4024.05.
(a) This section shall be known as the Getting Home Safe Act.(b) The rights established in this section apply to any person being released from a county jail, including, but not limited to, a person who has completed a sentence served, been ordered by the court to be released, been released on his or her own recognizance, been released because his or her charges have been dismissed by the court, is acquitted by a jury, is cited and released on a misdemeanor charge, has posted bail, has complied with pretrial release conditions, or has had the charges dropped against him or her by the prosecutor.
(c) (1) A
county sheriff shall make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to the public and shall post them online to the sheriff’s Internet Web site. The sheriff shall also make the release standards, release processes, and release schedules of a county jail available to a person when he or she is booked into a county jail and while he or she is incarcerated in a county jail.
(2) The release standards shall include the list of rights enumerated in this section and the timeframe for the expedient release of a person following the determination to release that person by a judge, jury, or appropriate county staff member.
(d) (1) A person shall have the right to request that, upon his or her release from a county jail, he or she be assisted in entering a drug or alcohol
rehabilitation program. The person shall be allowed to make this request upon, or subsequent to, being booked into a county jail.
(2) If the person chooses to enter a drug or alcohol rehabilitation program upon release from jail, the county jail shall provide or arrange transportation directly to a rehabilitation program or hospital free of charge immediately upon release.
(e) A person incarcerated in or recently released from a county jail shall have access to up to three free telephone calls from a telephone in the county jail to plan for a safe and successful release and shall also have access to a free cell phone charging station upon release from jail to charge his or her personal cell phone.
(f) (1) A sheriff shall offer a person scheduled to be released from jail
between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m. the option to voluntarily stay in jail for up to 16 additional hours or until normal business hours, whichever is shorter, in order to offer the person the ability to be discharged during daytime hours.
(2) A person shall provide his or her written consent before choosing to stay voluntarily in jail as described in paragraph (1). However, a person may revoke his or her written consent at any time and be discharged from jail as soon as possible and practicable.
(g) A person scheduled to be released from county jail between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, shall be released during that time. If the person is scheduled to be released from jail between the hours of 5 p.m. or sundown, whichever is later, and 8 a.m., and he or she has
declined the option described in subdivision (f), he or she shall be provided the opportunity to choose from both of the following alternatives:
(1) A safe place to wait for a person he or she knows to pick him or her up with adequate and sufficient ability to charge his or her own personal cell phone and access to a free public telephone.
(2) Free transportation to a location of the person’s choosing within the county or within a 100-mile radius, whichever is further.
(h) A person who is released from jail after being incarcerated for more than 30 days shall receive at least three days’ supply of any necessary medication.
(i) This section does not prevent the early release of a person as otherwise allowed
by law or allow a county jail to retain a person any longer than otherwise required or allowed by law without the person’s express written consent.
(j) (1) A violation of the rights established by this act may be submitted to the Board of State and Community Corrections, Ombudsman. The board shall convene a stakeholder group that includes women and girls who have been incarcerated to aid in developing protocols for receiving and responding to reports of violations of the rights established by this act.
(2) For purposes of this subdivision, “woman” means an individual who self-identifies her gender as a woman, without regard to her designated sex at birth.
(k) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2019.