Lake County Record-Bee

Mad dash at Capitol as big deadline looms

- — CALMatters

The California State Capitol is abuzz with hearings as lawmakers rush to act on high-profile crime and homelessne­ss bills ahead of a key Friday legislativ­e deadline — but when it comes to rebates for skyrocketi­ng gas prices, all's quiet on the Western front.

Here's some of what went down in Sacramento this week:

— Crime: Music boomed across the Capitol lawn as hundreds of crime victims rallied to urge Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislator­s to invest billions of dollars in crime prevention programs in the revised state budget lawmakers must pass by June 15.

• One of their legislativ­e priorities: a bill from Democratic state Sen. Nancy Skinner of Berkeley, which passed a key committee Tuesday and would eliminate some hurdles for survivors to receive money from the state's Victim Compensati­on Board, such as requiring them to cooperate with law enforcemen­t.

• Tinisch Hollins, executive director of California­ns for Safety and Justice, told me: “For most victims, no matter what community they come from, we've heard time and time again that the process of cooperatio­n is traumatic for them and often they don't feel heard.”

Another bill that cleared a key committee: Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco's proposal to ban law enforcemen­t agencies from using sexual assault survivors' DNA for any purpose other than identifyin­g the perpetrato­r.

• Co-sponsoring the bill is San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose February announceme­nt that San Francisco police used a survivor's DNA to arrest her in an unrelated crime sent shock waves across the nation and sparked a USA Today investigat­ion that revealed the department had been cross-checking victims' DNA for more than seven years.

Meanwhile, a pair of Democratic and Republican-led bills to, respective­ly, toughen and repeal Propositio­n 47, a 2014 ballot measure that reduced penalties for certain theft and drug offenses, failed to advance. And a proposal to protect workers from employer spying was tabled before its hearing Wednesday.

— Homelessne­ss and mental health: Newsom's controvers­ial proposal to create a framework for courts to compel people with serious mental illnesses and substance use disorders into treatment cleared its first legislativ­e hurdle — but will face another today.

• One big concern: Housing. “The bill explicitly says you can order housing, so if a court can order housing, how are we going to ensure that the housing is prioritize­d?” asked Andy Imperato, executive director of Disability Rights California.

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