HR 10 · 96th Congress · Civil Rights and Liberties, Minority Issues

Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act

Introduced 1979-01-15· Sponsored by Rep. Kastenmeier, Robert W. [D-WI-2]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
2
Committee
3
House Vote
4
Senate
Enacted
Latest: Public Law 96-247.(1980-05-23)

Recorded Votes

PassedSenate · 1980-05-06
Yea 56Nay 37
PassedSenate · 1980-05-06
Yea 56Nay 37
PassedSenate · 1980-05-01
Yea 60Nay 34
FailedSenate · 1980-04-30
Yea 53Nay 35
FailedSenate · 1980-04-29
Yea 56Nay 34

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Authorizes the Attorney General to institute a civil action for or in the name of the United States in an appropriate district court whenever he has reasonable cause to believe that a State or its agents are subjecting persons confined in any correctional facility, juvenile correction center, mental hospital, nursing home, or facility for the chronically ill, retarded, or physically handicapped to conditions which deprive such persons of their Federal constitutional or statutory rights. Permits such action only if the Attorney General believes that such deprivation of rights is part of a pattern or practice of denial, if the suit is of general public importance, and after notice and consultation with State officials. Directs the Attorney General to promulgate minimum standards for the resolution of grievances of persons involuntarily confined. Requires individuals confined in State correctional institutions to exhaust State administrative remedies which meet the minimum standards developed by the Attorney General before bringing a civil action under the Civil Rights Act.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

Cosponsors (19)

14 Democrats5 Republicans