What Will Minneapolis Do Without Police? Everything We Know
06/08/2020 02:54 pm EDT
Plans to Make Plans
As of Sunday, the Minneapolis City Council said that it did not yet have concrete plans for what the community's new public safety system would look like, according to The New York Times. The council promised that the community itself would be involved at every step of the process, and that it would also take past studies from around the world into consideration.
Demonstrators said that the important part here was the scale of change the City Council had agreed to. Earlier in the day, protesters booed Mayor Jacob Frey after he said that he did not want to de-fund his police department. Whatever comes of the City Council's new plan, demonstrators can be sure it will be far different from what they have now.
"Protesting is good and needed, press conferences are good and needed," said Councilwoman Alondra Cano. "That third space is needed where we are committed to each other, and not the camera."
Appropriate Responses
One of the basic concepts underlying police abolition is that a person with a gun is not the best response to many — if not most — of the crises that police are called on to respond to. For example, another report by The Times cites activists who want to see nurses respond to drug overdoses, or want to see social workers respond to mental illness calls. In this way, a more specialized network of experts could be established to meet a community's needs rather than expecting police to be able to handle whatever is thrown at them.
Police themselves have thrown support behind this idea. In a 2016 press conference, former Dallas Police Chief David Brown said: "we're asking cops to do too much in this country. We are. ...Every societal failure, we put it off on the cops to solve. Not enough mental health funding? Let the cops handle it. Not enough drug addiction funding? Let's give it to the cops. Here in Dallas, we got a loose dog problem. Let's have the cops chase loose dogs."
Advocates for police abolition say that not only are police ineffectual in many of these contexts, but that they cause more harm than good by escalating tense situations through their very presence. On Twitter this week, professionals like nurses and teachers have come forward to remark on how much easier it is to de-escalate an angry person when an armed police officer is not there imposing on them.
Budget
Of course, many of the services described above have very little funding and infrastructure compared to police departments — something that activists want to see drastically changed. To pay for the more specialized network of first responders they are proposing, they would like to see police departments "defunded," arguing that their budgets are unnecessarily high right now.
The Minneapolis Police Department reportedly got a budget of $189 million this year — about 14.54 percent of the city's $1.3 billion total budget. According to a report by PopularDemocracy.org, this is up from about 11.2 percent of the city's total budget in 2015. This is a larger percentage by far than any other service except for Public Works, which got 23.3 percent of the budget for public transportation and infrastructure management in 2015.
Organizers want to see that money redirected into programs for nurses, social workers, housing programs for the homeless and other ways of addressing common emergencies. Bear in mind that Minneapolis' police budget is relatively low compared to other large cities. Many communities dedicate 25 percent or more of their municipal spending to police, and that money fuels overtime pay, military-grade equipment and other expenditures that activists oppose.
CAHOOTS
Members of the Minneapolis City Council have voiced support for a crisis intervention model called CAHOOTS — Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets — which has been used successfully in Eugene, Oregon since 1989 according to The New York Times. CAHOOTS employees took over about 20 percent of Eugene's 911 calls in 2019 with a budget of just $2 million.
CAHOOTS employees are trained and authorized to respond to issues like public intoxication, homelessness and some mental health emergencies. They also offer crisis intervention, counseling, mediation, information and referral, transportation to social services and first aid. The program is not designed to replace cops altogether, but experts say its model could be expanded to do more.
Branding
Whatever alternate strategies are provided, some opponents of police abolition say that they will not feel truly safe if police are disbanded altogether. This has caused some advocates to suggest "re-branding" the idea to get more people on board. Minneapolis Councilman Jeremiah Ellison told Sunday's crowd that he is thinking more about "funding a different safety strategy."
"Is the goal to execute some kind of vendetta against MPD? No," he said. Still, to the extend that a physical security force would still exist, advocates want it to look so different as to be virtually unrecognizable as a "police" force.
One popular suggestion is that officers be required to live within the community they work in. According to a 2014 report by Five Thirty-Eight, about 60 percent of police in the U.S.' biggest cities lived outside of their jurisdictions at the time. Some studies have shown that residency requirements for police have driven rates of violent encounters down within those communities, while also providing guaranteed jobs within each neighborhood and leveling the playing field for taxes as well.
Whether a city that has abolished its police department would call these security officers "police" when all is said and done remains to be seen. Some advocates have argued that it is worth renaming them no matter what to give victims of police violence peace of mind and to force beneficiaries of it to grapple with the change.
Systemic Racism
Another common argument in favor of total police abolition is that it is the only way to be sure that whatever replaces the police is free of systemic racism. In his 2017 book, We Were Eight Years in Power, author Ta-Nehisi Coates draws a direct lineage from modern police departments to 18th century "slave catchers," whose job was to capture escaped slaves and return them to their masters. He also argues that white supremacy is "foundational" to the U.S. law enforcement system, and changing it from within is not possible.
Black Lives Matter activists often cite a 2018 report showing that violence against African Americans was "baked into" the Minneapolis Police Department upon its founding in 1867. To those who fear for their safety without cops, these activists retort that they will fear for their safety so long as conventional cops do exist.
Fears
Despite their radical calls for police abolition, activists are not immune to fear of what might take its place themselves. As the idea becomes more mainstream, some social media users are expressing worry about its possible replacements — from private security contractors or "mercenaries" to a federally funded "surveillance programs." The presence of unidentified military contractors at recent Washington, D.C. protests has fueled these concerns.
The only solution, activists say, is to be thorough in planning for the replacement of police within the community. From the sounds of it, the Minneapolis City Council hopes to have these planning sessions behind closed doors, but some of the ideas listed above will surely be discussed there. In the meantime, other big cities like L.A. and New York have committed to smaller budget cuts to their police department, and activists are watching closely to see where that money is redirected.
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