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Bill

AB 541

Relating to: poll list numbers marked on certain absentee ballots.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Deb Andraca and 12 co-sponsors

Creates a temporary ombudsperson office to review state CPRA denial decisions and require disclosure if improper, offering a faster administrative path to records.

Failed to pass pursuant to Senate Joint Resolution 1
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Bill Summary · AB 541

AB 541 — California Public Records Act Ombudsperson (Open Government Accountability Act)

Status: In committee — Held under submission (Assembly Appropriations, 5/23/2025)
Introduced: February 11, 2025
Author: Assemblymember DeMaio

Purpose / Intent

AB 541 would create a temporary, statewide ombudsperson office to review denials of California Public Records Act (CPRA) requests made to state agencies. The bill is framed to strengthen transparency and offer a faster, administrative review option for requesters who believe a state agency improperly withheld public records.

Key provisions

  • Establishes the Office of the California Public Records Act Ombudsperson (Chapter 6.6, Gov. Code §§ 8549–8549.1), effective until January 1, 2029, and subject to appropriation.
  • Appointment and staffing:
    • Ombudsperson appointed by the Governor.
    • Minimum qualifications: admitted to practice law in California and have CPRA expertise; admitted for at least five years immediately prior to appointment.
    • Governor must provide necessary staff; must fill a vacancy or replace an ombudsperson unable to serve for 30+ days within 30 days.
  • Scope and definitions:
    • Reviews only denials by state agencies of “original requests” under the CPRA (does not create review authority over local agencies in the text provided).
    • “Request for review” = submission to ombudsperson to examine a state agency’s denial.
  • Review process and timing:
    • Ombudsperson to create intake and review procedures and an intervention process for third parties whose privacy/confidentiality interests are implicated.
    • Must determine, within 30 days of receiving a request for review (with narrowly drawn extensions for “unusual circumstances”), whether the agency improperly withheld disclosable records.
    • Agencies must provide the ombudsperson access to documents and relevant information used to justify denial.
    • If the ombudsperson finds an improper denial, the state agency must provide the public records to the requester (subject to other statutory limits).
  • Privacy and confidentiality:
    • Ombudsperson must preserve privacy/confidentiality and follow procedures for handling records securely; cannot require disclosure of records exempted by law.
  • Opinions and legal effect:

    • Written opinions of determination must be retained and posted online.
    • Opinions are not binding precedent but may be persuasive to agencies and courts.
    • A determination does not affect a person’s right to initiate litigation under existing CPRA enforcement provisions; requesters are not required to exhaust this administrative review before suing.
  • Reporting:

    • Report to the Legislature on or before March 31, 2027, and annually thereafter (including counts of requests received).

Who is affected

  • Primary subjects: state agencies that handle CPRA requests (must cooperate with reviews and potentially release records after an adverse determination).
  • Requesters: members of the public seeking an administrative review alternative to litigation.
  • Individuals whose personal information appears in records: provided a pathway to intervene to protect privacy/confidentiality.
  • State budget/administration: requires appropriations for establishing and staffing the office.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • The office would exist only until January 1, 2029, unless extended by later legislation.
  • AB 541 has been amended in committee and, as of 5/23/2025, is held under submission in the Assembly Appropriations Committee after prior referral and re-referrals through Judiciary and other actions.
  • The bill was referred to the fiscal committee (fiscal committee: YES) and does not currently carry a direct appropriation in the bill text (Appropriation: NO), but its implementation is subject to appropriation.

Potential impacts (brief)

  • Provides a faster, low-cost administrative review for CPRA denials compared with litigation, potentially increasing access to records.
  • May increase administrative workload for state agencies and require state funding for the new office and staff.
  • Creates a published body of persuasive opinions that could guide agency practice and influence CPRA litigation.

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

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