Chicago Sun-Times

Aldermen push competing proposals to defund, re-fund Chicago Police Dept.

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

With the police reform movement gaining steam, aldermen are pushing competing proposals to defund and re-fund the Chicago Police Department.

On the defund side are 11 aldermen, including all six members of the Socialist Caucus.

They sent a letter to Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Tuesday demanding a commitment — “in writing or via an amendment” — that not a penny of the $333 million in “discretion­ary” federal stimulus money earmarked for “ongoing direct COVID-19 response costs” be spent on policing.

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th), dean of the City Council’s Socialist Caucus, called the promise a “reasonable ask” and a “very low bar” for the mayor to clear in the furor that followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

He noted CPD already receives $1.8 billion a year — 40% of the city’s corporate fund.

“If police are being sent to the lakefront to enforce the stay-athome order or the closure of trails, those are things paid for by the corporate fund. The notion that we would reimburse the corporate fund when we could instead be using this discretion­ary COVID-19 relief money on things like rent relief is really onerous to myself and to tens of thousands of Chicagoans,’” Ramirez-Rosa said.

The City Council is scheduled to vote Wednesday on Lightfoot’s spending plan for the entire $1.1 billion infusion of federal stimulus funds. Any two aldermen could postpone that vote for at least one meeting.

“That’s certainly always an option. But in the context of this Council, it’s the nuclear option. I don’t think we’re ready to get there just yet. I don’t think we have to go there,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

Kristen Cabanban, a spokespers­on for the city’s Office of Budget and Management, refused to comment on the demand from aldermen.

The re-fund the police movement is being led by a pair of aldermen whose Far Southwest and Northwest Side wards are home to scores of Chicago police officers.

Ald. Matt O’Shea (19th) plans to introduce an ordinance requiring that the CPD budget be “no less than” it was in 2020. It could be reduced below that threshold, but “only if authorized by a binding referendum” approved by Chicago voters.

“Every town hall meeting I host — every time I’m at a senior citizen event — I hear, ‘I don’t see the police on my block. I want more police.’ I don’t feel that the City

Council should dictate or be allowed to determine whether communitie­s have a police presence or not. This should be decided by the voters. The people we represent,” O’Shea said.

Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41st) has served Chicago as both a police officer and a firefighte­r. He plans to introduce a resolution that would, essentiall­y, call the bluff of those demanding to defund CPD.

It calls for a one-year pilot program allowing each alderman to “forego all or a portion [no less than 50 percent] of CPD personnel, services and resources allocated to their ward.”

Those resources would be “evenly distribute­d across all nonpartici­pating wards.” A report produced after the pilot would detail the impact on violent crime.

“I’m basically saying, if this is what you really believe — if this is what your 55,000 residents really want — then step up and go ahead and do it. Because I don’t believe that’s what a majority of their ward wants,” Napolitano said.

 ??  ?? Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa
Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa
 ??  ?? Ald. Matt O’Shea
Ald. Matt O’Shea

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