Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 mayors rebuff idea to rescind funding of police

Hiring crucial, PB leader says

- JOSEPH FLAHERTY

The mayors of Pine Bluff and Blythevill­e on Wednesday said they do not support defunding the police during a panel on policing and race held as part of the 2021 winter conference of the Arkansas Municipal League.

In rebuffing the idea of defunding police, Mayor Shirley Washington of Pine Bluff and Mayor James Sanders of Blythevill­e were responding to a rallying cry that gained national prominence during the George Floyd protests in the summer.

Though interpreta­tions and goals tied to the phrase differ, activists generally call for redirectin­g monies typically reserved for police department­s into other areas like social services and investing in historical­ly neglected communitie­s.

“We cannot defund the police at this time,” Washington said during the panel, explaining that police salaries in Pine Bluff as not seen as competitiv­e compared with Little Rock, hindering the city’s recruitmen­t efforts.

“We must increase funding so that we can have good, strong, competitiv­e hiring practices and hire officers that are … properly trained and capable of [handling] the job of policing our community so that our citizens feel safe and secure at all times,” Washington said.

Sanders said he agreed with Washington.

“This is your security,” he said. “Are you going to get some substandar­d security for your home?”

Like Washington, Sanders said police hiring has become competitiv­e across the state, and referred to the difference in salaries in larger cities and rural areas.

He suggested properly funded and trained officers are needed so that “any criminal element” understand­s there is a proper law enforcemen­t presence in the community to address crime.

Sanders acknowledg­ed, however, that he has heard the phrase before and understood it to mean not directly defunding, but examining social issues and placing additional funding in those areas.

“Not taking anything from our law enforcemen­t community, but actively placing funding to assist in the mental health issue or the situations that involve poverty that happens throughout our community that helps breed crime,” he said.

If people are talking about addressing issues of poverty and mental health, “then yes, let’s fund those areas, but please, let’s not defund our law enforcemen­t community,” Sanders said.

Both Washington and Sanders are members of a task force Gov. Asa Hutchinson created in June during the Floyd protests. The group, the Task Force to Advance the State of Law Enforcemen­t in Arkansas, submitted recommenda­tions to the governor in December.

Sanders is a former police captain who worked for the Blythevill­e department and the Arkansas State Police. He briefly served as sheriff of Mississipp­i County.

The Municipal League’s winter conference this year is being held virtually.

The panel featuring Washington and Sanders on Wednesday was part of a broader session that was billed as an opportunit­y for members of the governor’s task force to air their findings and thoughts on topics like decertific­ation of officers, bias, community policing and the use of body cameras.

Other featured participan­ts included Fayettevil­le Police Chief Mike Reynolds, activist Layla Holloway and Bob McMahan of the state’s prosecutor coordinato­r office.

During the session with Washington and Sanders, written prompts flashed on-screen to which the mayors could respond.

Washington recently experience­d a brush with the strong emotions attached to the police official in her own community. In August, she terminated Police Chief Kelvin Sergeant over the department’s response to crime and so-called vehicle caravannin­g, only to reinstate him two days later.

At the time, Washington told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that the response to Sergeant’s firing “was almost like an upheaval in the community, people saying we terminated Sergeant and he just has nine months until his retirement.”

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