Blog Post

Smart Solutions for Safety Campaign Launch

Heidi • Jan 10, 2024

Advocates, lawmakers call for smart solutions to safety with new campaign

January 10, 2024


SACRAMENTO — Following the start of the 2024 California Legislative Session, a broad coalition of labor, victims, health equity and criminal justice advocates launched the new #SmartSolutions campaign at a press conference on Tuesday. Joined by Assemblymembers Mia Bonta (D-Alameda) and Isaac Bryan (D-Los Angeles), the ACLU California Action, Smart Justice California, Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB), Californians for Safety and Justice, and the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights called on the Legislature to support smart solutions to public safety that address root causes of crime, support survivors, and give people returning home after incarceration the support they need.


“The state is facing its first budget deficit in a great many years. It’s not a coincidence that we’re having conversations about safety at the same time that we’re expecting to cut the safety net by more than we have in over a decade,” said Assemblymember Bryan during the press conference. “For every dollar we spend on criminalizing poverty it's a dollar we could have better spent ending poverty. These are the opportunities we have to protect Californians and prevent us from making the mistakes we’ve made time and time again. We can’t call it progress when we are literally going backwards.”


“I’m honored to stand today to launch #SmartSolutions because we need them now more than ever,” said Assemblymember Bonta on Tuesday morning. “Since I took office in 2021, my actions have made it very clear where I stand, which is on the path to public safety, including basic needs like healthcare, education, and opportunities to invest in our communities. We spent $14.6 billion on our carceral system last year, and every year we spend money on a broken system; a system that has people come out without the resources they need to be our good neighbors, to be our community members, and to come back to their mothers and fathers. Our path forward is to come up with solutions and investments that will actually make a difference.” 


Community leaders representing hundreds of thousands of Californians — from public health professionals, service and commercial workers, domestic violence and trafficking survivors, and more — spoke to the need for smart, community-centered solutions ahead of the first hearings of the California Senate and Assembly Public Safety Committee Hearing meetings on Tuesday morning. 


They specifically called on the State of California to allocate $200 million in ongoing funding in the state budget to keep current victims' services afloat in California. This year, California is expecting a severe shortfall in federal Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) funding, the largest funding source for victims' services in California and the country. These funds support nearly 400 organizations responding to the needs of survivors of child abuse, elder abuse, human trafficking, domestic violence, sexual assault, and more. Without California stepping in to fill the gap, these services will be severely disrupted or come to a complete halt.


With the announcement of California’s nearly $70 billion budget deficit in 2024, and the fact that the state has allocated $14 billion to the California Department of Correction and Rehabilitation, advocates called for community investments — including services for victims, housing, health care, schools, and programs that reduce recidivism and promote accountability — over the wasteful and ineffective expansion of criminalization and incarceration. According to At What Cost? Examining Police, Sheriff, and Jail Budgets Across the US — a joint report by PolicyLink and the USC Equity Research Institute — for every $100 in taxpayer dollars spent, $14.12 is spent on health in contrast to $32.50 on incarceration. 


  • Today, we are calling on the state of California to stop saying it cares about survivors, and start investing in the support survivors need. If California doesn’t act, we will see thousands of survivors unable to access vital care. Organizations across the state will be forced to reduce critical programming, increase their wait times, lay off staff, or even close their doors entirely. --Leigh LaChapelle, Associate Director of Survivor Advocacy at the Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking


  • The crumbling social safety net, mental health crisis, and an addiction epidemic have put UFCW members on the frontlines of community safety, something that they never signed up for when they started work at Safeway or CVS. Retail theft and violence occur daily, exacerbating a workplace safety crisis for our members who don’t have the proper training. It’s time our elected officials invest in good union jobs, worker training and education, workplace safety and healthcare as proven solutions to prevent crime before it happens. --Amber Baur, Executive Director, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Western States Council


  • Investments and #SmartSolutions that address root causes of health inequities are imperative to achieve community safety and racial equity for all. As we strive to build a California that secures the well-being of everyone, regardless of the color of your skin, we must focus on preserving community-informed care and community-centered solutions. We live in a society where your race, wealth, and zip code say a lot about your health outcomes. And while each community faces unique barriers and health inequities, we have more in common than not. All communities of color experience racism, discrimination, and bias. We have not been invested in and our needs are rarely seen as policy or budget priorities. --Andrea Rivera, Associate Director of Legislative Affairs at the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network 


  • Our message to the California Legislature today is simple: we won't go back. We won’t go back to failed mass incarceration policies of the past and to wasting limited resources that could be better spent on caring for our communities. Above all, we won’t go back to harmful policies that tear Black, Brown, and immigrant communities apart. --Carmen-Nicole Cox, Director of Government Affairs for ACLU California Action


Smart Solutions (#SmartSolutions) is a new, intersectional campaign to counter efforts to double down on criminalization and mass incarceration – which inevitably means wasting precious state resources that could be better spent on housing, health care, schools, services for victims, and programs that reduce recidivism and promote accountability beyond incarceration. The campaign is comprised of a broad coalition, including ACLU California Action, Smart Justice California, the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB), and others. Representatives from Felony Murder Elimination Project also participated in the campaign launch event yesterday.


Archived video of the press conference announcing the campaign --->> Facebook link.

By Heidi 14 May, 2024
In a recent feature from The Guardian, Kelly Savage-Rodriguez, a California Drop LWOP advocate, shares her survival story to help advocate for AB 2354. This bill would allow all abuse survivors to petition the court to vacate their arrests, convictions or adjudications, and order law enforcement and courts to seal records related to the arrest and offense.
From 2016; Death Row cellblock at San Quentin State Prison (Photo: Associated Press)
By Heidi 13 May, 2024
"I am serving a life sentence at San Quentin. I know budget cuts will hurt foster youth," is a commentary piece featured in the San Diego Union-Tribune last week and written by Donald Thompson, who is is serving a life sentence at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center (formerly known as San Quentin State Prison).
Flyer: Saturday May 10th, free community defender resources at the Ross Snyder Rec Center in LA
By Heidi 10 May, 2024
Tomorrow, Saturday May 10, free community defender resources will be offered at the Ross Snyder Recreation Center in Los Angeles from 10a-12 noon.
Election worker interacts with someone detained in the Denver jail. (Photo: Denver sheriff’s office)
By Heidi 08 May, 2024
Last week, the Colorado legislature adopted Senate Bill 72, a first-in-the-nation reform that requires county sheriffs to better work with county clerks to facilitate voting for eligible voters who are confined pre-trial in jails.
AB 2959 - Prioritize families over profits; CDCR visiting room food prices v.. food store prices
By Heidi 07 May, 2024
AB 2959, introduced by Assemblyperson Liz Ortega (D20), seeks to reduce and regulate food prices in California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation visiting rooms, require CDCR to renew and expand vendor contracts to include healthy options, and offer diverse food choices in prison vending machines.
Graphic - AB 2178 (Ting) provides a structured approach to managing surplus in CA state prisons.
By Heidi 06 May, 2024
AB 2178 promotes a more efficient and cost-effective use of taxpayer money by eliminating surplus bed capacity, potentially saving billions and paving the way for closing prisons. Please help us advocate for his bill ahead of hearing in the CA Assembly Appropriations Committee.
By Heidi 02 May, 2024
"California’s budget deficit will force difficult cuts. This one should be the easiest," an opinion piece written by Assemblyperson Phil Ting and CURB Executive Director Amber Rose Howard for the LA Times, advocates for closing and consolidating prison space at a time when prison bed occupancy is already decreasing.
Image of police engaged in arrest in a 2020 Hong Kong protest (Photo: Sandra Sanders/Shutterstock)
By Heidi 30 Apr, 2024
The myth of “superhuman strength;" a descriptor often applied to Black people in police use-of-force cases, dates back to Reconstruction. When “superhuman strength” is allowed as a use-of-force justification in court cases, dehumanizing misconceptions and stereotypes make their way into the wider criminal justice system.
Graphic - Ending girls' incarceration in California is possible
By Heidi 29 Apr, 2024
The Vera Institute of Justice and Young Women’s Freedom Center released ‘Freedom and Justice: Ending the Incarceration of Girls and Gender-Expansive Youth in California,' an in-depth look at the incarceration of girls and gender-expansive youth in California and steps to end their incarceration.
Illustration of a man lifting weights against a bright yellow backdrop (Illustration - Graham Sisk)
By Heidi 26 Apr, 2024
The essay "How I Regained My Self-Esteem in Prison" by Kashawn Taylor, an incarcerated writer in Connecticut, appears on the website for the Prison Journalism Project.
Show More
Share by: