Calaveras County Board of Supervisors Wrestles With Separation of Church and State

Calaveras County Board of Supervisors passed a law to praise a local organization not just for its work in the community but also for its mission of “inviting” women in the community to “see for themselves the many blessings that can come from living the teachings of Christ.” They also failed to allow community members - many of whom were at the meeting to oppose this resolution - to speak out about this resolution before they took their vote, a clear violation of our state’s Brown Act, which requires that our public officials listen to us before they make decisions like this.

By Novella Coleman

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Corporations Can’t Go to Church, but They Can Go to Court

This week’s unprecedented Hobby Lobby decision deserves the widespread criticism it has attracted: the Supreme Court decreed that corporations, which lack souls, have religious beliefs; even more jaw-dropping, it decreed that those anthropomorphic beliefs trump workers’ health, reproductive choices and equality.

By Maggie Crosby

graphic saying "protect access to birth control"

Sleep-Deprived + Hungry + Degraded = Fair Hearing?

While immigration detention is supposed to be “civil” detention, as opposed to incarceration as punishment for a crime, the conditions that immigrants experience are anything but civil. People detained by ICE are bused daily to immigration court wearing jumpsuits and metal handcuffs, belly chains, and leg irons in San Francisco.

By Jenny Zhao

shackled prisoners (staged at a protest in front of SF Federal Building)

What the SCOTUS Buffer Zone Ruling Means for Californians

Today, the Supreme Court struck down a Massachusetts law creating a 35 foot buffer zone around abortion facilities. The Court balanced two fundamental rights: freedom of speech on public sidewalks and women’s right to access reproductive health care. At the ACLU, we care deeply about both rights, and believe that in balancing rights in conflict the goal is to safeguard both. In our view, the Court gave too little weight to the real world experience of women who have suffered harassment, obstruction and intimidation in seeking care.

By Maggie Crosby

Photo by kbrooks via flickr.

Supremes Update Fourth Amendment for Digital Era

The United States Supreme Court unanimously acknowledged what common sense tells us and everyone who owns a cell phone (yes, that would be just about everyone) already knows: Our cell phones have a whole lot of private information about us. The Court therefore held that cops need a warrant to search a cell phone.

By Linda Lye

Get a warrant

My Time as an Intern at the ACLU

Growing up in any city it is easy to see the inequalities that permeate every-day life. Growing up in the Bay Area has provided me with so many opportunities to become aware and involved in challenging those inequalities. My time as an intern at the ACLU of Northern California helped me understand how to better do that.

By Graciela Olguin

Graciela Olguin

3 Black Men Executed in 3 States in 24 hours. And it’s Juneteenth.

Today is Juneteenth and the United States just executed three black men from three southern states in 24 hours. This is outrageous.

By Ana Zamora

Activist opposed to the death penalty

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

California Counties Say "No" to ICE

While we await much-needed federal immigration reform, dozens of counties are refusing ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) requests to detain immigrants in local jails.

By Kiran Savage-Sangwan

Ruth Montaño