The Californian 2021 Q4 – BEWARE OF NEW BSIS INCIDENT REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

AUTHOR’S CORRECTION AND REVISION: To clarify some questions raised by this article when it originally published, the Incident Report requirements below are more detailed to reflect that submitting the report to BSIS is required when an employee is discharged, suspended, or reprimanded as the result of being in a physical altercation with a member of the public. (See, “The New Rule,” below with added language.) Not every employee discharge, suspension or reprimand requires an Incident Report. Sorry for any confusion.

Earlier this year, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 229 into law. Among other things, this new law expands the duty of California Private Patrol Operators (PPOs) to report “incidents” that occur by security officers on duty. Not only does it greatly enlarge the obligation and the circumstances of reporting, but citations for failure to report have just increased from $1,000 per violation to $5,000 per violation. Wow! And this requirement took effect immediately.

The Private Security Services Act, Business & Professions Code § 7583.2 now requires a written Incident Report to BSIS within 7 business days of the occurrence of any of the following:

[Note that the new expanding language is underlined.]