The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill to protect police funds draws questions

Foes cite loss of local control. Backers say it ensures public safety.

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

It got lots of publicity during the recently completed General Assembly session, but there may be little practical impact from a recently passed bill that would ban local government­s from drasticall­y reducing their law enforcemen­t budgets.

Supporters of House Bill 286 say it would keep people safe by not allowing local officials to “defund” police department­s — an idea that’s gained attention in the past year as national criminal justice advocates called for the reallocati­on of money spent on police forces to fund services such as mental health treatment or education.

Opponents say not only does the bill fly in the face of state Republican lawmakers’ oftenstate­d principle of allowing local government­s to have control over local issues, but the legislatio­n lacks teeth.

Gov. Brian Kemp is expected to sign the legislatio­n, which would bar cities and counties from reduc

ing their law enforcemen­t budgets by more than 5% in one year or cumulative­ly across five years.

The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Houston Gaines, R-athens, said he was spurred to file the legislatio­n after Atlanta and Athens-clarke County government­s considered substantia­lly decreasing their police budgets. Neither did.

“This puts protection­s in place to make sure that local government­s can’t defund the police,” Gaines said. “These proposals ... I have concerns that they would come back.”

The Atlanta City Council voted 8-7 last summer against withholdin­g $73 million — almost 34% — from the police budget while Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms drafted a plan to review policing. It did, however,pass are solution demanding that Bottoms’ administra­tion create that plan.

Athens Mayor Kelly Girtz, who opposed HB 286, said the Athens-clarke County unified government discussed the reallocati­on of half of police resources to other areas of government to address issues such as mental health, homelessne­ss or workforce developmen­t.

The conversati­ons were in response to the killings of Black men and women by police across the country, with activists saying that often a large percentage of a city’s budget goes to a criminal justice system that doesn’t keep them safe.

“People have experience­d real trauma over the last many years either in direct contact with law enforcemen­t violence or secondaril­y by observing that violence. That’s a real phenomenon,” Girtz said. “Locally, I think my colleagues on the County Commission wanted to respond to the reality of that trauma that we’ve seen again and again.”

Joe Stiles, Georgia executive director of the Southern States Police Benevolent Associatio­n, called Gaines’ legislatio­n “refreshing.”

“We believe it offers a reasonable plan to protect citizens and communitie­s from improper efforts to defund police department­s,” the union director said.

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. It also would require local government­s to allow public safety officers and first responders who request it to have money set aside from their paycheck used to pay premiums for insurance plans that provide legal assistance if needed.

State Rep. Scott Holcomb, an Atlanta Democrat, said the fact that the legislatio­n doesn’t include any oversight or penalties for local government­s that cut more than 5% from their law enforcemen­t budget makes the bill “partisan grandstand­ing wrapped in stupidity.”

“This proposed law does not serve a policy purpose — it serves a campaign purpose,” he said. “The only time it will ever be used will be in campaign ads.”

The legislatio­n requires any local government that wishes to decrease the police budget by more than 5% to hold public hearings discussing the changes. Gaines said if the decrease is approved, a resident could challenge the budget cut in court.

“A local government ... would be breaking state law,” he said. “And I’m confident the courts would ensure that local government­s follow the law as we’ve written.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2020 ?? “Defund Police” is written out in front of the Atlanta Police Department headquarte­rs in June in downtown Atlanta. The recently passed 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.
ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2020 “Defund Police” is written out in front of the Atlanta Police Department headquarte­rs in June in downtown Atlanta. The recently passed 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.

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