Legislation Details

File #: 26-1615    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Discussion Item Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 4/10/2026 In control: Legislation Committee
On agenda: 4/15/2026 Final action:
Title: RECEIVE a report on the FY26-27 State Budget and matters of interest to the County in the 2025-26 legislative session, and PROVIDE direction to staff and the County's state advocates as needed.
Attachments: 1. Attachment A - Combined Budget and Regulator Comment Letters Sent, 2. Attachment B - Weekly News from Sacramento - NM, 3. Attachment C - LAO Report - H.R. 1 Medi-Cal Financing Impacts on Providers, 4. Attachment D - LAO Report - H.R. 1 Major CalFresh Changes
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LEGISLATION COMMITTEE
Meeting Date: April 15, 2026
Subject: State Legislative Updates of Interest to Contra Costa County
Submitted For: Legislation Committee
Department: County Administrator's Office
Referral Name: Federal Update
Presenter: M. Rubalcava and G. Neill, Nielsen Merksamer
Contact: E. Struthers (925) 655-2045

Referral History:
The Legislation Committee regularly receives reports on the State Budget and bills of interest to the County and provides direction and/or input to staff and the County's state lobbyists.

Referral Update:
The California State Legislature is in the second year of a two-year Legislative Session. The bill introduction deadline for new legislation occurred on February 20. The County's lobbyists, staff, and partner organizations have been analyzing new bill introductions for potential impacts to County finances, operations, and services.

At the same time, work is underway on the FY26-27 budget. Despite better-than-anticipated tax receipts, the State Budget is trending towards a small deficit. While the Governor's January Budget proposal included a nominal amount of funding for State agencies to implement changes to H.R. 1 for SNAP (CalFresh) and Medicaid (Medi-Cal) administration, it did not include funding for counties to implement these changes. California is one of nine states that administers SNAP locally, and is one of about half of states (27) that administer Medicaid locally. This means that federal impacts are disproportionately passed along to California county governments, impacting general funds and the services that rely upon those funding sources.

The California State Association of Counties (CSAC) has been working with partner organizations, including the Urban Counties of California (UCC), California Welfare Directors Association (CWDA) and the California Hospital Association (CAPH), among many others, to come up with a consolidated budget request. The request was released on Monday, March 23.

May 14 is the dead...

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