Texas Tribune Profile picture
Aug 27, 2018 10 tweets 5 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
1/ Here’s how it happens.

You get pulled over for speeding. You get a ticket. You can’t afford to pay. Your license is suspended.

You get pulled over again. For driving without a license, you owe more.

It keeps happening. Eventually, you go to jail.

trib.it/lp
2/ You owe more fees for driving without a license. Your surcharges add up. You still can’t afford to pay. You still can’t afford to not drive.

You keep driving. You keep ending up in jail.

You now owe thousands of dollars.

trib.it/lp
3/ This is the Driver Responsibility Program.

As of January 2018, there were approximately 1.4 million records of people ineligible to obtain their licenses under this program. trib.it/lp
4/ The Driver Responsibility Program came about as #txlege was searching for a way to fund the state’s emergency trauma care system.

The idea was simple: hold bad drivers responsible and keep them off the road by suspending their licenses. trib.it/lp
5/ In a sense, it’s worked. About 75 percent of the state now has immediate access to a trauma care facility.

But the majority of unpaid surcharge cases are people with non-public safety related offenses.

Like driving without a valid license. trib.it/lp
6/ And so, the Driver Responsibility Program has resulted in a deepening cycle of debt for those who cannot afford to pay. trib.it/lp
7/ You get a ticket. You can’t pay it.

You have to keep working to pay it off. But you lose your license. So, you drive to work without a license. You get pulled over. Now, you owe more.

You keep driving. You go to jail. You owe more.

trib.it/lp
8/ Both Republicans and Democrats say the program is deeply flawed and unfairly penalizes the most vulnerable members of society. trib.it/lp
9/ But attempts at eliminating the program have consistently failed.

The biggest obstacle has been finding the money to replace the roughly $144 million the program brings to the state. trib.it/lp
10/10 In the meantime, the cycle of debt for those who cannot afford to pay can deepen.

Read more here. trib.it/lp

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More from @TexasTribune

Aug 30, 2018
1/ Texas argued in a lawsuit it would cost more than $20 million to install A/C in a prison.

Since settling the case, that estimate has dropped to $4 million.

Texas spent $7 million on the lawsuit. trib.it/lY
2/ Before settling the lawsuit, the department conducted its own research and the cost dropped to $11 million.

That number has now dropped even further. trib.it/lY
3/ In 2014, several prison inmates sued, claiming the lack of air conditioning in their prison was unconstitutional.

They pointed to at least 23 prisoner deaths in Texas from heat stroke since 1998. trib.it/lY
Read 5 tweets
Aug 28, 2018
Roy Oliver was found guilty of murder in the police shooting of Jordan Edwards.

Police officers are almost never convicted of murder.

Body cameras may have made the difference in this case.

#JordanEdwards #RoyOliver bit.ly/2LxVm8c
2/ The use of police body cameras surged after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

Advocates hoped their use would increase transparency & hold officers accountable.

But studies have uncovered mixed results. trib.it/lK
3/ It’s not unusual for police officers to walk around with cameras on their chests anymore. Five of the six Texas cities with a population over 500,000 have already deployed the cameras. trib.it/lK
Read 6 tweets
Aug 20, 2018
1/ More than 300 migrant children remain separated from parents who were already deported.

This is the story of one family. Meet David Xol and his 7-year-old son, Bryon.

They were separated nearly 3 months ago. They remain apart.

NEW with @nomadagt. trib.it/l3
2/ In May, Xol and his son travelled here through Mexico in a wooden crate in the back of a tractor trailer — for three days.

They had an apple apiece.

They swallowed pills that kept them from defecating. trib.it/l3
3/ At a processing center, Xol was separated from his son.

“Don’t worry, son, it’s all part of the journey,” he said.

But Xol would remain separated from Byron.

trib.it/l3
Read 16 tweets
Jul 24, 2018
1/ When a guard took away this migrant’s 5-month-old baby, she protested.

“But I'm still breastfeeding him, you know.”

It doesn't matter, the guard said.

“No, but I'm breastfeeding.”

We still have to take them, the guard said.

trib.it/k9
2/ This is the story of a family of six that faced seemingly every possible hurdle under the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

It starts in Guatemala. trib.it/k9
3/ Sometime in February, Sandy — the mother — started getting anonymous phone calls: “If you don’t listen to me, there will be consequences.”

“I’m going to go get your husband and your kids.” trib.it/k9
Read 16 tweets
Jul 23, 2018
1/ This is Heyli. She is a six-year-old migrant. In a video call with her mother on Friday, she was sobbing uncontrollably — rubbing her eyes and rocking back and forth.

She’s waiting to be reunited with her father. bit.ly/2LjJQSH
2/ Heyli is in an Arizona shelter, waiting to be reunited with her father, Carlos, who is in a detention center in South Texas. bit.ly/2LjJQSH
3/ Her dad is at the Port Isabel detention center, where some migrant parents are being held in limbo as they wait to be reunited with their children. They’re not free to leave the facility, but they lack access to phones or commissary accounts. bit.ly/2LjJQSH
Read 9 tweets
Jul 23, 2018
1/ Rotten meat. Outbreaks of chickenpox. Tearful separations.

These are the conditions migrants are describing in federal custody.

trib.it/k7
2/ Migrant families passing through detention facilities have long complained of such conditions.

But new attention has been placed on these families under the administration’s practice of separating families. trib.it/k7
3/ In more than 1,000 pages of court documents, several hundred migrants who crossed the border seeking asylum are describing their conditions. trib.it/k7
Read 19 tweets

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