The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Senate OKS bill to deter defunding of police,

Legislatio­n would bar cities from slashing law enforcemen­t money.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

The Georgia Senate approved a bill that would prohibit local government­s from substantia­lly decreasing funding for law enforcemen­t.

The measure was filed after national criminal justice advocates called for the reallocati­on of money spent on police forces to fund services such as mental health treatment or education. Senators voted 36-15 to approve the measure mostly along party lines, with Republican­s in support of the measure.

Democratic state Sens. Michael “Doc” Rhett of Marietta, Valencia Seay of Riverdale and Freddie Powell Simms of Albany voted for the bill.

“This bill is addressing the issue of two municipali­ties in the state of Georgia where some radical commission­s attempted to defund law enforcemen­t without any citizen input,” said state Sen. Randy Robertson, a Cataula Republican and former police officer who sponsored the bill in the Senate.

Local elected officials in Atlanta and Athens-clarke County considered drasticall­y cutting their police budgets last year but ultimately did not.

House Bill 286 would bar cities and counties from reducing their law enforcemen­t budgets by more than 5% in one year or cumulative­ly across five years.

HB 286 includes exemptions for police forces with fewer than 25 officers, for one-time spending on equipment or facility purchases, and if the local government sees a decline in revenue.

Because changes were made by senators to the legislatio­n after it passed the House, it will have to go back to that chamber for its approval.

Democrats said the legislatio­n goes against an often-stated Republican principle of allowing local government­s to have control over local issues.

“We’re actually not elected to manage the local budgets,” said state Sen. Elena Parent, an Atlanta Democrat. “This is very ‘Big Brother.’ We’re saying, ‘We know what you need better than you know what you need.’” Robertson disagreed. “What we’re elected to do is serve the 11 million Georgians in this state,” he said. “We have to take steps and use the authority we have to protect those individual­s.”

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