It’s Not Just About 30 Police Officers
The debate about the federal COPS grant is really about long-term commitments and generational change
Statement from members of the Milwaukee Common Council – Alderman Ashanti Hamilton, Alderman Nik Kovac, Alderwoman Nikiya Dodd, Alderwoman Milele A. Coggs, Alderman Khalif J. Rainey, Alderwoman Chantia Lewis, Alderman José G. Pérez, Alderwoman Marina Dimitrijevic and Alderman Russell W. Stamper, II
We were not surprised to see members of the state legislature take the Common Council to task for its decision yesterday to turn down the federal COPS grant that has been at the center of so much debate recently. Some rarely miss an opportunity to speak quickly, one might say reflexively, when there’s an opportunity to criticize the City of Milwaukee.
Since, due to a procedural motion, this same file will return to the Common Council in January for more deliberation, perhaps there is time enough to explain why accepting this grant has been so difficult for a majority of this body.
We ask: isn’t it ironic that many of the same state legislators who rejected tens of millions of dollars in federal Medicare assistance and turned their backs on $800 million in federal transportation aid to build a passenger rail line across Wisconsin, now castigate Milwaukee for not wanting to burden a generation of taxpayers with unmanageable future costs?
Second, and perhaps more important, are the voices that called all Summer, through the Fall, and who are still heard in the street, for a reevaluation of the City’s priorities and its approach to policing. De-militarization, re-allocation, “right-sizing,” and a number of other important ideas can be summed up in one word: change. People can no longer accept a police department that takes so much and spends what it has in ways that they do not believe truly protect them. They want to see investment in intervention, mental health, de-escalation and non-violent responses to problems. Of course it is a long and complex road to get these goals, but we will never get there unless we start somewhere. That was the intention of the amendments offered at yesterday’s meeting; not to turn aside federal resources, but to assure ourselves and the community that there really is some hope for change. A great many in this City cannot abide the notion that this grant would only bring 30 more police officers into a department that has lost the trust of many.
Yesterday’s long and sometimes difficult conversation, perhaps overdue, was not a bad thing. It was a sign of hope. It was a sign that a grant the City has accepted without question for decades would be made transparent and those who administer it would be made accountable.
We ask those criticizing this decision to consider what it is about transparency, accountability, and financial responsibility they oppose? This version of the COPS grant is not a dead letter, but it and every other appropriation like it can expect fair-minded, close review going forward. Those we serve demand no less.
And we would offer one final point. Mayor Tom Barrett knows as well as anyone the challenges the growth of the police department’s budget are creating. He tells the Council about them every time he presents his proposed budget. He also insists that he has heard those calling for change and we want to believe him. His own remarks yesterday afternoon, then, sounding a good deal more like an unsympathetic state legislator than an advocate for progress in his own City, were intemperate and counterproductive. This sort of posturing benefits no one and only postpones the day on which he and the Common Council can begin to find real paths forward.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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