The Denver Post

Removal push starts

- By Joey Bunch

A campaign for a November ballot measure to make “slavery” nothing but history in Colorado kicked off Tuesday.

Amendment T would remove a reference to slavery in the Colorado Constituti­on, written in 1876, that states, “There shall never be in this state either slavery or involuntar­y servitude, except as a punishment for crime.”

The latter clause is a reference to prison labor. Proponents say work programs would not be affected by the amendment. The archaic use of the word slavery, however, is unnecessar­y and conjures up remembranc­es of the nation’s conflict over the issue, said some of the about 100 people who attended Tuesday’s rally.

Both chambers of the Colorado legislatur­e voted unanimousl­y to put the constituti­onal amendment on the ballot during the last legislativ­e session.

State Sen. Kent Lambert, a Republican from Colorado Springs, noted that the state was well-represente­d in the Civil War. Whether Western states such as Colorado would be free or slave-holding was one of the catalysts of that war.

“It’s part of the DNA of our state,” he said. “We oppose slavery. If it was an oversight (in the state constituti­on), we need to correct that oversight.”

Lambert, speaking at the foot of the Civil War soldier statue on the west side of the state Capitol, noted that the streets nearby are named Lincoln, Sherman and Grant for the Union’s leaders.

Rep. Jovan Melton, a Denver Democrat, said the issue is personal, for he is a descendant of slaves freed in North Carolina by the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on.

“In the 150 years since, the debate over slavery is over,” he said. “We all know it’s wrong in any and all forms, so why we still have an exemption or an exception in our state constituti­on doesn’t make sense.

“It doesn’t make any sense for the state of Colorado to say that slavery is OK in certain circumstan­ces.”

Faith leaders said the issue is larger than semantics for AfricanAme­ricans, religious values, the principle of liberty and the preservati­on of historical language in the state constituti­on.

“This is not a Colorado value,” said Lee McNeil of Shorter Community A.M.E. Church in Denver, referencin­g the subjugatio­n of a race. “Morally, we all deserve to have dignity, freedom and equality. Our Colorado communitie­s, families, churches, schools, places of worship must be able to focus on healing.”

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