BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 2430
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          ASSEMBLY THIRD READING
          AB 2430 (Chesbro)
          As Introduced  February 19, 2010
          Majority vote 

           HUMAN SERVICES      4-0         APPROPRIATIONS      12-5        
                    
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
          |Ayes:|Beall, Ammiano, Hall,     |Ayes:|Fuentes, Ammiano,         |
          |     |Swanson                   |     |Bradford,                 |
          |     |                          |     |Charles Calderon, Coto,   |
          |     |                          |     |Davis,                    |
          |     |                          |     |De Leon, Hall, Skinner,   |
          |     |                          |     |Solorio, Torlakson,       |
          |     |                          |     |Torrico                   |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |     |                          |Nays:|Conway, Harkey, Miller,   |
          |     |                          |     |Nielsen, Norby            |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
           SUMMARY  :  Requires that at least 20% of the board members of  
          organizations and agencies whose sole mission is to provide  
          services to persons who are blind or visually impaired and that  
          receive grants or contracts from the Department of  
          Rehabilitation (DOR) consist of persons who are blind or  
          visually impaired.

           EXISTING LAW  

          1)Establishes DOR with the goal of providing individuals with  
            disabilities with the tools necessary to make informed choices  
            and decisions, maximize employment and independence, and  
            achieve equality of opportunity and integration into all  
            aspects of society.  Welfare and Institutions Code (W&I Code)  
            Section 19000.

          2)Establishes the Legislature's intent that people with  
            disabilities and their advocates be full partners in  
            vocational rehabilitation and independent living programs and  
            be involved on a regular basis and in a meaningful way with  
            respect to policy development and implementation.  W&I Code  
            Section 19000. 









                                                                  AB 2430
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          3)Directs DOR to recommend to each organization or agency, the  
            purpose of which is to provide services to individuals who are  
            blind, and that receive grants or contracts from DOR, the  
            number of blind members of the board that is appropriate to  
            meet the needs of the community being served by that board.   
            W&I Code Section 19020.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations  
          Committee, unknown, likely absorbable workload to DOR to provide  
          oversight of the board service requirement established by this  
          bill.

           COMMENTS  :  

           Background  :  In 1992, the sponsor of this bill, the California  
          Council of the Blind (CCB), sponsored AB 550 (Farr), Chapter  
          1037, Statutes of 1992.  AB 550 added a provision to the Welfare  
          and Institutions Code requiring that DOR recommend that an  
          agency's board of directors have a minimum number of blind  
          individuals as a condition of receiving grants or contracts from  
          DOR.  

          In 1993, DOR established a policy requiring that at least 20% of  
          the board membership of organizations or agencies whose sole  
          mission is to provide services to persons who are blind or  
          visually impaired or that receive grants or contracts from DOR  
          be people who are blind or visually impaired.  Current DOR  
          policy no longer requires this minimum level of participation  
          but, instead, gives bonus points to agencies applying for grants  
          that meet the 20% threshold.  This bill would codify the former  
          DOR policy.

           Need for this bill  :  According to the author, "To best meet the  
          needs of blind and visually impaired consumers, it is essential  
          that an agency providing specialized services to such persons  
          have significant representation from that population on its  
          board of directors."  The author points out that the boards of  
          directors of Independent Living Centers (ILCs)--private  
          non-profit organizations that serve people with disabilities and  
          receive funding through DOR--are required by law to consist of a  
          majority of people with disabilities.  This bill, the author  
          says, "will extend the sound principle of community oversight  
          that has served [ILCs] well to agencies that specialize in  
          serving blind and visually impaired Californians."








                                                                  AB 2430
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          At least one provider organization has expressed concerns that  
          finding visually impaired board members can be challenging.   
          According to census data, as reported by the American Foundation  
          for the Blind, however, there are more than 660,000 Californians  
          age 18 and older who are blind or have serious vision  
          impairments.  It would seem reasonable, therefore, to require  
          organizations that receive DOR funds and whose sole purpose is  
          to provide services to people who are blind or visually impaired  
          to have at least 2 out of 10 members of their governing boards  
          be individuals who are blind or visually impaired.

           Prior bill  :  SB 1114 (Committee on Human Services) of  2006 also  
          would have required 20% board representation by blind or  
          visually impaired persons for organizations or agencies that  
          contract with or receive grants from DOR and whose sole purpose  
          is to provide services to individuals who are blind or visually  
          impaired.  SB 1114 was placed on the Assembly inactive file and  
          was not enacted.

           
          Analysis Prepared by  :    Eric Gelber / HUM. S. / (916) 319-2089 

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