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SB 545

Relating to an income tax credit for volunteer firefighters; prescribing an effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Dick Anderson and 27 co-sponsors

The bill would study and propose funding and development tools to maximize economic benefits and value capture around California’s high‑speed rail, including financing districts an

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · SB 545

SB 545 — High‑speed rail: economic opportunities (Cortese)

Status: Action postponed indefinitely (6/3/2025)
Introduced: February 20, 2025
Main subject: Public peace, health, safety & welfare — economic development around California high‑speed rail

Purpose / intent

The bill directs state agencies to study and produce concrete recommendations to maximize economic development, value capture, funding, and community benefits along the corridor of the California high‑speed rail project (and other high‑speed rail projects that will directly connect to it). It also limits how revenue from certain infrastructure districts used to finance the rail construction may be spent.

Key provisions

  • Adds Section 185035.5 to the Public Utilities Code establishing study and reporting duties.
  • Responsible agencies: the Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation and the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO‑Biz).
  • Required timeline:
    • Commission the study and submit a progress report to the chairs of the Senate and Assembly Transportation Committees by January 1, 2027.
    • Complete the study and submit final findings and recommendations to the Legislature’s appropriate policy and fiscal committees by January 1, 2028. Final report must comply with Gov. Code § 9795.
  • Study scope (non‑exhaustive highlights):
    • Assess a variety of funding mechanisms to support high‑speed rail capital and discrete system elements (including federal financing/loans).
    • Explore development opportunities, including expanded authorities and tools that accelerate development and maximize value (e.g., joint powers authorities, density bonuses, permitting and CEQA efficiencies).
    • Identify incentives for public‑private partnerships and strategies to capture value (value capture), including air‑rights development and bundling publicly owned parcels.
    • Establish one or more radii of contiguity around the corridor within which properties would be eligible to participate in any identified infrastructure district.
    • Evaluate forming infrastructure districts (e.g., enhanced infrastructure financing districts, neighborhood infill finance and transit improvement areas) to finance infrastructure and station‑area development.
    • Assess revenue‑generating land uses near stations (housing, commercial, community facilities, transport services) and opportunities for goods movement (parcel‑carrying cars, cargo arrangements).
    • Survey local cities/counties to identify incentives that would motivate state‑local partnerships.
    • Quantify potential housing cost impacts and potential offsets (via surveys of homebuilders and developers).
    • Consider feasibility of unlimited operating timeframes for infrastructure districts.
  • Fiscal use restriction: An “infrastructure district” (as defined in the bill) that uses its revenue to finance high‑speed rail construction must dedicate a majority of its revenue to infrastructure projects located within the jurisdictions of the local agencies that created the district.

Who would be affected

  • State agencies: Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation; GO‑Biz; High‑Speed Rail Authority (stakeholder).
  • Local governments (cities, counties) along the rail corridor — as potential participants in infrastructure districts or beneficiaries of station‑area development.
  • Developers, homebuilders, transit and freight operators, and potential private partners in public‑private partnerships.
  • Property owners and communities near station areas (possible economic, land‑use, and housing impacts).

Procedural / fiscal notes

  • The bill does not appropriate funds in text, but is flagged for fiscal committee review (fiscal committee: YES).
  • Final study/report must follow Government Code § 9795 report rules.
  • As of 6/3/2025 the measure was postponed indefinitely in committee (no further action recorded).

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Positive: could produce an actionable statewide strategy to attract funding, accelerate transit‑oriented development, capture land value near stations, and generate local community benefits.
  • Concerns/impacts: implementing recommendations may require new local/state coordination, legal changes to land‑use or financing tools, changes in how infrastructure district revenues are allocated (local jurisdictions may benefit; districts’ flexibility could be constrained), and potential housing‑market effects that the bill requires quantifying.
  • Next steps if revived: study outputs would inform legislation or administrative action to create/modify financing tools, development authorities, and station‑area policies.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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