BILL NUMBER: SB 759	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  JUNE 2, 2015
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 5, 2015
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 14, 2015

INTRODUCED BY   Senators Anderson and Hancock
   (Coauthors: Senators Leno, Liu, and Mitchell)
   (Coauthor: Assembly Member Jones-Sawyer)

                        FEBRUARY 27, 2015

   An act to  add Article 7 (commencing with Section 2696) to
Chapter 4 of Title 1 of Part 3 of, and to repeal and add Section
2933.6 of,   repeal and add Section 2933.6 of  the
Penal Code, relating to prisoners.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 759, as amended, Anderson. Prisoners: Secured Housing Units.
   Existing law establishes the Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation to oversee the state prison system. Existing law
authorizes Security Housing Units for segregation of certain
prisoners for disciplinary or security purposes, and because of gang
membership or  association.  
   The bill would require the department, commencing July 1, 2016, to
collect specified data regarding inmates subject to a term in a
Security Housing Unit. The bill would require the Inspector General,
commencing January 1, 2018, and biennially thereafter, to use the
data to prepare reports for the Legislature on specified criteria
pertaining to inmates in a Security Housing Unit and a Psychiatric
Services Unit. 
    Existing   association. Existing law
requires a prisoner of the Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation to be awarded credit reductions from his or her term
of confinement of 6 months for every 6 months of continuous
confinement, as specified. Existing law provides for up to 6 weeks of
additional credit in a 12-month period for the successful completion
of certain rehabilitative programs, for certain inmates, as
specified. Existing law makes a person who is placed in a Security
Housing Unit, Psychiatric Services Unit, Behavioral Management Unit,
or an Administrative Segregation Unit for specified misconduct, or
upon validation as a prison gang member or associate, ineligible to
earn credits pursuant to these provisions.
   This bill would repeal those provisions  regarding
ineligibility to earn credits  and instead require the 
department   department, no later than July 1, 2017,
 to establish regulations to allow specified inmates placed in a
Security Housing Unit, Psychiatric Services Unit, Behavioral
Management Unit, or an Administrative Segregation Unit to earn
credits during the time he or she is in the Security Housing Unit,
Psychiatric Services Unit, Behavioral Management Unit, or the
Administrative Segregation Unit.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
   
  SECTION 1.    Article 7 (commencing with Section
2696) is added to Chapter 4 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code,
to read:

      Article 7.  Security Housing Unit Reports


   2696.  (a) Commencing July 1, 2016, the department shall collect
the following data:
   (1) Information relating to each offender who is going through, or
has gone through, the validation process for determining a security
threat group affiliate, including the following:
   (A) The offender's gender, age, mental health status, and race.
   (B) The outcome at every step of the validation process.
   (C) If the offender was validated, the date of validation.
   (D) If the offender was validated, the level of validation that
the offender was assigned, and the name of the security threat group
with which the offender was identified.
   (2) Information relating to all offenders being housed in the
Security Housing Unit or Psychiatric Services Unit, including the
following:
   (A) The offender's gender, age, mental health status, and race.
   (B) The date the offender was placed in the Security Housing Unit
or Psychiatric Services Unit and the date of release.
   (C) The reason the offender is serving a Security Housing Unit
term.
   (D) If the offender is serving an indeterminate Security Housing
Unit term, the progress the offender has made in the Step Down
Program, as defined in Section 3378.3 of Title 15 of the California
Code of Regulations.
   (E) For offenders in the Step Down Program, the time spent in each
step of the program.
   (F) The number of visits from persons other than staff that the
offender was provided while serving a term in the Security Housing
Unit or Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (G) The number of phone calls the offender was provided while
serving a term in the Security Housing Unit.
   (H) Whether the offender attempted to commit or committed suicide.

   (I) Any disciplinary action taken against the offender, and the
result of that action.
   (J) Whether the offender was paroled directly out of the Security
Housing Unit or the Psychiatric Services Unit into the community.
   (3) The number of administrative appeals filed by offenders in the
Security Housing Unit or Psychiatric Services Unit, the subject
matter of the appeals, and the outcome of the appeals.
   (b) Commencing January 1, 2018, and biennially thereafter, the
Office of the Inspector General shall use the data described in
subdivision (a) to prepare a report to the Legislature that includes,
but is not limited to, the following information:
   (1) The number of offenders investigated for security threat group
validation.
   (2) The number of cases in which the Office of Correctional Safety
recommended against validation and the outcome of those cases.
   (3) The number of cases in which the security threat group
committee decided not to validate the offender.
   (4) The number of offenders who were not initially placed in the
Security Housing Unit or Psychiatric Services Unit but were sent to
the Security Housing Unit or Psychiatric Services Unit within six
months of validation.
   (5) The number of offenders placed for an indeterminate Security
Housing Unit term or in the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (6) The number of offenders placed for a determinate Security
Housing Unit term or in the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (7) The average length of time offenders serving an indeterminate
Security Housing Unit term spent in the Security Housing Unit or the
Psychiatric Services Unit, or both.
   (8) The number of suicide attempts made by offenders in the
Security Housing Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (9) The number of suicides by offenders in the Security Housing
Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (10) The number of offenders in the Security Housing Unit and the
Psychiatric Services Unit who were paroled directly out of the
Security Housing Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit into the
community.
   (11) The number of disciplinary actions taken against offenders in
the Security Housing Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit, the
type of actions, and the outcomes of the disciplinary actions.
   (12) The number of visits by persons other than staff to offenders
in the Security Housing Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (13) The number of phone calls provided to offenders in the
Security Housing Unit and the Psychiatric Services Unit.
   (14) The number of administrative appeals filed by offenders in
the Security Housing Unit or the Psychiatric Services Unit, the
subject matter of the appeals, and the outcomes of those appeals.
   (c) The report required by subdivision (b) shall be submitted in
compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. 
   SEC. 2.  SECTION 1.   Section 2933.6 of
the Penal Code is repealed.
   SEC. 3.   SEC. 2.   Section 2933.6 is
added to the Penal Code, to read:
   2933.6.   (a)   The Department
of Corrections and Rehabilitation  shall  
shall, no later than July 1, 2017,  establish regulations to
allow specified inmates placed in a Security Housing Unit,
Psychiatric Services Unit, Behavioral Management Unit, or an
Administrative Segregation Unit to earn credits pursuant to Section
2933 or 2933.05, or credits as otherwise specified in regulation,
during the time he or she is in the Security Housing Unit,
Psychiatric Services Unit, Behavioral Management Unit, or the
Administrative Segregation Unit. The regulations may establish
separate classifications of serious disciplinary infractions to
determine the rate of restoration of credits, the time period
required before forfeited credits or a portion thereof may be
restored, and the percentage of forfeited credits that may be
restored for those time periods, not to exceed those percentages
authorized for general population inmates. The regulations shall
provide for credit earning for inmates who successfully complete
specific program performance objectives. 
   (b) No credits shall be awarded to those inmates pursuant to this
section until the department has adopted regulations pursuant to
subdivision (a).