California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB1010 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly August 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1010Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Dodd, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018 An act to add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1010, as amended, Beall. Parolees: Supportive Housing Pilot Program.Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties that elect to participate in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other things, the bill would establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. for purposes of the program. The bill would require a participating county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program and the number residing in a county jail. The bill would require the department department, on or before June 30, 2021, to seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023. The bill would require the department to implement the program using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in the program. The bill would also include a statement of legislative findings and declarations.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a)Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b)The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c)It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d)It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.(a) In the 201415, 201516, and 201617 fiscal years, the undisbursed balance of funds appropriated by the Legislature for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program, the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, was $5,293,840, $5,311,403, and $2,771,818, respectively.(b) The undisbursed balances described in subdivision (a) for the 201516 and 201617 fiscal years reverted to the General Fund.(c) For the past few fiscal years, supportive services and housing support for mentally ill parolees have not received all of the funding that the Legislature deemed necessary and intended to provide for those purposes.SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3.(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b)Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1)The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2)The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3)A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4)The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
1+Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1010Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018 An act to amend Sections 2985.1, 2985.3, 2985.4, and 2985.5 of, and to repeal and add Section 2985.2 of, add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1010, as amended, Beall. Parolees: Supportive Housing Pilot Program.Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other changes, things, the bill would revise the establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. The bill would require a participating county, rather than the homeless services providers, county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would expand the scope of require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail. The bill would delete the requirement that the department submit the information and analysis described above annually and would instead require the department to submit that information prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b) The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly August 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1010Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Dodd, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018 An act to add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1010, as amended, Beall. Parolees: Supportive Housing Pilot Program.Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties that elect to participate in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other things, the bill would establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. for purposes of the program. The bill would require a participating county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program and the number residing in a county jail. The bill would require the department department, on or before June 30, 2021, to seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023. The bill would require the department to implement the program using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in the program. The bill would also include a statement of legislative findings and declarations.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 1010Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018 An act to amend Sections 2985.1, 2985.3, 2985.4, and 2985.5 of, and to repeal and add Section 2985.2 of, add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 1010, as amended, Beall. Parolees: Supportive Housing Pilot Program.Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other changes, things, the bill would revise the establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. The bill would require a participating county, rather than the homeless services providers, county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would expand the scope of require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail. The bill would delete the requirement that the department submit the information and analysis described above annually and would instead require the department to submit that information prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly August 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018
5+ Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018
66
7-Amended IN Assembly August 06, 2018
87 Amended IN Senate March 21, 2018
98 Amended IN Senate March 12, 2018
109
1110 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1211
1312 Senate Bill No. 1010
1413
15-Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Dodd, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018
14+Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)February 06, 2018
1615
17-Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Dodd, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)
16+Introduced by Senator Beall(Coauthors: Senators Anderson, Atkins, Hertzberg, Hill, Moorlach, Nielsen, Portantino, Stern, and Wiener)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Chiu, Chu, Gallagher, Gipson, Mullin, and Waldron)
1817 February 06, 2018
1918
20- An act to add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole.
19+ An act to amend Sections 2985.1, 2985.3, 2985.4, and 2985.5 of, and to repeal and add Section 2985.2 of, add Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, relating to parole.
2120
2221 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2322
2423 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2524
2625 SB 1010, as amended, Beall. Parolees: Supportive Housing Pilot Program.
2726
28-Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties that elect to participate in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other things, the bill would establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. for purposes of the program. The bill would require a participating county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program and the number residing in a county jail. The bill would require the department department, on or before June 30, 2021, to seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023. The bill would require the department to implement the program using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in the program. The bill would also include a statement of legislative findings and declarations.
27+Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other changes, things, the bill would revise the establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. The bill would require a participating county, rather than the homeless services providers, county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would expand the scope of require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail. The bill would delete the requirement that the department submit the information and analysis described above annually and would instead require the department to submit that information prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023.
2928
30-Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.
29+Existing law requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide a supportive housing program that provides wraparound services to mentally ill parolees at risk of homelessness using funding appropriated for that purpose. Existing law makes an inmate or parolee eligible for participation if he or she has a serious mental disorder, as specified, and has been assigned a release date from state prison and is likely to become homeless upon release or is currently a homeless parolee. Existing law requires providers to offer various services, including housing location services and rental subsidies and establishes criteria for housing that qualifies for the program. Existing law requires providers to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including the number of participants served and the outcomes for participants. Existing law also requires the department to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to annually submit, on or before February 1, the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees.
3130
32-This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties that elect to participate in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other things, the bill would establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. for purposes of the program. The bill would require a participating county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program and the number residing in a county jail. The bill would require the department department, on or before June 30, 2021, to seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023. The bill would require the department to implement the program using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in the program. The bill would also include a statement of legislative findings and declarations.
31+This bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2020, to create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program, which would be in effect at the same time as the existing program and would establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties in which the department would agree to use current funding to, among other things, refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services, and to use remaining resources, as specified, to pay for bridge rental assistance, as defined, and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole. The participating counties would agree to provide community-based mental health treatment within the existing county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary and to fund rental assistance and services, as specified. Among other changes, things, the bill would revise the establish criteria for housing that qualifies as supportive housing opportunities, as specified. The bill would require a participating county, rather than the homeless services providers, county to report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, and would expand the scope of require the information to include the percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail. The bill would delete the requirement that the department submit the information and analysis described above annually and would instead require the department to submit that information prepare an analysis of the information, as specified, and to submit the information and the analysis to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and other specified committees no later than January 1, 2023.
3332
3433 ## Digest Key
3534
3635 ## Bill Text
3736
38-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a)Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b)The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c)It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d)It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.(a) In the 201415, 201516, and 201617 fiscal years, the undisbursed balance of funds appropriated by the Legislature for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program, the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, was $5,293,840, $5,311,403, and $2,771,818, respectively.(b) The undisbursed balances described in subdivision (a) for the 201516 and 201617 fiscal years reverted to the General Fund.(c) For the past few fiscal years, supportive services and housing support for mentally ill parolees have not received all of the funding that the Legislature deemed necessary and intended to provide for those purposes.SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3.(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b)Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1)The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2)The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3)A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4)The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
37+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b) The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
3938
4039 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4140
4241 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4342
44-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a)Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b)The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c)It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d)It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.(a) In the 201415, 201516, and 201617 fiscal years, the undisbursed balance of funds appropriated by the Legislature for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program, the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, was $5,293,840, $5,311,403, and $2,771,818, respectively.(b) The undisbursed balances described in subdivision (a) for the 201516 and 201617 fiscal years reverted to the General Fund.(c) For the past few fiscal years, supportive services and housing support for mentally ill parolees have not received all of the funding that the Legislature deemed necessary and intended to provide for those purposes.
43+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b) The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.
4544
46-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a)Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b)The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c)It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d)It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.(a) In the 201415, 201516, and 201617 fiscal years, the undisbursed balance of funds appropriated by the Legislature for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program, the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, was $5,293,840, $5,311,403, and $2,771,818, respectively.(b) The undisbursed balances described in subdivision (a) for the 201516 and 201617 fiscal years reverted to the General Fund.(c) For the past few fiscal years, supportive services and housing support for mentally ill parolees have not received all of the funding that the Legislature deemed necessary and intended to provide for those purposes.
45+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.(b) The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.(d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.
4746
4847 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
4948
5049 ### SECTION 1.
5150
5251 (a) Evidence shows that supportive housing, or housing that is affordable to parolees living in poverty, without limits on length of stay, with rights and responsibilities of tenancy, coupled with services promoting housing stability, effectively reduces recidivism and improves the tenants ability to recover from mental illness.
5352
54-
55-
5653 (b) The Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill 1021 in 2012, which included direction to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to provide, pursuant to Section 3073 of Penal Code, a supportive housing program for mentally ill parolees, as set forth in Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code. The program was intended to use funds budgeted for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees or other programs to serve the purposes outlined in Senate Bill 1021. Since 2012, the budget has not referred to the program by name and funds have not been used for their legislatively intended purposes.
57-
58-
5954
6055 (c) It is the intent of the Legislature to strengthen corrections programs to ensure that the department promotes the evidence-based, wraparound services, including rental subsidies in an amount adequate to allow mentally ill parolees experiencing homelessness, or at risk of experiencing homelessness upon release from prison, to obtain and maintain housing stability during and after the term of parole, thereby reducing recidivism among parolees with a history of homelessness.
6156
62-
63-
6457 (d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this act to provide evidence-based, comprehensive mental health and supportive services, including housing subsidies, to parolees who suffer from mental illness and are either homeless or at risk of homelessness, in order to successfully reintegrate the parolees into the community, increase public safety, and reduce state costs of recidivism.
6558
66-
67-
68-(a) In the 201415, 201516, and 201617 fiscal years, the undisbursed balance of funds appropriated by the Legislature for the Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program, the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985) of Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, was $5,293,840, $5,311,403, and $2,771,818, respectively.
69-
70-(b) The undisbursed balances described in subdivision (a) for the 201516 and 201617 fiscal years reverted to the General Fund.
71-
72-(c) For the past few fiscal years, supportive services and housing support for mentally ill parolees have not received all of the funding that the Legislature deemed necessary and intended to provide for those purposes.
73-
74-SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3.(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b)Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1)The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2)The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3)A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4)The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
59+SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
7560
7661 SEC. 2. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 2986) is added to Chapter 7 of Title 1 of Part 3 of the Penal Code, to read:
7762
7863 ### SEC. 2.
7964
80- Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3.(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b)Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1)The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2)The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3)A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4)The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
65+ Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
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82- Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3.(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b)Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1)The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2)The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3)A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4)The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
67+ Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
8368
8469 Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program
8570
8671 Article 5.5. Supportive Housing Pilot Program
8772
88-2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.
73+2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.(b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.(c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.(d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.(f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:(1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.(2) Completing housing applications.(3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.(g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).(h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.(i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:(1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.(2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.
8974
9075
9176
9277 2986. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:
9378
9479 (a) Bridge rental assistance means rental assistance paid to participating landlords while the homeless services provider and the program participant seek permanent rental assistance that allows the program participant to remain in the same housing or, when feasible, allows the program participant to be responsible for paying the rent after the program participant is no longer on parole.
9580
9681 (b) Department means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
9782
9883 (c) Fair market rent means the rent, including the cost of utilities, other than the telephone, as established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for units of varying sizes, as determined by the number of bedrooms, that must be paid in the market area to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe, and sanitary rental housing of a modest nature with suitable amenities.
9984
10085 (d) Homelessness has the same meaning as in Section 91.5 of Subpart A of Part 91 of Subtitle A of Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
10186
102-(e) Homeless services Services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.
87+(e) Homeless services provider means an organization that qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that contracts with the relevant participating county to provide services to people experiencing homelessness, funded pursuant to this article, to provide services to participants of the program.
10388
10489 (f) Housing navigation means services provided prior to release or in the community that assist program participants with all of the following:
10590
10691 (1) Locating housing with landlords willing to accept rental assistance from the program participants.
10792
10893 (2) Completing housing applications.
10994
11095 (3) Obtaining documentation needed to access housing.
111-
112-(4) Fund move-in assistance, such as overdue rent and utility payments, security deposits, application fees, and utility payments for participants moving into permanent housing.
11396
11497 (g) Integrated Services for Mentally Ill Parolees program or ISMIP program means the program of supportive services and housing support provided pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 2985).
11598
11699 (h) Interim housing means a temporary residence in which a program participant resides, for a period not to exceed nine months, while waiting to move into permanent housing. Interim housing may include housing that is paid for using motel vouchers or housing in which a program participant resides for the purpose of receiving recuperative care.
117100
118101 (i) Likely to become homeless upon release or at risk of homelessness means an individual who has a history of homelessness and who satisfies both of the following criteria:
119102
120103 (1) The individual has not identified a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence upon release.
121104
122105 (2) The individuals only identified nighttime residence upon release includes a supervised, publicly or privately operated shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations, or a public or private place that is not designed for, or not ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations for human beings.
123106
124-(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and and, in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.
107+(j) Supportive housing has the same meaning set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and in addition, is decent, safe, and affordable.
125108
126-2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:(1)The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2)An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A)(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B)(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C)(3) Either of the following applies:(i)(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii)(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e)Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.
109+2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:(1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:(A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.(B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.(2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:(A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.(1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.(2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.(C) Either of the following applies:(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.(d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.(e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.
127110
128111
129112
130-2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, 2019, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:
113+2986.1. Pursuant to Section 3073, on or before January 1, 2020, the department shall create the Supportive Housing Pilot Program that shall do all of the following:
131114
132-(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, counties that elect to participate, in which the participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:
115+(a) Establish a process and timeline for finalizing a memorandum of understanding with one or more counties, in which participating counties and the department agree to both of the following:
133116
134117 (1) The department shall use current funding to do all of the following:
135118
136119 (A) Refer eligible parolees to participating counties for mental health treatment, housing navigation services, and supportive housing services.
137120
138121 (B) Pay for the nonfederal share of the costs of mental health treatment while the participant is on parole.
139122
140-(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay Pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.
123+(C) Use remaining resources the state would have spent on mental health treatment, if not for federal reimbursement through Medi-Cal, to pay for bridge rental assistance and services in supportive housing during the program participants term of parole.
141124
142125 (2) Participating counties shall do both of the following:
143126
144127 (A) Provide community-based mental health treatment within the currently operating county Medi-Cal mental health program if ongoing treatment for the participant is medically necessary.
145128
146-(B) After the parolee participant is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, Housing Program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.
129+(B) After the parolee is no longer on parole, fund rental assistance and services under the Mental Health Services Act program, if the participant qualifies for full-service partnership services, or under another source of funding that the county controls.
147130
148-(b) Provide a grant, Establish a process for awarding grants, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides bridge rental assistance based on rents at or above fair market rent and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.
131+(b) Provide a grant, using existing resources, to participating counties to fund a supportive housing program that provides rental assistance and comprehensive, or wraparound, services to mentally ill parolees who are either homeless or at risk of homelessness.
149132
150-(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program. An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if he or she is eligible for the ISMIP program or if all of the following apply:
133+(c) Produce a process for identifying and referring eligible participants to the pilot program.
151134
152135 (1) The department may allow current participants of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program to continue to receive services as long as the participant remains eligible. As each current participant of the ISMIP or other program used to fund this pilot program transitions off parole or leaves the program, the department shall refer an inmate or parolee who is eligible to be a program participant in the pilot program established pursuant to this article.
153136
154-
155-
156137 (2) An inmate or parolee is eligible to participate in the pilot program established pursuant to this article if all of the following apply:
157138
139+(A) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.
158140
141+(B) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.
159142
160-(A)
143+(C) Either of the following applies:
161144
145+(i) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.
162146
163-
164-(1) He or she has a serious mental disorder as defined in Section 5600.3 of the Welfare and Institutions Code and as identified by the department, and he or she has a history of mental health treatment in the prisons mental health services delivery system or in a parole outpatient clinic.
165-
166-(B)
167-
168-
169-
170-(2) The inmate or parolee voluntarily chooses to participate.
171-
172-(C)
173-
174-
175-
176-(3) Either of the following applies:
177-
178-(i)
179-
180-
181-
182-(A) He or she has been assigned a date of release within 60 to 180 days and is likely to become homeless upon release.
183-
184-(ii)
185-
186-
187-
188-(B) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.
147+(ii) He or she is currently a homeless parolee.
189148
190149 (d) Create a process for evaluating the pilot program that evaluates outcomes, costs, and recidivism to jail or prison among participants, pursuant to Section 2986.4.
191150
192151 (e) Set a timeline for phasing out or extending the pilot program.
193152
194-
195-
196-2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c)(1)To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3)(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant (d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.
153+2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Case management services.(2) Parole discharge planning.(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.(4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.(5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.(6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.(8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.(b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:(1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.(2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.(3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.(4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.(5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.(c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.
197154
198155
199156
200-2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer evidence-based services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment ensure the participant is able to access in a timely manner mental health treatment provided to the program participant. to which he or she is entitled. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, possible. The services shall include all of the following:
157+2986.2. (a) A homeless services provider working under a contract with participating counties shall offer services, in accordance with Section 5806 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to obtain and maintain health and housing stability while the program participant is on parole, to enable the program participant to comply with the terms of parole, and to augment mental health treatment provided to the program participant. The services shall be offered to a program participant in his or her home, or shall be made as easily accessible to the program participant as possible, and shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
201158
202159 (1) Case management services.
203160
204161 (2) Parole discharge planning.
205162
206-(3) Housing navigation services, and, including, if needed, move-in cost assistance.
163+(3) Housing navigation services, and, if needed, move-in cost assistance.
207164
208165 (4) Rental subsidies that are equal to or greater than fair market rent.
209166
210167 (5) Linkage to other services, such as vocational, educational, and employment services, as needed.
211168
212169 (6) Benefit entitlement application and appeal assistance.
213170
214-(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care care, as needed.
171+(7) Transportation assistance to obtain services and health care needed.
215172
216173 (8) Assistance obtaining appropriate identification.
217174
218175 (b) For a program participant identified prior to release from state prison, upon the homeless services providers receipt of referral and, in collaboration with the parole agent and, if appropriate, staff, the intake coordinator or case manager of the homeless services provider shall, when possible:
219176
220177 (1) Receive all prerelease assessments and discharge plans.
221178
222179 (2) Draft a plan for the program participants transition into housing that serves the program participants needs and that demonstrates a clear transition pathway to permanent, independent, and affordable housing. Housing options shall include permanent supportive housing and interim housing, as necessary, while the program participant awaits placement into permanent supportive housing.
223180
224181 (3) Engage the program participant to actively participate in services upon release.
225182
226183 (4) Assist in obtaining identification for the program participant, if necessary.
227184
228185 (5) Assist in applying for any benefits for which the program participant is eligible.
229186
230187 (c) (1) To facilitate the transition of a program participant identified prior to release into the community and a program participant identified during parole into supportive housing, a homeless services provider shall, on an ongoing basis, not less than quarterly, assess each program participants needs and include in each program participants assessment a plan to foster independence and continued residence in the same permanent housing when his or her parole is complete.
231188
189+(2) Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.
232190
191+(3) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.
233192
234-(2)Upon referral to the homeless services provider, the homeless services provider shall work to transition a program participant from the departments rental assistance to rental assistance provided under the participating countys full-service partnership program, rental assistance funded under another locally controlled program, or other mainstream rental assistance benefits if those benefits are necessary to enable the program participant to remain in stable housing, and shall prioritize transitioning the program participant to these benefits in a manner that allows the program participant to remain housed, when possible, without moving. Mainstream rental assistance benefits may include, but are not limited to, federal Housing Choice Voucher assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing vouchers, or other rental assistance programs.
193+(4) The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.
194+
195+2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.(b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:(1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.(2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.(3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.(4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.
235196
236197
237198
238-(3)
239-
240-
241-
242-(c) The program participants parole discharge plan and the assessments shall consider the need for and prioritize linkage to county mental health services and housing opportunities that are supported by the Mental Health Services Act, the Mental Health Services Act Housing Program, or other funding sources that finance permanent supportive housing for persons with mental illness, so that the program participant may continue to achieve all recovery goals of the program and remain permanently housed when his or her parole is complete.
243-
244-(4)The department and homeless services providers shall not limit the bridge rental assistance made available to the program participant, except to limit the period of time during which assistance is provided to the term of the program participants parole. The program participant
245-
246-
247-
248-(d) A program participant shall be allowed to remain in the same housing after the bridge rental assistance ends, as long as he or she complies with the terms of the lease.
249-
250-
251-
252-(a)A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.
253-
254-
199+2986.3. (a) A homeless services provider funded pursuant to this article shall identify and locate supportive housing opportunities for a program participant prior to his or her release from state prison or as quickly as possible upon his or her release from state prison, or as quickly as possible after the program participant is identified during parole, but in no case later than nine months after the program participant agrees to participate in the program.
255200
256201 (b) Housing identified pursuant to subdivision (a) shall satisfy all of the following:
257202
258-
259-
260203 (1) The housing shall be located in an apartment building, townhouse, or single-family home, including a rent-subsidized apartment leased in the open market or set aside within privately owned buildings.
261-
262-
263204
264205 (2) The housing shall be exempt from community care licensing requirements set forth in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1500) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.
265206
266-
267-
268207 (3) A program participant living in the supportive housing shall have a lease and be subject to the rights and responsibilities of tenancy.
269-
270-
271208
272209 (4) The housing program shall comply with the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
273210
211+(c) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing.
274212
275-
276-2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.
277-
278-2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(c)
279-
280-2986.3. (a) Housing identified for use pursuant to this article shall satisfy the criteria described in subdivision (c) of Section 1504.5 and paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 50675.14 of the Health and Safety Code, and, in addition, the core components identified in subdivision (b) of Section 8255 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
281-
282-(c)
283-
284-
285-
286-(b) A housing program funded pursuant to the pilot program established pursuant to this article may use funds to provide program participants with interim housing while the program participant is waiting to obtain appropriate permanent rental housing and to complete documentation and paperwork needed to move the program participant into the rental housing. The housing program may also use funds to provide move-in costs for eligible participants.
287-
288-2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5)The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
213+2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:(1) The number of program participants served.(2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.(4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.(5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
289214
290215
291216
292217 2986.4. (a) A participating county provider shall report to the department regarding the intended outcomes of the program, including all of the following:
293218
294219 (1) The number of program participants served.
295220
296221 (2) The types of services that were provided to program participants.
297222
298-(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to are currently living in permanent housing, the number who have ceased to participate in the program, program and the reasons why they ceased participating, the number who reoffended, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are while participating in the program, the number receiving mental health treatment, and the number residing in a county jail.
223+(3) The outcomes for program participants, including the number who are living independently, the number who remain in or have moved to permanent housing, the number who ceased to participate in the program, the number who returned to state prison, and the number who were arrested and are residing in a county jail.
299224
300225 (4) The number of program participants who have successfully completed parole.
301226
302227 (5) The percentage of program participants currently living in permanent housing.
303228
229+(b) The department shall prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of reduced recidivism rates by program participants using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.
304230
305-
306-(b) The (1) On or before June 30, 2021, the department shall seek and contract with an independent evaluator to prepare an analysis of the costs of the supportive housing program in comparison to the cost savings to the state as a result of outcomes of participants, including reduced recidivism rates by program participants and costs avoided, using the information provided pursuant to subdivision (a). This analysis shall exclude from consideration any federal funds provided for services while the program participant is on parole in order to ensure that the analysis accurately reflects only the costs to the state for the services provided to program participants.
307-
308-(2) Based on outcomes identified in paragraph (1), the department shall determine a timeline for a recommendation to the Legislature regarding extending the program.
309-
310-(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs Chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.
311-
312-2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
313-
314-
315-
316-2986.5. The department shall implement the program created by this article using funding appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes described in this article.
231+(c) The department shall submit the information collected pursuant to subdivision (a) and the analysis prepared pursuant to subdivision (b) to the chairs of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Budget, the Senate and Assembly Committees on Public Safety, the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, and the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development no later than January 1, 2023.