Formerly incarcerated Texans share stories at 'From Prison to Power' event

Maggie smiles in a video interview, FOX 7 logo and chyron reading Maggie Luna, Texas Center for Justice and Equity's Peer Policy Fellow

The event follows a series of community gatherings that have taken place in Texas cities, the most recent being in Dallas. Key organizer for the event and Texas Center for Justice and Equity's Peer Policy Fellow Maggie Luna has all the details.

Watch the interview from FOX 7 Austin.

How Much Power Do Police Oversight Offices Really Have?

Protesters stand outside of the APD headquarters with a sign reading Defund police add budget $402M

Negotiations between Austin officials and the police were breaking down in part over the city’s attempts to increase police accountability in 2018. The city’s citizen review panel disbanded. Finally, that November, the parties reached an agreement, though tensions remained. A new office was created and staffed by civilians rather than police: The Office of Police Oversight.

Read the rest of this article from Texas Observer.

Reports of Youth Crime Wave Debunked by Latest Research

A teen sits in a cell looking down

New research by The Sentencing Project shows a drop in youth crime over the past 20 years, which debunks a so-called "false narrative" of a youth violence movement sweeping the country. Sarah Reyes, policy analyst at the Texas Center for Justice and Equity, said there is little data since the pandemic started, but she suspects the drop in crime, at least in Texas, was an anomaly because kids were isolated due to COVID-19.

Formerly Incarcerated Leaders to Gather for Community-Building Event in Austin

Maggie holding a microphone, text reading "From Prison to Power: Finding Your Voice After Incarceration, July 2nd, 1:00-3:00pm Grassroots Leadership office 7910 Cameron Rd, Austin, TX 78754"

On Saturday, July 2, a group of formerly incarcerated and justice system-impacted Texans will convene in Austin. The event, “From Prison to Power: Finding Your Voice After Incarceration,” is organized by the Texas Center for Justice and Equity’s Statewide Leadership Council (SLC) and partners.

Read the rest of this press release here.

Home after prison: former convicts search for affordable housing in DFW

A headline reading Home after prison: former convicts search for affordable housing in DFW and a man with a white beard and glasses

In Texas, approximately half a million residents can face completely legal housing discrimination due to their criminal records.​ Texas has the highest incarceration rate of “any other democracy” according to the Prison Policy Initiative. When members of this population of 251,000 are released, they face barriers in finding affordable housing across the state, including the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.

This neighborhood attorney has a heart for kids caught up in the criminal justice system

This neighborhood attorney has a heart for kids caught up in the criminal justice system

“They did the crime,” it has been said, “they do the time.” In this case, “they” are incarcerated or previously incarcerated women, specifically mothers either expecting a baby or with one or more children. And while the mothers have colored outside the lines enough to warrant imprisonment, their children have not.

Read the rest of this article from Lakewood Advocate Mag.

As jail population increases, TCSO turns to county to help to fill vacancies

As jail population increases, TCSO turns to county to help to fill vacancies

This week, the Travis County Commissioners Court will weigh whether to hire a marketing firm for $250,000 to help the Travis County Sheriff’s Office fill current vacancies. That includes 145 corrections officer vacancies, up from only 60 vacancies before the pandemic in May of 2019. Additionally, the jail population has increased by 60 inmates this May compared to that same May of 2019, now up to 2,173.

Read the rest of this article from KXAN.

In Texas prisons, men have access to significantly more higher education programs than women

In Texas prisons, men have access to significantly more higher education programs than women

Alexa Garza has been out of prison for three years, but she still remembers how confining it felt. “I was surrounded by walls,” said Garza, who was incarcerated for two decades starting when she was 19. “I found that reading was an escape for me. I was able to read and learn and grow, and I knew that education was the key for me.”

Read the rest of this article from 19th News.

Stop ‘Locking up Motherhood’: Texas Study

Stop ‘Locking up Motherhood’: Texas Study

Incarceration is “uniquely detrimental” to women, particularly if they are mothers, and authorities should consider alternative approaches to punishment for them, says a Texas justice advocacy group. “With a fraction of the money it costs to incarcerate a mother, we can support her with tools to address underlying needs, as well as keep her with her children and in the community –in turn preventing trauma and loss for the entire family unit,” argued the Texas Center for Justice and Equity, in a special report on “Motherhood and Pregnancy Behind

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