A diverse coalition of more than 100 Kentucky organizations, including faith, housing, justice, mental health, recovery and community groups sent the following letter to the Kentucky State Senate, calling on them to reject the harmful policies in House Bill 5. The letter was sent on Feb. 12, 2024.
To the members of the Kentucky General Assembly:
All Kentuckians deserve to feel safe in their communities, but the proposals in House Bill 5 are counterproductive and harmful. This bill will make life harder for struggling citizens, further crowd our jails and prisons, and take resources away from investments that prevent crime, thereby endangering community safety, not promoting it.
Decades of research show that increasing incarceration is not making us safer, with more and longer sentences failing to deter crime. These measures weaken and separate families and make reentry more difficult.
HB 5 threatens to worsen Kentucky’s overdose crisis, increase homelessness, increase pretrial detention and deepen hardship for those already struggling.
Much of HB 5 will also disproportionately harm Black and Brown Kentuckians, who are already over-represented in the state’s criminal legal system.
The tax dollars needed to implement HB 5 would be better used on proven, crime-preventing strategies. Kentucky legislators should build on past successes by expanding harm reduction and community mental health services, reforming the Good Samaritan law to help prevent more overdose deaths by better protecting those who call for help and automating expungement to support successful reentry after incarceration.
We all care about the safety of Kentuckians, but more incarceration and criminalization will not achieve that. We urge the General Assembly to reject this harmful, costly and ineffective approach, and work with community leaders, experts and those who have direct experience with the problems the bill seeks to address to craft better solutions that can benefit all Kentuckians.
We, the undersigned, adamantly oppose passage of HB 5 as passed by the House.
Abolish Slavery KY ACLU of Kentucky Advocacy Action Network Advocacy Based on Lived Experience (ABLE) African American Studies program – Spalding University Americana Community Center Appalshop Community Media Initiative Berea Friends Meeting Black Leadership Action Coalition of Kentucky (BLACK) Black Lives Matter Louisville Bluegrass Activist Alliance Boyle Justice Advocates Bridgeport Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Buddhist Justice Collective Catholic Action Center Center for Accessible Living Central KY Housing and Homeless Initiative Clark County Homeless Coalition Coalition for the Homeless Cycle Breakers Breaking Chains Inc. Dream.org Eastern Kentucky SURJ Embrace Church EmpowHER with Open Arms Episcopal Diocese of Lexington Exodus Family Ministries FADD-Families Against Deadly Drugs Fairness Campaign Family Health Centers, Inc. Feed Louisville Forward Justice Action Network Forward Kentucky Foundation for Appalachian Kentucky Gateway Homeless Coalition Heartland Conference, United Church of Christ Highland Baptist Church Anti-Racism Team Homeless and Housing Coalition of Kentucky Hood to the Holler House of Ruth Jim Boyd Law Office Kentuckians For The Commonwealth Kentucky Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (KACDL) Kentucky Center for Economic Policy Kentucky Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty Kentucky Committee to End Executions (KCEE) Kentucky Conservation Committee Kentucky Council of Churches Kentucky Criminal Justice Forums (KCJF) Kentucky Equal Justice Center Kentucky Forum for Rights, Economics and Education (KYFREE) Kentucky Harm Reduction Coalition Kentucky Health Justice Network Kentucky Poor People’s Campaign Kentucky Psychological Association Kentucky Society for Clinical Social Work Kentucky State AFL-CIO Kentucky Voices for Health Kentucky Women’s Network Kept Inc Lexington Rescue Mission Life Coach Each One Teach One Reentry Fellowship Louisville Family Justice Advocates Louisville Outreach for the Unsheltered Louisville Showing Up for Racial Justice Louisville Urban League Madison County Tenants Union Mental Health America of Northern Kentucky and Southwest Ohio Metro United Way Mid-Kentucky Presbytery, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Mission Behind Bars and Beyond NAMI Lexington NAMI Kentucky National Association of Social Workers – Kentucky Chapter National Council of Jewish Women, Louisville Section New Beginnings, Bluegrass, Inc. No More Red Dots Inc NonViolent Owensboro Paducah Diversity Advocacy Board People Advocating Recovery Pointer Adventures Prison Policy Initiative Progress Kentucky Quaker Committee on Kentucky Legislation Robert Jamison Ministries, Inc. Sierra Club Kentucky Smart Justice Advocates St John Center St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church, Somerset St. Vincent de Paul Louisville SURJ Kentucky The 490 Project The Bail Project The Chad Lake Foundation (CLF) The Prisoner’s Hope The Revolution KY Union Church, Berea UP for Women and Children VOCAL-KY Voices of Hope-Lexington Inc. Welcome House KY Wellspring, Inc. Young Adult Development in Action, Inc. Young People In Recovery
Tue, February 13, 2024
Commentary, Featured, KY Legislature
Lexington Times Web Editor
Republished from Kentucky Center for Economic Policy
A diverse coalition of more than 100 Kentucky organizations, including faith, housing, justice, mental health, recovery and community groups sent the following letter to the Kentucky State Senate, calling on them to reject the harmful policies in House Bill 5. The letter was sent on Feb. 12, 2024.
To the members of the Kentucky General Assembly:
All Kentuckians deserve to feel safe in their communities, but the proposals in House Bill 5 are counterproductive and harmful. This bill will make life harder for struggling citizens, further crowd our jails and prisons, and take resources away from investments that prevent crime, thereby endangering community safety, not promoting it.
Decades of research show that increasing incarceration is not making us safer, with more and longer sentences failing to deter crime. These measures weaken and separate families and make reentry more difficult.
HB 5 threatens to worsen Kentucky’s overdose crisis, increase homelessness, increase pretrial detention and deepen hardship for those already struggling.
Much of HB 5 will also disproportionately harm Black and Brown Kentuckians, who are already over-represented in the state’s criminal legal system.
The tax dollars needed to implement HB 5 would be better used on proven, crime-preventing strategies. Kentucky legislators should build on past successes by expanding harm reduction and community mental health services, reforming the Good Samaritan law to help prevent more overdose deaths by better protecting those who call for help and automating expungement to support successful reentry after incarceration.
We all care about the safety of Kentuckians, but more incarceration and criminalization will not achieve that. We urge the General Assembly to reject this harmful, costly and ineffective approach, and work with community leaders, experts and those who have direct experience with the problems the bill seeks to address to craft better solutions that can benefit all Kentuckians.
We, the undersigned, adamantly oppose passage of HB 5 as passed by the House.
Abolish Slavery KY
ACLU of Kentucky
Advocacy Action Network
Advocacy Based on Lived Experience (ABLE)
African American Studies program – Spalding University
Americana Community Center
Appalshop Community Media Initiative
Berea Friends Meeting
Black Leadership Action Coalition of Kentucky (BLACK)
Black Lives Matter Louisville
Bluegrass Activist Alliance
Boyle Justice Advocates
Bridgeport Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Buddhist Justice Collective
Catholic Action Center
Center for Accessible Living
Central KY Housing and Homeless Initiative
Clark County Homeless Coalition
Coalition for the Homeless
Cycle Breakers Breaking Chains Inc.
Dream.org
Eastern Kentucky SURJ
Embrace Church
EmpowHER with Open Arms
Episcopal Diocese of Lexington
Exodus Family Ministries
FADD-Families Against Deadly Drugs
Fairness Campaign
Family Health Centers, Inc.
Feed Louisville
Forward Justice Action Network
Forward Kentucky
Foundation for Appalachian Kentucky
Gateway Homeless Coalition
Heartland Conference, United Church of Christ
Highland Baptist Church Anti-Racism Team
Homeless and Housing Coalition of Kentucky
Hood to the Holler
House of Ruth
Jim Boyd Law Office
Kentuckians For The Commonwealth
Kentucky Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (KACDL)
Kentucky Center for Economic Policy
Kentucky Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
Kentucky Committee to End Executions (KCEE)
Kentucky Conservation Committee
Kentucky Council of Churches
Kentucky Criminal Justice Forums (KCJF)
Kentucky Equal Justice Center
Kentucky Forum for Rights, Economics and Education (KYFREE)
Kentucky Harm Reduction Coalition
Kentucky Health Justice Network
Kentucky Poor People’s Campaign
Kentucky Psychological Association
Kentucky Society for Clinical Social Work
Kentucky State AFL-CIO
Kentucky Voices for Health
Kentucky Women’s Network
Kept Inc
Lexington Rescue Mission
Life Coach Each One Teach One Reentry Fellowship
Louisville Family Justice Advocates
Louisville Outreach for the Unsheltered
Louisville Showing Up for Racial Justice
Louisville Urban League
Madison County Tenants Union
Mental Health America of Northern Kentucky and Southwest Ohio
Metro United Way
Mid-Kentucky Presbytery, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Mission Behind Bars and Beyond
NAMI Lexington
NAMI Kentucky
National Association of Social Workers – Kentucky Chapter
National Council of Jewish Women, Louisville Section
New Beginnings, Bluegrass, Inc.
No More Red Dots Inc
NonViolent Owensboro
Paducah Diversity Advocacy Board
People Advocating Recovery
Pointer Adventures
Prison Policy Initiative
Progress Kentucky
Quaker Committee on Kentucky Legislation
Robert Jamison Ministries, Inc.
Sierra Club Kentucky
Smart Justice Advocates
St John Center
St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church, Somerset
St. Vincent de Paul Louisville
SURJ Kentucky
The 490 Project
The Bail Project
The Chad Lake Foundation (CLF)
The Prisoner’s Hope
The Revolution KY
Union Church, Berea
UP for Women and Children
VOCAL-KY
Voices of Hope-Lexington Inc.
Welcome House KY
Wellspring, Inc.
Young Adult Development in Action, Inc.
Young People In Recovery
The post More Than 100 Kentucky Groups Urge Lawmakers to Reject House Bill 5 appeared first on Kentucky Center for Economic Policy.
Republished from Kentucky Center for Economic Policy
https://kypolicy.org/more-than-100-kentucky-groups-urge-lawmakers-to-reject-house-bill-5/
Lexington Times Web Editor
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