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S2993 • 2026

SENATE RESOLUTION CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE IMPACT AND POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF BAIL REFORMS ON BLACK RHODE ISLANDERS AND THE STATE (Creates an 11 member commission to analyze the impact and potential economic benefits of bail reforms on Black Rhode Islanders, and would report back by February 5, 2027, and expire on April 5, 2027.)

SENATE RESOLUTION CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE IMPACT AND POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF BAIL REFORMS ON BLACK RHODE ISLANDERS AND THE STATE (Creates an 11 member commission to analyze the impact and potential economic benefits of bail reforms on Black Rhode Islanders, and would report back by February 5, 2027, and expire on April 5, 2027.)

Passed Legislature

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

Sponsor
Mack, Kallman, Acosta
Last action
2026-03-04
Official status
Introduced, referred to Senate Judiciary
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The plain English breakdown is still being put together. The official documents below are already here.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-04 Rhode Island General Assembly

    Introduced, referred to Senate Judiciary

Official Summary Text

SENATE RESOLUTION CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE IMPACT AND POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF BAIL REFORMS ON BLACK RHODE ISLANDERS AND THE STATE (Creates an 11 member commission to analyze the impact and potential economic benefits of bail reforms on Black Rhode Islanders, and would report back by February 5, 2027, and expire on April 5, 2027.)

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
S2993

2026 -- S 2993
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LC003398
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026
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S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N
CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE IMPACT AND
POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF BAIL REFORMS ON BLACK RHODE
ISLANDERS AND THE STATE

Introduced By:
Senators Mack, Kallman, and Acosta

Date Introduced:
March 04, 2026

Referred To:
Senate Judiciary
1
WHEREAS, Pre-trial detention is one of the earliest points in the criminal justice system
2
and typically represents an individual’s first prospect of being incarcerated. The individual is
3
simply jailed while awaiting trial and not yet convicted of a crime, and still legally innocent; and
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WHEREAS, The main purposes of pretrial detention are to secure the appearance at trial
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of defendants who are flight risks and to protect the community from further criminal activity of
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the person charged; and
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WHEREAS, Defendants detained before trial represent over 75 percent of all jail inmates
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in some parts of the country, with significantly higher rates of pretrial detention among black and
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Hispanic individuals; and
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WHEREAS, First‐time offenders accused of low‐level crimes, often spend months in
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pretrial detention and face subsequent long‐term damage in the form of family separation and
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adverse impacts on young children, work interruption, and loss of housing; and
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WHEREAS, Many individuals are jailed pretrial because they can't afford money bail,
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and others because prior probation or parole has resulted in the court placing a "hold" on their
15
release. The number of people in jail pretrial has nearly quadrupled since the 1980s; and
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WHEREAS, There are a number of different types of pre-trial supervised release
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including social workers and case managers from local organizations working with people to
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address barriers to court attendance and connect them to social services, employment and location
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monitoring, mental health treatment, and substance abuse treatment; and

1
WHEREAS, Balancing the greatest social benefit and/or risks to public safety, and return
2
on investment and use of taxpayer resources is necessary in order to provide the best data-driven
3
policy solutions; now, therefore be it
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RESOLVED, That a special legislative commission be and the same is hereby created
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consisting of eleven (11) members; three (3) of whom shall be members of the Rhode Island
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Senate, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be the RI Attorney
7
General, or designee; one of whom shall be a representative of the Judicial Branch, to be
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appointed by the Chief Justice; one of whom shall be the Chair of the Rhode Island Parole Board,
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or designee; one of whom shall be a warden of a Rhode Island prison, to be appointed by the
10
President of the Senate; one of whom shall be a representative from the Center for Health and
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Justice Transformation, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be the
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Director of the RI Department of Children, Youth & Families, or designee; and two (2) of whom
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shall be persons formerly incarcerated pre-trial in the State of Rhode Island, to be appointed by
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the President of the Senate.
15
In lieu of any appointment of a member of the legislature to a legislative study
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commission or task force, created by a General Assembly resolution, the appointing authority
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may appoint a member of the general public to serve in lieu of a legislator.
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The purpose of said commission shall be to analyze the economic and societal benefits
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and risks of pre-trial supervised release as an alternative to pre-trial detention, determine the
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impact of reforms on Black Rhode Islanders, and provide recommendations to reduce the
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population and all fees, costs and expenses incurred by pre-trial persons and the State.
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Forthwith upon passage of this resolution, the members of the commission shall meet at
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the call of the President of the Senate and organize, and shall select a Chairperson from among
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the legislative members.
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Vacancies in said task force shall be filled in like manner as the original appointment.
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The membership of said task force shall receive no compensation for their services.
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All departments and agencies of the state shall furnish such advice and information,
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documentary and otherwise, to said task force and its agents as is deemed necessary or desirable
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by the task force to facilitate the purposes of this resolution.
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The Joint Committee on Legislative Services is hereby authorized and directed to provide
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suitable quarters for said commission; and be it further
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RESOLVED, That said commission shall report its findings to the President of the Senate

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no later than February 5, 2027, and said task force shall expire on April 5, 2027.
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EXPLANATION
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
OF
S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N
CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE IMPACT AND
POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF BAIL REFORMS ON BLACK RHODE
ISLANDERS AND THE STATE
***
1
This resolution would create an eleven (11) member special legislative study commission
2
whose purpose it would be to analyze the impact and potential economic benefits of bail reforms
3
on Black Rhode Islanders, and who would report back to the Senate no later than February 5,
4
2027, and whose life would expire on April 5, 2027.
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