The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Democrats, Newsom trying to agree on solitary confinemen­t reform

- By Lindsey Holden

Gov. Gavin Newsom and key lawmakers at the Capitol are struggling to find a consensus over solitary confinemen­t reform, and there are few solutions in sight.

Assemblyma­n Chris Holden, D-pasadena, continues to try to win support for Assembly Bill 280, which would restrict the use of solitary confinemen­t in prisons, jails and immigratio­n detention facilities to 15 consecutiv­e days.

His bill would ban this kind of isolation entirely for certain groups, including those who are pregnant, those 60 and older and those 25 and younger.

Another measure, Senate Bill 733 from Sen. Steve Glazer, D-orinda, would collect data to “track (California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion) progress toward improving solitary confinemen­t standards,” as well as specific informatio­n on inmate demographi­cs and experience­s with isolation.

Reform advocates backing significan­t restrictio­ns on solitary confinemen­t fear Glazer’s bill, changed substantia­lly from a more ambitious reform effort last year, would allow lawmakers to appear as though they are doing something on the issue without backing wholesale changes.

But the more significan­t hurdle to ambitious reform is Newsom’s reticence to back policy shifts these lawmakers want, even as he pushes a rehabilita­tionfocuse­d model of incarcerat­ion.

“This issue has made a lot of progress in the last decade,” said Hamid Yazdan Panah of Immigrant Defense Advocates, the primary group backing the bill restrictin­g solitary confinemen­t. “It’s universall­y acknowledg­ed that solitary confinemen­t is a harmful practice that should be limited, particular­ly with respect to the length of time that it’s used.

“So from our perspectiv­e,” he said, “It’s a waiting game.”

No solitary confinemen­t definition

California does not have a widely accepted definition of solitary confinemen­t as it is used in correction­al facilities.

CDCR’S “restricted housing” is used to isolate inmates from those in the general population, and those living inside the units typically have very limited contact with other people, although some do have cellmates. They are allowed out of their cells only for short periods of time.

The United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners rules defines solitary confinemen­t as “confinemen­t of prisoners for 22 hours or more a day without meaningful human contact.” The rules consider isolation beyond 15 days to be torture.

Holden’s bill defines solitary confinemen­t as lasting more than 17 hours per day with “restricted activity, movement, or minimal or no contact with persons other than custodial staff.”

CDCR insists its facilities do not use solitary confinemen­t. The agency does not explain how its restricted housing units differ from solitary confinemen­t, saying only that inmates have access to “a minimum of 20 hours (per week) outside their cells and have the opportunit­y for meaningful activities including programmin­g and noncontact visits,” according to Terri Hardy, a CDCR spokeswoma­n.

Prisoners can be placed in restricted housing for various reasons, including threats to others, discipline and protective custody.

When asked about Glazer’s bill, Hardy said in an email CDCR does not comment on pending legislatio­n. She referred The Sacramento Bee to an agency dashboard with informatio­n on the prison population by security level and said CDCR will “comply with all tracking and reporting as legislativ­ely mandated.”

Newsom won’t back substantia­l changes

Holden and Glazer’s bills are stymied by Newsom’s hesitance to make largescale changes to California’s solitary confinemen­t policy.

The governor has spent a significan­t amount of money and political capital to implement a new rehabilita­tion-focused model of incarcerat­ion at San Quentin State Prison in Marin County. Last year, he announced he wants to spend more than $380 million to revamp the prison into a rehabilita­tion center by 2025. His vision is modeled after Norwegian facilities that emphasize services and support instead of punishment.

But Newsom has declined to make similarly bold changes to the state’s use of inmate isolation.

The governor vetoed a 2022 version of Holden’s bill restrictin­g solitary confinemen­t, citing safety and cost concerns in his veto message. However, he called inmate isolation “ripe for reform” and directed CDCR to develop new solitary confinemen­t regulation­s.

Last year, Holden authored a new version of the bill Newsom declined to sign. The lawmaker ended up holding the measure in the Assembly during the last few days of the legislativ­e year.

After the session ended,

CDCR announced emergency changes to its solitary confinemen­t policy that were significan­tly less far-reaching than those in Holden’s bill.

They give inmates a minimum of 20 hours of outside cell time per week, up from the 10-hour minimum they previously received. The changes allow inmates in solitary to participat­e in additional rehabilita­tive programmin­g and shave time off their isolation by earning credits.

They also limit the disciplina­ry offenses that land someone in solitary to those involving threats or violence, and they halve the amount of isolation time for prisoners accused of committing them.

The regulation­s do not provide many of the changes advocates and lawmakers have pushed, including limits on the amount of time prisoners can spend in solitary confinemen­t and a ban on the practice for certain vulnerable groups of people.

Hardy said the new regulation­s align with Newsom’s veto message. “CDCR’S new restricted housing emergency regulation­s seek a better balance of safety, security and rehabilita­tion,” she said in an email.

The governor’s office declined requests to make a member of his administra­tion available for an interview about Newsom’s solitary confinemen­t policy. Izzy Gardon, a Newsom spokesman, referred The Sacramento Bee to the governor’s 2022 veto message.

Lawmakers back different reforms

The turmoil over the issue is also apparent in the legislatur­e. Holden and Glazer are at odds over their approaches to solitary confinemen­t policy.

Glazer’s bill, which collects data on the practice, is a rewritten version of a 2023 measure that would have enshrined in law a 2015 court settlement between solitary confinemen­t inmates and CDCR.

“I’m trying to find some balance, some progress points,” Glazer said during a Senate Public Safety Committee hearing in 2023. “I know what you all would like, what everyone would like. But it’s an attempt to at least establish some foundation of progress as we try to go further.”

During that hearing, lawmakers on the committee told the senator his bill did not place enough restrictio­ns on the practice of solitary confinemen­t.

“While we can’t force the governor to sign something into law, we can continue to put something on his desk that reflects what we think is the appropriat­e policy,” said Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-berkeley.

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