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Thursday, December 10, 2020

2:00pm EST Police Accountability and Criminal Justice

Several tragedies have once more brought racial justice to the forefront of American political discourse. Actions of police officers in different jurisdictions, due to carelessness, bias, or outright racism, have led to calls of increasing police accountability, removing police from non-essential functions like school security to decrease potentially unnecessary criminal-justice interactions (known as defunding the police), enacting and enforcing policies to end profiling and stereotyping (including punishing the weaponization of stereotypes by those pressing charges or reporting potentially criminal activity), increasing minority community involvement in police practices and policies, demilitarizing police equipment and practices and, specifically, eliminating or greatly curbing the use of no-knock warrants. Prior to the well-known abuses starting in late spring, a growing bipartisan consensus also called for eliminating or curbing the use of civil asset forfeiture laws because of the unfairly skewed posture the asset holder is forced into when defending at court, subverting the principle of innocent until proven guilty. This session will discuss these policies and the strategies to enact them.

Moderator:
Representative Kerry Tipper (CO), Chair of Law and Criminal Justice Task Force, NHCSL
Participants:
Alex Vitale, Policing & Social Justice Project, Brooklyn College
Juan Cartagena, President and General Counsel, Latino Justice PRLDEF
Kate Chatfield, Director of Policy, The Justice Collaborative

3:00pm EST  Census 2020 Update and Redistricting

In October, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end the Decennial Census before everyone could be counted. While the Census Bureau website lists a 99.9% enumeration rate in all states and jurisdictions, only the Self-Response rate guarantees a high-confidence count, while the Nonresponse Follow-up enumeration rate only conveys that the Bureau has stopped trying to contact the household, not that residents were actually counted. Experts, including Census Bureau personnel, will discuss response rates and the consequences of failing to achieve a complete count. Further, we will discuss redistricting strategies and concerns and the status of litigation against the President's memorandum calling for the exclusion of undocumented immigrants from the apportionment count.

Moderator:
Senator Daniel Ivey Soto (NM), President, NHCSL
Participants:
Wendy Underhill, Director of Elections and Redistricting, NCSL
Jorge L. Vasquez Jr., Program Director for Power and Democracy Program, Advancement Project
Assemblyman Robert Rodriguez (NY)
Representative Joe Moody (TX), Speaker Pro Tempore

3:45pm EST  Lilly Diabetes Solution Center Presentation

As the economic crisis related to COVID-19 started affecting patients in April, Lilly announced an Insulin Value Program that allows anyone that does not have Medicare Part-D, including those with commercial insurance and the uninsured, to get a card, even an electronic card, from Lilly that allows them to purchase most Lilly insulins, including Humalog and non-branded insulins, at any pharmacy for $35 per vial, which is a typical month’s supply. (Other options are available to Medicare Part-D and to minimal income patients.) In September, Lilly made the program permanent. This short session will help legislators understand the program so they are able to direct constituents who reach out for help to get its benefits.

Moderator:
Dr. Aliza Lifshitz, Host, Vida y Salud
Participant: 
Cynthia Cardona, Senior Advisor in Corporate Affairs, Eli Lilly and Company

Friday, December 11, 2020

1:00 - 2:30pm EST  Annual Meeting - Ratification of Resolutions
(Legislators and BBA Only)

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