Bill Text: TX HCR32 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Requesting the creation of a joint interim committee to study the legacy of convict leasing in Texas.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-03-02 - Referred to House Administration [HCR32 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HCR32-Introduced.html
88R9908 TBO-D | ||
By: Reynolds | H.C.R. No. 32 |
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WHEREAS, In 2018, the discovery of an unmarked burial ground | ||
at the former Imperial State Prison Farm site in Sugar Land drew | ||
national attention to an abhorrent chapter in history; and | ||
WHEREAS, Archeologists at the site found the skeletal remains | ||
of 95 victims of the convict leasing system, which was used after | ||
the Civil War to replicate the oppression that existed under | ||
slavery; although the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution | ||
prohibited involuntary servitude, it created an exemption for | ||
people convicted of crimes; Southern states took advantage by | ||
enacting "Black Codes," laws that applied only to African | ||
Americans, who could be prosecuted criminally for such offenses as | ||
loitering, breaking curfew, or not carrying proof of employment; | ||
and | ||
WHEREAS, Prisoners of the state were leased as cheap labor to | ||
private railways, mines, and agricultural operations, including | ||
the sugar plantations along the Brazos River; while receiving no | ||
pay, convicts often endured conditions even more brutal than | ||
slavery, given that contractors had no financial interest in their | ||
well-being; more than 3,500 Texas prisoners died between 1866 and | ||
1912, when the legislature outlawed convict leasing; and | ||
WHEREAS, While the state and employers profited, the families | ||
and communities of victims suffered damage that spanned | ||
generations; a full understanding of the convict leasing system and | ||
its aftereffects is vital to addressing issues that continue to | ||
plague society today, including mass incarceration, convict labor, | ||
prison privatization, and entrenched poverty; now, therefore, be it | ||
RESOLVED, That the 88th Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
hereby request the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house | ||
of representatives to create a joint interim committee to study the | ||
legacy of convict leasing in Texas; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the committee examine the treatment of victims | ||
of the convict leasing system, the extent to which the State of | ||
Texas supported the system, and the lingering negative effects of | ||
the system; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the committee determine appropriate ways to | ||
educate the general public about the convict leasing system; and, | ||
be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the committee submit a full report, including | ||
findings and recommendations, to the 89th Texas Legislature in | ||
January 2025; and, be it further | ||
RESOLVED, That the committee's proceedings and operations be | ||
governed by such general rules and policies for interim committees | ||
as the 88th Texas Legislature may adopt. |