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Political Playback: California Capitol News You Might Have Missed

February 16, 2026

California faces three major policy developments affecting public health, education, and taxation. A new ballot initiative seeks to eliminate property taxes for homeowners over 60 who meet residency requirements, which could cost local governments and schools between $12-20 billion annually. Attorney General Rob Bonta has launched a civil rights investigation into whether West Altadena's historically Black community received delayed fire evacuation warnings during the deadly Eaton Fire that killed 19 people, most of them elderly residents.

Who is affected

  • *Property Tax Initiative:**
  • California homeowners age 60 and older who meet residency requirements
  • Local governments and public schools (facing $12-20 billion annual revenue losses)
  • Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber
  • Initiative sponsor Rishi Kumar of Campbell
  • *Eaton Fire Investigation:**
  • West Altadena residents, particularly the historically Black community
  • 19 deceased victims (18 from West Altadena), average age 77
  • Survivors Zaire Calvin, Evelyn McClendon (deceased), Kara Vallow, and two unnamed neighbors who died
  • Los Angeles County emergency response officials
  • Altadena for Accountability advocacy group
  • Attorney General Rob Bonta
  • *Federal Funding Lawsuit:**
  • California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota
  • Recipients of CDC public health grants (California losing the largest share of $600+ million)
  • Communities served by HIV testing, disease surveillance, emergency preparedness, and laboratory programs
  • Attorney General Rob Bonta
  • Trump administration/U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
  • *CPR Training Bill:**
  • 758,000 California students currently without CPR/AED training access
  • All California public and charter high school students (grades 9-12)
  • Low-income Black and Hispanic communities with lower bystander CPR rates
  • Senator Akilah Weber Pierson
  • Eric Paredes Save A Life Foundation, American Heart Association, American Red Cross
  • Cardiac arrest survivor Matt Clark

What action is being taken

  • *Property Tax Initiative:**
  • Signature gathering is currently underway (entered circulation Feb. 5, 2026) with supporters collecting signatures to reach the 874,641 threshold by Aug. 4, 2026
  • *Eaton Fire Investigation:**
  • The California Department of Justice Civil Rights Enforcement Section is conducting an investigation into delayed emergency alerts and evacuations in West Altadena
  • *Federal Funding Lawsuit:**
  • California and three other states are seeking a temporary restraining order to block the CDC funding cuts from taking effect
  • *CPR Training Bill:**
  • SB 945 has been introduced and is moving through the legislative process

Why it matters

  • *Property Tax Initiative:**
  • This measure could fundamentally restructure California's property tax system and significantly reduce funding for essential local services and education. The $12-20 billion annual loss would grow over time, creating substantial budget challenges for municipalities and school districts that rely heavily on property tax revenue.
  • *Eaton Fire Investigation:**
  • The investigation addresses potential systemic discrimination in emergency response that may have cost lives, particularly among elderly Black residents. It examines whether race, age, or disability played a role in delayed warnings, raising critical questions about equitable emergency preparedness and response in diverse communities.
  • *Federal Funding Lawsuit:**
  • The funding cuts threaten core public health infrastructure including HIV services, disease surveillance, and emergency preparedness across four states. California officials view this as politically motivated retaliation against Democratic-led states, setting a dangerous precedent for using federal funding as leverage to compel state policy compliance.
  • *CPR Training Bill:**
  • This legislation addresses life-threatening gaps in emergency response capacity, particularly in underserved communities where cardiac arrest victims are significantly less likely to receive bystander CPR. With survival rates decreasing 7-10% per minute without immediate CPR, universal training could save thousands of lives annually and promote equity in survival outcomes.

What's next

  • *Property Tax Initiative:**
  • Supporters must collect 874,641 valid signatures by Aug. 4, 2026
  • If qualified, the measure will appear on the November 2026 general election ballot
  • Voters would then decide whether to approve the constitutional amendment
  • *Eaton Fire Investigation:**
  • No explicit next steps stated in the article (the DOJ stated no further updates would be provided during the review)
  • *Federal Funding Lawsuit:**
  • The court will rule on the temporary restraining order request to block funding cuts
  • The lawsuit will proceed through the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
  • *CPR Training Bill:**
  • No explicit next steps stated in the article (beyond the standard legislative process for SB 945)

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint