Publication | BLOG
Feb 25, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 6

Turnaround, the first big deadline of the Kansas Legislative session has come and gone, meaning the landscape of the legislative session has changed with key bills rapidly pushed through the chambers, and others dying in committee. “Turnaround” means bills that were introduced in the first two months of the legislative session must be passed through their original chamber (House or Senate) by February 20th to stay alive in the legislative process. If a bill fails to pass through its respective chamber, the bill is considered “dead” and will not move forward in the legislative session. This week also saw its first veto override on an extremely harmful bill that is a blatant attack on the LGBTQ+ community. Plus, Republican leadership seeks to pass a concurrent resolution which would politicize the Kansas Supreme Court and undermine its ability to protect our constitutional rights. This legislative update will keep you up to date on which bills are still in play under the capitol dome.
Publication | BLOG
Feb 24, 2025
corecivic
  • Immigrants' Rights|
  • +1 Issue

We Cannot Trust CoreCivic to Keep Anyone Safe — in Leavenworth or Anywhere Else

As a for-profit prison corporation, CoreCivic has a long track record of running facilities rife with dangerous conditions across the country—so much so that the company rebranded in 2016 to separate itself from its previous identity, Corrections Corporation of America. Across the country, CoreCivic is known for its mismanagement, forced labor, inhumane living conditions, excessive use of force, prolonged use of solitary confinement, medical negligence, physical and sexual abuse, spying and voyeurism, overcrowding, understaffing, and other civil rights violations. There are decades' worth of traumatized and deeply harmed staff and residents whose lives were forever changed, many by permanent and debilitating injuries, from their experiences in a CoreCivic facility. It has been no different at the CoreCivic facility in Leavenworth, Kansas.
Publication | BLOG
Feb 18, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 5

We are almost a third of the way through the legislative session! As turnaround approaches at the end of this week (February 20th), committees crammed in many bill hearings on a variety of different areas to keep bills from dying in committee (this would happen if the bill did not receive a committee hearing before February 20th), which would end the bill’s life for this year’s session. Monday (2/17) was the final day non-exempt committees met before turnaround, which means only a handful of committees will continue to meet throughout the coming weeks. If a bill did not receive a hearing, but is moved to an exempt committee, the bill is still considered alive for this session and has a chance to continue through the legislative process. We hope you find this legislative update helpful in knowing which bills of interest will continue to move through the legislative process and which bills will die in committee.
Publication | BLOG
Feb 13, 2025
gac
  • LGBTQ+ Rights

Take Action on SB 63

Many of you took action a few weeks ago by asking lawmakers to vote NO on SB 63 and protect parents’ rights to make decisions that are best for their kids. Check out how your legislators voted on the KS legislature website. Despite hearing from countless Kansans like you who oppose this extremist and harmful law, both the House and Senate voted to pass SB 63, which would ban gender affirming care for trans youth.
Publication | BLOG
Feb 10, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 4

As of February 9, 2025, the Kansas Legislature is approaching the "turnaround" deadline on February 20, 2025. This critical date requires most bills to pass out of their initial committees to remain active for the session. As this deadline approaches, committee schedules are rapidly evolving, making it challenging to predict which bills will advance.
Publication | BLOG
Feb 3, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 3

During week three of the Kansas legislative session, civil liberties continued to be the target of the legislature. This remains a multi-front assault. Attacks on voting access, abortion bans, and singling out immigrant communities have all been on the docket this week. A gender-affirming care ban passed and is on its way to the Governor’s desk, where we expect the bill to be vetoed. It remains to be seen whether Republicans will have enough votes for a veto-override. But there was good news as well. A bill to ban juvenile fines and fees was introduced, along with a bill that would help restore voting rights for people who have completed their sentences. The ACLU of Kansas will continue to fight for the civil rights and liberties of all Kansans’ this session.
Publication | BLOG
Jan 31, 2025
systemic racism
  • Criminal Legal Reform

Probation in Kansas Criminalizes Poverty and Continues a Legacy of Systemic Racism

Probation, the legal practice that allows an individual to remain in their community for all or part of the sentence for a criminal conviction, dates back as far as the early 19th century. Originally, the practice may have been intended to allow the court to punish an offender without punishing those who relied upon his support, or perhaps in the face of a harsh sentence to “let the punishment fit the crime.” It may be that the judges who originally meted out probation instead of prison or other harsh punishments intended to do a service to offenders and their communities. But in the 21st century, we see that probation can do more harm than good, especially when it permanently subjects poor Kansas and particularly Kansans of color to repugnant, Reconstruction era-like restrictions.
Publication | BLOG
Jan 27, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 2

After two weeks of the legislative session, civil liberties remain heavily under attack. Attacks have come from all angles during week two, from decreasing voting access, to reintroducing abortion bans, to banning gender affirming care for minors. Yet, the ACLU of Kansas remains vigilant in defending the rights of Kansas under the capitol dome.
Publication | BLOG
Jan 17, 2025
legislative session

Legislative Update: Week 1 (January 13–17)

The 2024 elections marked a significant turning point in Kansas politics. Under newly drawn district maps designed to consolidate Republican power, the party emerged with a supermajority in both the House (70%) and Senate (78%). This dominance grants Republicans the ability to override any veto by the Democratic governor without significant bipartisan support. Only five Republican legislators in either chamber would need to join Democrats to block legislation. This unparalleled power raises questions about whether Republicans will use this opportunity for bold reforms or repeat past experiments, such as the controversial Brownback tax policies that led to severe fiscal challenges.