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Assemblyman Matt Haney (Photo: a17.asmdc.org)

Bill To Move Convicts into Prisons Closer To Their Children Under Age 18 Signed By Gov. Newsom

‘Maybe the victims should have a say too, if you want to make this fair’

By Evan Symon, July 25, 2023 11:25 am

A bill to have the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) place most incarcerated parents and legal guardians of a child under the age of 18 in the correctional facility closest to the child’s home was signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom during the weekend.

Assembly Bill 1226, authored by Assemblyman Matt Haney (D-San Francisco), would specifically require the Secretary of the CDCR to place a parent, guardian, or relative caregiver of a child under the age of 18 in the correctional institution or facility that is located nearest to the primary place of residence of the person’s child. AB 1226, also known as the “Keep Families Close bill” will require that the placement be suitable and appropriate, will facilitate increased contact between the person and their child, and will require the consent of the incarcerated parent. Incarcerated individuals will also be allowed to request a review of their new prison assignment when changing locations, with those already in prison before AB 1226 comes into effect can request a prison transfer to the closest one to their children.

However, AB 1226 also comes with many restrictions, most notably, those with violent and sex related offenses that prohibit child visitation will not be allowed to request prison changes.

Assemblyman Haney authored the bill because of the long distances that children face when away from parents and caregivers in prison. According to the CDCR, only 25% of incarcerated people in California state prisons are placed in institutions less than 100 miles from home. Visitation is also lower when the prison is further away, with 50% of people placed less than 50 miles away from home receiving frequent family visitation, but only 15% of people placed 500 miles away receiving visitors, with many in the latter often having visitors pay for expensive trips to visit them.

In addition, Haney also noted that those under 18 benefit from seeing a parent close by, with many who don’t often see them falling to behavioral and emotional development problems.

“We know that having a relationship with parents is crucial for a child’s behavioral and emotional development and being able to see them on a regular basis–even just during visits–can make a huge difference in a young child’s life,” Haney said in a statement earlier this year.

Passed by both houses, signed by the Governor

Opponents to the bill, which included many in law enforcement, noted that AB 1226 would only complicate the already stressed prison placement system within the CDCR, with many recent prison closures, by the state only furthering the turmoil.

“AB 1226 ignores so much,” Jose Longo, a former prison guard and current prison consultant, told the Globe on Tuesday. “Many prisons are in more rural areas, so we’re going to be seeing a very big influx here. San Quentin, the California Institute for Men and others near big urban areas are going to see a lot of requests, while others will see far fewer. And then what? Do you move around those who don’t fall under this but want to remain close just because they don’t have family? It’s a mess. Especially with many prisons closing and the options of where to put them dwindling as a result. This wasn’t thought through.”

“Also remember that these are criminals. They made the decisions to land in prison, including what it would do to their family. Do this, and you take away some accountability. Maybe the victims should have a say too, if you want to make this fair.”

Gavin Newsom
Governor Gavin Newsom. (Photo: Kevin Sanders for California Globe)

Despite opposition, the bill easily made it through the Assembly and Senate this year. First brought up in February, the bill made it through multiple committees, was passed by the Assembly in May and the Senate last month. While some lawmakers raised questions on how exactly the transfers would impact prison populations, many were ultimately won over by AB 1226’s focus on benefitting the children rather than the person in jail, as well as the financial and time costs it places on the family of those visiting. This led to Governor Newsom signing the bill into law over the weekend, one of 35 ultimately approved in a somewhat early bill signing spurt.

“The long distances place a burden on families who do not have the financial means or the time to travel across the state for family visits,” said Haney in a press release during the weekend. “We know that having a relationship with parents is crucial for a child’s behavioral and emotional development. Being able to see them on a regular basis, even just during visits, can make a huge difference in a child’s life.”

Longo added that “Well it has been signed now. The CDCR really needs to keep an eye on how the prison population shifts to avoid overcrowding and to make sure that all prisons have a steady population. This bill will make it harder, but we should have a clearer picture of how that will be working sometime next year.

AB 1226 is to take effect on January 1, 2024.

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6 thoughts on “Bill To Move Convicts into Prisons Closer To Their Children Under Age 18 Signed By Gov. Newsom

  1. The “Keep Families Close” bill! What a joke. Another problem-creator, not a problem-solver.
    As usual! Gah

    1. Also, appreciate former prison guard Jose Longo’s comments in the article about the necessity of keeping an eye out to preserve the stability of prison populations, but he needs to realize these creeps, from Gov Gav on down, WANT prison overcrowding —- as an excuse to shut more prisons down. In fact, that is probably why the bill was proposed in the first place.

  2. So all of a sudden Democrats care about children and families? And why are they even concerned about prisoner rights? I don’t buy it! Probably just an excuse to move hardened criminals to minimum security prisons! One step closer to release.

  3. Democrat Assemblymember Matt Haney and Democrat Senator Scott Wiener both represent San Francisco and both are creepy members of the dark cult. Last year Haney had aligned with his groomer buddy Wiener and had urged Newsom to sign Wiener’s SB 57 bill that would have legalized safe consumption sites (aka drug dens) in San Francisco, the City and County of Los Angeles, and Oakland. Even Newsom thought that was a bad idea and thankfully vetoed the legislation.

  4. So, all of a sudden, once the parent is an inmate, the state CARES about parents rights ?
    No chance. Whatever they claim, the opposite is true. We know that.

    AB 1226- the Safer Prison Overcrowding and Incarcerated Parental Rights Virtue Signaling Act

    AB 1226 is Virtue signaling at best or , at worst, another step towards celebrating and supporting the criminals while kicking the taxpaying , law abiding Californians right in the face.
    De-frock and De-fund Politics !
    Demand Accountability
    Delete the Demagogues

  5. The intent is to transform the entire CA prison system into a summer camp – some finger painting, and practice writing ” I am sorry” on the blackboard and poof – you are on parole!

    Does everyone realize that the convicts in California’s prison cannot be referred to as inmates any longer?

    The staff must call them “residents.”

    LIBERALISM IS A MENTAL DISORDER – AND DANGEROUS.

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