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Board meetings and strategic plans from Natalie Mack's organization
The board discussed several key topics including an update on responses to recent mass violence events in California, the governor's May revise, and the status of trauma recovery centers. Reports were provided on federal and state audits, which confirmed compliance and accountability, as well as an update on outreach activities, including liaison work with law enforcement. Additionally, the board received a legislative update on pending bills and reviewed a final report regarding the statewide public awareness campaign, which aimed to increase awareness of services among underserved populations.
This campaign report outlines CalVCB's strategy and progress to increase public awareness and applications for its victim compensation services, primarily targeting underserved and hard-to-reach communities in California. The strategic approach is built upon four key pillars: raising awareness about CalVCB and its role in victim support, building trust through concrete examples of how it helps, fostering clarity regarding eligibility and the application process, and inspiring engagement to drive future applications. The campaign aims to establish CalVCB as a vital resource, improve understanding of its offerings, and ultimately enhance its market penetration and accessibility to victims of violent crime.
The board meeting covered several key discussion items. The Executive Officer provided updates on trauma recovery center grant funding challenges, the resolution of attorney fee payment issues using state funds, and progress on rulemaking for mental health reimbursement. Additionally, updates were provided regarding federal and state audits of grant programs and restitution oversight, as well as outreach initiatives for National Crime Victims' Rights Week. The legislative update included a review of bills concerning tuition reimbursement for victims and public education on sexual assault and domestic violence. The board also approved an interagency agreement with the Government Operations Agency and discussed the staff recommendations for the 2026-2027 trauma recovery center grant awards based on available funding.
The meeting commenced with an executive officer statement noting that the Governor's January budget proposal, while not directly impacting the agency, indicates future budgetary scrutiny, particularly regarding projections on Proposition 47 savings, which are estimated to yield approximately $10.5 million for Trauma Recovery Center (TRC) awards in March. The agency received 42 TRC applications, noting funding constraints for all interested organizations. Updates were provided on establishing a general fund mechanism for attorney fee payments, which is necessary due to new federal grant requirements disallowing payments for undocumented immigrants. It was noted that regulatory package changes approved in November will take effect on April 1st. Additionally, an action item addressed approving draft regulations for mental health billing practices. Progress on suspending the 90-day billing rule, resulting in the reprocessing of over 2,200 bills and resolution of 566 appeals, was shared. The Executive Officer also highlighted January as Human Trafficking Prevention Month, detailing efforts to spread awareness and support for victims. During public comment, a victim's representative inquired about accountability and the status of a claim filed in September 2023, prompting staff follow-up. Another attendee raised concerns about current financial hardship due to delayed payments.
The meeting included several informational updates and discussions. The Executive Officer provided an update on a federal lawsuit challenging new provisions regarding state support for federal immigration issues, noting that the agency accepted the federal Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) grant despite the provision disallowing attorney payments for representation of undocumented immigrants. The agency is working with the Department of Finance to use general fund dollars for these attorney payments, which will cause a delay. Updates were also provided on the appeals backlog, noting that hiring efforts are underway to fill vacant positions, and that the backlog is not growing but not significantly decreasing. An informational item detailed the handling of the 90-day mental health bill rule re-evaluation, which reduced workload in the appeals section. Additionally, the board received a follow-up presentation on the Trauma Recovery Center (TRC) informational item from July, summarizing stakeholder feedback, timeline adjustments (extending application time to 60 days and moving the deadline before the holidays), and policy options for future consideration, noting that significant changes might require legislative action. The legislative update highlighted two signed bills: one prioritizing victim restitution orders over other debts, and another extending teleconferencing provisions for state bodies until 2030. The contract report was informational, covering extensions for postage and an IT service renewal. The session concluded with public comment.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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Nick Maduros
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