January 29, 2008
Pursuant to Elections Code Section 9005, we have
reviewed the proposed initiative cited as the “Safe Neighborhoods Act:
Protect Victims, Stop Gang, Gun, and Street Crime” (A.G. File No.
07‑0094, Amdt. #1-S).
Current Law
Types of Crime. There are three
kinds of crimes: felonies, misdemeanors, and infractions. A felony is
the most serious type of crime. About 18 percent of persons convicted of
a felony are sent to state prison. Other felons are supervised on
probation in the community, sentenced to county jail, pay a fine, or
have some combination of these punishments.
Criminal Justice Programs and Funds.
The state provides funding for various state and local criminal justice
programs. This includes the following:
-
State Penalty
Fund. The state administers the State Penalty Fund which
collects revenues from fees assessed to some criminal offenders.
These funds are disbursed for various purposes, including
restitution and peace officer training. Also, a portion is
transferred to the state General Fund.
-
Youthful
Offender Block Grant. The state has established a block
grant program which provides counties with funding to house,
supervise, and provide various types of treatment services to
juvenile offenders. The amount of funding provided for this program
in the 2007-08 budget plan is $24 million which is projected to
increase to $93 million by 2009-10 in accordance with a formula
established in statute.
-
Various Local
Crime Prevention and Enforcement Grants. The state currently
provides funding for various local criminal justice programs. For
example, the state provides $119 million to local law enforcement
agencies through the Citizens’ Option for Public Safety and an equal
amount to local youth services agencies through the Juvenile Justice
Crime Prevention Act.
Supervision of Parolees. Offenders
who have been convicted of a felony and sent to state prison are
supervised on parole by the state after their release. State policies
determine the number of parole agents and other staff necessary to
supervise these parolees.
Jessica’s Law. Proposition 83
(commonly referred to as “Jessica’s Law”) was approved by voters in
November 2006. Among other changes relating to sex offenders, the
proposition requires that anyone who has been (1) convicted of a felony
or an attempt to commit a felony that (2) requires him to register as a
sex offender and (3) been sent to prison shall be monitored by a Global
Positioning System (GPS) device while on parole and for the remainder of
his life. The proposition did not specify, however, whether state or
local governments would be responsible for paying for the GPS
supervision costs after these offenders are discharged from state parole
supervision.
Proposal
This measure makes several changes to current
laws relating to criminal offenders. The most significant of these
changes are described below.
New Criminal Justice Programs and Funding
Levels. The proposal creates new state-funded criminal justice
programs and requires that funding for certain existing programs be
continued at current levels or increased in the future. In total, the
measure requires the state to provide $965 million for specified
criminal justice programs beginning in 2009-10. This amount reflects an
increase in funding of $365 million compared to the amount provided in
the 2007-08 Budget Act. In particular, the measure
increases state funding for police, sheriffs, district attorneys, jails,
and probation offices primarily for law enforcement activities. The
measure prohibits the state or local governments from using the new
funding provided to replace funds now used for the same purposes. In
addition, the measure requires that future funding for some of these new
and existing programs be adjusted annually for inflation.
Specifically, the measure would allocate funding
for such purposes as:
-
Monetary awards to obtain information on crimes;
-
The construction and operation of county jails;
-
Juvenile facility repair and renovation and the operation
of probation supervision and recreational programs for youth;
-
Centers to assist investigations into child abuse and to
assist victims recovering from crimes;
-
Contracts to assist parolees in their reentry into
communities;
-
Task forces that would target offenders involved in gang
activity, focus on narcotics interdiction at the state border, or to
search high-risk probationers for guns;
-
Providing information and other assistance to victims of
crimes;
-
Running criminal background checks on individuals
receiving federal
Section 8 housing assistance vouchers; and
-
Electronic devices to track violent offenders or those
involved in gangs and sex crimes.
Figure 1 summarizes the increase in funding
required by this measure, generally beginning in 2009-10.
|
Figure 1
Annual General Fund State Funding for
Criminal Justice Programs Affected by This Measure |
(In Millions) |
|
Current
Spending Level |
Proposed Spending Level |
Change |
Local law enforcementa |
$187 |
$419 |
$232 |
New state programs |
— |
68 |
68 |
Local juvenile programs |
413b |
479 |
66 |
Totals |
$600 |
$965 |
$365 |
|
a Local law
enforcement includes funding directed to police, sheriffs,
district attorneys, adult probation,
and jails. |
b Includes $93
million for the youthful offender block grant as authorized
by current law for 2009-10. |
Detail may
not total due to rounding. |
|
In addition, this measure redistributes the State
Penalty Fund in a way that increases support for training for peace
officers, corrections staff, prosecutors, and public defenders, as well
as various victims’ services programs, while eliminating the existing
transfer of money to the state General Fund and the Department of
Education. The measure also requires that Youthful Offender Block Grant
funds be distributed to county probation offices and prohibits them from
being provided directly to county drug treatment, mental health, or
other county departments.
This measure creates a new state office to
distribute public service announcements about criminal justice statutes,
such as the “Three Strikes and You’re Out” law, and establishes a
commission to evaluate publicly funded early intervention and
rehabilitation programs designed to reduce crime.
Increased Criminal Penalties for Some
Crimes. The measure increases criminal penalties for various
crimes, including crimes related to gang participation and recruitment,
intimidation of individuals involved in court proceedings, possession
and sale of methamphetamines, vehicle theft, removing or disabling a GPS
device, and firearms possession. For example, this measure requires that
offenders convicted of car theft would be subject to an additional year
in state prison if the theft was for the purpose of selling the stolen
car. These and other proposed increases in penalties will likely result
in more offenders being sentenced to state prison or jail for the
crimes specified in the measure for a longer period of time. This
measure also allows law enforcement authorities to impound vehicles for
up to 60 days when a gun used in a crime is found in one.
Various Changes to State Parole Policies.
The measure makes several changes to state parole policies. For example,
the measure reduces the average parolee caseload of parole agents. The
measure also requires the state to pay the cost of GPS monitoring of sex
offenders after their discharge from parole supervision.
Other Changes. The measure makes
several other changes to state laws affecting the criminal justice
system, including the establishment of a statewide gang registry,
changes to hearsay rules and gang injunction procedures, the use of
temporary jails, and release of undocumented persons arrested for
violent or gang-related crimes. Each of these provisions is described in
more detail below.
-
Gang Databases. The measure requires the
development of two databases related to gang information for the use of
law enforcement agencies. The first requires the Department of Justice
(DOJ) to create a secure registry accessible to local law enforcement
that lists individuals who have been convicted of being gang members. In
addition, the measure calls for what it terms a statewide electronic
data warehouse to facilitate the sharing of information about gangs and
gang members among state, local, and federal law enforcement officials.
The DOJ and other law enforcement agencies currently operate an
electronic data system called Cal-Gang. The measure requires the new
statewide data warehouse to interface with Cal-Gang.
-
Hearsay Evidence. A legal statement is
considered hearsay evidence when an attorney cannot cross-examine the
witness making the statement. The measure would expand the circumstances
in which hearsay evidence is admissible in court, especially in cases
where someone has intimidated or otherwise tampered with a witness.
-
Gang Injunction Procedures. This measure
changes legal procedures to make it easier for local law enforcement
agencies to bring lawsuits against members of street gangs to prevent
them from engaging in criminal activities and makes it a new and
separate crime punishable by fines, prison, or jail to violate such
injunctions.
-
Temporary Housing for Offenders. The measure
permits counties with overcrowded jails to operate temporary jail and
treatment facilities to house offenders. These temporary facilities
would be required to meet local health and safety codes that apply to
residences.
-
Undocumented Offenders. This measure
prohibits persons charged with a violent or gang-related felony from
being released on bail or their own recognizance pending trial if he or
she is illegally in the United States. Sheriffs would be required to
record in their official criminal history the immigration status of
anyone charged, booked, or convicted of a felony.
Fiscal Effect
This measure would have significant fiscal
effects on both the state and on county governments. These effects are
discussed below.
State Funding for Criminal Justice
Programs. The measure increases state funding for various state
and local criminal justice programs by about $365 million in 2009-10. We
estimate that this amount will increase by about $100 million annually
within a decade due to the measure’s provisions that require the state
funding for some of these programs be adjusted each year for inflation.
In addition, the provisions requiring the state to implement new gang
databases would likely result in unknown one-time implementation costs,
as well as potentially some ongoing costs to maintain these databases.
The measure allocates $2 million annually of the $365 million for the
statewide electronic gang data warehouse. In addition, the
redistribution of the State Penalty Fund could result in about a
$13 million loss in state General Fund revenues.
State Prison and Parole System.
Various provisions of this measure would result in additional state
costs to operate the prison and parole system. These costs are likely to
be at least a couple hundreds of millions of dollars annually. These
increased costs are mainly due to provisions that increase penalties for
various crimes, decrease parole agent caseloads, and require the state
to pay for the cost of GPS monitoring for sex offenders discharged from
parole supervision. These provisions could also result in additional
one-time capital outlay costs, primarily related to prison construction
and renovation. The magnitude of these one-time costs is unknown but
potentially could exceed a half billion dollars.
Other provisions of this measure could affect the
state costs for operating the prison and parole system. The additional
funding provided for local law enforcement activities could result in
additional offenders being arrested, prosecuted, and sent to prison.
However, the measure provides some additional funding for prevention and
intervention programs for offenders designed to reduce the likelihood
that individuals will commit new crimes. To the degree that these
programs are successful, they could result in fewer offenders being sent
to state prison than would otherwise occur. The magnitude of these
offsetting effects is unknown but could be significant.
State Trial Courts, County Jails, and Other
Local Criminal Justice Agencies. This measure could have
significant fiscal effects on state trial courts, county jails, and
other local criminal justice agencies, potentially resulting in both new
costs and savings. The net fiscal effect of its various provisions is
unknown.
On the one hand, the measure could result in
increased costs to the extent that the additional funding provided for
local law enforcement activities results in more offenders being
arrested, prosecuted, and incarcerated in local jails. There could also
be additional jail costs for holding undocumented offenders arrested for
violent or gang-related crimes who would no longer be eligible for bail
or be released on their own recognizance. The measure’s provision
permitting the use of temporary jail and treatment facilities would
allow counties the authority to convert noncorrectional facilities to
temporary jails. There could be additional costs to counties to renovate
and operate such temporary facilities. The magnitude of these costs
would depend primarily on the number and size of new temporary
facilities utilized by counties.
On the other hand, the measure provides some
additional funding for prevention and intervention programs designed to
reduce the likelihood that individuals will commit new crimes. To the
degree that these programs are successful, they could result in fewer
offenders being arrested, prosecuted, and incarcerated in local jails
than otherwise would. Additionally, the measure’s provisions increasing
criminal penalties for specified crimes could result in more offenders
being sentenced to state prison who would otherwise be incarcerated in
local jails, thereby reducing local jail operations costs.
Other Impacts on State and Local
Governments. Other savings to the state and local government
agencies could result to the extent that offenders imprisoned for longer
periods under the measure’s provisions require fewer government
services, or commit fewer crimes that result in victim-related
government costs. Alternatively, there could be an offsetting loss of
revenue to the extent that offenders serving longer prison terms would
no longer become taxpaying citizens under current law. The extent and
magnitude of these impacts are unknown.
Summary of Fiscal Effects
This measure would have the following fiscal
effects:
-
Net state costs likely to exceed a half billion dollars
annually primarily for increased funding of criminal justice programs,
as well as for increased costs for prison and parole operations.
-
Unknown one-time state capital outlay costs potentially
exceeding a half billion dollars for prison facilities.
-
Unknown net fiscal impact for state trial courts, county
jails, and other local criminal justice agencies.
Return to Initiatives and Propositions
Return to Legislative Analyst's Office Home Page