Economic Justice

Through litigation and advocacy, we aim to remedy deeply entrenched sources of economic inequality and ensure that access to opportunity and the ability to build wealth is available to all.

A crowd of people is gathered around the clock tower in Waterbury, Connecticut. The sky is blue and it is sunny. A Black man is in the foreground, back to the camera, with fist raised. He is wearing a backpack.

All people should have an equal opportunity to thrive, not just survive. All of us should be able to earn a living, find a home, get an education, and support ourselves and our families. No one should be too poor to live.

Systemic racism and inequities, however, keep people — particularly people of color — from accessing the mainstays of economic life; including education, employment, and homeownership. Ongoing discrimination, structural inequality, biases, and the insidious nature of white supremacist racism cause racial disparities in wealth, income, and institutions that impact almost every facet of our everyday lives.

Connecticut’s economic laws, policies, and practices have endangered and harmed people of color, especially Black and Latinx people, including by preventing the intergenerational accrual of wealth.

Through litigation and advocacy, we aim to remedy deeply entrenched sources of economic inequality and ensure that access to opportunity and the ability to build wealth is available to all. We seek to end prison debt, to ensure access to credit and other financial products for people living with a record of arrest or conviction, to establish a fair workweek and fair scheduling for workers, and to reallocate money out of policing and prisons and instead into programs and services that expand opportunity, health, and safety for our communities. We oppose the ongoing criminalization of homelessness and poverty. We support efforts to create access to affordable and quality health care, combat food insecurity, create affordable utilities and prevent unjust rate hike increases, align the minimum wage for incarcerated workers with the minimum wage for people on the outside, provide free meals for children in school, create Medicaid coverage for diapers, end the “pink tax,” and mandate the disclosure of salary ranges in job postings.

The Latest

News & Commentary
A group of women are standing in a hearing room at the Capitol, holding signs that says "Undocumented + Unafraid" and "Strengthen the Trust Act Now!"

Reflecting on the 2025 Legislative Session

The 2025 legislative session has come to a close, and it was certainly a trying session for all. In a session where roughly 3,800 bills were introduced, only about 380 bills were passed, rounding up to a passing rate of about ten percent.
News & Commentary
Terri, one of our Smart Justice Leaders, is a Black woman wearing a yellow leather jacket with her hair in a protective style (locs) and black wire rim glasses.

HB 6948 is about the fight for survival for each and everyone affected by the collateral consequences of living with a criminal record

My name is Terri Ricks, I am a resident of Hartford and a Smart Justice Leader with the ACLU of Connecticut. I am a person who has been directly impacted by homelessness due to housing challenges. I am an individual who is here speaking and fighting for change even when I lived for three-and-a-half years in a hotel due to housing challenges. Every day has been a fight, but nothing has been a fight as tough as being freed from prison in 2005. After completing changing my life, housing has consistently been a problem that even eludes me to this day.
News & Commentary
ACLUCT smart justice leader Tracie Bernardi stands facing the camera and smiling. She is wearing a blue Smart Justice zip-up and a yellow People Not Prisons pin. To her left is an ACLUCT banner that says we the people dare to create a more perfect union

Housing is the most critical and fundamental part of reentry

Housing is the most critical and fundamental part of reentry, but far too often the most difficult to achieve. The more I see it the more I understand why people go back to jail. HB 6948 is about giving people a fair opportunity to find a safe place to live.
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