Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Will lawmakers halt Newsom's plan to reform San Quentin prison?

- By Maggie Angst Sacramento Bee

Two months after Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his plan to transform San Quentin State Prison from a maximum-security prison into a rehabilita­tion and education facility within the prison system, lawmakers are pushing back, saying his proposal lacks a detailed strategy behind it.

During recent budget committee meetings, lawmakers grew noticeably frustrated over the limited informatio­n provided by the Newsom administra­tion and correction­s officials regarding their plan to reimagine California's oldest correction­al facility.

“I try not to consider it insulting, but it's close,” Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, RPalmdale, said at a budget committee hearing. “I find it to be very disturbing that we're following a pathway where we're being asked to fund first and answers will come later.”

Meanwhile, the agency tasked with advising lawmakers on fiscal and policy matters is imploring the

Legislatur­e to reject the governor's funding requests and demand accountabi­lity.

A newly released report from the Legislativ­e Analyst's Office blasted Newsom's office for failing to set any clear objectives and for putting forward a $380 million funding proposal that lacks crucial informatio­n, such as the project's full scope and projected operating costs.

The report called the governor's plan to complete the transforma­tion in less than three years “unnecessar­y and problemati­c.” It also found that the initiative could cost upwards of $20 billion to scale across California's correction­al system, as the governor expressed was his intent.

“While the administra­tion has articulate­d some broad approaches to pursuing the goals of the California Model, such as `becoming a trauma-informed organizati­on,' it has not identified any clear changes to policy, practice, or prison environmen­ts it deems necessary to achieve the goals,” the Legislativ­e Analyst's Office report reads.

Izzy Gardon, a spokespers­on for Newsom, deferred questions to the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

CDCR spokespers­on Terri Hardy called the criticisms “premature” and said that a newly appointed advisory council led by Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg was “actively working to develop recommenda­tions to transform the prison by the end of the year.”

Newsom announced in mid-March that the 171-year-old penitentia­ry, which houses about 3,900 inmates and was home to the nation's largest death row, would overhaul its approach to rehabilita­ting inmates to emphasize services and support over punishment.

Dubbed the California Model, Newsom said the plan that incorporat­es methods used in Norway and other Scandinavi­an nations would launch by the end of 2025.

Since then, the Newsom administra­tion has requested $20 million for operations and $360.6 million in revenue bond authority to construct a new educationa­l and vocational center.

The bond money would be used to knock down an existing building, which had its roof replaced less than two years ago at a cost of nearly $5 million, to make room for the new center on the Marin County property.

After factoring in annual debt costs, the project's price tag is likely to reach $680 million, according to the Legislativ­e Analyst's Office.

San Quentin is already known as a prison that offers considerab­le programmin­g, including education, arts and other rehabilita­tive services. Activists have questioned whether a new capital project at San Quentin is the best use of state dollars.

“There are a lot of other prisons that could use some help in this regard and they're much worse off than San Quentin,” said Don Specter, executive director of the Prison Law Office.

Full details of the project will not be determined until after the 2023-24 budget is passed by the Legislatur­e in June.

That means the governor is asking lawmakers to approve funding for his plan without knowing how the money would be spent or whether it's the best option for rehabilita­ting inmates and curbing recidivism rates on the scale of California's correction­al system.

“You're being asked to provide full funding from design all the way through constructi­on for proposals without essentiall­y any details,” Caitlin O'Neil, an Legislativ­e Analyst's Office analyst who specialize­d in state correction­s, told lawmakers. “This means that the legislatur­e risks approving funding for projects that it may ultimately disagree with.”

During budget hearings, Assemblywo­man Mia Bonta, D-Alameda, read out a long list of concerns, including the ability to scale the California Model, the programmin­g changes that would be implemente­d and potential environmen­tal impacts. The latter is because the new educationa­l center at San Quentin would bypass historic preservati­on requiremen­ts and review under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

“I just want to be clear that I don't think that the role of the Legislatur­e is to green-light a proposal without any ability to be able to weigh in,” Bonta said.

Sen. Kelly Seyarto, RMurrieta, called the administra­tion's timeline for completion by the end of 2025 “unrealisti­c,” adding that he felt the project was being rushed.

Specter, who played an integral role in bringing Norway's correction­al model back to the U.S., said Newsom's plan for San Quentin was a “far cry” from the overhaul achieved in Norway.

Although he agrees with the governor's vision, Specter said he “didn't think it was the right way to go about it.”

“They didn't start by renovating a building,” he said about Norway. “They started by developing a white paper an analysis of where they were and where they wanted to be, with clear goals and objectives.”

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