USA TODAY International Edition

Poll: Most Americans want significant police reform

- Joel Shannon

Most Americans believe that change must be made to law enforcemen­t across the nation and that reforms are needed to reduce police brutality against Black Americans, a poll released Monday found.

Among the ideas embraced by many of those polled June 18- 22 by Ipsos on behalf of Public Agenda and USA TODAY:

• Force officers to reapply for their jobs to help weed out bad cops.

• Limit the scope of policing to focus on serious and violent crimes.

• Cut off police department­s’ ability to buy military gear.

Those reforms are in addition to widespread and bipartisan support for more training on de- escalation tactics and racial biases, as well as numerous reforms aimed at increasing transparen­cy.

The poll surveyed 1,113 U. S. adults as a part of the Hidden Common Ground initiative, which focuses on agreement and disagreeme­nt on solutions to tough public problems. The online poll has a credibilit­y interval, akin to a margin of error, of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points for all respondent­s.

The data comes after weeks of nationwide protests calling for racial equality and an end to police brutality. In respondent Lallage Carouthers’ 83 years, she has never seen such farreachin­g attention on the issues.

An African American woman living in Shelby, North Carolina, she can re

“I would like to see the police brutality stop and the racism stop.” Charlene Wise of Baltimore

member the end of segregatio­n – her daughter’s school integratin­g and a federal mandate that her nursing unit do the same.

But today, Americans’ reckoning with racial inequality is extending to even historical symbols of slavery and racism, especially Confederat­e statues. It’s unlike anything Carouthers has seen.

Cases of police brutality that have attracted national attention and protesting don’t happen in isolation – “It’s a problem with the whole system,” she said. Someone had to hire the officers, after all.

Yes, there is a problem

About three in four people surveyed say racial bias against Black Americans is a serious problem in the United States. Slightly fewer say it’s a problem in their community.

Asked whether racism is a problem with individual­s or society, respondent­s were more likely to say both. More than half said major changes or a total redesign were needed.

Few believe things should stay they way they are: Only 7% want to leave policing and law enforcemen­t the way it is.

“Some officers will profile Black people. ... I know I can get away with more things as a white person than a Black person could,” Yismo Rosenberg of Houston told USA TODAY. He believes poor training among officers is probably to blame.

The poll found several reforms that focused around training and diversity in policing had support from three- quarters or more of respondent­s: requiring all officers to undergo training on de- escalation tactics to avoid the use of force, requiring all officers to undergo training on how to be less racially biased and recruiting more Black Americans to become police officers.

Even more popular: transparen­cy reforms. Nine in 10 respondent­s supported having officers wear body cameras, 8 in 10 supported requiring police department­s to publicly report all incidents involving the use of force within 72 hours, and nearly as many supported creating a national public database of officers who have used excessive force – and prohibitin­g other jurisdicti­ons from rehiring them.

More extreme forms of police reform have varying levels of support, often with partisan divides. But the poll found two major reforms were supported by more than half of poll- takers: focusing policing on serious or violent crimes and requiring all police officers to reapply for their jobs, hiring back and retraining only the most qualified.

The poll identified several specific examples of responsibi­lities that more than half of respondent­s thought could be done by other profession­als rather than police: sending social workers and EMTs to respond to mental health, substance use and domestic violence issues, assigning social workers and counselors to monitor school safety, and using cameras, drones and other technologi­es to enforce traffic laws. Democrats were more likely to support these reductions to officers’ responsibi­lities.

But some are skeptical those reforms would work. Rosenberg, a Republican who has a military background, believed sending social workers to situations that could involve weapons, such as domestic violence disputes, would lead to widespread deaths and injuries.

And while rehiring officers could help, Ed Harrell, 42, of Jacksonvil­le, Florida, was skeptical the process would be able to identify bad officers: “They’re going to do what it takes to get the job.”

The poll also documented support for police was common: Nearly three- quarters of respondent­s said disrespect of police officers was a serious problem and about half saying police budgets should stay the same or increase.

Reducing funding to police department­s, a rallying cry for many protesters, received support from about onethird of respondent­s.

There are divides, too

Divisions along party lines were fairly common in the poll, especially in how widespread the problem is and how many changes are needed. For example, Democrats were about three times more likely to want major changes or a complete redesign of policing than Republican­s.

One core disagreeme­nt that can be seen in political and racial divides: the nature and prevalence of racism in policing.

White Americans tend to think the “vast majority” of police officers treat everyone fairly, while fewer than 1 in 10 Black respondent­s thought so.

Similarly, nearly 70% of Black Americans felt police using excessive force against Black Americans is a widespread problem, but only about 25% of white respondent­s thought so.

Charlene Wise, a 50- year- old Black woman from Baltimore, says she has never personally been a victim of police brutality, but she has seen “a lot of racism” over the years.

Finding a solution to the problem seems overwhelmi­ng to her: “I don’t even know where to start,” she said. The whole system might not be broken, but police department­s need better hiring practices and less focus on petty crimes, she says.

“America has a serious problem” with police brutality directed toward Black people, she said. “I would like to see the police brutality stop and the racism stop, if it could.”

 ??  ?? Reducing funding to police department­s, a rallying cry for many protesters, received support from about one- third of respondent­s. RINGO H. W. CHIU/ AP
Reducing funding to police department­s, a rallying cry for many protesters, received support from about one- third of respondent­s. RINGO H. W. CHIU/ AP

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