The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta City Council votes down cut to police department budget, wants to see culture change plan,

Ordinance would have held back $73 million to spur reform efforts.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

The Atlanta City Council on Saturday narrowly voted down an ordinance that would have withheld $73 million of the Atlanta Police Department’s budget until Mayor Keisha Lance Bottom’s administra­tion drafts a plan to reinvent the culture of policing in the city and make it a national model for law enforcemen­t.

The 8-7 vote came after two teleconfer­ence council meetings and a listening session this past week, during which the council received thousands of voice mails of public comment. Many called for them to defund the police, as a handful of other cities have done in the aftermath of mass demonstrat­ions sparked by the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd in late May.

Council members Michael Julian Bond, Andrea Boone, Howard

Shook, Marci Collier Overstreet, J.P. Matzigkeit, Joyce Sheperd,

Cleta Winslow and Dustin Hillis voted against the ordinance, while Council members Jennifer Ide, Matt Westmorela­nd, Andre Dickens, Natalyn Archibong, Amir R. Farohkhi, Antonio Brown and Carla Smith voted for it.

A divided City Council

The council also narrowly approved a nonbinding resolu

tion demanding the mayor draft a plan to reform policing in the city.

The ordinance, which would have sequestere­d $73 million of the department’s $217 million operationa­l budget until Dec. 31, was meant to provide the council leverage to oversee the process.

Ide, who authored the legislatio­n, said it was not intended to punish police, but hold the administra­tion and council accountabl­e.

“I didn’t want to spend the time of putting together some blue ribbon panel that we all pick our political friends to be on,” she

said. “We need to do our work. This is much more about the elected officials doing our work than the police officers.”

Bond, who voted for the resolution, but against the ordinance, said the possible defunding of the department sent a horrible message to police officers.

“These folks have mortgages,” he said. “They have bills. They have obligation­s that extend beyond six months.”

Bottoms convened an advisory council to make recommenda­tions for how to reform the police

department’s use of force policies earlier this month.

The unrest in Atlanta intensifie­d when Garrett Rolfe, a white officer, shot Rayshard Brooks on the night of June 12 after a struggle in which Brooks wrestled away an officer’s Taser and fired the stun gun at officers as he fled. An autopsy found Brooks died from two gunshot wounds “of the back.”

Fulton District Attorney Paul Howard Jr. charged Rolfe with felony murder Wednesday. Meanwhile, a Georgia Bureau of Inves

tigation review of the shooting is still underway.

The Council’s special called meeting to approve the city bud

get began on Friday morning and lasted until 5 a.m. Saturday before adjourning at 1 p.m.

Reforms debated

The initial resolution, coupled with the ordinance, would have withheld nearly six months of the police department’s budget and required that the administra­tion produce decades of data on police spending, crime rates and comparison­s of the department’s budget with peer cities. I t would have mandated monthly administra­tion updates on the status of recommenda­tions for reform, including ensuring a police force that reflects the city’s demographi­cs, extensive train

ing on cultural awareness, use of force and de-escalation tactics and requiring officers to participat­e in programmin­g on the negative role of law enforcemen­t on community/police relations.

At first, the legislatio­n had 12 sponsors — a veto-proof majority

— but several council members asked for the removal of their

names from the resolution after further reflection.

Some said they feared it created too much uncertaint­y among police, who have been promised $12 million in raises over

the next year. Councilman Matzigkeit said he agreed that the city needed to reimagine its police depart

ment, but that expectatio­ns of police aren’t necessaril­y consistent with the laws, policies and procedures that now govern them.

“Our police officers are caught in the middle,” he said. “That’s a horrible place for them to be.” Councilwom­an Overstreet said that her constituen­ts had

expressed concerns about rising crime in their communitie­s and wanted more police, not less.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Demonstrat­ors marched Monday to the state Capitol in downtown Atlanta, many of them protesting incidents of police brutality against Black people. The killing of Rayshard Brooks by police the weekend before at an Atlanta Wendy’s parking lot swelled the crowd demanding reform.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Demonstrat­ors marched Monday to the state Capitol in downtown Atlanta, many of them protesting incidents of police brutality against Black people. The killing of Rayshard Brooks by police the weekend before at an Atlanta Wendy’s parking lot swelled the crowd demanding reform.

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