BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    




                   Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
                           Senator Christine Kehoe, Chair

                                           438 (Beall)
          
          Hearing Date:  08/27/2009           Amended: 04/21/2009
          Consultant:  Jacqueline Wong-HernandezPolicy Vote: Public Safety  
          5-2
                                                           Human Services  
          3-2
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ___
          BILL SUMMARY: AB 438 expands diversion eligibility for persons  
          with cognitive disabilities, and requires the Department of  
          Developmental Services (DDS) to create a task force to identify  
          strategies and best practices for dealing with persons with  
          developmental disabilities in the criminal justice system.  
          Specifically, this bill:
          
             1.   Provides that diversion for persons with cognitive  
               disabilities will apply to any offense that is charged as,  
               or reduced to, a misdemeanor or a non-violent felony.  
               Defines a "non-violent" felony as a felony not listed in  
               the violent felony list in Penal Code section 667.5, or a  
               serious felony in section 1192.7, or 1192.8.
             2.   Deletes the current requirement that an individual with  
               autism, or a condition similar to mental retardation or  
               requiring similar treatment, is eligible for diversion only  
               if he or she was a regional center client at the time of  
               the charged offense.  
             3.   Requires that, by July 1, 2010, DDS convene a task force  
               to identify strategies and best practices for local  
               interagency coordination and cooperation in addressing the  
               needs of adults and juveniles with developmental  
               disabilities in the criminal and juvenile justice systems.  
               Requires that the task force include representation from  
               regional centers, Judicial Council, probation offices,  
               public defenders, district attorneys, school districts,  
               local law enforcement, county mental health, and other  
               stakeholders. 
             4.   States that the task force shall address issues  
               including, but not limited to, strategies and best  
               practices related to the accomplishment of all of the  
               following: (A) early identification and assessment of  
               people with developmental disabilities in the criminal and  
               juvenile justice process; (B) development of protocols and  










               procedures for ongoing communication and cooperation  
               between regional centers and other local agencies,  
               including law enforcement and the courts; and (C) training  
               of jail and court personnel on issues related to people  
               with developmental disabilities and available community  
               resources. 
             5.   Requires the task force to identify systemic barriers to  
               serving people with developmental disabilities in  
               community-based settings instead of jails and prisons, and  
               make recommendations for addressing identified systemic  
               barriers. Requires the task force shall develop model  
               training curricula and model memoranda of understanding  
               (MOU) between regional centers, the courts and other local  
               agencies.
             6.   Requires the task force to issue interim reports to the  
               Legislature its progress by July 1, 2011, and July 1, 2012,  
               and a final report by June 30, 2013.  The final report  
               shall include a description of best practices and  
               strategies identified by the task force, any sample  
               training curricula, materials, and memoranda of  
               understanding developed by the task force, and  
               recommendations for future action, including legislative  
               recommendations related to adults and youth in the criminal  
               and juvenile justice systems.

          Page 2
          AB 438 (Beall)
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____
                            Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

           Major Provisions                    2009-10               2010-11      
            2011-12                      Fund
           Increased eligibility testing                Unknown,  
          potentially significant costs       General

          Increased diversions                         Unknown,  
          potentially substantial costs      General            
          Decreased CDCR population       Potential savings, offset by  
          diversion costs*    General

          New task force                                        $65         
              $130            $130              General
                                                                      
          Substantial ongoing cost pressure











          Court costs                                       Unknown,  
          likely minor court costs              General**
                               Potential savings, to the extent that  
          trials are averted

          *Diversion costs will likely exceed CDCR savings.
          **Trial Courts Trust Fund
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____

          STAFF COMMENTS: SUSPENSE FILE.

          Existing law defines "cognitive developmental disability" as  
          mental retardation, autism, or disabling conditions found to be  
          closely related to mental retardation or autism or that requires  
          treatment similar to that required for individuals with mental  
          retardation or autism and that would qualify an individual for  
          services provided under the Lanterman Act.  Existing law defines  
          "diversion-related treatment and habilitation" to include  
          specialized services or special adaptations of generic services,  
          directed toward the alleviation of cognitive developmental  
          disability or toward social, personal, physical, or economic  
          habilitation or rehabilitation of an individual with a cognitive  
          developmental disability.  (Penal Code  1001.20.)
           
          Existing law provides for possible diversion to a Regional  
          Center treatment program in lieu of jail time in misdemeanor  
          cases when the court suspects that a defendant may have a  
          cognitive developmental disability, and the defendant consents  
          to the diversion process and to his or her case being evaluated  
          for eligibility for regional center services, and waives his or  
          her right to a speedy trial, the court must order the  
          prosecutor, the probation department, and the regional center to  
          prepare specified reports. The regional center's report must  
          determine whether the defendant has a cognitive developmental  
          disability and a proposed diversion program, individually  
          tailored to the needs of the defendant, as specified. The  
          prosecutor must submit a report, as specified. If the prosecutor  
          recommends against diversion, the report must include a written  
          declaration explaining the reasons. The court determines whether  
          the defendant should be diverted. 

          Existing diversion requirements limit eligibility to individuals  
          charged with (or whose charges were reduced to) a misdemeanor,  
          who were already Regional Center clients, and who have not been  
          diverted in the past two years. 











          Page 3
          AB 438 (Beall)

          This bill expands the eligibility for diversion consideration to  
          anyone determined to have a specified cognitive developmental  
          disability who is charged with (or whose charges are reduced to)  
          a non-violent felony, regardless of whether the defendant has  
          ever been a Regional Center client, and regardless of whether  
          the defendant has been diverted in the past two years. This bill  
          substantially expands the number of defendants eligible to (or  
          for whom the court or district attorney can) request testing for  
          a qualifying cognitive developmental disability. The Regional  
          Centers would be statutorily obligated to complete these  
          additional assessments and mandatory reports, at a time when  
          Regional Centers have been cut by more than $334,000,000 General  
          Fund (in addition to a federal funding reduction) in the 2009-10  
          State Budget.

          The extent to which actual diversions will increase is unknown,  
          because this specific diversion is a court option rather than a  
          requirement. Moreover, the court has many options for diverting  
          defendants, both related to mental health (including state  
          mental hospitals) and related to specific crimes (such as drug  
          courts).  Diverting felons will save CDCR incarceration costs of  
          approximately $23,000 per inmate per year*, but that savings  
          will be offset by treatment received through the Regional  
          Centers. Those costs include, at a minimum: assessment and  
          intake, the creation of an individual program plan, lifetime  
          entitlement to services, and ongoing case management. It is  
          unclear the extent to which additional clinical and intake staff  
          may be needed to support an increase of assessments and/or  
          services.

          In some cases, Regional Center treatment will likely be more  
          expensive than incarceration. Regional Centers determine  
          appropriate services and placements for individuals with  
          cognitive developmental disabilities, based on their supervision  
          and treatment needs. This treatment can include supervised  
          residential placement in a Community Care Facility (CCF), or  
          Supportive Living services. It is likely that many individuals  
          charged with felonies will require more supervision and  
          treatment services than other people with cognitive disabilities  
          that may attend day programs or receive occasional services.  
          Moreover, the court is likely to seek a program with  
          supervision, since it is functionally "sentencing" the defendant  










          to that program. According to the Department of Developmental  
          Services (DDS), CCFs designed for individuals with cognitive  
          disabilities cost more than $5,000 per individual per month - an  
          annual cost of more than double incarceration. In 2007, the  
          average cost of Supported Living services was $49,972, and the  
          median cost was $26,488. Because the court would order the  
          defendant to be diverted, the state would be forced to pay these  
          costs.

          This bill requires DDS to create a task force to identify best  
          practices related to the accomplishment of all of the following:  
          (a) early identification and assessment of people with  
          developmental disabilities in the criminal and juvenile justice  
          process; (b) development of protocols and procedures for ongoing  
          communication and cooperation between regional centers and other  
          local agencies, including law enforcement and the courts; and  
          (c) training of jail and court personnel, including judges,  
          public defenders, district attorneys, and probation officers, on  
          issues related to people with developmental disabilities and  
          available community resources. The task force is also charged  
          with identifying systemic barriers to serving people with  
          developmental disabilities in community-based settings instead  
          of jails and prisons, including licensing barriers and 
          Page 4
          AB 438 (Beall)

          community resource and service needs, and making recommendations  
          for addressing identified systemic barriers.

          Considering the extent of the work assigned to this new task  
          force, including the development of protocols and training for  
          various local agencies, as well as annual reports to the  
          Legislature, it is likely that DSS will require 1 PY to staff  
          this task force. DDS has sustained reductions and furloughs, and  
          cannot absorb the workload associated with duties of this task  
          force. Furthermore, to the degree that training for local  
          agencies, model training curricula, procedures and protocols for  
          agencies' interaction, sample memoranda of understanding, and  
          recommendations for future action (all of which are provided for  
          in the provisions of this bill describing task force duties) are  
          adopted, there will be substantial cost pressure to implement  
          the recommendations.   





































          *Based on the Legislative Analyst's Office calculation for the  
          amount of savings yielded be inmate reduction. The often-cited  
          $49,000 annual cost per inmate is derived by dividing the CDCR  
          budget by the number of inmates. In releasing/diverting a small  
          number of inmates, the actual savings is not proportional  
          throughout the department's budget due to extensive fixed costs.