Amended
IN
Assembly
August 15, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
June 15, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
June 08, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Senate
May 19, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Senate
April 19, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Senate
March 10, 2022 |
Introduced by Senator Skinner (Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Cristina Garcia) (Coauthors: Senators |
February 14, 2022 |
This bill would establish the Flexible Assistance for Survivors (FAS) pilot grant program, to be administered by the Office of Emergency Services. The bill would require the office to
establish a grant selection advisory committee to provide grants to qualifying community-based organizations to establish assistance funds to distribute in direct cash assistance to survivors, as defined.
This bill would require the committee when considering grant applications to give preferences to certain organizations, including organizations that are located in, serve, and employ members of communities that experience disproportionately high rates of gun violence and imprisonment. The bill would restrict expenditure of grant funds for administrative expenses to no more than 10%, and would require organizations receiving an award to establish policies and procedures for distributing funds that comply with specified requirements.
This bill would require that cash assistance received under these provisions to be treated in the same manner as the federal earned income refund, as specified, for purposes of determining eligibility to receive specified benefits. The bill would require each grantee to report certain information to the office each year. The bill would require the office to post on its internet website a public report on the impact of the grant program before July 1, 2027, as specified, and would require the office to submit a progress report to the Legislature by July 1, 2025, as specified.
This bill would make the FAS pilot grant provisions inoperative on July 1, 2027, and would repeal them January 1, 2028.
Existing law requires the California Victim Compensation Board to consist of 3 members, as specified.
For the purpose of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
(a)“Community-based organization” means a nonprofit organization, or organization fiscally sponsored by a nonprofit, that provides direct services to survivors, and includes, but is not limited to, a trauma recovery center, as described in Section 13963.1.
(b)“Family member” means any of the following:
(1)A person related to another by blood, adoption,
marriage, or domestic partnership.
(2)A household member or former household member of another.
(3)A person who is not related by blood, adoption, or marriage to another but who otherwise has a significant emotional relationship with another.
(c)“Grant program” means the Flexible Assistance for Survivors (FAS) pilot grant program established by this chapter.
(d)“Office” means the Office of Emergency Services.
(e)“Survivor” means a person who would be eligible for services from an organization that would qualify to receive a grant as a crime victim assistance program pursuant to Section 20103 of Title 34 of the United States Code.
(a)The Flexible Assistance for Survivors (FAS) pilot grant program is hereby established, to be administered by the Office of Emergency Services, with the goal of improving safety, healing, and financial stability for survivors, and the loved ones of those violently injured or killed.
(b)FAS grants shall be made to qualifying community-based organizations pursuant to this chapter for the purpose of establishing assistance funds to distribute in direct cash assistance to survivors.
(c)The office shall establish a grant selection advisory committee that includes, without limitation, persons who have been impacted by violence, formerly incarcerated persons, and persons with direct experience in implementing supportive services for marginalized
survivors. Racial, gender, and ethnic diversity, and representation of communities and identities described in subdivisions (g) and (h), shall be considered for all appointments. The committee shall consist of 13 members, as follows:
(1)(A)Three representatives from community-based organizations providing direct services and recovery assistance such as housing, job placement, or economic support to vulnerable survivors.
(B)Of the three members described by subparagraph (A), one member shall be appointed by the
Governor, one member shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and one member shall be appointed by the Senate President pro Tempore.
(2)(A)Three survivors who have experience in advocacy, treatment, or service provision, and who are members of communities that experience disproportionately high rates of gun violence and imprisonment.
(B)At least one of the members described
in subparagraph (A) shall be formerly incarcerated.
(C)Of the three members described by subparagraph (A), one member shall be appointed by the Governor, one member shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and one member shall be appointed by the Senate President pro Tempore.
(3)(A)Three community providers or advocates with expertise in community-based violence reduction programs or initiatives with a public health approach.
(B)Of the three members described by subparagraph (A), one member
shall be appointed by the Governor, one member shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and one member shall be appointed by the Senate President pro Tempore.
(4)(A)Two mental health professionals with experience providing trauma recovery services that serve residents of communities that experience disproportionately high rates of gun violence and imprisonment.
(B)Of the two members described by subparagraph (A), one member shall be appointed by the Governor and one member shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly.
(5)(A)Two public health professionals.
(B)Of the two members described by subparagraph (A), one member shall be appointed by the Governor and one member shall be appointed by the Senate President pro Tempore.
(d)The advisory committee shall establish rules for implementing this section and shall make grants under this chapter on a competitive basis to community-based organizations. Community-based organizations shall apply on a form prescribed by the committee, which shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
(1)A description of the organization’s history serving one or more of the groups described in subdivision (h).
(2)A description of how the community or communities the organization serves are impacted by violence and incarceration.
(3)The estimated number of survivors the organization or program currently serves.
(4)The estimated number of survivors to whom the organization or program anticipates it will distribute grant funds.
(5)How the organization plans to distribute cash assistance funds to survivors to meet immediate financial needs quickly.
(6)How the organization plans to minimize the burden on survivors to provide documentation or submit paperwork.
(e)The advisory committee shall do all of the following:
(1)Strive to minimize the paperwork burden on grant applicants and grantees.
(2)Strive to develop an application, awards, and reporting process that is accessible to community-based organizations with smaller budgets or without past experience receiving a state grant award.
(3)Develop a plan to
publicize the grant program in advance of an application deadline.
(4)Provide technical assistance to applicants and grantees.
(5)Work with the office to develop tools to support applicants applying for an award under this chapter, including, but not limited to, templates and sample applications, which shall be posted prominently on the office’s internet website.
(6)Prior to an application deadline, work with the office to publicize and host at least two webinars that are open to the public detailing how to apply for a grant under this chapter.
(7)Develop reporting metrics for grantees to provide information to the office to aid the office in creating the
reports required by Section 8699.02. In developing these metrics, the advisory committee shall strive to minimize the paperwork burden on survivors that apply for assistance.
(f)A community-based organization shall be eligible to apply for a grant under this chapter if the organization has a history of serving survivors and the majority of people the organization, or a project within the organization that will administer the grant, serves are survivors.
(g)When considering grant applications, the advisory committee shall give preference to organizations that are located in, serve, and employ members of communities that experience disproportionately high rates of gun violence and imprisonment.
(h)When considering grant applications, the advisory committee shall give preference to community-based organizations that have a history of providing services to vulnerable survivors, including, but not limited to, the following:
(1)Survivors of color.
(2)Elderly survivors.
(3)Survivors with disabilities.
(4)Survivors who are transgender or gender nonconforming.
(5)Survivors who have faced disproportionate police contact.
(6)Survivors who are formerly incarcerated or who have past arrests or convictions.
(7)Survivors with immigration status issues.
(8)Survivors who are unhoused.
(9)Survivors of firearm injuries.
(10)Survivors who have lost a family member to homicide.
(11)Survivors facing mental health crises.
(12)Low-income survivors.
(13)Survivors challenged by substance abuse.
(i)An organization receiving a grant under this chapter may use the funds as follows:
(1)Unrestricted cash assistance to survivors to meet survivors’ financial needs or to cover survivors’ expenses, distributed at the discretion of the organization in amounts determined by the organization based on the needs of survivors and in a way that minimizes or eliminates the burden on survivors to provide external documentation of their need or expenses.
(2)Up to 10 percent for the organization’s
expenses in administering the grant.
(j)A community-based organization receiving a grant under this chapter shall establish policies and procedures for distributing funds to survivors whom the organization serves that comply with all the following:
(1)Develop a method that allows survivors to attest to their experience of victimization that minimizes the burden of requiring survivors to obtain
documentation of a victimization.
(2)Promote distribution of funds to survivors in a manner that
meets the immediate needs of survivors quickly.
(3)Do not require survivors to engage in other services or programs as a condition of receiving funds.
(4)Do not require survivors to provide or maintain burdensome documentation of their need or spending.
(5)Do not require survivors to report a crime to a law enforcement agency as a condition of receiving cash assistance.
(6)Do not exclude survivors on the basis of citizenship or immigration status.
(7)Do not exclude survivors on the basis of an arrest or conviction record, nor on the basis of a survivor’s status under correctional
supervision.
(k)Notwithstanding any other law, cash assistance received under this chapter shall be treated in the same manner as the federal earned income refund for the purpose of determining eligibility to receive benefits under Division 9 (commencing with Section 10000) of the Welfare and Institutions Code or amounts of those benefits.
(l)Each grantee shall annually report to the office all of the following:
(1)The aggregate number of survivors who received cash assistance through the grant program.
(2)The average amount of assistance each survivor received through the grant program.
(3)Information responsive to the metrics developed pursuant to paragraph (7) of subdivision (e).
(m)The office may use up to 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the grant program each year for the costs of administering the grant program, including, without limitation, employing personnel, providing technical assistance to grantees or prospective grantees, and issuing a report on the impacts of the grant program.
(a)(1)By July 1, 2025, the office shall submit a progress report to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795 discussing the impact of the grant program, which shall include information received pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (l) of Section 8699.01.
(2)The requirement for submitting a report imposed by this subdivision is inoperative on January 1, 2026, pursuant to Section 10231.5.
(b)Before July 1, 2027, the office shall post on its internet website a public report on the impact of the grant program, which shall include policy recommendations to provide guidance
to the Legislature and Governor in fully implementing and scaling a permanent grant program using information received pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (l) of Section 8699.01.
This chapter shall become inoperative on July 1, 2027, and, as of January 1, 2028, is repealed.
(a)The board may grant for pecuniary loss, when the board determines it will best aid the person seeking compensation, as follows:
(1)Subject to the limitations set forth in Section 13957.2, reimburse the amount of medical or medical-related expenses incurred by the victim for services that were provided by a licensed medical provider, including, but not limited to, eyeglasses, hearing aids, dentures, or any prosthetic device taken, lost, or destroyed during the commission of the crime, or the use of which became necessary as a direct result of the crime.
(2)Subject to the limitations set forth in Section 13957.2, reimburse the amount of psychiatric, psychological, or other mental health counseling-related expenses incurred by the victim or derivative victim, including peer counseling services provided by a rape crisis center as defined by Section 13837 of the Penal Code, and including family psychiatric, psychological, or mental health counseling for the successful treatment of the victim provided to family members of the victim in the presence of the victim, whether or not the family member relationship existed at the time of the crime, that became necessary as a direct result of the crime, subject to the following conditions:
(A)The following persons may be reimbursed for the expense of their outpatient mental health counseling:
(i)A victim.
(ii)A derivative victim who is the surviving parent, grandparent, sibling, child, grandchild, spouse, or fiance of a victim of a crime that directly resulted in the death of the victim.
(iii)A derivative victim, as described in paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, of subdivision (c) of Section 13955, who is the primary caretaker of a minor victim whose claim is not denied or reduced pursuant to Section 13956 for not more than two derivative victims.
(iv)A derivative victim not eligible for reimbursement pursuant to clause (iii), provided that mental health counseling of a derivative victim described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) of Section 13955, shall be reimbursed only if that counseling is necessary for the treatment of the victim.
(v)A minor who suffers emotional injury as a direct result of witnessing a violent crime and who is not eligible for reimbursement of the costs of outpatient mental health counseling under any other provision of this chapter. To be eligible for reimbursement under this clause, the minor must have been in close proximity to the victim when the minor witnessed the crime.
(B)The board may reimburse a victim or derivative victim for inpatient psychiatric, psychological, or other mental health counseling if the claim is based on dire or exceptional circumstances that require more extensive treatment.
(C)Expenses for psychiatric, psychological, or other mental health counseling-related services may be reimbursed only if the services were provided by either of the following individuals:
(i)A person who would have been authorized to provide those services pursuant to former Article 1 (commencing with Section 13959) as it read on January 1, 2002.
(ii)A person who is licensed in California to provide those services, or who is properly supervised by a person who is licensed in California to provide those services, subject to the board’s approval and subject to the limitations and restrictions the board may impose.
(3)Subject to the limitations set forth in Section 13957.5, authorize compensation equal to the loss of income or loss of support, or both, that a victim or derivative victim incurs as a direct result of the victim’s or derivative victim’s injury or the victim’s death. If the qualifying crime is a violation of Section 236.1 of the Penal Code, the board may authorize compensation equal to loss of income or support that a victim incurs as a direct result of the victim’s deprivation of liberty during the crime, not to exceed the amount set forth in Section 13957.5. If the victim or derivative victim requests that the board give priority to reimbursement of loss of income or support, the board may not pay medical expenses, or mental health counseling expenses, except upon the request of the victim or derivative victim or after determining that payment of these expenses will not decrease the funds available for payment of loss of income or support.
(4)Authorize a cash payment to or on behalf of the victim for job retraining or similar employment-oriented services.
(5)Reimburse the expense of installing or increasing residential security, not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Installing or increasing residential security may include, but need not be limited to, both of the following:
(A)Home security device or system.
(B)Replacing or increasing the number of locks.
(6)Reimburse the expense of renovating or retrofitting a victim’s residence, or the expense of modifying or purchasing a vehicle, to make the residence or the vehicle accessible or operational by a victim upon verification that the expense is medically necessary for a victim who is permanently disabled as a direct result of the crime, whether the disability is partial or total.
(7)(A)Authorize a cash payment or reimbursement not to exceed seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) to a victim or derivative victim for expenses incurred in relocating, if the applicant provides a signed statement indicating that relocation is necessary for the personal safety or emotional well-being of the victim or derivative victim as a result of the qualifying crime. For purposes of this paragraph, “expenses incurred in relocating” may include the costs of temporary housing for any pets belonging to the victim upon immediate relocation.
(B)The cash payment or reimbursement made under this paragraph shall only be awarded to one claimant per crime giving rise to the relocation. The board may authorize more than one relocation per crime if necessary for the personal safety or emotional well-being of the victim or, if the victim is deceased, a derivative victim who resided with the victim at the time of the qualifying crime. However, the total cash payment or reimbursement for all relocations due to the same crime shall not exceed seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500). For purposes of this paragraph, a claimant is the crime victim, or, if the victim is deceased, a person who resided with the deceased at the time of the crime.
(C)The board may, under compelling circumstances, award a second cash payment or reimbursement to a victim for another crime if both of the following conditions are met:
(i)The crime occurs more than three years from the date of the crime giving rise to the initial relocation cash payment or reimbursement.
(ii)The crime does not involve the same offender.
(D)Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) and (B), the board may increase the cash payment or reimbursement for expenses incurred in relocating to an amount greater than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500), if the board finds this amount is appropriate due to the unusual, dire, or exceptional circumstances of a particular claim.
(E)If a security deposit, pet deposit, or both is required for relocation, the board shall be named as the recipient and receive the funds upon expiration of the victim’s rental agreement.
(8)When a victim dies as a result of a crime, the board may reimburse any individual who voluntarily, and without anticipation of personal gain, pays or assumes the obligation to pay any of the following expenses:
(A)The medical expenses incurred as a direct result of the crime in an amount not to exceed the rates or limitations established by the board.
(B)The funeral and burial expenses incurred as a direct result of the crime, not to exceed twenty thousand dollars ($20,000). The board shall not create or comply with a regulation or policy that mandates a lower maximum potential amount of an award pursuant to this subparagraph for less than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000).
(9)When the crime occurs in a residence or inside a vehicle, the board may reimburse any individual who voluntarily, and without anticipation of personal gain, pays or assumes the obligation to pay the reasonable costs to clean the scene of the crime in an amount not to exceed one thousand seven hundred dollars ($1,700). Services reimbursed pursuant to this subdivision shall be performed by persons registered with the State Department of Public Health as trauma scene waste practitioners in accordance with Chapter 9.5 (commencing with Section 118321) of Part 14 of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code.
(10)When the crime is a violation of Section 600.2 or 600.5 of the Penal Code, the board may reimburse the expense of veterinary services, replacement costs, or other reasonable expenses, as ordered by the court pursuant to Section 600.2 or 600.5 of the Penal Code, in an amount not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
(11)An award of compensation pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (f) of Section 13955 shall be limited to compensation to provide mental health counseling and shall not limit the eligibility of a victim for an award that the victim may be otherwise entitled to receive under this part. A derivative victim shall not be eligible for compensation under this provision.
(b)The total award to or on behalf of each victim or derivative victim shall not exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000).
(B)The following persons may be reimbursed for the expense of their outpatient mental health counseling in an amount not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000):
(i)
(ii)
(C)
(D)
(D)When a relocation payment or reimbursement is provided to a victim of sexual assault or domestic violence and the identity of the offender is known to the victim, the victim shall agree not to inform the offender of the location of the victim’s new residence and not to allow the offender on the premises at any time, or shall agree to seek a restraining order against the offender. A victim may be required to repay the relocation payment or reimbursement to the board if the victim violates the terms set forth in this paragraph.
(E)
(F)
(a)Any person who, having been convicted of any crime against the state amounting to a felony, is granted a pardon by the Governor for the reason that the crime with which they were charged was either not committed at all or, if committed, was not committed by the person, or who, being innocent of the crime with which they were charged for either of those reasons, have served the term or any part thereof for which they were imprisoned in state prison, incarcerated in county jail, on parole, or under supervised release, may, under the conditions provided under this chapter, present a claim against the state to the California Victim Compensation Board for the erroneous conviction and imprisonment or incarceration served solely as a result of the former
conviction.
(b)If a state or federal court has granted a writ of habeas corpus or if a state court has granted a motion to vacate pursuant to Section 1473.6 or paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1473.7, and the charges were subsequently dismissed, or the person was acquitted of the charges on a retrial, the California Victim Compensation Board shall, upon application by the person, and without a hearing, recommend to the Legislature that an appropriation be made and the claim paid pursuant to Section 4904, unless the Attorney General establishes pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 4902, that the claimant is not entitled to compensation.
(a)If the evidence shows that the crime with which the claimant was charged was either not committed at all, or, if committed, was not committed by the claimant, or for claims pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 4900, the Attorney General’s office has not met their burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the claimant committed the acts constituting the offense, the California Victim Compensation Board shall report the facts of the case and its conclusions to the next Legislature, with a recommendation that the Legislature make an appropriation for the purpose of compensating the claimant. The amount of the appropriation recommended shall include the following:
(1)A sum equivalent to one hundred forty dollars ($140) per day of incarceration served solely as a result of the former conviction, and shall include any time spent in custody, including in a county jail, that is considered to be part of the term of incarceration.
(2)A sum equivalent to seventy dollars ($70) per day served on parole pursuant to Section 3000 or 3000.1 or on supervised release solely as a result of the former conviction.
(3)Reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred by or on behalf of the claimant in overturning the claimant’s conviction or securing a pardon.
(4)Reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred by or on behalf of the claimant in obtaining compensation under this section or obtaining a finding of factual innocence under Section 851.8, 851.86, 1473.7, or 1485.55. When an award is made under this paragraph, a claimant’s attorney many not collect any fees or costs in excess of the amount awarded.
(b)The appropriation amounts provided in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) shall be updated annually to reflect changes in the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index, West Region commencing one year after this section becomes effective.
(c)Pursuant to Section 17156.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, funds received by the claimant under this section shall not be treated as gross income to the recipient.