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Posted inLocal News

California voters reject measure that would have prohibited forced prison labor

by Associated Press November 12, 2024November 11, 2024

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An incarcerated man picks up trash at San Quentin State Rehabilitation Center in 2021. Mandatory labor has long been an accepted practice in California's prison system, where hourly wages start at 16 cents. California voters have rejected Proposition 6 on the Nov. 5 ballot that would have banned involuntary servitude for prisoners. (Phouen You/San Quentin New Archives via Bay City News)

By SOPHIE AUSTIN | Associated Press/Report for America

California voters have rejected a measure on the November ballot that would have amended the state constitution toย ban forced prison labor.

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The constitution already prohibits so-called involuntary servitude, but an exception allows it to be used as a punishment for crime.

That exemption became a target of criminal justice advocates concerned that prisoners are often paid less than $1 an hour for labor such as fighting fires, cleaning cells and doing landscaping work at cemeteries.

The failed Proposition 6 was included in aย package of reparations proposalsย introduced by lawmakers this year as part of an effort to atone and offer redress for a history of discrimination against Black Californians.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law in the package in September to issue a formal apology for the state’s legacy of racism against African Americans. But state lawmakers blocked a bill that would have created an agency to administer reparations programs, and Newsom vetoed a measure that would have helped Black families reclaim property taken unjustly by the government through eminent domain.

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โ€˜Dismantling the remnants of slaveryโ€™

Abolish Slavery National Network co-founder Jamilia Land, who advocated for the initiative targeting forced prison labor, said the measure and similar ones in other states are about โ€œdismantling the remnants of slaveryโ€ from the books.

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โ€ข Enslaved behind bars: California incarcerated forced to work for as little as 16 cents hourly

โ€œWhile the voters of California did not pass Proposition 6 this time, we have made significant progress,โ€ she said in a statement. โ€œWe are proud of the movement we have built, and we will not rest until we see this issue resolved once and for all.โ€

George Eyles, a retired teacher in Brea who voted against Prop 6, said he found it confusing that the initiative aimed to ban slavery, which was outlawed in the U.S. in the 19th century. After finding out more about the measure, Eyles decided it likely would not be economically feasible since prison labor helps cut costs for upkeep, he said.

โ€œI really couldnโ€™t get any in-depth information about … the thinking behind putting that whole Prop. 6 forward, so that made me leery of it,โ€ Eyles said. โ€œIf I really canโ€™t understand something, then Iโ€™m usually going to shake my head, โ€˜No.โ€™โ€

Multiple states โ€” including Colorado, Tennessee, Alabama and Vermont โ€” have voted to rid their constitutions of forced labor exemptions in recent years, and this week they were joined by Nevada, which passed its own measure.

โ€œWe are proud of the movement we have built, and we will not rest until we see this issue resolved once and for all.โ€ Jamilia Land, Abolish Slavery National Network co-founder

In Colorado โ€” the first state to get rid of an exception for slavery from its constitution in 2018 โ€” incarcerated people alleged in a 2022 lawsuit filed against the corrections department that they were still being forced to work.

Proposition 6โ€™s ballot language did not explicitly include the word โ€œslaveryโ€ like measures elsewhere, because the California Constitution was amended in the 1970s to remove an exemption for slavery. But the exception for involuntary servitude as a punishment for crime remained on the books.

The 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution also bans slavery and involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime.

Proposition 6 saw the second-least campaign spending among the 10 statewide initiatives on the ballot this year, about $1.9 million, according to the California Secretary of Stateโ€™s office. It had no formal opposition.


Sophie Austin is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.ย Report for Americaย is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on Twitter: @sophieadanna

Tagged: 2024 California Election, Associated Press, crime, criminal justice reform, criminal justice system, election, Election 2024, election results, Gov. Gavin Newsom, incarceration, inmates, involuntary servitude, politics, Proposition 6, reparations

Local News Matters brings community coverage to the SF Bay Area so that the people, places and topics that deserve more attention get it. Our nonprofit newsroom is supported by the generosity of readers like you via tax-deductible donations toย Bay City News Foundation.

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