Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘Screw-up’ lets $15M for police slip away

Officials decry missing submission deadline

- Elliot Hughes

Two officials in Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson’s office said Friday it wasn’t the city’s decision not to apply for a $15 million federal policing grant for 2024. Instead, it was an “administra­tive screw-up” that caused the city to miss the deadline to apply for the money.

However, both officials maintain that, even if the city had successful­ly applied and was awarded the grant – which would have paid for about 50 police officers for three years – it would have had to turn it down because of complicati­ons with a new state law over local government funding.

“We would not have accepted it because we would not have had the capacity to train them,” said Nick DeSiato, the mayor’s chief of staff. “It just does not make sense.”

Neverthele­ss, the applicatio­n was due before the new state law went into effect. The botched submission still represents a colossal error that “we want to make sure never happens again,” said Jeff Fleming, Johnson’s spokespers­on. “It was entirely unacceptab­le.”

The news was first reported by Mark Belling of News/Talk 1130 WISN-AM radio.

DeSiato said a “very seasoned” civilian employee within the Milwaukee Police Department is the subject of an internal investigat­ion to determine what happened with the applicatio­n.

Heather Hough, the police department’s chief of staff, didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment Friday.

DeSiato and Fleming said the employee attempted to submit the grant electronic­ally within hours of the deadline in mid-May, but failed to complete the submission and missed the deadline due to a technical issue.

The city “exerted a significant

If the city doesn’t maintain police and fire staffing services according to the law, the penalties are large. Milwaukee would lose 15% of its state revenue. Based on the total shared revenue the city expects to receive in 2024, the loss would total about $36 million, according to city officials.

amount of resources” to get an extension, DeSiato said. That included reaching out to Sen. Tammy Baldwin’s office, but the effort failed.

Why the employee waited within hours to submit the applicatio­n is one angle of the Police Department’s internal investigat­ion, DeSiato and Fleming said.

The COPS grant is a program through the U.S. Department of Justice that provides funding directly to law enforcemen­t agencies to hire officers. The city has been awarded money under the program the last two years.

But Wisconsin’s new local funding law – written by Republican­s in the state Legislatur­e and signed into effect in June by Gov. Tony Evers – throws a wrench in funding officers with grants, DeSiato and Fleming said.

The law requires Milwaukee to maintain the number of police officers and the daily staffing level in the fire department minimally at the numbers from the previous year – excluding any who are in state- or grant-funded positions.

The law also requires that, within 10 years, the city must employ at least 1,725 officers. For 2023, it has funding for 1,630 positions.

On Tuesday, Johnson released his proposed $1.9 billion 2024 budget, which included taxpayer funding for three police recruit classes, each with 65 officers.

That’s the maximum number of recruits and classes that Milwaukee’s police academy can train in a year, according to DeSiato, who has previously served as chief of staff for the Milwaukee Police Department.

If 50 of those recruits were grantfunde­d, the city would have fallen behind on its state-mandated benchmarks for staffing, DeSiato said.

If the city doesn’t maintain police and fire staffing services according to the law, the penalties are large. Milwaukee would lose 15% of its state revenue. Based on the total shared revenue the city expects to receive in 2024, the loss would total about $36 million, according to city officials.

DeSiato said the law has a “material negative impact to support public safety,” which he said is one of Johnson’s highest priorities. “This limitation extensivel­y and long-term discourage­s using COPS grants to expand our police force.”

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