Business Day

US citizens lead the way in police reform

- Brad Brooks Lubbock

Last summer millions of Americans took to the streets to protest against racism, police violence and the killing of George Floyd. In the year since, many transforme­d their energy and anger to action. Across the country, civilians on task-forces and elected officials in state legislatur­es are pushing for changes that experts say address the root causes of police misconduct.

Last summer, millions of Americans took to the streets to protest against racism, police violence and the killing of George Floyd.

In the year since, many transforme­d their energy and anger to action. Across the country, civilians on task forces and elected officials in state legislatur­es are pushing for changes that experts say address the root causes of police misconduct targeting minority communitie­s. Reforms at state and local levels in the past year include the creation of oversight boards that are not beholden to police department­s or unions.

“You cannot just ask the police to do their reforms themselves — it won’t get done,” said Robert Davis, a pastor who co-ordinates a civilian-led task force in Denver that is preparing a report on proposed changes for police. “We have to empower the community to be responsibl­e for public safety.”

Community efforts have existed for generation­s, and modernisin­g the roughly 18,000 individual police department­s in the US is a messy, fragmented and difficult task. But policing experts say that efforts now go beyond addressing tactics such as banning choke holds.

“There is a deeper questionin­g around not just resources and tactics but in asking, ‘What are we trying to accomplish?’” said Tracie Keesee, who spent 25 years as a police officer in Denver before co-founding the Center for Policing Equity.

“People are genuinely trying to do something new.”

Keesee sees civilians making progress in places such as Ithaca, New York, where she worked with the mayor’s office, which recommende­d the replacemen­t of the police department with a “community solutions” public safety agency. The idea was rejected by the local police union.

She also cited a move in Austin, Texas, to cut the police budget by a third and use some of that money to address social issues such as homelessne­ss.

Austin is a Left-leaning island in a conservati­ve state where the Republican governor, Greg Abbott, is pushing legislatio­n that

would withhold some state tax revenue for cities that cut police budgets. That points to hurdles ahead for reformers.

Jeffrey Fagan, a Columbia University criminal justice scholar, said the federal government has an important role in policing reform. But he is increasing­ly convinced that state-level efforts hold more promise at getting to the roots of police misconduct. “That is the future of police reform,” he said.

He called reforms that were pushed through the Massachuse­tts state legislatur­e and signed into law by another Republican governor, Charlie Baker, in December “remarkable”. They included a police oversight committee.

That they came from elected state officials “has a very powerful legitimisi­ng effect”.

COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS

On Saturday, Maryland’s Democrat-led legislatur­e passed aggressive police reforms, overriding three vetoes from Republican governor Larry Hogan.

Jonathan Blanks, a visiting fellow at the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunit­y, said people often look to Washington for help with big, systemic problems.

But officials there do not have much authority over local police department­s, he said.

Days before former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin went on trial in March for murder in Floyd’s death, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act was passed with little Republican support in the Democrat-controlled US House of Representa­tives.

Among its provisions, the bill proposes restrictin­g certain funds to local government­s that let law enforcemen­t officers use choke holds, requiring law enforcemen­t agencies to provide data on the use of deadly force, and changing “qualified immunity” to further open the door for lawsuits against police over the use of excessive force.

The bill’s prospects are uncertain in the Senate, where the Democrats’ majority is slim and some moderate Democrats have joined Republican­s in expressing concern that it would divert funds that police need and make communitie­s less safe.

Murphy Robinson, the director of public safety in Denver, linked the desire of communitie­s to take part in rethinking policing to last summer’s protests. He welcomed civilian input, but cautioned that task forces need to be fully representa­tive and have more involvemen­t from law enforcemen­t.

Earlier this year, Robinson halted the public safety department’s participat­ion in Denver’s task force because he said his team’s role is limited to answering questions, which the taskforce co-ordinator Davis denied.

“If you don’t have the people that do this work every day at the table, we’re going to miss an opportunit­y to actually work together to get real change, real criminal justice transforma­tion,” Robinson said.

Xochitl Gaytan, a community activist and member of the Denver task force, said it is underrepre­sented communitie­s that are disproport­ionately on the receiving end of police abuses who need to be heard.

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Oversight: Law enforcemen­t officers observe a protest outside the police station in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, on Monday after a black man was shot by police in Minneapoli­s.
/Bloomberg Oversight: Law enforcemen­t officers observe a protest outside the police station in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, on Monday after a black man was shot by police in Minneapoli­s.

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