6 minute read

Inside The County

Next Article
Publisher's Desk

Publisher's Desk

Growing Bureaucracy

NEW AGENCY WILL HELP WITH JAIL REFORM

Eager to address systemic racism and equity, the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors is creating a new agency focused on public safety, justice and community input. The move acknowledges “the role of structural racism in the criminal justice system” and the importance of approaching the problems with an “equity lens,” the board says.

The agency’s formation will allow various county departments to meet with community stakeholders and strive for jail reductions and diversion programs.

Among the departments involved are coroner, probation and public defender. The new agency will serve as liaison to the sheriff and district attorney, since those jobs are held by separately elected offi cials and don’t fall under the county executive.

Community activists who identify themselves as supporters of Decarcerate Sacramento heaped appreciation on the fi ve supervisors. In the past, the group fought against county plans to improve the jail system. They predicted earlier strategies would result in jail expansions.

The group wants to decrease jail populations and shift money from policing and incarceration. Advocates want dollars spent on alternative, community-based systems. Members are active in the “defund the police” movement.

County insiders aren’t surprised by the board’s action. Last November, the supervisors declared racism a public health crisis and affi rmed the need for racial equity. Supervisors Phil Serna, Patrick Kennedy and Don Nottoli voted in favor of the declaration, with Sue Frost opposed. Supervisor Rich Desmond wasn’t yet on the board.

This time, the vote was unanimous to form the new agency and improve community engagement.

But activists didn’t get everything they wanted. Decarcerate Sacramento sought language to create a “Care First: Alternative to Incarceration Committee” that would give them “a

HS HS

By Howard Schmidt Inside The County

seat at the table” to guide the county’s de-incarceration efforts.

County Executive Ann Edwards told the board she was “fully committed to engage with the community.” This means county staff will recommend a committee structure to help the new agency ensure a “community voice” that includes advocacy organizations and formerly incarcerated people.

Edwards said the committee could be ready for board consideration this month.

When the “defund the police” movement was at its peak, public testimony on criminal justice reform was often heated. Profanities were routinely hurled at the supervisors. By comparison, the new agency hearing was tame.

Prior to the vote, Kennedy remarked how the subject of criminal justice reform can be emotional. He thanked the audience for its “polite language” this time around.

STATE PRISONERS RELEASED EARLY

While the Board of Supervisors seeks to reduce jail populations, District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert has been combing through records of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, studying the early release of prison inmates. She found more than 1,300 inmates from our area have been freed after serving less than half their time.

Her fi ndings should concern the public. A recent U.S. Department of Justice study found a 71-percent recidivism rate among prison releases in 34 states, including California.

Schubert and 44 other California district attorneys are suing the state over the good conduct credit rules established for the pandemic. She says the emergency regulations allow additional credits to be awarded to serious and violent felons—including credits not based upon completion of any rehabilitation programs.

Howard Schmidt worked 16 years for Sacramento County. He can be reached at howardschmidt218@aol. com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

Traditional Jewish Food for Nontraditional Times

HOMEMADE & IMPORTED DELI FAVORITES, BAKED GOODS, SWEET TREATS, SPECIALTY BREADS and MORE!

All current safety measures will be followed during food preparation, packaging and pick up

ONLINE ORDERS ONLY CBSHALOM.ORG

PARKING LOT PICK UP CONGRECATION BETH SHALOM 4746 EL CAMINO AVENUE, CARMICHAEL

ORDER BY OCTOBER 14th FOR PICKUP ON SUNDAY OCTOBER 24th

Celebrating 100 years serving Sacramento

• Call for individual or groupC llf i di id l presentationsi • Remote and in-person appointments available • Pre-planning and immediate need • Ask about our Lunch & Learn Pre-planning classes!

Our family faithfully serving your family for 100 years!

Preplan Todad y

(916) 443-7917

Brian C. Noble,

Manager of Funeral Services

FDR 3912

bnoble@cfcssacramento.org

2691 Riverside Boulevard, Sacramento 95818 www.klumppsfuneralhome.com

FROM page 26

insulation and plumbing. When they were cited for minor problems it made news, just because it was Simon or Randy.

Simon leased his 16th Street location from the Capitol Area Development Authority, a publicproperty landlord that was either his ideal partner or worst nightmare, depending on who ran the agency. Now CADA is demolishing Simon’s bar.

Randy owned the real estate at his bars and restaurants at 28th and N streets and 15th and R, plus his new hotel at 28th and Capitol. But he was an epic renter.

Centro Cochina and his former Downtown sites were leased. He was upset when false rumors claimed he received city subsidies for a restaurant, theater and nightclub at 10th and K. The developer—Randy’s landlord—was subsidized, not Randy.

The only time Randy relied heavily on government subsidies was in Stockton. City offi cials begged him to open a restaurant in a refurbished hotel. They provided free rent. Even then, the project failed. Fun is a tough business.

Randy and Simon never talked about retirement. I think they feared it. COVID devastated them, but they weren’t ready to quit. “We have no money coming in. We have no employees. We’re on hold,” Randy told me last year. Simon said something similar: “All I can do is wait until I can reopen.”

Randy was 74, Simon 69. Neither made preparations for death. They expected to keep living. Now Sacramento has to replace them, fi nd new saloonkeepers who can draw crowds and create fun for four or fi ve decades.

I think that’s impossible. But it’s hard to be objective when you knew and admired and loved two guys who made fun look so easy.

R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n

BuildtoSuit•Remodel•PhysicalAccessRemodel

ForeverHomeRemodel•BuildtoSuit•Remodel•PhysicalAccessRemodel Thanksgiving is coming - having guests?

I can help!

For more than 30 years I have been helping your friends and neighbors fi nd THEIR STYLE. THEIR STYLE. What can I do for you? Complimentary One Hour Session. What can I do for you? Complimentary One Hour Session.

916.329.8484 | Just Your Style.com

ForeverHomeRemodel•BuildtoSuit•Remodel

Is your family prepared for a future without you? FREE Initial

Living Trust Consultation Mark J. Lamb

Attorney at Law

Wills•Trusts•Probate & Special Needs Trusts

Call (916) 485-2593

3001 I Street, Suite 130 Lambtrust.com

This article is from: