California Board of State and Community Corrections
BSCC
Summary
The BSCC (Cal. Penal Code §§6024–6031), established in 2012 as successor to the Corrections Standards Authority, independently sets minimum standards for local jails and juvenile detention facilities and conducts biennial unannounced inspections. Its 15-member board includes sheriffs, police chiefs, probation officers, CDCR leadership, and civilian community members (health providers, rehab service providers, youth advocates, and one public member). The board has no discipline authority over corrections officers — it may report violations and withhold standards certification, but enforcement referrals go to local officials or the AG. It also administers Standards and Training for Corrections (STC) officer-training standards.
Independence Scorecard
| Appointment | Mixed (multi-branch) |
|---|---|
| Term length | 3 years |
| Removal standard | At will (weak protection) |
| Budget independence | Legislative line item |
| Subpoena power | No |
| Compel testimony | No |
| Records access | Restricted |
| Public reports required | Yes |
| Pre-publication review | None — reports published directly |
Statute
- Name
- Board of State and Community Corrections Act (2012)
- Citation
- Cal. Penal Code §§6024–6031
- Full text
- Full text of law →
Jurisdiction scope
All local adult and juvenile detention facilities in California (558 facilities); sets minimum standards, conducts biennial inspections, administers correctional training standards
Other audit bodies in California
- California State Auditor CSA 73/100