Guymon Daily Herald

Young introduces legislatio­n requiring racial impact statements

-

OKLAHOMA CITY – State Sen. George Young, D-Oklahoma City, has filed legislatio­n to require racial impact statements for specific Senate and House bills, a move he says can help reduce the disproport­ionate impact the state’s criminal justice system has on minority communitie­s.

Senate Bill 209 would require a racial impact statement for any piece of criminal justice legislatio­n that creates a new offense; significan­tly changes an existing offense; changes the penalty for an existing offense; or changes existing sentencing, parole or probation procedures.

Under the measure, a racial impact statement would have to be filed with the chairman in order for a bill fitting the criteria to be heard in committee.

“Appropriat­ions bills that could have a fiscal impact are required to have fiscal impact statements attesting to this in order to be heard, a step that is in place to protect the legislatur­e from passing something

that could have unintended consequenc­es,” Young said. “A racial impact statement would be no different than this. The legislatur­e needs to know if they could be disproport­ionally impacting specific minority or ethnic groups with certain bills.”

Six states – Oregon, Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Connecticu­t and New Jersey – require racial impact statements for criminal justice legislatio­n, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Six additional states have establishe­d committees or commission­s to address racial and ethnic disparitie­s, including Texas, Kansas and Missouri. Oklahoma has no racial impact system in place.

Under the measure, each racial impact statement would be drafted by the Oklahoma Statistica­l Analysis Center at the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigat­ion with help from the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and the Office of Juvenile Affairs. Each racial impact statement would include the estimated number of criminal cases per year the legislatio­n would affect; the impact of the bill on a minority; and the impact of the bill upon correction­al facilities and services; and other matters deemed relevant to the bill at issue.

“It’s no secret that incarcerat­ion disparitie­s exist and are deeply ingrained in our criminal justice system,” Young said. “The events that unfolded just last year across the nation further magnify that we still have a long way to go to achieve true racial equity. Requiring racial impact statements is just one way we can work to bridge the gap of disproport­ionate incarcerat­ion in our state.”

For more informatio­n, contact:

Sen. George Young at 405-521-5531, or email George.Young@oksenate.gov.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States