Gov. Newsom signs housing legislation overhauling California's landmark environmental lawNew Foto - Gov. Newsom signs housing legislation overhauling California's landmark environmental law

California lawmakers have approved two new bills that are expected to lead to a significant overhaul of the state's landmark environmental protection law and jump-start the stagnated housing market that has long stymied residents and would-be employers. The major changes to theCalifornia Environmental Quality Act, known as CEQA, were attached to two bills in a larger $321 billion state budget bill that eventually passed with ease. California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the legislation on June 30, which received rare bipartisan support. "This is the most consequential housing reform in modern history in the state of California. Long overdue? Absolutely," Newsom said at a news conference as he signed the legislation. Supporters said the reforms to CEQA's strenuous review process will help improve the state's ongoing housing shortage and chronic homelessness crisis. Some environmental advocates call the move back-door dealmaking. Assembly Bill 130, created by California Assemblymember Buffy Wicks, D-Oakland, exempts most urban housing projects from environmental review. Another bill, Senate Bill 131, by California state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, waives the environmental restrictions for other buildings, including health clinics, child care, and food banks. California has long been considered a national pioneer for environmental action, as changes to its signature impact review law come at a time that may change the landscape within the nation's most populous state. California is estimated to need3.5 million more housing unitsthan it has. The shortage is one reason people and businesses have fled as housing in popular cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles is unaffordable to the vast majority who want to live and work there. The changes are meant to jump-start housing construction, which has often been strangled by the use of the state's signature 1970 environmental law. Critics say the law is used by groups whose goal is more intent on stopping buildings than sparing the environment. The bills became law after Newsom threatened to reject the state budget passed last week unless there was anoverhaul of CEQA, which requires strict reviews of any new development built and its impact on the environment. That process could take months to years, adding expense and uncertainty to projects. For years, these environmental impact studies have often been known to delay and even halt new development due to CEQA, regarded as among the strictest laws of its kind in the United States. Duringa news conferenceafter signing the laws, Newsom said the matter was "too urgent, too important, to allow the process to unfold as it has for the last generation, invariably falling prey to all kinds of pratfall." Under the two new laws, nine types of projects are exempted from environmental impact reviews. They include child care centers, health clinics, food banks, as well as farmworker housing, broadband, wildfire prevention, water infrastructure, public parks or trails, and advanced manufacturing. "It's aligned with what I know about the history and the reform measures,"Mark Baldassare, survey director for thePublic Policy Institute of California, a nonpartisan research organization, told USA TODAY. "We'll see what takes place. Stay tuned." Possible changes have been under intense debate for at least a decade, Baldassare said. Newsom and other state legislators are now aware that voters nationwide during last year's elections blamed politicians, especially Democrats, for not curbing rising cost-of-living prices, Baldassare added. Baldassare said PPIC statewide polling of California voters in both2023andJune 2025revealed that the cost of living and affordable housing are their top two concerns, calling last year's election "a wake-up call." "The idea of reforming CEQA has been around for a long time," Baldassare said. "Our polling indicated that despite the state's strong environmental attributes, they were supportive of reforming CEQA across party lines, and that doesn't happen too often, especially given today's polarization." California budget breakdown:How it impacts your life, from Medi-Cal and education to fires The 54-year-old California statute, signed by then-governor Ronald Reagan, was intended to protect wildlife and natural resources of forests, mountains, and coastal spaces. The law requires state and local governments to study and publicize the likely environmental impact of any decisions they make, including the permitting of new housing, as California home values and rents are amongthe most expensive in the nation, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. The requirement is called an Environmental Impact Report, which can take up to a year to complete. Aiming to streamline and lower the cost of construction in California, the new laws also restrict legal challenges under CEQA by narrowing the documents courts can consider. It also allows limited environmental reviews of projects that are not considered to have a litany of impacts. California state Senator Scott Wiener,who wrote one of the two bills, told reporters on June 30 that the changes won't happen in the next year or three years, but in decades to come. He called the changes a bold step forward toward tackling the root causes of California's affordability crisis. "The high costs devastating our communities stem directly from our extreme shortage of housing, childcare, affordable healthcare, and so many of the other things families need to thrive," Wiener, a Democrat, said in a statement. "These bills get red tape and major process hurdles out of the way, allowing us to finally start addressing these shortages and securing an affordable California and a brighter future." Weiner added that when the economic conditions are right, the state will be prepared "to build a ton of housing," and the structure is in place to facilitate it. 'Connect people to shelter, housing':California Gov. Gavin Newsom unveils homelessness plan to clear street camps Asha Sharma, a state policy manager with Leadership Council for Justice and Accountability, described the changes as a "back-room, last-minute deal" that left the state budget hanging in the balance and the opposition little time for public scrutiny. "The bills were passed in the most undemocratic way possible. It made the entire state budget contingent on it," Sharma told USA TODAY. "We really couldn't make our voices heard. There was very little public process with this." She wasn't alone.Raquel Mason, a senior legislative manager with the California Environmental Justice Alliance, said her group opposes Weiner's bill. Sharma and Mason said there have been 23 Superfund sites in Santa Clara County, where tech-rich Silicon Valley is located. They saymany of those sites are tied to semiconductor manufacturing. "By advancing this bill, the legislature sent a clear message: our health, our safety, and our right to participate in decisions that impact our lives are disposable," Mason said in a statement to USA TODAY. "This bill will usher industrial development without any opportunity for our communities to advocate for needed mitigations to protect ourselves." While Weiner wrote a bill to exempt several types of projects from environmental review, Newsom forced the changes to overhaul the state's environmental law. The governor told lawmakers that he wouldn't approve California's $321 billion budget without them. Last week, a provision in the approved budget act said the spending plan would be repealed if changes to the state's environmental review process were not finalized by June 30. On June 30, Newsomsaid on social mediathat he enacted "the most game-changing housing reforms" in recent California history. "We're urgently embracing an abundance agenda by tearing down the barriers that have delayed new affordable housing and infrastructure for decades," Newsom wrote. The governor later mentioned to reporters during a June 30 news conference that his administration's goal is to build 2.5 million homes by 2030. Newsom said it's up to leaders across the state to use this new tool to help make the goal a reality. "If we can't address this issue, we're going to lose trust, and that's just the truth," Newsom said. "And so this is so much bigger in many ways than the issue itself. It is about the reputation of not just Sacramento and the legislative leadership and executive leadership, but the reputation of the state of California." Contributing: Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:California lawmakers roll back its landmark environmental impact law

Gov. Newsom signs housing legislation overhauling California's landmark environmental law

Gov. Newsom signs housing legislation overhauling California's landmark environmental law California lawmakers have approved two new bil...
'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'New Foto - 'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'

There was no evidence of the onetime rivalry between President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday as they came together in a common cause:opening an immigrant detention centerin the swampy heart of Florida. Trump and his top deputies visited the Everglades, where Florida officials delivered a win for his anti-immigration agenda and positioned the state at the forefront of his crackdown. The facility, which Republican leaders dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz," is set to house 3,000 detainees and took just eight days to construct. "It might be as good as the real Alcatraz," Trump told reporters Tuesday. "It's a little controversial, but I couldn't care less." The push behind "Alligator Alcatraz" is not only to keep Florida aligned with Trump on immigration but also to reposition some of the state's biggest Republican players politically. DeSantis, for instance, fought vocally with Trump during the 2024 presidential primaries; during the visit Tuesday, however, he and Trump praised each other. "You are my friend, and you'll always be my friend, and we may have some skirmishes, even in the future. I doubt it, but I will always come back, because we have blood that seems to match pretty well," Trump said. "I think it is a 10," Trump added of their relationship. "Maybe a 9.9. ... We get along great." DeSantis, unprompted, quickly chimed in with a reminder that he endorsed Trump as soon as he exited the presidential race in early 2024. "The thing about it is, I endorsed him," DeSantis said. "Raised one of his PACs millions and millions of dollars." Trump and DeSantis, along with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, toured the facility in a made-for-TV presentation of the opening of what is one of the largest immigrant detention facilities in the country. A number of the media outlets on the tour were Trump-friendly organizations, who asked questions that praised him or allowed him to hype his agenda. One reporter asked him to weigh in on the "disastrous handling of the border" by President Joe Biden's administration, while another had him comment on how his "beloved New York City may well be led by a communist soon." "What's your message to Gov. Gavin Newsom?" right-wing YouTube personality Benny Johnson asked. Trump responded that the "first thing" Newsom, the governor of California and a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, should do "is come here and learn something." The political undertones of the event were hard to ignore. Among those Trump invited to attend was Rep. Byron Donalds, a Florida Republican running for governor in 2026. At the same time, DeSantis' wife, Casey DeSantis,continues to consider a competing run for governor. During a roundtable discussion Tuesday, Donalds — sitting just a couple of feet from DeSantis — said he "commended" him for his work to combat illegal immigration. The moment represented political foes' setting aside their feud, at least for the day. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, a close DeSantis ally, hatched the idea for Alligator Alcatraz last month, but it got national traction when DeSantis did a live tour of the facility Friday on "Fox and Friends," which caught the Trump administration off-guard. Noem and top adviser Corey Lewandowski supported the facility but wanted the opening Tuesday to be the formal public rollout, two sources familiar with the matter told NBC News. "DeSantis upset Noem and Lewandowski with his Fox News tour of the detention site," a Republican operative familiar with the process said. "Noem wanted an event for Tuesday and didn't want anyone having eyes on the site and needed to push until Tuesday because she was traveling." The Republican operative said Noem's staff asked DeSantis not to do the Fox News tour. "The DHS team asked DeSantis not to do his Friday event," the person added. "DeSantis did what was best for DeSantis and got out in front...angering both Noem and Lewandowski." Another source familiar with the matter said the ire did not stem directly from the White House but from Lewandowski. "He lost his s---," the person said. Lewandowski and DeSantis' political team did not respond to requests for comment. The White House called the assertion "fake news." "Leave it to the Fake News NBC to write about baseless gossip following a hugely successful event with President Trump, Secretary Noem and Governor DeSantis at Alligator Alcatraz," White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement. "Here's the real story that the state-of-the-art facility will play an important role in fulfilling the President's promise to keep Americans safe and deport criminal illegal aliens." "The President is grateful to work with both Secretary Noem and Governor DeSantis on this project," she added. Still, the event signaled that DeSantis was publicly rekindling his relationship with Trump, and to some degree it wasseen as a boonfor his attempt to again regain national political footing for a potential presidential campaign in 2028, even as Vice President JD Vance is widely seen as the current front-runner. "No one thought Trump would so closely embrace DeSantis today," said a longtime Florida operative who was at the event. "We didn't think he would try to undercut him or insult him, but Trump was over the top in his praise today. I don't know what that means, but it was a good day for Ron DeSantis." The Everglades facility has given DeSantis and the state's Republican leaders, including Uthmeier,a boost to their fundraising efforts, even as Democrats have decried the effort as cruel to those accused of being in the country illegally. "'Alligator Alcatraz' is a callous political stunt," said David Jolly, a former Republican member of Congress who is running for governor as a Democrat in 2026. "Florida's most pressing challenge is the housing affordability crisis created by Republican leaders, not immigrants working to support our state's economy." Since the announcement of the facility,there have also been protests— including one Tuesday for the opening — and a lawsuitfiled by environmental groupsconcerned over the impact it could have on the Everglades. The facility was made possible by DeSantis' using emergency powers he enacted in 2023. The state built what amounts to a tent city, hiring a dozen vendors and seizing land from Miami-Dade County over local leaders' objections. The facility is housed on a little-used airstrip that includes a runway that DeSantis said can be used to quickly fly undocumented immigrants to third countries if deportation is deemed appropriate.

'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz'

'You'll always be my friend': Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at 'Alligator Alcatraz' There was no evidence of ...
Anti-Trump Protests Planned Across U.S. on July 4New Foto - Anti-Trump Protests Planned Across U.S. on July 4

A banner showing a picture of President Donald Trump is displayed outside of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) building on June 3, 2025, in Washington, D.C. Credit - Kevin Carter—Getty Images This July 4, some Americans are planning to retire their Independence Day barbecues and instead head to the streets in protest againstPresident Donald Trumpand his Administration. The collective demonstrations will be the latest in a long line of protests that have taken place since Trump returned to the White House for a second term. On June 14, as Trump held a national military parade in Washington, D.C.,–the largest the capital city has seen in decades—people across the U.S. gathered for counter-action, attending"No Kings" proteststo publicly "reject authoritarianism." Ahead of the big day, Trump had warned that "people that want to protest will be met with big force," saying participants are "people that hate our country." Amid the "No Kings" activism, states across the U.S. also encounteredimmigration protestsas people demonstrated against the Trump Administration's ICE raids. The protests notably started in Los Angeles and garnered national and international attention, especially afterTrump deployed the National Guard, and later the Marines, to quell the demonstrations, without the request of California Gov. Gavin Newsom. The decision resulted in much criticism and a legal battle, with an appeals court ultimately ruling that Trump was allowed to keep control of the National Guard in L.A. In April,people gathered across the U.S. and international citiessuch as London, Paris, and Stockholm to protest against the actions of Trump and his then-ally, former Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) lead Elon Musk. (The former allies have since had avery public falling out.) Now, a fresh round of protests are set to take place on July 4, America's Independence Day. Here's what we know about the planned action. Women's March, which coordinates protests across the U.S.against sexism and oppression, has published a list of over 140 events set to take place on July 4. The displays of protest range from rallies and marches to block parties. Women's March has invited communities across the country to create even more events. Per the organization, the Free America Weekendaims to highlightkey issues being faced by people across the U.S., such as poverty, unlawful orders, and "the grip of hate and the politics of fear." "This July 4th, while the U.S. marks Independence Day, we'll gather across the country—on porches, in town squares, backyards, and streets—to stand for real freedom and build a vision of a Free America, brick-by-brick," reads a statement within Women March's call for action. "They want us scared, divided, and alone. They don't want us to dream about freedom. But that's exactly what we have to do," said the organization. After widespread "No Kings" protests took place throughout the U.S. on June 14, another round of demonstrations are set to take place on July 4. "No Kings 2.0" events have been scheduled inWisconsin,LouisianaandWyoming, along with at leastten other locationsacross the U.S. While the "No Kings" protests in June were notably rallying against "authoritarianism," the event page for Wisconsin's July 4 rally in Green Bay says that the focus this time is on ICE raids and activity amid Trump's nationwide immigration crackdown. The protest event page encourages those attending to stand up for "community, justice [in] solidarity with our immigrant neighbors." In June, ICE arrests conducted in Trump's second term reportedly reachedover 100,000. Organizers of "No Kings 2.0" events in Louisiana and Wyoming have stressed non-violent demonstrations as a core principle of the gatherings. Read More:Protesters Across the U.S. Rally Against Trump and Musk: 'Stop Destroying America' Locals areplanning a demonstrationoutside Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida. Protesters are scheduled to gather near the estate on the evening of July 4, equipped with a large balloon depicting the President as a baby. A similar balloon was hoisted above Trump's Florida residence on Juneteenth in 2020,in protestagainst the treatment of Black Americans, in the weeks after the killing of George Floyd. "We're supposed to be celebrating America's independence, and I felt a moral responsibility to stand up and declare our independence from Trump-ism," Mark Offerman, a local activist, told Palm Beach Daily News. Meanwhile, The People's Union USA is encouraging Americans to stay at home on July 4, boycotting large corporations and avoiding parades and firework displays in a show of solidarity against wealth inequality and ICE raids. Instead, The People's Union USA, whoorganized the "Economic Blackout" in February, wants people to focus on supporting their communities and buying locally. Founder John Schwarz hascalledit the "most important boycott of the year." "Do not wave a flag for a country that no longer waves it for you," Schwarz saidin a video. "The 4th of July is supposed to be a celebration of freedom, but what freedom are we actually talking about?" Contact usatletters@time.com.

Anti-Trump Protests Planned Across U.S. on July 4

Anti-Trump Protests Planned Across U.S. on July 4 A banner showing a picture of President Donald Trump is displayed outside of the U.S. Depa...
Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on billNew Foto - Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on bill

By Bo Erickson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The debate within President Donald Trump's Republican Party over a massive tax-cut and spending bill returns to the House of Representatives on Wednesday, as party leaders try to overcome internal divisions and meet a self-imposed July 4 deadline. The Senate passed the legislation, which nonpartisan analysts say will add $3.3 trillion to the nation's debt over the next decade, by the narrowest possible margin on Tuesday after intense debate on the bill's hefty price tag and substantial cuts to the Medicaid health care program. Similar divides exist in the House, which Republicans control by a 220-212 margin and where a fractious caucus has regularly bucked its leadership in recent years -- though members have so far not rejected major Trump priorities. "The House will work quickly to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill that enacts President Trump's full America First agenda by the Fourth of July," House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement on Tuesday, citing the bill's extension of Trump's 2017 individual tax cuts and increased funding for the military and immigration enforcement. House Republican leaders set an initial procedural vote on the bill for 9 a.m. ET (1300 GMT). Some of the loudest Republican objections against it come from party hardliners angry that it does not sufficiently cut spending and a $5 trillion increase in the nation's debt ceiling, which lawmakers must address in the coming months or risk a devastating default on the nation's $36.2 trillion debt. "What the Senate did was unconscionable," said Representative Ralph Norman, a South Carolina Republican, one of several fiscal hawks who spoke out against the Senate bill's higher price tag, accusing the Senate of handing out "goodie bags" of spending to satisfy holdouts. Norman said he would vote against advancing the bill on Wednesday. Democrats are united in opposition to the bill, saying that its tax breaks disproportionately benefit the wealthy, while cutting services that lower- and middle-income Americans rely on. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that almost 12 million people could lose health insurance as a result of the bill. "This is the largest assault on American healthcare in history," Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters on Tuesday, pledging that his party will use "all procedural and legislative options" to try to stop - or delay - passage. The version of the bill passed by the Senate on Tuesday would add more to the debt than the version first passed by the House in May and also includes more than $900 million in cuts to the Medicaid program for low-income Americans. Those cuts also raised concerns among some House Republicans. "I will not support a final bill that eliminates vital funding our hospitals rely on," Representative David Valadao of California said before Senate passage. TIMING DIFFICULTIES But some House Republicans worried about social safety-net cuts could find solace in the Senate's last-minute decision to set aside more money for rural hospitals, funding that Representative Nick Langworthy, a New York Republican, called "a lifeline that will be very helpful to districts like mine." Any changes made by the House would require another Senate vote, making it all but impossible to meet the July 4 deadline. Further complicating the timeline, a wave of storms in the Washington area on Tuesday night canceled flights, and some lawmakers from both parties detailed on social media plans to drive from their home districts to the Capitol for Wednesday's expected vote. A senior White House official said on Tuesday that Trump is expected to be "deeply involved" in the whip operation this week. Trump for weeks has pushed for passage ahead of the July 4 Independence Day holiday, though he has also in recent days softened that deadline, describing it as less than critical. Any public opposition to the bill risks irking Trump, as was the case when the president slammed Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican who announced his retirement after coming out in opposition to the bill. Another former Trump ally, the world's richest person Elon Musk, this week resumed an active campaign against the bill over social media, blasting its deficit-building effects. That has reignited a feud between Trump and Musk. (Reporting by Bo Erickson, Rick Cowan, and Nandita Bose; Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia Osterman)

Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on bill

Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on bill By Bo Erickson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The debate within President Donald ...
Hamas orders Gaza clan leader to surrender, accuses him of treasonNew Foto - Hamas orders Gaza clan leader to surrender, accuses him of treason

CAIRO (Reuters) -The Hamas-run interior ministry in Gaza on Wednesday ordered the leader of a well-armed Bedouin clan defying the group's control of the Palestinian enclave to surrender and face trial, accusing him of treason. A ministry statement said the decision was taken by what it called a "Revolutionary Court". Yasser Abu Shabab, who does not recognize the authority of Hamas and accuses the militants of hurting the interests of Gaza, has 10 days to surrender, it said. The court urged Palestinians to inform Hamas security officials about the whereabouts of Abu Shabab, who has so far remained beyond their reach in the Rafah area of southern Gaza held by Israeli troops. There was no immediate response from his group to the surrender order. Hamas, which accuses Abu Shabab of looting UN aid trucks and alleges that he is backed by Israel, has sent some of its top fighters to kill him, two Hamas sources and two other sources familiar with the situation told Reuters last month. Abu Shabab's group told Reuters at the time that it is a popular force protecting humanitarian aid from looting by escorting aid trucks and denied getting support from Israel or contacts with the Israeli army. It accused Hamas of violence and muzzling dissent. Israel has said it has backed some of Gaza's clans against Hamas but has not said which. (Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi; editing Philippa Fletcher)

Hamas orders Gaza clan leader to surrender, accuses him of treason

Hamas orders Gaza clan leader to surrender, accuses him of treason CAIRO (Reuters) -The Hamas-run interior ministry in Gaza on Wednesday ord...

 

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