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WHYR’s A Pause for Thought on felon disenfranchisement and the ongoing struggle for voting rights in Louisiana

Baton Rouge Community Radio’s A Pause for Thought recently covered felon disenfranchisement in Louisiana. You can listen to the episode here:

The program features an interview with Norris Henderson, executive director of VOTE (Voice Of The Experienced), a non-profit by, of, and for formerly incarcerated individuals and their families. VOTE is the lead plaintiff in VOTE v. Louisiana, currently in the First Circuit Court of Appeals, charging that the state unconstitutionally disenfranchises citizens on parole or probation. At issue is Section 10(A) of the Louisiana 1974 Constitution’s Declaration of Rights, which grants the right to vote with the exception of persons ‘under an order of imprisonment for conviction of a felony.’

Speaking to show host Wayne Parker, Mr. Henderson explained “If you ask the regular citizen what their understanding of ‘under an order of imprisonment’ means, they would literally say that you’re talking about somebody that’s in jail. And so for the legislature, [the Constitution] was passed by an election of over 600,000 people in 1973 and within less than two years 144 [legislators] decide to change it. So that’s been our challenge.” He also spoke about the extension of disenfranchisement to those under probation, saying “The thing about the person on probation, the person on probation never really went to jail; they got arrested, went to court and got sent to probation and went home. And so that’s not talking about a person that’s under orders of incarceration.”

Norris Henderson was falsely imprisoned in Louisiana for a crime he did not commit for 27 years, 10 months, and 18 days. He has since been cleared of the crime he was unjustly jailed for almost three decades.

VOTE and The Advancement Project are leading the litigation in Louisiana state court, which includes VOTE and eight individual plaintiffs. Their suit claims the voters approving the 1974 Louisiana Constitution did not intend disenfranchisement to extend to parolees and those on probation, rather the legislature changed the language of the law unconstitutionally two years later.

Almost 2/3rds of those disenfranchised for criminal convictions in Louisiana aren’t actually in jail or prison. Currently, 71,000 Louisiana citizens who are not incarcerated are barred from exercising their constitutional right to vote for parole or probation. 31,000 Louisianians in state prisons and parish jails are also disenfranchised. 3.04% of Louisiana’s adult citizens are disenfranchised, higher than the nationwide average of 2.47%.

Nationwide, more than 6 million Americans can’t vote due to felon disenfranchisement. Most of them are out of prison on parole or probation. In many states across the country, efforts are underway to reenfranchise former felons. In the South, home today to some of the most restrictive states for felon disenfranchisement, such laws were first implemented after the Civil War to reduce African Americans’ voting strength following the granting of black male suffrage through the 15th Amendment.

More information on VOTE can be found at: vote-nola.org .

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Life is a Rock and ALTitude coming to WHYR Wednesday nights starting November 8th @ 8pm

Fans of 96.9FM’s Wednesday night country, blues, and rock lineup will have two new shows to enjoy starting Wednesday November 8th. Joining Baton Rouge Community Radio will be Life is a Rock, 8:00-9:00pm, and ALTitude, from 9:00-10:00pm.

Life is a Rock is a classic rock program with a weekly theme on historic events and milestones of rock personalities from that week in history, playing the hits and the B-sides by those same artists.

ALTitude is a show featuring alternative pop / power pop music. From the show’s host, Madison Square: “I say it’s ‘adult alternative pop, power pop, classic alternative and whatever else fits the groove.’ It’s Elvis Costello meets Jellyfish. And there’s a Beatle Break halfway through. The show’s really about the music, the stories, the fun.”

You can read more about ALTitude here:

https://www.facebook.com/ALTituderadioshow/

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Good Points Radio now on WHYR Mondays @ 10:00pm

Good Points Radio is the newest show to join Baton Rouge Community Radio. Listen every Monday from 10 to 11pm for ‘the greatest music ever recorded, one hour at a time.’

Check out the show, listen to past episodes, and see the play list at Good Points’ website:

https://www.goodpointsradio.com/

One more thing: Every fourth Monday, Good Points Radio will become ‘Shakedown Radio’, Louisiana’s ONLY Grateful Dead radio hour! Does the neat freak in you prefer the un-paralleled perfection of May 1977? Or do you crave the rabid acid-test psychedelia of early 1969? Do you enjoy listening to Jerry scorch theaters and auditoriums off of the face of the earth? 1971 is for you. Is your space getting hot? Take an ’82 Althea and call me in the morning. Feel like a stranger? Need a miracle? Spring 1990 is your ticket. It’s gonna be some rare and different tunes – only on 96.9FM Baton Rouge!