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Hearing today on California bill to limit rules on clean ports

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Suzanne Potter
(California News Service)

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A controversial bill on how best to clean up the air at California ports gets a hearing today in Sacramento.

Senate Bill 34 would place limits on the South Coast Air Quality Management District while it considers a proposal to accelerate progress toward zero-emission shipping at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

Cristhian Tapia-Delgado, Southern California climate campaigner for the advocacy group Pacific Environment, said the bill would tie regulators' hands and urged the State Assembly Natural Resources Committee to reject it.

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California State Capitol Building

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"It would stop the South Coast AQMD from being able to pursue pretty much anything that is related to the ports for at least the next decade," Tapia-Delgado contended. "They're citing unsupported claims that this is gonna set a cap on cargo, even though the ports indirect source rule does not contain any cargo throughput limits."

The bill would forbid caps on cargo or limits on port operations and require new regulations to address energy demand and supply, cost estimates and effects on the workforce. Ports would also be allowed to request extensions. The bill has already passed the state Senate. The bill's sponsor, Senator Laura Richardson, D-San Pedro, did not respond to a request for comment.

Tapia-Delgado pointed out a proposed indirect source rule for ports has been in the works for nine years. He argued the rule is necessary to reduce pollution from trucks, trains, cargo ships, harbor craft and cargo handling equipment, which choke the air in nearby low-income communities of color.

"According to a Long Beach Health and Human Services Assessment, this pollution burden has actually resulted in an eight-year life expectancy difference for residents in port-adjacent communities when compared to the county average," Tapia-Delgado reported.

The South Coast Air Quality Management District is still expected to take up the indirect source rule this fall.