From the BBC:
“Seattle police chief quits
after city council votes to strip funds”
Seattle's chief of police has
announced her resignation on the same day that the city council voted to slash
the police budget and lay off officers. Carmen Best's decision comes amid
pressure on police after George Floyd's death, unrest in Seattle and budget
shortfalls due to the current pandemic. Chief Best became the city's first
black police chief in 2018, leading a 1,400-member force. The US military
veteran joined the Seattle Police Department in 1992. She will stay on until 2
September.
Budget cuts On Monday, the city council voted to slash
over $3m (£2.3m) from the police's $400m annual operating budget. The cuts are
expected to lead to the loss of about 100 police officers, but fall short of
the hopes of anti-police brutality Black Lives Matter protesters who have
called for a 50% reduction. Seattle City Council President M Lorena González
said it was necessary to rebalance the police budget, due to a loss of government
tax funds caused by the economic downturn, and the demands of Black Lives
Matter protests - some of whom have called for "defunding" the police
and instead using the money to bolster social services. The new budget also
slashes the police chief's salary from $294,000 to $275,000 per year. After the
measure was approved in a 7-1 vote, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan - who could
still veto the cuts - denounced the decision. "It is unfortunate Council
has refused to engage in a collaborative process to work with the Mayor, Chief
Best, and community members to develop a budget and policies that respond to
community needs while accounting for - not just acknowledging - the significant
labour and legal implications involved in transforming the Seattle Police Department,"
she said in a statement after the vote. The Downtown Seattle Association also
condemned the cuts, saying: "In defunding SPD, the council moved with
speed and pettiness rather than with precision and thoughtfulness. "Decisions
critical to public safety require stating the desired results and working with
the community to figure out how to get there. This Council focused largely on
an abstract pledge and not a concrete plan." The group has previously been
among the most vocal critics of the city's autonomous protest zone, a six-block
area where protesters kept city police from entering. The so-called Capitol
Hill Autonomous Zone was set up amid nationwide protests against racism and
police brutality since the death of George Floyd in police custody in May. It
was dismantled by police on 1 July after several shootings inside the occupied
area.
What did Chief Best say? "I am confident the department will
make it through these difficult times," Chief Best wrote in a resignation
letter on Monday to her colleagues. "You truly are the best police
department in the country, and please trust me when I say, the vast majority of
people in Seattle support you and appreciate you," she continued. "I
look forward to seeing how this department moves forward through the process of
re-envisioning public safety. I relish the work that will be done by all of
you." She is expected to be replaced by Deputy Chief Adrian Diaz on 2
September when she leaves.
^ Clearly the Seattle Mayor and
the Seattle City Council live in a world of lemon drops and moon beams. You
would think they would have learned from their past actions (allowing the Seattle
Purge Zone and the death and destruction that caused) but they haven’t. I think
the Seattle Police Chief did the right thing in resigning in protest. I only hope
that if the Mayor or any member of the City Council ever needs Police help in
an emergency that the Police will be available – you can’t be against the Police,
take away their Officers, their funding and their training and still expect law
and order to reign. ^
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