8 minute read
ONSEE POLICE
Pictured: Top row (l-r): Sijuwola Crawford, the Rev. Dr. Earle J. Fisher, Memphis City Councilman JB Smiley Jr.; bottom row: Shahidah Jones and Harold Collins. (Screen capture)
POLICE
CONTINUED FROM FRONT
electorate is one that will turn out and yield more participation,” Fisher said, explaining one of the reasons his nonpartisan voting and political activism organization decided to host the event.
Police reform has steadily become a hot button issue nationally and locally following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police offi cers in May.
While the panel agreed that more offi cers would not necessarily curb local crime, they disagreed on other topics. One of the biggest disputes involved defunding the police.
Williams, who served on the Memphis Police Department for more than two decades, said he does not support taking funds from local law enforcement.
“I don’t believe that police are the only answer; they are just a piece of the puzzle. But we need to make sure we have enough to be in a proactive role as opposed to a reactive role,” he said.
“There are good citizens and there are those who are operating outside of the law… and those issues have to be addressed.”
Strickland has said the city needs at least 800 more offi - cers to meet its staffi ng goal.
Smiley has publicly disagreed with that stance.
“We are fi ne with the number we have now and any increase needs to go to funding communities,” he reiterated at the symposium.
Jones agreed, providing clarity on the now nationally popularized and controversial phrase “defund the police.”
“This is a term that talks about defunding in dollars and in power,” she said. “It is saying we want to put more funds and power in the hands of our community.”
Approximately 40 percent of the city’s budget goes toward policing.
Collins said taking away from the department isn’t the answer.
“Once you talk about defunding the police, you talk about cuts that may include closing precincts, and no one wants that,” he said. “But there are grants and other resources that can be reallocated to fund some of the other things.”
While their diff erences were abundant, all panel members pointed to the need for crucial conversations such as Monday’s.
Williams, added, “As a Black man in America, I never want my brothers and sisters to be mistreated by police. So, I get what the activism and conversation is about, but there needs to be a 360 conversation, and I’m willing to do that.”
In a slightly heated exchange, Smiley challenged Williams’ comment, claiming that his offi ce reached out to the soon-to-retire police association president to set up a meeting to discuss reform, but received no reply.
Williams countered that he didn’t recall seeing Smiley’s email.
After the conversations, like the one at the symposium, what’s next?
Smiley said the next steps should include elected offi - cials devising a public safety plan, similar to the comprehensive plan of Memphis 3.0. This proposed plan would include allocating resources to communities in need, supporting wrap around services and community policing.
“We can’t fi x this problem with a single-faceted approach that only gives the appearance of safety without providing results,” he said.
As for UPtheVote901 organizers, they plan to keep the conversations going, hoping to stimulate change toward police reform and other issues they say matter to residents.
“This is not the end of our conversation. This is part of a broader, structural and systemic and holistic framework that we hope to implement (over) the next few years,” Fisher said.
The next UPtheVote 901symposium will take place in October and will focus on labor and wages.
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