BILL NUMBER: AB 2825	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 27, 2008
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 1, 2008

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Carter
   (Coauthors: Assembly Members  Portantino 
   and Swanson   De Leon, 
 Portantino,   and Swanson  )
   (Coauthors: Senators Denham and Florez)

                        FEBRUARY 22, 2008

   An act to amend  , repeal, and add  Sections 9884.8 and
9884.9 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to automotive
repair.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2825, as amended, Carter. Automotive repair: crash parts.
   Existing law, the Automotive Repair Act, establishes the Bureau of
Automotive Repair under the supervision and control of the Director
of Consumer Affairs. The act provides for the registration and
regulation of automotive repair dealers and authorizes the director
to adopt regulations to implement its provisions. The act requires
all work done by an automotive repair dealer to be recorded on an
invoice that describes all service work done and parts supplied and
specifies if any used, rebuilt, or reconditioned parts are supplied.
The act requires the invoice to include a statement indicating
whether any crash parts are original equipment manufacturer crash
parts or nonoriginal equipment manufacturer aftermarket crash parts.
The act also requires this information to be provided to a customer
in an itemized written estimate when an automotive repair dealer is
doing auto body or collision repairs. Existing law requires the
automotive repair dealer to obtain authorization from the customer
before performing work and imposing charges. A violation of the act
is a crime.
   This bill would require the invoice to specify if any used,
rebuilt, remanufactured, or reconditioned parts are supplied. The
bill would require the first page of the itemized written estimate to
include a notice, as specified, stating that providing parts other
than those described on the estimate without prior approval from the
customer is unlawful.  The bill would require an automotive
repair dealer to attach copies of specified invoices to the estimate
for all crash parts installed in excess of $50.  The bill would
additionally require an automotive repair dealer, when doing auto
body or collision repairs, to provide a specified certification 
, on the first page of   the final invoice,  to the
customer upon completion of the repairs indicating that the crash
parts identified on the written estimate  and attached invoices
 provided to the customer, or pursuant to an approved change to
the estimate, were installed on the customer's motor vehicle.
 The bill would require the certification to be signed by the
automotive repair dealer or his or her designee and would require it
to appear on the first page of the final invoice. The bill would
authorize the bureau to adopt regulations specifying the form and
content of the notice and the certification.  The bill would
make findings and declarations in this regard.  The bill would
make these provisions operative on January 1, 2010. 
   Because a violation of the bill's provisions would be a crime, the
bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
   The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local
agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) At least 10 percent of all crashes nationwide occur in
California and there are over one million vehicles involved in
accidents in California every year or nearly 3,000 every single day.
   (b) Part switching is the practice whereby some auto body repair
shops charge the consumer or insurer the cost of a repair part that
was not actually installed on a vehicle.
   (c) Part switching is unlawful and is prosecuted by the Bureau of
Automotive Repair (BAR) when uncovered. Auto body repair shops are
required under California statutes and BAR regulations to install
parts specified in an estimate at the time of each collision repair.
   (d) In January of 2007, the BAR reopened the Auto Body Inspection
Program but can only do a limited number of inspections of the over
one million crash repairs done in California each year.
   (e) In spite of the best efforts by the BAR to enforce car parts
laws and regulations, many consumers may still be victimized by the
illegal practice of "part switching."
   (f) Many consumers are unaware of services to combat car part
switching without their prior approval and have insufficient tools to
determine when this unlawful activity occurs.
   (g) In its 2003 report, BAR recommends that stakeholders "explore
specific methods and strategies to reduce unfair and illegal
practices in the auto collision repair industry."
   (h) It is the intent of this legislation to educate, inform, and
empower the consumer to be vigilant when contracting auto repair
services and to not duplicate existing law.
   (i) The best time to educate consumers about "parts switching" is
at the time of collision repair.
   (j) Consumers deserve assurances that they are getting what their
insurance policies specify and what was specified on their estimate.
Ensuring that consumers receive accurate information about repair
service for their vehicles will help deter part switching and
solidify a morally and ethically sound relationship between the
customer and auto body repair shops. 
  SEC. 2.    Section 9884.8 of the Business and
Professions Code is amended to read:
   9884.8.  All work done by an automotive repair dealer, including
all warranty work, shall be recorded on an invoice and shall describe
all service work done and parts supplied. Service work and parts
shall be listed separately on the invoice, which shall also state
separately the subtotal prices for service work and for parts, not
including sales tax, and shall state separately the sales tax, if
any, applicable to each. If any used, rebuilt, remanufactured, or
reconditioned parts are supplied, the invoice shall clearly state
that fact. If a part of a component system is composed of new and
used, rebuilt, remanufactured, or reconditioned parts, that invoice
shall clearly state that fact. The invoice shall include a statement
indicating whether any crash parts are original equipment
manufacturer crash parts or nonoriginal equipment manufacturer
aftermarket crash parts and a certification with respect to those
crash parts as required under Section 9884.9. One copy of the invoice
shall be given to the customer and one copy shall be retained by the
automotive repair dealer.  
  SEC. 3.    Section 9884.9 of the Business and
Professions Code is amended to read:
   9884.9.  (a) The automotive repair dealer shall give to the
customer a written estimated price for labor and parts necessary for
a specific job. No work shall be done and no charges shall accrue
before authorization to proceed is obtained from the customer. No
charge shall be made for work done or parts supplied in excess of the
estimated price without the oral or written consent of the customer
that shall be obtained at some time after it is determined that the
estimated price is insufficient and before the work not estimated is
done or the parts not estimated are supplied. Written consent or
authorization for an increase in the original estimated price may be
provided by electronic mail or facsimile transmission from the
customer. The bureau may specify in regulation the procedures to be
followed by an automotive repair dealer if an authorization or
consent for an increase in the original estimated price is provided
by electronic mail or facsimile transmission. If that consent is
oral, the dealer shall make a notation on the work order of the date,
time, name of person authorizing the additional repairs, and
telephone number called, if any, together with a specification of the
additional parts and labor and the total additional cost, and shall
do either of the following:
   (1) Make a notation on the invoice of the same facts set forth in
the notation on the work order.
   (2) Upon completion of the repairs, obtain the customer's
signature or initials to an acknowledgment of notice and consent, if
there is an oral consent of the customer to additional repairs, in
the following language:
""I acknowledge notice and oral approval of an
increase in the
original estimated price.
                    ______________________________
                       (signature or initials)''


   Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring an
automotive repair dealer to give a written estimated price if the
dealer does not agree to perform the requested repair.
   (b) The automotive repair dealer shall include with the written
estimated price a statement of any automotive repair service that, if
required to be done, will be done by someone other than the dealer
or his or her employees. No service shall be done by someone other
than the dealer or his or her employees without the consent of the
customer, unless the customer cannot reasonably be notified. The
dealer shall be responsible, in any case, for any service in the same
manner as if the dealer or his or her employees had done the
service.
   (c) In addition to subdivisions (a) and (b), an automotive repair
dealer, when doing auto body or collision repairs, shall do both of
the following:
   (1) Provide an itemized written estimate for all parts and labor
to the customer. The written estimate shall describe labor and parts
separately and shall identify each part, indicating whether the
replacement part is new, used, rebuilt, remanufactured, or
reconditioned. Each crash part shall be identified on the written
estimate and the written estimate shall indicate whether the crash
part is an original equipment manufacturer crash part or a
nonoriginal equipment manufacturer aftermarket crash part. The first
page of the written estimate shall include a notice that providing a
part, other than a part described on the written estimate, without
prior approval from the customer, is unlawful and the notice shall
also include a toll-free telephone number for the bureau. The bureau
may specify in regulation the form and content of the notice.
   (2) Upon completion of the repairs, provide a written
certification to the customer that the crash parts identified on the
itemized written estimate, or pursuant to an approved change to the
written estimate, have been installed on the motor vehicle. The
certification shall be signed by the automotive repair dealer or his
or her designee and it shall appear on the first page of the final
invoice given to the customer. The bureau may specify in regulation
the form and content of the certification.
   (d) A customer may designate another person to authorize work or
parts supplied in excess of the estimated price, if the designation
is made in writing at the time that the initial authorization to
proceed is signed by the customer. The bureau may specify in
regulation the form and content of a designation and the procedures
to be followed by the automotive repair dealer in recording the
designation. For the purposes of this section, a designee shall not
be the automotive repair dealer providing repair services or an
insurer involved in a claim that includes the motor vehicle being
repaired, or an employee or agent or a person acting on behalf of the
dealer or insurer. 
   SEC. 2.    Section 9884.8 of the   Business
and Professions Code   is amended to read: 
   9884.8.  (a)    All work done by an automotive
repair dealer, including all warranty work, shall be recorded on an
invoice and shall describe all service work done and parts supplied.
Service work and parts shall be listed separately on the invoice,
which shall also state separately the subtotal prices for service
work and for parts, not including sales tax, and shall state
separately the sales tax, if any, applicable to each. If any used,
rebuilt, or reconditioned parts are supplied, the invoice shall
clearly state that fact. If a part of a component system is composed
of new and used, rebuilt or reconditioned parts, that invoice shall
clearly state that fact. The invoice shall include a statement
indicating whether any crash parts are original equipment
manufacturer crash parts or nonoriginal equipment manufacturer
aftermarket crash parts. One copy of the invoice shall be given to
the customer and one copy shall be retained by the automotive repair
dealer. 
   (b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2010, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2010, deletes or extends
that date. 
   SEC. 3.    Section 9884.8 is added to the  
Business and Professions Code   , to read:  
   9884.8.  (a) All work done by an automotive repair dealer,
including all warranty work, shall be recorded on an invoice and
shall describe all service work done and parts supplied. Service work
and parts shall be listed separately on the invoice, which shall
also state separately the subtotal prices for service work and for
parts, not including sales tax, and shall state separately the sales
tax, if any, applicable to each. If any used, rebuilt,
remanufactured, or reconditioned parts are supplied, the invoice
shall clearly state that fact. If a part of a component system is
composed of new and used, rebuilt, remanufactured, or reconditioned
parts, that invoice shall clearly state that fact. The invoice shall
include a statement indicating whether any crash parts are original
equipment manufacturer crash parts or nonoriginal equipment
manufacturer aftermarket crash parts and a certification with respect
to those crash parts as required under Section 9884.9. One copy of
the invoice shall be given to the customer and one copy shall be
retained by the automotive repair dealer.
   (b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2010. 
   SEC. 4.    Section 9884.9 of the   Business
and Professions Code   is amended to read: 
   9884.9.  (a) The automotive repair dealer shall give to the
customer a written estimated price for labor and parts necessary for
a specific job. No work shall be done and no charges shall accrue
before authorization to proceed is obtained from the customer. No
charge shall be made for work done or parts supplied in excess of the
estimated price without the oral or written consent of the customer
that shall be obtained at some time after it is determined that the
estimated price is insufficient and before the work not estimated is
done or the parts not estimated are supplied. Written consent or
authorization for an increase in the original estimated price may be
provided by electronic mail or facsimile transmission from the
customer. The bureau may specify in regulation the procedures to be
followed by an automotive repair dealer if an authorization or
consent for an increase in the original estimated price is provided
by electronic mail or facsimile transmission. If that consent is
oral, the dealer shall make a notation on the work order of the date,
time, name of person authorizing the additional repairs, and
telephone number called, if any, together with a specification of the
additional parts and labor and the total additional cost, and shall
do either of the following:
   (1) Make a notation on the invoice of the same facts set forth in
the notation on the work order.
   (2) Upon completion of the repairs, obtain the customer's
signature or initials to an acknowledgment of notice and consent, if
there is an oral consent of the customer to additional repairs, in
the following language:
""I acknowledge notice and oral approval of an
increase in the
original estimated price.
                    ______________________________
                       (signature or initials)''


   Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring an
automotive repair dealer to give a written estimated price if the
dealer does not agree to perform the requested repair.
   (b) The automotive repair dealer shall include with the written
estimated price a statement of any automotive repair service that, if
required to be done, will be done by someone other than the dealer
or his or her employees. No service shall be done by other than the
dealer or his or her employees without the consent of the customer,
unless the customer cannot reasonably be notified. The dealer shall
be responsible, in any case, for any service in the same manner as if
the dealer or his or her employees had done the service.
   (c) In addition to subdivisions (a) and (b), an automotive repair
dealer, when doing auto body or collision repairs, shall provide an
itemized written estimate for all parts and labor to the customer.
The estimate shall describe labor and parts separately and shall
identify each part, indicating whether the replacement part is new,
used, rebuilt, or reconditioned. Each crash part shall be identified
on the written estimate and the written estimate shall indicate
whether the crash part is an original equipment manufacturer crash
part or a nonoriginal equipment manufacturer aftermarket crash part.
   (d) A customer may designate another person to authorize work or
parts supplied in excess of the estimated price, if the designation
is made in writing at the time that the initial authorization to
proceed is signed by the customer. The bureau may specify in
regulation the form and content of a designation and the procedures
to be followed by the automotive repair dealer in recording the
designation. For the purposes of this section, a designee shall not
be the automotive repair dealer providing repair services or an
insurer involved in a claim that includes the motor vehicle being
repaired, or an employee or agent or a person acting on behalf of the
dealer or insurer. 
   (e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2010, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2010, deletes or extends
that date. 
   SEC. 5.    Section 9884.9 is added to the  
Business and Professions Code   , to read:  
   9884.9.  (a) The automotive repair dealer shall give to the
customer a written estimated price for labor and parts necessary for
a specific job. No work shall be done and no charges shall accrue
before authorization to proceed is obtained from the customer. No
charge shall be made for work done or parts supplied in excess of the
estimated price without the oral or written consent of the customer
that shall be obtained at some time after it is determined that the
estimated price is insufficient and before the work not estimated is
done or the parts not estimated are supplied. Written consent or
authorization for an increase in the original estimated price may be
provided by electronic mail or facsimile transmission from the
customer. The bureau may specify in regulation the procedures to be
followed by an automotive repair dealer if an authorization or
consent for an increase in the original estimated price is provided
by electronic mail or facsimile transmission. If that consent is
oral, the dealer shall make a notation on the work order of the date,
time, name of person authorizing the additional repairs, and
telephone number called, if any, together with a specification of the
additional parts and labor and the total additional cost, and shall
do either of the following:
   (1) Make a notation on the invoice of the same facts set forth in
the notation on the work order.
   (2) Upon completion of the repairs, obtain the customer's
signature or initials to an acknowledgment of notice and consent, if
there is an oral consent of the customer to additional repairs, in
the following language: 
 ""I acknowledge notice and oral approval of an 
 increase in the 
 original estimated price. 
                     ______________________________ 
                        (signature or initials)'' 


   Nothing in this section shall be construed as requiring an
automotive repair dealer to give a written estimated price if the
dealer does not agree to perform the requested repair.
   (b) The automotive repair dealer shall include with the written
estimated price a statement of any automotive repair service that, if
required to be done, will be done by someone other than the dealer
or his or her employees. No service shall be done by anyone other
than the dealer or his or her employees without the consent of the
customer, unless the customer cannot reasonably be notified. The
dealer shall be responsible, in any case, for any service in the same
manner as if the dealer or his or her employees had done the
service.
   (c) In addition to subdivisions (a) and (b), an automotive repair
dealer, when doing auto body or collision repairs, shall do all of
the following:
   (1) Provide an itemized written estimate for all parts and labor
to the customer. The written estimate shall describe labor and parts
separately and shall identify each part, indicating whether the
replacement part is new, used, rebuilt, remanufactured, or
reconditioned. Each crash part shall be identified on the written
estimate and the written estimate shall indicate whether the crash
part is an original equipment manufacturer crash part or a
nonoriginal equipment manufacturer aftermarket crash part. In all
instances, the first page of the written estimate shall contain a
notice with the following information in 12-point boldface type or
larger enclosed in a box:


   "PROVIDING A PART, OTHER THAN A PART DESCRIBED ON THE WRITTEN
ESTIMATE, WITHOUT PRIOR APPROVAL FROM THE CUSTOMER, IS UNLAWFUL. FOR
MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE STATE BUREAU OF AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR."


   (2) Attach copies of invoices from the distributor, dealer or
manufacturer for all crash parts installed in excess of fifty dollars
($50).
   (3) Upon completion of the repairs, provide a written
certification to the customer that the crash parts identified on the
itemized written estimate provided to the customer prior to the
completion of the repairs and on the attached invoices, or pursuant
to an approved change to the written estimate, have been installed on
the motor vehicle. The certification shall appear on the first page
of the final invoice and shall contain the following information in
12-point boldface type or larger enclosed in a box:


   "THIS AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR DEALER (INSERT NAME OF BUSINESS) CERTIFIES
THAT THE CRASH PARTS IDENTIFIED ON THE ITEMIZED WRITTEN ESTIMATE,
ATTACHED INVOICES, AND APPROVED CHANGES, HAVE BEEN INSTALLED ON THE
MOTOR VEHICLE."


   (d) A customer may designate another person to authorize work or
parts supplied in excess of the estimated price, if the designation
is made in writing at the time that the initial authorization to
proceed is signed by the customer. The bureau may specify in
regulation the form and content of a designation and the procedures
to be followed by the automotive repair dealer in recording the
designation. For the purposes of this section, a designee shall not
be the automotive repair dealer providing repair services or an
insurer involved in a claim that includes the motor vehicle being
repaired, or an employee or agent or a person acting on behalf of the
dealer or insurer.
   (e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2010. 
   SEC. 4.   SEC. 6.   No reimbursement is
required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred
by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this
act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or
infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within
the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the
definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII
B of the California Constitution.