Informational Hearing Could Precede Further Action on AB 363 (Medina)
After having successfully moved AB 363 (Medina) through the Legislature up to its final policy committee hearing, by clearing all […]
After having successfully moved AB 363 (Medina) through the Legislature up to its final policy committee hearing, by clearing all […]
June 2, 2021 – AB 363 (Medina) has been overwhelmingly approved by the California State Assembly. This CNGVC-sponsored bill received […]
Great news out of the Port of Long Beach as its Board of Harbor Commissioners voted to exempt low NOx […]
AB 363 (Medina) was passed yesterday by the Assembly Transportation Committee with overwhelming, bipartisan support. The vote was 12-0 with […]
On April 16, the South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) staff presented to the Mobile Source Committee their latest […]
The CNGVC-sponsored AB 363 (Medina) will be heard in Assembly Transportation Committee on Monday, April 26th at 2:30 pm. This […]
While CARB’s approved $483 million 2018–19 Funding Plan for Clean Transportation Incentives supports NGVs, it does not provide all the features that the Coalition pressed for.
In the final bill signing of his four terms as California’s governor, Gov. Jerry Brown approved a number of clean transportation bills that underscore the state’s commitment to NGVs.
The Coalition tracked the following bills and others that affect alternative fuels and vehicles throughout the legislative session, which ended Aug. 31. Approved bills will take effect Jan. 1, 2019, and the Legislature will reconvene Jan. 7.
On Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018, Gov. Jerry Brown signed AB 2061, which allows ultraclean heavy-duty trucks to exceed California’s weight limits by as much as 2,000 pounds, accommodating the extra weight of natural gas and other clean truck fuel systems.
The Legislature adjourned Aug. 31 after passing all the alternative fuel-friendly bills on the Coalition’s watch list, including AB 2061, the heavy-duty truck weight-exemption bill.
The Coalition tracked the following bills and others throughout the legislative session, which ended Aug. 31. Gov. Jerry Brown must act on all bills by Sept. 30.