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Committee backs oversight triggers for juvenile residential placements in small counties
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Summary
SB 1109 would place STRTPs on annual review if they receive multiple serious citations or are located in counties with limited infrastructure; the committee passed the bill as amended and sent it to Appropriations.
Senator (author) presented SB 1109, which would require state review of short-term residential therapeutic programs (STRTPs) that show red flags: five or more serious citations in a year or placement in counties of 75,000 residents or fewer lacking basic infrastructure such as a hospital or high school. The author detailed years of oversight reports and incidents at one contractor and said the bill seeks increased accountability without closing facilities or removing licensure.
Alpine County officials and probation staff described a disproportionate burden on local services: "When both homes are full, they are 1% of our population, but over a 5 year period, we're responsible for 12% of the calls to law enforcement that required a response," said Alpine County Board Chair David Griffith. Chief Probation Officer Brian Lowry and other rural representatives urged the state to avoid placing high-needs youth in counties without clinical or emergency infrastructure.
Annie Thomas of the California Alliance of Child and Family Services testified in opposition unless amended, warning the bill's citation-count trigger could be overly broad and destabilize capacity. The author accepted committee amendments to address concerns and said she would continue work with stakeholders. Senator Nilo moved the bill as amended to the Appropriations Committee; the roll call recorded four ayes and the measure passed out of committee.
