Prohibiting confinement as a condition of community supervision may result in reduced demands upon state correctional resources due to a possible decrease in the number of individuals placed in confinement in a state-operated facility.
Various terms of confinement may be ordered as a condition of community supervision, including placement in a substance abuse felony punishment facility. In fiscal year 2022, there were 4,302 individuals admitted into a state substance abuse felony punishment facility as a condition of community supervision. It is unknown how many individuals would have met the definition of primary caretaker of a child as outlined in the bill's provisions.
The impact to state correctional populations or on the demand for state correctional resources cannot be determined due to the lack of statewide data to identify the number of individuals with an ordered condition of confinement and who were a primary caretaker of a child as defined in the bill's provisions.