Public Comments for: HB482 - Local and Regional Jails, State Board of; supervision by Office of Dept. of Corrections Ombudsman.
Last Name: Kyle Locality: Quinton

I am writing to oppose the current slate of firearm restriction bills before the General Assembly. While these proposals are framed as public safety measures, in practice they disproportionately harm marginalized Virginians — including racial minorities, LGBTQ+ individuals (especially trans people), immigrants, and low-income residents — who often face higher risks of targeted violence and slower or unequal police response. These bills add costs, delays, and bureaucratic hurdles to exercising a fundamental right. Increased fees, mandatory waiting periods, feature bans, and expanded disqualifications fall hardest on people with limited financial resources, unstable work schedules, or justified concerns about their personal safety. For many vulnerable individuals, the ability to lawfully and promptly acquire a firearm is not about ideology, but about self-defense. History shows that restrictive gun laws are most aggressively enforced in minority communities, amplifying disparities in arrests, prosecution, and legal exposure — even when no harm has occurred. Expanding civil liability, criminal penalties, and subjective risk standards increases that risk. Public safety should not come at the expense of civil rights or equal access to self-protection. Policies that price people out of their rights or delay lawful self-defense do not address the root causes of violence and instead leave the most vulnerable less safe. I respectfully urge you to oppose these bills and support approaches that protect both public safety and the rights of all Virginians, regardless of income, identity, or background. Thank you for your time and consideration.

Last Name: Faye Locality: Louisa

I am writing in support of Virginia House Bill 361. My perspective comes from personal experience. My loved one has been incarcerated within the Virginia Department of Corrections for 17 years. During that time, he has spent long periods confined under conditions and policies that offered no opportunity to earn sentence credits — despite consistent effort, good behavior, and personal growth. HB 361 is not about excusing past mistakes. It is about fairness. Time served is time lived, and individuals should not be denied earned sentence credits simply because of when their incarceration occurred or circumstances beyond their control. After 17 years, I have seen how denying earned credits deepens hopelessness while recognizing effort encourages accountability and rehabilitation. I respectfully urge you to support HB 361 and help ensure Virginia’s sentencing system reflects fairness, humanity, and modern justice principles.

Last Name: Wright Organization: Uproar, first second chance Locality: Stephens city

We thought this ombudsman would be an answer to our prayers . December 2024 we met with the general assembly who stated red onion be priority it still has not been investigated by the ombudsman and waiting on 13 members I guess we should just can it because these people are getting paid to not do anything we need complete outside oversight with powers to be able to do complete investigations inside and out . We all know the grievance process is a failure but yet to investigate it has to be completed my son has severe mental health issues from being in solitary confinement for so long he is unable to complete any forms but yet continues to be mistreated and no investigations because he didn't file the grievance process this is just another smoke and mirror situation which is costing the tax payers a fortune for nothing .

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