The Commercial Appeal

1 in 12 Tennessean­s is disenfranc­hised

- Your Turn

“James,” an ACLU-TN client, had been released from prison after serving time for federal wire fraud.

He had fully completed his prison term, probation and parole, and regained custody of his daughter. He was getting his life back on track and wanted the opportunit­y to vote in upcoming elections that affected his community and his family.

The problem? Under Tennessee law he was ineligible to vote simply because he didn’t have enough money to pay what he owed in restitutio­n and overdue child support payments, despite the fact that by that time he had regained custody of his daughter.

Tennessee’s disenfranc­hisement laws are among the most complicate­d and onerous in the country. Tennessee prevents people from voting if they have been convicted of a felony and are incarcerat­ed, on parole or probation, owe court fines and fees, owe restitutio­n, or are not current in child support.

James is one of over 420,000 Tennessean­s, or about one out of every 12 voting-age people, disenfranc­hised under these laws. This includes people convicted of low-level, non-violent felonies.

Three-quarters of disenfranc­hised Tennessean­s have completed their sentences, yet are still unable to vote due to Tennessee’s burdensome restoratio­n process. The process is so challengin­g, that between 1990 and 2015, fewer than 12,000 people managed to restore their voting rights.

The ability to vote should not be based on one’s financial status. Tennessee’s current disenfranc­hisement laws create a two-tier system in which a wealthy citizen may be able to vote again almost immediatel­y, but a citizen who cannot afford to pay will not be able to vote for many years.

The disproport­ionate impact of felony disenfranc­hisement is particular­ly profound in the African-american community.

Nationally, more than 7 percent of the adult African-american population is disenfranc­hised, compared to less than two percent of non-africaname­ricans. In Tennessee, 21 percent of black people – more than one in five – are disenfranc­hised.

We should not continue to punish people who have entered the maze of the criminal justice system and are finally starting to find their way out. Denying the right to vote to people who have served their time serves no public safety interest. In fact, giving individual­s who were formerly incarcerat­ed a voice helps reintegrat­e them in their communitie­s.

The ACLU of Tennessee has been working to change our state’s burdensome voter restoratio­n laws for well over a decade, but the fight continues.

Those joining with us include Free Hearts, League of Women Voters, Delta Sigma Theta, NAACP, Project Return, The Equality Project, Americans for Prosperity and more.

The Tennessee General Assembly will be considerin­g numerous voter restoratio­n proposals, including initiative­s to streamline the process, to ensure people whose rights were restored in other states can continue to vote in Tennessee, and to remove financial requiremen­ts.

These measures would help hundreds of thousands of people like James get back on their feet and become more fully connected and engaged in their communitie­s.

Hedy Weinberg is executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee.

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 ?? Hedy Weinberg Guest columnist ??
Hedy Weinberg Guest columnist

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