BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       


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                              UNFINISHED BUSINESS
                                        

          Bill No:  SB 1769
          Author:   Chesbro (D)
          Amended:  8/14/00
          Vote:     21

            
           SENATE PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE  :  4-0, 4/25/00
          AYES:  Vasconcellos, Burton, Johnston, McPherson
          NOT VOTING:  Polanco, Rainey

           SENATE HEALTH & HUMAN SERV. COMMITTEE  :  6-1, 5/10/00
          AYES:  Escutia, Figueroa, Hughes, Polanco, Solis,  
            Vasconcellos
          NOES:  Mountjoy
          NOT VOTING:  Haynes, Morrow

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE :  Senate Rule 28.8

           SENATE FLOOR  :  25-10, 5/25/00
          AYES:  Alarcon, Alpert, Bowen, Burton, Chesbro, Costa,  
            Dunn, Escutia, Figueroa, Hayden, Hughes, Johnston,  
            Karnette, McPherson, O'Connell, Ortiz, Peace, Perata,  
            Schiff, Sher, Solis, Soto, Speier, Vasconcellos, Wright
          NOES:  Johannessen, Johnson, Kelley, Knight, Leslie,  
            Monteith, Morrow, Mountjoy, Poochigian, Rainey

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  46-28, 8/24/00 - See last page for vote
           

           SUBJECT  :    Mental health courts

           SOURCE  :     Author

           
                                                           CONTINUED





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           DIGEST  :    This bill would allow counties to receive  
          funding for mental health courts through an existing grant  
          program for programs for mentally ill inmates and to  
          establish basic requirements for such a court in order for  
          it to be eligible for such a grant.

           Assembly Amendments  delete provisions relative to  
          encouraging counties to submit crime reduction grant  
          proposals.

           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law provides that the Board of  
          Corrections shall administer and award mentally ill  
          offender crime reduction grants on a competitive basis to  
          counties that expand or establish a continuum of swift,  
          certain, and graduated responses to reduce crime and  
          criminal justice costs related to mentally ill offenders.

          Existing law provides that to be eligible for a grant each  
          county shall develop a comprehensive plan for providing  
          cost-effective continuum of graduated responses including  
          prevention, intervention, and incarceration for mentally  
          ill offenders.

          This bill provides that a component of the comprehensive  
          mental health plan described above may be the development  
          and implementation of a mental health court.

          This bill provides that the objectives of the mental health  
          court shall be:

          1.Increased cooperation between the criminal justice system  
            and mental health systems.

          2.Faster case processing time.

          3.Improved access to necessary services and support.

          4.Improved well-being for offenders with mental illness.

          5.Reduced recidivism.

          This bill provides that the mental health court shall  
          provide for a single point of contact where a defendant  
          with a mental disability may receive court-ordered  







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          treatment and support services in connection with a  
          diversion from prosecution, a sentencing alternative, or a  
          term of probation.

          This bill provides that defendants may be referred to the  
          mental health court by a number of sources including but  
          not limited to the police, attorneys, family members,  
          probation officers, the district attorney, the public  
          defender, jail personnel, or another court.

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

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  5/24/00) (unable to reverify at time  
          of writing)

          Peace Officers Research Association of California
          California Council of Mental Health Agencies
          Mental Health Association of California
          California Psychological Association
          California Health Care Association
          California Psychiatric Association


           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    According to the author,  
          "research tells us that California spends in excess of  
          $315 million on persons with mental illness who are  
          repeatedly placed in county jails for violations of the  
          law, often quite minor.  This bill seeks to reduce  
          these costs by encouraging counties to develop a  
          specialized mental health court which would identify  
          appropriate mentally ill offenders, place them into  
          appropriate community-based programs, and monitor their  
          compliance with their treatment program.  Studies show  
          that mentally ill persons who have treatment and  
          stability do not commit crimes.

          "According to national figures, an estimated 7.2% of  
          inmates were reported to suffer from serious mental  
          illness according to a joint report of the National  
          Alliance for the Mentally Ill and the Public Citizen's  
          Health Research Group.  Nearly one-third of the jails  
          surveyed had seriously mentally ill individuals in  
          custody without filing criminal charges against them.   







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          Most others held inmates on lesser charges such as  
          disorderly conduct, trespassing, and drunkenness.  Once  
          mentally ill persons are jailed, their psychiatric and  
          medical consequences worsen.  More than 20% of jails  
          have no access to mental health services of any kind,  
          and the vast majority provides little or no training to  
          corrections officers in treating the mentally ill.   
          Despite even the best intentions of prison officials,  
          inmates with mental illness are often abused by other  
          inmates, are exposed to deadly diseases, or commit  
          suicide (according to a report in the American Bar  
          Association Journal, "Special Treatment," June 1998).

          "In California, the total impact of the mentally ill on  
          the criminal justice and corrections system is  
          estimated to be $1.2 billion and $1.8 billion.  8% to  
          20% of state prison inmates are seriously mentally ill.  
           Between 7.2% and 15% of county inmates have a serious  
          mental illness.  It is conservatively estimated that  
          10% of all arrestees are seriously mentally ill  
          (Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy in  
          "Corrections, Criminal Justice, and the Mentally Ill:   
          Some Observations About Costs in California," September  
          1966).

          "Very often, a person's untreated mental illness is  
          directly responsible for the behavior, which led to his or  
          her arrest.  Further, increasing demand for jail and prison  
          space typically leads to the early release of many  
          offenders with mental illness who are returned to the  
          community without services or supports and are likely to  
          re-offend."

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :
          AYES:  Alquist, Aroner, Bock, Calderon, Cardenas, Cardoza,  
            Cedillo, Corbett, Cox, Cunneen, Davis, Ducheny, Dutra,  
            Firebaugh, Floyd, Gallegos, Havice, Honda, Jackson,  
            Keeley, Knox, Kuehl, Lempert, Longville, Lowenthal,  
            Machado, Maldonado, Mazzoni, Migden, Nakano, Reyes,  
            Romero, Scott, Shelley, Steinberg, Strom-Martin, Thomson,  
            Torlakson, Villaraigosa, Vincent, Wayne, Wesson, Wiggins,  
            Wildman, Wright, Hertzberg
          NOES:  Aanestad, Ackerman, Ashburn, Baldwin, Bates, Battin,  
            Baugh, Brewer, Briggs, Campbell, Florez, Granlund, House,  







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            Kaloogian, Leach, Leonard, Maddox, Margett, McClintock,  
            Olberg, Oller, Robert Pacheco, Rod Pacheco, Pescetti,  
            Runner, Strickland, Thompson, Zettel


          RJG:sl  8/26/00   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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