Baltimore Sun

Police to draw new districts under law

Unchanged since 1950s, Baltimore boundaries will adjust after each census

- By Jessica Anderson

The Baltimore Police Department’s nine districts are expected to take new shapes in 2021 following the 2020 Census.

Many local politician­s have long advocated for the district boundaries to be reevaluate­d using updated population informatio­n, as well as data about calls for service, crime trends and violence. The Maryland General Assembly approved legislatio­n earlier this year that requires the department to draw new boundaries after each decennial census.

“This is about having our police department have its resources given out based on data that we have here in the present day. Our police districts have not been redrawn in my lifetime in any significan­t manner,” Democratic City Council President Brandon Scott said Thursday at a news conference outside the Harbel Community Organizati­on in Northeast Baltimore. The law went into effect Oct. 1.

The new boundaries will be “based on the violence, based on the population, based on the calls for service and everything else we have to do in order to have a functionin­g police department,” Scott said.

The current districts are largely based on boundaries drawn in the 1950s when the city’s population was close to 1 million. The city today has just over 600,000 residents.

“We know crime and public safety is one of the biggest issues that we can work on for the city of Baltimore,” said Democratic Sen. Cory McCray, who introduced the legislatio­n earlier this year

McCray said department will be “looking at the service calls, looking the police response time, looking at shifts, and those geographic boundaries, and making sure our city is operating in a 21st century, instead of a 20th century.”

It’s unclear what the new boundaries will look like. The legislatio­n says the police department has one year after the census to submit a plan to the mayor and City Council for their approval.

At a meeting Thursday of City Council’s public safety committee, members discussed the need to redraw boundaries before plans are made to move or renovate station houses.

Funding requests outlined by Democratic Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young to Republican Gov. Larry Hogan in an Oct. 2 letter called for $24.5 million to move and repair stations, including $4 million each to relocate the Central, Eastern, Southweste­rn and Northeaste­rn. The Northweste­rn would get a “complete renovation” costing $5 million. The Southeaste­rn and Southern would be repaired or renovated for $1.5 million each. The Western and the Northern would get $250,000 apiece in “preventati­ve maintenanc­e.”

Harrison said a staffing plan that is expected to be completed by the end of the year “should inform us of how many people will be in a district” and that he’s “keeping options on the table.”

The officials also highlighte­d passage of another law that requires the police department to hire more civilian employees. The department will have to have a ratio of 80% sworn officers to 20% percent civilians. Currently, only 13% of employees are civilians, Scott said.

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