Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB1322 Compare Versions

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11 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 1322 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO CORRECTIONS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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4747 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that experts have long documented the detrimental effects of solitary confinement on individuals. Spending time in solitary confinement has been found to increase the risk of premature death, even after release from incarceration. Solitary confinement is a severe form of punishment that is closely associated with long-lasting psychological harm and poor post-release outcomes. The official purposes of solitary confinement are typically divided into punishment and correctional facility management. When used as punishment by facility authorities, sometimes called "disciplinary custody" or "disciplinary segregation", solitary confinement serves as a response to misconduct charges such as fighting or drug use. When used for correctional facility management, often called "administrative custody" or "administrative segregation", solitary confinement serves to separate inmates deemed to pose a threat to staff or other inmates, or as protective custody for inmates who seem or are determined to be unsafe in the general prison population. Although the purposes of solitary confinement vary, correctional facility conditions and restrictions are often similar whether an incarcerated person is in disciplinary or administrative custody. The legislature also finds that an overwhelming body of evidence shows that solitary confinement--which deprives inmates of meaningful human contact, including phone privileges that allow them to speak with loved ones--creates permanent psychological, neurological, and physical damage. The legislature notes that House Concurrent Resolution No. 85, H.D. 2, S.D. 1 (2016), requested the establishment of a task force to study effective incarceration policies to improve Hawaii's correctional system. The interim report of the task force, which was dated February 2017 and provided to the legislature, included an observation by the Vera Institute of Justice that the prevalence of incarcerated people having mental illness is at odds with the design, operation, and resources of most correctional facilities. Studies show that the detrimental effects of solitary confinement far exceed the immediate psychological consequences identified by previous research, such as anxiety, depression, and hallucinations. Unfortunately, these detrimental effects do not disappear once an inmate is released from solitary confinement. Even after release back into a community setting, a former inmate faces an elevated risk of suicide, drug overdose, heart attack, and stroke. The legislature recognizes that as of 2021, legislation to ban or limit the use of solitary confinement in prison has been introduced in thirty-two states and the United States Congress. Further, twenty-four states have enacted statutes that limit or prohibit solitary confinement while other states have limited its use through administrative code, policy, or court rules. Some of these new laws, such as those enacted by Connecticut and Washington, reflect tentative and piecemeal approaches to change. However, most of the new laws represent significant reforms to existing practices and thus have the potential to facilitate more humane and effective practices in prisons and jails. The legislature further finds that the revised United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, also known as "the Nelson Mandela Rules" to honor the legacy of the late South African president, are based upon an obligation to treat all prisoners with respect for their inherent dignity and value as human beings. The rules prohibit torture and other forms of maltreatment. Notably, the rules also restrict the use of solitary confinement as a measure of last resort, to be used only in exceptional circumstances. Moreover, the rules prohibit the use of solitary confinement for a time period exceeding fifteen consecutive days and characterize this disciplinary sanction as a form of "torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment". Indeed, Nelson Mandela said he found solitary confinement to be "the most forbidding aspect of prison life" and stated that "[t]here was no end and no beginning; there's only one's own mind, which can begin to play tricks". Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Restrict the use of solitary confinement in state-operated and state-contracted correctional facilities, with certain specified exceptions; (2) Require the department of corrections and rehabilitation to develop written policies and procedures regarding solitary confinement by July 1, 2026; (3) Require the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission to review certain housing placements; (4) Require the department of corrections and rehabilitation to develop policies and procedures to review committed persons placed in solitary confinement and develop a plan for committed persons currently in solitary confinement by April 1, 2026; and (5) Require a report to the legislature and Hawaii correctional system oversight commission. SECTION 2. Chapter 353, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§353- Solitary confinement; restrictions on use; policies and procedures. (a) The use of solitary confinement in correctional facilities shall be restricted as follows: (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement unless there is reasonable cause to believe that the committed person would create a substantial risk of immediate serious harm to the committed person's self or another, as evidenced by recent threats or conduct, and that a less restrictive intervention would be insufficient to reduce this risk; provided that the correctional facility shall bear the burden of establishing the foregoing by clear and convincing evidence; (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement for non-disciplinary reasons; (3) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement before receiving a personal and comprehensive medical and mental health examination conducted by a clinician; (4) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall only be held in solitary confinement pursuant to initial procedures and reviews that provide timely, fair, and meaningful opportunities for the committed person to contest the confinement. These procedures and reviews shall include the right to: (A) An initial hearing held within twenty-four hours of placement in solitary confinement, in the absence of exceptional circumstances, unavoidable delays, or reasonable postponements; (B) Appear at the hearing; (C) Be represented at the hearing; (D) An independent hearing officer; and (E) Receive a written statement of reasons for the decision made at the hearing; (5) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the final decision to place a committed person in solitary confinement shall be made by the warden or the warden's designee; (6) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection or in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed or held in solitary confinement if the warden or the warden's designee determines that the committed person no longer meets the criteria for the confinement; (7) A clinician shall evaluate on a daily basis each committed person who has been placed in solitary confinement, in a confidential setting outside of the committed person's cell whenever possible, to determine whether the committed person is a member of a vulnerable population. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person determined to be a member of a vulnerable population shall be immediately removed from solitary confinement and moved to an appropriate placement elsewhere; (8) A disciplinary sanction of solitary confinement imposed on a committed person who is subsequently removed from solitary confinement pursuant to this subsection shall be deemed completed; (9) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), during a facility-wide lockdown, a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement for more than fifteen consecutive days, or for more than twenty days total during any sixty-day period; (10) Cells or other holding or living space used for solitary confinement shall be properly ventilated, lit, temperature-controlled, clean, and equipped with properly functioning sanitary fixtures; (11) A correctional facility shall maximize the amount of time spent outside of the cell by a committed person held in solitary confinement by providing the committed person with access to recreation, education, clinically appropriate treatment therapies, skill-building activities, and social interaction with staff and other committed persons, as appropriate; (12) A committed person held in solitary confinement shall not be denied access to: (A) Food, water, or any other necessity; and (B) Appropriate medical care, including emergency medical care; (13) Each committed person held in solitary confinement shall receive a written copy of the committed person's sanction and the criteria for a pathway back into the general population. The department shall ensure that the committed person understands the reason for the sanction and the criteria for the pathway back into the general population. The committed person's case manager shall work with the committed person in solitary confinement to develop a plan of action to reduce the committed person's violations, return to the general population, and work on the committed person's rehabilitation; and (14) A committed person shall not be released directly from solitary confinement to the community during the final one hundred eighty days of the committed person's term of incarceration, unless necessary for the safety of the committed person, staff, other committed persons, or the public. (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person who is a member of a vulnerable population shall not be placed in solitary confinement; provided that a committed person who is a member of a vulnerable population because the committed person is: (1) Twenty-one years of age or younger, has a disability based on mental illness, or has a developmental disability shall: (A) Not be subject to discipline for refusing treatment or medication, or for engaging in self‑harm or related conduct or threatening to do so; and (B) Be screened by a correctional facility clinician or the appropriate screening service pursuant to rules and, if found to meet the criteria for civil commitment, shall be placed in a specialized unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department, or civilly committed to the least restrictive appropriate short-term care or psychiatric facility designated by the department of health, but only if the committed person would otherwise have been placed in solitary confinement; or (2) Sixty years of age or older; has a serious medical condition that cannot be effectively treated while the committed person is in solitary confinement; or is pregnant, in the postpartum period, or recently suffered a miscarriage or terminated a pregnancy, shall alternately be placed in an appropriate medical or other unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department, but only if the committed person would otherwise have been placed in solitary confinement. (c) A committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement or in any other cell or other holding or living space, in any facility, whether alone or with one or more other committed persons, if there is reasonable cause to believe that there exists a risk of harm, harassment, intimidation, extortion, or other physical or emotional abuse to the committed person or to another committed person in that placement. (d) The use of solitary confinement in correctional facilities shall be permitted only under the following limited circumstances: (1) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a facility-wide lockdown is necessary to ensure the safety of committed persons in the facility, until the warden or the warden's designee determines that the threat to a committed person's safety no longer exists. The warden or the warden's designee shall document the specific reasons that any facility-wide lockdown was necessary for more than twenty-four hours, and the specific reasons why less restrictive interventions were insufficient to accomplish the facility's safety goals. Within six hours of a decision to extend a facility-wide lockdown beyond twenty-four hours, the director or deputy director of the department shall publish the foregoing reasons on the department's website and shall provide meaningful notice to the legislature of the reasons for the lockdown; (2) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in emergency confinement; provided that: (A) A committed person shall not be held in emergency confinement for more than twenty-four hours; and (B) A committed person placed in emergency confinement shall receive an initial medical and mental health evaluation within six hours and a personal and comprehensive medical and mental health examination conducted by a clinician within twenty-four hours. Reports of these evaluations shall be immediately provided to the warden or the warden's designee; (3) A physician, based upon the physician's personal examination of a committed person, determines that the committed person should be placed or held in medical isolation; provided that any decision to place or hold a committed person in medical isolation due to a mental health emergency shall be made by a clinician and based upon the clinician's personal examination of the committed person. In any case of medical isolation occurring under this paragraph, a clinical review shall be conducted at least every six hours and as clinically indicated. A committed person in medical isolation due to a mental health emergency pursuant to this paragraph shall be placed in a mental health unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department; (4) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in protective custody; provided that: (A) A committed person may be placed in voluntary protective custody only when the committed person has provided voluntary, informed, and written consent and there is reasonable cause to believe that protective custody is necessary to prevent reasonably foreseeable harm. When a committed person makes a voluntary, informed, and written request to be placed in protective custody and the request is denied, the correctional facility shall bear the burden of establishing a basis for denying the request; (B) A committed person may be placed in involuntary protective custody only when the correctional facility is able to establish by clear and convincing evidence that protective custody is necessary to prevent reasonably foreseeable harm and that a less restrictive intervention would be insufficient to prevent the harm; (C) A committed person placed in protective custody shall be provided opportunities for activities, movement, and social interaction, in a manner consistent with ensuring the committed person's safety and the safety of other persons, that are comparable to the opportunities provided to committed persons in the facility's general population; (D) A committed person subject to removal from protective custody shall be provided with a timely, fair, and meaningful opportunity to contest the removal; (E) A committed person who is currently or may be placed in voluntary protective custody may opt out of that status by providing voluntary, informed, and written refusal of that status; and (F) Before placing a committed person in protective custody, the warden or the warden's designee shall use a less restrictive intervention, including transfer to the general population of another facility or to a special-purpose housing unit for committed persons who face similar threats, unless the committed person poses an extraordinary security risk so great that transferring the committed person would be insufficient to ensure the committed person's safety; and (5) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense; provided that: (A) The committed person's placement in solitary confinement is pursuant to approval granted by the warden or the warden's designee in an emergency situation, or is because the committed person's presence in the facility's general population while the investigation is ongoing poses a danger to the committed person, staff, other committed persons, or the public; provided further that the determination of danger shall be based upon a consideration of the seriousness of the committed person's alleged offense, including whether the offense involved violence or escape, or posed a threat to institutional safety by encouraging other persons to engage in misconduct; (B) The committed person's placement in solitary, disciplinary, or administrative segregation shall not revert to another form of segregation after the initial sanction has been served; (C) A committed person's placement in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense shall be reviewed within twenty-four hours by a supervisory-level employee who was not involved in the initial placement decision; and (D) A committed person who has been placed in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense shall be considered for release to the facility's general population if the committed person demonstrates good behavior while in solitary confinement. If the committed person is found guilty of the disciplinary offense, the committed person's good behavior shall be considered when determining the appropriate penalty for the offense. (e) No later than July 1, 2026, the department shall develop written policies and implement procedures, as necessary and appropriate, to effectuate this section, including: (1) Establishing less restrictive interventions as alternatives to solitary confinement, including separation from other committed persons, transfer to other correctional facilities, and any other sanction not involving solitary confinement that is authorized by the department's policies and procedures; provided that any temporary restrictions on a committed person's privileges or access to resources, including religious services, mail and telephone privileges, visitation by contacts, and outdoor or recreation access, shall be imposed only when necessary to ensure the safety of the committed person or other persons, and shall not restrict the committed person's access to food, basic necessities, or legal assistance; (2) Requiring periodic training of disciplinary staff and all other staff who interact with committed persons held in solitary confinement; provided that the training: (A) Is developed and conducted with assistance from appropriately trained and qualified professionals; (B) Clearly communicates the applicable standards for solitary confinement, including the standards set forth in this section; and (C) Provides information on the identification of developmental disabilities; symptoms of mental illness, including trauma disorders; and methods for responding safely to persons in distress; (3) Requiring documentation of all decisions, procedures, and reviews of committed persons placed in solitary confinement; (4) Requiring monitoring of compliance with all rules governing cells, units, and other spaces used for solitary confinement; (5) Requiring the posting of quarterly reports on the department's official website that: (A) Describe the nature and extent of each correctional facility's use of solitary confinement and include data on the age, sex, gender identity, ethnicity, incidence of mental illness, and type of confinement status for committed persons placed in solitary confinement; (B) Include the population of committed persons as of the last day of each quarter and a non-duplicative, cumulative count of the number of committed persons placed in solitary confinement during the fiscal year; (C) Include the incidence of emergency confinement, self-harm, suicide, and assault in any solitary confinement unit, as well as explanations for each instance of facility-wide lockdown; and (D) Exclude personally identifiable information regarding any committed person; and (6) Updating the department's corrections administration policy and procedures manual, as necessary and appropriate, to comply with the provisions of this section, including the requirement to use appropriate alternatives to solitary confinement for committed persons who are members of a vulnerable population. (f) Following the initial hearing for the placement of an individual into solitary confinement, the department shall immediately notify and transmit all relevant documentation and evidence to the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission. The Hawaii correctional system oversight commission shall thoroughly review all determinations regarding the imposition of solitary confinement for fairness, impartiality, alignment with best practices, and other factors the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission finds relevant, and shall issue quarterly reports on the utilization thereof. The Hawaii correctional system oversight commission shall actively monitor and review all housing placements involving individuals subjected to twenty or more hours of cell confinement, irrespective of whether the placements are designated as solitary confinement by the department or state-contracted facilities, to ensure that the department and its contracted entities do not implement cell confinement exceeding twenty hours without proper adherence to the procedures outlined in this section. (g) For the purposes of this section: "Correctional facility" means a state prison, other penal institution, or an institution or a facility designated by the department as a place of confinement under this chapter. "Correctional facility" includes community correctional centers, high-security correctional facilities, temporary correctional facilities, in-state correctional facilities, state-contracted correctional facilities operated by private entities, and jails maintained by county police departments. "Member of a vulnerable population" means any committed person who: (1) Is twenty-one years of age or younger; (2) Is sixty years of age or older; (3) Has a physical or mental disability, a history of psychiatric hospitalization, or recently exhibited conduct, including serious self-mutilation, that indicates the need for further observation or evaluation to determine the presence of mental illness; (4) Has a developmental disability, as defined in section 333F-1; (5) Has a serious medical condition that cannot be effectively treated while the committed person is in solitary confinement; (6) Is pregnant, in the postpartum period, or recently suffered a miscarriage or terminated a pregnancy; (7) Has a significant auditory or visual impairment; or (8) Is perceived to be lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or intersex. "Solitary confinement" occurs when all of the following conditions are present: (1) A committed person is confined in a correctional facility pursuant to disciplinary, administrative, protective, investigative, medical, or other purposes; (2) The confinement occurs in a cell or similarly physically restrictive holding or living space, whether alone or with one or more other committed persons, for twenty hours or more per day; and (3) The committed person's activities, movements, and social interactions are severely restricted." SECTION 3. No later than April 1, 2026, the department of corrections and rehabilitation shall: (1) Develop written policies and implement procedures, as necessary and appropriate, for the review of committed persons placed in solitary confinement; (2) Initiate a review of each committed person placed in solitary confinement during the immediately preceding fiscal year to determine whether the placement would be appropriate in light of the requirements of section 353- , Hawaii Revised Statutes; and (3) Develop a plan for providing step-down and transitional units, programs, and staffing patterns to accommodate committed persons currently placed in solitary confinement, committed persons who may prospectively be placed in solitary confinement, and committed persons who receive an intermediate sanction in lieu of being placed in solitary confinement; provided that staffing patterns for correctional and program staff are set at levels necessary to ensure the safety of staff and committed persons pursuant to the requirements of this Act. SECTION 4. No later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2027, the department of corrections and rehabilitation shall submit to the legislature and Hawaii correctional system oversight commission a status report of the department's progress toward full compliance with this Act, along with draft copies of written policies and procedures undertaken pursuant to this Act. SECTION 5. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2026. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that experts have long documented the detrimental effects of solitary confinement on individuals. Spending time in solitary confinement has been found to increase the risk of premature death, even after release from incarceration. Solitary confinement is a severe form of punishment that is closely associated with long-lasting psychological harm and poor post-release outcomes. The official purposes of solitary confinement are typically divided into punishment and correctional facility management. When used as punishment by facility authorities, sometimes called "disciplinary custody" or "disciplinary segregation", solitary confinement serves as a response to misconduct charges such as fighting or drug use. When used for correctional facility management, often called "administrative custody" or "administrative segregation", solitary confinement serves to separate inmates deemed to pose a threat to staff or other inmates, or as protective custody for inmates who seem or are determined to be unsafe in the general prison population. Although the purposes of solitary confinement vary, correctional facility conditions and restrictions are often similar whether an incarcerated person is in disciplinary or administrative custody.
5050
5151 The legislature also finds that an overwhelming body of evidence shows that solitary confinement--which deprives inmates of meaningful human contact, including phone privileges that allow them to speak with loved ones--creates permanent psychological, neurological, and physical damage. The legislature notes that House Concurrent Resolution No. 85, H.D. 2, S.D. 1 (2016), requested the establishment of a task force to study effective incarceration policies to improve Hawaii's correctional system. The interim report of the task force, which was dated February 2017 and provided to the legislature, included an observation by the Vera Institute of Justice that the prevalence of incarcerated people having mental illness is at odds with the design, operation, and resources of most correctional facilities. Studies show that the detrimental effects of solitary confinement far exceed the immediate psychological consequences identified by previous research, such as anxiety, depression, and hallucinations. Unfortunately, these detrimental effects do not disappear once an inmate is released from solitary confinement. Even after release back into a community setting, a former inmate faces an elevated risk of suicide, drug overdose, heart attack, and stroke.
5252
5353 The legislature recognizes that as of 2021, legislation to ban or limit the use of solitary confinement in prison has been introduced in thirty-two states and the United States Congress. Further, twenty-four states have enacted statutes that limit or prohibit solitary confinement while other states have limited its use through administrative code, policy, or court rules. Some of these new laws, such as those enacted by Connecticut and Washington, reflect tentative and piecemeal approaches to change. However, most of the new laws represent significant reforms to existing practices and thus have the potential to facilitate more humane and effective practices in prisons and jails.
5454
5555 The legislature further finds that the revised United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, also known as "the Nelson Mandela Rules" to honor the legacy of the late South African president, are based upon an obligation to treat all prisoners with respect for their inherent dignity and value as human beings. The rules prohibit torture and other forms of maltreatment. Notably, the rules also restrict the use of solitary confinement as a measure of last resort, to be used only in exceptional circumstances. Moreover, the rules prohibit the use of solitary confinement for a time period exceeding fifteen consecutive days and characterize this disciplinary sanction as a form of "torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment". Indeed, Nelson Mandela said he found solitary confinement to be "the most forbidding aspect of prison life" and stated that "[t]here was no end and no beginning; there's only one's own mind, which can begin to play tricks".
5656
5757 Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
5858
5959 (1) Restrict the use of solitary confinement in state-operated and state-contracted correctional facilities, with certain specified exceptions;
6060
6161 (2) Require the department of corrections and rehabilitation to develop written policies and procedures regarding solitary confinement by July 1, 2026;
6262
6363 (3) Require the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission to review certain housing placements;
6464
6565 (4) Require the department of corrections and rehabilitation to develop policies and procedures to review committed persons placed in solitary confinement and develop a plan for committed persons currently in solitary confinement by April 1, 2026; and
6666
6767 (5) Require a report to the legislature and Hawaii correctional system oversight commission.
6868
6969 SECTION 2. Chapter 353, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
7070
7171 "§353- Solitary confinement; restrictions on use; policies and procedures. (a) The use of solitary confinement in correctional facilities shall be restricted as follows:
7272
7373 (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement unless there is reasonable cause to believe that the committed person would create a substantial risk of immediate serious harm to the committed person's self or another, as evidenced by recent threats or conduct, and that a less restrictive intervention would be insufficient to reduce this risk; provided that the correctional facility shall bear the burden of establishing the foregoing by clear and convincing evidence;
7474
7575 (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement for non-disciplinary reasons;
7676
7777 (3) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement before receiving a personal and comprehensive medical and mental health examination conducted by a clinician;
7878
7979 (4) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person shall only be held in solitary confinement pursuant to initial procedures and reviews that provide timely, fair, and meaningful opportunities for the committed person to contest the confinement. These procedures and reviews shall include the right to:
8080
8181 (A) An initial hearing held within twenty-four hours of placement in solitary confinement, in the absence of exceptional circumstances, unavoidable delays, or reasonable postponements;
8282
8383 (B) Appear at the hearing;
8484
8585 (C) Be represented at the hearing;
8686
8787 (D) An independent hearing officer; and
8888
8989 (E) Receive a written statement of reasons for the decision made at the hearing;
9090
9191 (5) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the final decision to place a committed person in solitary confinement shall be made by the warden or the warden's designee;
9292
9393 (6) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection or in subsection (d), a committed person shall not be placed or held in solitary confinement if the warden or the warden's designee determines that the committed person no longer meets the criteria for the confinement;
9494
9595 (7) A clinician shall evaluate on a daily basis each committed person who has been placed in solitary confinement, in a confidential setting outside of the committed person's cell whenever possible, to determine whether the committed person is a member of a vulnerable population. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person determined to be a member of a vulnerable population shall be immediately removed from solitary confinement and moved to an appropriate placement elsewhere;
9696
9797 (8) A disciplinary sanction of solitary confinement imposed on a committed person who is subsequently removed from solitary confinement pursuant to this subsection shall be deemed completed;
9898
9999 (9) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), during a facility-wide lockdown, a committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement for more than fifteen consecutive days, or for more than twenty days total during any sixty-day period;
100100
101101 (10) Cells or other holding or living space used for solitary confinement shall be properly ventilated, lit, temperature-controlled, clean, and equipped with properly functioning sanitary fixtures;
102102
103103 (11) A correctional facility shall maximize the amount of time spent outside of the cell by a committed person held in solitary confinement by providing the committed person with access to recreation, education, clinically appropriate treatment therapies, skill-building activities, and social interaction with staff and other committed persons, as appropriate;
104104
105105 (12) A committed person held in solitary confinement shall not be denied access to:
106106
107107 (A) Food, water, or any other necessity; and
108108
109109 (B) Appropriate medical care, including emergency medical care;
110110
111111 (13) Each committed person held in solitary confinement shall receive a written copy of the committed person's sanction and the criteria for a pathway back into the general population. The department shall ensure that the committed person understands the reason for the sanction and the criteria for the pathway back into the general population. The committed person's case manager shall work with the committed person in solitary confinement to develop a plan of action to reduce the committed person's violations, return to the general population, and work on the committed person's rehabilitation; and
112112
113113 (14) A committed person shall not be released directly from solitary confinement to the community during the final one hundred eighty days of the committed person's term of incarceration, unless necessary for the safety of the committed person, staff, other committed persons, or the public.
114114
115115 (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a committed person who is a member of a vulnerable population shall not be placed in solitary confinement; provided that a committed person who is a member of a vulnerable population because the committed person is:
116116
117117 (1) Twenty-one years of age or younger, has a disability based on mental illness, or has a developmental disability shall:
118118
119119 (A) Not be subject to discipline for refusing treatment or medication, or for engaging in self‑harm or related conduct or threatening to do so; and
120120
121121 (B) Be screened by a correctional facility clinician or the appropriate screening service pursuant to rules and, if found to meet the criteria for civil commitment, shall be placed in a specialized unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department, or civilly committed to the least restrictive appropriate short-term care or psychiatric facility designated by the department of health, but only if the committed person would otherwise have been placed in solitary confinement; or
122122
123123 (2) Sixty years of age or older; has a serious medical condition that cannot be effectively treated while the committed person is in solitary confinement; or is pregnant, in the postpartum period, or recently suffered a miscarriage or terminated a pregnancy, shall alternately be placed in an appropriate medical or other unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department, but only if the committed person would otherwise have been placed in solitary confinement.
124124
125125 (c) A committed person shall not be placed in solitary confinement or in any other cell or other holding or living space, in any facility, whether alone or with one or more other committed persons, if there is reasonable cause to believe that there exists a risk of harm, harassment, intimidation, extortion, or other physical or emotional abuse to the committed person or to another committed person in that placement.
126126
127127 (d) The use of solitary confinement in correctional facilities shall be permitted only under the following limited circumstances:
128128
129129 (1) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a facility-wide lockdown is necessary to ensure the safety of committed persons in the facility, until the warden or the warden's designee determines that the threat to a committed person's safety no longer exists. The warden or the warden's designee shall document the specific reasons that any facility-wide lockdown was necessary for more than twenty-four hours, and the specific reasons why less restrictive interventions were insufficient to accomplish the facility's safety goals. Within six hours of a decision to extend a facility-wide lockdown beyond twenty-four hours, the director or deputy director of the department shall publish the foregoing reasons on the department's website and shall provide meaningful notice to the legislature of the reasons for the lockdown;
130130
131131 (2) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in emergency confinement; provided that:
132132
133133 (A) A committed person shall not be held in emergency confinement for more than twenty-four hours; and
134134
135135 (B) A committed person placed in emergency confinement shall receive an initial medical and mental health evaluation within six hours and a personal and comprehensive medical and mental health examination conducted by a clinician within twenty-four hours. Reports of these evaluations shall be immediately provided to the warden or the warden's designee;
136136
137137 (3) A physician, based upon the physician's personal examination of a committed person, determines that the committed person should be placed or held in medical isolation; provided that any decision to place or hold a committed person in medical isolation due to a mental health emergency shall be made by a clinician and based upon the clinician's personal examination of the committed person. In any case of medical isolation occurring under this paragraph, a clinical review shall be conducted at least every six hours and as clinically indicated. A committed person in medical isolation due to a mental health emergency pursuant to this paragraph shall be placed in a mental health unit designated by the director or deputy director of the department;
138138
139139 (4) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in protective custody; provided that:
140140
141141 (A) A committed person may be placed in voluntary protective custody only when the committed person has provided voluntary, informed, and written consent and there is reasonable cause to believe that protective custody is necessary to prevent reasonably foreseeable harm. When a committed person makes a voluntary, informed, and written request to be placed in protective custody and the request is denied, the correctional facility shall bear the burden of establishing a basis for denying the request;
142142
143143 (B) A committed person may be placed in involuntary protective custody only when the correctional facility is able to establish by clear and convincing evidence that protective custody is necessary to prevent reasonably foreseeable harm and that a less restrictive intervention would be insufficient to prevent the harm;
144144
145145 (C) A committed person placed in protective custody shall be provided opportunities for activities, movement, and social interaction, in a manner consistent with ensuring the committed person's safety and the safety of other persons, that are comparable to the opportunities provided to committed persons in the facility's general population;
146146
147147 (D) A committed person subject to removal from protective custody shall be provided with a timely, fair, and meaningful opportunity to contest the removal;
148148
149149 (E) A committed person who is currently or may be placed in voluntary protective custody may opt out of that status by providing voluntary, informed, and written refusal of that status; and
150150
151151 (F) Before placing a committed person in protective custody, the warden or the warden's designee shall use a less restrictive intervention, including transfer to the general population of another facility or to a special-purpose housing unit for committed persons who face similar threats, unless the committed person poses an extraordinary security risk so great that transferring the committed person would be insufficient to ensure the committed person's safety; and
152152
153153 (5) The warden or the warden's designee determines that a committed person should be placed in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense; provided that:
154154
155155 (A) The committed person's placement in solitary confinement is pursuant to approval granted by the warden or the warden's designee in an emergency situation, or is because the committed person's presence in the facility's general population while the investigation is ongoing poses a danger to the committed person, staff, other committed persons, or the public; provided further that the determination of danger shall be based upon a consideration of the seriousness of the committed person's alleged offense, including whether the offense involved violence or escape, or posed a threat to institutional safety by encouraging other persons to engage in misconduct;
156156
157157 (B) The committed person's placement in solitary, disciplinary, or administrative segregation shall not revert to another form of segregation after the initial sanction has been served;
158158
159159 (C) A committed person's placement in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense shall be reviewed within twenty-four hours by a supervisory-level employee who was not involved in the initial placement decision; and
160160
161161 (D) A committed person who has been placed in solitary confinement pending investigation of an alleged disciplinary offense shall be considered for release to the facility's general population if the committed person demonstrates good behavior while in solitary confinement. If the committed person is found guilty of the disciplinary offense, the committed person's good behavior shall be considered when determining the appropriate penalty for the offense.
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163163 (e) No later than July 1, 2026, the department shall develop written policies and implement procedures, as necessary and appropriate, to effectuate this section, including:
164164
165165 (1) Establishing less restrictive interventions as alternatives to solitary confinement, including separation from other committed persons, transfer to other correctional facilities, and any other sanction not involving solitary confinement that is authorized by the department's policies and procedures; provided that any temporary restrictions on a committed person's privileges or access to resources, including religious services, mail and telephone privileges, visitation by contacts, and outdoor or recreation access, shall be imposed only when necessary to ensure the safety of the committed person or other persons, and shall not restrict the committed person's access to food, basic necessities, or legal assistance;
166166
167167 (2) Requiring periodic training of disciplinary staff and all other staff who interact with committed persons held in solitary confinement; provided that the training:
168168
169169 (A) Is developed and conducted with assistance from appropriately trained and qualified professionals;
170170
171171 (B) Clearly communicates the applicable standards for solitary confinement, including the standards set forth in this section; and
172172
173173 (C) Provides information on the identification of developmental disabilities; symptoms of mental illness, including trauma disorders; and methods for responding safely to persons in distress;
174174
175175 (3) Requiring documentation of all decisions, procedures, and reviews of committed persons placed in solitary confinement;
176176
177177 (4) Requiring monitoring of compliance with all rules governing cells, units, and other spaces used for solitary confinement;
178178
179179 (5) Requiring the posting of quarterly reports on the department's official website that:
180180
181181 (A) Describe the nature and extent of each correctional facility's use of solitary confinement and include data on the age, sex, gender identity, ethnicity, incidence of mental illness, and type of confinement status for committed persons placed in solitary confinement;
182182
183183 (B) Include the population of committed persons as of the last day of each quarter and a non-duplicative, cumulative count of the number of committed persons placed in solitary confinement during the fiscal year;
184184
185185 (C) Include the incidence of emergency confinement, self-harm, suicide, and assault in any solitary confinement unit, as well as explanations for each instance of facility-wide lockdown; and
186186
187187 (D) Exclude personally identifiable information regarding any committed person; and
188188
189189 (6) Updating the department's corrections administration policy and procedures manual, as necessary and appropriate, to comply with the provisions of this section, including the requirement to use appropriate alternatives to solitary confinement for committed persons who are members of a vulnerable population.
190190
191191 (f) Following the initial hearing for the placement of an individual into solitary confinement, the department shall immediately notify and transmit all relevant documentation and evidence to the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission. The Hawaii correctional system oversight commission shall thoroughly review all determinations regarding the imposition of solitary confinement for fairness, impartiality, alignment with best practices, and other factors the Hawaii correctional system oversight commission finds relevant, and shall issue quarterly reports on the utilization thereof.
192192
193193 The Hawaii correctional system oversight commission shall actively monitor and review all housing placements involving individuals subjected to twenty or more hours of cell confinement, irrespective of whether the placements are designated as solitary confinement by the department or state-contracted facilities, to ensure that the department and its contracted entities do not implement cell confinement exceeding twenty hours without proper adherence to the procedures outlined in this section.
194194
195195 (g) For the purposes of this section:
196196
197197 "Correctional facility" means a state prison, other penal institution, or an institution or a facility designated by the department as a place of confinement under this chapter. "Correctional facility" includes community correctional centers, high-security correctional facilities, temporary correctional facilities, in-state correctional facilities, state-contracted correctional facilities operated by private entities, and jails maintained by county police departments.
198198
199199 "Member of a vulnerable population" means any committed person who:
200200
201201 (1) Is twenty-one years of age or younger;
202202
203203 (2) Is sixty years of age or older;
204204
205205 (3) Has a physical or mental disability, a history of psychiatric hospitalization, or recently exhibited conduct, including serious self-mutilation, that indicates the need for further observation or evaluation to determine the presence of mental illness;
206206
207207 (4) Has a developmental disability, as defined in section 333F-1;
208208
209209 (5) Has a serious medical condition that cannot be effectively treated while the committed person is in solitary confinement;
210210
211211 (6) Is pregnant, in the postpartum period, or recently suffered a miscarriage or terminated a pregnancy;
212212
213213 (7) Has a significant auditory or visual impairment; or
214214
215215 (8) Is perceived to be lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or intersex.
216216
217217 "Solitary confinement" occurs when all of the following conditions are present:
218218
219219 (1) A committed person is confined in a correctional facility pursuant to disciplinary, administrative, protective, investigative, medical, or other purposes;
220220
221221 (2) The confinement occurs in a cell or similarly physically restrictive holding or living space, whether alone or with one or more other committed persons, for twenty hours or more per day; and
222222
223223 (3) The committed person's activities, movements, and social interactions are severely restricted."
224224
225225 SECTION 3. No later than April 1, 2026, the department of corrections and rehabilitation shall:
226226
227227 (1) Develop written policies and implement procedures, as necessary and appropriate, for the review of committed persons placed in solitary confinement;
228228
229229 (2) Initiate a review of each committed person placed in solitary confinement during the immediately preceding fiscal year to determine whether the placement would be appropriate in light of the requirements of section 353- , Hawaii Revised Statutes; and
230230
231231 (3) Develop a plan for providing step-down and transitional units, programs, and staffing patterns to accommodate committed persons currently placed in solitary confinement, committed persons who may prospectively be placed in solitary confinement, and committed persons who receive an intermediate sanction in lieu of being placed in solitary confinement; provided that staffing patterns for correctional and program staff are set at levels necessary to ensure the safety of staff and committed persons pursuant to the requirements of this Act.
232232
233233 SECTION 4. No later than forty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2027, the department of corrections and rehabilitation shall submit to the legislature and Hawaii correctional system oversight commission a status report of the department's progress toward full compliance with this Act, along with draft copies of written policies and procedures undertaken pursuant to this Act.
234234
235235 SECTION 5. New statutory material is underscored.
236236
237237 SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2026.
238238
239239
240240
241241 INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
242242
243243 INTRODUCED BY:
244244
245245 _____________________________
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250250
251251 Report Title: DCR; Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission; Correctional Facilities; Committed Persons; Solitary Confinement; Restrictions; Report Description: Restricts the use of solitary confinement in state-operated and state-contracted correctional facilities, with certain specified exceptions. Requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to develop written policies and procedures regarding solitary confinement by 7/1/2026. Requires the Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission to review certain housing placements. Requires the Department to develop policies and procedures to review committed persons placed in solitary confinement and develop a plan for committed persons currently in solitary confinement by 4/1/2026. Requires a report to the Legislature and Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission. Effective 7/1/2026. The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
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259259 Report Title:
260260
261261 DCR; Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission; Correctional Facilities; Committed Persons; Solitary Confinement; Restrictions; Report
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264264
265265 Description:
266266
267267 Restricts the use of solitary confinement in state-operated and state-contracted correctional facilities, with certain specified exceptions. Requires the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to develop written policies and procedures regarding solitary confinement by 7/1/2026. Requires the Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission to review certain housing placements. Requires the Department to develop policies and procedures to review committed persons placed in solitary confinement and develop a plan for committed persons currently in solitary confinement by 4/1/2026. Requires a report to the Legislature and Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission. Effective 7/1/2026.
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274274
275275 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.