Economic Justice
We鈥檙e working to ensure that people living in poverty in the Deep South, especially communities of color, are not punished or exploited because of their economic status.
They鈥檙e victimized by predatory lenders who trap them in a cycle of debt and rob them and their communities of scant resources.
They鈥檙e denied access to the social safety net by politicians who stigmatize low-income workers and blame them for our country鈥檚 problems.
They鈥檙e exploited and imprisoned by local governments that target impoverished communities for revenue-generating traffic fines 鈥 and by profiteering companies that charge exorbitant, unfair fees for privatized, court-ordered 鈥渟ervices鈥 like payment plans or probation oversight.聽
For more than 40 years, we鈥檝e represented the most vulnerable people in society 鈥 often those living in poverty who cannot afford to mount legal challenges to the injustices they face. Today, our Economic Justice Project is fighting back against deeply engrained policies and practices that exploit or punish the poor simply because of their economic status. Our work has a national reach but is primarily focused on the Deep South.聽
We are focused on the following priorities:
- Reforming policies that trap the poor in a cycle of court debt.
We鈥檙e shutting down modern-day debtors鈥 prisons across the Deep South. We鈥檙e stopping the use of 鈥渙ffender-funded鈥 services such as private 鈥減robation鈥 companies that use the power of the justice system to extort payments from the poor. We鈥檙e also committed to stopping the collateral consequences of court fines and fees, such as driver鈥檚 license suspensions, which can force people to choose between driving with a suspended license and losing a job. We鈥檙e working to reform bail systems that discriminate against the poor and to stamp out abusive practices by bail bond companies. We鈥檙e also dedicated to stopping the abuse of civil asset forfeiture, a practice that allows law enforcement to seize property but is too often driven by profit rather than public safety. - Protecting the safety net for the poor.
We鈥檙e working to ensure that the poor are not denied access to the social safety net. In Tennessee, for example, we filed suit when officials erected barriers to keep many residents from obtaining health care coverage under the state鈥檚 Medicaid program. Our suit led to a preliminary injunction that has helped thousands. More recently, we have sued in Kentucky to fight the state鈥檚 efforts to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipients 鈥 requirements that serve little purpose other than to deny services to those most in need. - Protecting low-income consumers from predatory practices.
We鈥檙e helping lead the charge to protect consumers from payday and title lenders that prey upon low-income communities and trap the poor in a cycle of debt. And, we鈥檙e educating the public and supporting a national effort to create strong consumer safeguards to rein in this rapacious industry. We鈥檙e also taking aim at abusive wage garnishment practices, and fighting the efforts of private companies to exploit the criminal justice system for their own profit.