From Maritza Perez - DPA <[email protected]>
Subject End the ban on public assistance for drug convictions
Date August 5, 2021 7:16 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Friend,

For decades, there’s been a federal lifetime ban on people with drug convictions from accessing nutritional and other forms of critical public assistance.  

Now there’s finally real support for ending this cruel policy in the White House and Congress. The MEAL Act would lift the ban – it was introduced in the House last May, today it was introduced in the Senate, and we have a shot at getting it included in the budget reconciliation package being negotiated right now.  

Help us build support by telling your Senators to cosponsor the bill and fight to get it included in the budget.

===========
TAKE ACTION: [link removed]
=========== 

A drug conviction should never be the basis to deny a person their most basic needs. Yet during the tough-on-crime era in the 1990s, Congress imposed a lifetime ban on people with felony drug convictions from receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP or food stamps) and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF or welfare) benefits. 

Individuals and families who qualify for SNAP and TANF have low income, generally living at or below the poverty line. SNAP provides monthly benefits to help buy food. And TANF provides income assistance, childcare, education and job training, transportation, and a variety of other services. 

This ban – another prohibitionist policy driven by the drug war – disproportionately harms women and people of color, and it also affects children – because when a parent is made ineligible for SNAP and TANF, their family receives a much lower overall household benefit. 

Denying people and their families these crucial benefits have had disastrous consequences, depriving them of the support they need to survive especially during a pandemic when so many are already struggling.  

Congress must act now to help people in need. Contact your Senators in support of lifting the ban on public assistance for drug convictions.

===========
TAKE ACTION: [link removed]
===========  

For far too long, drug war propaganda has shaped our beliefs on who is worthy of our support, and restricted access to sorely needed public assistance. Together, let’s put an end to it. 

Sincerely,

Maritza Perez
Director, National Affairs
Drug Policy Alliance

Take Action: [link removed]

The Drug Policy Alliance depends entirely on private donations to fund our work to end the war on drugs and promote new drug policies grounded in science, compassion, health, and human rights. Your support is crucial – thank you!

Donate: [link removed]

You have received this email because [email protected] is a member of the Drug Policy Alliance mailing list.

Receive fewer emails [link removed].

Contact Us. [link removed]

Drug Policy Alliance
131 West 33rd St., 15th Floor New York, NY 10001

Unsubscribe. [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis