1 of 1 HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 3242 FILED ON: 1/16/2025 HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 2030 The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _________________ PRESENTED BY: Andres X. Vargas _________________ To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General Court assembled: The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill: An Act to implement recommendations of the Commission on structural racism in the parole process. _______________ PETITION OF: NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :DATE ADDED:Andres X. Vargas3rd Essex1/16/2025 1 of 5 HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 3242 FILED ON: 1/16/2025 HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 2030 By Representative Vargas of Haverhill, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 2030) of Andres X. Vargas relative to structural racism in the parole process. The Judiciary. [SIMILAR MATTER FILED IN PREVIOUS SESSION SEE HOUSE, NO. 1805 OF 2023-2024.] The Commonwealth of Massachusetts _______________ In the One Hundred and Ninety-Fourth General Court (2025-2026) _______________ An Act to implement recommendations of the Commission on structural racism in the parole process. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows: 1 SECTION 1. Section 4 of chapter 27 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2020 2Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out the first paragraph and inserting in place 3thereof the following paragraph:- 4 There shall be in the department, but not subject to its jurisdiction, a parole board, 5consisting of 9 members, to be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the 6council, for terms of 5 years. The governor may, with the advice and consent of the council, 7remove members from the board for cause, upon a written certification of such cause; provided 8that such member shall have the right to notice and the opportunity for a public hearing before 9the council relative to such removal. 2 of 5 10 SECTION 2. Said section 4 of said chapter 27, as so appearing, is hereby further 11amended by inserting after the second paragraph the following paragraph:- 12 At all times, at least 3 members of the parole board shall have at least 5 years of 13experience in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, social work or the treatment of substance use 14disorders. One of those 3 members shall be a licensed mental health professional, as defined in 15section 1 of chapter 123. At all times, 1 of the 9 members of the board shall be someone who has 16been incarcerated and successfully completed the parole process; a minimum of 3 years shall 17have passed since the individual completed the parole process and they shall have a professional 18or volunteer background in at least 1 of the following areas: psychology, mental health or 19substance use, transitional housing, re-entry after incarceration, public safety or law. If the 20membership of the parole board does not comply with this paragraph, then every candidate 21recommended for a parole board position shall possess at least 1 of the qualifications listed 22above. This provision applies notwithstanding any other provision of law. 23 SECTION 3. Section 5 of said chapter 27, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding 24the following paragraph:- 25 No condition of parole shall be ordered unless that condition specifically addresses the 26particular characteristics of the person and the crime for which they are being paroled. The 27parole board shall consider whether any condition ordered would have a rehabilitative effect or 28 serve a legitimate public safety goal based on current criminal recidivism and 29rehabilitation research with clear and convincing evidence. 30 SECTION 4. Said chapter 27, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding the 31following section:- 3 of 5 32 Section 8. (a) The parole board shall collect the following data for individuals 33incarcerated in or paroled from the correctional institutions of the commonwealth, jails or houses 34of correction: 35 (i) the number of parole violations by race, ethnicity, gender and type of violation; 36 (ii) the number of parole revocations, the cause of the revocation and the race, ethnicity 37and gender of the individual whose parole permit was revoked; 38 (iii) the number of individuals who are returned to prison for a preliminary hearing on an 39alleged technical parole violation and the race and ethnicity of each individual; 40 (iv) the number of individuals found to have violated a technical condition of parole at a 41final revocation hearing that are returned to prison; 42 (v) the number of individuals found to have committed a disciplinary infraction after 43being granted a parole permit; 44 (vi) the number of individuals eligible for parole who choose to forego the parole process 45compared to those who pursue a parole permit, by race and ethnicity; 46 (vii) the average time between the date of eligibility for parole, the parole release hearing 47date, the date of the parole board’s decision and the actual release date, disaggregated by race, 48ethnicity and gender, and disaggregated by house of correction inmates, inmates serving a life 49sentence and inmates not serving a life sentence; 50 (viii) the average time between the date of the parole board’s decision to grant a parole 51permit and the individual’s release; 4 of 5 52 (ix) the percentage of individuals to whom the parole board decides to grant a parole 53permit but who are not released on parole; 54 (x) the percentage of individuals taken into custody for a parole violation before they 55have a revocation hearing; and 56 (xi) the percentage of individuals who have had their parole permit revoked and are 57returned to custody for a technical violation not associated with criminal activity. 58 (b) The parole board shall publish in its annual statistical report the data collected 59pursuant to subsection (a). 60 (c) The department of correction and the superintendents of the houses of correction shall 61collect data on the race and ethnicity of their employees. The department of correction shall 62publish this data in its annual report. 63 SECTION 5. Section 136 of chapter 127 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 64amended by inserting after the first paragraph the following paragraph:- 65 The parole board shall issue a detailed record of decision for all cases, including for 66inmates not serving a sentence for life, which shall include individual details and facts about the 67case that have led the board to either approve or deny parole. In the case of denial, the parole 68board shall provide clear instructions for becoming a better candidate for parole. 69 SECTION 6. Section 133A of said chapter 127, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 70adding the following paragraph:- 71 For every person who is eligible for parole, the parole board shall conduct a public 72hearing no later than 90 days before the person’s parole eligibility date. The hearing shall be 5 of 5 73before a panel of at least 6 members of the board for purposes of granting parole. The board shall 74issue its record of decision no later than 30 days before the parole eligibility date.