The Judiciary Committee this week started the process of putting together its budget bill. The committee was given a $90 million target, which allows for some investments in the state’s court and corrections system, and in some public safety requests.
The bill, however, is a stark portrait of what the Senate Republican priorities aren’t; the bill contains no policing and criminal justice reform, no justice programs, and little in the way of reducing the intersectional causes behind crime and recidivism.
There has been renewed focus on transformational changes to Minnesota’s criminal justice and policing systems in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent beginning of the Derek Chauvin trial. Republicans promised they would continue this important work after passing a bare minimum reform bill last summer but have not kept that promise. Senate DFLers are committed to working with the House and Governor Walz through the conference committee to bring these important measures forward.
Senate DFLers have also worked to address systemic injustices present through much of our societal systems, including fixing practices that further harm victims of sexual assault, rewriting laws that disproportionately affect our communities of color, and uplifting programs that work to eliminate these injustices. None of this work is included in the Senate Republicans’ budget bill as it was introduced, including the recommendations to improve our state’s criminal sexual conduct statutes, legalizing adult-use recreational cannabis and expunging related drug offenses, or the establishment of an Office for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women.
It was only due to the hard work of Senate DFLers on the committee and the incredible determination of stakeholders and victims that pressured Senate Republicans into accepting the legislative recommendations from the state’s criminal sexual conduct working group, including language that would address the state’s Supreme Court ruling on the definition of “mentally incapacitated”. This was a victory for Minnesotans, but more work is still needed to address community demands.
Despite Republican roadblocks, Senate DFLers have and will continue to fight for the changes our communities are demanding as this bill works its way through the conference committee process. (SF 970)