“She had the courage to put out the call to neighboring states to support Arizona doctors and patients, and that’s what we are responding to,” state Sen. Nancy Skinner, bill author and caucus chair, said of Mayes.
“She had the courage to put out the call to neighboring states to support Arizona doctors and patients, and that’s what we are responding to,” state Sen. Nancy Skinner, bill author and caucus chair, said of Mayes.
State Senator Nancy Skinner authored the bill, adding she couldn’t have written it without support. She thanked Arizona Attorney General Kris Mays, “because she had the courage to put out the call to neighboring states to support Arizona doctors and patients, and that's what we are responding to,” Skinner said at the press event Wednesday.
Skinner said the measure includes provisions to ensure California will protect the privacy of any Arizona medical professionals who travel here for work.
Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Oakland) also said there are legal protections for women and physicians. "California will protect the privacy of any Arizona medical professionals that come here under this law, so it's built in," she said.
Top California leaders introduced a plan Wednesday to expand abortion access for Arizonans coming
The new Skinner bill, SB 1144, would specify that sales that do not occur within a marketplace’s own payments system would be included towards the SB 301 verification requirement, and would require disclosure for whether or not a seller is verified.
Senate Bill 976 by Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) would require that social media platforms essentially turn off their algorithms for users under 18 and instead serve them content through a chronological feed from people they follow and information that they’ve searched for.
Bipartisan legislation, Senate Bill 976, introduced by Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley provides an important tool for protecting our youth from social media addiction.