Liberation Not Incarceration: Hundreds from across Texas unite for a day of empowerment and advocacy at Texas Capitol

Day packed with events led by those directly impacted by the criminal justice system and will speak out on bills that directly impact their communities

WHAT: #kNOwMORE2019 Advocacy Day

WHO: Formerly incarcerated people across Texas

WHEN:   February 4, series of events taking place from 9:30 to 3:00PM; Art Installation from 9:30–3:00PM; Spoken word performance from 12:00–12:30PM (Capitol rotunda); Rally in collaboration with Texas Inmate Families Association from 1:00–2:00PM

WHERE: Texas State Capitol, South Steps

AUSTIN — Members of Texas Advocates for Justice (TAJ) and Grassroots Leadership will gather hundreds of formerly incarcerated community members, their families, and advocates from Austin, San Antonio, Houston, and the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Those attending the event include community members impacted by incarceration and see these issues as interconnected and rooted in systems of oppression and exploitation. The full day of events include a rally on the Capitol steps, a powerful art installation in the North Central Gallery created by formerly incarcerated people, and legislative visits.

Those formerly incarcerated, deported, and their families demand that communities impacted by deportation and incarceration policies be consulted in a meaningful way when policies are written, amended, or enacted. Legislative visits are scheduled in order for directly impacted people to advocate for public health approaches to drug use; end fines, fees, and surcharges for people who cannot afford to pay; remove obstacles to reentry and dramatically change parole for adults and juveniles; create independent oversight for Texas prisons; fix the bail system, and more.

“Those of us who are impacted need our voices to be heard,” said Annette Price, statewide organizer for Texas Advocates for Justice, a network of formerly incarcerated people and their loved ones. “We must be a key part in ending this system of modern-day slavery called mass incarceration."

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