SB 827 is Not a Housing Bill
(Editor’s Note: The following transcript was taken from The Planning Report published by David Abel in Los Angeles about urban planning, growth, design, and public infrastructure investment.)
(Editor’s Note: The following transcript was taken from The Planning Report published by David Abel in Los Angeles about urban planning, growth, design, and public infrastructure investment.)
Cross-posted at Zev.LACounty.Gov.
We spoke—and the governor listened.
Gov. Brown’s office announced that he’d scaled back one of the most onerous facets of his “realignment” plan to erase the state’s $26 billion deficit. Responding to concerns and criticisms of county leaders and law enforcement officials across the state, Brown significantly shrank the numbers of state prisoners and parolees he’d planned on putting under the management of California’s counties.
And that’s good news for a couple reasons.
First, our local criminal system already is bursting at the seams. Our jails are overcrowded and we simply don’t have the kind of staffing—or the money—needed to supervise the huge numbers of parolees with which the governor wanted to saddle us. The Board of Supervisors, Sheriff Lee Baca and District Atty. Steve Cooley had made this abundantly clear to Sacramento.