We fight to dismantle incarceration by advancing policies that center healing, justice, and the leadership of system-impacted communities.
AB 1958 (Kalra) would make additional clarifying changes to the procedures for Racial Justice Act (RJA) claims. It will do three things: 1) remove procedural barriers that have blocked disparity claims, 2) make it clear that the law applies to plea bargains, and 3) make it clear that the prosecution must hand over evidence in the hands of law enforcement.
AB 1851 (Gipson) would implement a Social Emotional Learning curriculum for Kindergarten-12th grade schools as a harm prevention measure to combat the school-to-prison pipeline. This bill was written and introduced by people currently incarcerated in Pleasant Valley State Prison.
Creating change requires strategy, persistence, and collective power. We develop and support legislation that reduces harm, restores rights, and shifts the justice system away from punishment and toward healing.
We listen to impacted communities to surface urgent problems that require policy change.
We help write legislation that reflects the needs and demands of directly impacted people.
We organize communities, build coalitions, and meet with lawmakers to gather momentum.
We track the bill through committees, votes, and amendments—showing up every step of the way.
We push for implementation and stay engaged to ensure policies are carried out with integrity.