BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                  SB 1022|
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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  SB 1022
          Author:   Steinberg (D)
          Amended:  5/22/07
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE  :  3-1, 4/10/07
          AYES:  Romero, Cedillo, Ridley-Thomas
          NOES:  Cogdill
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Margett

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  10-6, 5/31/07
          AYES:  Torlakson, Cedillo, Corbett, Florez, Kuehl, Oropeza,  
            Ridley-Thomas, Simitian, Steinberg, Yee
          NOES:  Cox, Aanestad, Ashburn, Dutton, Runner, Wyland
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Battin


           SUBJECT  :    Child abuse:  central index:  minors

           SOURCE :     Childrens Law Center of Los Angeles 
                      County Welfare Directors Association


           DIGEST  :    This bill requires the Department of Justice  
          (DOJ) to remove information relating to a person who's name  
          is listed in the Child Abuse Central Index as a suspect in  
          a child abuse or neglect investigation due to an incident  
          that occurred when the person was under 18 years of age if  
          the incident did not result in a delinquency adjudication  
          or criminal conviction, and he/she makes a notarized  
          written request to DOJ to have his/her name removed as a  
          suspect with respect to that incident, as specified.  This  
                                                           CONTINUED





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          bill, in addition, requires DOJ to notify the current  
          caregiver, the parents or legal guardian, the attorney, and  
          the guardian ad litem of a minor if the minor is the  
          suspected abuser.

           ANALYSIS  :    Current law establishes the Child Abuse and  
          Neglect Reporting Act (CANRA), which generally is intended  
          to protect children from abuse and neglect.  [Section 11164  
          of the Penal Code (PEN)]

          Current law requires DOJ to "maintain an index of all  
          reports of child abuse and severe neglect" submitted  
          pursuant to the mandatory reporting laws.  The index shall  
          be continually updated by DOJ and shall not contain any  
          reports that are determined to be unfounded.  [PEN Section  
          11170(a)(1)]

          Current law provides that DOJ "shall act only as a  
          repository of reports of suspected child abuse and severe  
          neglect to be maintained in the Child Abuse Central Index?  
          The submitting agencies are responsible for the accuracy,  
          completeness, and retention of the reports described in  
          this section.  The department shall be responsible for  
          ensuring that the Child Abuse Central Index accurately  
          reflects the report it receives from the submitting  
          agency."  [PEN Section 11170(a)(2)]

          Current law applies the following definitions for purposes  
          of CANRA and the Child Abuse Central Index (CACI):

          1. "Unfounded report" means a report that is determined by  
             the investigator who conducted the investigation to be  
             false, to be inherently improbable, to involve an  
             accidental injury, or not to constitute child abuse or  
             neglect, as defined in PEN Section 11165.6.

          2. "Substantiated report" means a report that is determined  
             by the investigator who conducted the investigation to  
             constitute child abuse or neglect, as defined in PEN  
             Section 11165.6, based upon evidence that makes it more  
             likely than not that child abuse or neglect, as defined,  
             occurred.

          3. "Inconclusive report" means a report that is determined  







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             by the investigator who conducted the investigation not  
             to be unfounded, but the findings are inconclusive and  
             there is insufficient evidence to determine whether  
             child abuse or neglect, as defined in PEN Section  
             11165.6, has occurred.  [PEN Section 11165.12]

          Current law requires specified law enforcement agencies to  
          forward to DOJ a report in writing of every case it  
          investigates of known or suspected child abuse or severe  
          neglect which is determined not to be unfounded, as  
          specified.  An agency shall not forward a report to DOJ  
          unless it has conducted an active investigation and  
          determined that the report is not unfounded.  If a report  
          has previously been filed which subsequently proves to be  
          unfounded, DOJ shall be notified in writing of that fact  
          and shall not retain the report.  [PEN Section 11169(a)]

          Current law requires that information from an inconclusive  
          or unsubstantiated report be deleted from CACI after 10  
          years if no subsequent report concerning the same suspected  
          child abuser is received within that time period.  [PEN  
          11170(a)(3)]

          Current law provides that "(i)f a person is listed in the  
          Child Abuse Central Index only as a victim of child abuse  
          or neglect, and that person is 18 years of age or older,  
          that person may have his or her name removed from the index  
          by making a written request to the Department of Justice.   
          The request shall be notarized and include the person's  
          name, address, social security number, and date of birth."   
          [PEN Section 11170(f)]

          This bill provides, in addition, that if "a person is  
          listed in the Child Abuse Central Index as a suspect in a  
          child abuse or neglect investigation due to an incident  
          that occurred when the person was under the age of 18 years  
          , and the incident did not result in a delinquency  
          adjudication or criminal conviction, that person may make a  
          written request to DOJ to have his/her name removed from  
          the index as a suspect with respect to that incident.  The  
          request shall be notarized and include the person's name,  
          address, social security number, and date of birth.  Upon  
          receipt of the request, DOJ shall inquire of the submitting  
          agency whether the incident resulted in a delinquency  







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          adjudication or criminal conviction.  Unless the submitting  
          agency responds to DOJ in the affirmative within 30 days,  
          DOJ shall remove the person's name from the index as the  
          person suspected in that incident.

          If a person is listed in the index as a suspect with  
          respect to more than one reported incident, the process set  
          forth above shall be followed with respect to each incident  
          for which the person wishes to have his/her name removed  
          from the index.
                      
          Current law requires specified law enforcement agencies who  
          forward a report in writing to DOJ to also notify in  
          writing the known or suspected child abuser that he/she has  
          been reported to the CACI.  [PEN Section 11169(b)]

          This bill provides that, if the known or suspected child  
          abuser is a minor, the agency shall notify the minor's  
          current caregiver, the minor's parents or legal guardian,  
          the minor's attorney, and the minor's guardian ad litem, if  
          any.   

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  No

          According to the Senate Appropriations Committee:

                          Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

             Major Provisions                2007-08     2008-09     
             2009-10               Fund  

            CACI review         $38       $75       $75        
            General

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  5/31/07)

          Children's Law Center of Los Angeles (co-source)
          County Welfare Director's Association (co-source)
          American Federation of State, County and Municipal  
          Employees, AFL-CIO
          Conference of Delegates of California Bar Association
          Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety








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           OPPOSITION  :    (Verified  5/31/07)

          California District Attorneys Association

           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    The author has provided the  
          following statement concerning the need for this bill:

            "Minors are sometimes listed on the statewide Child Abuse  
            Central Index ('CACI') as perpetrators of 'sexual abuse,'  
            due to a report of sexual behavior between the child and  
            another child.  Abused and neglected children in foster  
            care are especially likely to end up being listed as  
            perpetrators on the CACI.  Often the listing of the child  
            occurs without any effective notice to the child, the  
            parents or caregivers, or the child's attorney if the  
            child has one.  Children are listed on the CACI even in  
            cases where no criminal or delinquency charges are filed,  
            solely on the basis of an investigation concluding that  
            the allegation of 'sexual abuse' is either substantiated  
            or inconclusive.  In light of the tremendous implications  
            a CACI listing can have for the child's future, greater  
            protections are needed."


          RJG:mw  6/1/07   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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