Cop: "It's Your Word Against Mine."

By Griffith Fuller

Griffith Fuller, Jr. Photo by Daniel A. McKee

It's Time to Repeal the Maximum Family Grant Rule

For more than 20 years, California has maintained a policy of denying financial support to babies born while their families are receiving CalWORKs basic needs grants for older siblings. This policy is known as the Maximum Family Grant (MFG) rule. The only exceptions are for reported rape and incest, and the failure of certain invasive, long-acting contraceptives.

By Ashley Morris

Black and white photo of cupped hands holding a paper cut-out of a family

Shut Up and Listen: Race and Justice in Schools

By Nayna Gupta

Nayna Gupta

Fixing School Funding for Vulnerable Students in Stockton

Barely a generation ago, California’s schools were the greatest in the nation. Now, the state’s education is abysmal, ranking 49th in the nation on how much it spends on students.

By Laila Fahimuddin

Marching for school funding

Enough Is Enough: Poor Women Are Not Having Babies for Money

When I was young, my mom was on welfare. She wasn't unlike other moms on our South Los Angeles block: single, working multiple jobs, and doing her best to keep her head above water. My mom braved the stigma that is tethered to receiving state benefits. Braving it is what poor people do...

By Shanelle Matthews

photo of a mother holding two babies

Evict an Entire Family Because a Child Misses School? No Way, Says ACLU

The ACLU of Northern California, along with other public interest and legal services organizations, won an important victory last week for families who live in public housing.

By Luz Gonzalez

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The Truth About Life Without Parole: Condemned to Die in Prison

The facts prove that life in prison without the possibility of parole (LWOP) is swift, severe, and certain punishment. The reality is that people sentenced to LWOP have been condemned to die in prison and that’s what happens: They die in prison of natural causes, just like the majority of people sentenced to death. The differences: Sentencing people to death by execution is three times more expensive than sentencing them to die in prison. And if we make a mistake by sentencing an innocent person to death, it can’t be fixed.

truth about lwop

Historic Victory: Standing up for Japanese Americans During World War II

In 1942, San Leandro draftsman Fred Korematsu was jailed for refusing to obey President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066 ordering all citizens of Japanese descent to report to relocation centers. Korematsu and his fiancée had intended to leave California to marry.

Fred Korematsu

Racial Disparities in Arrests Contributing to Education Crisis for Oakland Students of Color

Oakland police are arresting school-age African American youth at shockingly high rates, contributing to a burgeoning education crisis for students of color, according to a new report released today by the Black Organizing Project, ACLU of Northern California, and Public Counsel. The report, "From Report Card to Criminal Record: The Impact of Policing Oakland Youth," reveals disturbing trends about police interaction with Oakland's youth of color and especially with African-American boys.

By ACLU of Northern California

policing oakland youth report