Pipeline of unnecessary legislation fuels mass incarceration crisis in Pennsylvania

Law enforcement and prosecutors already have all of the tools necessary to protect public safety. But over the last four decades, the Pennsylvania General Assembly has become a bipartisan offense factory, churning out hundreds of new bills each legislative session that duplicate existing law or add unnecessarily harsh new criminal penalties to our already bloated criminal code. This is the statehouse-to-prison pipeline.The ACLU of Pennsylvania tracks all criminal laws proposed or passed by lawmakers in Harrisburg for our biennial report More Law, Less Justice: Pennsylvania's Statehouse-to-Prison Pipeline. Late last month, we released our latest edition for the 2021-2022 legislative session.Mass incarceration begins at the statehouse. The purpose of this report is to highlight the role and responsibility of the Pennsylvania General Assembly in fueling our state’s ongoing mass incarceration crisis.

By Elizabeth Randol

More Law, Less Justice 2021-2022 cover

Why We’re Taking Legal Action - Again - Against the Central Bucks School District

Here we go again. For the second time in less than a year, the ACLU of Pennsylvania has taken legal action against Central Bucks School District because of the district’s discriminatory and punitive policies against LGBQ&T students and their allies.

By Witold "Vic" Walczak, Richard T. Ting

Group of Central Bucks students at a demonstration

Stop and frisk: a clear failure of public safety policy

Despite what you might hear from some candidates for mayor and city council in Philadelphia, one policing tactic that has proven a failure time and again in bolstering public safety is so-called stop-and-frisk.

photo of the back of a police officer

Agreement between Pittsburgh Public Schools and city police is progress but doesn’t address failures of school district police

After more than a decade, Pittsburgh Public Schools and the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police have reached an agreement about how city police interact with students.

By Ghadah Makoshi

classroom

Goodbye (for now), and thank you!

Reggie Shuford reflects on 26 years at the ACLU

By Reggie Shuford

Show Love

In a desperate power grab, PA House Republicans ignore the will of the voters

Over the past two years, MAGA Republicans in Harrisburg have been pursuing a radical, anti-democracy agenda.

By Elizabeth Randol

Governor Wolf signs Act 77

Street-based sex workers and the revolving door of incarceration

The stigma surrounding sex workers is rooted in personal beliefs, false assumptions, and a culture of sex work being too taboo to discuss openly.

By Naiymah Sanchez

Philadelphia skyline at dusk

Why we’ve taken legal action against Central Bucks School District

School should be a safe place for all students. It should be an environment that fosters creativity and the free exchange of ideas.

By Witold "Vic" Walczak, Richard T. Ting

Central Bucks blog photo

Decriminalization of sex work is a means of harm reduction

Sex work is here to stay. The question is, are we willing to protect those who choose to enter into this industry? Or will we continue to make their lives and livelihoods less safe by continuing to criminalize this type of chosen work?

By Naiymah Sanchez

heart-shaped ring and fifty dollar bill