During the Covid-19 pandemic, the city of Los Angeles moved thousands of unhoused people into hotel rooms. The program, called Project Roomkey, was a temporary safety net during the national health emergency. But participants soon nicknamed it “Project No Key” because they felt more incarcerated than housed. Reporter Mark Betancourt chronicles their experience in part two of our series on how homelessness is criminalized.
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A Pregnancy That Changed Texas Law, Part 1
Comedian Felonious Munk Stands Up for Reform
An Open and Shut Case, Reopened
The Work of Closing a Notorious Jail
How Bail Shackles Women of Color
When Disability Requires a Different Approach
Marching Toward Reform in New Orleans
Now a Peabody Award Nominee!!
Are Some of the Formerly Incarcerated Owed Reparations?
How New Orleans Could Set a New Course for Bail Reform
In Miami, Jailing Fewer, Treating More
Undocumented Immigrants Are Tethered to ICE, and Private Companies, by Ankle Monitors
In One State, an Opioid Crisis Led Police to Start an Angel Program
One State Is Disrupting the Pipeline from Foster Care to Jail
Putting Women Already in Jail First
Reform Activists and a New DA Find Common Ground
Veterans Courts Give Soldiers a Way Back
Locals Divided Between Diversion and Border Security
70 Million S1 Trailer
70 Million Podcast Teaser
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The Modern West
Birthful
Our Body Politic
Latina to Latina
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Key Conversations with Phi Beta Kappa