Divestment from policing is close to reality for a lot of people in our state. It should be reality for everyone.

It’s about bigger towns and cities, especially those where policing most harms Black and Latinx people, getting the same chance to do what other Connecticut towns have long done: investing hard-earned resources into schools, healthcare, food security, housing security, and jobs instead of policing.

By Claudine Constant, Melvin Medina

Red tent with white sign. Sign reads: Divest from policing / invest in2 community

Policymakers need to listen to activists on the solutions to police violence and racism

This movement has been around since the early days of policing and has always been led by activists and organizers from communities that have been harmed by the police. It’s time people in power listen.

By Kelly McConney Moore

Red tent with white sign. Sign reads: Divest from policing / invest in2 community

Lamont’s “re”opening runs the risk of widening inequities in our state

To understand what Lamont’s choice to add more businesses to the lists of those that have been open could mean for Connecticut, it’s useful to look at what his actions so far have meant for vulnerable people – the people who the government has left open and exposed to COVID-19 from the start.

By David McGuire

undraw illustration of three people in blue shirts walking 6 feet apart in white masks and white gloves, with blue trees in background

Protecting Public Health and the Right to Vote Means Expanding Vote-by-Mail

Expanding absentee voting for widespread illness in the state is a simple and important part of protecting voting rights.

By Kelly McConney Moore

a white envelope against wood background. written on the envelope: LET PEOPLE VOTE

What’s actually happening with Connecticut’s discretionary releases from prisons and jails?

The numbers don’t reflect an unprecedented response to save incarcerated lives, especially Black and Latinx lives.

By Melvin Medina, Meghan Holden

blue aclu of connecticut people not prisons poster in front of Connecticut governor's mansion

If CT prisons and jails were a town, they’d have the highest COVID-19 infection rate in the state.

Even if Lamont and the DOC continue to ignore the people who they should have been listening to all along, they should pay attention to the numbers, which show that the DOC’s reactionary, backward-looking response to COVID-19 is not working.

By David McGuire, Melvin Medina

blue aclu of connecticut people not prisons poster in front of Connecticut governor's mansion

Connecticut Agencies Have a Lot of Independent Authority to Protect Public Health by Releasing Incarcerated People. So Far, These Agencies Have Refused to Act.

Under state law, more than 100 different state government agencies – including the Governor and DOC – could take steps right now to reduce the number of people who are sitting in prisons, where they are at risk during the COVID-19 pandemic.

By Kelly McConney Moore

blue aclu of connecticut people not prisons poster in front of Connecticut governor's mansion

Smart Justice asks Governor Lamont & Legislators to Protect Incarcerated People from COVID-19

Smart Justice has been speaking out for weeks about the urgent need for Governor Lamont, members of the Connecticut General Assembly, and other decision makers to act. Watch their calls to action in this powerful video series.

From behind, a man stands in a blue ACLU of Connecticut Smart Justice shirt

Smart Justice leader testifies in support of strong Clean Slate

During a packed public hearing, Smart Justice leader Ciara Rosati testified in support of S.B. 403, a bill introduced by the Judiciary Committee that would create a strong Clean Slate law in Connecticut.

Ciara Rosati, Smart Justice leader, testifies in support of strong Clean Slate, SB 403, at the CT General Assembly in 2020. Ciara wears a blue shirt and is seated next to policy counsel Kelly Moore, in a white blazer.