Tag Archives: Gavin Newsom

Entertainment Loan-Out Companies California Bill Signed Into Law

California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed into legislation a union-supported invoice that seeks to guard leisure employees’ use of loan-out corporations after an audit earlier this yr provoked widespread concern about their future.

The governor’s workplace introduced that Newsom had formally greenlit state Sen. Anthony Portantino’s SB 422 on Monday. The invoice, which acquired the backing of the Leisure Union Coalition — consisting of the California IATSE Council, the Administrators Guild of America, SAG-AFTRA, the Teamsters Native 399 and LiUNA! Native 724 — codifies {that a} loan-out firm is the employer of leisure employees that arrange these corporations and work below their auspices and is accountable for paying employer taxes.

The laws additionally bars leisure payroll corporations from being thought of the employers of loan-out corporations or their employees. Beneath the parameters of the invoice, leisure payroll corporations shall be required to submit quarterly studies to California’s Director of Employment Improvement disclosing their funds to loan-out corporations.

The laws successfully affirms leisure employees’ longtime use of those S-Companies, C-Companies or LLCs, which “mortgage out” their providers to numerous different corporations, stated one {industry} union. “In follow, because of this loan-out corporations will proceed to perform as they’ve for many years,” the Writers Guild of America West wrote in an Aug. 31 message to members explaining the invoice, which had at the moment handed the state legislature. “The laws additionally preserves an essential court docket determination establishing the appropriate of loan-out workers to obtain UI advantages on the identical foundation as different unemployed employees.”

Many alternative {industry} employees, similar to writers and actuality tv producers, use loan-out corporations, which offer some company protections and may provide tax advantages. Defined DGA Western government director Rebecca Rhine in an interview, whose union took a management function in collaborating on the invoice, “Mortgage-outs has been a part of our {industry} for a lot of, many a long time due to the transitory nature of the work and a number of employers and totally different initiatives. And so it’s a construction that helps individuals within the {industry} handle their explicit work life.”

A number of stakeholders started engaged on the invoice after information broke in Might that California’s Employment Improvement Division was auditing main {industry} payroll supplier Forged & Crew. Forged & Crew despatched out a cautionary message to {industry} employees that month, noting that the state division had challenged the follow of channeling compensation by means of loan-out corporations relatively than paying wages on to loan-out corporations’ homeowners or shareholders as in the event that they had been the payroll suppliers’ workers. Forged & Crew stated on the time that it was “actively contesting” the EDD’s determination and dealing with unions and leisure corporations on the matter, which it anticipated would rapidly grow to be “an industry-wide subject.”

In a response on the time, EDD stated that it was participating with {industry} representatives and clarified that it might not be banning the usage of loan-outs in California.

Leisure unions started participating with the governor’s workplace in regards to the subject after information of the audit emerged and finally labored with Portantino to resolve the matter by means of laws, stated Rhine. The WGA West, EDD and Forged & Crew additionally performed a task within the effort, in line with the WGA West’s August message to members. Rhine added of the brand new legislation, “A very powerful factor is it supplies readability to our members, to the state and to the {industry} in regards to the function of loan-out companies in our world.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom Vetoes Controversial AI Safety Bill SB 1047

California Governor Gavin Newsom has vetoed SB 1047, a sweeping synthetic intelligence security invoice, arguing that it isn’t one of the simplest ways to cope with the looming threats and alternatives introduced by AI.

In an announcement explaining the choice to veto the invoice, Newsom famous that 32 of the highest 50 AI firms are primarily based in California, and that the invoice would actually give attention to solely the most important firms, which might doubtlessly undercut any security advantages.

“Whereas well-intentioned, SB 1047 doesn’t consider whether or not an AI system is deployed in high-risk environments, includes important decision-making or the usage of delicate information,” Newsom wrote in his letter explaining the veto. “As a substitute, the invoice applies stringent requirements to even essentially the most primary capabilities — as long as a big system deploys it. I don’t imagine that is the very best strategy to defending the general public from actual threats posed by the know-how.”

He additionally famous that he had signed many payments that focus or contact on dangers related to AI (earlier this month, for instance, he signed payments backed by SAG-AFTRA regulating AI efficiency replicas).

“This yr, the legislature despatched me a number of considerate proposals to manage Al firms in response to present, quickly evolving dangers — together with threats to our democratic course of, the unfold of misinformation and deepfakes, dangers to on-line privateness, threats to important infrastructure and disruptions within the workforce,” Newsom stated Sunday. “These payments, and actions by my administration, are guided by ideas of accountability, equity and transparency of Al programs and deployment of Al know-how in California.”

SB 1047 was a scorching button invoice, opposed by Silicon Valley by backed by many in Hollywood, together with J.J. Abrams, Jane Fonda, Pedro Pascal, Shonda Rhimes and Mark Hamill. Nevertheless, it additionally garnered opposition from linked energy gamers like former Home Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who argued that federal laws ought to step in and fill that security hole.

Child Influencer Protection Bills Signed Into Law in California

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two payments into legislation in Los Angeles on Thursday that provide new monetary protections to kids who carry out and seem in income-generating on-line content material.

A type of payments, California Meeting Invoice 1880, expands California’s longtime Coogan Regulation protections for baby performers to influencers and on-line content material creators who’re minors. The Coogan Regulation, which was signed into legislation within the state in 1939 and was named after baby silent-film star Jackie Coogan, mandates that 15 p.c of a kid performer’s earnings be saved in a protected belief that they will entry once they attain maturity.

The opposite laws that was greenlit on Thursday, Senate Invoice 764, states that on-line influencers that includes kids in a minimum of 30 p.c of their output should put away a share of gross earnings in a belief for the minor to entry once they grow to be an grownup. The invoice additionally requires creators to take care of data of revenue generated from content material that includes kids and what number of minutes minors appeared in that content material, amongst different info.

Former Disney Channel star Demi Lovato — who not too long ago helmed and appeared within the Hulu documentary Youngster Star, which raised points of economic exploitation of kid performers — joined Newsom for the Thursday signing. The leisure business, Newsom mentioned in a video posted to California Governor’s X account, “has clearly developed now with on-line, social media, content material creators” because the institution of California’s Coogan Regulation. “There’s been this evident hole, and this laws mainly closes that loophole,” he mentioned.

Lovato known as the legal guidelines “basically the Coogan Regulation for the digital age” in a voiceover to the video.

Youngster Star, launched on Sept. 17 on Hulu, options activist Chris McCarty of the group Give up Clicking Children, which champions efforts to compensate baby performers and protect minors’ proper to privateness. McCarty and Lovato each advocated for laws to guard baby performers in California earlier than Thursday’s signing.

The brand new legal guidelines arrive after Illinois handed pioneering laws final 12 months that requires influencers who incorporate kids underneath the age of 16 into their content material to avoid wasting a share of gross compensation from that content material in a belief. Illinois’ laws took impact July 1.

Meeting Invoice 1880 was launched by Assemblymember Juan Alanis, whereas Senator Steve Padilla launched Senate Invoice 764. In an announcement concerning the California legal guidelines, the nationwide government director of performers’ union SAG-AFTRA, Duncan Crabtree-Eire, mentioned, “No matter medium or platform, all baby performers have to be strongly protected.”

Gavin Newsom Signs AI Bills Supported by SAG-AFTRA

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed two union-supported payments proscribing using AI digital replicas of performers into regulation.

In a symbolic transfer, the governor visited the Los Angeles headquarters of performers’ union SAG-AFTRA on Monday to formally greenlight the payments, AB 2602 and AB 1836, which have been handed by the California state Senate in August. SAG-AFTRA sponsored each payments after instituting preliminary AI protections for members in its 2023 TV/theatrical contract.

AB 2602 bars contract provisions that facilitate using a digital reproduction of a performer in a undertaking as a substitute of an in-person efficiency from that human being, until there’s a “fairly particular” description of the meant use of the digital reproduction and the performer was represented by authorized counsel or a labor union in negotiations. AB 1836, in the meantime, requires leisure employers to realize the consent of a deceased performer’s property earlier than utilizing a digital reproduction of that individual. The brand new regulation refines an “expressive works” exemption from the state’s present postmortem proper of publicity legal guidelines that leisure firms in any other case might have pointed to in an period of AI digital replicas.

“We discuss California as being a state of dreamers and doers. Lots of dreamers come to California however typically they’re not well-represented,” Newsom mentioned in a video launched on Drescher’s and the CA governor’s Instagram pages on Tuesday. “And with SAG and this invoice I simply signed, we’re ensuring that nobody turns over their title, picture and likeness to unscrupulous folks with out illustration or union advocacy.”

The payments enshrine a few of the main ideas that SAG-AFTRA fought for throughout its 2023 into state regulation. Within the 2023 contract reached on the finish of the 118-day strike with studios and streamers, the union secured language requiring employers to get consent from performers and supply an outline of meant use when utilizing a digital reproduction tied to an in-person job and when utilizing one not related to in-person employment. The 2023 contract additionally requires employers to get the consent of a deceased performer’s property (or union if no different representatives can be found) for an independently-created digital reproduction.

In a press release, Drescher referred to as Tuesday “a momentous day for SAG-AFTRA members and everybody.” She added that this was as a result of “the A.I. protections we fought so arduous for final yr are actually expanded upon by California regulation because of the Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom.”

The union is constant to advocate for additional regulation of AI-facilitated digital replicas and artificial performers. SAG-AFTRA supported Tennessee’s Guaranteeing Likeness Voice and Picture Safety (ELVIS) Act, which was signed into regulation in March, and is pushing for the passage of a federal invoice referred to as the  Nurture Originals, Foster Artwork and Hold Leisure Protected (NO FAKES) Act.

Sept. 17, 11:58 a.m. Up to date to appropriate the date that Newsom signed the payments.