Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Berkeley Moves Toward Pulling Police From Traffic Enforcement, Homeless Calls
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
July 16, 2020

Share

SAN FRANCISCO — After hours of emotional public testimony and a middle-of-the-night vote by Berkeley leaders, the progressive California city is moving forward with a novel proposal to replace police with unarmed civilians during traffic stops in a bid to curtail racial profiling.

“There may be situations where police do need to intervene, and so we need to look at all that. We need to look at if we do move traffic enforcement out of the Police Department, what does that relationship look like and how will police officers work in coordination with unarmed traffic enforcement personnel?” — Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin
The City Council early Wednesday approved a police reform proposal that calls for a public committee to hash out details of a new Berkeley Police Department that would not respond to calls involving people experiencing homelessness or mental illness. The committee also would pursue creating a separate department to handle transportation planning and enforcing parking and traffic laws.
The council voted for the committee to find ways to eventually cut the Police Department’s budget by half and approved an analysis of police calls and spending.
A tired but excited Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin said he doesn’t expect a new transportation department overnight because conversations will be hard and detailed with complicated logistics to figure out. But he said communities of color in his city feel targeted by police and that needs to change.
“There may be situations where police do need to intervene, and so we need to look at all that,” he said. “We need to look at if we do move traffic enforcement out of the Police Department, what does that relationship look like and how will police officers work in coordination with unarmed traffic enforcement personnel?”
It’s believed the plan to separate traffic enforcement from police is the first of its kind in the U.S. and comes as many cities seek broad public safety reforms, including reducing law enforcement budgets, following the May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. Fans of the proposal cheered its passage even as some called for greater cuts to police.
It could take months, even years, to create a new department, but police and other law enforcement experts rebuked the idea as dangerous, not only for traffic safety but for the people tasked with pulling over drivers, who they say can be dangerous.

Nine U.S. Police Officers Were Killed During Traffic Stops So Far This Year

“I think what Berkeley is doing is nuts,” said Mark Cronin, a director with the Los Angeles Police Protective League, a union for officers. “I think it’s a big social experiment. I think it’s going to fail and it’s not going to take long for, unfortunately, traffic collisions, fatalities to increase exponentially.”
Cronin, a former traffic officer, said cities can’t rely on unattended traffic signals or camera lights to catch bad drivers and that people are needed to educate motorists on safe driving. But those people also need backup and the authority to arrest should they encounter a driver who is intoxicated, armed and fleeing a crime, or wanted on other charges.
“Traffic stops are one of the most unpredictable and therefore dangerous duties of law enforcement. There is no such thing as a routine traffic stop and to perform them effectively and safely takes months of police training in and outside of an academy,” said Frank Merenda, a former New York City Police Department captain who is an assistant professor of criminal justice at Marist College.
Philip Stinson, a criminal justice professor at Bowling Green State University, called the idea an “overly simplistic plan that could have deadly consequences for unarmed traffic enforcement officers.”
Nine U.S. police officers were killed during traffic stops so far this year, according to data compiled by the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund. Six were shot, and three were struck by vehicles.
Numerous studies have shown Black drivers are much more likely to be stopped by police than whites for minor traffic infractions, and the results sometimes can be deadly for the driver.

Berkeley Police Issued a Statement Wednesday Saying the Department Would Work With the Community

Philando Castile, for example, was fatally shot after the 32-year-old was stopped for a broken tail light in 2016 in Minnesota. Sandra Bland, 28, died in a jail cell three days after being stopped for failing to signal when changing lanes in Texas in 2015.

A 2018 report by the Center for Policing Equity, a research and advocacy group based in Los Angeles, found that Black and Latino drivers were stopped by Berkeley police at higher rates than whites.
The largely affluent and progressive San Francisco suburb of 120,000 has led the country on environmental, cultural and equity issues but still has lopsided traffic stop figures.
A 2018 report by the Center for Policing Equity, a research and advocacy group based in Los Angeles, found that Black and Latino drivers were stopped by Berkeley police at higher rates than whites.
Data analyses by the Stanford Open Policing Project at Stanford University also found that Black and Latino drivers were searched far more often than whites, but the searches turned up fewer drugs, guns and other contraband.
Berkeley police issued a statement Wednesday saying the department would work with the community “to determine how we can best evolve to accomplish our mission of safeguarding our community.”
Police unions for Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Jose issued a statement opposing the proposal. The Berkeley police union did not respond to requests for comment this week.
Arreguin, the mayor, said creating a new department is a phase-two development that’s at least a year away and would likely involve making changes to state law.
Traffic stops can be dangerous and require extensive training, said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a research organization that promotes best practices in policing. He also recognizes fairness and profiling are issues for law enforcement.
“At the end of the day, policymakers would have to ask themselves if this change accomplished their intended goals,” he said.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Watch: Israel’s Oversized Influence in American Elections

DON'T MISS

Own a Business? Learn How to Get a Piece of the $5.5 Billion Visa/Mastercard Settlement

DON'T MISS

Special Report: How a 1965 Law Makes It Hard for the Poor to Get Mental Health Treatment

DON'T MISS

CA Restaurants Shouldn’t Be Shocked That ‘Junk Fees’ Ban Applies to Them

DON'T MISS

Did California’s Massive COVID Homeless Shelter Program Work? A New Evaluation Probes the Results

DON'T MISS

Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama Is Rookie of the Year After a Record-Setting Season

DON'T MISS

Murray Tosses Heat Pack, Coach Screams at Officials as Frustrated Nuggets Lose Again

DON'T MISS

India Votes in Third Phase of National Elections; Modi Escalates His Rhetoric Against Muslims

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Students Bring Home Wins From Model UN Competition

DON'T MISS

New York Governor Regrets Saying Black Kids in The Bronx Don’t Know What a Computer Is

UP NEXT

Own a Business? Learn How to Get a Piece of the $5.5 Billion Visa/Mastercard Settlement

UP NEXT

Did California’s Massive COVID Homeless Shelter Program Work? A New Evaluation Probes the Results

UP NEXT

Boy Scouts of America Changing Name to More Inclusive Scouting America After Years of Woes

UP NEXT

How to Prepare Your Cellphone for a Protest

UP NEXT

Thief Uses Sleight of Hand to Swipe $255K Tiffany Ring, Cops Say

UP NEXT

California Reports the First Increase in Groundwater Supplies in 4 Years

UP NEXT

Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism Awarded to The New York Times, The Washington Post, AP and Others

UP NEXT

A Subset of Alzheimer’s May Be Caused by Two Copies of a Single Gene: New Research

UP NEXT

Pro-Palestinian Protesters at USC Comply With Order to Leave

UP NEXT

As Border Debate Shifts Right, Sen. Alex Padilla Emerges as Persistent Counterforce for Immigrants

CA Restaurants Shouldn’t Be Shocked That ‘Junk Fees’ Ban Applies to Them

3 hours ago

Did California’s Massive COVID Homeless Shelter Program Work? A New Evaluation Probes the Results

3 hours ago

Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama Is Rookie of the Year After a Record-Setting Season

3 hours ago

Murray Tosses Heat Pack, Coach Screams at Officials as Frustrated Nuggets Lose Again

3 hours ago

India Votes in Third Phase of National Elections; Modi Escalates His Rhetoric Against Muslims

3 hours ago

Fresno State Students Bring Home Wins From Model UN Competition

4 hours ago

New York Governor Regrets Saying Black Kids in The Bronx Don’t Know What a Computer Is

5 hours ago

Boy Scouts of America Changing Name to More Inclusive Scouting America After Years of Woes

5 hours ago

Israeli Forces Seize Rafah Crossing in Gaza, Threatening Aid and Putting Cease-Fire Talks on Edge

5 hours ago

Testifying in Hush Money Trial, Porn Actor Stormy Daniels Describes First Meeting Trump

5 hours ago

Watch: Israel’s Oversized Influence in American Elections

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee, with more than 100,000 members and a long roster of donors, is among the most powerful lobbyin...

47 mins ago

47 mins ago

Watch: Israel’s Oversized Influence in American Elections

2 hours ago

Own a Business? Learn How to Get a Piece of the $5.5 Billion Visa/Mastercard Settlement

2 hours ago

Special Report: How a 1965 Law Makes It Hard for the Poor to Get Mental Health Treatment

3 hours ago

CA Restaurants Shouldn’t Be Shocked That ‘Junk Fees’ Ban Applies to Them

3 hours ago

Did California’s Massive COVID Homeless Shelter Program Work? A New Evaluation Probes the Results

3 hours ago

Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama Is Rookie of the Year After a Record-Setting Season

3 hours ago

Murray Tosses Heat Pack, Coach Screams at Officials as Frustrated Nuggets Lose Again

3 hours ago

India Votes in Third Phase of National Elections; Modi Escalates His Rhetoric Against Muslims

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend