Bill Text: CA AB2402 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Amended
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Department of Fish and Game: Fish and Game Commission.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-09-25 - Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 559, Statutes of 2012. [AB2402 Detail]
Download: California-2011-AB2402-Amended.html
Bill Title: Department of Fish and Game: Fish and Game Commission.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-09-25 - Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 559, Statutes of 2012. [AB2402 Detail]
Download: California-2011-AB2402-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: AB 2402 AMENDED BILL TEXT AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY APRIL 18, 2012 INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Huffman FEBRUARY 24, 2012 An act to amend Sections 37, 39, 700, 1002, 2089.4, 2536, 2540, 3031.2, 6651,and7149.8 , and 8598.3 of, and to add Sections 13.5, 33, 43, 703.3, 703.5, 715, 1020,1021,1065, 12028, and 13205 to,and to repeal and add Section 8598.3 of,the Fish and Game Code, and to amend Section 12805 of the Government Code, relating to fish and wildlife resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 2402, as amended, Huffman. Department of Fish and Game: Fish and Game Commission: entitlements: fees: violations. (1) Existing law establishes the Department of Fish and Game and the Fish and Game Commission and sets forth the powers and duties of that department and commission. This bill would make findings and declarations of the Legislature concerning the process of developing a strategic vision for the Department of Fish and Game and the Fish and Game Commission pursuant to Chapter 424 of the Statutes of 2010, as specified. The bill would make specified statements of policy relating to the use of ecosystem-based management, adaptive management, and credible science, as defined. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature regarding department and commission partnerships and collaborations with other agencies and stakeholders. This bill would rename the Department of Fish and Game the Department of Fish and Wildlife, and would make related changes. The bill would prohibit existing supplies, forms, insignias, signs, logos, uniforms, or emblems from being destroyed or changed as a result of changing the name of the Department of Fish and Game to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, and would require their continued use until exhausted or unserviceable. The bill would require the Director of Fish and Game, in consultation with the Natural Resources Agency, to establish an independent science advisory panel to provide advice and recommendations to the department and the commission. The bill would require the department to develop and adopt a method to impose and collect entry pass fees onsite for visitors that are engaging in nonconsumptive uses, as defined, at state wildlife refuges and other lands managed by the department that are open to the public. The bill would require the department to modify its online processes for purchase of entry passes and warden stamps to make these systems user-friendly for nonconsumptive users. The bill would require the director, at least 30 days before submitting the department's proposed annual budget requests to the Governor, to give the commission an opportunity to review and provide comment on the proposed annual budget requests. (2) Under existing law, the changes in the Implicit Price Deflator for State and Local Government Purchases of Goods and Services is used as the index to determine an annual rate of increase or decrease in the fees for licenses, stamps, permits, and tags. Under existing law, the department issues scientific collecting permits, lifetime hunting licenses, guide licenses, abalone report cards, kelp harvester licenses, and marine aquaria collector's permits, and existing law establishes base fees for those entitlements, adjusted annually pursuant to the index. This bill would require the commission toestablish base fees for lifetime hunting licenses, as specified, and for abalone report cards and marine aquaria collector'sadjust the amount of the fees for lifetime hunting licenses, guide licenses, abalone report cards, kelp harvester licenses, and marine aquaria collector's permits, as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licences or permitsfor the 2013 license year, and would require those fees to be adjusted annually thereafter according to the index. The bill would require the department to adjust the amount of the fees for scientific collecting permits as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those permits. (3) Existing law, except as expressly provided otherwise, makes violations of the Fish and Game Code, or of any rule, regulation, or order made or adopted under that code, a misdemeanor. Existing law sets prescribed fines and penalties for specified violations. This bill would require the department to modify its Automated License Data System to include information on all violations of the code and regulations adopted pursuant to the code. The bill would require electronic field equipment utilized by fish and game wardens to be modified to give fish and game wardens access to Automated License Data System information in the field. (4) Existing law requires, unless otherwise provided, that all money collected under the provisions of the Fish and Game Code and of any other law relating to the protection and preservation of birds, mammals, fish, reptiles, or amphibia be paid into the State Treasury to the credit of the Fish and Game Preservation Fund. Existing law establishes specific accounts within the fund, including the Big Game Management Account, and the department has established other accounts within the fund. This bill would require the Augmented Deer Tags Account, Bighorn Sheep Permit Account, and Wild Pig Account within the fund to be consolidated and any remaining funds in these accounts transferred to the Big Game Management Account. The bill would require the department, after consultation with the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analyst's Office, to provide recommendations to the Legislature for consolidation of additional dedicated accounts within the fund if, in the determination of the department, consolidation would serve to reduce administrative costs to the department and enhance its ability to meet current needs, while still preserving the stated purposes of the dedicated accounts. Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. (a) In 2010, the Legislature passed and the Governor signed Assembly Bill 2376, which established a process to develop a strategic vision for the Department of Fish and Game and the Fish and Game Commission. (b) Pursuant to Assembly Bill 2376, the Natural Resources Agency appointed an executive committee, a blue ribbon commission, and a broad-based stakeholder group, and established a public process that is focused on improving and enhancing the capacity of both the Department of Fish and Game and the Fish and Game Commission to protect and manage California's fish and wildlife. (c) All groups and individuals with an interest in improving the work of the department and the commission have been invited to participate in the stakeholder group process. Numerous public meetings have been held and extensive information on the process and the comments received to date are available on the Internet Web site of the Department of Fish and Game. The process is still underway and a final report is due to the Legislature by June 2012. (d) The policy chairs of the committees of the Legislature with subject matter jurisdiction shall consider proposed legislation to address many of the draft recommendations of the California Fish and Wildlife Strategic Vision and other reforms necessary to satisfy the mandate of Assembly Bill 2376. Some of the content of the proposed legislation reflects suggestions contained in the draft interim strategic vision report released by the department and the commission on November 22, 2011. The proposed legislation may be amended from time to time to reflect additional recommendations as the stakeholder and blue ribbon commission process and final reports of the executive committee are completed. SEC. 2. Section 13.5 is added to the Fish and Game Code , to read: 13.5. "Adaptive management," unless otherwise specified in this code, means management that improves the management of biological resources over time by using new information gathered through monitoring, evaluation, and other credible sources as they become available, and adjusts management strategies and practices to assist in meeting conservation and management goals. Under adaptive management, program actions are viewed as tools for learning to inform future actions. SEC. 3. Section 33 is added to the Fish and Game Code , to read: 33. "Credible science" means the best available scientific information that is not overly prescriptive due to the dynamic nature of science, and includes the evaluation principles of relevance, inclusiveness, objectivity, transparency, timeliness, verification, validation, and peer review of information as appropriate. Credible science also recognizes the need for adaptive management as scientific knowledge evolves.SEC. 2.SEC. 4. Section 37 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 37. "Department" means the Department of Fish and Wildlife.SEC. 3.SEC. 5. Section 39 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 39. "Director" means the Director of Fish and Wildlife. SEC. 6. Section 43 is added to the Fish and Game Code , to read: 43. "Ecosystem-based management" means an environmental management approach relying on credible science, as defined in Section 33, that recognizes the full array of interactions within an ecosystem, including humans, rather than considering single issues, species, or ecosystem services in isolation.SEC. 4.SEC. 7. Section 700 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 700. (a) There is in the Natural Resources Agency a Department of Fish and Wildlife administered through the director. (b) The Department of Fish and Wildlife shall succeed to, and is vested with, all the duties, powers, purposes, responsibilities, property, and jurisdiction previously vested in the Department of Fish and Game. (c) Whenever the term "Department of Fish and Game" appears in a law, the term means the "Department of Fish and Wildlife." (d) No existing supplies, forms, insignias, signs, logos, uniforms, or emblems shall be destroyed or changed as a result of changing the name of the Department of Fish and Game to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, and those materials shall continue to be used until exhausted or unserviceable. SEC. 8. Section 703.3 is added to the Fish and Game Code , to read: 703.3. It is the policy of the state that the department and commission use ecosystem-based management informed by credible science in all resource management decisions. It is further the policy of the state that scientific professionals at the department and commission, and all resource management decisions of the department and commission, be governed by a scientific quality assurance and integrity policy, and follow well-established standard protocols of the scientific profession, including, but not limited to, the use of peer review, publication, and science review panels where appropriate. Resource management decisions of the department and commission should also incorporate adaptive management to the extent possible. SEC. 9. Section 703.5 is added to the Fish and Game Code , to read: 703.5. It is the intent of the Legislature that the department and the commission seek to create, foster, and actively participate in effective partnerships and collaborations with other agencies and stakeholders to achieve shared goals and to better integrate fish and wildlife resource conservation and management with the natural resource management responsibilities of other agencies. To that end, the department and commission are encouraged to participate in interagency coordination processes that facilitate consistency and efficiency in review of projects requiring multiple permits, including, but not necessarily limited to, joint state, federal, and local permit review teams that enable early consultation with project applicants, and provide improved sharing of data, information, tools, and science to achieve better alignment of planning, policies, and regulations across agencies.SEC. 5.SEC. 10. Section 715 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 715. (a) As used in this section, "panel" means the independent science advisory panel established pursuant to subdivision (b). (b) The director, in consultation with the Natural Resources Agency, shall establish an independent science advisory panel to provide advice and recommendations to the department and the commission. The panel shall be composed of no more than 10 members recommended by the director and approved by the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency. The term of office shall be for five years. A member may serve not more than two consecutive terms. Members of the panel shall be scientific experts in their fields with expertise in biological sciences and with a range of multidisciplinary expertise pertinent to the work of the department and the commission. The purpose of the panel shall be to assist the department and the commission in establishing an independent and objective view of the scientific issues underlying important policy decisions. (c) The duties of the panel shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, the following: (1) Providing oversight of the scientific research, monitoring, and assessment programs that support the department's and the commission's work with fish and wildlife species and their habitats. (2) Providing the best available independent scientific information and advice to guide and inform department and commission decisions. (3) Promoting and facilitating independent scientific peer review. (4) Promoting science-based adaptive management. (5) Ensuring scientific integrity and transparency in decisionmaking. (d) The panel may recommend and consult with other independent scientific experts with specialized expertise as needed for independent peer review of department reports, including, but not limited to, status review reports prepared for purposes of informing decisions on petitions for listing of species under the California Endangered Species Act (Chapter 1.5 (commencing with Section 2050) of Division 3). (e) The panel shall develop a proposed scientific integrity policy to guide the work of the department and the commission. The scientific integrity policy may include, but is not necessarily limited to, an ethical code of conduct for department scientists, standards for independent peer review, and other best practices for ensuring scientific integrity and public confidence in department and commission work products and decisions. (f) For marine fisheries and other marine resources, the department may utilize the California Ocean Science Trust for the purposes of this section. SEC. 11. Section 1002 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 1002. (a) The department may issue permits, subject to restrictions and regulations that the commission determines are desirable, to take or possess, in any part of the state, for scientific, educational, or propagation purposes, mammals, birds and the nests and eggs thereof, fish, amphibia, reptiles, or any other form of plant or animal life. (b) The department may issue a permit that is valid for 24 months from the date of issuance to a resident of this state on the payment of a base fee of thirty dollars ($30), as adjusted under Section 713. (c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), the department may issue a permit without fee that is valid for 12 months from the date of issuance for either of the following purposes: (1) To authorize only the banding of birds and the exhibition of live or dead wildlife specimens by public zoological gardens, scientific, or educational institutions. (2) To a student who is regularly enrolled in a commercial fishing class in a school operating under the jurisdiction of the State Board of Education or in a commercial fishing class in a community college and to a faculty member of those schools or a community college when conducting a regularly enrolled class in commercial fishing. Any permit issued under this paragraph shall be valid only when the student is under the direct supervision of the instructor who is approved by the school or community college to teach the class and who has obtained a permit under subdivision (b) or this paragraph from the department. All fish taken shall be taken in accordance with state law, except that Sections 7850, 7880, and 7881 do not apply to persons or equipment operating under this paragraph. All fish taken under a permit issued under this paragraph may be sold only to a person licensed to receive fish from commercial fishermen as provided in Section 8032 or 8033 or donated to a charitable institution. All funds received from the sale of the fish shall be used solely for the support of the commercial fishing classes. (d) The department may issue a special student permit that is valid for 12 months from the date of issuance on the payment of a base fee of ten dollars ($10), as adjusted under Section 713, to any student in a school of collegiate level who is required by an instructor in wildlife research in the school to collect specimens used in laboratory work in the school under supervision and in connection with a course in wildlife research or in the conduct of wildlife investigations and studies on behalf of the public. (e) The department may issue a nonresident permit that is valid for 24 months from the date of issuance on application and payment of a base fee of one hundred dollars ($100) as adjusted under Section 713. (f) It is not necessary for the possessor of the permit to have a sportfishing or hunting license to collect any fish, reptile, aquatic animal or plant, bird, or mammal for scientific, educational, or propagation purposes in this state. (g) Nothing in this section authorizes any act which violates Section 597 of the Penal Code. (h) A permit under this section does not authorize the taking of fish or mammals from the ocean waters of this state which are within the boundaries of any city if the city has filed with the department an objection to the taking. (i) The adjustment of the base fees pursuant to Section 713 that is specified in subdivisions (b), (d), and (e) shall be applicable to permits issued on or after January 1, 1991. (j) The department shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivisions (b), (d), and (e) as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those permits.SEC. 6.SEC. 12. Section 1020 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 1020. The department shall develop and adopt a method to impose and collect entry pass fees onsite for visitors that are engaging in nonconsumptive uses at state wildlife refuges and other lands managed by the department that are open to the public. The department shall also modify its online processes for purchase of entry passes and warden stamps to make these systems user-friendly for nonconsumptive users. As used in this section, "nonconsumptive uses" means compatible uses other than hunting or fishing.SEC. 7.Section 1021 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 1021. The director, at least 30 days before submitting the department's proposed annual budget requests to the Governor, shall give the commission an opportunity to review and provide comment on the proposed annual budget requests.SEC. 8.SEC. 13. Section 1065 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 1065. The department shall modify its Automated License Data System to include information on all violations of this code and regulations adopted pursuant to this code. Electronic field equipment utilized by fish and game wardens shall be modified to give fish and game wardens access to Automated License Data System information in the field.SEC. 9.SEC. 14. Section 2089.4 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 2089.4. As used in this article, the following definitions apply: (a) "Agreement" means a state safe harbor agreement approved by the department pursuant to this article. "Agreement" includes an agreement with an individual landowner and a programmatic agreement. (b) "Baseline conditions" means the existing estimated population size, the extent and quality of habitat, or both population size and the extent and quality of habitat, for the species on the land to be enrolled in the agreement that sustain seasonal or permanent use by the covered species. Baseline conditions shall be determined by the department, in consultation with the applicant, and shall be based on the best available science and objective scientific methodologies. For purposes of establishing baseline conditions, a qualified person that is not employed by the department may conduct habitat surveys, if that person has appropriate species expertise and has been approved by the department. (c) "Department" means the Department of Fish and Wildlife, acting through its director or his or her designee. (d) "Landowner" means any person or nonstate or federal entity or entities that lawfully hold any interest in land or water to which they are committing to implement the requirements of this article. (e) "Management actions" means activities on the enrolled land or water that are reasonably expected by the department to provide a net benefit to the species or their habitat, or both. (f) "Monitoring program" means a program established or approved by the department in accordance with subdivision (f) of Section 2089.6. (g) "Net conservation benefit" means the cumulative benefits of the management activities identified in the agreement that provide for an increase in a species' population or the enhancement, restoration, or maintenance of covered species' suitable habitats within the enrolled property. Net conservation benefit shall take into account the length of the agreement, any offsetting adverse effects attributable to the incidental taking allowed by the agreement, and other mutually agreed upon factors. Net conservation benefits shall be sufficient to contribute either directly or indirectly to the recovery of the covered species. These benefits include, but are not limited to, reducing fragmentation and increasing the connectivity of habitats, maintaining or increasing populations, enhancing and restoring habitats, and buffering protected areas. (h) "Programmatic agreement" means a state safe harbor agreement issued to a governmental or nongovernmental program administrator. The program administrator for a programmatic agreement shall work with landowners and the department to implement the agreement. The program administrator and the department shall be responsible for ensuring compliance with the terms of the agreement. (i) "Qualified person" means a person with species expertise who has been approved by the department. (j) "Return to baseline" means, at the termination of an agreement, activities undertaken by the landowner to return the species population or extent or quality of habitat to baseline, excluding catastrophic events such as floods, unplanned fires, or earthquakes, and other factors mutually agreed upon prior to permit issuance and that are beyond the control of the landowner. SEC. 15. Section 2536 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 2536. (a) It is unlawful for any person to engage in the business of guiding or packing, or to act as a guide for any consideration or compensation whatever, without first having secured a guide license from the department. (b) An employee of a licensee who acts as a guide only in connection with, and within the scope of, his or her employment is exempt from the requirement of subdivision (a) if all of the following conditions are met: (1) If the employment is subject to and the person is reported to the carrier of the employer's workers' compensation insurance. (2) If the person is subject and reported to the state and federal taxing authorities for withholding of income tax. (3) If the person is reported to the department, on forms provided by the department, as an employee of the guide prior to any contact with any person being guided, and a registration fee has been paid. The base fee for an employee guide registration for the 2004 license year shall be thirty-three dollars ($33), which shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713. (c) A person who is licensed in another state to provide guide services for the purposes of fishing is exempt from the requirements of subdivision (a) if all of the following conditions are met: (1) The state in which the person is licensed grants a similar exemption to licensed guides who are residents of this state. (2) Evidence of a valid guide license is provided to the department upon request. (3) The person is engaged in the business of guiding only in conjunction with and during the term of a multistate fishing tournament approved by the appropriate agency in each of the affected states. (4) The tournament sponsor provides to the department any information or documents necessary to administer and enforce this paragraph, as determined by the department, including, but not limited to, the identities of all guides participating in the tournament, verification of another state's license exemption, and information sufficient to determine the validity of another state's guide licenses. (5) The tournament sponsor pays the department an amount, determined by the department, to be sufficient to cover the department's cost to administer and enforce this subdivision. (6) The net proceeds of the tournament are used for resource management projects or habitat improvement projects, or both. (d) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses. SEC. 16. Section 2540 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 2540. (a) The base fee for a guide license issued to a resident is one hundred fifty dollars ($150). (b) The base fee for a guide license issued to a nonresident is three hundred fifty dollars ($350). (c) A guide license is valid for the license year beginning on February 1 and ending on January 31 of the succeeding year or, if issued after the beginning of the license year, for the remainder of that license year. (d) The base fees specified in this section are applicable to the 2004 license year, and shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713. (e) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivisions (a), (b), and (d), as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses.SEC. 10.Section 3031.2 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 3031.2. (a) In addition to Sections 714 and 3031, and notwithstanding Section 3037, the department shall issue lifetime hunting licenses under this section. A lifetime hunting license authorizes the taking of birds and mammals anywhere in this state in accordance with the law for purposes other than profit for the life of the person to whom issued unless revoked for a violation of this code or regulations adopted under this code. A lifetime hunting license is not transferable. A lifetime hunting license does not include any special tags, stamps, or fees. (b) A lifetime hunting license may be issued to residents of this state, as follows: (1) To a person 62 years of age or over, upon payment of a base fee as determined pursuant to subdivision (e). (2) To a person 40 years of age or over, and less than 62 years of age, upon payment of a base fee as determined pursuant to subdivision (e). (3) To a person 10 years of age or over, and less than 40 years of age, upon payment of a base fee as determined pursuant to subdivision (e). (4) To a person less than 10 years of age, upon payment of a base fee as determined pursuant to subdivision (e). (c) Nothing in this section requires a person less than 16 years of age to obtain a license to take birds or mammals except as required by law. (d) Nothing in this section exempts an applicant for a license from meeting other qualifications or requirements otherwise established by law for the privilege of sport hunting. (e) The commission shall establish base fees for lifetime hunting licenses described in subdivisions (a) and (b) in an amount sufficient to recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and commission relating to those licenses. The base fees specified in this section as it was amended effective January 1, 2013, are applicable commencing January 1, 2013, and shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713.SEC. 17. Section 3031.2 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 3031.2. (a) In addition to Sections 714 and 3031, and notwithstanding Section 3037, the department shall issue lifetime hunting licenses under this section. A lifetime hunting license authorizes the taking of birds and mammals anywhere in this state in accordance with the law for purposes other than profit for the life of the person to whom issued unless revoked for a violation of this code or regulations adopted under this code. A lifetime hunting license is not transferable. A lifetime hunting license does not include any special tags, stamps, or fees. (b) A lifetime hunting license may be issued to residents of this state, as follows: (1) To a person 62 years of age or over, upon payment of a base fee of three hundred sixty-five dollars ($365). (2) To a person 40 years of age or over, and less than 62 years of age, upon payment of a base fee of five hundred forty dollars ($540). (3) To a person 10 years of age or over, and less than 40 years of age, upon payment of a base fee of six hundred dollars ($600). (4) To a person less than 10 years of age, upon payment of a base fee of three hundred sixty-five dollars ($365). (c) Nothing in this section requires a person less than 16 years of age to obtain a license to take birds or mammals except as required by law. (d) Nothing in this section exempts an applicant for a license from meeting other qualifications or requirements otherwise established by law for the privilege of sport hunting. (e) The base fees specified in this section are applicable commencing January 1, 2004, and shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713. (f) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivision (b), as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses. SEC. 18. Section 6651 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 6651. (a) A license granting the privilege to harvest kelp or other aquatic plants shall be issued upon application and the payment of a fee of one hundred dollars ($100) to the department. The license shall be valid from January 1 to December 31, inclusive, or, if issued after the beginning of that term, for the remainder thereof. (b) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivision (a), as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses.(b)(c) This chapter does not apply to aquatic plants grown on private land or on state water bottoms leased pursuant to Division 12 (commencing with Section 15000).SEC. 11.Section 7149.8 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 7149.8. (a) A person shall not take abalone from ocean waters unless he or she first obtains, in addition to a valid California sport fishing license and any applicable license validation or stamp issued pursuant to this code, an abalone report card, and maintains that report card in his or her possession while taking abalone. (b) The department or an authorized license agent shall issue an abalone report card upon payment of a base fee as determined pursuant to subdivision (c). (c) The commission shall establish a base fee for abalone report cards in an amount sufficient to recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and commission relating to those cards. The base fee specified in this section is applicable to the 2013 license year, and shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713.SEC. 19. Section 7149.8 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 7149.8. (a) A person shall not take abalone from ocean waters unless he or she first obtains, in addition to a valid California sport fishing license and any applicable license validation or stamp issued pursuant to this code, an abalone report card, and maintains that report card in his or her possession while taking abalone. (b) The department or an authorized license agent shall issue an abalone report card upon payment of a fee of fifteen dollars ($15) in the 2004 license year, which shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713. (c) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivision (b) as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses.SEC. 12.Section 8598.3 of the Fish and Game Code is repealed.SEC. 13.Section 8598.3 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 8598.3. (a) The commission shall establish a base fee for a marine aquaria collector's permit in an amount sufficient to recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and commission relating to those permits. The base fee established pursuant to this section is applicable to the 2013 license year, and shall be adjusted annually thereafter pursuant to Section 713. (b) A person engaged in taking, possessing, or landing marine species under a marine aquaria collector's permit shall not take, possess aboard a boat, or land any species under the authority of a scientific collector's permit issued pursuant to Section 1002, 5515, or 10660 on the same fishing trip.SEC. 20. Section 8598.3 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read: 8598.3. (a) The fee for a marine aquaria collector's permit shall be three hundred thirty dollars ($330). (b) A person engaged in taking, possessing, or landing marine species under a marine aquaria collector's permit shall not take, possess aboard a boat, or land any species under the authority of a scientific collector's permit issued pursuant to Section 1002, 5515, or 10660 on the same fishing trip. (c) The commission shall adjust the amount of the fees specified in subdivision (a) as necessary, to fully recover, but not exceed, all reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department and the commission relating to those licenses.SEC. 14.SEC. 21. Section 12028 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 12028. The Legislature finds and declares that: (a) Egregious poaching violations and other violations of the Fish and Game Code have been increasing, and these violations have a detrimental impact on fish and wildlife and their habitats, which are held in trust by the state for the benefit of the people of the state. (b) In order to facilitate effective enforcement of the Fish and Game Code and deter illegal poaching and other violations that adversely impact fish and wildlife, it is important that courts be provided with up-to-date information on current Fish and Game Code prohibitions and penalties that have been enacted by the Legislature. (c) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to urge the Judicial Council to review and update the Uniform Bail and Penalty Schedule to include references to additional Fish and Game Code provisions not included in the Uniform Bail and Penalty Schedule currently. (d) It is further the intent of the Legislature that courts in all 58 counties be informed of the availability of the updated Uniform Bail and Penalty Schedules once those are completed.SEC. 15.SEC. 22. Section 13205 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read: 13205. The Augmented Deer Tags Account, Bighorn Sheep Permit Account, and Wild Pig Account within the Fish and Game Preservation Fund shall be consolidated and any remaining funds in these accounts transferred to the Big Game Management Account, consistent with Section 3953. The department, after consultation with the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analyst's Office, shall provide recommendations to the Legislature for consolidation of additional dedicated accounts within the Fish and Game Preservation Fund if, in the determination of the department, consolidation would serve to reduce administrative costs to the department and enhance its ability to meet current needs, while still preserving the generally stated purpose of the dedicated accounts.SEC. 16.SEC. 23. Section 12805 of the Government Code is amended to read: 12805. (a) The Resources Agency is hereby renamed the Natural Resources Agency. The Natural Resources Agency consists of the departments of Forestry and Fire Protection, Conservation, Fish and Wildlife, Boating and Waterways, Parks and Recreation, Resources Recycling and Recovery, and Water Resources; the State Lands Commission; the Colorado River Board; the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission; the Central Valley Flood Protection Board; the Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission; the Wildlife Conservation Board; the Delta Protection Commission; the Native American Heritage Commission; the California Conservation Corps; the California Coastal Commission; the State Coastal Conservancy; the California Tahoe Conservancy; the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy; the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy; the San Joaquin River Conservancy; the San Gabriel and Lower Los Angeles Rivers and Mountains Conservancy; the Baldwin Hills Conservancy; the San Diego River Conservancy; and the Sierra Nevada Conservancy. (b) No existing supplies, forms, insignias, signs, or logos shall be destroyed or changed as a result of changing the name of the Resources Agency to the Natural Resources Agency, and those materials shall continue to be used until exhausted or unserviceable.