The passage of the Clear Slate Act, which works to routinely seal folks’s conviction data after a sure time interval, earlier this 12 months was simply the tip of the iceberg for prison justice advocates. They’re decided to battle discrimination towards previously incarcerated New Yorkers on all fronts—particularly housing.
The Honest Probability for Housing Marketing campaign helps a metropolis council invoice that may finish housing discrimination towards folks with convictions in New York Metropolis. They gathered at Foley Sq. in Manhattan final Wed with native electeds.
Andre Ward, affiliate vice chairman of public coverage on the David Rothenberg Middle for Public Coverage (DRCPP) Fortune Society, led the rally. He has been pushing for the passage of Honest Probability for public and private causes for the final 4 years, he stated.
Ward was deeply concerned in unlawful actions as a teen and was sentenced to 24 years in jail by age 20. He has been out for the final 14 and a half years, he stated. Since then, he has achieved quite a few accolades, a prestigious place, a excessive degree of training, and taught at establishments.
“I’m somebody who got here out, did the precise factor, contributes to our neighborhood, and but, I didn’t put my identify on the housing software that my spouse utilized for as a result of I knew that if I did, they most likely wouldn’t enable me to stay there,” he stated, a few lease state of affairs together with his household in 2016. “As a result of I’ve a conviction file.”
His group runs a number of supportive and transitional housing areas across the metropolis for previously incarcerated folks, together with Lengthy Island Metropolis, Harlem, and the Bronx. They’ve in depth rehabilitative providers for folks as soon as they’ve been launched, emergency housing for these with nowhere to go, and reintegration plans for folks keen to decide to programming. “Central to the work is believing in folks’s capability to vary and rework their lives,” stated Ward.
Ward believes that when somebody does the work, they deserve a good shot at life, and a conviction historical past shouldn’t deter that.
From 1980 to 2021, there have been about “6.6 million New York prison circumstances impacting almost 2.2 million folks that resulted in a conviction,” stated analysis collected by the Information Collaborative for Justice (DCJ). New York Metropolis accounted for 53% of those convictions in 1980. The speed has steadily decreased to 33% by 2019, the report says. The drop-off was vital in 2020 and 2021.
From 1985 to 2021, 42% of convictions concerned Black folks, but they made up 15% of the state’s inhabitants in 2019. New York Metropolis has a conviction fee that’s 5.7 instances increased for Black folks than white folks, the DCJ concluded.
Ward added {that a} excessive proportion of Black and brown folks launched from state prisons are coming into metropolis shelters due to these convictions and never qualifying for housing. He stated the shelter system right here is “unfit” and “uninhabitable” due to unaddressed circumstances. “This difficulty behind Honest Probability for Housing can be a racial justice difficulty, and that’s why it’s so essentially vital,” he stated.
Kandra Clark, vice chairman of coverage and technique with Exodus Transitional Group, runs a supportive housing program for previously incarcerated folks much like Fortune Society. “It’s so unhappy to see what number of New Yorkers face housing discrimination day by day. Individuals with conviction histories are perpetually punished, making their households extra more likely to expertise intergenerational homelessness,” stated Clark in a press release. “We should break this cycle of poverty and supply households the chance to flourish of their properties and communities.”
Clark stated that Honest Probability is simply “good laws” that ought to be handed instantly. Loads of electeds within the metropolis and state agree.
East Harlem’s Assemblymember Eddie Gibbs is the primary previously incarcerated particular person elected to the state meeting and was an enormous proponent of getting Clear Slate handed on the tail finish of the June legislative session. He stated, in a press release, he wholeheartedly helps the Honest Probability Housing Act and that it will enable folks with conviction histories to entry secure housing.
“A person’s conviction historical past doesn’t solely have an effect on them. It could actually have an effect on their household as properly and result in a endless cycle of instability,” stated Gibbs.
Councilmember Carmen De La Rosa stated somebody’s previous shouldn’t decide whether or not or not they stay in dignified and reasonably priced housing. “The Honest Probability for Housing Act alleviates an already tough course of whereas working in the direction of our aim of securing everlasting housing for all New Yorkers, particularly for the disproportionate numbers of previously incarcerated folks of shade,” she stated in a press release.
Ward concedes that there could have to be provisions within the invoice, much like these in Clear Slate with regards to sure sexual or egregious conviction data, with a view to get it handed.
Ariama C. Lengthy is a Report for America corps member and writes about politics for the Amsterdam Information. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps maintain her writing tales like this one; please contemplate making a tax-deductible reward of any quantity immediately by visiting https://bit.ly/amnews1.