PLACERVILLE, Calif. — The office of Janelle Horne, Recorder-Clerk for El Dorado County, has found itself in unexpectedly turbulent waters after a key piece of legislation designed to bolster its finances was vetoed earlier this month.
Timeline & Context
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Earlier this session, Assembly Bill 1430, authored by Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland), advanced through the Legislature with bipartisan support. The bill would have increased the recording and indexing fee for the first page of document filings from $10 to $15, and for each additional page from $3 to $4. It also would have bumped the land-ownership document fee from $1 to $3 per additional page. The increased fees would have been dedicated to covering recorder-clerk office operational costs.
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The bill had strong support from the statewide recorders’ association, including the County Recorders’ Association of California (CRAC), on which Horne serves.
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On its way to the governor’s desk, the bill was anticipated to take effect in January 2026 if signed, according to Horne.
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However, Governor Gavin Newsom opted for a veto, citing concern that raising fees could discourage innovation in delivering recording services more efficiently. In his veto message he wrote: “Raising these fees on Californians will disincentivize efforts to think innovatively about how to deliver recording services at a lower cost, faster and with better customer service.”
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The veto came as a surprise to Horne and CRAC representatives, who say they had little opposition and had worked hard to educate legislators.
Implications for El Dorado County
Horne shared that her department is not part of the county general fund and must rely solely on fees collected through recording services to cover salaries, benefits, supplies and other operational costs. That reliance has grown more precarious as costs have increased over the past five years. She noted that:
“It has been 15 years since we have increased our fees and we are way behind. Really, at this point, I can’t make any more cuts without severely cutting services to the public.”
The 2025-26 adopted budget for her office is $1,542,812 — nearly $20,000 less than the prior year’s allocation and about $200,000 less than what the office spent in 2010. To compensate, the department tapped into special revenue accounts, pulling about $270,000 in the last fiscal year. But Horne cautions that those funds are finite:
“As costs continue to increase, it’s just a matter of time before we don’t have those funds available.”
With just 10 approved staff positions (including Horne) and one vacancy, the office has already trimmed 40 % of its staff since Horne took the helm, implemented cross-training and a new software system to drive efficiency. But she emphasized:
“We can’t cut anymore … but I can tell you our staff loves what we do. We love serving the community.”
What Happens Next
CRAC and the Recorder-Clerk’s offices across the state plan to meet with the governor’s staff in the coming weeks to seek clarity on his concerns and to chart a path forward. Horne confirmed that the group hopes to introduce a revised version of AB 1430 as an “emergency bill” early next year. If passed and signed, she estimates the fee increase could take effect around September or October 2026.
Until then, El Dorado County residents may face the risk of reduced services — such as longer wait times for recording land documents, more limited staffing for civil wedding ceremonies and slower issuance of certified vital statistics.
Why It Matters Locally
The Recorder-Clerk’s office plays a central role in the everyday functioning of real estate transactions, business filings, vital statistics (birth/death/marriage) and civil ceremonies. Proper funding ensures that historical and legal records remain accessible and accurate — a key service for the wider community. Without a reliable funding stream, the county could struggle to meet state mandates and public expectations.
For El Dorado County residents undertaking property sales, recording deeds, applying for marriage licenses or obtaining certified copies of vital records, the budget squeeze means the department may be operating with fewer resources behind the scenes. Horne’s plea is clear: ignoring the funding gap is not an option — the alternative is service erosion.
As she put it:
“When the recorder’s office was established … the fees were set up for us not to be a burden to the general fund and the county as a whole because what we do is required by state law.”
The veto of AB 1430, then, represents not just a legislative decision — but a tangible challenge for local government services.









