WALDRON BILLS PASS ASSEMBLY, ADRESS HEALTHCARE ISSUES, WILDFIRE PREVENTION, AND WATER CONCERNS

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East County News Service

June 14, 2023 (Sacramento) -- This year, the “House of Origin Deadline” was June 2nd, the final day for bills to pass the house in which they were first introduced. Several bills by  Assemblywoman  Marie Waldron (R-Valley Center) passed the Assembly by that deadline.

Legislation that made it through included AB 1741, which Waldron introduced to help solve the shortage of clinical laboratory personnel that has impacted test processing for patients here locally and throughout California. The bill passed without opposition and expands the duties that unlicensed personnel who meet specified education/training criteria can perform under direct supervision of licensed personnel.

Another health-related bill, SB 90, which I co-authored with Senator Weiner, caps co-pays for insulin at $35 for a 30 day supply. SB 90 passed the Senate unanimously. Another bipartisan bill, AB 1399, coauthored with Assemblymembers Friedman and Lowenthal, expands the ability of veterinarians to provide animal care via telehealth, when appropriate.

In 2021, fentanyl overdoses caused 5,722 deaths in California. Two bills co-authored by Waldron dealing with this deadly scourge passed before the deadline. AB 33 (Bains) sets up a Fentanyl Addiction and Overdose Prevention Task Force consisting of representatives from law enforcement, the health sector and government to develop fentanyl policy recommendations for the state. AB 474 (Rodriguez) creates a Threat Assessment Center to prioritize cooperation with state and local efforts to disrupt and dismantle criminal networks that traffic in opioids. Both bills passed without opposition.

“Given our region’s vulnerability to wildfires, drought and diminishing groundwater resources, I supported AB 1567 (Garcia and others), which, if approved by voters, will finance projects involving wildfire prevention, drought preparation, flood protection, sustainable ground water, dam safety and tribal water infrastructure projects,” Waldron says.”This bipartisan bill also passed without any opposing votes.”

She adds, “Contentious issues in Sacramento generate headlines, but that doesn’t keep legislators on both sides of the aisle from coming together to pass legislation that benefits all Californians.”

Assemblymember Waldron represents the 75th Assembly District which includes the cities of Poway, Santee, parts of the City of San Diego, and most of rural eastern and northern San Diego County.

 

 


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