FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE–June 22, 2023
Louisiana Progress’s 2023 legislative policy agenda, which was built around decriminalizing poverty, found relative success amidst a session that saw “tough on crime” proponents largely control the debate.
BATON ROUGE, LA | June 22, 2023—During this year’s Louisiana legislative session, Louisiana Progress, a non-profit political advocacy group based in Baton Rouge, and its ally organizations, found success with initiatives that are intended to provide solutions to our state’s systemic problems with persistently high poverty and crime rates.
One of those victories was House Bill 89 (Act 217), by Rep. Denise Marcelle, which requires the Louisiana State Police to collect and publish traffic stop data. Once this data is made public, starting in 2024, we’ll gain greater transparency into police practices and find out if racial profiling is taking place, and whether law enforcement officers are disproportionately pulling over poor people for minor infractions. Our hope is that other law enforcement agencies will follow LSP's lead in the years to come.
Other successes include HB286 (Act 342) by Rep. Delisha Boyd, which will make it easier and cheaper for people to expunge an arrest for first-time simple marijuana possession from their criminal records, and HB477 (Act 87) by Rep. Vincent Pierre, which requires state and local agencies that refer uncollected debt to the state’s Office of Debt Recovery to provide more data and transparency on those debts.
