BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 2192
                                                                  Page  1

          CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS
          AB 2192 (Bass)
          As Amended August 22, 2006
          Majority vote
           
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          |ASSEMBLY:  |47-32|(May 31, 2006)  |SENATE: |22-12|(August 30,    |
          |           |     |                |        |     |2006)          |
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           Original Committee Reference:    HUM. S.  

           SUMMARY  :  Permits persons convicted of felony crimes involving use  
          or possession of drugs to qualify for California Work Opportunity  
          and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs) under specified  
          circumstances.  

           The Senate amendments  :

          1)Add as a basis of eligibility successful completion of a clean  
            drug test, and quarterly submission to such a test after  
            establishment of eligibility.

          2)End the drug testing requirement after successful completion of  
            a government-recognized drug treatment program.

          3)Eliminate placement on a waiting list for a drug treatment  
            program as a basis of eligibility.

          4)Eliminate vendor payments as an option for families with a  
            member disqualified by the drug felon rule, requiring that  
            voucher payments be made to the remaining eligible family  
            members.

          5)Require that families which include persons whose eligibility is  
            based upon participation or enrollment in a drug treatment  
            program be paid through vouchers for at least rent and utilities  
            until the individual completes a drug treatment program.  
           
          AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY  , this bill:

          1)Opted California out of the lifetime prohibition on receipt of  
            benefits funded by the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families  
            (TANF) block grant and establishes CalWORKs eligibility for  
            otherwise eligible persons convicted of a drug-related felony  
            subject to specified conditions.







                                                                  AB 2192
                                                                  Page  2


          2)Required that to be eligible for CalWORKs, a person convicted of  
            a drug-related felony related to possession or use must provide  
            proof of one of the following:

             a)   Completion, participation in, enrollment in or placement  
               on a waiting list for a government-recognized drug treatment  
               program; or,

             b)   Other evidence that the illegal use of controlled  
               substances has ceased, pursuant to regulations adopted by the  
               State Department of Social Services.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Senate Appropriations Committee  
          analysis, added CalWORKs caseload costs estimated at $1.3 million  
          in 2006-07 and $1.4 million in 2007-08, but potentially offsetting  
          state General Fund savings due to a lower number of parole returns  
          and re-arrests estimated at $700,000 annually.

           COMMENTS  :  This bill partially opts California out of the lifetime  
          ban on CalWORKs benefits for persons convicted of drug-related  
          felonies.  This is similar to AB 1796 (Leno), Chapter 932,  
          Statutes of 2004, which opts out of the ban as applied to food  
          stamps, and to last year's AB 855 (Bass), which passed the  
          Legislature and was vetoed by the Governor.  

          The lifetime ban on food stamps and TANF-funded benefits for  
          persons with felony drug convictions was included in the 1996  
          federal welfare reform bill, as Section 115 of the Personal  
          Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act.  

          A person may be disqualified even if they are in a treatment  
          program and need a healthy diet to succeed, or if the conviction  
          occurred long before the time they needed assistance, or if they  
          have no current substance problem.  Additionally, the rule  
          disparately affects persons of color.  According to the Sentencing  
          Project, 46% of women convicted of felony drug offenses are  
          African-American or Latina.  

          The federal provision gives states the ability to opt out of the  
          disqualification.  California declined to include any opt-out  
          provision when it implemented welfare reform in 1997.  According  
          to a 2005 report of the Sentencing Project, 25 states plus the  
          District of Columbia have entirely or partially opted out of the  
          TANF ban.








                                                                  AB 2192
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          The Department of Social Services (DSS) estimates that 373 persons  
          are denied CalWORKs each month because of the drug felon  
          prohibition.

          The 2006-07 Budget appropriates $48.9 million in CalWORKs funds  
          expressly to be used for substance abuse services.  The drug felon  
          ban prevents a person from receiving CalWORKs substance treatment  
          services, or any other welfare-to-work services, she or he may  
          need to become employable.

          The rationale supporting the drug felon ban derives in part from a  
          concern that persons with felony drug convictions are likely to  
          misuse public benefits to support a substance abuse habit.  The  
          ban, however, requires no such showing and makes no allowances for  
          those who present no risk.  

          Senate amendments permit a person to qualify if he or she  
          successfully completes a drug test and submits to quarterly  
          testing after eligibility is established.  They also delete  
          placement on a waiting list for a treatment program as a basis of  
          eligibility.

          Senate amendments also require payment by non-cash vouchers to  
          families which include persons whose basis of eligibility is  
          participation or enrollment in a treatment program.  Current law  
          currently requires vouchers (or vendor payments) to the eligible  
          family members when a person is ineligible under the drug felon  
          rule.  State law also allows counties to provide "restricted  
          payments" on behalf of a recipient to the provider of shelter and  
          utilities if the "county determines that the recipient has  
          demonstrated such an inability to manage funds that payments to  
          the [parent or relative caretaker] have not been or are not  
          currently used in the best interest of the child."  The voucher  
          payment provisions of the drug felon rule do not require a  
          demonstration that a parent or guardian is unable to manage funds.

           
          Analysis Prepared by  :    Casey McKeever / HUM. S. / (916) 319-2089  


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