SEC. 2.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Assembly Bill 1334 of the 2007–08 Regular Session would have required the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to allow nonprofits and health agencies to enter department institutions to provide sexual barrier protection devices, including condoms, to state prisoners.
(b) In his October 14, 2007, veto message for Assembly Bill 1334, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger noted that, although it is illegal to engage in sexual activity while incarcerated, providing access to condoms is “consistent with the need to improve our prison
healthcare system and overall public health.”
(c) The veto message directed the department to determine the risk and viability of such a program by identifying one state prison facility for the purpose of allowing nonprofits and health agencies to distribute sexual barrier devices.
(d) To accomplish the Governor’s directive, a pilot program was implemented in Solano State Prison, Facility II, for one year, from November 5, 2008, through November 4, 2009. Several agencies covered all costs for the program and volunteered their staff time and expertise.
(e) The Center for Health Justice, a nonprofit organization, purchased the condom dispensing machines and condoms, monitored and refilled the dispensers throughout the pilot
period, and provided education for staff and inmates.
(f) Researchers from the Division of Correctional Health Care Services, Public Health Unit, and the State Department of Public Health, Office of AIDS, and the Sexually Transmitted Diseases Control Branch, provided evaluation services and finalized their conclusions in a September 2011 report entitled: Evaluation of a Prisoner Condom Access Pilot Program Conducted in One California State Prison Facility.
(g) The report concluded that there was no evidence that the availability of condoms created an increased risk of breaches of safety or security, or resulted in injury to staff or inmates, in a general population prison facility setting.
(h) The report also
stated that its findings may not be generalized with regard to other settings, for example, because of higher security or in a setting dedicated to inmates with mental health problems. Additional pilot studies may be warranted in these other settings.
(i) The report concluded that providing condoms from dispensing machines similar to those used in the pilot program is feasible and of relatively low cost to implement and maintain.
(j) Estimates of the in-prison HIV and STD transmission rates are not available. However, given the relatively low cost of providing condoms relative to the cost of treating
HIV, and that very few HIV infections would need to be prevented to cover the costs of the program, it is likely that providing condoms could reduce department medical costs.