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California Suspends Enforcement of Law Requiring VCs to Disclose Diversity Data

California Suspends Enforcement of Law Requiring VCs to Disclose Diversity Data Image: Primary
California regulators have again suspended enforcement of a state law that required venture capital firms to disclose the demographic composition of startup founders they fund, after investors appealed to Governor Gavin Newsom to delay the reporting deadline. The law, Senate Bill 54, passed in 2023 and was designed to create a public record of which founders receive venture funding broken down by race, gender, and other demographic factors. Proponents argued the transparency requirement would help identify and address long-standing inequities in startup funding allocation. The latest delay marks the second time California has paused enforcement since the law took effect. Venture capital groups lobbied the Newsom administration arguing that compliance costs were disproportionate and that reporting requirements conflicted with investor privacy obligations in some fund structures. Critics of the delay accused the governor of capitulating to industry pressure. Research consistently shows that Black and Latino founders, as well as women founders, receive a disproportionately small share of venture capital dollars. Transparency advocates argued that without reporting data it is difficult to measure whether the gap is narrowing or widening. The suspension does not repeal SB 54. A new enforcement date has not been announced. The state Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, which oversees compliance, said it would issue updated guidance for fund managers. California is home to the largest concentration of venture capital activity in the United States, and the law had been closely watched as a potential model for similar disclosure requirements in other states.
Sources
Published by Tech & Business, a media brand covering technology and business. This story was sourced from WIRED and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.