Disclaimer: Only “roll call” votes are recorded.

Disclaimer: Only the attendance of committee members is recorded for committee meetings.

File #: O-298-22    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 10/5/2022 In control: Metro Council
On agenda: 12/1/2022 Final action: 12/1/2022
Title: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 37 OF THE LOUISVILLE/ JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO CODE OF ORDINANCES TO SUPPORT BUSINESSES WHICH HIRE PERSONS CONVICTED OF A CRIME BY REQUIRING A GOOD FAITH EFFORT TO INCREASE PROCUREMENT FROM THOSE SECOND CHANCE BUSINESSES.
Sponsors: Keisha Dorsey (D-3), Cassie Chambers Armstrong (D-8), Jecorey Arthur (D-4), Barbara Shanklin (D-2), Angela Bowens (D-1), Donna L. Purvis (D-5)
Attachments: 1. O-298-22 V.101322 Amending LMCO to Support Businesses which Hire Persons Convicted of a Crime.pdf, 2. ORD 185 2022.pdf
ORDINANCE NO. ________, SERIES 2022
title
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 37 OF THE LOUISVILLE/ JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO CODE OF ORDINANCES TO SUPPORT BUSINESSES WHICH HIRE PERSONS CONVICTED OF A CRIME BY REQUIRING A GOOD FAITH EFFORT TO INCREASE PROCUREMENT FROM THOSE SECOND CHANCE BUSINESSES.
body
SPONSORED BY: COUNCIL MEMBERS DORSEY, CHAMBERS ARMSTONG, SHANKLIN, ARTHUR, BOWENS, AND PURVIS

WHEREAS, the Prison Policy Initiative estimates that, as of 2020, there were 2.3 million Americans who were incarcerated; and
WHEREAS, the Brennan Center estimates that nearly half of Black men will be arrested by the time they turn 23; and
WHEREAS, that same organization states that the same number of Americans have a criminal record as have a four-year college degree; and
WHEREAS, one study estimates that having a felony conviction on one's record is correlated with a 22 percent decrease in annual earnings (Terry-Ann Craigie, Conviction, Imprisonment, and Lost Earnings: How Involvement with the Criminal Justice System Deepens Inequality (Sep. 15, 2020) https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/conviction-imprisonment-and-lost-earnings-how-involvement-criminal); and
WHEREAS, that same study shows that white people who have been incarcerated see their income trend upward after their incarceration, whereas Black and brown people do not; and
WHEREAS, studies suggest that even a misdemeanor conviction is associated with a 16% decrease in annual wages (Terry-Ann Craigie, Conviction, Imprisonment, and Lost Earnings: How Involvement with the Criminal Justice System Deepens Inequality (Sep. 15, 2020) https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/conviction-imprisonment-and-lost-earnings-how-involvement-criminal); and
WHEREAS, numerous studies show that Black individuals are more likely to be charged with a serious crime and more likely to face a longer sentence than are white people (An Unjust Burden, Vera: Institute o...

Click here for full text