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Treasurer Chiang and Assemblymember Gonzalez vow to ‘leave no worker behind’ at CalSavers kickoff event

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Written by: California Treasurer's Office
Published: 28 November 2018
California State Treasurer John Chiang, center, at a kickoff event for the CalSavers program in San Diego, Calif., on Tuesday, November 27, 2018. Photo courtesy of the California Treasurer’s Office.

SAN DIEGO – At a launch event in San Diego on Tuesday, in front of small business leaders, community partners, and Californians ready to take control of their retirement security, California State Treasurer John Chiang and State Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez kicked off CalSavers, a new statewide retirement savings program destined to empower 7.5 million California workers, currently without access to a workplace retirement program, to start saving for their golden years.

“Our businesses and workers have grown California’s economy to the fifth largest in the world, so it is with great fulfillment that we, as one state, are today declaring we are leaving no worker behind to languish in poverty through their golden years,” said Treasurer Chiang. “Small business employees and our state’s millions of self-employed and gig economy workers now have a clear path to saving for a secure retirement. CalSavers will help facilitate the most ambitious and sweeping expansion of retirement security since the passage of Social Security in 1935.”

California is a leader in the growing national movement to provide retirement savings programs to workers who lack access through their places of work. Illinois and Oregon have created similar savings programs for workers, and a growing list of additional states are waiting in the wings to follow California’s example, and similarly revolutionize efforts to ensure workers do not retire into poverty.

Senator Kevin De León, who authored the groundbreaking legislation that created CalSavers, added, “No one who works every day to provide for themselves and their loved ones should be forced to retire into poverty. That’s why we fought Wall Street to create CalSavers, which will provide millions of Californians with a way to end their working years with dignity.”

California currently has nearly two-hundred thousand small businesses that are unable or unwilling to offer their employees a retirement savings program, resulting in four million small business employees working without any workplace retirement.

“CalSavers could be the difference between retiring with dignity and some level of independence or having to rely heavily on social services when you’re in your golden years,” said Assemblymember Gonzalez. “I’m pleased about the process we are making to allow working Californians to build toward a secure retirement through CalSavers.”

In San Diego County, more than 16,000 employers and more than 338,000 employees are eligible for the retirement savings program.

Tuesday’s event is one of five being held statewide this week to launch the CalSavers program; the others being held in Los Angeles, Fresno, Sacramento and San Francisco.

Experts agree that the critical mistake many workers, of all ages, make year-after-year lies in assuming Social Security benefits will manage to sustain them in their retirement years. But, with the average Social Security benefit paying less than $17,000 annually, Social Security alone is not enough to retire with dignity.

In fact, nearly half of California workers are on a trajectory to retire into economic hardship, defined as below twice the federal poverty rate. And with researchers now estimating that California’s senior population is projected to increase by 64 percent by 2025, that means up to 12 million Californians may be at risk of retiring without the resources to live a dignified retirement.

But access to workplace retirement programs makes individuals 15 times more likely to save for retirement, and even modest savings faithfully maintained over a career can make a difference. Analyses have shown a typical 25-year-old California worker who participates in CalSavers could amass $350,000 by the time they retired at age 65 — two-thirds of which would come from earnings on the original investments made by the saver.

CalSavers will put more Californians on the path to greater financial independence in retirement without spending a cent of taxpayer monies. Additionally, there are no costs to employers, who are already registering to participate in the pilot program.

“Registering was easy and the platform was very user friendly and easy to navigate,” said Victor Barajas, human resources manager at San Diego-based Integrated Microwave Corporation, one of the pilot employers already registered for CalSavers.

The law establishing CalSavers requires any employer with five or more employees, which does not already offer a workplace retirement savings program, to begin offering a retirement savings program either through the private market or by providing their employees access to CalSavers. Beginning July 1, 2019, employers of all sizes can register for CalSavers at www.CalSavers.com.

However, employers can currently register for the pilot program already underway. Employers with 100 or more employees, who do not already offer a retirement plan, will have until June 30, 2020 to register. Employers with 50 or more employees will be required to register by June 30, 2021, and those with five or more employees thereby June 30, 2022. Employers of any size can register at any time, even before their registration deadline.

Once enrolled, employees can choose their own contribution amount, up to the federal maximum of $6,000 – the same as any Individual Retirement Account, or IRA – with deductions made automatically from their paychecks.

For more information about CalSavers or to enroll in the program, employers or individuals can visit www.CalSavers.com, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or follow the program on Twitter at @CalSavers.

Residential policy locator service helps wildfire survivors and family members locate insurance policies

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Written by: California Department of Insurance
Published: 25 November 2018
SACRAMENTO – As survivors and family members of wildfire victims who died tragically in the Camp and Woolsey wildfires begin to pick up the pieces of their lives and begin the process of settling the estates of their loved ones, finding lost or destroyed property insurance policies is just one challenge.

The Department of Insurance has an online property insurance locator form to help survivors and family members find homeowner or renter insurance policies.

The result of Sen. Bill Monning's SB 569, which was supported by Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones, the new tool was introduced after Gov. Brown signed the bill into law last year with an effective date of January 2018.

"Wildfire survivors and family member who lost loved ones in such tragic circumstances are already facing overwhelming emotions and an almost insurmountable road to recovery," said Commissioner Jones. "Sen. Monning's bill created a sensible easy-to-use online tool to help wildfire survivors and family members start the recovery process. I was pleased to support his effort."

The service is available to property owners or the owner's legal representative if the property was damaged or destroyed in an area designated as a disaster by the president of the United States or the governor, and the property insurance policy cannot be located and they do not know or cannot recall the name of the insurer that issued the policy.

Department of Insurance representatives will forward the information you provide on the form to insurance companies licensed in California who will search their records to determine if the property was insured. The company will contact the insured or their representative directly if they locate a policy that was in force at the time of disaster. This service is free of charge.

Legislature’s Wine and Governmental Organization Committees plan Nov. 29 hearing

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 24 November 2018
SAN DIEGO – Assemblymembers Cecilia Aguiar-Curry and Adam Gray, and Senators Mike McGuire and Bill Dodd, will unite their respective Select Committees on Wine and Committees on Governmental Organization for a hearing in San Diego’s Central Library next week to discuss with experts the issues facing the wine industry at the state and federal levels.

The joint hearing will be held next beginning at 10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 29, in San Diego, and will be livestreamed at https://www.assembly.ca.gov/media/Field1-stream/video.

It will include panels of experts testifying about the state of the Wine Industry in California, the effects of federal law and trade from the state perspective, and an overview of which policies are the most impactful to California wines.

Assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, Chair of the Assembly Select Committee on Wine, said: “Our economy and our wine industry are constantly evolving. State regulation and international trade relationships have to keep pace with this evolution to keep our world-class wine industry and state economy healthy. This hearing is a great opportunity to hear from industry leaders to make sure policymakers understand and are responsive to industry needs.”

“California made up 97 percent of the more than $1.5 billion in U.S. wine exports last year,” said Sen. Bill Dodd, D-Napa, co-chair of the Senate Select Committee on California’s Wine Industry. “Maintaining open trading policy is absolutely critical to continuing that trend and reaching new global markets. I look forward to meeting with my legislative colleagues to find solutions to new challenges facing our wine industry.”

"California’s wineries and vineyards are part of the fabric of our great state,” said Assemblymember Adam Gray, Chair of the Assembly Committee on Governmental Organization, “This important agribusiness makes enormous contributions towards jobs, employment, wages, taxes, and tourism."

The hearing will take place at the San Diego Central Library, Shirley Special Events Suite, 330 Park Blvd.

Fisheries hearing in San Francisco next week focused on whale protection efforts and state of the state on latest crab season

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 23 November 2018
SACRAMENTO – Sen. Mike McGuire, Chairman of the Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture, or JCFA, and Assemblymember Mark Stone, Vice Chairman, are hosting a comprehensive hearing next week at the Aquarium of the Bay in San Francisco.

They will kick off the hearing with a State of the State of the California Dungeness Crab Season, one of the oldest commercial fisheries in California, and what to expect on ocean conditions, domoic acid levels and crab quality in the months to come.

Then they will transition into the robust efforts the State, Crab Fleet and numerous environmental organizations have been laser focused on: Protecting the Golden State’s majestic whales from entanglement. The committee will also be focused on the impacts large ships have been having on California whale populations.

“For several years now, California’s crab fishery has been on the brink of disaster due to high domoic acid levels in our ocean, and at next week’s hearing we’ll be taking a look at the current ocean conditions and how they’re impacting the crab fishery,” North Coast Senator Mike McGuire said. “We’ll also be discussing progress made from the critical legislation passed to protect California’s majestic whale populations from entanglement and other issues impacting whales including commercial ship strikes, which is a growing concern.”

The hearing titled: “Protecting California’s Whales from Entanglement and Maintaining the Sustainability of the Dungeness Crab Fishery” will be held Wednesday, November 28 from 1 to 5 p.m.at the Aquarium of the Bay – Farallon Room, PIER 39, The Embarcadero & Beach Street San Francisco, California.

The Committee has brought some of the nation’s top experts on the Dungeness crab fishery and those responsible for reducing whale entanglements together for one significant event next Wednesday. The Committee will also begin the investigation into commercial ship strikes and how it’s become a growing concern for California’s whale populations.

The agenda features presentations by agency leaders, scientists, commercial fishing representatives, non-governmental organizations, and environmental advocates.

Deborah Halberstadt, California Natural Resources Agency Deputy Secretary for Oceans and Coastal Policy, and Charlton Bonham, Director of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, headline this year’s list of speakers and presenters.

A final list of presenters will be released early next week.
  1. Mendocino National Forest announces several log deck sales
  2. Online homeowner insurance pricing tool helps residents find coverage
  3. Commercial Dungeness crab season delayed in Northern California
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