BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  SB 1258
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          SENATE THIRD READING
          SB 1258 (Wolk and Correa)
          As Amended  June 28, 2012
          Majority vote 

           SENATE VOTE  :38-0  
           
           VETERANS AFFAIRS    9-0         APPROPRIATIONS      17-0        
           
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          |Ayes:|Cook, Pan, Atkins, Block, |Ayes:|Fuentes, Harkey,          |
          |     |Gorell, Nielsen, V.       |     |Blumenfield, Bradford,    |
          |     |Manuel P�rez, Williams,   |     |Charles Calderon, Campos, |
          |     |Yamada                    |     |Davis, Donnelly, Gatto,   |
          |     |                          |     |Hall, Hill, Lara,         |
          |     |                          |     |Mitchell, Nielsen, Norby, |
          |     |                          |     |Solorio, Wagner           |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |     |                          |     |                          |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
           SUMMARY  :  This bill requires the California Department of 
          Veterans Affairs (CDVA) to establish a system for monitoring 
          outcomes for veterans including employment and 
          employment-related earnings, incidence of suicide, higher 
          education, and involvement with the child welfare system and 
          with the criminal justice system.  Specifically,  this bill  :   

          1)Requires CDVA to develop outcome and related indicators for 
            veterans for the purpose of assessing the status of veterans 
            in California, for monitoring the quality of programs intended 
            to serve those veterans, and to guide decisionmaking on how to 
            improve those services.

          2)Specifies that indicators shall reflect the following issues, 
            including, but not limited to, employment and 
            employment-related information such as earnings, incidence of 
            suicide, higher education including access to higher 
            education, involvement with the child welfare system, and 
            involvement with the criminal justice system.

          3)Authorizes the CDVA to receive any data, the access to which 
            is not restricted by any state or federal law, that is 
            necessary to develop outcome and related indicators as 
            specified, including, but not limited to, data held by other 








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            state agencies or departments.

          4)Directs CDVA to prescribe a manner in which to ensure the 
            confidentiality of information in the possession of the 
            department received pursuant to this section, that is equal 
            to, or greater than, the protections in place for data 
            received by other state agencies or departments.

          5)Permits CDVA to establish one or more advisory bodies to guide 
            and inform the selection of outcome and related indicators and 
            the strategy for developing and reporting those indicators, as 
            determined by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.  An existing 
            state entity that involves diverse representation of state and 
            local veterans, including, but not limited to, the California 
            Interagency Council on Veterans, may act as an advisory body 
            for purposes of this section.

          6)Requires the CDVA to report to the Senate and Assembly 
            Veterans Affairs Committees, on or before March 1, 2015, all 
            of the outcome and related indicators developed by the 
            department.  The report shall also include recommendations on 
            ways to establish a system for monitoring those indicators on 
            a continual basis, including additional staffing or technology 
            that might be necessary, as well as any regulatory or fiscal 
            barriers that may hinder future progress on the development of 
            a monitoring system.

          7)Specifies that the report required to be submitted shall be 
            submitted in compliance with Government Code Section 9795.

          8)Specifies that the requirement for submitting a report is 
            inoperative on March 1, 2019, pursuant to Government Code 
            Section 10231.5.

           EXISTING LAW  :  In August 2011, Governor Brown issued Executive 
          Order B-9-11 which created the California Interagency Council on 
          Veterans and ordered that the Secretaries of the Labor and 
          Workforce Development Agency, California Volunteers, the 
          Business Transportation and Housing Agency, the Health and Human 
          Services Agency, and the Department of Corrections and 
          Rehabilitation, the Adjutant General of the Military Department, 
          and the Directors of the Employment Development Department, the 
          Department of Consumer Affairs, the Department of 
          Rehabilitation, and the Department of Housing and Community 








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          Development are appointed as members of the California 
          Interagency Council on Veterans.  The purpose of the Council is 
          to identify and prioritize the needs of California's veterans, 
          and to coordinate the activities at all levels of government in 
          addressing those needs.  

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations 
          Committee, minor general fund costs to CDVA to identify, 
          develop, and report on outcome and related veteran status and 
          outcome indicators over the next two years.  Assuming the 
          equivalent of one-half of a mid-range personnel-year for two 
          years, the annual cost would likely be in the range of $45,000.

          Subsequent to the actual requirements of this bill, the 
          development of an ongoing system to monitor developed indicators 
          would likely be significant, in the hundreds of thousands of 
          dollars. 

           COMMENTS  :  The ultimate goal of this bill is to create a system 
          to assess veterans' status, what happens to them, and what 
          benefits they obtain so that an accurate picture of how well 
          their needs are being met can be compiled, thereby driving 
          future decision making with regard to veterans.  However, what 
          the bill requires is an interim step, a report on which "outcome 
          indicators" are important, how to establish a system to track 
          those outcome indicators, and what the barriers might be to 
          establishing such a system.  Assessing the status of veterans, 
          tracking the success of programs for veterans, and measuring the 
          extent to which veterans' needs are being met seems aligned with 
          existing public policy and in particular with the recent 
          establishment of the Interagency Council on Veterans.


           Analysis Prepared by  :    John Spangler / V. A. / (916) 319-3550


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