Chicago Sun-Times

Format changes after chaotic hearing on cop oversight

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@ suntimes. com | @ fspielman

The format of public hearings on four rival proposals for civilian police review will be dramatical­ly altered after a chaotic first hearing that encountere­d so much resistance, it had to be cut short.

Ald. Ariel Reboyras ( 30th), chairman of the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety, said he would abandon plans to divide the audience into smaller discussion groups in favor of a format similar to the court- ordered public participat­ion session prior to City Council meetings.

That would give participan­ts who fill out sign- in sheets three minutes apiece to air their views.

Reboyras did not say whether there would be a portable countdown clock for the four remaining public hearings that begin at 1 p. m. Saturday at Gage ParkHigh School, 5630 S Rockwell.

Reboyras acknowledg­ed he’s making the change because the hearings got off to a disastrous start on Tuesday night at Corliss High School.

“We had two tables — and about 20 folks — who were very, very uncooperat­ive. They didn’t let it happen and they won,” Reboyras recalled.

“They shouted much louder than we did. They pretty much controlled the atmosphere for two hours at least . . . They were very upset. Some of them walked out early.” The resistance was led by supporters of the most extreme of four rival proposals for civilian police review.

Last month, Reboyras called off a City Council hearing two years in the making on that proposal to abolish the Police Board, get rid of the Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity and replace both with an elected, 22- member council.

Reboyras said then it was “too egregious” and didn’t have the 26 votes needed for passage.

But he agreed to put it on equal footing with three other more moderate proposals after rookie Ald. Carlos Ramirez- Rosa ( 35th) withdrew his threat to force a City Council floor fight that could have embarrasse­d Mayor Rahm Emanuel and put aldermen on the spot.

On Friday, Reboyras chided RamirezRos­a for not even showing up at the first public hearing.

“He needs to be there . . . I gave himthe courtesy — the respect — to include that ordinance as well as the other three. But I would love to see him there,” he said.

“I’m hoping that he shows up Saturday and at the remaining ones . . . We need him there.”

Ramirez- Rosa could not be reached for comment.

The public hearings are considerin­g the long- stalled “Civilian Police Accountabi­lity Council” along with three more moderate proposals for civilian police oversight.

One was crafted by the Grassroots Alliance for Police Accountabi­lity and includes the power to subpoena documents, fire the police superinten­dent, reversible only by a two- thirds City Council vote, establish police policy, choose the Police Board and hire and fire the Police Board president.

The other two were introduced by Reboyras and neuter GAPA’s proposal in favor of a civilian review structure that’s more advisory in nature.

 ??  ?? Ald. Ariel Reboyras
Ald. Ariel Reboyras

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