By Antonio Ray Harvey, California Black Media
A bill authored by Assemblymember Sade Elhawary (D-Los Angeles) and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom will extend the sunset (repeal) date of the California Commission on the State of Hate from Jan. 1, 2027, to Jan. 1, 2031.
Assembly Bill (AB) 822 allows the California Commission on the State of Hate (CCSH) to continue its work, which includes analyzing the state of hate in California; developing recommendations for prevention and response; issuing an annual report; and creating policy recommendations.
“We introduced AB 822 to make sure the State of Hate Commission can keep doing the work to protect our communities and stop the spread of hate. This fight isn’t over, and we need to keep showing up,” said Elhawary, who is a member of the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC).
The bill passed both houses with broad bipartisan support, receiving a 65-3 approval in the Assembly on June 2, and a unanimous decision of 39-0 in the Senate on Sept. 8.
Newsom signed the bill on Oct. 13 as part of a package aimed at combating the rise of hate crimes and rhetoric. AB 822 addresses various forms of discrimination and hate, including measures to protect LGBTQ+ communities and strengthen laws against specific threats of violence.
The CCHS is a state-appointed public body established to strengthen California’s efforts to monitor, prevent, and respond to hate activity and support those targeted by hate. It operates under the umbrella of the California Civil Rights Department (CRD).
The CRD focuses heavily on hate, operating the CA vs. Hate hotline for reporting hate incidents and crimes, connecting victims with support, tracking hate activity, and working to prevent violence through its Community Conflict Resolution Unit. The CRD enforces laws against discrimination and bias-motivated violence, aiming to protect Californians from various forms of hate.
The Commission is tasked with a variety of duties to address hate in California, including research and fact-finding on the nature and prevalence of hate activity and related crimes across the state.
It publishes annual reports that share a comprehensive accounting of hate activity and recommends policies to the governor and the Legislature. The commission also hosts community forums to raise awareness of the state of hate and to gather input from the public and community leaders.
In 2024, there were 494 reported anti-Black hate crime events in California, a 4.6% decrease from 518 in 2023, according to the California Department of Justice(DOJ).
In Los Angeles County, there were 345 anti-Black crimes recorded in 2024, the highest number ever recorded for the county since reporting began in 1980.
“AB 822 ensures California continues to respond with care, urgency, and long-term solutions, not just reactive headlines,” Elhawary stated. “The fight against hate doesn’t start somewhere else. It starts with us.”
Days before Newsom approved AB 822, the CRD — in partnership with the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research’s California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) — released the results of a new representative survey on the experiences of Californians aged 12 and older with hate across the state.
