holds a ceremony for the signing of the bill in the White House on December 21, 2018. An initial version of the First Step Act, H.R. 5682, was sponsored and introduced by Rep.
Doug Collins (R-GA-9) with original cosponsor Rep.
Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY-8) on May 7, 2018. This bipartisan bill primarily focused on recidivism reduction through the development of a risk and needs assessment system for all federal prisoners. The bill directed the
U.S. attorney general to develop this system along with evidence-based recidivism reduction programs for federal prisoners. Under the bill, prison administrators would use the national risk and needs assessment system to classify a prisoner's risk of recidivism, to make decisions about which recidivism reduction programs might be appropriate for each individual, and to determine when a prisoner is prepared to transfer into prerelease custody. The draft legislation also included a number of other
criminal justice reform provisions, including ones that permit
Bureau of Prison (BOP) employees to store firearms in designated off-site firearms storage facilities or vehicle lockboxes and carry concealed weapons outside of the prison (Section 202); prohibit the use of restraints on prisoners during pregnancy, labor and postpartum recovery, except where a health care provider determines otherwise or where the prisoner is an unreasonable flight risk or public safety threat (Section 301); place prisoners as close as possible to (and no more than 500 miles away from) their primary residence where practicable (Section 401); expand compassionate release (also "reduction in sentencing" or "RIS") for terminally ill patients and reauthorize the
Second Chance Act of 2007 (Section 403); mandate the Bureau of Prisons to provide identification to returning citizens (Section 404); authorize new markets for
Federal Prison Industries (Section 406); mandate
de-escalation training for correctional officers and employees (Section 407); direct reporting on opioid treatment and abuse in prisons (Section 408); improve availability of
feminine hygiene products in prison (Section 412); and other actions. After introduction, the bill was immediately referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary, and was subsequently voted out of committee—accompanied by a report—on a 25–5 vote on May 22, 2018. The House Committee's report highlighted Bureau of Prison data about recidivism, and warned of the fiscal and social costs of repeated arrest, conviction and incarceration. It also expressed concern with shrinking educational and vocational opportunities for inmates, given the proven potential of those activities to reduce criminal tendencies. After passage, the bill was referred to the Senate. The Senate did not ultimately vote on H.R. 5682, nor did it consider S. 2795—a companion bill to H.R. 5682 that was introduced in the Senate on May 7, 2018, by Senator
John Cornyn (R-TX) and referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Senate did not actually vote on criminal justice reform until December 2018 due to disagreement about the scope of the First Step Act. Without the inclusion of meaningful sentence reform akin to the measures proposed in the
Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act of 2015, many Senate Democrats were unwilling to support it. After months of intense brokering in the Senate, Senator
Chuck Grassley (R-IA) introduced a version of bill (S. 3649) on November 15, 2018, that incorporated the correctional reforms from S. 2795/H.R. 5682, added supplemental measures, and—importantly—included new sentencing reform provisions. It garnered more than 40 cosponsors. On December 12, Senator Grassley (R-IA), along with cosponsor Senator
Dick Durbin (D-IL), introduced a revised version of S. 3649 as S. 3747, which preserved S. 3649's content and added an additional title reauthorizing and amending the Second Chance Act of 2007. In an unusual procedural move, and after reversing his statement that he would not proceed on a vote until 2019, the Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell (R-KY) on December 13, 2018, substituted the content of The First Step Act (S. 3747) into a S. 756—a substantively unrelated bill called the Save Our Seas Act, which was originally introduced by Senator
Dan Sullivan (R-AK) on March 29, 2017—in order to solicit final amendments and bring the matter to a vote. (Due to this procedural move—known as "amendment in the nature of a substitute"—congressional records in various places reflect two wholly unrelated versions of S. 756 from the 115th Congress). Many Senators moved to submit amendments, among them Senators
Tom Cotton (R-AR) and
John Kennedy (R-LA). They introduced controversial amendment 4109 to S. 756 to expand the types of convictions that would render an inmate ineligible for good-time credits (the crime "exclusion list") and to require prison wardens to notify every crime victim of the release date of the inmate associated with their offense, among other information-sharing measures. They argued that these reforms were necessary to protect victims, but bill-backers viewed the move as a last-minute effort to derail months of consensus building. In his statement to the Senate prior to the vote encouraging bill passage and discouraging the Cotton-Kennedy amendments, Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) stated that the notification requirements of the Cotton-Kennedy amendments duplicated already-existing notification and information-sharing provisions of the
Crime Victim Rights Act while undesirably disallowing victims to opt out of notifications. He also suggested that the Cotton-Kennedy amendments attempted to add crimes to the exclusion list that they had previously opposed. passed the U.S. Senate as S. 756 on a bipartisan 87–12 vote. The House approved the bill with the Senate revisions on December 20, 2018 (358–36). and became Public Law 115–391.
Support and opposition Senators
Chuck Grassley (R-IA),
Dick Durbin (D-IL),
Cory Booker (D-NJ), and
Mike Lee (R-UT) championed the First Step Act in the Senate and built a bipartisan coalition to pass the legislation. In the House, Representatives
Doug Collins (R-GA-9),
Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY-8) and
John Lewis (D-GA-5) promoted similar legislation, albeit without sentencing reform provisions. Though
President Donald Trump was initially skeptical of the legislation, intense lobbying by his son-in-law and senior adviser
Jared Kushner eventually persuaded him to back the bill and push for a floor vote in 2018. Republican lawmakers who opposed the bill included Senators
Tom Cotton (R-AR),
John Kennedy (R-LA),
Ben Sasse (R-NE), and
Lisa Murkowski (R-AK). Twelve Republican senators in total voted against the First Step Act. Though Senator
Ted Cruz (R-TX) was originally opposed to the legislation, he ultimately backed the bill after an amendment he drafted to expand the crime exclusion list was adopted. No Democratic congressional members voted against the First Step Act. However, some liberal commentators such as Roy L. Austin Jr., who worked on criminal justice in the Obama administration, criticized the act for not delivering more relief to more prisoners. == Main legislative provisions ==