Legislation & Policy
Sex Workers and Advocates Coalition
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Criminalization & Incarceration
NCLR joined the Sex Workers Advocates Coalition in 2018 to support the campaign to decriminalize sex work in the District of Columbia. NCLR co-leads the efforts to build support in the LGBTQ community for sex work decriminalization.
MoreLegislation & Policy
Federal AIDS Policy Partnership
NCLR is a member of the Federal AIDS Policy Partnership (FAPP), which is a national coalition of more than 120 local, regional, and national organizations advocating for federal funding, legislation and policy to end the HIV epidemic in the United States, and is active in the Structural Interventions Working Group.
MoreLegislation & Policy
Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019 (B23-0318)
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Criminalization & Incarceration
NCLR supports the DC DECRIMNOW Campaign to pass the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019 (B23-0318), which would decriminalize consensual sex work for those who are 18 years of age or older and create a task force to monitor the implementation and effects of the act. NCLR has been an active member of the camaign by helping to lead the efforts to build support for the legislation by moblizing LGBTQ organizations and educating the DC LGBTQ community on the need for sex work decriminlization to address the health and saftey concerns facing sex wokers.
MoreLegislation & Policy
Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act (H.R. 2415/ S. 1243)
- Immigration/Asylum (Hogar)
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Criminalization & Incarceration
The Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act makes would make needed reforms to the U.S. immigration system, including ending mandatory detention, ensuring that only those who are a threat to the community are detained and creating a presumption of release, establishing a presumption that vulnerable individuals–including LGBTQ individuals, young people, and victims of crimes–should be placed in community-based supervision programs rather than detention facilities, removing the minimum bond amount of $1,500 for release, requiring immigration judges to consider an individual’s ability to pay when setting a bond, and other changes.
MoreLegislation & Policy
SAFE SEX Workers Study Act
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Criminalization & Incarceration
NCLR supports the “SESTA/FOSTA Examination of Secondary Effects for Sex Workers Study Act,” or the “SAFE SEX Workers Study Act.” The bill requires a federal study on how losing access to online platforms impacts the health and safety of people in the commercial sex trade.
In 2018, Congress passed SESTA/FOSTA, which vastly expanded the civil and criminal liability of websites for hosting information related to the sex trade. In response, dozens of websites closed, displacing sex workers who utilized those websites to earn a living in order to stay housed, fed and safe. The SAFE SEX Workers Study Act seeks to understand the collateral consequences of the SESTA/FOSTA and other measures to shutdown online platforms.
MoreLegislation & Policy
DREAM Act
In late-2017 to early-2018, NCLR led the LGBTQ coalition advocating for the passage of the DREAM Act to provide permanent legal protections for undocumented people who arrived in the U.S. at an early age (“Dreamers”). In June 2019, The House passed the DREAM and Promise Act, which provides a pathway for citizenship for Dreamers and holders of Temporary Protected Status. The Senate has not voted on the bill.
MoreLegislation & Policy
2018 Farm Bill Protecting Food Assistance
- Relationships & Family > Reproductive Justice
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Rural communities
During the 2018 re-authorization of the Farm bill, House Republicans passed a version that made cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP aka “food stamps”). NCLR and other LGBTQ groups joined anti-hunger and poverty groups to fight the cuts. Congress ultimately passed a bipartisan farm bill, which was signed by President Trump, that protected SNAP.
According to 2017 data from the Center for American Progress, LGBTQ people and their families were 2.3 times more likely to participate in SNAP than were non-LGBTQ people, with 22.7% of their nationally-representative LGBTQ survey respondents reporting using SNAP, a statistically significant difference when compared to non-LGBTQ respondents. Among LGBTQ people with a disability, 41.2% reported receiving SNAP.
MoreLegislation & Policy
SESTA/FOSTA
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Racial & Economic Justice > Criminalization & Incarceration
President Trump signed SESTA/FOSTA into law in April 2018. The law expanded civil and criminal liability for online platforms by expanding liability for platforms used by third parties to engage in sex trafficking. It also created a new federal crime promotion or facilitation of prostitution, which could include communities collecting and distributing information about violence, connecting with clients for the ability to screen or workers directly sharing safety techniques on-line.
NCLR worked with sex worker rights, LGBTQ, anti-trafficking, and technology organizations to oppose the bill. While NCLR opposes trafficking, we believed sex workers who warned they would be harmed by the law, because it would cause them to be kicked off-line and forced back on the streets where its more dangerous to trade sex.
MoreLegislation & Policy
FAMILY Act
- Relationships & Family > Parenting
- Relationships & Family > Reproductive Justice
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Discrimination > Employment
The FAMILY Act would establish a national paid leave insurance program. Specifically, it would provide eligible employees with up to 12 weeks of partial income to address their own serious health condition, including pregnancy or childbirth; to deal with the serious health condition of a parent, spouse, domestic partner or child; to care for a new child; and/or specific military care-giving and leave purposes.
MoreLegislation & Policy
Department of Labor Paid Sick Leave Comments
- Relationships & Family > Reproductive Justice
- Racial & Economic Justice > Race & Poverty
- Discrimination > Employment
On April 25, 2016, NCLR submitted comments supporting the Department of Labor’s proposed rule requiring federal contractors to provide paid sick leave for workers to take time off when they or a family member is sick.
More