ACLU Demands that Phillips County Reapportion its Commission Districts

In mid-March, the ACLU Foundation of Kansas learned that Phillips County in northwestern Kansas has not reapportioned its county commission districts since 1965.  Because Phillipsburg has grown markedly over the last fifty years in comparison to the rural areas of the County, the county commission districts are now malapportioned so that residents of Phillipburg are grossly underrepresented while voters in the rural areas of the County are overrepresented.

By Mary B.

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ACLU Advocates for Open Courtrooms in Sedgwick County

In mid-March 2014, the ACLU’s Legal Department received reports that the traffic courtroom at the Sedgwick County Courthouse in Wichita, Kansas, was closed to the public.   Legal Director Doug Bonney investigated these reports and found the following:A sign posted on the door of the traffic courtroom on

By Mary B.

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Quick Victory in ACLU Challenge to Kansas Jail Ban on Newspapers & Magazines: Allen County Drops Its Ban on Inmate Periodicals

 

By Mary B.

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ACLU lawsuit against Kobach returned to Kansas court

U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren granted the ACLU’s motion to send back to state court our challenge to the creation of a two-tiered voter registration system in Kansas.On November 21, 2013 we filed a lawsuit  in Shawnee County District Court charging that by creating a two-tiered voter registration system Kansas was dividing eligible voters into separate and unequal classes, in violation of the Kansas Constitution. When Secretary of State Kris Kobach responded by removing our suit to federal court, we in turn filed a motion to send the case back to state court.  Now that Judge Melgren has agreed with our motion we will file additional papers in Shawnee County District Court in the next few weeks."ACLU lawsuit against Kobach returned to Kansas court", Topeka Capitol-Journal, 04/08/2014

By Mary B.

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Bill of Rights and Statutory Protection of Religious Freedom in Kansas

 

By Mary B.

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U.S. Supreme Court gives Kobach setbacks

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear two cases on city ordinances that sought to require proof of citizenship when trying to rent housing. These ordinances would levy fines against landlords who rent to undocumented immigrants seeking housing.“Today, the ordinances’ supporters failed in their final, last ditch attempt to resurrect these laws, which have been blocked for years without ever going into effect,” said a statement by Omar Jadwat, supervising attorney of the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project. “Now that these appeals are over, we look forward to Farmers Branch and Hazleton joining cities across the nation that are looking at ways to make their cities welcoming places for immigrants, rather writing hostility and discrimination into municipal law.”Read more here: "Kobach’s drive against illegal immigration set back as U.S. Supreme Court declines cases", Kansas City Star, 03/03/2014

By Mary B.

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Kansas SB401

Kansas Senate bill  401 would make it easier to prosecute teachers, librarians or school principals for exposing students to offensive materials. The bill was drafted in response to a sexual education poster shown by a teacher in the Shawnee Mission School District.  ACLU Advocacy Director Holly Weatherford, commenting on the current language proposed in the bill, said it is “facially unconstitutional.”“The way this bill is currently written, it is so overly broad that it’s hard to even evaluate what all of the implications or consequences are of its reach,” she said. Read more here: "Kansas Senate weighs bill to ease prosecution of teachers over offensive materials", Wichita Eagle, 03/02/2014 

By Mary B.

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The fight against discrimination

Remarks at the Equality Kansas rally by ACLU of Kansas executive Director Gary Brunk."The road our nation has traveled in the quest to expand liberties has never been straight or easy.  The Declaration of Independence boldly asserted that all men are created equal, but the Constitution condoned slavery.  As historian Garry Wills convincingly argues, at Gettysburg President Lincoln had to leapfrog back over the Constitution to the Declaration to restore the centrality of the idea “that all men are created equal.”  Even then, it was many decades after Gettysburg before we began making real progress in the struggle for equality for African-Americans, just as it took decades before we made real progress in the struggle for equality for women.   Today we can acknowledge that the fulfillment of rights of Africa-Americans and women has improved, but we still have a long way to go before we are near the end of the road to equality.And so it is for other groups marginalized and discriminated against in our society.  In the last few years our country has taken astonishing steps towards equality for LGBT people.  I am proud to say that the ACLU has played a critical role in that progress, including our historic victory in convincing the Supreme Court  that the Defense of Marriage Act violated equal protection by denying married gay couples recognition under federal law.We have made progress, but much remains to be done. Hardly anywhere is that as true as in our own state, where under the guise of religious liberty some legislators want to legalize discrimination against LGBT couples.But this fight in Kansas is not about religious liberty, it’s about giving persons with certain convictions the right to impose their views on others.  This is, pure and simple, an attempt to institutionalize the tyranny of a set of ideas that increasingly most Americans reject.Today, as civil libertarians, as people who are religious, as people who are not religious but care about working to fulfill the promise of the Declaration of Independence, we are called on

By Mary B.

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Legalized discrimination: Kansas House Bill 2453

Under the guise of “religious freedom,” Kansas House Bill 2453 would allow discrimination against LGBT people.  The opposition to the bill has been tremendous, coming from not only advocates and citizens who believe in equality, but also from concerned business leaders.  While the legislation seems derailed for the time being, the ACLU will be watching closely for attempts to revive it. 

By Mary B.

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