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AB 436

Relating to: requiring animal testing facilities and breeders to offer certain dogs and cats for adoption to releasing agencies and providing a penalty. (FE)

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Clint Anderson and 19 co-sponsors

OPR to post a best-practices advisory on siting composting facilities; post-2029, cities/counties must consider it when revising land use plans, guiding zoning and permitting.

Representative Steffen added as a coauthor
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Bill Summary · AB 436

AB 436 — Composting facilities: zoning (Ransom) — Bill summary

Status: In committee (Held under submission, Assembly Appropriations, 5/23/2025)
Introduced: February 6, 2025

Purpose / Intent

AB 436 directs the Office of Planning and Research (OPR) — Land Use and Climate Innovation to produce a technical advisory with best practices to facilitate the siting and zoning of composting facilities so local governments can better meet California’s organic waste reduction goals (see Health & Safety Code §39730.6).

Key provisions

  • Adds two sections to the Government Code:
    • Section 65040.19 (new): Requires OPR, in consultation with the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle), to develop and post a technical advisory on its website by June 1, 2027.
    • The advisory must reflect best practices for siting composting facilities.
    • It must include (1) sample general plan goals, policies, and implementation measures and (2) a model ordinance suitable for local adoption or modification.
    • OPR must consult with representatives from urban, suburban, and rural counties and cities, composting facility operators, and public/private waste services while developing the advisory.
    • Section 65302.16 (new): Requires that, upon a substantive revision of a jurisdiction’s general plan land use element on or after January 1, 2029, a city/county must consider:
    • The best practices, sample general plan content, and model ordinance contained in the OPR technical advisory; and
    • Updating the land use element to identify areas where composting facilities may be an allowable use (with flexibility for different facility types or sizes).
    • This requirement only applies to land use element revisions occurring after the advisory is publicly posted.

Who is affected

  • State agencies: OPR and CalRecycle (development of advisory).
  • Local governments: cities, counties, and city-counties (planning staff and elected bodies) — required to consider the advisory during substantive land use element revisions.
  • Composting facility operators, waste haulers, and local communities — may see changes in zoning, permitting, and siting pathways.
  • The bill creates a state-mandated local program by increasing local planning duties.

Timeline & procedural notes

  • OPR advisory due by June 1, 2027.
  • Local governments must consider the advisory upon substantive land use element revisions on or after January 1, 2029 (only after the advisory is posted).
  • Legislative status as of 5/23/2025: held under submission in Assembly Appropriations; prior committee approvals include unanimous Do Pass recommendations in Local Government and Natural Resources committees.

Fiscal / legal notes

  • The bill contains no appropriation. It is designated as imposing a local program; however, it states no state reimbursement to local agencies is required under Article XIII B, Section 6 of the California Constitution (citing Government Code §17556) because local agencies may fund mandated costs via fees or assessments.

Potential impacts

  • Encourages consistency across jurisdictions and provides templates to streamline local zoning for composting.
  • May accelerate siting of composting infrastructure needed to meet organic waste reduction/climate goals.
  • Imposes additional planning consideration duties on local governments when they revise land use elements, potentially changing zoning maps or allowable uses to accommodate composting operations.

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

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