BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                    AB 2624


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          Date of Hearing:  April 5, 2016
          Chief Counsel:     Gregory Pagan


                         ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SAFETY


                       Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr., Chair





          AB  
                       2624 (Cooper) - As Amended  March 17, 2016




          SUMMARY:  Requires the Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) in  
          consultation with the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and  
          Training (POST) to conduct a study of community policing and  
          engagement programs, efforts, strategies, and policies in the  
          state, and to report its findings to the Legislature.    
          Specifically, this bill:  

          1)Requires The LAO in consultation with POST to conduct a study  
            to determine the effectiveness of community policing and  
            engagement programs, efforts, strategies, and policies in the  
            state, including, but not limited to, police activities  
            leagues, neighborhood watch programs, and integrated policing.

          2)Requires the LAO and POST to report its findings with regard  
            to the study to the Legislature by December 31, 2018.

          3)States that the report must comply with the requirements for  
            submission of reports by state or local agencies.

          EXISTING LAW:  

          1)Establishes POST.  (Pen. Code, § 13500.)









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          2)Empowers POST to develop and implement programs to increase  
            the effectiveness of law enforcement.  (Pen. Code, §13503.)



          3)Authorizes POST, for the purpose of raising the level of  
            competence of local law enforcement officers, to adopt rules  
            establishing minimum standards related to physical, mental and  
            moral fitness and training that shall govern the recruitment  
            of any peace officers in California.  (Pen. Code, § 13510,  
            subd. (a).)



          4)Requires POST to conduct research concerning job-related  
            educational standards and job-related selection standards to  
            include vision, hearing, physical ability, and emotional  
            stability and adopt standards supported by this research.   
            (Pen. Code, § 13510, subd. (b).)



          5)Requires POST to establish a certification program for peace  
            officers, which shall be considered professional certificates.  
             (Pen. Code, § 13510.1, subd. (a).)



          6)Requires POST to undertake a feasibility study when a person  
            or persons desire peace-officer status, or a person or persons  
            desire a change in peace-officer designation or status.  (Pen.  
            Code, § 13540.)

          7)Requires POST to develop regulations and professional  
            standards for the operation of law enforcement agencies.   
            (Pen. Code, § 13551.)

          FISCAL EFFECT:  Unknown

          COMMENTS:  

          1)Author's Statement:  According to the author, "AB 1289 helps  








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            California take inventory of community policing efforts,  
            programs, policies and best practices statewide in order to  
            reevaluate, recommit, and renew a focus on sustaining and  
            enhancing trusting community-police relationships with all  
            segments of the community."

          2)Community Policing:  "Community policing is, in essence, a  
            collaboration between the police and the community that  
            identifies and solves community problems. With the police no  
            longer the sole guardians of law and order, all members of the  
            community become active allies in the effort to enhance the  
            safety and quality of neighborhoods.  Community policing has  
            far-reaching implications.  The expanded outlook on crime  
            control and prevention, the new emphasis on making community  
            members active participants in the process of problem solving,  
            and the patrol officers' pivotal role in community policing  
            require profound changes within the police organization. The  
            neighborhood patrol officer, backed by the police  
            organization, helps community members mobilize support and  
            resources to solve problems and enhance their quality of life.  
             Community members voice their concerns, contribute advice,  
            and take action to address these concerns. Creating a  
            constructive partnership will require the energy, creativity,  
            understanding, and patience of all involved."  (See U.S.  
            Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance,  
            Understanding Community Policing: A Framework for Action, p.  
            vii.)

          A recent report from the United States Conference of Mayors  
            notes, "Recent events have demonstrated that, despite  
            instituting community policing in many departments and  
            realizing substantial reductions in the crime rate in many  
            cities, mistrust between the police and the communities they  
            serve and protect continues to be a challenge that must be  
            addressed."  (See Strengthening Police Community Relations in  
            America's Cities, Jan. 22, 2015,  
            <  http://www.usmayors.org/83rdWinterMeeting/media/012215-report- 
            policing.pdf  >.) 

          There are many examples of community policing taking place in  
            California.  This bill requires POST to conduct a study to  
            determine the effectiveness of community policing and  








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            engagement programs, efforts, strategies, and policies in the  
            state.

          3)POST:  POST was created by the legislature in 1959 to set  
            minimum selection and training standards for California law  
            enforcement.  (Pen. Code, § 13500, subd. (a).)  Their mandate  
            includes establishing minimum standards for training of peace  
            officers in California.  (Pen. Code, § 13510, subd. (a).)  As  
            of 1989, all peace officers in California are required to  
            complete an introductory course of training prescribed by  
            POST, and demonstrate completion of that course by passing an  
            examination.  (Pen. Code, § 832, subd. (a).)  POST is also  
            tasked with developing and implementing programs to increase  
            the effectiveness of law enforcement.  (Pen. Code, § 13503,  
            subd. (e).) 


          4)Prior Legislation:  AB 1289 (Cooper) of the 2015 Legislative  
            Session was similar to this bill in that it required the LAO  
            to conduct a study on community policing programs.  AB 1289  
            was substantially amended in the Senate to become a  
            transportation related bill.

          REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION:

          Support

          American Civil Liberties Union

          Opposition

          None
            
          Analysis Prepared  
          by:              Gregory Pagan / PUB. S. / (916) 319-3744















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