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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBill to Criminalize Environmental Protests in Wisconsin Heads to the Assembly Floor
( They will do anything to try and control the future, its sick.)
By David Armiak
October 10th, 2019
at 7:43 AM (CDT
The Wisconsin State Assembly will convene for the first time this fall today to consider a bill backed by the oil industry and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) that would impose harsh criminal penalties on protesters who trespass on or damage any property owned by energy and water companies.
Dubbed the The Worker Safety and Energy Security Act, AB 426 passed unanimously out of committee on October 2. The Senate version of the bill, SB 386, is still pending in committee.
The bill would expand a law passed in 2015 that made it a felony to trespass on or damage property owned, operated, or leased by an electrical or gas company to cover water, oil, petroleum, and renewable fuel companies properties, as the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) first reported.
Protestors found guilty under the proposed changes could receive up to six years in prison, a maximum fine of $10,000, or both, for protesting on an energy companys property if the penalty under current law stays intact. And, because the bill would apply to all property owned held by the oil and gas industry in Wisconsin, protesters would face the same penalties for demonstrating at corporate headquarters as they would for demonstrating at a pipeline or other critical infrastructure.
The bill is based on ALECs Critical Infrastructure Protection Act and is backed by the American Petroleum Institute (API), the American Chemistry Council, and a number of other business associations and labor unions, which secured an exemption for picketing around labor disputes.
Testimony in favor of the bill at its public hearing on September 26 focused on preventing the destruction of property and violence against workers, with few, if any, addressing the drastic implications for peaceful protestors.
Rep. Jason Fields (D-Milwaukee), a co-sponsor of the legislation, complained about the criticism he received due to his support. Calling it appalling, Fields advocated for protestors to follow the nonviolent methods employed by Martin Luther King, Jr, while at the same time ignoring that Dr. Kings peaceful protests would have triggered a felony violation under the bill.
The bills 2018 Drafting Requests, obtained by Documented, show that the initial topic for the bill was, Trespassing on the property of an energy provider, signaling that lawmakers were locked in on criminalizing protests from the get-go.
https://www.exposedbycmd.org/2019/10/10/bill-criminalize-environmental-protests-wisconsin-heads-assembly-floor/
AllyCat
(16,187 posts)We already have laws on the books to deal with trespassing and hey are used routinely.
BeckyDem
(8,361 posts)silence. I don't know why Fields is supporting it, terrible.
Garrett78
(10,721 posts)Response to Garrett78 (Reply #3)
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Garrett78
(10,721 posts)Response to Garrett78 (Reply #5)
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Garrett78
(10,721 posts)Response to Garrett78 (Reply #7)
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Garrett78
(10,721 posts)Holder and Obama are working on tackling gerrymandering: https://democraticredistricting.com. It's wrong no matter who is in power.
And voter suppression is rampant, as well.
And, yes, GOTV is crucial.
None of these things are mutually exclusive, nor are they insurmountable with enough persistent effort.