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5ubmittal Date: <br />08/28/2010 <br />Council Date: <br />09/27/2010 <br />CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEM BRIEFING SHEET <br />Originaring Department: Presented By: Agenda Item No.: <br />Police <br />Bob Hundley <br />13. <br />RECOMMENDED MOTION: <br />Not an action item - Public hearing and first reading. [IF SUPERMAJORITY RULE INVOKED - Move to <br />approve an ordinance excluding persons required to register as a sex offender from residing within a <br />1,000-foot zone around the real property of a school, childcare facility, childcare institution, park, <br />playground, or other child safety zones.] <br />POLICY ISSUE(S): <br />Public safety <br />nnl-xUxuuNli: <br />During the comment period at the August 9, 2010, City Council meeting several citizens spoke against a <br />registered sex offender who recently returned to their neighborhood on the northwest part of town. The issue <br />highlighted the lack of a local ordinance governing where child sex offenders (those who victimized persons <br />under the age of 17) can and cannot live. An ordinance cannot require registered sex offenders who have already <br />established a permanent residence to move and would only be used for new offenders or if the presently registered <br />offenders decided to move. The proposed ordinance proposes a 1,000-foot exclusion zone around the property <br />lines of schools, child care facilities, child care institutions, parks, playgrounds, or other child safety zones (two <br />other accompanying maps show 500-foot and 750-foot zones). When determining the radius of an exclusion <br />zone, a balance must be struck in two areas. First, the ordinance must not exclude so much of the city that an <br />offender is effectively banned from living in town or large sections of town as this may not pass judicial review. <br />Second, if it is too difficult for an offender to find a place to live and register, they might be forced underground <br />without registering and we lose track of where they are. <br />Restrictions on sex offenders are only available while they are either on probation or parole. Once a convicted <br />individual has satisfied the requirements of sentencing (e.g. incarceration), the only remaining requirement is <br />registration. Registration can be anywhere from once a year to once every 90 days, depending on the nature of <br />offense and criminal record of the individual. Most studies regarding sex offenders show there is a low <br />percentage of recidivism for sex offenders (Hanson 2004). After 15 years, 73 percent of convicted sex offenders <br />had not been charged with or convicted of another sexual offense; i.e. 27 percent of sex offenders did reoffend. <br />The Hanson study also states for those that reoffend, there are multiple offenses committed before being charged. <br />nUAitD/ I,OMMISSION KECOMMENDATION: <br />L" XHIBITS: <br />Ordinance; Child safety zones maps, Registered Sex Offenders Residences map, Child safety zone list; <br />Ordinance com arison table. <br />ACTION: <br />BUDGET INFO: <br />❑ Financial Report ❑ Minute Order <br />❑ D <br />Expense <br />$ <br />epartment Report ❑ Resolution <br />❑ Present <br />ti <br />Z O <br />di <br />Budgeted Amt. <br />$ <br />a <br />on <br />r <br />nance <br />❑ Public Hearin <br />❑ Oth <br />y'I'D Actual <br />$ <br />g <br />er <br />Acct. Name <br />Acct. Number <br />r1Jl.A1. 114v 1 t:J: <br />KEVIEWED AND APPROVED BY: <br />Z Administration Z City Clerk ❑ Community Development ❑ EMS/IT ❑ Finance ❑ Fire <br />❑ Municipal Court Z Legal ❑ Library Z Police ❑ Eng./Public Works ❑ Utilities <br />City of Paris Revised 2/04/08 <br />109 <br />