For Some with a Felony Conviction, Voting Rights Might Be Coming Soon
Date:  02-01-2018

While some states are restoring voting rights, a formerly incarcerated person is taking on felony disenfranchisement in Florida
From NBC News:

RICHMOND, Va. — Dean Turner never voted before he went to prison. But his right to cast a ballot was the last barrier to rebuilding his life once he got out. Released in February 2016, after more than a decade behind bars for selling drugs, the 50-year-old Virginian worked his way up from dishwasher to line chef by Googling how to cook. He started mentoring young men, and coaches a writing class at Virginia Commonwealth University based on the book he helped write while incarcerated. But until last fall, Turner was one of the estimated 6.1 million Americans — 2.5 percent of the nation's voting-age population — barred from voting by a felony conviction.

"When you're able to vote, that means you have a voice in the world," Turner told NBC News. Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, restored his voting rights last year, and Turner cast his first-ever ballot in November 2017. Continue reading >>>