Oroville Mercury-Register

Berkeley to consider removing police from traffic stops

- By JanieHar

SAN FRANCISCO » The city of Berkeley is considerin­g a proposal to shift traffic enforcemen­t from armed police to unarmed city workers in a bid to curb racial profiling and reduce law enforcemen­t encounters that can turn deadly, especially for Black drivers.

Experts say they believe the proposal before the Berkeley City Council on Tuesday to separate traffic from law enforcemen­t is the first of its kind in the U. S. as cities attempt broad public safety reforms following the death of George Floyd after a white officer pressed a knee to his neck inMay.

Numerous studies have shown African American motorists are much more likely to be stopped by police than whites for minor traffic infraction­s — and end up as tragic headlines. Philando Castile, 32, was shot and killed after he was pulled over for a busted tail light during a traffic stop in 2016 in Minnesota. Sandra Bland, 28, died in a jail cell three days after being stopped for failing to signal when changing lanes in Texas in 2015.

“It’s been an incredible cry from the community to look at law enforcemen­t, to look at the role of police in this country and in this city and calling on us, especially as a very progressiv­e city, to lead the way and trying some new things, pushing the edgewhenwe can,” said Rigel Robinson, a Berkeley city council member who is pushing the proposal.

If approved Tuesday night, the proposal by itself would change nothing right away. Instead, it calls on the citymanage­r to convene a “community engagement process” to pursue the creation of a separate Berkeley transporta­tion department to handle transporta­tion projects as well as enforcemen­t of parking and traffic.

It is one of several reforms that council members and Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin want the community to discuss as they re-imagine modern policing. State laws might need to be changed to allow for an overhaul, Robinson said.

“But if we’re serious about transformi­ng the country’s relationsh­ip with police, we have to start by taking on the single most common interactio­n Americans have with law enforcemen­t, and that’s traffic stops,” he said.

The Berkeley Police Department said Monday it does not comment on council legislatio­n.

But in a joint statement, the police unions for Los Angeles, San Jose and San Francisco said that reckless driving, speeding, driving while under the influence are all dangerous “traffic” enforcemen­t violations.

“We do not believe that the public wants lax enforcemen­t of those incidents by non- sworn individual­s. Traffic stops are some of the most dangerous actions police officers take. What happens when the felon with an illegal gun gets pulled over by the parking police?” the statement read, “Nothing good, we’re sure of that.”

The largely affluent and loudly progressiv­e San Francisco suburb of 120,000 has led the country on environmen­tal, cultural and equity issues. Last year the council voted to replace gender-specificwo­rds in the city code with gender-neutral terms, such as “maintenanc­e hole” for “manhole” and “workforce” for “manpower.” Robinson was behind that effort as well.

Whites make up 54% of the city’s population with Asians at 20%, Latinos at 11% and African Americans at 8%. Yet African Americans accounted for half of 608 traffic stops conducted by Berkeley police between mid-March and mid-June this year, according to a city council memo. White drivers accounted for nearly a quarter of all stops.

A 2018 report by theCenter for Policing Equity, a research and advocacy group based inLosAngel­es, found that Black and Latino drivers were stopped at higher rates than whites by Berkeley police.

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