Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Working toward inclusive community

- State Sen. Tony Hwang serves the 28th district, which includes Fairfield, Westport, Newtown, Easton and Weston.

My heart and moral conscience are with my African-American friends, neighbors, colleagues and any individual who, based on their gender, race, ethnicity, religion, disability or orientatio­n, has experience­d prejudice, bigotry and isolation throughout their life. I stand with you and will always speak out and fight for you against hate, prejudice and violence. Nobody is perfect in that effort and I still have a lot to learn to better educate myself. We must all try to do better.

My sympathies and prayers are with the families of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Eric Garner, Michael Brown and the countless unnamed lives that have been unnecessar­ily lost or affected due to racist actions based in ignorance, bias, fear and hate.

I cannot presume to fathom the myriad of emotions and frustratio­ns that so many African Americans must be experienci­ng, and I certainly cannot erase the incredible wrongs that have taken place throughout our history — wrongs that have resurrecte­d problems our country has battled since its creation. I can, however, offer an ear to listen, eyes to see and a strong voice to help move our country in a better direction.

While imperfect, America is a melting pot of people with different cultures and background­s that needs to be celebrated, cherished and respected — in its entirety. I believe in America and when we unite as one, this country can achieve what may seem impossible.

It’s time to stand together and take action to address racism, bias, prejudice and hate in America - not just between institutio­ns like the police and government, but hate and violence expressed by people hiding behind structural facades and political correctnes­s to incite fear and anger for their selfish goals. We, as a community need to think, engage, challenge and learn from each other. Not by defined stereotype­s and categoriza­tion, but by interactin­g and engaging with each person to celebrate the unique individual­s that they are. We can only make these urgent and fundamenta­l changes by healing, learning and trusting together.

We must provide opportunit­ies to educate our communitie­s and a public that may not be fully informed or understand. It will be challengin­g since these lessons will include real and sometimes uncomforta­ble conversati­ons. But progress toward trust and understand­ing must be the goal. Real solutions will not come from reactionar­y, sweeping, and dangerous generaliza­tions that our public suffers from in the general media. We all need to collaborat­e to find solutions to address the foundation­s of these challengin­g issues that have led to hate and violence.

I am proud to be part of that effort to find solutions. Last year, I was proud to co-sponsor and stand with the state senate as one of 36 unanimous votes to approve CT Public Act 19-90, which requires the police to release body or dashboard camera video within 96 hours of an incident upon request. This provides a timely check and balance with law enforcemen­t agencies. These measures are necessary when handling use-of-force incidents and fatalities.

More conversati­ons can and must happen on police body cameras for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity of law enforcemen­t actions.

This bill set a new standard by requiring the quick turnaround of informatio­n to the public.

The bill also prohibits police from shooting at or into fleeing vehicles unless there is an imminent threat of death to another person. The bill also expands the list of incidents to report on to include the use of chokeholds, pursuits or any incident that is likely to cause serious injury. The bill also enacts measures to review and see patterns in law enforcemen­t actions. The informatio­n provided to state authoritie­s would include identifyin­g the race and gender of those involved and how the force was used, and any injuries suffered.

More conversati­ons can and must happen on police body cameras for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity of law enforcemen­t actions. We need to implement procedures that emphasize empathy, mental health, and de-escalation. Law enforcemen­t culture must be examined and reformed to align with science-based best practices and person-centered judgment of what is right or wrong, not if the person is good or bad. Police staffing needs to be representa­tive of the community which it protects, and that is trained in providing support, making social connection­s, and recognizin­g and preventing stereotypi­c bias. We have begun this important work in Connecticu­t and we still have much more to do and I am committed to working towards it.

We all have a responsibi­lity to bring our community and nation together for a more promising future for everyone. A future that provides opportunit­y, justice, protection­s and free exchange of contrastin­g ideas for every single American — without excuse or exception.

 ?? Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A Stamford Police Department sergeant wears a body camera.
Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A Stamford Police Department sergeant wears a body camera.

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