California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB42 Compare Versions

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1-Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 42Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)December 03, 2018 An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 42, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow. SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 42Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)December 03, 2018 An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Sections 4024.5 and 4024.6 Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 42, as amended, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would provide a person with the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, that the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program, and would require the county jail to assist, when feasible, in arranging for transportation directly from jail to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release from jail. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require a person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days to be provided with at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication, as defined, that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a st2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing these provisions and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow. SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 4.Section 4024.6 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.6.(a)(1)The Board of State and Community Corrections shall establish the Late-Night Release Prevention Task Force.(2)The task force shall be composed of relevant stakeholders, including women and children who have been incarcerated.(b)The task force shall do both of the following:(1)Prepare all materials related to the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act.(2)Develop recommended requirements for county jails to maintain records that adequately document the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act, including how these records will be maintained and made available to the public.(c)(1)The task force shall submit a report on January 1, 2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing this section and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California.(2)The requirement for submitting a report imposed under paragraph (1) is inoperative on January 1, 2026, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(d)For purposes of this section, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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3- Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 42Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)December 03, 2018 An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 42, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 42Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)December 03, 2018 An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Sections 4024.5 and 4024.6 Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 42, as amended, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would provide a person with the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, that the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program, and would require the county jail to assist, when feasible, in arranging for transportation directly from jail to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release from jail. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require a person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days to be provided with at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication, as defined, that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a st2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing these provisions and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow. SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 4.Section 4024.6 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.6.(a)(1)The Board of State and Community Corrections shall establish the Late-Night Release Prevention Task Force.(2)The task force shall be composed of relevant stakeholders, including women and children who have been incarcerated.(b)The task force shall do both of the following:(1)Prepare all materials related to the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act.(2)Develop recommended requirements for county jails to maintain records that adequately document the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act, including how these records will be maintained and made available to the public.(c)(1)The task force shall submit a report on January 1, 2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing this section and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California.(2)The requirement for submitting a report imposed under paragraph (1) is inoperative on January 1, 2026, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(d)For purposes of this section, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
44
5- Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019
5+ Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019
66
7-Enrolled September 13, 2019
8-Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019
9-Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019
107 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019
118 Amended IN Assembly July 01, 2019
129 Amended IN Senate May 17, 2019
1310
1411 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
1512
1613 Senate Bill
1714
1815 No. 42
1916
2017 Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)December 03, 2018
2118
2219 Introduced by Senator Skinner(Coauthors: Assembly Members Kamlager-Dove and Wicks)
2320 December 03, 2018
2421
25- An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails.
22+ An act to amend and repeal Section 4024 of, and to add Sections 4024.5 and 4024.6 Section 4024.5 to, the Penal Code, relating to jails.
2623
2724 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2825
2926 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3027
31-SB 42, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.
28+SB 42, as amended, Skinner. The Getting Home Safe Act.
3229
33-Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
30+Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021. The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would provide a person with the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, that the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program, and would require the county jail to assist, when feasible, in arranging for transportation directly from jail to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release from jail. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require a person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days to be provided with at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication, as defined, that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a st2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing these provisions and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3431
3532 Existing law authorizes a county sheriff to discharge a person from a county jail at any time on the last day that the person may be confined that the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of that person. Existing law additionally authorizes a sheriff to offer a voluntary program to a person, upon completion of a sentence served or a release ordered by the court to be effected the same day, that would allow the person to stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours, as specified. Existing law authorizes the person to revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable. Existing law requires a sheriff offering this program to, whenever possible, allow the person to make a telephone call to arrange for transportation or to notify a bail agent, as specified.
3633
3734 This bill would make these provisions inoperative on June 1, 2020, and would repeal it as of January 1, 2021.
3835
39- The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a state-mandated local program.
36+ The bill, beginning June 1, 2020, would instead require the sheriff to make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to incarcerated persons, as specified. The bill would provide a person with the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, that the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program, and would require the county jail to assist, when feasible, in arranging for transportation directly from jail to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release from jail. The bill would also require a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, to be released during that time. The bill would require the sheriff to offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, as specified. The bill would require a sheriff to provide a person who declines that option with a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone. The bill would also require a person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days to be provided with at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication, as defined, that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. the county jail to track the number of people released during those hours and to make that information available, as specified. Because this bill would impose new duties on sheriffs and county jails, it would impose a st2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing these provisions and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
37+
38+
4039
4140 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
4241
4342 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
4443
4544 ## Digest Key
4645
4746 ## Bill Text
4847
49-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow. SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
48+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow. SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 4.Section 4024.6 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.6.(a)(1)The Board of State and Community Corrections shall establish the Late-Night Release Prevention Task Force.(2)The task force shall be composed of relevant stakeholders, including women and children who have been incarcerated.(b)The task force shall do both of the following:(1)Prepare all materials related to the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act.(2)Develop recommended requirements for county jails to maintain records that adequately document the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act, including how these records will be maintained and made available to the public.(c)(1)The task force shall submit a report on January 1, 2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing this section and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California.(2)The requirement for submitting a report imposed under paragraph (1) is inoperative on January 1, 2026, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(d)For purposes of this section, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
5049
5150 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5251
5352 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5453
5554 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow.
5655
5756 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.(2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.(3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.(4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.(5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.(6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.(7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.(8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.(9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.(10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow.
5857
5958 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
6059
6160 ### SECTION 1.
6261
6362 (1) Women of color are more commonly criminalized for noncriminal behavior than other demographic groups and are treated like perpetrators when they call for help or are suffering a crisis.
6463
6564 (2) The overrepresentation of women of color in our county jails is evidence of these injustices and the disregard with which they are discharged from county jails only worsens the harm they experience as a result.
6665
6766 (3) Despite legislation passed and signed in 2014 that allowed county jails to voluntarily participate in a program that would reduce the number of late-night releases throughout California, few jails have changed their release policy and, instead, jails continue to regularly release jailed persons during late-night hours.
6867
6968 (4) The lack of free phone services available to people during detention and the inability to charge personal cell phones upon release exacerbates the danger of late-night releases.
7069
7170 (5) This practice is especially dangerous for women, including transgender women, who become targets for physical abuse, sexual abuse, and sex trafficking from predators who are familiar with county jail late-night release practices.
7271
7372 (6) The release of people from a county jail during late-night hours is not only dangerous for the person being released but also for the public health and safety of the community at large.
7473
7574 (7) Persons who suffer from mental illness or substance addiction are far less likely to be able to access immediate treatment services following a late-night release from county jail.
7675
7776 (8) Intentional or not, these release policies are cruel and fail to acknowledge the often significant lived trauma that people, especially women, who are involved in the criminal justice system have experienced.
7877
7978 (9) There is no recidivism prevention or public safety purpose of county jail late-night release policies that would substantiate the need for counties to maintain them. In fact, the lack of access to essential reentry and family reunification services means these late-night release policies work contrary to crime-prevention goals.
8079
8180 (10) Throughout California, women impacted by these late-night release policies have been thwarted in their efforts to end this practice, indicating that a statewide solution is needed.
8281
8382 (b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that people are released with expediency from county jails with conditions that protect their health and maximize the likelihood of their success in preventing rearrest by establishing a statewide release standard for county jails to follow.
8483
8584 SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
8685
8786 SEC. 2. Section 4024 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
8887
8988 ### SEC. 2.
9089
9190 4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
9291
9392 4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
9493
9594 4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.(b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.(2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.(3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.(4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.(5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.(c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
9695
9796
9897
9998 4024. (a) The sheriff may discharge a prisoner from the county jail at the time on the last day the prisoner may be confined as the sheriff considers to be in the best interests of the prisoner.
10099
101100 (b) (1) Upon completion of a sentence served by a prisoner or the release of a prisoner ordered by the court to be effected the same day, including prisoners who are released on their own recognizance, have their charges dismissed by the court, are acquitted by a jury, are cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, have posted bail, or have the charges against them dropped by the prosecutor, the sheriff may offer a voluntary program to the prisoner that would allow that prisoner to stay in the custody facility for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the prisoner the ability to be discharged to a treatment center or during daytime hours. The prisoner may revoke consent and be discharged as soon as possible and practicable.
102101
103102 (2) This subdivision does not prevent the early release of a prisoner as otherwise allowed by law or allow jails to retain a prisoner any longer than otherwise required by law without the prisoners express written consent.
104103
105104 (3) Offering this voluntary program is an act of discretion within the meaning of Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
106105
107106 (4) If a prisoner has posted bail and elects to participate in this program, the prisoner shall notify the bail agent as soon as possible and practicable of the decision to participate.
108107
109108 (5) A sheriff offering this program shall, whenever possible, allow the prisoner volunteering to participate in the program to make a telephone call to either arrange for transportation, or to notify the bail agent pursuant to paragraph (4), or both.
110109
111110 (c) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
112111
113-SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
112+SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
114113
115114 SEC. 3. Section 4024.5 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
116115
117116 ### SEC. 3.
118117
119-4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
118+4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
120119
121-4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
120+4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
122121
123-4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
122+4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act. (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.(c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j). (d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release. (e)(d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.(f)(e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.(2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.(3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.(4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request. (g)(f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.(i)(g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth. (k)(h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
124123
125124
126125
127126 4024.5. (a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act.
128127
129128 (b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on the persons own recognizance, been released because the charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped by the prosecutor.
130129
131130 (c) (1) The sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when the person is booked into a county jail and while incarcerated in a county jail.
132131
133132 (2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.
134133
134+(3)The release standards shall include a notification of the complaint process specified in subdivision (j).
135+
136+
137+
138+(d)(1)A person shall have the right to request that, upon release from a county jail, the person be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.
139+
140+
141+
142+(2)If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall assist, when feasible, in arranging transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release.
143+
144+
145+
146+(e)
147+
148+
149+
135150 (d) A person incarcerated in, or recently released from, a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release.
151+
152+(f)
153+
154+
136155
137156 (e) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.
138157
139158 (2) A person shall provide written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.
140159
141160 (3) If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and the person has declined the option described in paragraph (1), the person shall be provided the opportunity to have a safe place to wait to be picked up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge a personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.
142161
143162 (4) The county jail shall track the number of people released between 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. and provide that information to the public, upon request.
144163
164+(g)
165+
166+
167+
145168 (f) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time.
169+
170+(h)A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least 3 days supply of any necessary medication that was being provided to the person while incarcerated. Necessary medication means medication identified as necessary to protect life, prevent significant illness or disability, or alleviate severe pain, unless clinically contraindicated.
171+
172+
173+
174+(i)
175+
176+
146177
147178 (g) This section does not preclude the early release of a person as otherwise allowed by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the persons express written consent.
148179
180+(j)(1)A complaint regarding a violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsperson. This section does not limit that persons rights in any other forum.
181+
182+
183+
184+(2)(A)For purposes of developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act, the board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in this effort.
185+
186+
187+
188+(B)For purposes of this paragraph, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.
189+
190+
191+
192+(k)
193+
194+
195+
149196 (h) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
150197
151-SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
152198
153-SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
154199
155-SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
156200
157-### SEC. 4.
201+
202+(a)(1)The Board of State and Community Corrections shall establish the Late-Night Release Prevention Task Force.
203+
204+
205+
206+(2)The task force shall be composed of relevant stakeholders, including women and children who have been incarcerated.
207+
208+
209+
210+(b)The task force shall do both of the following:
211+
212+
213+
214+(1)Prepare all materials related to the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act.
215+
216+
217+
218+(2)Develop recommended requirements for county jails to maintain records that adequately document the implementation of the Getting Home Safe Act, including how these records will be maintained and made available to the public.
219+
220+
221+
222+(c)(1)The task force shall submit a report on January 1, 2022, to the relevant policy and budget committees of the Legislature about the progress made by the task force in implementing this section and make suggestions for any additional legislation necessary to prevent dangerous late-night releases at county jails throughout California.
223+
224+
225+
226+(2)The requirement for submitting a report imposed under paragraph (1) is inoperative on January 1, 2026, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
227+
228+
229+
230+(d)For purposes of this section, woman means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.
231+
232+
233+
234+SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
235+
236+SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
237+
238+SEC. 5.SEC. 4. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
239+
240+### SEC. 5.SEC. 4.