California
California announces plan to close more prisons, including its last private facility
As California’s jail inhabitants continues to say no beneath courtroom order, state officers introduced plans Tuesday to shut two extra prisons, together with the one remaining facility owned by a personal contractor.
The Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation stated the California Metropolis Correctional Facility, in Kern County, will shut down in March 2024 when the state’s $32 million-a-year contract with CoreCivic expires. The all-male jail now holds 1,893 inmates, 8.8% above its designed capability.
The division additionally stated it might start steps to shut Chuckawalla Valley State Jail in Blythe (Riverside County) by March 2025. The medium-security male facility holds 2,039 inmates, 17.3% above its designed capability. As well as, the division stated, throughout 2023 it plans to shut the ladies’s part of Folsom State Jail in Sacramento County and elements of the prisons at Pelican Bay (Del Norte County), the California Males’s Colony in San Luis Obispo, the California Rehabilitation Heart in Norco (Riverside County), the California Establishment for Males in Chino (San Bernardino County), and the California Correctional Establishment in Tehachapi (Kern County). Their inmates can be transferred to different prisons after the closures.
The division stated it might “work to restrict the influence to staff,” permitting them to switch to different prisons. It stated it might work with neighborhood members in Riverside County “to assist help staff and foster a bottom-up financial resilience plan” to ease the influence of closing the Chuckwalla Valley jail.
That was additionally the plan introduced by the division final 12 months for the closure of one other rural jail, the California Correctional Heart in Susanville (Lassen County). Gov. Gavin Newsom had deliberate to close the jail by this June, however Susanville officers sued, arguing that they’d been wrongly neglected of the method of deciding which prisons to keep up. A choose issued an injunction blocking the closure, however one other choose lifted the injunction in September, saying state legislation left these selections as much as the Legislature and jail officers. The jail is now scheduled to shut subsequent June.
Newsom closed one other jail, Deuel Vocational Establishment in Tracy (San Joaquin County), in September 2021. The state nonetheless has 34 prisons.
Tuesday’s announcement was praised by Californians United for a Accountable Price range, an advocacy group that has referred to as for closures of 10 prisons.
“Our neighborhood applauds this transfer towards reversing California’s horrible historical past of jail enlargement,” stated the group’s government director, Amber Rose-Howard. “We hope yard deactivations are executed safely, and that they’re a sign of the long run jail closures everyone knows are potential over the subsequent a number of years.”
One other advocate of decreased imprisonment, Tinisch Hollins, government director of Californians for Security and Justice, stated the closures are welcome in a state that also spends greater than $14 billion a 12 months on its jail system.
“Analysis backs up many years of lived expertise that over-reliance on incarceration solely compounds the situations that create violence and does nothing to truly forestall crime within the first place,” Hollins stated.
The state’s jail inhabitants had soared for 35 years, beginning within the mid-Seventies, as legislators and voters handed a collection of legal guidelines rising and mandating a number of the nation’s most extreme sentences. The variety of inmates had reached 143,000 in 2011, almost twice the prisons’ designed capability, earlier than the U.S. Supreme Courtroom intervened and ordered a swift discount of greater than 30,000 to allow enhancements within the prisons’ woeful well being care system.
Lawmakers responded with measures transferring hundreds of state prisoners to county jails, whereas voters exempted some lesser crimes from potential life phrases beneath the state’s 1994 “three strikes” legislation, decreased sentences for minor drug and theft crimes, and narrowed prosecutors’ authority to cost youths in grownup courts. The present inhabitants is 95,699, nonetheless almost 9% above the prisons’ designed capability.
Non-public prisons had been focused by the state after stories that they had been much less protected and had worse well being care than authorities correctional services. A 2020 California legislation required the state to shut these prisons when their present contracts expired, or by 2028 on the newest.
A federal appeals courtroom dominated in September that the state couldn’t use its legislation to shutter immigration prisons run by personal contractors due to the federal authorities’s authority over immigration. The courtroom didn’t invalidate the legislation’s ban on personal prisons for inmates convicted of felony prices, however officers stated the necessary shutdown didn’t cowl the power in California Metropolis as a result of it’s truly leased and operated by the state, although owned by CoreCivic. That left the choice as much as the Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation, which stated it might shut the power when its contract expires in 2024.
Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle workers author. E-mail: begelko@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @BobEgelko
California
Democrat Derek Tran ousts Republican rival in key California House seat
Democrat Derek Tran ousted Republican Michelle Steel in a southern California House district Wednesday that was specifically drawn to give Asian Americans a stronger voice on Capitol Hill.
Steel said in a statement: “Like all journeys, this one is ending for a new one to begin.” When she captured the seat in 2020, Steel joined Washington state Democrat Marilyn Strickland and California Republican Young Kim as the first Korean American women elected to Congress.
Tran, a lawyer and worker rights advocate and the son of Vietnamese refugees, declared victory earlier this week. He said his win “is a testament to the spirit and resilience of our community. As the son of Vietnamese refugees, I understand firsthand the journey and sacrifices many families in our district have made for a better life.”
The contest is one of the last to be decided this year, with Republicans now holding 220 seats in the House, with Democrats at 214. The Associated Press has not declared a winner in California’s 13th district, where Democrat Adam Gray was leading Republican John Duarte by a couple of hundred votes.
Steel held an early edge after election day, but late-counted ballots pushed Tran over the top.
Steel filed a statement of candidacy on Monday with federal regulators, which would allow her to continue raising funds. It wasn’t immediately clear if she planned to seek a return to Congress.
In the campaign, Tran warned of Republican threats to abortion rights. Steel opposes abortion with exceptions for rape, incest or to save the life of the pregnant woman, while not going so far as to support a federal ban. Tran also warned that Donald Trump’s return to the White House would put democracy at risk.
On Capitol Hill, Steel has been outspoken in resisting tax increases and says she stands strongly with Israel in its war with Hamas. “As our greatest ally in the Middle East, the United States must always stand with Israel,” she said. She advocates for more police funding and has spotlighted her efforts on domestic violence and sexual abuse.
The largest demographic in the district, which is anchored in Orange county, south-east of Los Angeles, is Asian Americans, and it includes the nation’s biggest Vietnamese community. Democrats hold a four-point registration edge.
Incomplete returns showed that Steel was winning in Orange county, the bulk of the district. Tran’s winning margin came from a small slice of the district in Los Angeles county, where Democrats outnumber Republicans by nearly two to one.
California
Dickies to say goodbye to Texas, hello to Southern California
FORT WORTH, Texas — Dickies is leaving Cowtown for the California coast, according to a report from the Los Angeles Times.
The 102-year-old Texas workwear brand, which is owned by VF Corp., is making the move from Fort Worth to Costa Mesa in order to be closer to its sister brand, Vans.
Dickies was founded in Fort Worth in 1922 by E.E. “Colonel” Dickie. Today, Dickies Arena is the entertainment hub of the city and home of the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo.
The company is expected to make the move by May. Approximately 120 employees will be affected, the report said.
By moving one of its offices closer to the other, VF Corp. says it can “consolidate its real estate portfolio,” as well as “create an even more vibrant campus,” Ashley McCormack, director of external communications at VF Corp. said in the report.
Dickies isn’t the only rugged brand owned by VF Corp. The company also has ownership of Timberland, The North Face and JanSport.
VF Corp. acquired Dickies in 2017 for $820 million.
“Their contributions to our city’s culture, economy and identity are immeasurable,” District 9 City Council member Elizabeth Beck, who represents the area of downtown Fort Worth where Dickies headquarters is currently located, said in a statement to the Fort Worth Report. “While we understand their business decision, it is bittersweet to see a company that started right here in Fort Worth take this next step. We are committed to supporting the employees who remain here and will work to honor the lasting imprint Dickies has left on our community.”
California
Caitlyn Jenner says she'd 'destroy' Kamala Harris in hypothetical race to be CA gov
SAN FRANCISCO – Caitlyn Jenner, the gold-medal Olympian-turned reality TV personality, is considering another run for Governor of California. This time, she says, if she were to go up against Vice President Kamala Harris, she would “destroy her.”
Jenner, who publicly came out as transgender nearly 10 years ago, made a foray into politics when she ran as a Republican during the recall election that attempted to unseat Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2021. Jenner only received one percent of the vote and was not considered a serious candidate.
Jenner posted this week on social media that she’s having conversations with “many people” and hopes to have an announcement soon about whether she will run.
Caitlyn Jenner speaks at the 4th annual Womens March LA: Women Rising at Pershing Square on January 18, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Chelsea Guglielmino/Getty Images)
She has also posted in Trumpian-style all caps: “MAKE CA GREAT AGAIN!”
As for VP Harris, she has not indicated any future plans for when she leaves office. However, a recent poll suggests Harris would have a sizable advantage should she decide to run in 2026. At that point, Newsom cannot run again because of term limits.
If Jenner decides to run and wins, it would mark the nation and state’s first transgender governor.
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