/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thenation.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2020%2F06%2FCovert-defund-ftr_img.jpg)
By
Bryce Covert
thenation.com
On a Sunday in early June, Grand Army Plaza, a large square at the
entrance to Brooklyn’s Prospect Park, swarmed with people of all
different races and ages. A family march of parents and their children
flowed into groups of young people on bikes. Many held signs declaring
“Black lives matter,” but there were perhaps an equal number of other
signs: “Defund the police.”1
It’s a radical demand that just a few weeks ago was rarely heard on
the streets of New York City or in many other cities, for that matter.
But since George Floyd, a black resident of Minneapolis, was killed by a
white police officer and Breonna Taylor, a black emergency room
technician, was killed by police in Louisville, Ky., in her sleep and
outrage over these and countless other instances of police brutality
pushed tens of thousands of people to protest in cities and towns across
the country, it has become a rallying cry of the movement.2
It’s not just a slogan. Out of the protest movement has come a surge
of organizing to push city councils to shift money out of bloated police
budgets and into starved social services—and activists are already
seeing some concrete successes. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti walked
back a proposed increase for the LAPD and has promised a $150 million
cut instead. Lawmakers in 15 other cities have made similar pledges. The
Minneapolis City Council has even voted to disband the city’s police
department.3
It’s an unprecedented moment. Spending on the police by state and
local governments jumped from about $2 billion in 1960 to $137 billion
in 2018, unadjusted for inflation; the average share of city budgets
spent on policing grew from 6.6 percent in 1977 to 7.8 percent in 2017.
“We have had a persistent trend for the last half-century of spending
ever more money on police and incarceration,” said Kelly Lytle
Hernandez, a history professor at the University of California, Los
Angeles. “This is a truly historic shift.” Organizers agree. “Something
like ‘defund the police’ just two weeks ago…was a nonstarter,” said
Nicolas O’Rourke, the Pennsylvania organizing director for the Working
Families Party. Now it’s a chant heard nearly as often at protests as
“No justice, no peace.”4
The ever-increasing amount of money spent on policing has borne
little relationship to crime rates. The number of crimes rose from 1,887
per 100,000 Americans in 1960 to 5,950 in 1980. Then rates started to
decline, falling to 2,580 per 100,000 by 2018. And yet spending has
steadily increased throughout that span.5
In New York City, spending on police went from $7 million in 1981 to
$5.9 billion this year, not accounting for inflation. The NYPD accounts
for 7.7 percent of the city’s budget—more than what was allocated to the
Housing Preservation and Development, Health and Mental Hygiene,
Homeless Services, and Youth and Community Development departments
combined. And yet crime in the city has been falling for the past two
decades.6
Constance Malcolm knows all too well about the outsize power of the
NYPD. A white officer chased her teenage son Ramarley Graham into their
home and shot and killed him in their bathroom in 2012. “I’ve been
fighting for eight years, and I didn’t get any justice,” she said. The
officer, Richard Haste, was indicted on manslaughter charges by a grand
jury, but a judge dismissed them; Haste stayed on the force five more
years before he quit just after he was found guilty in a departmental
disciplinary review. “I wouldn’t call it justice,” she added, “because
somebody’s life was taken and there’s nothing that could replace it.”7
Malcolm works in a nursing home and said she hasn’t been
given enough protective equipment since the Covid-19 pandemic hit. She
has tested positive for coronavirus antibodies, and a lot of her
patients died. “Even before the coronavirus, black and brown communities
were not getting what we needed,” she said. “Many of our people don’t
even have access to good health care, affordable housing, good quality
food, or a strong education.”8
Despite this, spending on the police continues to increase. “The NYPD
keeps getting the highest budget, even though they kill our children
and nothing happens,” Malcolm said. “We’re in a crisis. Police brutality
is a crisis. The only way to deal with this and keep our community safe
is to defund the police.”9
These spending imbalances have now been thrown into
stark relief. As a result of the economic crash, state and local budgets
are being decimated by a drop in tax revenue at the same time that
expenses are rising steeply to deal with the coronavirus crisis. The
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities projects a $615 billion shortfall
in state budgets over the next three years. Because nearly all city and
state governments have to balance their operating budgets every year,
they’ll be forced to make deep cuts.10
Keeping spending on the police intact or even increasing it will mean
brutal reductions elsewhere. “When the economy is great and the tax
revenues of the city are growing, you can sort of paper over that,” said
Leo Ferguson, a member of the New York–based Communities United for
Police Reform. “But then something like Covid-19 hits, you have a
crisis, and suddenly it all falls apart.” In order to make up for a $10
billion tax shortfall, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio released an
executive budget in April that cut NYPD funding by less than 1 percent
while hitting the Department of Education with a 3 percent reduction and
eliminating a youth employment program, among other cuts.11
The crisis has also increased the need for the very services
on the chopping block. “No one is asking for more police,” said Kamau
Walton, a member of Critical Resistance, a national prison-abolition
group. “People are really asking, ‘What do we need to survive? What do
we need to make it through this dire moment?’ And the answer is
definitely not more police.” Hobbled services barely able to respond to a
pandemic stand in sharp contrast with the tools that police departments
have to quell the protests. “I see all of the resources—military-grade
weapons—being used in residential areas,” O’Rourke said. “They were
shooting tear gas and rubber bullets and bean bags.”12
The protest movement happened to coincide with the time of year when
many cities are considering the next year’s budget. In New York,
advocates have coalesced around the demand to cut a minimum of $1
billion from the NYPD’s budget for the coming fiscal year—something the
City Council promised to do a little over two weeks into the protests.
Advocates want to see a police hiring freeze, which has been imposed on
many other city agencies, and an end to using police in schools and
youth programs. They also want to end the NYPD’s task forces for mental
illness and homeless outreach and have social workers take their place.
All of this may require a reduction in head count during a recession in
which millions have lost their jobs. But, Ferguson said, “police should
not be an employment program.” There are other areas to cut in the
NYPD’s budget, he added, such as the hundreds of thousands of dollars
spent on things like bomb-seeking underwater drones and militarized
armored vehicles.13
Advocates would also like to see settlements for police brutality
come out of police budgets, not general revenue. In New York, as in many
other cities, the money for settling these cases is usually taken out
of the city’s overall budget. Ensuring that settlements come out of the
NYPD’s budget “gives them some incentive to address misconduct,”
Ferguson said.14
Symbolic politics: Activists criticized
Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser for painting a “Black Lives
Matter” mural in front of the White House when she had resisted cutting
the police budget.
Organizing to address swollen police budgets has been happening in a
number of other cities for years. For the past six years, some members
of the Black Philly Radical Collective have been fighting to reduce
police violence, including a call to defund the police. But this is the
first time that all the members of the collective have made such a
demand. “We know there are political moments when you have to strike,”
said Megan Malachi, an organizer with Philly for REAL Justice, which is
part of the collective.15
The City Council, however, hasn’t been quick to take up the demand.
“This is the kind of issue where even the black members of our political
government here in Philadelphia are not responsive to the needs of
their constituents,” Malachi said. Still, after a majority of council
members said in early June they opposed Mayor Jim Kenney’s proposed $14
million increase in the police budget, prompting him to drop it, they
reached a deal to reduce police funding by $33 million on June 17.
Before the protests, if someone had claimed that the mayor would go
against an increase in police funding, “no one would have believed you,”
O’Rourke said.16
Stop Police Terror Project DC, which fights police violence in the
nation’s capital, has highlighted the amount of money the Metropolitan
Police Department gets in the budget every year when it comes up for
debate. Sean Blackmon, one of the project’s organizers, noted that in
Washington, some violent crimes, such as homicide, have been on the rise
in recent years, bucking the national trend, despite increasing police
budgets. For him, that’s still a reason to defund the police. “Why would
a city government continue to invest in something that’s clearly not
working?” he said.17
At the same time, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser recently proposed cutting
the Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, which was created as
part of a 2016 criminal justice reform that sought to deploy public
health violence interrupters instead of police. “This is the same mayor
who is getting all of this positive press because of the Black Lives
Matter mural and renaming Black Lives Matter Plaza,” Blackmon said. “But
her actual policies…have a tangible negative impact on black lives.”
Meanwhile, the City Council passed an emergency police reform bill
focused on limiting the use of force and increasing transparency without
touching the budget question. It “feels kind of delinquent. Kind of far
behind,” he said.18
“That’s why we’re pushing so hard now for defunding the police,
particularly as Bowser is clearly seeking to usurp and co-opt this
moment,” he continued. “If she’s determined to claim to the world that
black lives matter, we intend to make her prove it.”19
The movement to defund the police is cropping up not just in major
metropolises. It’s also taking root in smaller cities. Wildaliz Bermudez
has been on the City Council of Hartford for over four and a half
years. “Never before have I seen this type of public outcry,” she said.
She has received more than 100 e-mails calling to defund the police. She
and a fellow Working Families Party member on the council, Joshua
Michtom, proposed cutting $9.6 million from the police department’s
budget. That proposal failed, but the council did vote to reduce the
department’s budget by $1 million next year and put that money into
things like after-school programs and another housing inspector.20
In addition to less spending on policing, advocates want the
police to stop dealing with things like mental health crises and school
safety; instead, they want cities to fund services that would address
these issues without criminalizing the people who are suffering. “The
safest communities don’t have the most cops. They have the most
resources,” O’Rourke said. Police officers are typically the first
responders when someone has a mental health crisis, not public health or
social workers. Jails like Rikers Island in New York and Cook County
Jail in Illinois are now the country’s largest mental health facilities.
Communities across the country have responded to the homelessness
crisis by criminalizing homeless people, putting the police in charge of
ticketing and clearing those without shelter rather than offering
housing and services. And 38 states and Washington, D.C., authorize the
placement of police officers in schools. “The bottom line is you can’t
overinvest in social services,” said Anthonine Pierre, the deputy
director of the Brooklyn Movement Center. “You can overinvest in
policing.”21
Seeking justice: Constance Malcolm has been
fighting against police violence since her son, Ramarley Graham, was
killed by an NYPD officer in 2012.
The deaths of Floyd and Taylor may prove to be a pivotal
moment, but these transformations have been years in the making. “This
work has been going on on the ground for quite some time,” Lytle
Hernandez said. “It’s exploded on the streets under the term ‘defund the
police,’ but this broader notion of rethinking resources to police [to]
invest in the social safety net has been in play certainly for the last
few years.”22
Today’s protests come after seven years of organizing and movement
building in the wake of the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown, Eric
Garner, and other black people at the hands of police and vigilantes.
These deaths led to some reforms, such as departments banning certain
use-of-force techniques like choke holds and instituting the use of body
cameras. The Obama administration put at least 15 police departments
under consent decrees and limited the transfer of military-grade
equipment to local forces. In fact, Minneapolis was one of six cities
the Obama Justice Department selected to pilot procedural reforms in
2015. And yet since 2015, police have killed about 1,000 people in the
nation every year. “We’re not going to fix these problems by jailing a
couple of killer cops or giving them body cameras or making them take
implicit bias training,” Alex S. Vitale, the author of The End of Policing, told Zachary Siegel in an interview with The Nation.23
So activists have pushed to go much further. Defunding the police was
one of the six policy platforms put forward by the Movement for Black
Lives in 2016, a year after it convened a massive gathering in
Cleveland. “Black Lives Matter set the foundation and the groundwork,”
Pierre said. Since then, “there has been ongoing forward movement.”24
It’s no coincidence that these protests and the demands issuing from
them are happening in the midst of a historic health crisis. “When you
live in a pandemic for three months and lose jobs and lose family
members and think about how society is organized, it becomes much easier
to say, ‘Well, maybe we do need to get rid of the cops,’” Pierre said.
“We got rid of going outside. So maybe we should get rid of the cops.”25
Not to mention that black people have been disproportionately dying
of Covid-19. Everyone has watched the federal government’s paralysis in
the face of the crisis, and many feel that the $1,200 stimulus checks
and enhanced unemployment benefits don’t go far enough to cushion such
an enormous blow. The protests are “happening in the context of the US
government abandoning its people under the coronavirus,” Blackmon said.
“It’s almost like a perfect storm that has now exploded and blossomed
into a nationwide resistance movement.”26
A number of those who are calling to defund the police are demanding
not just that their budgets be reduced and redistributed but also that
the money eventually be zeroed out and police eliminated. “Our call is
specifically abolitionist,” Malachi said. “We’re aware that because of
the popularity of the defund-the-police narrative…it could easily be
co-opted by Democrats and liberals and made into reform rather than the
radical call that it is.”27
Even so, many see changing city budgets and the roles the police play
as part of that process. “It can be a step toward abolition,” Walton
said, “if we make sure these processes are being controlled and led by
the community.” As Vitale put it, abolition is “a process more than an
outcome…. We need to challenge the scope and power of policing. We need
to take their budgets away, take their toys away, take their authority
away in as many dimensions as we can.”28
“These have been the tensions and conversations all along,” Lytle
Hernandez said. But “you can go back to any social movement and find
these kinds of tensions between more moderate and radical wings of the
movement.” For her, eradicating racial inequality requires abolition.
“We have walked up to this precipice at least twice before,” she said,
pointing to Emancipation and the civil rights movement. “We have to make
a decision about are we going to really head toward racial justice or
make a compromise that’s easier for the moment and maintain white
supremacy? Each time before, we have chosen white supremacy.”29
Whether more mayors and city councils will take heed is unclear.
Mayor de Blasio, a Democrat who briefly ran for the party’s presidential
nomination this year on his progressive bona fides, at first shot down
the idea of reducing the NYPD’s budget before saying, 10 days into the
protests, that he would cut that spending and direct it to youth and
social services. But he hasn’t stated yet by how much. “Cut the budget,
and let’s see where you stand,” Malcolm, Ramarley Graham’s mother, said
of de Blasio. “Let’s see if black life really matters to him.”30
Meanwhile, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer has called for a
$1.1 billion reduction over four years rather than the immediate
decrease that activists want to see and the City Council appears to be
considering. In Congress, Democrats have put forward a landmark policing
bill that is still focused on procedural reform. But even this is proof
of the impact the activism is having. “This is something that I think
we’d all agree felt pretty unthinkable just a few weeks ago,” Ferguson
said. “It shows how much the ground is shifting.”31
“This is the moment for us to lean in,” O’Rourke said. “I’m excited to see for the most part the people are leaning in with us.”32
No comments:
Post a Comment