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SB-557 • 2026

Child abuse: family resource centers.

Child abuse: family resource centers.

Children Water
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Hurtado
Last action
2026-01-29
Official status
In Assembly. Read first time. Held at Desk.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide specific details on funding or the effectiveness of the changes in preventing child abuse.

Child Abuse Prevention: Family Resource Centers

The bill changes the definition of family resource centers, emphasizing their role as hubs for multigenerational support services provided at no cost or low cost to families.

What This Bill Does

  • Defines a 'family resource center' as an entity that provides multigenerational, family-centered, and family-strengthening support services at no cost or low cost to participants.
  • Requires these centers to be embedded in communities, culturally sensitive, reflective of community needs and interests, and build peer support networks for families.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Families receiving services from family resource centers
  • Agencies involved in preventing child abuse

Terms To Know

Family Resource Center
An organization that provides free or low-cost support services to families, aiming to prevent child abuse and strengthen communities.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how much funding will be provided for family resource centers.
  • It is unclear if the changes in defining family resource centers will lead to more effective prevention of child abuse.

Bill History

  1. 2026-01-29 California Legislative Information

    In Assembly. Read first time. Held at Desk.

  2. 2026-01-29 California Legislative Information

    Read third time. Passed. (Ayes 39. Noes 0. Page 3323.) Ordered to the Assembly.

  3. 2026-01-26 California Legislative Information

    Ordered to special consent calendar.

  4. 2026-01-22 California Legislative Information

    Read second time. Ordered to third reading.

  5. 2026-01-22 California Legislative Information

    From committee: Do pass. (Ayes 7. Noes 0. Page 3269.) (January 22).

  6. 2026-01-21 California Legislative Information

    Set for hearing January 22.

  7. 2026-01-20 California Legislative Information

    January 20 hearing: Placed on APPR. suspense file.

  8. 2026-01-14 California Legislative Information

    Set for hearing January 20.

  9. 2026-01-13 California Legislative Information

    From committee: Do pass and re-refer to Com. on APPR. (Ayes 5. Noes 0. Page 3204.) (January 12). Re-referred to Com. on APPR.

  10. 2026-01-07 California Legislative Information

    Set for hearing January 12.

  11. 2026-01-05 California Legislative Information

    Re-referred to Com. on HUMAN S.

  12. 2026-01-05 California Legislative Information

    From committee with author's amendments. Read second time and amended. Re-referred to Com. on RLS.

  13. 2025-03-05 California Legislative Information

    Referred to Com. on RLS.

  14. 2025-02-21 California Legislative Information

    From printer. May be acted upon on or after March 23.

  15. 2025-02-20 California Legislative Information

    Introduced. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment. To print.

Official Summary Text

SB 557, as amended, Hurtado.
Sustainable groundwater management: basin boundaries.
Child abuse: family resource centers.
Existing law establishes the Office of Child Abuse Prevention in the State Department of Social Services and requires the office to apply for federal funding for the administration of its functions. Existing law requires the office to use those funds to undertake specified activities, including, among other things, supporting coordination and sharing of best practices implemented by family resource centers with other agencies, when the best practices reflect strategies and outcomes that were achieved and supported by evidence-informed programs and data.
Existing law authorizes a county to establish a child abuse multidisciplinary personnel team within that county to allow provider agencies to share confidential information in order for provider agencies to
investigate reports of suspected child abuse or neglect, as specified, or for the purpose of child welfare agencies making a detention determination. Existing law specifies that the multidisciplinary personnel team may include a representative of a local child abuse prevention council or family-strengthening organization, including, but not limited to, a family resource center.
Existing law defines “family resource center,” for purposes of these provisions, to mean an entity providing family-centered and family-strengthening services that are embedded in communities, culturally sensitive, and include cross-system collaboration to assist in transforming families and communities through reciprocity and asset development based on impact-driven and evidence-informed approaches with the goal of preventing child abuse and neglect and strengthening children and families.
This bill would instead define “family resource center” to
mean a family-friendly entity serving as a hub for multigenerational, family-centered, and family-strengthening support services that are provided at no cost or low cost to participants, embedded in communities, culturally sensitive, reflective of, and responsive to, community needs and interests, build communities of peer support for families, and include cross-system collaboration to assist in transforming families and communities through reciprocity, development of social connections that reduce isolation and stress, and asset development based on impact-driven and evidence-informed approaches with the goal of preventing child abuse and neglect and strengthening children and families.
Existing law, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, requires all groundwater basins designated as high- or medium-priority basins by the Department of Water Resources to be managed under a groundwater sustainability plan or coordinated groundwater sustainability plans, except as specified. The act requires the boundaries of a basin to be those identified in a specified report of the department, unless other basin boundaries are established, as prescribed.
This bill would make a nonsubstantive change in the provision relating to basin boundaries.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Download Bill PDF