SACRAMENTO -- Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday signed 10 bills that his office said will help protect “the most vulnerable Californians – homeless children and adults and foster youth.”
The measures include one that establishes "runaway and homeless youth shelters” as a new kind of group home and requires them to be licensed and overseen by the Department of Social Services.
There are an estimated 200,000 minors in California who are homeless, according to the California Research Bureau and the Council on Youth Relations' Homeless Youth Project.
Assemblyman Mark Stone (D-Scotts Valley) authored AB 346 to address that category of the homeless population.
Sen. Jim Beall (D-San Jose) introduced a bill that allows counties to transfer bond money approved for construction of shelters for abused or neglected children to instead be used for shelters for runaway or homeless youths. Beall’s bill, which was signed by Brown, is SB 347.
The governor also signed a bill that provides that the fact that a child is homeless or an "unaccompanied minor" is not, in and of itself, a sufficient basis for triggering the mandatory child abuse or neglect reporting laws.
Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) said his bill gives those serving foster youths discretion in cases where youths might otherwise be taken into police custody or returned to a home from which they have fled.
“Allowing mandated reporters to not report solely based on homelessness allows the youths to access services and the service providers that specialize in homeless youth services to effectively do their jobs,” Ammiano said in arguing for his AB 652.
The governor also signed legislation requiring that when a decision is made to place a foster child who is medically fragile, priority consideration be given to foster parents who are nurse practitioners. That bill by Assemblywoman Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) is AB 1133.
Brown also signed a measure by Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco) that requires social workers to periodically visit foster youths in their home placements and provides for the foster youths to request a private conversation with his or her social worker.
Yee said his SB 342 is needed because in-home visits by social workers “are an essential component of our child welfare system and are critical for ensuring the safety of children placed in out-of-home care."
via http://www.latimes.com/local/political/la-me-pc-gov-brown-signs-10-bills-to-help-homeless-and-foster-youth-20131002,0,2061191.story
via http://www.latimes.com/local/political/la-me-pc-gov-brown-signs-10-bills-to-help-homeless-and-foster-youth-20131002,0,2061191.story
I have begun a page devoted to video documentation of the many brutal homeless camp clearings in California.
ReplyDeleteCalifornia Homelessness Reporter
http://www.california-homelessness-reporter.org/sample-page/homelessness-camp-evictions/
Please let me know if you hear of any others!
markmetzler@sbcglobal.net