Cats, guns and ICE: 7 new California laws in 2026
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Cats, guns and ICE: 7 new California laws in 2026
"From bans on declawing cats and plastic grocery bags to new anti-discrimination protections for students and cheaper insulin, a raft of new California laws takes effect Jan. 1, with others rolling out through 2026. The measures survived months of negotiations in the state Legislature and scrutiny from Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has shown a willingness to veto bills he opposes even with Democrats holding supermajorities. Some proposals drew opposition or support from powerful business and labor interests. Here are the highlights:"
"The law prohibits veterinarians from declawing cats except when medically necessary. Newsom sided with animal welfare advocates who say the practice goes far beyond trimming claws, instead involving the amputation of a cat's toes a procedure that can cause pain and long-term health problems. East Bay Assemblymember Alex Lee, who owns two cats, sponsored the bill. A leading veterinary group opposed it, arguing politicians should not dictate which medical procedures veterinarians can perform."
"Millions of Californians with diabetes depend on regular doses of insulin to regulate their blood sugar medication that has become a symbol of unaffordable health care in the United States. Starting Jan. 1, SB 40 limits health insurance co-pays and deductibles for all types of insulin to $35 a month. The law was sponsored by San Francisco Sen. Scott Wiener and Sen. Aisha Wahab of the East Bay and Silicon Valley, both Democrats."
Multiple new California laws take effect Jan. 1, with additional measures phased through 2026. Assembly Bill 867 bans declawing cats except when medically necessary and authorizes the California Veterinary Medical Board to suspend or revoke licenses of veterinarians who violate the law. Senate Bill 40 caps health insurance co-pays and deductibles for all types of insulin at $35 per month. The measures survived months of legislative negotiation and gubernatorial review, with some bills facing opposition or support from business and labor groups. Several proposals prompted governor consideration of vetoes even with Democratic supermajorities.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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