased so that the service can be accessed with their devices.(d) It is in the public interest to ensure that subscribers of broadband internet access service reliably receive the speeds they pay for, are fully informed about the pricing structure for their plans, and have access to affordable broadband that meets their connectivity needs. SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares as follows:(a) Californians receive their broadband internet access service from a variety of providers utilizing various technologies to deliver the service to residences and businesses.(b) A variety of factors may negatively impact the speed performance of a subscribers broadband internet access service including the type of device being used, other hardware issues, equipment, network traffic, software issues, signal interference, physical obstructions, and user error.(c) While not all factors that influence a subscribers speed performance are directly attributable to the broadband internet service provider, customers have a reasonable expectation that their provider will reliably provide the advertised speeds for their contracted plan that is purchased so that the service can be accessed with their devices.(d) It is in the public interest to ensure that subscribers of broadband internet access service reliably receive the speeds they pay for, are fully informed about the pricing structure for their plans, and have access to affordable broadband that meets their connectivity needs. SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares as follows: ### SECTION 1. (a) Californians receive their broadband internet access service from a variety of providers utilizing various technologies to deliver the service to residences and businesses. (b) A variety of factors may negatively impact the speed performance of a subscribers broadband internet access service including the type of device being used, other hardware issues, equipment, network traffic, software issues, signal interference, physical obstructions, and user error. (c) While not all factors that influence a subscribers speed performance are directly attributable to the broadband internet service provider, customers have a reasonable expectation that their provider will reliably provide the advertised speeds for their contracted plan that is purchased so that the service can be accessed with their devices. (d) It is in the public interest to ensure that subscribers of broadband internet access service reliably receive the speeds they pay for, are fully informed about the pricing structure for their plans, and have access to affordable broadband that meets their connectivity needs. SEC. 2. Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer.21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section.21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222.21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission.21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification.21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days. SEC. 2. Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 21220) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: ### SEC. 2. CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer.21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section.21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222.21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission.21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification.21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days. CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer.21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section.21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222.21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission.21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification.21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days. CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers ##### CHAPTER 8.2. Broadband Internet Service Providers 21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state.(c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following:(1) Advertised speeds by plan.(2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan.(4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings.(5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts.(6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level.(d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following:(1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance.(2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing.(3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions.(4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws.(d)(e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs.(e)(f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats.(f)(g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer. 21220. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply: ###### 21220. (a) Broadband internet access service has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 3100 of the Civil Code. (b) Broadband internet service provider means any entity that provides broadband internet access service to an individual, corporation, government, or other customer in the state. (c) Broadband pricing and speed data means information related to the following: (1) Advertised speeds by plan. (2) Speed performance experienced by customers. (3) Promotional pricing by plan. (4) Total pricing for broadband internet access services paid by a customer per plan, inclusive of all fees, surcharges, and additional charges assessed on the customer, either as standalone broadband service or the broadband service component of bundled service offerings. (5) Plan structures, including bundled service offerings and discounts. (6) The most commonly purchased broadband internet access service plans aggregated to the census tract level. (d) Consumer complaint means any written or electronic complaint submitted by a consumer to a broadband internet service provider regarding any of the following: (1) Service quality issues, including slow speeds, frequent outages, or failure to meet advertised performance. (2) Billing discrepancies, including hidden fees, overcharges, unauthorized charges, or misleading promotional pricing. (3) Contractual disputes, including price increases after a promotional period, early termination fees, or failure to disclose terms and conditions. (4) Customer service failures, including repeated unresponsiveness, lack of resolution, or failure to comply with California consumer protection laws. (d) (e) Department means the Department of Consumer Affairs. (e) (f) Machine-readable format means a structured data format that can be processed by a computer without human intervention, including, but not limited to, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), comma-separated values (CSV), or Extensible Markup Language (XML) formats. (f) (g) Speed performance means the speed delivered to the customer. 21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers.(2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges.(4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section. 21221. (a) A broadband internet service provider operating in the state shall, on or before January 1, 2027, and then annually, submit to the department a report containing broadband internet access service pricing and speed data at the census tract or address level in a machine-readable format. The report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following: ###### 21221. (1) The advertised speeds offered to consumers. (2) Speed performance. (3) The advertised and total price paid by consumers, including all fees and surcharges. (4) A breakdown of broadband internet access service plans offered to consumers at the census-tract or address level, including standalone, bundled, and eligibility-based plans. (b) The department may conduct audits and require broadband internet service providers to provide supporting documentation to verify compliance with this section. 21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221.(b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code). 21222. (a) The department shall publish an annual broadband internet access service affordability and speed report aggregating and analyzing the data submitted pursuant to Section 21221. ###### 21222. (b) The data submitted pursuant to Section 21221 shall be made available to the public by the department in an open data format, subject to the protection of proprietary business information and personally identifying information, and consistent with the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code). 21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved.(b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public.(c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222. 21223. (a) A broadband internet service provider that fails to comply with this chapter, Section 21221, including, but not limited to, failure to submit required data, submission of incomplete or misleading data, or failure to cooperate with audits conducted pursuant to this chapter, subdivision (b) of Section 21221, shall be subject to an administrative penalty by the department not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), per violation per day until compliance is achieved. ###### 21223. (b) The department shall adopt a data reporting template for entities to report the broadband pricing and speed data to the department. The template shall be in an open data format that shall be readily accessible to the public. (c) The department may adopt rules and regulations necessary to implement and enforce this chapter. Sections 21221 and 21222. 21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution.(c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt.(d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission. 21224. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall establish and maintain a dedicated consumer complaint resolution process that allows customers to submit consumer complaints via telephone, email, and an online portal. ###### 21224. (b) A broadband internet service provider shall provide consumers with a tracking number for each consumer complaint and an estimated timeline for resolution. (c) A broadband internet service provider shall respond to a consumer complaint within seven business days and provide a resolution, explanation, or corrective action within 30 days of receipt. (d) If a consumer complaint cannot be resolved within 30 days, the broadband internet service provider shall provide the consumer with a written explanation of the delay and an updated resolution timeline, not to exceed 60 days from the initial complaint submission. 21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies:(1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices.(2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service.(3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. 21225. (a) If a broadband internet service provider fails to resolve a consumer complaint within the timeframe specified in Section 21224 or refuses to act in good faith, the consumer is entitled to one or more of the following remedies: ###### 21225. (1) For billing disputes, a refund for overcharges, undisclosed fees, or improper billing practices. (2) For service failures or service quality issues, prorated credits or full refunds for periods of nonservice or substandard service, or replacement of provider-issued hardware, including modems or routers, at no cost to the consumer, if the equipment is determined to be the likely cause of degraded service. (3) For breach of contract, waiver of early termination fees when the broadband internet service provider fails to uphold its service agreement. (b) A broadband internet service provider shall issue a minimum credit of fifty dollars ($50) to any consumer whose complaint remains unresolved beyond 60 days without valid justification. 21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website.(b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days. 21226. (a) A broadband internet service provider shall disclose the complaint resolution process and remedies clearly and conspicuously in its terms of service, in its billing statements, and on its internet website. ###### 21226. (b) A broadband internet service provider shall report quarterly complaint statistics to the department that include the number of consumer complaints received, the types of complaints, the average resolution time, and the number of unresolved complaints exceeding 60 days. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of this act, which adds Section 21222 to the Business and Professions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the confidentiality of consumers and the proprietary information of businesses subject to this act, it is necessary that this act limit the publics right of access to proprietary business information, protected personal information, and personally identifiable information. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of this act, which adds Section 21222 to the Business and Professions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the confidentiality of consumers and the proprietary information of businesses subject to this act, it is necessary that this act limit the publics right of access to proprietary business information, protected personal information, and personally identifiable information. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of this act, which adds Section 21222 to the Business and Professions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest: ### SEC. 3. In order to protect the confidentiality of consumers and the proprietary information of businesses subject to this act, it is necessary that this act limit the publics right of access to proprietary business information, protected personal information, and personally identifiable information.