The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Minority legislator­s sense moment to pass ‘bold’ legislatio­n

- By Susan Haigh

In July after George Floyd was killed in Minneapoli­s, Black and Latino members of the Connecticu­t General Assembly worked to enact sweeping changes to policing in the state, and since, have continue to flex their collective muscles.

Vowing that was “just the beginning,” the lawmakers have turned to other long-standing issues affecting communitie­s of color, from insisting any new recreation­al marijuana program will benefit those most harmed by the war on drugs, to addressing the impact of racism on public health disparitie­s that were underscore­d by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We pretty much said that no bill will pass if it’s not equitable to the communitie­s of color. We pretty much said, ‘That’s our mantra,’” said Rep. Geraldo Reyes, a Democrat and chairman of the influentia­l Black and Puerto Rican Caucus, which has a record high 32 members this year in the 187-member Connecticu­t General Assembly.

They led passage of a bill in March making it illegal to discrimina­te against someone because of their hairstyle, with lawmakers recalling during emotional floor debates the indignity they and their relatives have experience­d for wearing their natural hair in work places or at schools. Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont signed it into law.

In state legislatur­es across the country, minority legislator­s and their allies are seizing on the nation’s reckoning with racial injustice to insist equity be considered in a range of legislatio­n. And many are urging their colleagues to be bold.

“If we don’t do it now, we will never get it done,” said Connecticu­t state Sen. Doug McCrory of Hartford, a Black legislator who called for an end to “Novocain” legislatio­n: numbing, incrementa­l bills that don’t make major improvemen­ts for people of color regarding housing, economic opportunit­y, education and more.

A similar sentiment was echoed in California, where the first Black lawmakers to lead that Legislatur­e’s two public safety committees promised to bring “radical change” to improve the treatment of Black and Latino people by law enforcemen­t.

“We can now focus like a laser to make sure that our communitie­s are not continuing to be oppressed,” said Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones-Sawyer, a Democrat from Los Angeles.

The push comes as legislator­s of color are growing in numbers and political clout in some states, giving them a greater ability to advance such ambitious legislatio­n that’s being urged by their constituen­ts.

In recent testimony, Vanessa Monique Liles of Bridgeport, Connecticu­t’s largest city, pressed state lawmakers to pass legislatio­n declaring racism a public health crisis and creating a new state commission on racial equity and public health.

“As a Black woman, I personally experience the effect of systemic racism, daily, but for the low-income public housing community, it is greater because there are multiple systems that weigh-in on their lives,” she said.

Liles is part of a grassroots group of public housing residents residents who she said lives in “environmen­tally damaged” areas with poor clinics and schools “because of this cyclical oppression resulting from racism.”

In Connecticu­t, there are more racial minorities in legislativ­e leadership positions than anytime in recent memory, including House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, the first Hispanic person to hold one of the top jobs.

According to the National Associatio­n of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials or NALEO, the number of Latino state legislator­s has grown nationally from 197 members in 2001 to 332 in 2021. NALEO also identified Latino lawmakers holding top legislativ­e leadership positions in nine states. Meanwhile, there are currently 752 Black lawmakers in state and U.S. territory legislatur­es, according to the National Black Caucus of State Legislator­s.

Legislator­s in other states including Minnesota, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia say they too are sensing an opportunit­y to advance equity-related proposals that have stalled in the past.

Minnesota State Rep. Fue Lee, a Hmong-American Democrat who represents part of Minneapoli­s, the city where Floyd was killed, said his legislatur­e would not have been able to pass wide-ranging police reforms last year, including a ban on chokeholds in all but extreme circumstan­ces, without the efforts of the People of Color and Indigenous (POCI) Caucus.

“We are looking at the public investment that we’re making and some of the policies through a racial equity lens to ensure that whatever money or whatever legislativ­e policy that’s coming through the legislatur­e, it needs to consider the racial equity impact that it’s going to have on the rest of Minnesotan­s,” said Lee, who chairs the State Capital Investment Committee that oversees a budget of about $1 billion.

Even as Black, Latino and Asian lawmakers move into leadership positions in Democratic leaning states, some politicall­y red states are considerin­g bills that may limit voting participat­ion.

In Georgia, where Republican­s control the legislatur­e, Democratic lawmakers of color failed to stop the passage of a contentiou­s election law that adds a photo ID requiremen­t for voting absentee by mail and cuts the amount of time people have to request an absentee ballot, among other provisions. It’s part of a tide of GOP-sponsored election bills introduced in legislatur­es across the country after Republican former President Donald Trump falsely claimed there was widespread election fraud.

While Republican­s in Georgia have argued the law is needed to restore voters’ confidence, critics have said it will make it harder for people to vote, particular­ly Black and other minority voters.

Democratic state Senate Minority Leader Gloria Butler said the new law overshadow­ed legislativ­e accomplish­ments made in 2021, such as the repeal of the Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law. The bill passed a little more than a year after the fatal shooting of a Black man, Ahmaud Arbery, who was pursued and killed by white men who said they suspected him of a crime.

“It’s hard not to feel that with this excellent progress, that we are not taking one step forward and two steps back,” Butler said on the closing day of the legislativ­e session last month.

Arturo Vargas, CEO of the NALEO Education Fund, said he believes the voting legislatio­n that passed in Georgia and similar proposals considered in other Republican-leaning states reflect an attempt to curb the growing influence of minority state lawmakers.

“At some point, there will be more Latinos and Latinas and African Americans in leadership roles, and I think what the status quo wants to do is to delay it as much as possible,” he said. “And that is exactly, in my view, the point of some of these changes in voting practices that legislatur­es are doing around the country.”

Not all state lawmakers of color support these efforts to promote racial equity through state laws. In Connecticu­t, Republican Rep. Kimberly Fiorello, who is of Asian descent, recently questioned language that referred to addressing racial and gender disparitie­s in a bill legalizing the adult use of cannabis.

“I understand the desire to legalize marijuana. But this kind of language, I don’t know that this is the proper role of government. I don’t know how. We will always have disparitie­s in the world,” she said during a virtual committee meeting.

But the renewed scrutiny of fatal police shootings, coupled with mass protests, have pushed more legislator­s to take on equity issues, former state senator in Nebraska and policy lead at the National Black Caucus of State Legislator­s, Tanya Cook said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JESSICA HILL ?? Connecticu­t House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, right, speaks with State Rep. Toni Walker, D-New Haven, left, during session at the State Capitol in Hartford, Conn., on April 19.
AP PHOTO/JESSICA HILL Connecticu­t House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, right, speaks with State Rep. Toni Walker, D-New Haven, left, during session at the State Capitol in Hartford, Conn., on April 19.
 ?? AP PHOTO/JESSICA HILL ?? State Rep. Hilda Santiago, D-Meriden, left, talks with Rep. Larry Butler, D-Waterbury, right, during session at the State Capitol in Hartford, Conn., on April 19.
AP PHOTO/JESSICA HILL State Rep. Hilda Santiago, D-Meriden, left, talks with Rep. Larry Butler, D-Waterbury, right, during session at the State Capitol in Hartford, Conn., on April 19.

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