Bill Text: CA SB1054 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Amended

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Mentally ill offender crime reduction grants.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2014-09-18 - Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 436, Statutes of 2014. [SB1054 Detail]

Download: California-2013-SB1054-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SB 1054	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  JUNE 23, 2014
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 7, 2014

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Steinberg

                        FEBRUARY 18, 2014

   An act to add Article 4 (commencing with Section 6045) to Chapter
5 of Title 7 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to mentally ill
criminal  offenders, and making an appropriation therefor.
  offenders. 



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 1054, as amended, Steinberg. Mentally ill offender crime
reduction grants.
   Existing law establishes the Board of State and Community
Corrections to collect and maintain available information and data
about state and community correctional policies, practices,
capacities, and needs, as specified.  Existing law
establishes the Recidivism Reduction Fund, to be used, upon
appropriation by the Legislature, for activities designed to reduce
the state's prison population, including, but not limited to,
reducing recidivism. 
   This bill would require the board to administer and award mentally
ill offender crime reduction grants on a competitive basis to
counties that expand or establish a continuum of swift, certain, and
graduated responses to reduce crime and criminal justice costs
related to mentally ill  juvenile and adult  offenders. The
bill would require the board to establish minimum standards, funding
schedules, and procedures for awarding grants.  This bill
would appropriate $50,000,000 from the Recidivism Reduction Fund in
the 2014-15 fiscal year for the mentally ill offender crime reduction
grant program, and require that half of that amount be used for
adult offenders and half for juvenile offenders. 
   Vote:  2/3   majority  . Appropriation:
 yes  no  . Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


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

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) A share of the restored mentally ill offender crime reduction
grants, with the enactment of this act, will be dedicated to
improving mental health outcomes for children in the juvenile justice
system.
   (b) While California's youth crime rates are down overall in
California, our courts and juvenile justice facilities are brimming
with children and youth with a broad range of mental health disorders
and unmet treatment needs.
   (c) In a 2005 "gap survey" of California probation chiefs, paving
the way for the subsequent realignment of the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice
population to local control, the chiefs identified juvenile mental
health cases as the most significant problem and service gap they
faced. In a later study, Chief Probation Officers of California
documented long stays and high costs related to the detention of
juveniles with mental health problems. State and national studies
confirm, again and again, extremely high rates of mental health
disorders among incarcerated youth, with prevalence exceeding 70
percent of juveniles in custody. Data from the Board of State and
Community Corrections in 2013 documents the fact that nearly half of
the daily 8,200 juveniles in custody or on electronic monitoring in
California have "open mental health cases."
   (d) When the mental health needs of young offenders are ignored,
these youth enter a high-risk zone of becoming chronic adult
offenders, committing further crimes, and filling up our already
crowded prisons and jails. This comes at a cost in public safety, a
cost to the probation, court, and corrections agencies who must then
deal expensively with the problem on a long-term basis at the deep
end of our jail and prison systems, and a cost to the taxpayers.
   (e) We know that early intervention in these youth mental health
cases is a key to success. The mentally ill offender crime reduction
grant program investment on the juvenile justice side is an
investment in crime prevention. The juvenile justice share of the
mentally ill offender crime reduction grants will support local
investment in proven best-practices, including early diagnoses,
family and community-based treatment models, specialized mental
health courts, and other collaborative models of intervention that
have proven to be successful. The goal, overall, is to break the link
between mental illness and crime as soon as possible, using
state-of-the-art assessment and intervention strategies. Early
recognition and treatment in these cases is also critical to our goal
of preventing the escalation of youth mental health disorders into
tragedies like the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting that
occurred in 2012.
   (f) Modern science tells us that children are developmentally
different from adults. This finding has been embedded in decisions of
the United States Supreme Court in recent years, placing limits on
the death penalty and other punishments imposed on children. In the
foster care sector, important cases like the Katie A. litigation
recognize the need for more effective strategies and collaborative
efforts to address the mental health needs of children without homes
of their own.
   (g) The good news is that science and evidence-based studies point
the way to interventions that can stop the cycle of mental illness
and crime early in these young lives. The new mentally ill offender
crime reduction grants will prioritize funding for local assessments
and interventions that promise to produce better youth outcomes, to
lower youth recidivism rates, and to reduce system workloads and
costs that result from failing to address the problem.
   (h) Research indicates that a continuum of responses for mentally
ill offenders that includes prevention, intervention, and
incarceration can reduce crime, jail overcrowding, and criminal
justice costs.
   (i) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature that grants be
provided to counties that develop and implement a comprehensive,
cost-effective plan to reduce the rate of crime and offenses
committed by persons with serious mental illness and reduce jail
overcrowding and local criminal justice costs related to mentally ill
offenders.
  SEC. 2.  Article 4 (commencing with Section 6045) is added to
Chapter 5 of Title 7 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read:

      Article 4.  Mentally Ill Offender Crime Reduction Grants


   6045.  The Board of State and Community Corrections shall
administer and award mentally ill offender crime reduction grants on
a competitive basis to counties that expand or establish a continuum
of swift, certain, and graduated responses to reduce crime and
criminal justice costs related to mentally ill offenders, as defined
in  subdivision (a),  paragraph (1) of subdivision 
(b)   (b),  and subdivision (c) of Section 5600.3
of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
   6045.2.  (a) To be eligible for a grant, a county shall establish
a strategy committee that shall include, at a minimum, the sheriff or
director of the county department of corrections in a county in
which the sheriff is not in charge of administering the county jail
system, who shall chair the committee, representatives from other
local law enforcement agencies, the chief probation officer, the
county mental health director, a superior court judge, a  former
 client of a mental health treatment facility, and
representatives from organizations that can provide, or have
provided, treatment or stability, including income, housing, and
caretaking, for persons with mental illnesses.
   (b) The committee shall develop a comprehensive plan for providing
a cost-effective continuum of graduated responses, including
prevention, intervention, and incarceration, for mentally ill
offenders. Strategies for prevention and intervention shall include,
but are not limited to, both of the following:
   (1) Mental health or substance abuse treatment for mentally ill
offenders who have been released from law enforcement custody.
   (2) The establishment of long-term stability for mentally ill
offenders who have been released from law enforcement custody,
including a stable source of income, a safe and decent residence, and
a conservator or caretaker.
   (c) The plan shall include the identification of specific outcome
and performance measures and a plan for annual reporting that will
allow the Board of State and Community Corrections to evaluate, at a
minimum, the effectiveness of the strategies in reducing crime and
offenses committed by mentally ill offenders and the criminal justice
costs related to mentally ill offenders.
   6045.4.  The Board of State and Community Corrections shall award
grants that provide funding for four years. Funding shall be used to
supplement, rather than supplant, funding for existing programs. The
funds may be used to fund specialized alternative custody programs
that offer appropriate mental health treatment and services. A grant
shall not be awarded unless the applicant makes available resources
in an amount equal to at least 25 percent of the amount of the grant.
Resources may include in-kind contributions from participating
agencies. In awarding grants, priority shall be given to those
proposals that include additional funding that exceeds 25 percent of
the amount of the grant.
   6045.6.  The Board of State and Community Corrections shall
establish minimum standards, funding schedules, and procedures for
awarding grants, which shall take into consideration, but not be
limited to, all of the following:
   (a) Percentage of the jail population with severe mental illness.
   (b) Demonstrated ability to administer the program.
   (c) Demonstrated ability to develop effective responses to provide
treatment and stability for persons with severe mental illness.
   (d) Demonstrated history of maximizing federal, state, local, and
private funding sources.
   (e) Likelihood that the program will continue to operate after
state grant funding ends.
   6045.8.  (a) The Board of State and Community Corrections shall
create an evaluation design for mentally ill offender crime reduction
grants that will assess the effectiveness of the program in reducing
crime, the number of early releases due to jail overcrowding, and
local criminal justice costs.
   (b) Commencing on June 30, 2015, and annually thereafter, the
board shall submit a report to the Legislature based on the
evaluation design, with a final report due on December 31, 2019.
   (c) The reports submitted pursuant to this section shall be
submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
   (d) Pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, this
section is repealed as of January 1, 2024. 
  SEC. 3.    There is hereby appropriated from the
Recidivism Reduction Fund, established in Section 1233.9 of the Penal
Code, in the 2014-15 fiscal year, fifty million dollars
($50,000,000) for use by the Board of State and Community Corrections
to provide grants and administer the Mentally Ill Offender Crime
Reduction Grant Program. One-half of the money shall be used for
adult offenders and one-half of the money shall be used for juvenile
offenders. 
                         
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