The Signal

City Council to discuss Keep California Safe Act

- By Crystal Duan Signal Staff Writer

Santa Clarita City Council plans to consider formally supporting the Reducing Crime and Keeping California Safe Act of 2018, which will be voted on by California residents in November, at its April 10 meeting.

The initiative filed with state officials would “reform the parole system so violent felons are not released early from prison, strengthen oversight of post release community supervisio­n and tighten penalties for violations of terms of post release community supervisio­n.” It would also “reform theft laws to restore accountabi­lity for serial thieves and organized theft rings” and “expand DNA collection from persons convicted of drug, theft and domestic violence related crimes to help solve violent crimes and exonerate the innocent.”

Crimes that would be re-classified as violent felonies include domestic violence, hate crimes and child abduction.

The measure was approved for the signature-gathering phase by Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office in the first week of January. The effort needs about 367,000

signatures to qualify.

The initiative is aimed as a response to Propositio­n 47 and Propositio­n 57. Prop 47 reduced certain nonviolent felonies to misdemeano­rs after it was approved by voters in 2014. Prop 57, approved two years later, hastened the release of some non-violent offenders from prisons.

Santa Clarita City Councilman Bob Kellar said he “absolutely” supported the initiative.

“As elected representa­tives throughout the state of California and the country, if we did not do all we can to protect our citizens, why are we even in office?” he said.

The initiative complement­ed legislativ­e bill number AB 109, a 26page report issued by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s

on how the county is complying with prison realignmen­t.

The initiative “corrects some unintended consequenc­es,” Michele Hanisee, president of the Los Angeles Associatio­n of Deputy District Attorneys, said in a previous Signal interview.

“We support this initiative because it gives us and the police the tools that we need to protect our communitie­s and that is the most

important thing to us,” Hanisee said.

Ron Hernandez, the president of the Associatio­n of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, said in a previous interview with the Signal that Prop 47 and Prop 57 were unclear to voters when they were approved.

“I think if we re-address some of the issues and solve those issues, it will not only make the streets safer for the communitie­s that we

protect, but it will also make it safe for those law enforcemen­t officers and (sheriff’s deputies) that go out there and try to protect those communitie­s,” he said.

Kellar said his previous experience as a police officer informed his decision to support the initiative.

“When you see people out here that have been on various levels, incredible victims of crimes, you sit here and you think, ‘Wait a

minute. I’m supposed to coddle the criminals at the risk of our good citizens?’” he said. “If I have a regret in my law enforcemen­t career, it’s that I didn’t throw more bad people in jail. We will continue to do everything we can to ensure the safety of our citizens. It’s one of the reasons that we have been, at our size, repeatedly one of the safest cities in America for our population.”

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