As of fiscal year 2005-2006, SATF had a total of 1,786 staff and an annual operating budget of $230 million. As of September 2007, it had a design capacity of 3,424 but a total institution population of 7,459, for an occupancy rate of 217.8 percent. As of April 30, 2020, SATF was incarcerating people at 141.5% of its design capacity, with 4,844 occupants. SATF's include the following facilities, among others:
Level II housing.
Level III housing.
Level IV housing.
SATF's most well-known program involves "two self-contained treatment facilities... were specifically designed to provide housing and residential substance abuse treatment for minimum security offenders with substance abuse problems." The program uses a "therapeutic community" model which had produced low recidivism rates at Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility at Rock Mountain and California Institution for Women, and which had also been used at California Rehabilitation Center. In the program, inmates "undergo at least 20 hours a week of individual and group substance abuse counseling, addiction education, relapse prevention, living skills workshops, anger management, conflict resolution, and even a class called 'identification and change of criminal thought processes'." SATF has been described as "the largest addiction treatment center in the world."
History
Having been "authorized by legislation approved in 1993," SATF opened in August 1997. The California Office of the Inspector General issued a January 2003 report on health care at SATF that "suggest three inmate deaths in the previous two years could be attributed in part to negligent medical treatment." Per a newspaper article on the report before its public release, the problems at SATF "ranged from lax oversight that has led to the wasting of millions of taxpayer dollars to full-time doctors who see only a handful of patients and continually sleep on the job." The report was publicly released only in March 2004, and is available only in a version "heavily redacted" by lawyers of the administration of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. In February 2007, the California Office of the Inspector General concluded "Numerous studies show that despite an annual cost of $36 million, the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s in-prison substance abuse treatment programs have little or no impact on recidivism." The report characterized the cumulative amount spent by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation on substance abuse programs for inmates and parolees as "a $1 billion failure — failure to provide an environment that would allow the programs to work; failure to provide an effective treatment model; failure to ensure that the best contractors are chosen to do the job at the lowest possible price; failure to oversee the contractors to make sure they provide the services they agree to provide; failure to exert the fiscal controls necessary to protect public funds; failure to learn from and correct mistakes — and most tragically, failure to help California inmates change their lives and, in so doing, make our streets safer." In response, the Schwarzenegger administration reorganized the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and named a new head of its Division of Addiction and Recovery Services.
Notable inmates
The prison's notable inmates include:
Current
Cameron Hooker - Convicted for the sexual assault and kidnapping of Colleen Stan. Hooker was sentenced to 104 years' imprisonment for holding Stan as his "sex slave" and will not be eligible for parole until 2022.
Efren Saldivar - Convicted angel of death serial killer.
Robert Downey Jr. - Actor who entered SATF in August 1999 to serve a three-year sentence for a "parole violation that stemmed from a 1996 drug conviction." In August 2000, he was released early "on orders from the 2nd District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles" because he had received credit for "time served on related misdemeanor charges and for time already served in drug rehabilitation programs."
Phil Spector - Music producer convicted of murder in 2009 and serving 19 years to life; transferred to Corcoran in mid-2009.