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File #: 191090    Version: 0
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 10/15/2019 In control: COMMON COUNCIL
On agenda: Final action: 11/5/2019
Effective date:    
Title: Resolution supporting 2019 Wisconsin Senate Bill 348, relating to restoring the right to vote to certain persons barred from voting as a result of a felony conviction, changing the information required on voter registration forms, and changing voting procedure for certain persons who are convicted of felonies.
Sponsors: ALD. RAINEY, ALD. COGGS, ALD. LEWIS, ALD. KOVAC
Indexes: STATE LEGISLATION, VOTING
Number
191090

Version
ORIGINAL

Reference

Sponsor
ALD. RAINEY, COGGS, LEWIS AND KOVAC

Title
Resolution supporting 2019 Wisconsin Senate Bill 348, relating to restoring the right to vote to certain persons barred from voting as a result of a felony conviction, changing the information required on voter registration forms, and changing voting procedure for certain persons who are convicted of felonies.

Analysis
This resolution supports 2019 Wisconsin Senate Bill 348 restoring the right to vote to certain persons barred from voting as a result of a felony conviction, changing the information required on voter registration forms and changing voting procedure for certain persons who are convicted of felonies. The resolution also directs the Department of Administration-Intergovernmental Relations Division to lobby the State Legislature to enact such legislation.

Body
Whereas, Over 5.3 million Americans, and over 62,000 Wisconsinites, cannot vote because of a felony conviction; and

Whereas, The vast majority of disfranchised Americans are no longer incarcerated, but are living in their communities on probation or parole, and 2.1 million have fully completed their sentences; and

Whereas, The impact of felony disfranchisement falls disproportionately upon communities of color with nearly 13% of African American men disfranchised due to felony convictions, a rate that is seven times the national average of one out of 41 adults; and

Whereas, One out of 9 African-American voters is disfranchised in Wisconsin, compared to one out of 50 Wisconsin voters, giving Wisconsin the 11th highest rate of African-American disfranchisement in the United States; and

Whereas, Disfranchising persons after release from prison is antithetical to the reentry process and harmful to the long-term reintegration of ex-offenders into society; now, therefore, be it

Resolved, By the Common Council of Milwaukee, that the City supports 2019 Wisconsin Senate Bill 348, restoring t...

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