USA TODAY US Edition

Justice for Taylor not the end of advocacy

We must continue to reform public safety

- Rashad Robinson

Now that the Louisville police officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor have been charged, more than two years after her death, Taylor’s family may finally get some accountabi­lity. But Taylor will never get her life back. Nor will the next person killed by police.

Thursday’s decision by the Department of Justice to bring charges shows why federal laws with real teeth – and vigilant, competent federal officials – really matter. They are too often the only authoritie­s capable of protecting our freedom and ensuring justice, whether related to police accountabi­lity, voting rights or reproducti­ve freedom.

The president and Congress have some big decisions on their plates. They have the opportunit­y to enact change with legislatio­ns that address underlying factors of police violence – The People’s Response Act (which provides grants to solve community issues instead of using police) and the Counseling Not Criminaliz­ation in Schools Act (which replaces school police with trauma services).

They should take that opportunit­y. The truth is that we will not see the end of police violence as long as we continue to allow police department­s to control the definition of public safety. That forces our communitie­s to serve the interests of police, instead of the other way around.

Police department­s escalate violent practices that have proved not to work, ignore community-driven solutions that do, treat Black people as if our constituti­onal rights and freedoms are conditiona­l on their approval, and blame Black communitie­s for the realities that people in power have created, including law enforcemen­t officials.

We need to fundamenta­lly change who’s in charge of public safety, who decides what the real problems are and who decides what the solutions are. We need to change who gets the money tagged for ensuring our safety – and what they do with it.

This change requires the same kind of sustained investment in Black-led community activism we have seen over the past two years, as well as the same kind of federal interventi­on that we (finally) saw last Thursday.

Charges against the officers were brought by the federal Department of Justice, in part, on the grounds of civil rights violations. This is what activists have been demanding since the initial mishandlin­g of the grand jury investigat­ion by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron. It’s sustained community activism that forces action.

Too much of the conversati­on about policing promotes a big lie: that the police exist to protect all Americans equally.

Police disproport­ionately harass Black Americans. And there’s no hesitation to arrest protesters when we speak out about the trauma, pain and suffering that they cause us.

Just last month – at a protest against the brutal police murder of Jayland

Walker, who died from 46 bullet wounds in Akron, Ohio – officers arrested Taylor’s aunt and the father of Jacob Blake Jr., who was left partially paralyzed after a 2020 police shooting in Milwaukee.

Even so, we cannot back down. Activism focused on changing the entire system of public safety is the only antidote to out-of-control police department­s. When people vote, raise their voices, demand that officials at all levels take alternativ­es to policing seriously – and demand that federal authoritie­s take police department­s to task for their systematic abuses and failures to protect us – we start to see the changes that will prevent the next police killing.

Policing, punishment and prisons alone don’t make our communitie­s safer. In some cases, they put Black lives in greater danger.

Black communitie­s want and need a new approach. Community-led alternativ­es – housing stability, food security, mental-health support, education improvemen­ts and the expansion of community resources – will help keep Black people safe.

We must continue to advocate, speak and vote loudly to promote a new strategy for public safety. We must do this in Breonna Taylor’s name, and in the name of so many others.

Rashad Robinson is the president of Color of Change, a racial justice organizati­on with more than 7 million members that uses innovative strategies to bring about lasting change in systems and sectors that affect the lives of Black Americans.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP ?? A ground mural depicts Breonna Taylor in Annapolis, Md.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP A ground mural depicts Breonna Taylor in Annapolis, Md.
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