Community News
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Health care for undocumented immigrants wasn’t part of Gov. Jerry Brown’s revised budget proposal last week, but that hasn’t slowed the campaign for SB 4. The proposal – a priority of legislative Democrats that currently sits in the Senate Appropriations Committee as lawmakers consider the expected annual cost of between $175 million and $740 million – tops the agenda for the 19th annual Immigrant Day.
Immigrant rights advocates will be at the Capitol to lobby for SB 4, as well as AB 622, which would prohibit employers from using the federal E-Verify system to check the immigration status of current workers or applicants who have not yet received a job offer; AB 953, to expand limits on racial profiling; and a $20 million budget proposal to assist Californians applying for citizenship or deferred action.
The day will kick off at 9:15 a.m. with an interfaith ceremony on the west steps of the Capitol, followed by a rally at 9:45 a.m. featuring state Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León, Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, D-San Diego, and Assemblyman Luis Alejo, D-Watsonville.
Via: http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article21135027.html
Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article21135027.html#storylink=cpy
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.—California will have no choice but to move 4,000 more inmates to private
prisons in other states if federal judges refuse to postpone a court-ordered
population cap, state Corrections Secretary Jeffrey Beard said Wednesday.
The state faces an April 18
deadline to reduce overcrowding in its 33 adult prisons. The judges have found
reducing overcrowding to be the key step in improving inmate medical and mental
health care, but Gov. Jerry Brown is seeking a three-year delay.
Brown's budget proposal,
prematurely leaked Wednesday, assumes that the court grants a two-year extension
to meet the cap. Like Beard, the budget says that if the extension is not
granted the state will have to spend more money on short-term capacity
increases while likely cutting spending on rehabilitation programs in order to
avoid releasing inmates early.
Beard said such a delay would
give the state time to build cells for nearly 3,500 additional inmates. That
would bring the state close to meeting the federal population cap while
avoiding the need to send more inmates elsewhere.
It also would give time for
rehabilitation programs to work, he said. Those programs are designed to reduce
the number of convicts who commit new crimes after their release and then get
sent back to prison. Brown's budget projects $81 million would be available for
rehabilitation programs in the fiscal year that begins July 1 if the two-year
extension is granted, but the money will be eaten up by incarceration costs if
it is denied, according to a copy of the budget posted online by The Sacramento
Bee.
"We really don't want to
do more out-of-state either, so we're hopeful we get our extension," Beard
said in an interview. "But if we don't get that, then our only alternative
will be to increase the out-of-state (transfers)."
A panel of three federal
judges has set a Friday deadline for an end to negotiations between Brown's
administration and attorneys representing inmates.
The judges already postponed
by nearly 10 months their original June 30, 2013, deadline for the state to
reduce its inmate population to about 110,000 inmates. Beard said that gave the
state crucial time to begin operating what used to be a private prison in the
Mojave Desert, open a medical hospital in Stockton and send additional inmates
to five community correctional facilities within California.
Without those moves, the
state would be looking at sending up to 7,000 inmates out of state instead of
4,000, he said.
California already houses
roughly 8,900 inmates in Corrections Corporation of America prisons in Arizona,
Mississippi and Oklahoma. The Department of Finance estimates it costs the
state $29,500 a year for each inmate housed out of state, although that amount
is less than the average per-inmate cost within California because mostly
younger and healthier prisoners are selected for the transfers.
The judges last year ordered
the state not to move more inmates out of state, but Beard said he expects the
judges would lift that ban when negotiations end this week.
An additional delay would
give the state time to open an expansion of the Stockton medical facility this
spring to house about 1,100 mentally ill inmates. The state last week also
detailed plans to build three medium-security housing units over the next 2 1/2
years at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego and Mule Creek
State Prison in Ione, 40 miles southeast of Sacramento, to hold a combined
2,376 inmates. The combined cost of all the new housing is $700 million.
Beard would not say if the
budget Brown will propose Friday calls for building additional prison cells.
California already has
reduced its prison population by about 25,000 inmates during the last two
years, mainly through the governor's criminal justice realignment plan that is
sending lower-level offenders to county jails instead of state prisons.
Yet the inmate population
keeps climbing, said Don Specter, director of the nonprofit Prison Law Office
and one of the attorneys representing inmates in the long-running federal case.
"It's continuing to
increase, so any building would be spending billions of dollars for only a
temporary fix," he said. "It also shows that realignment was only a
temporary fix, as well."
Brown and lawmakers of both
political parties have been fighting previous court rulings that say the state
can safely release more than 4,000 inmates by increasing good-behavior credits.
The judges have previously said the state also could release elderly and
medically incapacitated inmates without endangering the public.
"Other states and
jurisdictions use lots of other methods other than increasing capacity, and
there's no reason California can't do the same thing," Specter said.
The budget also includes
nearly $65 million for the Department of State Hospitals to help the agency
deal with a more violent mentally ill population that increasingly comes from
the criminal justice system. A federal judge last year blamed the department
for part of the problems in treating mentally ill prison inmates.
via: http://www.mercurynews.com/california/ci_24871805/prison-secretary-seeks-delay-inmate-court-order