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Brown Signs Bills To Help California Women, Families

SACRAMENTO (AP) — California women will have more tools to fight pay discrimination, more resources to buy diapers and pay for childcare, and more opportunities for parental leave under bills signed Thursday by Gov. Jerry Brown.

"California is not just about Silicon Valley, it's not just about agriculture, it's not just about Hollywood — it's about families and kids," Brown said before signing the bills outside a Sacramento center that provides resources for homeless women.

The 26-member legislative Women's Caucus championed the nine bills aimed at improving the lives of California women and families, with several focusing on victims of domestic violence. They are broad in scope, aimed at helping women in the workplace and at home.

"California is once again leading the way when it comes to helping women who need it the most," said Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzales Fletcher of San Diego.

One bill requires small businesses employing between 20 and 49 people to offer 12 weeks of unpaid maternity and paternity leave to employees, giving new parents assurance they can stay home with their children without being fired. Existing state law only imposes that requires for larger companies.

Another workplace-focused bill bans employers from asking applicants about their past salaries. That builds on a 2015 law signed by Brown making it easier for women to push for equal pay.

Several other bills focus on health and wellness. Among them is a requirement that public schools with high populations of low-income students provide free tampons and menstrual products in women's and girl's restrooms. Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia, chair of the Women's Caucus, has dubbed herself the "tampon queen" in her fight for the bill.

"I've heard from young girls across the state who miss school on a regular basis because they can't afford these products," Garcia said.

A bill by Gonzales Fletcher will allow low-income women on public assistance to get up to $30 a month help to buy diapers for children under three. Brown vetoed a similar bill last year.

Other bills in the package will:

—Make obtaining sexual images or sexual acts through extortion a crime, sometimes called "sextortion"

—Allow parents taking English as a second language or high school equivalency courses to be eligible for subsidized childcare

—Provide homeless benefits such as hotel vouchers to domestic violence victims who are awaiting shelter space

—Require the state to keep rape kits on file for 20 years

—Ensure women are given information about breast cancer susceptibility genes

(© Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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