California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SCR69 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate January 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 69Introduced by Senator BradfordAugust 14, 2019Relative to prisoner compensation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 69, as amended, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: YES Bill TextWHEREAS, This country has long recognized the value of human labor and the importance of fair wages. California has demonstrated this recognition through its ongoing commitment to offering quality pay careers for Californians through enactments like the California Equal Pay Act; andWHEREAS, The dignity of every person is inherent, and it is incumbent on the state to protect the dignity of all its citizens; andWHEREAS, Fair and just wages are intrinsically tied to human dignity; andWHEREAS, The factors of disparities within imprisonment are partially a result of disproportionate social factors in African American and Latinx communities that are associated primarily with poverty, employment, housing, and family differences; andWHEREAS, The poverty rate is roughly 25 percent for both African American and Latinx communities, compared to 9 percent for White American communities; andWHEREAS, The median income for African American and Latinx communities is roughly $20,000 less than the median income for White American communities; andWHEREAS, African American and Latinx adults are, respectively, 5.9 and 3.1 times more likely to be incarcerated than White adults; andWHEREAS, The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) found that in 2015, over 71 percent of prisoners were men of color. More specifically, 42 percent were Latinx and 29 percent were African American; andWHEREAS, In 2017, African American women were incarcerated at 5.7 times the rate of White women and Latinx women were incarcerated at 1.3 times the rate of White women; andWHEREAS, The State of California currently incarcerates 126,428 people in state prisons and people in prison are routinely required to work for little or no compensation; andWHEREAS, Roughly 42,897 people in prison work up to full time, earning anywhere from $0.08 to $1.00 per hour to $3.90 per day in jobs ranging from electricians, carpenters, cooks, orderlies, fire conservation crew members, braille transcribers, silk screen printers, and many other integral work positions; andWHEREAS, In 1982, California established the Prison Industry Authority (CALPIA) as a self-supporting business that provides work assignments for approximately 7,000 incarcerated people. CALPIA manages over 100 manufacturing, service, and consumable operations in all 34 CDCR institutions throughout California; andWHEREAS, The goods and services produced by CALPIA are sold predominantly to California state agencies, as well as to other government entities; andWHEREAS, CALPIA generates a gross profit of approximately $60 million annually and manufactures items from road signs and clothing to cleaning products and the furniture used in nearly every room at the State Capitol; andWHEREAS, Seven thousand people in prison work up to full time for CALPIA and nearly 1,175 participate in the Inmate Ward Labor program (IWL) and can earn $0.30 to $0.95 per hour; and WHEREAS, As of February 20, 2019, 3,384 people in prison work up to full time for the CDCR Conservation Camp program and earn $1.45 to $3.90 per day in jobs protecting people and property from fire. When working as emergency firefighters, they in emergency situations, conservation crew members are compensated $1 per hour; andWHEREAS, Inflation continues to increase, yet the pay scale for those who are incarcerated continues to remain relatively low and does not reflect the inflation increase; andWHEREAS, As an example, the oldest written documentation of the pay schedule for those incarcerated and working in conservation camps is from the CDCRs Department Operations Manual published on January 10, 1990, which is identical to the current pay schedule; andWHEREAS, Fifty-five percent of a persons wages earned in prison are garnished to pay restitution, and low wages mean payments to victims are also low; andWHEREAS, Many people in prison have families, and low wages mean they are less able to help with general family financial needs, child support, or the added costs of communication and travel for families who have a loved one in prison; andWHEREAS, Research found that parents, upon entering prison, on average owed $10,543 in child support obligations. Due to a lack of income or full-time employment opportunities, the majority of parents have no means of paying child support debt while in prison, and they also struggle to pay it after their release; andWHEREAS, Fifty-two percent of people in state prisons are parents of minors. African American children are 7.5 times, and Latinx children 2.6 times, more likely than White children to have a parent in prison. There are 1.7 million children in the United States that have an incarcerated parent; andWHEREAS, Returning members of society face many challenges upon reentry, including housing insecurity and difficulty finding and keeping employment; andWHEREAS, Financial distress continues well after release from prison because of the difficulties one faces in finding a job, because having a criminal record makes the pathway to employment extremely difficult for those who are formerly incarcerated; andWHEREAS, A Brookings Institution study found that in the first year of postrelease, only 55 percent of formerly incarcerated people have any reported earnings. The research found that those with jobs in the first year earned a median of $10,090 and only 20 percent earned more than $15,000; andWHEREAS, The inability to earn or save money puts heavy burdens on families once a person is released. According to the study, 66 percent of formerly incarcerated people relied on family and friends as their primary source of financial support upon release; andWHEREAS, Estimates indicate formerly incarcerated people owe as much as 60 percent of their income to criminal justice debt. According to one source, up to 85 percent of people released from prison owe some form of criminal justice debt, compared to 25 percent in 1991; andWHEREAS, People released from prison receive $200 in gate money and typically leave prison with little to no financial support, putting them at risk for financial insecurity, hunger, and homelessness; andWHEREAS, Formerly incarcerated people are almost 10 times more likely to be homeless than the general public; and WHEREAS, The high cost of living in California, particularly in Los Angeles where 32 percent of people return to following incarceration, can lead to adverse outcomes for people released from prison; andWHEREAS, People in prison who earn a fair and just wage can contribute to the growth of the economy and to public safety. These contributions to their families, taxes, restitution, and themselves will support the rehabilitative mandate of CDCR and ultimately save the state money by reducing the number of times people reoffend, the number of children in need of social services, and the likelihood of people seeking out governmental assistance; andWHEREAS, State law empowers CDCR to fix the daily wage rate for persons incarcerated in state prison by regulation, and empowers CALPIA to adopt a compensation schedule for inmate employees based on quantity and quality of work performed but not more than one-half the state minimum wage; andWHEREAS, State law also empowers a county to provide for the payment of wages to juvenile wards, and allows CDCR to pay juvenile wards for work related to the construction, renovation, or repair of juvenile justice facilities; andWHEREAS, State law should be amended to address the unfair wage compensation and to provide incarcerated persons with base work protections by redefining prison labor as legal employment; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature supports fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; and be it furtherResolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
1+CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 69Introduced by Senator BradfordAugust 14, 2019 Relative to prisoner compensation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 69, as introduced, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: YES Bill TextWHEREAS, This country has long recognized the value of human labor and the importance of fair wages. California has demonstrated this recognition through its ongoing commitment to offering quality pay careers for Californians through enactments like the California Equal Pay Act; andWHEREAS, The dignity of every person is inherent, and it is incumbent on the state to protect the dignity of all its citizens; andWHEREAS, Fair and just wages are intrinsically tied to human dignity; andWHEREAS, The factors of disparities within imprisonment are partially a result of disproportionate social factors in African American and Latinx communities that are associated primarily with poverty, employment, housing, and family differences; andWHEREAS, The poverty rate is roughly 25 percent for both African American and Latinx communities, compared to 9 percent for White American communities; andWHEREAS, The median income for African American and Latinx communities is roughly $20,000 less than the median income for White American communities; andWHEREAS, African American and Latinx adults are, respectively, 5.9 and 3.1 times more likely to be incarcerated than White adults; andWHEREAS, The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) found that in 2015, over 71 percent of prisoners were men of color. More specifically, 42 percent were Latinx and 29 percent were African American; andWHEREAS, The State of California currently incarcerates 126,428 people in state prisons and people in prison are routinely required to work for little or no compensation; andWHEREAS, Roughly 42,897 people in prison work up to full time, earning anywhere from $0.08 per hour to $3.90 per day in jobs ranging from electricians, carpenters, cooks, orderlies, fire crew members, braille transcribers, silk screen printers, and many other integral work positions; andWHEREAS, In 1982, California established the Prison Industry Authority (CALPIA) as a self-supporting business that provides work assignments for approximately 7,000 incarcerated people. CALPIA manages over 100 manufacturing, service, and consumable operations in all 34 CDCR institutions throughout California; andWHEREAS, The goods and services produced by CALPIA are sold predominantly to California state agencies, as well as to other government entities; andWHEREAS, CALPIA generates a gross profit of approximately $60 million annually and manufactures items from road signs and clothing to cleaning products and the furniture used in nearly every room at the State Capitol; andWHEREAS, Seven thousand people in prison work up to full time for CALPIA and nearly 1,175 participate in the Inmate Ward Labor program (IWL) and can earn $0.30 to $0.95 per hour; and WHEREAS, As of February 20, 2019, 3,384 people in prison work up to full time for the CDCR Conservation Camp program and earn $1.45 to $3.90 per day in jobs protecting people and property from fire. When working as emergency firefighters, they are compensated $1 per hour; andWHEREAS, Inflation continues to increase, yet the pay scale for those who are incarcerated continues to remain relatively low and does not reflect the inflation increase; andWHEREAS, As an example, the oldest written documentation of the pay schedule for those incarcerated and working in conservation camps is from the CDCRs Department Operations Manual published on January 10, 1990, which is identical to the current pay schedule; andWHEREAS, Fifty-five percent of a persons wages earned in prison are garnished to pay restitution, and low wages mean payments to victims are also low; andWHEREAS, Many people in prison have families, and low wages mean they are less able to help with general family financial needs, child support, or the added costs of communication and travel for families who have a loved one in prison; andWHEREAS, Research found that parents, upon entering prison, on average owed $10,543 in child support obligations. Due to a lack of income or full-time employment opportunities, the majority of parents have no means of paying child support debt while in prison, and they also struggle to pay it after their release; andWHEREAS, Fifty-two percent of people in state prisons are parents of minors. African American children are 7.5 times, and Latinx children 2.6 times, more likely than White children to have a parent in prison. There are 1.7 million children in the United States that have an incarcerated parent; andWHEREAS, Returning members of society face many challenges upon reentry, including housing insecurity and difficulty finding and keeping employment; andWHEREAS, Financial distress continues well after release from prison because of the difficulties one faces in finding a job, because having a criminal record makes the pathway to employment extremely difficult for those who are formerly incarcerated; andWHEREAS, A Brookings Institution study found that in the first year of postrelease, only 55 percent of formerly incarcerated people have any reported earnings. The research found that those with jobs in the first year earned a median of $10,090 and only 20 percent earned more than $15,000; andWHEREAS, The inability to earn or save money puts heavy burdens on families once a person is released. According to the study, 66 percent of formerly incarcerated people relied on family and friends as their primary source of financial support upon release; andWHEREAS, Estimates indicate formerly incarcerated people owe as much as 60 percent of their income to criminal justice debt. According to one source, up to 85 percent of people released from prison owe some form of criminal justice debt, compared to 25 percent in 1991; andWHEREAS, People released from prison receive $200 in gate money and typically leave prison with little to no financial support, putting them at risk for financial insecurity, hunger, and homelessness; andWHEREAS, Formerly incarcerated people are almost 10 times more likely to be homeless than the general public; and WHEREAS, The high cost of living in California, particularly in Los Angeles where 32 percent of people return to following incarceration, can lead to adverse outcomes for people released from prison; andWHEREAS, People in prison who earn a fair and just wage can contribute to the growth of the economy and to public safety. These contributions to their families, taxes, restitution, and themselves will support the rehabilitative mandate of CDCR and ultimately save the state money by reducing the number of times people reoffend, the number of children in need of social services, and the likelihood of people seeking out governmental assistance; andWHEREAS, State law empowers CDCR to fix the daily wage rate for persons incarcerated in state prison by regulation, and empowers CALPIA to adopt a compensation schedule for inmate employees based on quantity and quality of work performed but not more than one-half the state minimum wage; andWHEREAS, State law also empowers a county to provide for the payment of wages to juvenile wards, and allows CDCR to pay juvenile wards for work related to the construction, renovation, or repair of juvenile justice facilities; andWHEREAS, State law should be amended to address the unfair wage compensation and to provide incarcerated persons with base work protections by redefining prison labor as legal employment; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature supports fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; and be it furtherResolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
22
3- Amended IN Senate January 23, 2020 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 69Introduced by Senator BradfordAugust 14, 2019Relative to prisoner compensation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 69, as amended, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: YES
3+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 69Introduced by Senator BradfordAugust 14, 2019 Relative to prisoner compensation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 69, as introduced, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: YES
44
5- Amended IN Senate January 23, 2020
65
7-Amended IN Senate January 23, 2020
6+
7+
88
99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Senate Concurrent Resolution
1212
1313 No. 69
1414
1515 Introduced by Senator BradfordAugust 14, 2019
1616
1717 Introduced by Senator Bradford
1818 August 14, 2019
1919
2020 Relative to prisoner compensation.
2121
2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2525
26-SCR 69, as amended, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.
26+SCR 69, as introduced, Bradford. Prisoners: wages.
2727
2828 This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
2929
3030 This measure would express the Legislatures support for fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
3131
3232 ## Digest Key
3333
3434 ## Bill Text
3535
3636 WHEREAS, This country has long recognized the value of human labor and the importance of fair wages. California has demonstrated this recognition through its ongoing commitment to offering quality pay careers for Californians through enactments like the California Equal Pay Act; and
3737
3838 WHEREAS, The dignity of every person is inherent, and it is incumbent on the state to protect the dignity of all its citizens; and
3939
4040 WHEREAS, Fair and just wages are intrinsically tied to human dignity; and
4141
4242 WHEREAS, The factors of disparities within imprisonment are partially a result of disproportionate social factors in African American and Latinx communities that are associated primarily with poverty, employment, housing, and family differences; and
4343
4444 WHEREAS, The poverty rate is roughly 25 percent for both African American and Latinx communities, compared to 9 percent for White American communities; and
4545
4646 WHEREAS, The median income for African American and Latinx communities is roughly $20,000 less than the median income for White American communities; and
4747
4848 WHEREAS, African American and Latinx adults are, respectively, 5.9 and 3.1 times more likely to be incarcerated than White adults; and
4949
5050 WHEREAS, The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) found that in 2015, over 71 percent of prisoners were men of color. More specifically, 42 percent were Latinx and 29 percent were African American; and
5151
52-WHEREAS, In 2017, African American women were incarcerated at 5.7 times the rate of White women and Latinx women were incarcerated at 1.3 times the rate of White women; and
53-
5452 WHEREAS, The State of California currently incarcerates 126,428 people in state prisons and people in prison are routinely required to work for little or no compensation; and
5553
56-WHEREAS, Roughly 42,897 people in prison work up to full time, earning anywhere from $0.08 to $1.00 per hour to $3.90 per day in jobs ranging from electricians, carpenters, cooks, orderlies, fire conservation crew members, braille transcribers, silk screen printers, and many other integral work positions; and
54+WHEREAS, Roughly 42,897 people in prison work up to full time, earning anywhere from $0.08 per hour to $3.90 per day in jobs ranging from electricians, carpenters, cooks, orderlies, fire crew members, braille transcribers, silk screen printers, and many other integral work positions; and
5755
5856 WHEREAS, In 1982, California established the Prison Industry Authority (CALPIA) as a self-supporting business that provides work assignments for approximately 7,000 incarcerated people. CALPIA manages over 100 manufacturing, service, and consumable operations in all 34 CDCR institutions throughout California; and
5957
6058 WHEREAS, The goods and services produced by CALPIA are sold predominantly to California state agencies, as well as to other government entities; and
6159
6260 WHEREAS, CALPIA generates a gross profit of approximately $60 million annually and manufactures items from road signs and clothing to cleaning products and the furniture used in nearly every room at the State Capitol; and
6361
6462 WHEREAS, Seven thousand people in prison work up to full time for CALPIA and nearly 1,175 participate in the Inmate Ward Labor program (IWL) and can earn $0.30 to $0.95 per hour; and
6563
66-WHEREAS, As of February 20, 2019, 3,384 people in prison work up to full time for the CDCR Conservation Camp program and earn $1.45 to $3.90 per day in jobs protecting people and property from fire. When working as emergency firefighters, they in emergency situations, conservation crew members are compensated $1 per hour; and
64+WHEREAS, As of February 20, 2019, 3,384 people in prison work up to full time for the CDCR Conservation Camp program and earn $1.45 to $3.90 per day in jobs protecting people and property from fire. When working as emergency firefighters, they are compensated $1 per hour; and
6765
6866 WHEREAS, Inflation continues to increase, yet the pay scale for those who are incarcerated continues to remain relatively low and does not reflect the inflation increase; and
6967
7068 WHEREAS, As an example, the oldest written documentation of the pay schedule for those incarcerated and working in conservation camps is from the CDCRs Department Operations Manual published on January 10, 1990, which is identical to the current pay schedule; and
7169
7270 WHEREAS, Fifty-five percent of a persons wages earned in prison are garnished to pay restitution, and low wages mean payments to victims are also low; and
7371
7472 WHEREAS, Many people in prison have families, and low wages mean they are less able to help with general family financial needs, child support, or the added costs of communication and travel for families who have a loved one in prison; and
7573
7674 WHEREAS, Research found that parents, upon entering prison, on average owed $10,543 in child support obligations. Due to a lack of income or full-time employment opportunities, the majority of parents have no means of paying child support debt while in prison, and they also struggle to pay it after their release; and
7775
7876 WHEREAS, Fifty-two percent of people in state prisons are parents of minors. African American children are 7.5 times, and Latinx children 2.6 times, more likely than White children to have a parent in prison. There are 1.7 million children in the United States that have an incarcerated parent; and
7977
8078 WHEREAS, Returning members of society face many challenges upon reentry, including housing insecurity and difficulty finding and keeping employment; and
8179
8280 WHEREAS, Financial distress continues well after release from prison because of the difficulties one faces in finding a job, because having a criminal record makes the pathway to employment extremely difficult for those who are formerly incarcerated; and
8381
8482 WHEREAS, A Brookings Institution study found that in the first year of postrelease, only 55 percent of formerly incarcerated people have any reported earnings. The research found that those with jobs in the first year earned a median of $10,090 and only 20 percent earned more than $15,000; and
8583
8684 WHEREAS, The inability to earn or save money puts heavy burdens on families once a person is released. According to the study, 66 percent of formerly incarcerated people relied on family and friends as their primary source of financial support upon release; and
8785
8886 WHEREAS, Estimates indicate formerly incarcerated people owe as much as 60 percent of their income to criminal justice debt. According to one source, up to 85 percent of people released from prison owe some form of criminal justice debt, compared to 25 percent in 1991; and
8987
9088 WHEREAS, People released from prison receive $200 in gate money and typically leave prison with little to no financial support, putting them at risk for financial insecurity, hunger, and homelessness; and
9189
9290 WHEREAS, Formerly incarcerated people are almost 10 times more likely to be homeless than the general public; and
9391
9492 WHEREAS, The high cost of living in California, particularly in Los Angeles where 32 percent of people return to following incarceration, can lead to adverse outcomes for people released from prison; and
9593
9694 WHEREAS, People in prison who earn a fair and just wage can contribute to the growth of the economy and to public safety. These contributions to their families, taxes, restitution, and themselves will support the rehabilitative mandate of CDCR and ultimately save the state money by reducing the number of times people reoffend, the number of children in need of social services, and the likelihood of people seeking out governmental assistance; and
9795
9896 WHEREAS, State law empowers CDCR to fix the daily wage rate for persons incarcerated in state prison by regulation, and empowers CALPIA to adopt a compensation schedule for inmate employees based on quantity and quality of work performed but not more than one-half the state minimum wage; and
9997
10098 WHEREAS, State law also empowers a county to provide for the payment of wages to juvenile wards, and allows CDCR to pay juvenile wards for work related to the construction, renovation, or repair of juvenile justice facilities; and
10199
102100 WHEREAS, State law should be amended to address the unfair wage compensation and to provide incarcerated persons with base work protections by redefining prison labor as legal employment; now, therefore, be it
103101
104102 Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature supports fair and just wages for incarcerated persons working for the Prison Industry Authority, the Division of Juvenile Facilities, and the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; and be it further
105103
106104 Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.