SB 9 54, presented by Senator Blake Spear, was advanced out of the Assembly Natural Resources Committee after a daylong policy debate over how to rein in a broadly worded CEQA exemption adopted last year. The bill removes raw‑material extraction from the exemption, narrows eligibility toward final‑tier manufacturing, sets distance triggers from disadvantaged communities and sensitive receptors, and requires environmental and labor standards for projects seeking streamlined review.
Supporters framed the measure as a necessary "cleanup" of SB 131 that preserves the exemption’s intent while restoring public‑health and habitat protections. "SB 9 54 attempts to modify the CEQA exemption in SB 131 by adding critical guardrails for advanced manufacturing," the author said in opening remarks. Labor and environmental groups urged the committee to back the bill; Elmer Lizardi of the California Labor Federation told members, "We are here representing over 2,300,000 union workers in the state," and asked for an I vote to protect workers and communities.
Business and trade associations, however, warned the amendments could reintroduce costly permitting hurdles and disincentivize investment. Matt Regan of the Bay Area Council said the bill "goes beyond mere cleanup" by adding certification, land‑use and labor requirements that could make the exemption impractical. Industry witnesses and some members questioned the feasibility of requirements such as LEED certification and how zoning limitations would affect existing facilities.
The committee’s discussion focused on public‑safety risks from facilities that handle hazardous chemicals, with members repeatedly citing a recent chemical release at an aerospace plant that led to mass evacuations. Lawmakers pressed the author on whether setbacks and air thresholds would adequately protect nearby schools and neighborhoods; the author and witnesses said the bill now includes setbacks (for example, 1,000 feet for disadvantaged communities, larger distances for schools and hospitals), air quality thresholds and a narrowing of eligible activities to reduce litigation risk and protect habitat.
After questions from members and extended back‑and‑forth with stakeholders, the committee recorded a "do pass" recommendation to the Labor and Employment Committee. The author said she would continue negotiating technical fixes — including potential sunset language and clarity on certification pathways — as the bill advances.
The committee action does not itself change law; the measure will proceed through further committee consideration where additional amendments or clarifying language are expected.