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Missing the Opportunity...And the Point

by: Brian Leubitz

Thu Aug 27, 2009 at 14:06:01 PM PDT


The Assembly is struggling to to achieve what the Senate has already done: pass a substantive prisons bill. Instead we get a bunch of legislators changing their minds about a sentencing commission, and in the end, setting us backward on reforming the prison mess.

Today, Speaker Bass revealed the details of the legislation that she plans to put up for a vote come Monday.  You can see a summary of that bill over the flip (h/t SacBee). To say it is entirely underwhelming would be an understatement.

The bill makes some minor changes to the Senate Bill on the way things are handled, including the "wobblers", which are crimes that can be charged as either a felony and misdemeanor. They changed some of the alternative custody rules and the definition of "grand theft." Really, nothing all that substanital. They don't restore funding for rehabilitation programs that were stripped in the Senate Bill.

But what they do take out of the bill is the "Public Safety Commission" aka the Sentencing Commission.  Without the sentencing commission this bill isn't worth the pixels on your screen. It won't fix the prisons. It won't create any substantive change. It will merely kick the can down the road. In order for this bill to be worthwhile, it MUST have a sentencing commission with teeth. A sentencing commission that allows policy makers who understand public safety to make the decisions, not political hacks trying to make their way to the next job. Again, if it can play in Kansas, it can happen here. The only thing missing here are a few legislators with courage.

In other words, this bill misses the opportunity presented by the budget challenges.  Frankly, we only have so many cracks at this apple, and this is the perfect storm for a sentencing commission: A Republican Governor providing some cover, a budget mess requiring cost savings, and a federal court order hanging over our heads. The time is now. Like Arnold and his crew are using the mess to shock doctrine the state, we should use this mess to fix the state.

But the Assembly frankly does not have the courage to do what they believe is right. I know they believe it is right, because they passed it as AB 160 back in 2007. The Senate can get it done, the Assembly should be able to muster the votes too.

We can move forward in one of two directions: We can pass a decent piece of legislation, or we can pass this half-hearted nothingness. We can have real reform, or we can just keep going on the same path that we've been pursuing.  In all likelihoods, the Assembly will pick the latter, and nothing will really be accomplished.  We might even end up with the federal courts deciding how to release prisoners.  But, as activists, we must all remember who stood up to make the tough vote, and who did not. In politics, there is always an accountability moment.

Brian Leubitz :: Missing the Opportunity...And the Point
SB 18 XXX   Corrections Reform Bill
What This Bill Does

SENTENCING CHANGES

Property crime thresholds.  Property crime thresholds, many of which have not changed since 1982, will be updated to reflect the Consumer Price Index (CPI).It was suggested that the threshold for Grand Theft be $2,500 but in response to concerns from the law enforcement community, it was set at $950.

CREDITS
Inmate Credit Changes. Credits create an incentive for inmates to participate in programs while in prison which in turn reduces recidivism.  Specifically, this legislation (a) provides consistent day-for-day credit earning status for offenders currently eligible for earning day-for-day credit in both jail and prison; (b) authorizes the department to award enhanced credits (up to 6 weeks) for the completion of rehabilitation, education, and vocation programs in prison; (c) authorizes the department to extend existing enhanced credits for fire camp inmates (two days for one day) to inmates waiting to be transferred to a fire camp (d) provides for day for day credits for inmates serving jail terms.

PAROLE AND PROBATION
Parole Policy.  The legislation requires CDCR to use a risk-instrument on parolees.  As part of the package, CDCR will increase supervision levels for the most serious and violent offenders.  New proposed levels will be a supervision ratio of 45:1 instead of 70:1.  As a result, parole officers will have reduced caseloads that will allow them to focus more time and energy on the supervision of higher risk, violent parolees.

Low and moderate risk offenders with non-serious, non-violent and non-sex offenses will be placed on a less intensive supervision and will not be subject to parole revocation.  Serious offenders will be eligible for early parole discharge based upon successfully completing drug treatment.

Establishes the Parole Reentry Accountability Program.  As part of the program CDCR will use a parole violation decision-making instrument to determine the most appropriate parole sanctions for a parole violator.  Parole violators with a history of substance abuse or mental illness may be referred to a re-entry court.  The court will work with the assistance of parole agents to determine the appropriate conditions of parole.  

Community Corrections.  County probation departments would receive a portion of CDCR savings so felony probationers who would otherwise be sent to prison remain under the jurisdiction of the counties. Probation Departments will use these funds for additional officers and evidence-based programs.  Seed money is provided for 2009-10 via a $45 million appropriation from federal funds.

How This Bill Differs from AB 14 (3X), as passed by the Senate
1.Removes the changes to "wobblers."    
2.Removes the creation of "alternative custody".
3.Removes changes to grand theft and grand theft auto, and limits all other changes to property crime to inflation since 1982.
4.Removes the Public Safety Commission.

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An empty cab pulled up and Karren Bass stepped out. (0.00 / 0)
She continues to prove herself one of our worst Speakers in CA history...talk about lack of leadership ...she repeatedly defines non-strategic bumbler. From 'leading' the budget 'negotiations' [read capitulations], to giving her staff a pay raise and then rapidly withdrawing it after maximum damage has been done, to calling repeated floor votes which never resulted in actual votes, to this...I can't believe this well intentioned idiot hasn't been thrown out as 'leader' yet as she is an embarrassment to the rest of the Dems in the Assembly and a disaster to the California Democratic Party.  God, I wish for the days of Willie when at least the Dems had a real leader.

You are Kidding, Right? (0.00 / 0)
You won't vote for solid progressives like Ted Lieu, Pedro Nava, Alberto Torrico, Fiona Ma and others because they don't want to release folks from prison and return them to our streets?

Have you seen a single opinion poll on this issue?

Speaker Bass gets kudos in my book for slowing this train down and modifying the bill so it makes sense.


uh-oh (0.00 / 0)
Steve must be getting paid by somebody again.  That's usually when the comments like this start coming out.

[ Parent ]
'Slowing things down' does not equal leadership (0.00 / 0)
Recent events show Bass has minimal influence on whether or not a 'good or bad' bill moves forward or not fast or slow...she repeatedly brings bills to vote which don't even have the backing of her own caucus! She is and will remain a useful idiot for the Republicans to exploit until she gets disposed of (and that is saying something given the CA R's abysmal gene pool). She brings to mind those Italian Generals in WWI who slaughtered tens of thousands of their countrymen through incompetence all the while believing that they were leading. I repeat, she is a disaster to the CA Democratic Party.

PS: Who is Steve?


[ Parent ]
This is when David Dayden starts his personal character attacks (0.00 / 0)
Apparently because he doesn't have the facts to back up his points.

Or maybe he's looking to find that poll where Democrats - or voters of any stripe -- favor letting criminals out of jail and into their neighborhoods.


[ Parent ]
So... (0.00 / 0)
By "letting criminals out of jail and into their neighborhoods", what exactly do you mean?

Because that toughist rhetoric seems to indicate that you think that:

- "criminals" should never be let out of jail -- once a criminal, always a criminal.

- "criminals" should never be allowed to go near anyone other than other criminals again -- neighborhoods with law-abiding people are off-limits.

Or is it merely releasing convicts early that you mean is a problem?  I mean, before they've finished their course in brutality, race segregation, and de facto execution-by-medical-neglect that we favor?  Maybe we should just make all crimes capital crimes, solve all those problems.

I love the straw men that toughism seems to require.  One waits with bated breath for an argument-by-anecdote involving a new Willie Horton.  Or even the same old Willie Horton.


[ Parent ]
I tell you what (0.00 / 0)
Let's put a bunch of these folks who will be leaving prison before their sentences were up and put them in your neighborhood.

You in favor of that?

They're in prison for a reason.


[ Parent ]
Where do you think they're coming home to? (0.00 / 0)
I live in the middle of San Francisco, on the edge of a pretty iffy neighborhood.

You really don't have anything, do you?  Just flat out fearmongering toughism.  That doesn't work.  It hasn't worked.  The US jails more people per capita than anyone else, for longer, and we are still a dangerous society.  Maybe it's time to stop the posturing and figure out what actually works, instead of just reflexively ramping up the length of sentences while eliminating opportunities for rehabilitation.

And aside from that, the federal courts have determined that we have underfunded our prison system, our warehouse, so badly, that they are ORDERING this reduction in the population.  So you can do it smart, or you can do it stupid, but it's going to happen, and no amount of "How would you feel, Mr. Dukakis, if your wife was raped" BS will change that.


[ Parent ]
Then why the Aye vote in 2007? (0.00 / 0)
If Ma, Torrico, and Nava thought this was such a terrible idea, why did they vote for the sentencing commission in 2007?

Sometimes you have to put politics over policy, I get that.  But when the time comes for something as critical as this, where the question of what is better for our state is so stark, you just have to bite the bullet and do what's right.  Sure, you may take a hit in the short term, but who honestly thinks we are going to lose the districts in question. While I disagree with Huber, I get where she's coming from. But these so-called "progressives"? I'm less understanding.

This is about personal politics, not progressive politics.

I think?


[ Parent ]
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