The Signal

Brown signs Wilk’s sex-offender bill

- By Perry Smith Signal Deputy Managing Editor

Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 1199 into law Monday evening, an attempt to correct the way Jessica’s Law led to a disproport­ionate number of sexual offenders being released to rural areas.

The bill’s author, Scott Wilk, R-Santa Clarita, said the bill addresses an unintended consequenc­e, which created a burdensome and unfair situation in several parts of the 21st Senate District, which he represents, as well as rural communitie­s throughout the state.

The problem for these smaller communitie­s is that most of them, due to their lack of population density, meet the requiremen­ts for where a convicted sex offender can be released, Wilk said.

Jessica’s Law was initially passed in Florida in 2005, in response to the murder of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford at the hands of a convicted sex offender, according to national reports at the time. A version

of the law that stated convicted sex offenders must live 2,000 feet from churches and schools was later made law in California through a ballot initiative in 2006.

However, in most urban and even suburban areas, building density makes it impossible to place a sex offender in these areas, Wilk said. And these areas also tend to have more of the resources a sex offender would need in order to rehabilita­te.

“I think this is going to release

the unfair burden on my constituen­ts,” Wilk said, adding that it’s also a win for those who need help to rehabilita­te.

Wilk said he had two more legislativ­e efforts that he was hopeful would garner the governor’s signature:

SB 1409 creates a framework for the growth of industrial hemp in California, and the bill is expected to be heard on the Assembly floor this week, he said.

SB 1036 addresses a privacy issue that was brought to a constituen­t during a Saugus Union

School District board meeting, he said.

SB 1036 would “prohibit the ... personal informatio­n, as defined, of a pupil or of the parent or guardian of a pupil in the minutes of a meeting of the governing body ... if a pupil who is 18 years of age or older or a parent or guardian of a pupil has provided a written request to the secretary or clerk of the governing body to exclude his or her personal informatio­n or the name of his or her minor child, as specified.”

Wilk said a grandmothe­r who

spoke during the public comment portion of an SUSD meeting — expressing her opinion regarding a book that had offended her — later learned that her residentia­l address had been published as part of the official record of the meeting’s minutes.

The woman felt that in “today’s political climate” it was not a good idea to have her personal informatio­n published without her expressed consent.

“Personal informatio­n,” according to SB 1036, “includes a person’s address, telephone number, date of birth and email address.”

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