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Friday, October 6, 2023

Senate Bill 81 on the Governor's desk as of september 21, 2023: he has until October 18 to sign or veto it

 SB81 GOVERNOR SIGNING DEADLINE status:

Governor Newsom has not signed SB81 as of October 6, 2023. He has 12 days to act on the bill, so the deadline for him to sign or veto it is October 18, 2023.


If he does not act on the bill by the deadline, it will become law without his signature.


Governor Newsom has not yet indicated whether he will sign or veto SB81.

IN GENERAL:

Governor Newsom has 12 days to sign, veto, or allow a bill to become law without his signature. This 12-day period begins on the day the bill is presented to the Governor. If the 12th day is a Sunday or a holiday, the Governor has until the next working day to act.

However, there is an exception to this 12-day rule for bills that are passed in the last 30 days of the legislative session. For these bills, the Governor has 30 days to act. If the Governor does not sign or veto a bill within the allotted time, the bill becomes law without his signature.

It is important to note that the Governor can issue a pocket veto on bills that are presented to him during the last 10 days of the legislative session. A pocket veto is a type of veto that the Governor can use to kill a bill without actually vetoing it. To pocket veto a bill, the Governor simply does not sign it within the 10-day period. If the Governor pocket vetoes a bill, it does not become law.


Since 1979, there has not been a successful veto override in the California Legislature.

 

 LAST (5) ACTIONS:

On September 21, 2023 in the Senate: Enrolled and presented to the Governor at 4 p.m. 

On September 14, 2023 in the Senate: Assembly amendments concurred in. (Ayes 29. Noes 9.) Ordered to engrossing and enrolling. 

On September 13, 2023 in the Senate: In Senate. Concurrence in Assembly amendments pending. 

On September 13, 2023 in the Assembly: Read third time. Passed. Ordered to the Senate. 

On September 7, 2023 in the Assembly: Ordered to third reading. Read third time and amended. Assembly Rule 69 suspended.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

BEWARE: BPH STATES THAT “MEDICAL RECORDS” ARE NOT OFF LIMITS FOR USE AT PAROLE HEARINGS!

There have been many inquiries about legal authority for the Board of Parole Hearings (BPH) to access the medical records of incarcerated people for parole consideration purposes. 

 In short, all those asking if the Board can access medical and mental health treatment records for their parole suitability hearing—the answer is, Yes. Is it legal?…. that can still be debated given that the Parole Hearing transcripts “themselves” are Public Record and thus [in our opinion] indirectly violates the Confidential Medical records laws. 

The main short term take away: if your loved one is seeing a clinical psychologist, psychiatrist or even a Medical Doctor within CDCR (and/or their Mental Health division) then they should know to “be careful” what is disclosed to the Doctor. The Doctor’s NOTE will not be Confidential and will be used at the Parole Hearing against them. These Doctors’ notes usually come in as “quotes” from the medical record during the Comprehensive Risk Assessment (CRA) file review by the BPH psychologist, who then writes their report for the Board (a.k.a. Psychological Report).

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BELOW is a summary of why BPH thinks that they are allowed to violate the inmates right by reviewing the “confidential” private Medical Records. 

BPH’s Chief Counsel’s legal position is that People (inmates) appearing before the board do not have a right to keep their medical records private from the Board, as the Board must review all relevant and reliable evidence when making parole decisions. 

To the extent people appearing before the Board asserts a right to privacy of medical information, the board’s authority to access the medical records of incarcerated people for purposes of parole consideration is permitted by both the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and California law. In fact, California law requires that an incarcerated person’s records be made available for the board to decide when a person can be safely allowed to return to society, and this exception obviates the need for a signed disclosure under HIPAA. The board may access medical records to satisfy its regulatory and statutory mandates. California Code of Regulations, title 15, sections 2281 and 2402, require the board to consider all relevant and reliable information for the board to meet its statutory obligations under Penal Code sections 3041, 4801, and 5075.1. 

 Medical records may contain relevant and reliable information about an individual’s suitability for parole. For example, under the elderly parole program ordered by the three-judge panel in Plata/Coleman v. Newsom and the separate elderly parole program in Penal Code section 3055, the board must consider an elderly offender’s diminished physical capacity. The medical records are a critical source for this information. 

 Similarly, when applying the youth offender factors required by Penal Code sections 3051 and 4801, subdivision (c), the board must look for subsequent growth and increased maturity of an individual, evidence of which is often found in the treatment and programming records contained in a medical file. Further, programming information for some people is kept in their medical file, as is evidence of mental state, conditions of treatment or control, and further information that bears on the person’s suitability for release. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2281, subd. (b); 2402, subd. (b).) Since disclosure of medical records is required under these legal mandates, HIPAA is satisfied. 

When considering “the purpose for which the information is sought” — which here is to determine whether an incarcerated person would pose an unreasonable risk to public safety in the free community — the scope is not limited in the request because the board must consider all relevant and reliable information when making such a parole decision. 

 If an entity other than the board was to limit its access to records, and thereby make decisions as to what information is relevant to parole suitability, the entity would violate the board’s purpose and authority. No agency other than the board determines what information may be relevant to making parole decisions. 

Mental health treatment records are accessible to the BPH. BPH’s Chief Counsel’s summarized some basic reasons (below) for the board’s access to an inmate’s medical/mental health records: 

 Elderly parole must give special consideration to the diminished physical condition, if any, have reduced the elderly inmate’s risk for future violence (PC 3055),

Programming records for those in mental health treatment programs (where compliance with treatment is often considered programming),

Information relevant to future risk due to illness/impairment,

Information related to mental state, conditions of treatment and control and further information that bears on the person’s institutional behavior and suitability for release,

Information on substance abuse based on the person’s history Information needed to ascertain reasonable accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act.  

BOTTOM LINE: BPH’s Chief Counsel’s legal position is that an incarcerated person does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy regarding their medical records when the records are needed for parole consideration purposes. Even if there was some privacy expectation, the board has the explicit authority to utilize an incarcerated person’s medical records for purposes of parole consideration under the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act HIPAA and Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA).

Monday, August 7, 2023

LSA offers free "live" Seminars for Lifers to prepare for their Parole Hearing; at RJ Donovan August 25, 26, 27: Tell your RJD Loved ones to sign up.

Life Support Alliance (LSA) returning to Prison to give their impactful Lifer Workshop: Get your Loved ones involved. 

Now that Covid19 is subsiding and more institutions are allowing Program providers into the prisons to bring "live" presentations; Life Support Alliance (LSA) is getting invitations to bring their impactful workshops. Tell Your Loved Ones to sign-up for the classes before it fills up.

 IT IS FREE and conducted on the YARDS at the prison.

SAVE THE DATES:

RJ Donovan San Diego; Friday, Saturday, and Sunday starting August 25* to 27 of 2023

** Watch for a Special RJD Appearance by Attorney Diane Letarte  at one or more sessions.

The idea is to try to present the class to as many inmates, by visiting as many Yards as possible, in the RJD institution during those 3-days. Some of the workshops include: Unraveling a Parole Hearing, Connecting the Dots, the Amends Project (e.g. how to write apology letters), among others.

LSA travels to the prisons to give their workshops in-person to all Long Term Inmates (i.e. Lifers, Youth Offender, Elderly hearings, DSL, ISL) that are going to a Parole Suitability Hearing. The workshop will help them get prepared for the Parole Hearing. LSA staff will go where they have the most interested people. This month of August 2023; it will be at RJ Donovan institution.

Specifically LSA will normally prioritize the institutions who register the most memberships (i.e. interest)! 

 If you are a Loved Ones in the free community then sign up to be a Free member of the Life Support Alliance (LSA). You will get the Free Newsletter (Lifer*Line) each month in your email inbox. The other way is to text the word “JOIN” to their automated system at 916-702-7344; which will return a link. Use the link to fill out the membership registration, right from the phone. 

The membership “count” will indicate which Prisons should get the in-person workshop first. You can also go to LSA’s website at www.lifesupportalliance.Org. Scroll to the bottom of the page and hit the “JOIN” button to get the same form to fill out. Fill out the form with the inmates’ name and the prison location. 

 LSA can be contacted via their email address info@lifesupportalliance.org and 

LSA PO BOX 277 

Rancho Cordova, 

CA 95711 

 

Thank You to LSA for all of what they do to assist the inmate population get home.