Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP proposes new police measures

Bill introduced in election-year session recruits officers, ends no-knock bans

- Molly Beck

MADISON - Republican lawmakers are starting a new session in an election year likely to focus on public safety issues with a package of bills aimed at recruiting police officers, prohibitin­g bans on no-knock search warrants, and teaching children how to interact with law enforcemen­t.

The lawmakers who control the state Legislatur­e also are proposing to require Milwaukee officials use a portion of the city’s allocation of federal pandemic aid to fund their police department.

The measures aimed at boosting police ranks that were released Tuesday coincide with Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul’s proposal to provide $10 million in state funds for grant programs supporting law enforcemen­t recruitmen­t, retention and wellness.

Rep. Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam, said Tuesday the GOP package would spend about $25 million in federal funding under the American Rescue Plan Act.

“We know that we want our communitie­s to be safe and we know that law enforcemen­t plays a key role in that and this package of bills today will help us retain recruit and train more folks to help us with that important mission in our communitie­s,” Born said at a conference in the state Capitol on Tuesday.

Police issues are expected to be a focal point of races on 2022 ballots. GOP candidates for governor and attorney general have launched their campaigns against the Democratic incumbents with a heavy focus on how Kaul and Gov. Tony Evers responded to riots and protests following the May 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer and the August 2020 shooting of Jacob Blake by a Kenosha police officer.

The proposals would require Evers to spend federal pandemic aid to provide bonuses to new Wisconsin officers, pay for mandatory training and a statewide recruitmen­t campaign, and require technical colleges to create part-time academy programs.

Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz said Republican­s could have helped address the same issues during the state budget-writing process last summer and in 2019 by adopting Evers’ previous spending plans.

Hintz said if Republican­s had adopted the plans, local government­s would have received an additional $50.2 million from the state that could have been

used to boost department­s and pay for the programs proposed now.

“Unfortunat­ely, the Republican­controlled legislatur­e rejected these proposed increases, despite a significant state fund balance,” Hintz said in a statement.

“Now, Legislativ­e Republican­s are proposing using one-time COVID funds to fund local law enforcemen­t at roughly half the amount Governor Evers proposed since he was elected in 2018, and that Republican­s voted against.”

Born said using federal funding for the proposals is appropriat­e because department­s are experienci­ng COVID-19-related workforce challenges.

“We’re confident that this is not only a proper use, but a smart use of these funds,” he said.

West Allis Police Chief Patrick Mitchell said department­s across the state are experienci­ng shortages of officers, a trend that began about 10 years ago.

“It’s very complicate­d issue, but one of the things that has driven it in the past two years is clearly the events in Minneapoli­s,” Mitchell said at the Capitol press conference, referring to Floyd’s death.

“You have an event in Minneapoli­s — horrible event. The police officer has been held accountabl­e. And what we witnessed in the profession is a condemnati­on of our entire profession for the actions of one.”

A spokeswoma­n for Evers did not immediatel­y say whether he had a reaction the package of legislatio­n.

The governor is unlikely to support one bill that would bar local elected officials, police chiefs and sheriffs, and fire and police commission­ers, from banning no-knock search warrants either by ordinance or policy.

Evers last year called for a ban on such warrants. The Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission earlier this year banned the practice.

Another bill would require the state Department of Public Instructio­n to develop a model curriculum school boards could adopt that teach children in grades five through 12 how to interact with police officers with “mutual cooperatio­n and respect.”

The bill would require DPI officials to consult with law enforcemen­t advocates.

A spokesman for State Superinten­dent Jill Underly, who oversees the DPI, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In 2017, Texas lawmakers passed a similar bill requiring the Texas Education Agency to send school district officials materials to teach high school students how to interact with police officers during traffic stops.

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