Las Vegas Review-Journal

Plan to cut $1B from NYPD expected to pass

Demonstrat­ors plan to stay outside City Hall

- By Jennifer Peltz and Michael R. Sisak The Associated Press

NEW YORK — New York City lawmakers were expected Tuesday to approve shifting $1 billion from policing to education and social services in the coming year, acknowledg­ing protesters’ demands to cut police spending but falling short of what activists sought.

City Council members were due to debate and vote on the plan Tuesday night, with time running short ahead of the budget year that begins Wednesday.

Mayor Bill de Blasio supports the $88.2 billion spending plan and Council Speaker Corey Johnson said he was confident it would pass the council, but he expected a lot of “no” votes from members who want to cut more from police.

The vote comes at an extraordin­ary moment when the nation’s biggest city is grappling with a $9 billion revenue loss due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and simultaneo­usly with pressure to cut back on policing and invest more in community and social programs.

Protesters have been camped outside City Hall, insisting that the city slash $1 billion from the New York Police Department’s budget amid a nationwide campaign to “defund” police — a movement animated by outrage over the deaths of George Floyd and other Black Americans at the hands of police.

The proposal did little to assuage the demonstrat­ors. Many said they intended to stay outside City Hall indefinite­ly.

“We are being gaslit,” said activist Jawanza James Williams. “This movement is about so much more than the $1 billion, and this means they don’t understand what we’re saying.”

Activists say the budget needs to make a substantia­l, not symbolic, difference in advancing racial justice and curbing the size and power of the nation’s largest police force.

Five years ago, the City Council — then as now, overwhelmi­ngly Democratic — added nearly 1,300 additional officers to the NYPD.

Now, Johnson has said he was wrong to support the expansion, and he lamented Tuesday that he had been unable to negotiate a bigger police budget cut.

“I am disappoint­ed,” Johnson said at a news conference. “I did my best.”

Council budget leaders said they needed to balance calls to cut policing with residents’ concerns about safety.

“Many in my community have supported police and want police. They just want families and young people to be treated fairly,” said Councilwom­an Vanessa Gibson, who represents a Bronx district where over half of residents are Hispanic and about 40 percent are Black.

Gibson said she’d met Tuesday with relatives of a Bronx 17-year-old who was shot and killed Sunday, days after his high school graduation.

“I don’t want anyone to misunderst­and and think that we don’t care and that we have not been working our behinds off to get to a place of equity,” while ensuring communitie­s “are not left behind with crime, violence, illegal guns in our communitie­s, no programs, no activities, and no hope for a better tomorrow,” Gibson said.

But some other members said the budget proposal didn’t dig deep enough into police spending. Councilman Brad Lander, who planned to vote no, called it “more budget-dancing than meaningful reductions.”

Cuts would come from canceling a nearly 1,200-person police recruiting class set for next month — though another class in October is scheduled to go forward — as well as halving overtime spending, redeployin­g officers from administra­tive functions to patrol and ending police responsibi­lity for school crossing guards and homeless outreach.

 ??  ?? Bill de Blasio
Bill de Blasio

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