BILL NUMBER: SB 488	ENROLLED
	BILL TEXT

	PASSED THE SENATE  JULY 8, 2013
	PASSED THE ASSEMBLY  JULY 3, 2013
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JUNE 26, 2013
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 7, 2013
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 22, 2013
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 8, 2013

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Hueso
   (Coauthor: Assembly Member Quirk-Silva)

                        FEBRUARY 21, 2013

   An act to amend Sections 17920.3 and 17961 of the Health and
Safety Code, relating to housing.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 488, Hueso. Substandard housing: regulations.
   (1) Existing law specifies that any building, including any
dwelling unit, shall be deemed to be a substandard building when a
health officer determines that, among other things, an infestation of
insects, vermin, or rodents exists to the extent that it endangers
the life, limb, health, property, safety, or welfare of the public or
its occupants, or there is a lack of adequate garbage and rubbish
storage and removal facilities.
   This bill would, if an agreement does not exist with an agency
that has a health officer, authorize a code enforcement officer, upon
successful completion of a course of study in the appropriate
subject matter as determined by the local jurisdiction, to determine
whether an infestation exists or whether there is a lack of adequate
garbage and rubbish removal facilities.
   (2) Existing law provides that the housing or building department
of every city, county, or city and county is required to enforce
within its jurisdiction all of the State Housing Law. Existing law
further provides that the health department of every city, county, or
city and county, or any environmental agency or local building
department, may enforce regulations related to lead hazards, as
specified, and is required to coordinate enforcement activities with
other interested departments and agencies in order to avoid
unnecessary duplication.
   This bill would make technical, conforming changes to those
provisions.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) Exposure to pests, such as arthropods and rodents, in one's
home has clear health impacts. Cockroaches are known to produce
allergens that trigger asthma, especially in children. A study
conducted by the National Institutes of Health found that cockroach
allergens are the primary contributor to childhood asthma in
inner-city homes. Mouse and rat allergen sensitization and exposure
also contribute to asthma exacerbations. Rats and mice are the source
of several infections in humans, including, but not limited to,
hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, murine typhus, leptospirosis, and
lymphocytic choriomeningitis. Bed bug bites can cause itching and
become infected, and bed bug infestations have been linked to severe
mental stress.
   (b) Inadequate garbage and rubbish storage and removal facilities
can be a contributing factor to infestations of pests and vermin as
they provide harborage.
   (c) State law limits the enforcement authority for pest
infestations and inadequate garbage and rubbish storage and removal
facilities to county health officers. Cities lacking an agreement or
the resources needed to contract with a county for the services of
the county health officer are left without any authority to address
these substandard housing conditions. Local code enforcement officers
could make these determinations.
   (d) Owners shall not be cited by both a local code enforcement
officer and a health officer for the same violation of regulations
regarding infestations of pests and inadequate garbage storage and
removal.
  SEC. 2.  Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code is amended
to read:
   17920.3.  Any building or portion thereof including any dwelling
unit, guestroom or suite of rooms, or the premises on which the same
is located, in which there exists any of the following listed
conditions to an extent that endangers the life, limb, health,
property, safety, or welfare of the public or the occupants thereof
shall be deemed and hereby is declared to be a substandard building:
   (a) Inadequate sanitation shall include, but not be limited to,
the following:
   (1) Lack of, or improper water closet, lavatory, or bathtub or
shower in a dwelling unit.
   (2) Lack of, or improper water closets, lavatories, and bathtubs
or showers per number of guests in a hotel.
   (3) Lack of, or improper kitchen sink.
   (4) Lack of hot and cold running water to plumbing fixtures in a
hotel.
   (5) Lack of hot and cold running water to plumbing fixtures in a
dwelling unit.
   (6) Lack of adequate heating.
   (7) Lack of, or improper operation of required ventilating
equipment.
   (8) Lack of minimum amounts of natural light and ventilation
required by this code.
   (9) Room and space dimensions less than required by this code.
   (10) Lack of required electrical lighting.
   (11) Dampness of habitable rooms.
   (12) Infestation of insects, vermin, or rodents as determined by a
health officer or, if an agreement does not exist with an agency
that has a health officer, the infestation can be determined by a
code enforcement officer, as defined in Section 829.5 of the Penal
Code, upon successful completion of a course of study in the
appropriate subject matter as determined by the local jurisdiction.
   (13) General dilapidation or improper maintenance.
   (14) Lack of connection to required sewage disposal system.
   (15) Lack of adequate garbage and rubbish storage and removal
facilities, as determined by a health officer or, if an agreement
does not exist with an agency that has a health officer, the lack of
adequate garbage and rubbish removal facilities can be determined by
a code enforcement officer as defined in Section 829.5 of the Penal
Code.
   (b) Structural hazards shall include, but not be limited to, the
following:
   (1) Deteriorated or inadequate foundations.
   (2) Defective or deteriorated flooring or floor supports.
   (3) Flooring or floor supports of insufficient size to carry
imposed loads with safety.
   (4) Members of walls, partitions, or other vertical supports that
split, lean, list, or buckle due to defective material or
deterioration.
   (5) Members of walls, partitions, or other vertical supports that
are of insufficient size to carry imposed loads with safety.
   (6) Members of ceilings, roofs, ceiling and roof supports, or
other horizontal members which sag, split, or buckle due to defective
material or deterioration.
   (7) Members of ceilings, roofs, ceiling and roof supports, or
other horizontal members that are of insufficient size to carry
imposed loads with safety.
   (8) Fireplaces or chimneys which list, bulge, or settle due to
defective material or deterioration.
   (9) Fireplaces or chimneys which are of insufficient size or
strength to carry imposed loads with safety.
   (c) Any nuisance.
   (d) All wiring, except that which conformed with all applicable
laws in effect at the time of installation if it is currently in good
and safe condition and working properly.
   (e) All plumbing, except plumbing that conformed with all
applicable laws in effect at the time of installation and has been
maintained in good condition, or that may not have conformed with all
applicable laws in effect at the time of installation but is
currently in good and safe condition and working properly, and that
is free of cross connections and siphonage between fixtures.
   (f) All mechanical equipment, including vents, except equipment
that conformed with all applicable laws in effect at the time of
installation and that has been maintained in good and safe condition,
or that may not have conformed with all applicable laws in effect at
the time of installation but is currently in good and safe condition
and working properly.
   (g) Faulty weather protection, which shall include, but not be
limited to, the following:
   (1) Deteriorated, crumbling, or loose plaster.
   (2) Deteriorated or ineffective waterproofing of exterior walls,
roofs, foundations, or floors, including broken windows or doors.
   (3) Defective or lack of weather protection for exterior wall
coverings, including lack of paint, or weathering due to lack of
paint or other approved protective covering.
   (4) Broken, rotted, split, or buckled exterior wall coverings or
roof coverings.
   (h) Any building or portion thereof, device, apparatus, equipment,
combustible waste, or vegetation that, in the opinion of the chief
of the fire department or his deputy, is in such a condition as to
cause a fire or explosion or provide a ready fuel to augment the
spread and intensity of fire or explosion arising from any cause.
   (i) All materials of construction, except those that are
specifically allowed or approved by this code, and that have been
adequately maintained in good and safe condition.
   (j) Those premises on which an accumulation of weeds, vegetation,
junk, dead organic matter, debris, garbage, offal, rodent harborages,
stagnant water, combustible materials, and similar materials or
conditions constitute fire, health, or safety hazards.
   (k) Any building or portion thereof that is determined to be an
unsafe building due to inadequate maintenance, in accordance with the
latest edition of the Uniform Building Code.
   (  l  ) All buildings or portions thereof not provided
with adequate exit facilities as required by this code, except those
buildings or portions thereof whose exit facilities conformed with
all applicable laws at the time of their construction and that have
been adequately maintained and increased in relation to any increase
in occupant load, alteration or addition, or any change in occupancy.

   When an unsafe condition exists through lack of, or improper
location of, exits, additional exits may be required to be installed.

   (m) All buildings or portions thereof that are not provided with
the fire-resistive construction or fire-extinguishing systems or
equipment required by this code, except those buildings or portions
thereof that conformed with all applicable laws at the time of their
construction and whose fire-resistive integrity and
fire-extinguishing systems or equipment have been adequately
maintained and improved in relation to any increase in occupant load,
alteration or addition, or any change in occupancy.
   (n) All buildings or portions thereof occupied for living,
sleeping, cooking, or dining purposes that were not designed or
intended to be used for those occupancies.
   (o) Inadequate structural resistance to horizontal forces.
   "Substandard building" includes a building not in compliance with
Section 13143.2.
   However, a condition that would require displacement of sound
walls or ceilings to meet height, length, or width requirements for
ceilings, rooms, and dwelling units shall not by itself be considered
sufficient existence of dangerous conditions making a building a
substandard building, unless the building was constructed, altered,
or converted in violation of those requirements in effect at the time
of construction, alteration, or conversion.
  SEC. 3.  Section 17961 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to
read:
   17961.  (a) The housing or building department or, if there is no
building department acting pursuant to this section, the health
department of every city, county, or city and county, or any
environmental agency authorized pursuant to Section 101275, shall
enforce within its jurisdiction all of this part, the building
standards published in the State Building Standards Code, and the
other rules and regulations adopted pursuant to this part pertaining
to the maintenance, sanitation, ventilation, use, or occupancy of
apartment houses, hotels, or dwellings. The health department or the
environmental agency may, in conjunction with a local housing or
building department acting pursuant to this section, enforce within
its jurisdiction all of this part, the building standards published
in the State Building Standards Code, and the other rules and
regulations adopted pursuant to this part pertaining to the
maintenance, sanitation, ventilation, use, or occupancy of apartment
houses, hotels, or dwellings. Each department and agency, as
applicable, shall coordinate enforcement activities with each other
and interested departments and agencies in order to avoid unnecessary
duplication.
   (b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the health department of
every city, county, or city and county, or any environmental agency
authorized pursuant to Section 101275 may, in addition to the local
building or housing department, if any, enforce within its
jurisdiction the provisions of Section 17920.10 and shall coordinate
enforcement activities with other interested departments and agencies
in order to avoid unnecessary duplication.
   (c) The State Department of Public Health may enforce Section
17920.10 if any local agency or department specified in subdivisions
(a) and (b) enters into a written agreement, approved and published
pursuant to local government procedures, with the State Department of
Public Health to enforce that section, or provides the State
Department of Public Health with a written request to enforce that
section for a specific case following the identification of a lead
poisoned child in that jurisdiction.