BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                             


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|SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                   SB 323|
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                       THIRD READING
                              

Bill No:  SB 323
Author:   Hayden (D)
Amended:  4/22/99
Vote:     21

  
  SENATE PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE :   5-0, 4/13/99
AYES:  Vasconcellos, Burton, Johnston, Polanco, Rainey
NOT VOTING:  McPherson

  SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :   10-3, 6/8/99
AYES:  Johnston, Alpert, Bowen, Burton, Escutia, Karnette,  
  Leslie, McPherson, Perata, Vasconcellos
NOES:  Johnson, Kelley, Mountjoy
 

  SUBJECT  :    Peace Process Task Force, Commission on Prison  
Peace 
            and Peace Process coordinator

 SOURCE  :     Author

 
  DIGEST  :    This bill creates the Commission on Prison Peace  
as well as the Peace Process Coordinator to address and  
identify the causes of violence in state prisons and  
recommends preventive solutions.  The bill also establishes  
the Peace Process Task Force to make findings and  
recommendations regarding gang violence prevention and to  
promote a peace process.

  ANALYSIS  :    Existing law defines a criminal street gang as  
any ongoing organization, association, or group of three or  
more persons, whether formal or informal, having as one its  
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primary activities the commission of one or more specified  
criminal acts, having a common name or common identifying  
sign or symbol, and whose members individually or  
collectively engage in or have engaged in a pattern of  
criminal gang activity.  (Penal Code sec. 186.22(f))

Existing law provides for various penalties for gang  
activities, such as the active participation in a criminal  
street gang, or the coercion or solicitation of persons  
into a criminal street gang. (Penal Code secs. 186.22 and  
186.26)

Under current law, various task forces exist.  For example,  
each county is authorized and encouraged to create a county  
task force on violent crimes against women, which must  
develop a countywide policy on violent crimes against  
women.  (Penal Code sec. 14140 et seq.)

Existing law directs the California Department of Justice  
to develop and implement the California Gang, Crime and  
Violence Prevention Partnership Program.  This program was  
enacted in 1997 for the purpose of reducing gangs, criminal  
activity and youth violence in communities with high  
incidences of gang violence.  This program appropriates  
funds to community-based organizations for prevention and  
intervention activities for at-risk youth.  (Penal Code  
sec. 13825.2)

Existing law establishes the Gang Violence Suppression  
Program in the Office of Criminal Justice Planning (OCJP)  
to provide financial and technical assistance for district  
attorneys' offices, law enforcement agencies, county  
probation departments and other organizations that are  
primarily engaged in the suppression of gang violence.   
(Penal Code sec. 13826 et seq.)

Under existing law, the Director of the Department of  
Corrections is vested with the supervision, management and  
control of the State prisons and is responsible for the  
care, custody, treatment, training, discipline and  
employment of a person confined in those prisons.  The  
Director may prescribe rules and regulations for the  
administration of the prisons.  (Penal Code Secs. 5054 and  
5058)







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This bill creates the Peace Process Task Force, as a joint  
project of state government, educational institutions and  
private foundations 

The Peace Process Task Force shall consist of the  
twenty-six members as follows:

1.Five members would be appointed by the Senate Committee  
  on Rules:  three of whom shall have personal experience  
  with gang issues; one of whom shall have professional  
  experience with economic development and job creation in  
  communities with significant gang and violence problems;  
  one member shall have academic or public policy  
  experience with issues related to gangs and violence.

2.Five members would be appointed by the Speaker of the  
  Assembly:  three of whom shall have personal experience  
  with gang issues; one of whom shall have professional  
  experience with economic development and job creation in  
  communities with significant gang and violence problems;  
  one member shall have academic or public policy  
  experience with issues related to gangs and violence.

3.Nine members would be appointed by the Governor:  one  
  member shall be a sheriff; one member shall be a chief of  
  police; two members shall be law enforcement officers who  
  have extensive experience with gang-related violence; one  
  member shall be a probation officer; one member shall be  
  a member of the California Business Roundtable; one  
  member shall be a member of the chamber of commerce; one  
  member shall be a correctional administrator; one member  
  shall be a private citizen.

4.Seven members would be appointed by the chair, in  
  consultation with the Office of Attorney General.  These  
  members shall include persons whose background include  
  former gang membership, incarceration, personal efforts  
  to create gang truces, and a commitment to a peaceful,  
  legal, and democratic means of resolving the problem of  
  inner-city violence.  When making these appointments the  
  chair shall ensure that the northern, central, and  
  southern regions of California are adequately represented  
  on the task force.







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The membership of the task force would reflect the ethnic  
and geographic complexity of the gang problem in this  
state.  The appointments of the members would have to be  
made on or before February 15, 2000

The Governor shall select a chair from among the members of  
the task force.  This individual would have to be confirmed  
by the Senate.  The chair is responsible for the following  
duties:

1.Calling and chairing meetings.

2.Publicly representing the task force when necessary.

3.Leading an inclusive process.

4.Encouraging the maximum involvement of all task force  
  members.

5.Encouraging support and partnerships with the private  
  sector and other institutions.

The task force may select up to three vice chairs, select  
officers, and establish committees among its members.   
Members of the task force would receive no compensation,  
however, they would be reimbursed for actual expenses.

The Task Force would be required to do all of the  
following:

1.Hold at least four public hearings, with at least two in  
  communities most heavily marked by urban violence.  The  
  first of these hearings would need to be held no later  
  than April 15, 2000.

2.Hold an additional public hearing in a prison setting or  
  in location where inmate participation or dialogue is  
  made possible.

3.Include those who created gang truces directly in the  
  process of defining and recommending alternatives that  
  will lessen or prevent violence in the inner city.








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4.Create a common ground of discussion among public  
  officials, law enforcement, and those individuals  
  attempting to transform their lives from violence to  
  nonviolent empowerment.

5.Identify the local problems and needs of each specific  
  community as they relate to gangs, violence and crime.

6.Identify strategies related to gang truces, job creation  
  and other social services to address problems related to  
  local gang violence and crime.

7.Assess and recommend possible ways of breaking the cycle  
  of gang violence through early childhood programs,  
  remedial education and training, inner-city jobs, drug  
  treatment, and other violence prevention strategies.

8.Provide assistance to local communities suffering from  
  gang violence.

9.Prepare a comprehensive report, which shall be presented  
  to the Senate and Assembly Public Safety Committees and  
  the Governor by January 1, 2001, and on January 1st of  
  the following year concerning the formulation of  
  comprehensive public policy that identifies state and  
  local strategies for reducing gang-related crime and  
  violence.

The Office of the Attorney General shall, and the Senate  
Office of Research may, make staff resources available to  
the task force for the purpose of providing research,  
policy and technical assistance.  Other public and private  
institutions are encouraged to offer staff and other  
in-kind resources.

The bill provides that no more than $200,000 shall be spent  
over two years on expenditures for the four hearings,  
publications, staffing and administrative expenses required  
by the task force.

The above provisions would sunset on January 1, 2002.

This bill establishes in the Office of Attorney General,  
the Office of Peace Process Coordinator with specified  







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duties.  The Peace Process Coordinator would be appointed  
by the Governor.  The Peace Process Coordinator shall have  
both professional experience in community-based violence  
prevention programs and juvenile justice programs, and a  
personal background in communities where gang violence is  
prevalent.  The Coordinator would be appointed by the  
Governor and confirmed by the Senate.  

  The Peace Process Coordinator would be required to do all  
of the following:

1.Serve as staff director to the Peace Process Task Force  
  and the Commission on Prison Peace.

2.Identify areas of the state where gang violence has been  
  significantly reduced, meet with local violence  
  prevention groups and interested parties, including law  
  enforcement, and evaluate any lessons for state policy.

3.Visit areas of the state where gang violence seems  
  endemic and ongoing, meet with local prevention groups,  
  and evaluate and make recommendations regarding measures  
  that might result in the lessening of violence.

4.Convene public workshops that bring together various  
  interested parties, including the California Gang, Crime,  
  and Violence Prevention Partnership Program, for the  
  purpose of achieving better communications, conflict  
  resolution, and understanding of identifiable barriers to  
  violence prevention.

5.Seek interagency cooperative agreements of memoranda of  
  understanding with the Department of Justice, the  
  Employment Development, the Trade and Commerce Agency,  
  and any other state agencies to help maximize  
  institutional resources focused on violence prevention.

The Peace Process Coordinator provisions of this bill would  
sunset on January 1, 2002.

This bill creates the Commission on Prison Peace to  
undertake a public review of innovative approaches to  
reduce the causes of violence and increase the conditions  
of peace and safety in the California correctional system.   







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The Commission on Prison Peace shall consist of a  
commission chair and seventeen additional members as  
follows:

1.  The chair and eight additional members would be  
  appointed by the Governor upon subsequent approval of the  
  Senate.  The eight appointees would have experience and  
  expertise in corrections or law enforcement, and would  
  include:

   A.   A member of the Department of Corrections  
     administrative staff.

   B.   A Department of Corrections correctional officer.

   C.   A representative of the California Correctional  
     Peace Officers Association.

2.  Four members would be appointed by the Speaker of the  
  Assembly.

3.  Four members would be appointed by the Senate Committee  
  on Rules.

4.  The Attorney General or a designee.

The legislative appointees shall be academic, religious or  
community leaders with demonstrated records of working to  
lessen gang violence or prison violence.

The Commission on Prison Peace would be required to do all  
of the following:

1.Identify the causes of violence and recommend innovative  
  approaches to prevent them and increase the conditions of  
  peace and safety in California's correctional system.

2.Hold public hearings and seek the testimony of  
  correctional officers, prison inmates, former inmates,  
  policy experts, academic specialists, and community  
  leaders.  At least one of the public hearings is to be  
  held in a prison setting where inmate participation and  







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  dialogue is made possible.

3.Report its preliminary findings no later than September  
  1, 2000 and its final report no later than December 31,  
  2000 to the Governor and the Legislature.

The Commission shall initially meet upon the call of the  
chair and shall adopt rules governing its proceedings.  The  
Commission shall operate by consensus or, failing  
consensus, shall adopt procedures for noting majority and  
minority viewpoints.

This bill would remain in effect until January 1, 2002,  
unless extended by a subsequent statute.

  Prior legislation  :

SB 547 (Watson) passed the Senate 22-10, 9/5/97 and was  
vetoed by the Governor.  Senate Floor vote:

AYES:  Alpert, Brulte, Calderon, Costa, Greene, Hayden,  
Hughes, Karnette,
  Kopp, Lockyer, McPherson, O'Connell, Peace, Polanco,  
Rainey, Rosenthal,
  Schiff, Sher, Solis, Thompson, Vasconcellos, Watson
NOES:  Hayes, Hurtt Johnson, Kelley, Knight, Leslie, Lewis,  
Monteith, 
  Mountjoy, Wright
NOT VOTING:  Ayala, Burton, Craven, Dills, Johannessen,  
Johnston, Lee,
  Maddy

SB 980 (Hayden) passed the Senate Floor 25-8, 9/11/97 and  
was vetoed by the Governor.  Senate Floor vote:

AYES:  Alpert, Ayala, Burton, Calderon, Costa, Hayden,  
Haynes, Hughes, 
  Johnston, Karnette, Kelley, Kopp, Leslie, Lewis, Lockyer,  
Maddy, 
  O'Connell, Peace, Polanco, Rainey, Rosenthal, Sher,  
Solis, Thompson, 
  Watson
NOES:  Brulte, Hurtt, Johannessen, Johnson, Knight,  
Monteith, Mountjoy, 







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  Wright
NOT VOTING:  Craven, Dills, Greene, Lee, McPherson, Schiff,
  Vasconcellos

SB 980 was an earnest effort to establish a dialogue  
directed toward bringing peace to neighborhoods suffering  
from gangs in conflict.

But the communication and trust that are the essential  
goals of this bill are best achieved when voluntarily  
initiated between parties who start with some knowledge of  
one another, and when conducted privately out of the glare  
of the public spotlight.  Public negotiations between  
strangers in the high profile setting that will be  
inescapably created by a process of statutory appointments  
by political officeholders is instead all but guaranteed to  
produce rhetoric and advocacy rather than the desired trust  
and candor.

With the best of intentions, the proposed process presents  
a substantially greater opportunity for raising false  
expectations and for highly publicized failure than for  
achieving its laudable goals.  In fact, it presents a  
probability of being counter-productive and creating  
cynicism and mistrust.

To minimize the inherently high risks that attend any such  
effort to achieve a really useful dialogue, the goals of  
this bill will be far better undertaken by a less formal,  
less political, less contrived and certainly a less public  
process.

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

                         Fiscal Impact (in thousands)
  
Major Provisions                       1999-2000         2000-01       2001-02      
  Fund  

Task Force            $  100              $ 50            $ 50              
General
Coordinator/CPP                   $  250                    Unknown             
     General







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  SUPPORT  :   (Verified  6/9/99)

California Child, Youth and Family Coalition
Trauma Foundation
MADDADS
Attorney General
Jobs for the Future
San Diego Urban League
Communities in Schools

  ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :   According to the author:

Over 55 years ago, a Los Angeles Police Department memo on  
LA gangs proposed to "take them out of circulation until  
they realize that the authorities will not tolerate  
gangsterism."  Five decades later, gangs in Los Angeles and  
across the state are larger, stronger and more violent than  
ever, and the war on gangs, drugs and crime has become a  
blood-filled urban quagmire.

Young people in inner cities have created gang truces and  
are now seeking to replace violence with jobs and hope.   
California must include those individuals in a serious  
discussion on finding solutions to urban problems.  It is  
time to give inner cities hope for change through a  
committed peace process that places policing in a new  
framework of prevention.

Violence in our streets is correlated with violence in our  
correctional system and vice versa.  California has some of  
the most violent prisons in the nation.  Several of our  
high security prisons are currently under federal and state  
investigations for incidents of fatal shootings, staged  
rapes and inmate fights, civil rights violations and  
investigative cover-ups.  Inmate-on-prison guard and  
inmate-on-inmate violence is out of control.

We must examine the conditions that lead to violence in our  
prisons and implement policies that encourage an atmosphere  
of peace and safety--otherwise, the cycle will proceed and  
we will continue to export this violent behavior into our  
streets.








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SB 323 helps address these issues by including in the  
political process the people working to create peaceful  
conditions in our neighborhoods and prisons.   
Community-based groups like Impacto, F.A.C.E.S.,  
Amer-I-Can, Barrios Unidos, Unity One and various other  
groups are already working toward creating gang-truces and  
encouraging economic development and community empowerment.  
 By bringing them together with elected officials,  
educators, law-enforcement authorities and the clergy, we  
can move toward comprehensive solutions to gang and  
violence problems in our streets and in out correctional  
system.

Unless California engages itself in a peace-oriented  
process aimed at solving urban and prison violence, our  
policies will continue to fail and generations of young  
people will continue to live lives filled with despair and  
powerlessness rather than hope and empowerment.


RJG:jk  6/9/99   Senate Floor Analyses 

               SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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