FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Feb. 23, 2022
Contact: Lida Shepherd lshepherd@afsc.org

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – As West Virginia’s crisis of jail overcrowding and rising incarceration rates continue, justice-impacted people and criminal law reform advocates rallied on Tuesday at the State Capitol on various pieces of legislation currently under consideration. 

“Numerous bad bills which would increase incarceration have been introduced this session, as well as good bills that would ease barriers to reentry and recovery,” said Lida Shepherd with the American Friends Service Committee, “Today policymakers got to hear directly from people who understand the impacts these policies would have.”

Autumn McCraw told those gathered, “The reason so many of us are here today is because so many of us are impacted every single day by the criminal legal system. We know that we must show up and work with our legislature in order to make positive change.  And that we must vote.”  

McCraw continued, “And it’s not only those of us who are locked up or under supervision or struggling in reentry, but it’s also our families, our friends, entire communities.  No one is not affected by the decisions being made in this building.”

Kenny Matthews with WV Family of Convicted People spoke against HB 2257 which passed the House and if made law would add up to ten years of extended supervision for people convicted of certain drug felonies. 

Matthews said, “More imprisonment and supervision does not reduce our state’s ongoing drug problem.  This legislature keeps trying to address problems of addiction and overdoses in the same ineffective and expensive ways, making the problems worse not better.”

Speaking in favor of SB 488 which would restore voting rights for people on community supervision, Autumn McCraw shared how after her incarceration, getting her voters registration card was a crucial moment for her reentry, a signal that she could be a full-fledged member of society again.

SB 488 was supposed to be on third reading in the Senate on Tuesday but instead was sent to the Rules committee.

Greg Whittington with the WV Family of Convicted People said, “While we are very disappointed that the Senate has stalled movement on restoring voters rights for nearly 10,000 West Virginians, the good news is that the movement for criminal law reform is growing in the Mountain State and we are making our voices heard.”

The West Virginia Criminal Law Reform Coalition includes WVFCP, ACLU-WV, American Friends Service Committee, The Appalachian Prison Book Project, Jefferson County NAACP, Mountain State Justice, WV Center on Budget and Policy, The WV Council of Churches, and WV Re-Entry Councils.