California Victim Compensation Board
Legislative Update
July 16, 2026
AB 109 (Gabriel) Budget Act of 2026
The Budget Act of 2026 includes a $12.5 million General Fund appropriation for the Trauma Recovery Center grant program. Of this amount, $11 million is to fund existing TRCs that were not recommended for funding in Fiscal Year 2026-27. Additionally, $875,000 is for training and technical assistance, provided by the University of California Trauma Recovery Center Technical Assistance Program, and $675,000 is allocated for CalVCB’s administrative costs. Remaining funds will supplement grant amounts previously recommended for Fiscal Year 2026-27 and provide Flexible Emergency Cash Assistance Program funding for TRCs.
Status: Signed by the Governor (Chapter 19, Statutes of 2026)
AB 2297 (Stefani) Restitution: Diversion
This bill would require a court to order restitution to a victim who incurs economic loss as a result of a crime when the defendant participates in a diversion program. To the extent that CalVCB has already paid expenses on behalf of a victim, collected restitution orders can go toward reimbursing CalVCB for those payments.
Status: On the Senate Floor
AB 2247 (Elhawary) Trauma Healing and Resilience Investment for Victimized and Exposed Youth Act
This bill would create the Trauma Healing and Resilience Investment for Victimized and Exposed Youth Act (T.H.R.I.V.E.) as a pilot program until January 1, 2032, in Alameda, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, and Solano counties to be administered by the State Department of Health Care Services (DHCS). DHCS would administer grants to counties to establish programs to pay for mental health and counseling services for youth survivors of gun violence. The bill specifies that payments by this grant program shall not reduce a youth survivor of gun violence’s maximum benefit allowance provided by CalVCB, except that expenses paid by the grant program shall not be eligible for reimbursement or payment by CalVCB for the same purposes.
Status: In the Senate Judiciary Committee
SB 891 (Cervantes) Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons Justice Program
This bill would establish the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons Justice Program within the Department of Justice. The program’s responsibilities would include facilitating collaboration and acting as a liaison between tribal victims’ families, tribal governments, and law enforcement agencies regarding active and inactive cases involving missing and murdered indigenous persons in California, including cases involving human trafficking. Until January 1, 2029, the bill would require the program to submit an annual report to both houses of the Legislature containing, among other things, data on the number of, and facts about, cases involving missing and murdered indigenous persons in California.
Status: In the Senate Appropriations Committee
AB 2378 (Gabriel) California Violence Intervention and Prevention (CalVIP) Grant Program
This bill would create the Office of Community Violence Intervention within the Board of State and Community Corrections (BSCC). It would require the office to, among other things, advise BSCC on the implementation of community violence intervention and prevention policies, provide technical assistance for community violence intervention and prevention organizations and CalVIP grantees, and produce a biennial report on community violence intervention and prevention.
Status: In the Senate Appropriations Committee
H.R. 909 (Wagner) Crime Victims Fund Stabilization Act of 2025
This federal legislation would redirect any leftover unobligated funds collected under the False Claims Act to the Crime Victims Fund through Federal Fiscal Year 2029.
Status: In the Senate Committee on the Judiciary
H.R. 8426 (Simon) Crime Survivor Support and Stability Act of 2026
This federal legislation would establish a $40 million grant program within the Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crime to support community-based organizations in providing direct cash assistance to survivors of violence and their affected family members. It would affirm that states should review and revise laws to ensure survivors adequately receive the support they need, and it would enumerate survivor rights. It would establish a pilot program at the Bureau of Justice Statistics to conduct annual state-level victim needs surveys.
Status: In the House Committee on the Judiciary