BILL ANALYSIS
Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
Senator Kevin Murray, Chairman
2192 (Bass)
Hearing Date: 8/7/2006 Amended: 8/7/2006
Consultant: John Miller Policy Vote: Human Svcs 3 - 2
_________________________________________________________________
____
BILL SUMMARY: AB 2192 would permit parents who have been
convicted of the use or possession of drugs and who meet certain
criteria, to qualify for CalWORKS benefits.
_________________________________________________________________
____
Fiscal Impact (in thousands)
Major Provisions 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 Fund
CalWORKS benefits $1,266 $1,423 $ 811 GF/FF
Potential, off-setting savings of approx. $700,000 annually due
to reduced recidivism.
_________________________________________________________________
____
STAFF COMMENTS: This bill meets the criteria for referral to
Suspense.
Existing federal law prohibits cash assistance for anyone
convicted of a felony related to illegal drugs unless a state
formally acts to opt out in whole or in part of this
prohibition. This bill would exempt individuals convicted of
possession of drugs (convictions for sale are excluded) if the
individuals prove completion, participation or enrollment in a
government recognized drug treatment program. Approximately 750
adults are currently denied CalWORKS benefits due to a history
of drug use. If one half of these adults become eligible under
this legislation the costs would equal roughly $1.2 million per
year. Twelve states have acted to opt entirely out of the
federal ban and another eight states have conditionally
permitted beneficiaries in treatment to participate in a fashion
similar to this bill.
Proponents support the bill because it increases the likelihood
that some drug felons will remain drug free with the support of
CalWORKS and resume stable life and avoid return to crime and
prison. Research conducted by the Little Hoover Commission did
find lower parole returns when women had support, and to the
extent that additional income helped stabilize families, reduced
foster care caseload.
AB 2192 prohibits CalWORKS eligibility for anyone convicted of
sales or trafficking in drugs and requires that applicants
either enroll, complete or be placed in a recognized drug
treatment program, successfully pass a test for drugs and be
subject to quarterly testing, or produce other acceptable
evidence, as determined by the state, that they are drug free.
This bill is similar to AB 855 (Bass, 2005) which was vetoed by
the Governor, who felt the bill did not provide adequate
assurances beneficiaries abstained from drug use. The author
believes the treatment and testing provisions provide proof of
compliance.