Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia’s Kemp signs bill aimed at banning ‘defund the police’ efforts

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp has signed a law aimed at blocking “defund the police” efforts in larger Georgia cities and counties, saying it’s unfair to “condemn and demonize” police officers.

“This far-left movement will endanger our communitie­s and our law enforcemen­t officers and leave our most vulnerable at risk,” the Republican Kemp said Friday while speaking at the Barrow County Sheriff’s Office gun range in Bethlehem, flanked by a number of sheriffs and police chiefs.

The law would limit government­s’ ability to cut police funding by more than 5% a year after Atlanta and Athens-Clarke County officials debated but rejected plans to cut or redirect spending following racial injustice protests last year. The murder of George Floyd, a Black man killed in police custody in Minneapoli­s last year, launched demonstrat­ions that were also fueled by the death of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta.

The measure is a rejection of arguments by protesters nationwide that minority communitie­s are suffering from overpolici­ng. The critics argue that government­s should spend less on law enforcemen­t and more on social services to address problems.

Rep. Houston Gaines, an Athens Republican who sponsored the bill, said lawmakers “won’t allow the defund the police movement to take a foothold in Georgia,” saying instead that local government­s should be hiring more officers and paying them more to fight a spike in crime.

“Listen, I support local control, but when you have local government­s that are out of control, I knew we had to act,” Gaines said of Athens-Clarke and Atlanta.

“While we’re fortunate these proposals didn’t pass the first time around, we can’t let it happen.”

Most Democrats opposed restrictin­g local control and said Republican­s were grandstand­ing to score political points.

A similar measure has become law in Florida, while other states are considerin­g them.

Defunding the police was debated extensivel­y across the country, including during the presidenti­al race, but not much action followed. An Associated Press review found that while some local government­s trimmed police budgets, cuts were mostly modest. In Minneapoli­s, despite efforts to transform policing, the city is planning to spend $6.4 million to try to fill vacancies.

Under the Georgia measure, cities and counties can cut more than 5% if local revenues decline by more than that, and cities and counties with fewer than 25 officers are exempt.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? A man walk across a “Defund Police” written in front of the Atlanta Police Department Headquarte­rs in June 2020.
ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP A man walk across a “Defund Police” written in front of the Atlanta Police Department Headquarte­rs in June 2020.

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