Boston Herald

Police reform bill in Baker’s hands Gov has 10 days to make decision

- By ERIN TIERNAN

The fate of a sweeping police accountabi­lity bill now rests with Gov. Charlie Baker, but it’s unclear if the Republican governor will agree to expansive reforms that could shake up law enforcemen­t statewide and have stirred staunch opposition from police unions.

Police reform legislatio­n has been on the lips of civil rights and police leaders and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle after protests swept the nation this spring in the wake of the high-profile police killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

Baker kicked off the legislatio­n with a “conversati­on starter” bill filed in June that outlined an independen­t, 14member Peace Officer Standards and Training System to set up licensing standards to be governed with “equal representa­tion” from law enforcemen­t and civilians, and a series of other changes agreed upon by members of the Black and Latino Legislativ­e Caucus and the Massachuse­tts Law Enforcemen­t Policy Group.

It spurred a flurry of reform bills that culminated in packages passed by the House and Senate and sent to conference committee in

While the governor’s office declined to shed any light on where he stands on the compromise bill agreed to by lawmakers on Tuesday night, he said this week increasing police accountabi­lity is ‘an issue that’s important to us.’

late July. Lawmakers this week agreed to compromise legislatio­n that goes far beyond the reforms in Baker’s initial bill.

While the governor’s office declined to shed any light on where he stands on the compromise bill agreed to by lawmakers on Tuesday night, he said this week increasing police accountabi­lity is “an issue that’s important to us.”

The compromise bill includes a POST certificat­ion system, but with nine members, and skews the balance toward the civilian side. It also attempts to deliver more widespread changes and begins to roll back qualified immunity protection­s, bans chokeholds and limits the use of tear gas and no-knock warrants.

Baker has 10 days before he must choose to sign, veto or send the bill back to the Legislatur­e with amendpOOL ments.

Both chambers passed the compromise bill in votes that split party support. Senators eked out a slim vetoproof margin, passing the bill in a 28-12 vote. Thirty-six Democrats broke ranks with House Speaker Robert DeLeo — who has urged passage of the bill — joining Republican­s to oppose the bill in the 91-67 vote.

Police unions have already accelerate­d efforts to lobby a Baker veto as proponents have set their sights on further reforms.

Massachuse­tts ACLU President Carol Rose called the legislatio­n “a bold first step.”

Lewis Finfer of the Massachuse­tts Communitie­s Action Network said “there’s more to do” to abolish qualified immunity protection­s against civil liability for officers and called for greater reinvestme­nt in communitie­s disproport­ionately impacted by policing — a provision from the Senate bill omitted in the compromise.

State Sen. Sonia ChangDiaz — one of the bill’s architects — said the bill “scores meaningful wins for accountabi­lity,” noting the makeup of the nine-member POST commission is the first time any state has included “significan­t community membership at the table of power.”

Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr said the compromise bill breaks with “the crux of the agreement that held so much potential on that day back in June” when Baker unveiled his version of police reform legislatio­n.

 ?? PHOTO ?? OUTCOME UNCLEAR: The fate of a sweeping police reform bill cleared by both the House and Senate rests with Gov. Charlie Baker, who has 10 days to make a decision. State Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, top right, one of the bill’s architects, said it ‘scores meaningful wins for accountabi­lity.’
PHOTO OUTCOME UNCLEAR: The fate of a sweeping police reform bill cleared by both the House and Senate rests with Gov. Charlie Baker, who has 10 days to make a decision. State Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, top right, one of the bill’s architects, said it ‘scores meaningful wins for accountabi­lity.’
 ?? STATE HOuSE NEwS SERvICE FILE ?? SPECIAL DELIVERY: Rep. Carlos Gonzalez, Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, and Sen. Will Brownsberg­er deliver their committee’s compromise policing reform bill to Senate Clerk Michael Hurley Monday.
STATE HOuSE NEwS SERvICE FILE SPECIAL DELIVERY: Rep. Carlos Gonzalez, Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, and Sen. Will Brownsberg­er deliver their committee’s compromise policing reform bill to Senate Clerk Michael Hurley Monday.
 ?? STuART CAHILL / HERALd STAFF FILE ??
STuART CAHILL / HERALd STAFF FILE

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