This session, Texas Appleseed supports legislation that increases supports for kids aging out of foster care, ensures students who are homeless are not given out-of-school suspensions (which assumes they have a home to go to when they aren’t in school) and makes it easier for homeless youth to get driver’s licenses and state IDs — a key to greater stability. Bills We Support HB 811 (Rep. White) & SB 424 (Sen. West) Youth experiencing homelessness
During the 86th Texas Legislature, Texas Appleseed supports legislation that will enhance consumer rights and promote fair market standards, including bills that do the following: Bills We Support Enforce State Rate Caps for Payday and Auto Title Loans SB 110 (Menendez): Closes the payday loophole Adopt City Payday and Auto Title Lending Reform Ordinances as State Law HB 1258 (Craddick): Creates uniform regulatory structure by enacting city ordinances into law HB 242 (Bernal): Creates uniform
We knew it was coming. Yesterday, the Federal Commission on School Safety, a group created following the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, and led by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, released their report with recommendations for how to improve school safety. There were some good recommendations, including urging school districts to adopt “evidence-based multi-tiered behavioral framework(s) for improving behavioral outcomes and learning conditions for all students” and evidence-based behavior threat assessments. The Commission also recommended
If you ask most people what it means to them to do legal work on a pro bono basis, they will tell you about one specific person or family they were able to help and the impact it had on both the individual and themselves. It is incredibly important work to ensure that a parent is not wrongfully evicted due to a simple inability to pay rent on time that month or to secure a
As we enter the 2018 holiday season, we should take the time to remember survivors and those lost from natural disasters that seem to occur with greater and greater regularity. In 2018, we marked both the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Harvey and the 10-year anniversary of Hurricane Ike, two of the most devastating disasters in U.S. history. And even more recently, we’ve witnessed other natural disasters wreak havoc in other parts of the U.S., from
During the upcoming 86 th legislative session, the Texas Legislature will have the opportunity to create a pretrial justice system that maximizes both public safety and court appearance rates, while advancing equal justice for all Texans regardless of income. The key to accomplishing these goals is for lawmakers to require that judges make decisions about pretrial release based on the unique needs of each individual, only detaining people who pose a true risk to public
Social media feeds are filling up this week with annual back-to-school photos — kids excitedly posing with their backpacks, brand new sneakers, and school outfits in front of their houses before they head off to school. These adorable photos remind us that summer is over and school is back in session. It’s also an important reminder that for children in Texas experiencing homelessness, school is often a place of refuge, providing meals and shelter, as
In the first two blog posts in this series, Deborah and I described some of the school safety proposals — including hardening schools, bringing back zero tolerance discipline, and increasing the presence of school police officers — that are currently being discussed and debated by school administrators, educators, parents, students, advocates, and lawmakers across the state. Many of us who work on school discipline, school policing, and school safety issues are concerned that these proposals
Last week, a federal district court in Tennessee issued a monumental decision — one that the Texas legislature must take note of if they want Texas to avoid a similar suit. The federal court struck down a Tennessee law that suspended the driver’s licenses of people who failed to pay criminal fines and costs, holding the law was unconstitutional because it had the effect of punishing low-income people more harshly than wealthy people, simply because they did not have the ability to pay.
After Hurricane Harvey, my four-year-old, Sammy, was very worried about natural disasters. We didn’t expose him to much information about what happened, but he caught us watching the news every once in a while. For months he asked me a million questions about storm preparedness—he questioned the qualifications of the person who built our house, he worried about where he should go if a hurricane hit Austin, and he grilled me about the structural integrity
Last month, a moment that mentors have been warning me about for years came to fruition— that moment when your work comes full circleand you find that “everything old is new again.” Like most youngsters, I assumed that when my wise elders predicted this eventuality, they were simply showing their age – grumpy and cynical. I assumed that surely once Texas reeled in policies that proved ineffective and harmful, those policies would be consigned to
DateAuthor Ahmed Lavalais, Clinical Teaching Fellow in the Policy Advocacy Clinic at Berkeley Law
While national attention is focused on the regressive and racially discriminatory practice of charging fines and fees in criminal court, until recently this practice has received relatively little attention in the juvenile system. The Policy Advocacy Clinic is part of a small but growing group of advocates and researchers studying the effects of imposing court costs against youth and families. The research emerging from this work shows that such sanctions harm youth and families, and
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