Californians will be able to choose a blockchain-based delivery of vital records due to a new law making the technology an integral part of state recordkeeping.
The state has been looking over numerous cryptocurrency proposals. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has vetoed a crypto licensing and regulation bill recently, approved another one that tells county records offices to allow for blockchain tech to be used in this manner, a CoinDesk report notes.
The tech could be used in the distribution of birth, death and marriage records — with PDFs sent immediately instead of a 10-day postal delivery as has been done in the past.
The bill, which was proposed by California state Sen. Robert Hertzberg, will test how blockchain works for essential government functions for the most populated U.S. state.
“This secure and highly convenient process will allow the average person to access their vital records and shows California is still leading the way for innovation,” Hertzberg said in a statement to CoinDesk on Thursday.
Arguing for the bill last month, Hertzberg said it was faster, cheaper and more efficient, a way for Californians to save time and money. It will also be more secure overall.
PYMNTS wrote previously about the veto of the bill that could’ve created a crypto regulation framework, writing that Newsom had said it might have forced smaller startups out of the state.
Read more: Veto of California Crypto Law Cold Comfort for State’s FinTech Sector
The Digital Financial Assets Law passed both houses of the state legislature in August, and was called a California BitLicense law, referring to New York’s crypto licensing regime that has caught heat for reportedly driving businesses out of the state. One of the businesses driven out of New York was the Kraken cryptocurrency exchange, which moved to San Francisco.
The Blockchain Association, a crypto industry lobbying group, was happy about Newsom’s veto and said the bill “threatened to choke innovation and stop California’s burgeoning crypto industry in its tracks.”