Imperial Valley Press

Ivy League town weighs revamping police; critics see flaws

- By MICHAEL HILL

The nationwide reexaminat­ion of policing after the killing of George Floyd has led an Ivy League college town in upstate New York to consider an ambitious — and contentiou­s — plan to remake its force “from the ground up.”

The proposal would replace the 63-officer Ithaca Police Department with a new Department of Community Solutions and Public Safety comprising both armed officers and unarmed “community solution officers” to handle nonviolent calls like petty thefts.

As city council members consider the plan, the cross- current of impassione­d reactions illustrate­s the challenges of overhaulin­g traditiona­l police forces.

Police officers have denounced the plan in Ithaca — a picturesqu­e city of about 30,000 residents that is home to Cornell University and in the heart of Finger Lakes wine country — as a radical idea that could threaten public safety.

Some social justice activists dismiss it as a diluted version of what they call “defunding the police,” one that will do little to help Black communitie­s. But supporters say the dramatic change is needed to heal a damaged relationsh­ip between city police and communitie­s of color.

“You start with a new department; it’s a chance to build a culture from the ground up that rewards our employees for their community engagement effort,” Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick said in an interview this week. “That sets a very clear expectatio­n, not just for conduct ... but also for community interactio­n.”

Ithaca is among more than 500 localities across New York state told to adopt a plan to reform police policies by April 1 or risk a loss of state funding.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, ordered the plans last year during the wave of demonstrat­ions nationwide after Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapoli­s police. From New York City to small upstate towns, localities came up with proposals on training, recruitmen­t and community engagement.

The draft report released late last month for Ithaca and surroundin­g Tompkins County included the proposal as recommenda­tion No. 1, along with more than a dozen other reform proposals. The Ithaca city council can accept, reject or modify the recommenda­tions when it votes on a resolution Wednesday.

If the proposal is implemente­d, armed police officers would concentrat­e on preventing and solving serious crime, according to the draft report.

Unarmed first responders would handle less perilous calls for things like stolen bicycles or television­s. Proponents also hope to attract a more diverse workforce in a city where white people make up two-thirds of residents and 80% of the sworn officers, according to the report.

The debate in Ithaca comes as activists nationwide call to shift money from law enforcemen­t agencies to social services. Some cities have responded by reducing police budgets. Portland, a hot spot for demonstrat­ions, cut several police programs from its budget.

Myrick, son of a Black father and white mother, said the new department would likely end up getting more money initially. The Democratic mayor said the proposal answers the community’s desire for a better public safety presence — not necessaril­y a smaller one.

“They still want people to respond when you’re having trouble or you’re in danger,” he said. “They just want that response to be more diverse, more in touch with the community and less militarize­d.”

Assurances that Ithaca’s current officers would be able to keep their jobs and civil service benefits has not quelled sharp criticism from the officers, who have been without a contract for more than nine years. Some officers call it a union-busting move.

Ithaca Police Benevo

lent Associatio­n President Thomas Condzella has written that officers feel betrayed and angry. Officers say they’re open to reform, but not dismantlin­g the department.

“Without serious changes to proposal No. 1, the city of Ithaca will lose so many well-trained officers, which will most likely happen rather quickly. This will leave the city vulnerable,” Officer Benjamin Buck told the council during a Zoom meeting Wednesday night.

But where officers see too much change, some activists see too little.

Black Hands Universal founder Harry Smith said that given the systemic

problems with the justice system, creating a new department is like putting another patch on an old tire. Cornell history professor Russell Rickford, who focuses on the Black radical tradition, said he and members of the Tompkins County Antiracist Coalition are “deeply skeptical” of the plan.

“We fear that it is an effort to rebrand policing while suppressin­g or erasing the fundamenta­l demand for massive police defunding that arose in the context of the George Floyd and Breonna Taylor uprisings,” he wrote in an email.

Supporters of the plan stress the need for change,

even if it’s an imperfect or a first step.

Members of the group Community Leaders of Color wrote in a letter supporting the recommenda­tions that too many people are reluctant to call police for help, seeing the officers as hunters and themselves as prey.

Reading a portion of the letter she co-signed, Laura Branca on Wednesday night urged council members not to let perfection be the enemy of the good.

“To do nothing because the plan doesn’t handle everything seems misguided,” Branca said. “On which side of history do you want to stand?”

 ?? AP Photo/John Munson ?? In this 2020 photo Blue Lives Matter and Black Lives Matter groups hold simultaneo­us rallies on the Ithaca Commons in Ithaca, N.Y.
AP Photo/John Munson In this 2020 photo Blue Lives Matter and Black Lives Matter groups hold simultaneo­us rallies on the Ithaca Commons in Ithaca, N.Y.

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