Texas Civil Rights Project

The logo for the Texas Civil Rights Project.

Texas Civil Rights Project (TCRP) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization based in Austin, Texas.[1] TCRP uses legal advocacy to empower Texas communities and create policy change. In its twenty-five year history, TCRP has brought thousands of strategic lawsuits, defending voting rights, fighting institutional discrimination, reforming systems of criminal justice, and protecting First Amendment values.

TCRP has also assembled self-help manuals on issues such as Title IX and disability rights, given more than 400 civil rights talks and speeches across Texas to diverse groups (such as school conferences, police and law enforcement trainings, senior citizens’ organizations, and Continuing Legal Education programs), and published eleven Human Rights Reports on issues such as hate crimes, jail standards, and sexual harassment in Texas secondary schools.[2]

History

The South Texas Project (STP) was originally founded in 1972 by the ACLU.[3] In 1978, attorney James C. Harrington created Oficina Legal del Pueblo Unido, Inc. (OLPU) as a grassroots foundation in South Texas. STP came under the auspices of OLPU soon after OLPU was founded. OLPU was a part of the late-1960s farm worker movement headed by César Chávez. Chávez’s efforts to organize the South Texas farm worker community and to ultimately secure union contracts for them led to the birth of both OLPU and the United Farm Workers. OLPU is one of the oldest and foremost proponents of civil rights in the Rio Grande Valley, and has long worked on behalf of farm workers, abused immigrant women, people with disabilities, and economically disadvantaged people along the US/Mexico border.[4]

In September 1990, James Harrington founded Texas Civil Rights Project (TCRP) as a program of OLPU in Austin, Texas. STP also became a project of TCRP the same year.

Office Locations and Service Areas

Today, TCRP’s main office is located at the Michael Tigar Human Rights Center in Austin, Texas.[5] Other regional offices are in El Paso and the South Texas, which remained in its initial location in San Juan until the grand opening of its new facility in Alamo, TX on June 22, 2011.[6] TCRP also has offices in Houston and Dallas. While TCRP operates out of these regional offices, its services are available to individuals across the state.

A fire on October 30, 2013 severely damaged TCRP-Austin's office building. The fire was determined by the Austin Fire Department to be accidental. TCRP was back to work the day of the fire, as TCRP was immediately offered office space by Texas RioGrande Legal Aid.

Issues

TCRP works on the following issue areas.

Voting Rights

The need for democracy reform in Texas is critical given the state’s bottom-of-the-barrel voter turnout. In 2016, TCRP’s advocacy is geared towards improving Texas’ voter registration system — which, as President Obama noted, lags behind other states “because the folks who are currently governing the good state of Texas aren’t interested in having more people participate.” Millions of eligible voters remain shut out of the democratic process, a disparate number of whom are young, poor and people of color. No other legal advocacy organization in Texas is focused on these issues.

Instituitional Discrimination

State officials have a notorious history of discriminating against Texas residents due to immutable and arbitrary characteristics, such as race, ethnicity, religion, gender, gender identification, sexual orientation and physical disability. TCRP is committed to ferreting out discriminatory policies that restrict access to social and economic necessities.

Criminal Justice

Recent headlines have called into question policing tactics and incarceration conditions in Texas as well as in the rest of the country. TCRP, a long-time advocate in this field, has achieved notable reform at police departments, county jails and state prisons over the years, including significant changes in the Austin Police Department’s use-of-force policies in 2008. Our current docket focuses on the mistreatment of the mentally ill by law enforcement officials and the denial of constitutionally guaranteed protections to poor criminal defendants.

See below, Major Litigation: Criminal Justice System

First Amendment Rights

TCRP has fought for First Amendment values since its founding, protecting minorities from government overreach and ensuring the robust exchange of ideas.

Special Programs

Immigrant Victims Services

An estimated five million Texans have experienced family violence in their lifetimes and immigrants are even more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse than their citizen counterparts. TCRP empowers immigrant victims of abuse to leave abusers and become self-sufficient by providing direct legal services, as well as providing education and community advocacy to support survivors.

Specifically:

Veterans Services

Texas is home to over 1.6 million veterans of military service, the highest number in the nation. Veterans returning from deployment sometimes have mental, emotional, and physical injuries stemming from their service. TCRP empowers veterans and educates the community to remove any stigma the effects of war may still carry. TCRP provides advocacy and legal assistance to veterans with disabilities who experience serious civil rights violations or who face discrimination. TCRP also hosts “Know Your Rights” presentations with a focus on veterans’ issues. In addition to offering veterans the same services TCRP offers all individuals for civil rights protections, TCRP also works on several issues most common to veterans.

Specifically:

Major Litigation

Disability Rights

TCRP’s efforts to promote ballot accessibility for blind voters have set the national model for ballot accessibility[7] and their annual regional ADA compliance campaigns throughout Texas to commemorate every anniversary of the ADA (see Disability Campaign below) have prompted a myriad of businesses and public facilities to become more accessible to elderly and disabled persons. In 2010 for example, TCRP sued Austin Duck Tours, Congressman Lamar Smith’s Austin Office, Pure Nightclub in downtown Austin, and the University of Texas School of Architecture, among other Austin-area establishments, for ADA compliance.[8]

TCRP also helped a woman in a wheelchair sue a Texas movie theater, resulting in national requirements for wheelchair accessibility in theaters.[9][10]

To commemorate the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), TCRP holds a disability rights campaign every summer. TCRP teams up with people from the disability community to enforce the compliance of Texas businesses and institutions with the ADA. In past years, TCRP has sued city buildings, schools, retail stores, restaurants, and hotels, among other businesses, to enforce ADA compliance.[11]

Rural Economic Justice

TCRP helps farm laborers and other low-income workers rectify injustice in the workplace and improve working conditions. TCRP’s efforts have addressed wage claims, sexual harassment by crew leaders and managers of housing projects, field sanitation, and protecting the right to organize to improve labor conditions and life in the colonias.[12]

To combat predatory financial practices, TCRP also conducts community education and litigation on behalf of low-income Hispanic families cheated on fraudulent land-purchase schemes and exorbitant water district fees in colonias, unincorporated low-income communities along the Texas-Mexico border that often lack basic infrastructure such as potable water, access to electricity, and paved roads.[13]

Title IX Compliance in Secondary School

To ensure that girls and young women in Texas schools receive equal treatment and opportunities, TCRP implemented extensive educational efforts and litigation in rural communities regarding student peer sexual harassment and comparable sports and educational benefits in Texas schools.[14]

Racial Discrimination

TCRP also assisted Texans who were discriminated against after the 9/11 attacks. These included American citizens, permanent residents, and university students with South Asian or Arab backgrounds. For example, TCRP helped Mohammed Ali Ahmed, an American citizen asked to leave an American Airlines flight with his three children after the pilot saw his name on the passenger manifesto, file suit against American Airlines.[15]

In 2009 TCRP filed a racial discrimination suit against employees of a West Texas inn, on behalf of Gwenda Gault, a woman whose hotel reservation was rejected by the hotel manager because of her race.[16]

Criminal Justice System

The Texas Youth Commission (TYC), a juvenile detention center that earned notoriety after allegations of child sexual abuse emerged, was sued by TCRP on behalf of four children who were physically and sexually abused by TYC guards. In addition to the $625,000 paid to the plaintiffs, TYC also agreed to make significant changes to its operations as a result of the lawsuit.[17]

TCRP also brought a case against the Otero County Sheriff’s Department, which resulted in sweeping reform and increased training within the police force, after officials illegally searched homes, harassed and interrogated residents, and racially profiled and stopped citizens in an effort to target undocumented immigrants.[18]

TCRP also represented a magazine publisher and filed suit against a jail that had denied inmates access to the publication Prison Legal News. The jail was required to modify policy as a consequence.[19]

The efforts of TCRP’s Prisoners’ RIghts Program have also led to greater due process rights for paroled Texas prisoners.[20]

Police Brutality

When police responded to a report of a mentally-ill man sleeping at a bus station, an officer brutally beat him with a baton and filed a false report causing the man to spend ten weeks in jail. TCRP represented the man in a lawsuit requiring the city to pay him a total of $62,000.[21]

A police officer slammed an African American college student to the ground, knocking him unconscious, after the student complained the officer was treating an unrelated suspect too harshly. When an ambulance arrived to take the student to hospital, the officer took him out of the ambulance and sent him to jail instead. A TCRP lawsuit forced the city to pay $31,000.[22]

Protecting Free Speech

TCRP sued the City of Round Rock in 2006, after hundreds of students were arrested and charged with truancy for leaving their classes to protest anti-immigrant sentiment and legislation. The suit was filed on behalf of 98 students whom TCRP represented, claiming that their First Amendment rights had been violated, and was eventually won. The City of Round Rock was forced to halt all prosecutions, erase the arrests from the students’ records, and arrange a scholarship fund for the students.[23]

The organization also sued the City of Austin in 2001, after protestors demonstrating against then President George W. Bush’s first visit back to Austin were blocked by police from entering the free speech zone near the Texas Governor’s mansion. Eventually, in 2006, a district judge ruled that the City had indeed violated the protestors’ First Amendment rights.[24]

When Raul G. Salinas, Mayor of Laredo, had issues of local newspaper LareDOS removed from distribution because they contained criticism and caricatures of Salinas, TCRP sued on behalf of the newspaper. TCRP Director James C. Harrington called Salinas’ actions “classic political retaliation” against unfavorable coverage. As a result of the suit, Salinas was fined $15,000 and was forced to apologize for violating freedom of the press.[25]

When members of the San Angelo-based American White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) came to Austin City Hall to demonstrate in support of Proposition 2, the Texas constitutional amendment that banned gay marriage in 2005, about 3,000 counterprotesters flooded downtown Austin to demonstrate against them. However, the counterprotesters were met by police barricades that kept the counterprotesters two blocks away from where the KKK was demonstrating. Because the counterprotesters were prevented from exercising their rights to free speech and members of the independent media were blocked by the city from covering the protests, TCRP sued the City of Austin for violating the First Amendment. This suit eventually required the city to “establish reasonable perimeters for future demonstrations, and establish objective press credentialing criteria.”[26]

Right to Privacy

In 2010, the organization sued the Texas State Department of State Health Services, after Texas parents discovered that the State was, without parental consent, creating a database of newborn babies blood with the leftover blood from the testing of newborns for serious genetic diseases. The State was also selling these baby blood samples to pharmaceutical companies and the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, and bartering with it for medical supplies. The lawsuit was settled and all samples taken and stored without parental consent were destroyed. The Texas Legislature took additional action, requiring the State to obtain parental consent to store future samples through an "opt out" consent form.[27]

See also

References

  1. Harrington, James C. (2007). "Presenting the Paso Del Norte Civil Rights Project". Texas Civil Rights Project. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  2. Negron, Sito. "Montwood Protest and Other Civil Rights Issues", Newspaper Tree, El Paso, 14 November 2005. Retrieved on 24 December 2011.
  3. "American Civil Liberties Union Records: Organizational Matters Series, 1947-1995: Finding Aid". Princeton University Library. 2003. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  4. "History of Oficina Legal Del Pueblo Unido, Inc and The Texas Civil Rights Project". Texas Civil Rights Project. 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  5. "Contact Us". Texas Civil Rights Project. 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  6. "Open House and Dedication for South Texas". Texas Civil Rights Project. 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  7. Harrington, James C. Pencils Within Reach and a Walkman or Two: Making the Secret Ballot Available to Voters Who Are Blind or Have Other Physical Disabilities. <http://www.nls.org/conf2004/voting-litigation.pdf>.
  8. Petrowski, Lauren (26 July 2010). "Duck Tours, UT Among Local Businesses Sued for Violating Americans with Disabilities Act". MyFoxAustin. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  9. "Disabled Patrons Win Lawsuit against Cinemark". Amarillo Globe-News. 9 Feb 1999. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  10. Everett, Liz (9 Feb 1999). "Cinemark Must Retrofit Auditoriums". Amarillo Globe-News. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  11. Smith, Denise (26 June 2010). "Businesses Sued on Behalf of Disabled". KXAN.com. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  12. Taylor, Steve (3 August 2010). "Border Patrol Asked To Stop 'Terrorizing' Colonia Residents". San Diego Immigrant Rights Consortium. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  13. Ramshaw, Emily (7 July 2011). "Improvement Comes Up Short in South Texas Colonias". New York Times. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  14. "Winning Title IX Cases". feminism.org. Feminist Majority Foundation. 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  15. Root, Jay (5 June 2002). "ACLU Lawsuits Aim at American Airlines". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  16. Flener, Matt (2 February 2009). "Suit: Black Family Refused from Hotel". KXAN.com. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  17. "Judge Approves Settlement in TYC Civil Rights Case". Your News Now. 5 July 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  18. Porter, Kai (19 March 2009). "Big Changes At Otero County Sheriff's Department". News Channel 9 KTSM. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  19. Rodriguez, Iris (15 March 2011). "Prison Legal News No Longer Banned in Galveston Jail". La Nueva Raza. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  20. "A Whacked-Out System: Inmate's Lawsuit Focuses on Secret and Unreasonable Texas Paroles". Austin Chronicle. 5 April 2007. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  21. "City Settles Excessive Force Suit". KXAN.com. 23 June 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  22. Chavez, Crystal (30 June 2011). "Justice Department Closes APD Investigation". KUT News. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  23. Axtman, Kris (19 June 2006). "For Students, Cost of Protest Can Be High". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  24. Dunbar, Wells. "Naked City." Austin Chronicle. 28 July 2006. Web. 28 June 2011. <http://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2006-07-28/390542/>.
  25. Richards, Ashley (28 June 2011). "Publication Charges Mayor with Censoring Newspaper". Laredo Morning Times. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  26. Welch, Diana (11 November 2005). "With God on Their Side: The KKK Stops By". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  27. "Texas Sued over Sale of Baby Blood Samples". CBSNews.com. 9 December 2010. Retrieved 24 December 2011.

External links

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