California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2555 Compare Versions

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11 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2555Introduced by Assembly Member Blanca RubioFebruary 17, 2022 An act to amend Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code, relating to domestic violence. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2555, as introduced, Blanca Rubio. Domestic violence: probation: sobriety-monitoring programs.Existing law requires the court to impose specified conditions of probation for defendants convicted of domestic violence, including referral to a batterers program in which participation in substance abuse counseling is a standard component for defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs and alcohol. If probation is granted in domestic violence cases, existing law authorizes the probation department or the court to make provisions for a defendant to receive alcohol and drug services using the defendants own resources.This bill would require the court to order a person who is convicted of, and placed on probation for, a domestic violence offense to participate in a sobriety-monitoring program, as defined, as a term of probation if the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, unless the court determines that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares that alcohol consumption is a major and disproportionate contributor to the occurrence of domestic violence.SEC. 2. Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code is amended to read:1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
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33 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2555Introduced by Assembly Member Blanca RubioFebruary 17, 2022 An act to amend Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code, relating to domestic violence. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2555, as introduced, Blanca Rubio. Domestic violence: probation: sobriety-monitoring programs.Existing law requires the court to impose specified conditions of probation for defendants convicted of domestic violence, including referral to a batterers program in which participation in substance abuse counseling is a standard component for defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs and alcohol. If probation is granted in domestic violence cases, existing law authorizes the probation department or the court to make provisions for a defendant to receive alcohol and drug services using the defendants own resources.This bill would require the court to order a person who is convicted of, and placed on probation for, a domestic violence offense to participate in a sobriety-monitoring program, as defined, as a term of probation if the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, unless the court determines that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NO
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1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Blanca RubioFebruary 17, 2022
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1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Blanca Rubio
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2020 An act to amend Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code, relating to domestic violence.
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2626 AB 2555, as introduced, Blanca Rubio. Domestic violence: probation: sobriety-monitoring programs.
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2828 Existing law requires the court to impose specified conditions of probation for defendants convicted of domestic violence, including referral to a batterers program in which participation in substance abuse counseling is a standard component for defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs and alcohol. If probation is granted in domestic violence cases, existing law authorizes the probation department or the court to make provisions for a defendant to receive alcohol and drug services using the defendants own resources.This bill would require the court to order a person who is convicted of, and placed on probation for, a domestic violence offense to participate in a sobriety-monitoring program, as defined, as a term of probation if the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, unless the court determines that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program.
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3030 Existing law requires the court to impose specified conditions of probation for defendants convicted of domestic violence, including referral to a batterers program in which participation in substance abuse counseling is a standard component for defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs and alcohol. If probation is granted in domestic violence cases, existing law authorizes the probation department or the court to make provisions for a defendant to receive alcohol and drug services using the defendants own resources.
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3232 This bill would require the court to order a person who is convicted of, and placed on probation for, a domestic violence offense to participate in a sobriety-monitoring program, as defined, as a term of probation if the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, unless the court determines that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program.
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3838 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares that alcohol consumption is a major and disproportionate contributor to the occurrence of domestic violence.SEC. 2. Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code is amended to read:1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
3939
4040 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4141
4242 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4343
4444 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares that alcohol consumption is a major and disproportionate contributor to the occurrence of domestic violence.
4545
4646 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares that alcohol consumption is a major and disproportionate contributor to the occurrence of domestic violence.
4747
4848 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares that alcohol consumption is a major and disproportionate contributor to the occurrence of domestic violence.
4949
5050 ### SECTION 1.
5151
5252 SEC. 2. Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code is amended to read:1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
5353
5454 SEC. 2. Section 1203.097 of the Penal Code is amended to read:
5555
5656 ### SEC. 2.
5757
5858 1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
5959
6060 1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
6161
6262 1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:(1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.(2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.(3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.(4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.(5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.(B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.(C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:(i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.(ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.(D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.(E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.(6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.(B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.(C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.(6)(7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.(7)(8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.(ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.(B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.(8)(9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.(9)(10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.(10)(11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:(i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.(ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.(iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.(iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.(v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.(vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.(vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.(viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.(B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.(C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.(11)(12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:(A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).(B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.(12)(13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.(b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:(1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.(2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.(3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(A) Social, economic, and family background.(B) Education.(C) Vocational achievements.(D) Criminal history.(E) Medical history.(F) Substance abuse history.(G) Consultation with the probation officer.(H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.(I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.(4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.(1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:(A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.(B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.(C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.(D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.(E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.(F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.(G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.(H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.(I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.(J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.(K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.(L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.(M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.(N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.(O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:(i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.(ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.(iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.(P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.(2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:(A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.(B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.(3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:(A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.(B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.(C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.(D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.(4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.(5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.(A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:(i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.(ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.(iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.(iv) The payment of the approval fee.(B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.(C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:(i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.(ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.(6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.(7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.(d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.
6363
6464
6565
6666 1203.097. (a) If a person is granted probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, the terms of probation shall include all of the following:
6767
6868 (1) A minimum period of probation of 36 months, which may include a period of summary probation as appropriate.
6969
7070 (2) A criminal court protective order protecting the victim from further acts of violence, threats, stalking, sexual abuse, and harassment, and, if appropriate, containing residence exclusion or stay-away conditions.
7171
7272 (3) Notice to the victim of the disposition of the case.
7373
7474 (4) Booking the defendant within one week of sentencing if the defendant has not already been booked.
7575
7676 (5) (A) A minimum payment by the defendant of a fee of five hundred dollars ($500) to be disbursed as specified in this paragraph. If, after a hearing in open court, the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay, the court may reduce or waive this fee. If the court exercises its discretion to reduce or waive the fee, it shall state the reason on the record.
7777
7878 (B) Two-thirds of the moneys deposited with the county treasurer pursuant to this section shall be retained by counties and deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund created pursuant to Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, to be expended for the purposes of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 18290) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. Of the moneys deposited in the domestic violence programs special fund, no more than 8 percent may be used for administrative costs, as specified in Section 18305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
7979
8080 (C) The remaining one-third of the moneys shall be transferred, once a month, to the Controller for deposit in equal amounts in the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund and in the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund, which are hereby created, in an amount equal to one-third of funds collected during the preceding month. Moneys deposited into these funds pursuant to this section shall be available upon appropriation by the Legislature and shall be distributed each fiscal year as follows:
8181
8282 (i) Funds from the Domestic Violence Restraining Order Reimbursement Fund shall be distributed to local law enforcement or other criminal justice agencies for state-mandated local costs resulting from the notification requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of Section 6380 of the Family Code, based on the annual notification from the Department of Justice of the number of restraining orders issued and registered in the state domestic violence restraining order registry maintained by the Department of Justice, for the development and maintenance of the domestic violence restraining order databank system.
8383
8484 (ii) Funds from the Domestic Violence Training and Education Fund shall support a statewide training and education program to increase public awareness of domestic violence and to improve the scope and quality of services provided to the victims of domestic violence. Grants to support this program shall be awarded on a competitive basis and be administered by the State Department of Public Health, in consultation with the statewide domestic violence coalition, which is eligible to receive funding under this section.
8585
8686 (D) The fee imposed by this paragraph shall be treated as a fee, not as a fine, and shall not be subject to reduction for time served as provided pursuant to Section 1205 or 2900.5.
8787
8888 (E) The fee imposed by this paragraph may be collected by the collecting agency, or the agencys designee, after the termination of the period of probation, whether probation is terminated by revocation or by completion of the term.
8989
9090 (6) (A) If the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, they shall be placed in a sobriety-monitoring program that requires testing of, and abstention from, alcohol and controlled substances.
9191
9292 (B) The requirement that the defendant enter the sobriety-monitoring program may be removed from the terms of probation if the court finds that the interests of justice would not be served by having the defendant participate in the program. The court shall state its reasons for removing the requirement in writing or on the record.
9393
9494 (C) As used in this section, a sobriety-monitoring program means a program in which alcohol and controlled substances are tested for on a continuous basis in order to eliminate an opportunity for consumption to occur without detection.
9595
9696 (6)
9797
9898
9999
100100 (7) Successful completion of a batterers program, as defined in subdivision (c), or if none is available, another appropriate counseling program designated by the court, for a period not less than one year with periodic progress reports by the program to the court every three months or less and weekly sessions of a minimum of two hours class time duration. The defendant shall attend consecutive weekly sessions, unless granted an excused absence for good cause by the program for no more than three individual sessions during the entire program, and shall complete the program within 18 months, unless, after a hearing, the court finds good cause to modify the requirements of consecutive attendance or completion within 18 months.
101101
102102 (7)
103103
104104
105105
106106 (8) (A) (i) The court shall order the defendant to comply with all probation requirements, including the requirements to attend counseling, keep all program appointments, and pay program fees based upon the ability to pay.
107107
108108 (ii) The terms of probation for offenders shall not be lifted until all reasonable fees due to the counseling program have been paid in full, but in no case shall probation be extended beyond the term provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1203.1. If the court finds that the defendant does not have the ability to pay the fees based on the defendants changed circumstances, the court may reduce or waive the fees.
109109
110110 (B) Upon request by the batterers program, the court shall provide the defendants arrest report, prior incidents of violence, and treatment history to the program.
111111
112112 (8)
113113
114114
115115
116116 (9) The court also shall order the defendant to perform a specified amount of appropriate community service, as designated by the court. The defendant shall present the court with proof of completion of community service and the court shall determine if the community service has been satisfactorily completed. If sufficient staff and resources are available, the community service shall be performed under the jurisdiction of the local agency overseeing a community service program.
117117
118118 (9)
119119
120120
121121
122122 (10) If the program finds that the defendant is unsuitable, the program shall immediately contact the probation department or the court. The probation department or court shall either recalendar the case for hearing or refer the defendant to an appropriate alternative batterers program.
123123
124124 (10)
125125
126126
127127
128128 (11) (A) Upon recommendation of the program, a court shall require a defendant to participate in additional sessions throughout the probationary period, unless it finds that it is not in the interests of justice to do so, states its reasons on the record, and enters them into the minutes. In deciding whether the defendant would benefit from more sessions, the court shall consider whether any of the following conditions exists:
129129
130130 (i) The defendant has been violence free for a minimum of six months.
131131
132132 (ii) The defendant has cooperated and participated in the batterers program.
133133
134134 (iii) The defendant demonstrates an understanding of and practices positive conflict resolution skills.
135135
136136 (iv) The defendant blames, degrades, or has committed acts that dehumanize the victim or puts at risk the victims safety, including, but not limited to, molesting, stalking, striking, attacking, threatening, sexually assaulting, or battering the victim.
137137
138138 (v) The defendant demonstrates an understanding that the use of coercion or violent behavior to maintain dominance is unacceptable in an intimate relationship.
139139
140140 (vi) The defendant has made threats to harm anyone in any manner.
141141
142142 (vii) The defendant has complied with applicable requirements under paragraph (6) of subdivision (c) or subparagraph (C) to receive alcohol counseling, drug counseling, or both.
143143
144144 (viii) The defendant demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior perpetrated against the victim.
145145
146146 (B) The program shall immediately report any violation of the terms of the protective order, including any new acts of violence or failure to comply with the program requirements, to the court, the prosecutor, and, if formal probation has been ordered, to the probation department. The probationer shall file proof of enrollment in a batterers program with the court within 30 days of conviction.
147147
148148 (C) Concurrent with other requirements under this section, in addition to, and not in lieu of, the batterers program, and unless prohibited by the referring court, the probation department or the court may make provisions for a defendant to use his or her their resources to enroll in a chemical dependency program or to enter voluntarily a licensed chemical dependency recovery hospital or residential treatment program that has a valid license issued by the state to provide alcohol or drug services to receive program participation credit, as determined by the court. The probation department shall document evidence of this hospital or residential treatment participation in the defendants program file.
149149
150150 (11)
151151
152152
153153
154154 (12) The conditions of probation may include, in lieu of a fine, but not in lieu of the fund payment required under paragraph (5), one or more of the following requirements:
155155
156156 (A) That the defendant make payments to a battered womens shelter, up to a maximum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).
157157
158158 (B) That the defendant reimburse the victim for reasonable expenses that the court finds are the direct result of the defendants offense.
159159
160160 For any order to pay a fine, to make payments to a battered womens shelter, or to pay restitution as a condition of probation under this subdivision, the court shall make a determination of the defendants ability to pay. Determination of a defendants ability to pay may include his or her their future earning capacity. A defendant shall bear the burden of demonstrating lack of his or her their ability to pay. Express findings by the court as to the factors bearing on the amount of the fine shall not be required. In no event shall any order to make payments to a battered womens shelter be made if it would impair the ability of the defendant to pay direct restitution to the victim or court-ordered child support. When the injury to a married person is caused, in whole or in part, by the criminal acts of his or her their spouse in violation of this section, the community property shall not be used to discharge the liability of the offending spouse for restitution to the injured spouse, as required by Section 1203.04, as operative on or before August 2, 1995, or Section 1202.4, or to a shelter for costs with regard to the injured spouse, until all separate property of the offending spouse is exhausted.
161161
162162 (12)
163163
164164
165165
166166 (13) If it appears to the prosecuting attorney, the court, or the probation department that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from counseling, or has engaged in criminal conduct, upon request of the probation officer, the prosecuting attorney, or on its own motion, the court, as a priority calendar item, shall hold a hearing to determine whether further sentencing should proceed. The court may consider factors, including, but not limited to, any violence by the defendant against the former or a new victim while on probation and noncompliance with any other specific condition of probation. If the court finds that the defendant is not performing satisfactorily in the assigned program, is not benefiting from the program, has not complied with a condition of probation, or has engaged in criminal conduct, the court shall terminate the defendants participation in the program and shall proceed with further sentencing.
167167
168168 (b) If a person is granted formal probation for a crime in which the victim is a person defined in Section 6211 of the Family Code, in addition to the terms specified in subdivision (a), all of the following shall apply:
169169
170170 (1) The probation department shall make an investigation and take into consideration the defendants age, medical history, employment and service records, educational background, community and family ties, prior incidents of violence, police report, treatment history, if any, demonstrable motivation, and other mitigating factors in determining which batterers program would be appropriate for the defendant. This information shall be provided to the batterers program if it is requested. The probation department shall also determine which community programs the defendant would benefit from and which of those programs would accept the defendant. The probation department shall report its findings and recommendations to the court.
171171
172172 (2) The court shall advise the defendant that the failure to report to the probation department for the initial investigation, as directed by the court, or the failure to enroll in a specified program, as directed by the court or the probation department, shall result in possible further incarceration. The court, in the interests of justice, may relieve the defendant from the prohibition set forth in this subdivision based upon the defendants mistake or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be filed within 20 court days of the missed deadline. This time limitation may not be extended. A copy of any application for relief shall be served on the office of the prosecuting attorney.
173173
174174 (3) After the court orders the defendant to a batterers program, the probation department shall conduct an initial assessment of the defendant, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
175175
176176 (A) Social, economic, and family background.
177177
178178 (B) Education.
179179
180180 (C) Vocational achievements.
181181
182182 (D) Criminal history.
183183
184184 (E) Medical history.
185185
186186 (F) Substance abuse history.
187187
188188 (G) Consultation with the probation officer.
189189
190190 (H) Verbal consultation with the victim, only if the victim desires to participate.
191191
192192 (I) Assessment of the future probability of the defendant committing murder.
193193
194194 (4) The probation department shall attempt to notify the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the batterers program, as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.
195195
196196 (c) The court or the probation department shall refer defendants only to batterers programs that follow standards outlined in paragraph (1), which may include, but are not limited to, lectures, classes, group discussions, and counseling. The probation department shall design and implement an approval and renewal process for batterers programs and shall solicit input from criminal justice agencies and domestic violence victim advocacy programs.
197197
198198 (1) The goal of a batterers program under this section shall be to stop domestic violence. A batterers program shall consist of the following components:
199199
200200 (A) Strategies to hold the defendant accountable for the violence in a relationship, including, but not limited to, providing the defendant with a written statement that the defendant shall be held accountable for acts or threats of domestic violence.
201201
202202 (B) A requirement that the defendant participate in ongoing same-gender group sessions.
203203
204204 (C) An initial intake that provides written definitions to the defendant of physical, emotional, sexual, economic, and verbal abuse, and the techniques for stopping these types of abuse.
205205
206206 (D) Procedures to inform the victim regarding the requirements for the defendants participation in the intervention program as well as regarding available victim resources. The victim also shall be informed that attendance in any program does not guarantee that an abuser will not be violent.
207207
208208 (E) A requirement that the defendant attend group sessions free of chemical influence.
209209
210210 (F) Educational programming that examines, at a minimum, gender roles, socialization, the nature of violence, the dynamics of power and control, and the effects of abuse on children and others.
211211
212212 (G) A requirement that excludes any couple counseling or family counseling, or both.
213213
214214 (H) Procedures that give the program the right to assess whether or not the defendant would benefit from the program and to refuse to enroll the defendant if it is determined that the defendant would not benefit from the program, so long as the refusal is not because of the defendants inability to pay. If possible, the program shall suggest an appropriate alternative program.
215215
216216 (I) Program staff who, to the extent possible, have specific knowledge regarding, but not limited to, spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, substance abuse, the dynamics of violence and abuse, the law, and procedures of the legal system.
217217
218218 (J) Program staff who are encouraged to utilize the expertise, training, and assistance of local domestic violence centers.
219219
220220 (K) A requirement that the defendant enter into a written agreement with the program, which shall include an outline of the contents of the program, the attendance requirements, the requirement to attend group sessions free of chemical influence, and a statement that the defendant may be removed from the program if it is determined that the defendant is not benefiting from the program or is disruptive to the program.
221221
222222 (L) A requirement that the defendant sign a confidentiality statement prohibiting disclosure of any information obtained through participating in the program or during group sessions regarding other participants in the program.
223223
224224 (M) Program content that provides cultural and ethnic sensitivity.
225225
226226 (N) A requirement of a written referral from the court or probation department prior to permitting the defendant to enroll in the program. The written referral shall state the number of minimum sessions required by the court.
227227
228228 (O) Procedures for submitting to the probation department all of the following uniform written responses:
229229
230230 (i) Proof of enrollment, to be submitted to the court and the probation department and to include the fee determined to be charged to the defendant, based upon the ability to pay, for each session.
231231
232232 (ii) Periodic progress reports that include attendance, fee payment history, and program compliance.
233233
234234 (iii) Final evaluation that includes the programs evaluation of the defendants progress, using the criteria set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (10) (11) of subdivision (a), and recommendation for either successful or unsuccessful termination or continuation in the program.
235235
236236 (P) A sliding fee schedule based on the defendants ability to pay. The batterers program shall develop and utilize a sliding fee scale that recognizes both the defendants ability to pay and the necessity of programs to meet overhead expenses. An indigent defendant may negotiate a deferred payment schedule, but shall pay a nominal fee, if the defendant has the ability to pay the nominal fee. Upon a hearing and a finding by the court that the defendant does not have the financial ability to pay the nominal fee, the court shall waive this fee. The payment of the fee shall be made a condition of probation if the court determines the defendant has the present ability to pay the fee. The fee shall be paid during the term of probation unless the program sets other conditions. The acceptance policies shall be in accordance with the scaled fee system.
237237
238238 (2) The court shall refer persons only to batterers programs that have been approved by the probation department pursuant to paragraph (5). The probation department shall do both of the following:
239239
240240 (A) Provide for the issuance of a provisional approval, provided that the applicant is in substantial compliance with applicable laws and regulations and an urgent need for approval exists. A provisional approval shall be considered an authorization to provide services and shall not be considered a vested right.
241241
242242 (B) If the probation department determines that a program is not in compliance with standards set by the department, the department shall provide written notice of the noncompliant areas to the program. The program shall submit a written plan of corrections within 14 days from the date of the written notice on noncompliance. A plan of correction shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each corrective action and timeframe for implementation. The department shall review and approve all or any part of the plan of correction and notify the program of approval or disapproval in writing. If the program fails to submit a plan of correction or fails to implement the approved plan of correction, the department shall consider whether to revoke or suspend approval and, upon revoking or suspending approval, shall have the option to cease referrals of defendants under this section.
243243
244244 (3) No program, regardless of its source of funding, shall be approved unless it meets all of the following standards:
245245
246246 (A) The establishment of guidelines and criteria for education services, including standards of services that may include lectures, classes, and group discussions.
247247
248248 (B) Supervision of the defendant for the purpose of evaluating the persons progress in the program.
249249
250250 (C) Adequate reporting requirements to ensure that all persons who, after being ordered to attend and complete a program, may be identified for either failure to enroll in, or failure to successfully complete, the program or for the successful completion of the program as ordered. The program shall notify the court and the probation department, in writing, within the period of time and in the manner specified by the court of any person who fails to complete the program. Notification shall be given if the program determines that the defendant is performing unsatisfactorily or if the defendant is not benefiting from the education, treatment, or counseling.
251251
252252 (D) No victim shall be compelled to participate in a program or counseling, and no program may condition a defendants enrollment on participation by the victim.
253253
254254 (4) In making referrals of indigent defendants to approved batterers programs, the probation department shall apportion these referrals evenly among the approved programs.
255255
256256 (5) The probation department shall have the sole authority to approve a batterers program for probation. The program shall be required to obtain only one approval but shall renew that approval annually.
257257
258258 (A) The procedure for the approval of a new or existing program shall include all of the following:
259259
260260 (i) The completion of a written application containing necessary and pertinent information describing the applicant program.
261261
262262 (ii) The demonstration by the program that it possesses adequate administrative and operational capability to operate a batterers treatment program. The program shall provide documentation to prove that the program has conducted batterers programs for at least one year prior to application. This requirement may be waived under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) if there is no existing batterers program in the city, county, or city and county.
263263
264264 (iii) The onsite review of the program, including monitoring of a session to determine that the program adheres to applicable statutes and regulations.
265265
266266 (iv) The payment of the approval fee.
267267
268268 (B) The probation department shall fix a fee for approval not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and for approval renewal not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250) every year in an amount sufficient to cover its costs in administering the approval process under this section. No fee shall be charged for the approval of local governmental entities.
269269
270270 (C) The probation department has the sole authority to approve the issuance, denial, suspension, or revocation of approval and to cease new enrollments or referrals to a batterers program under this section. The probation department shall review information relative to a programs performance or failure to adhere to standards, or both. The probation department may suspend or revoke an approval issued under this subdivision or deny an application to renew an approval or to modify the terms and conditions of approval, based on grounds established by probation, including, but not limited to, either of the following:
271271
272272 (i) Violation of this section by any person holding approval or by a program employee in a program under this section.
273273
274274 (ii) Misrepresentation of any material fact in obtaining the approval.
275275
276276 (6) For defendants who are chronic users or serious abusers of drugs or alcohol, standard components in the program shall include concurrent counseling for substance abuse and violent behavior, and in appropriate cases, detoxification and abstinence from the abused substance.
277277
278278 (7) The program shall conduct an exit conference that assesses the defendants progress during his or her their participation in the batterers program.
279279
280280 (d) An act or omission relating to the approval of a batterers treatment programs under paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) is a discretionary act pursuant to Section 820.2 of the Government Code.