California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2031 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly March 07, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2031Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-SawyerFebruary 01, 2024An act to amend Sections 13300, 13301, 13303, 13304, 13305, and 13307 of, and to add Section 13311 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to immigration services.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2031, as amended, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
1+CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2031Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-SawyerFebruary 01, 2024 An act to amend Sections 13300, 13301, 13303, 13304, 13305, and 13307 of, and to add Section 13311 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to immigration services.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2031, as introduced, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly March 07, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2031Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-SawyerFebruary 01, 2024An act to amend Sections 13300, 13301, 13303, 13304, 13305, and 13307 of, and to add Section 13311 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to immigration services.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2031, as amended, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2031Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-SawyerFebruary 01, 2024 An act to amend Sections 13300, 13301, 13303, 13304, 13305, and 13307 of, and to add Section 13311 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to immigration services.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2031, as introduced, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly March 07, 2024
65
7-Amended IN Assembly March 07, 2024
6+
7+
88
99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Assembly Bill
1212
1313 No. 2031
1414
1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-SawyerFebruary 01, 2024
1616
1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Jones-Sawyer
1818 February 01, 2024
1919
2020 An act to amend Sections 13300, 13301, 13303, 13304, 13305, and 13307 of, and to add Section 13311 to, the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to immigration services.
2121
2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2525
26-AB 2031, as amended, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.
26+AB 2031, as introduced, Jones-Sawyer. One California program.
2727
2828 Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
2929
3030 Existing law requires the State Department of Social Services, subject to an appropriation, to provide grants to qualified nonprofit organizations through contracts, in order to provide persons with certain immigration-related legal services. Under existing law, a component of those grants is aimed at legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in the state.
3131
3232 This bill would make changes to the criteria for organizations providing legal services to those minors, including adjustments to qualifications based on the organizations history of professional experience.
3333
3434 Under existing law, another component of those grants is aimed at services relating to immigration remedies and naturalization, among other processes, to assist persons residing in, or formerly residing in, the state.
3535
3636 This bill would expand those qualifying services to persons having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to the state, and would expand the scope of services to include, among other things, legal representation and related services for removal defense. The bill would make changes to the definitions of various terms relating to legal services and immigration remedies.
3737
3838 Existing law prohibits use of the grant funds to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent or serious felony.
3939
4040 This bill would remove that prohibition on the use of funds for those individuals.
4141
4242 Existing law requires the department to update the Legislature on specified information relating to the grant program in the course of budget hearings.
4343
4444 This bill would expand the scope of reportable information and would instead require the department to update the Legislature through an annual report, and to post the reports on the departments internet website and make them publicly available. The bill would also require the department to update the Legislature through a publicly available report, every 3 years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The bill would make conforming changes to related provisions.
4545
4646 The bill would require the Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or their representative, to convene an ongoing advisory committee, with a specified composition, to be established by January 1, 2026. Under the bill, the committees purpose would be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and to the Legislature on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.
4747
4848 Under the bill, personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the above-described services, would not be a public record and would be prohibited from disclosure by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.
4949
5050 Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
5151
5252 This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
5353
5454 ## Digest Key
5555
5656 ## Bill Text
5757
58-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
58+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
5959
6060 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6161
6262 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6363
64-SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
64+SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
6565
6666 SECTION 1. Section 13300 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
6767
6868 ### SECTION 1.
6969
70-13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
70+13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
7171
72-13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
72+13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
7373
74-13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
74+13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.(b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
7575
7676
7777
7878 13300. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this chapter or the annual Budget Act, the department shall contract, as described in Section 13301, with qualified nonprofit legal services organizations to provide legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are transferred to the care and custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement and who are present in this state.
7979
8080 (b) Legal services provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the sole purpose of providing legal representation to unaccompanied undocumented minors who are in the physical custody of the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or who are residing with a family member or other sponsor.
8181
8282 (c) For purposes of this chapter, the term unaccompanied undocumented minors means unaccompanied children as described in Section 279(g)(2) of Title 6 of the United States Code.
8383
84-(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
84+(d) For purposes of this chapter, the term legal services services and related services, or a variation thereof as specified in subdivision (b) of Section 13303, includes culturally and linguistically appropriate services provided by attorneys, paralegals, interpreters interpreters, social workers, and other support staff for state court proceedings, federal immigration proceedings, and any appeals arising from those proceedings. The term includes psychological evaluations, expert witness testimony, interpretation and translation, medical examinations, investigators, postrelease services, and other litigation costs.
8585
86-SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
86+SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
8787
8888 SEC. 2. Section 13301 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
8989
9090 ### SEC. 2.
9191
92-13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
92+13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
9393
94-13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
94+13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
9595
96-13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
96+13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:(a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.(4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).(5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.(c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.(e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
9797
9898
9999
100100 13301. Contracts awarded pursuant to Section 13300 shall fulfill all of the following:
101101
102102 (a) Be executed only with nonprofit legal services organizations that meet all of the following requirements:
103103
104-(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.
104+(1) Have at least three years of experience handling asylum, T-Visa, U-Visa, or special immigrant juvenile status cases and have represented at least 25 individuals in these matters. matters, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or representative accredited by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) or federal Office of Legal Access Programs (OLAP) (DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative) with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration matters before the United States Department of Homeland Security.
105105
106-(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.
106+(2) Have experience in representing individuals in removal proceedings and asylum applications. applications, or include on the staff of the organization a supervising attorney or DOJ or OLAP Accredited Representative with at least three years experience and expertise in providing legal representation to indigent clients in civil immigration proceedings before the Executive Office for Immigration Review within the United States Department of Justice.
107107
108-(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for persons beyond their staff.
108+(3) Have conducted trainings on these issues for practitioners persons beyond their staff.
109109
110110 (4) Have experience guiding and supervising the work of attorneys whom themselves do not regularly participate in this area of the law but nevertheless work pro bono on the types of cases described in paragraph (1).
111111
112112 (5) Are accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.
113113
114114 (b) Provide for legal services to unaccompanied undocumented minors through a funding method, as determined by the department, that shall include all administrative and supervisory costs and court fees.
115115
116116 (c) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.
117117
118118 (d) Require contractors to coordinate efforts with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement Legal Access Project in order to respond to and assist or represent unaccompanied undocumented minors who could benefit from the services provided under this chapter.
119119
120120 (e) Require contractors to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
121121
122-SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
122+SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
123123
124124 SEC. 3. Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
125125
126126 ### SEC. 3.
127127
128-13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
128+13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
129129
130-13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
130+13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
131131
132-13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
132+13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.(b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.(B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.(C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.(2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.(3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.(4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.(c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).(3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.(3)(4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.(4)(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.(5)(6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.(d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.(e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.(e)(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).(3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.(g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.(f)(h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.(g)(i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.(h)(j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
133133
134134
135135
136136 13303. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants, as described in subdivision (b), to organizations qualified under Section 13304.
137137
138138 (b) Grants provided in accordance with subdivision (a) shall be for the purpose of providing one or more of the following services, as determined by the department:
139139
140-(1) Services to persons residing in, formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
140+(1) Services to persons residing in, or formerly residing in, or having an intent to reside in and having a nexus to, California, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
141141
142-(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Department of Homeland Security.
142+(A) Services to assist with the application process for initial or renewal requests of deferred action under the DACA policy with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Department of Homeland Security.
143143
144144 (B) Services to obtain other immigration remedies and benefits.
145145
146146 (C) Services to assist with the naturalization process and an appeal arising from the process.
147147
148148 (2) Services to provide legal training and technical assistance.
149+
150+(3)(A)(i)Funds available for the purposes of this section shall not be used to provide legal services to an individual who has been convicted of, or who is currently appealing a conviction for, a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 of the Penal Code, or a serious felony as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7 of the Penal Code.
151+
152+
153+
154+(ii)For the purposes of this subparagraph, legal services does not include activities relating to client intake, which shall be provided regardless of an individuals criminal history.
155+
156+
157+
158+(B)Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), this section does not prohibit eligibility for services pursuant to this section for an individual whose criminal record is shown to be inaccurate.
159+
160+
149161
150162 (3) Services to provide legal representation and related services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, for removal defense.
151163
152164 (4) Services to provide legal services, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13300, to unaccompanied undocumented minors.
153165
154166 (c) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
155167
156168 (1) DACA refers to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status as described in guidelines issued by the United States Department of Homeland Security.
157169
158-(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, relief that vacates, eliminates, or reduces a criminal record, conviction, or sentence that may have adverse immigration consequences, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).
170+(2) Services to assist includes, but is not limited to, outreach, workshop presentations, document review, Freedom of Information Act requests, services to obtain postconviction relief, and screening services that seek to assist individuals with the services described in subdivision (b).
159171
160172 (3) Services to obtain includes, but is not limited to, legal representation, investigative services, interpretation and translation, expert witness services, or the provision of supportive and rehabilitative services to people facing removal from the United States.
161173
174+(3)
175+
176+
177+
162178 (4) Legal training and technical assistance includes, but is not limited to, educational and capacity building activities that will augment the competent provision of legal services to immigrants, including for organizations located in and serving underserved communities.
163179
164-(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security. asylum, and other legal actions, including remedies available before federal or state agencies or courts, the United States Department of Justice, the United States Department of Homeland Security, or the United States Department of State, that are necessary to enable the pursuit of immigration protections.
180+(4)
181+
182+
183+
184+(5) Immigration remedies include, but shall not be limited to, U-visas, T-visas, U-Visas, T-Visas, special immigrant juvenile status, Violence Against Women Act self-petitions, family-based petitions, cancellation of removal, and asylum or other remedies that may also include remedies necessary to enable pursuit of immigration protections. The department shall broadly construe the definition of immigration remedies, which may include, but is not limited to, any remedy or relief from ancillary proceedings before federal or state agencies or courts, and any other remedy or relief that may be available from the United States Department of Justice or the United States Department of Homeland Security.
185+
186+(5)
187+
188+
165189
166190 (6) Immigration benefits include, but shall not be limited to, advanced parole, employment authorization documents, and lawful Permanent Resident Card renewal.
167191
168192 (d) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13304 shall be advanced to that organization.
169193
170194 (e) Personally identifiable information, collected by the department as related to the services provided under this chapter, is not a public record and shall not be disclosed by the department, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena.
171195
172-(f) The department shall update the Legislature through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:
196+(e)
197+
198+
199+
200+(f) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: through an annual report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available. The reports shall include all of the following information:
173201
174202 (1) The timeline for implementation and administration of this section, including important upcoming dates.
175203
176204 (2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants, and the aggregate amounts awarded for each service described in subdivision (b).
177205
178206 (3) The number and types of applications submitted, and the aggregate amounts requested for each service described in subdivision (b).
179207
180-(4) The number of clients served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.
208+(4) The number of clients served. served, the number of matters in which representation was provided over a designated time period of the awards, and the number of nonprofit organization staff members who were funded through the program established pursuant to this chapter.
181209
182210 (5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.
183211
184-(6) The regions served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.
212+(6) The regions served. served, and identification of regions that are particularly underserved.
185213
186-(7) The ethnic communities served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.
214+(7) The ethnic communities served. served, and identification of communities that are particularly underserved.
187215
188-(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.
216+(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to the provision of services described in subdivision (b). (b), and recommendations to address those barriers and challenges based on findings from data gathered in the furtherance of this subdivision.
189217
190218 (g) The department shall update the Legislature through a report, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, every three years, commencing on July 1, 2026, that provides information and analysis on the costs associated with service provision and that provides recommendations for any program administration updates addressing these costs. The department shall also post the reports on its internet website and make them publicly available.
191219
220+(f)
221+
222+
223+
192224 (h) In accordance with Section 1621(d) of Title 8 of the United States Code, this section provides services for undocumented persons.
225+
226+(g)
227+
228+
193229
194230 (i) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) is hereby appropriated to the State Department of Social Services in the 201718 fiscal year for immigration services funding to be available for payment to existing entities under contract pursuant to this section for work on behalf of clients involved in, applying for, or subject to federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status.
195231
232+(h)
233+
234+
235+
196236 (j) Notwithstanding any other law, payments shall be made by the Controller to existing entities under contract pursuant to this chapter upon receipt of written notification from the State Department of Social Services of the amounts, contractors, and timing of the payments.
197237
198-SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
238+SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
199239
200240 SEC. 4. Section 13304 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
201241
202242 ### SEC. 4.
203243
204-13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
244+13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
205245
206-13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
246+13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
207247
208-13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
248+13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:(1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.(C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).(2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.(3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.(b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
209249
210250
211251
212252 13304. (a) Any grant awarded pursuant to Section 13303 shall fulfill all of the following:
213253
214254 (1) Be executed only with a nonprofit organization that meets the requirements set forth in Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code and that meets all of the following requirements:
215255
216-(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301. and meet the requirement or requirements described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301, as applicable to the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant.
256+(A) Except as provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (D), have at least three years of experience handling the type of immigration issues for which the organization is requesting a grant. grant, as described in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 13301.
217257
218-(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues.
258+(B) Have conducted trainings on immigration issues for persons beyond its staff. issues.
219259
220260 (C) Is recognized and accredited by the Office of Legal Access Programs under the United States Department of Justices Executive Office for Immigration Review or meets the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.
221261
222262 (D) (i) For a legal services organization that provides legal training and technical assistance as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 13303, have at least 10 years of experience conducting immigration legal services and technical assistance and meet the requirements to receive funding from the Trust Fund Program administered by the State Bar of California.
223263
224264 (ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), a legal services organization, as described in clause (i), may, at the discretion of the department, instead meet the requirements listed in subparagraphs (A) and (B).
225265
226266 (2) Require reporting, monitoring, or audits of services provided, as determined by the department.
227267
228268 (3) Require grant recipients to maintain adequate legal malpractice insurance and to indemnify and hold the state harmless from any claims that arise from the legal services provided pursuant to this chapter.
229269
230270 (b) For grants awarded prior to the effective date of the act that added this subdivision, with the consent of the department and the grantee, the grantee may provide any of the services described in Section 13303, as amended by that act, and any agreement between the department and grantee shall be deemed to authorize the provision of those services.
231271
232-SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
272+SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
233273
234274 SEC. 5. Section 13305 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
235275
236276 ### SEC. 5.
237277
238-13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
278+13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
239279
240-13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
280+13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
241281
242-13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
282+13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.(b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.(1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.(2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.(c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:(1) The timeline for implementation of this section.(2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.(3) The number of applications submitted.(4) The number of clients served.(5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.(6) The regions served.(7) The ethnic communities served.(8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
243283
244284
245285
246286 13305. (a) Subject to the availability of funding in the act that added this section or the annual Budget Act, the department shall provide grants to organizations qualified under Section 13306 to provide free education and outreach information, services, and materials about services provided pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 13303.
247287
248288 (b) For purposes of this section, education and outreach activities means the dissemination of information or activities that promote the benefits of citizenship or immigration remedies, and explain eligibility to prospective United States citizens or prospective individuals eligible for deferred action, or explain to individuals their immigration-related rights.
249289
250290 (1) Education and outreach activities shall include referrals to educational or legal services that support the applicants eligibility for citizenship, deferred action, or other immigration remedies, and the importance of participating in civic engagement as a naturalized citizen.
251291
252292 (2) Education and outreach activities do not include representation as legal counsel that would assist in the application process for a prospective citizen or prospective individual eligible for deferred action or other immigration remedies.
253293
254294 (c) No more than 40 percent of grant funds awarded to an organization qualified under Section 13306 shall be advanced to that organization.
255295
256-(d) The department shall annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:
296+(d) The department shall update the Legislature on the following information in the course of budget hearings: annually update the Legislature, through the report described in subdivision (f) of Section 13303, on all of the following information:
257297
258298 (1) The timeline for implementation of this section.
259299
260300 (2) The participating organizations awarded contracts or grants.
261301
262302 (3) The number of applications submitted.
263303
264304 (4) The number of clients served.
265305
266306 (5) The types of services provided and in what language or languages.
267307
268308 (6) The regions served.
269309
270310 (7) The ethnic communities served.
271311
272312 (8) The identification of further barriers and challenges to education, outreach, immigration assistance, and legal services related to naturalization and deferred action.
273313
274314 (e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2016.
275315
276-SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
316+SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
277317
278318 SEC. 6. Section 13307 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is amended to read:
279319
280320 ### SEC. 6.
281321
282-13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
322+13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
283323
284-13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
324+13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
285325
286-13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
326+13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:(a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.(b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
287327
288328
289329
290-13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:
330+13307. The department may transfer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter among services described in this chapter in response to the results of requests for applications received or to changing state or federal law. Following the award of funding pursuant to this section, the department shall provide written notification to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the items specified in subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303. Subsequent to this notification, and in addition to the update required by subdivision (e) (f) of Section 13303, the department shall provide written notification to the Department of Finance and the Joint Legislative Budget Committee no less than 30 days prior to either of the following, unless a shorter timeframe is requested by the department due to emergent circumstances:
291331
292332 (a) Any proposed changes that adjust the aggregate amount awarded for any particular service described in subdivision (b) of Section 13303 by more than 15 percent.
293333
294334 (b) For any proposed transfers of funding between the purposes of Sections 13300 and 13303.
295335
296336 SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.
297337
298338 SEC. 7. Section 13311 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:
299339
300340 ### SEC. 7.
301341
302342 13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.
303343
304344 13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.
305345
306346 13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.(2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.(b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.(c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:(1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.(2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.(3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.(4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.(5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.(6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.(d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.(e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:(1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.(2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.(3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.
307347
308348
309349
310350 13311. (a) (1) The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau, at the department, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an ongoing advisory committee, which shall be established by January 1, 2026.
311351
312352 (2) The purpose of the advisory committee shall be to create voluntary guidance and make recommendations to the department and, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, to the Legislature, on policies and procedures to ensure that indigent immigrant Californians receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to set up immigrants and their families to thrive in the state.
313353
314354 (b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, representing the diversity of immigrant communities throughout the state, and shall be composed of no fewer than 10 individuals, with no fewer than 2 of whom being individuals directly affected by immigration enforcement.
315355
316356 (c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups:
317357
318358 (1) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on affirmative legal immigration services.
319359
320360 (2) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on removal legal defense.
321361
322362 (3) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in advising and providing legal advocacy on asylum and refugee matters.
323363
324364 (4) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved geographic regions.
325365
326366 (5) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in serving particularly underserved communities impacted by immigration enforcement, especially with linguistic barriers in accessing legal services.
327367
328368 (6) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience in providing technical assistance to legal nonprofit organizations.
329369
330370 (d) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. The Section Chief of the Immigration Services Bureau shall appoint all other individuals to the advisory committee.
331371
332372 (e) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the applicable divisions and entities within the department, and with other applicable state agencies or departments, on which additional policies could be adopted by the department or additional legislation enacted by the Legislature to ensure a thriving One California Immigration Services Funding program. The advisory committee shall develop voluntary practice-specific legal and other guidance, as necessary, for the purpose of all of the following:
333373
334374 (1) Educating and providing outreach to immigrants and their families on their rights and privileges, and concomitant resources needed to set them up to thrive in the state.
335375
336376 (2) Setting up a One California infrastructure and processes that ensure and maximize the ability of indigent immigrant Californians to receive the vital legal services and other concomitant resources needed to thrive in communities.
337377
338378 (3) Identifying and evaluating barriers of indigent immigrant Californians in accessing services specific to the practice, and how to remove these barriers through the administration of the program established pursuant to this chapter.
339379
340380 SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
341381
342382 SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.
343383
344384 SEC. 8. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 3 of this act, which amends Section 13303 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
345385
346386 ### SEC. 8.
347387
348388 In order to protect the privacy of individuals receiving legal services and other immigration-related services under the One California Immigration Services Funding program, except where necessary to comply with a court-issued order, warrant, or subpoena, it is necessary that this act limit the publics rights of access to personally identifiable information collected by the State Department of Social Services as related to those services.