Stop Criminalizing Adolescent Behavior (AB 901)

  • Status: Active
  • Position: Support
  • Bill Number: AB 901
  • Session: 2019-2020
  • Latest Update: July 26, 2019
A young Black girl holding a marker, doing arithmetic at a white board

In far too many places across California, juvenile probation has become a knee-jerk reaction to young people who are simply having trouble in school or at home but who haven't been accused of a crime.

Criminalizing adolescent behavior and placing young people on probation means young people are forced to sign away their rights to privacy and due process and to submit to surprise searches, unannounced home visits, restrictions on who they can speak to, and invasive interrogations about their private lives. In Riverside County alone, over 3,000 young people were placed on probation between 2005-2016 for behavior like being late to class, having poor attendance, and being "easily persuaded by peers." Black and Latinx students were disproportionately referred to probation for this normal adolescent behavior.

It's time we stop systematically treating young people, especially young people of color, young people with disabilities, and LGBTQ youth, like lost causes. AB 901 will make sure youth are instead referred to community programs to provide them with the tools, resources, and support they need to succeed.

It's time to pass AB 901 and set up California's young people for real success.

Bill Developments

July 29, 2020: Approved by Senate Education Committee
August 30, 2019: Approved by Senate Appropriations Committee
July 2, 2019: Approved by Senate Public Safety Committee
May 29, 2019: Passed the Assembly
May 16, 2019: Approved by Assembly Appropriations Committee
March 26, 2019: Approved by the Assembly Public Safety Committee
February 20, 2019: Introduced

Authors:
Assemblymember Mike Gipson
Sponsors:
Alliance for Boys and Men of Color, ACLU of California, East Bay Community Law Center, Haywood Burns Institute, Sigma Beta Xi, Youth Justice Coalition

When Kicking Around an Orange Gets You On Probation

By Andrew M., Plaintiff in SBX V. County of Riverside I was in 8th grade when it happened. I’ll never forget the feeling of those cold, clanky pairs of metal constraints. I was being handcuffed in front of my friends and classmates.

An orange on the ground

This County Criminalized Students for Bad Grades – Until Now

Since 2001, the Riverside County probation department has been needlessly funneling young people struggling with grades, behavior, trauma, and mental health into the criminal justice system. This direct line to the criminal system is the product of a partnership between local school districts and

By Sarah Hinger, Sylvia Torres-Guillén

Six youth and an adult sitting in a classroom with their desks forming a semi-circle. Three of the youth have their hands raised.