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Protesters march on June 6, 2020, in New York. (AP) Protesters march on June 6, 2020, in New York. (AP)

Protesters march on June 6, 2020, in New York. (AP)

Miriam Valverde
By Miriam Valverde June 9, 2020

If Your Time is short

  • While some protesters want to eliminate police departments entirely, others want to reexamine the functions of police departments and redirect some of their funding to other services.

  • Some Minneapolis City Council members say they plan to “dismantle” the city police department. But specific details and a timeline are unsettled.

  • Police departments generally allocate most of their budgets to salaries, and what’s left over is used for equipment, training and community-oriented programs.

For more than a week, Americans across the country have been out on the streets calling for justice for George Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapolis police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Activists protesting police brutality and racial discrimination are now raising specific demands they want communities to take to prevent deaths like Floyd’s. Among them: a call to "defund the police."

What exactly do they mean by that?

While some protesters want to eliminate police departments entirely, others want to revisit the functions of police departments and reroute some of their funding toward other services.

On June 8, MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough asked the Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil-rights leader and TV host, what he had heard from activists about calls to "defund the police." Sharpton said he understood that they want to redirect funding toward community policing, mental health services, police training and intervention that does not involve policing.

"I don’t think that anyone other than the far extremes are saying ‘we don’t want any kind of policing at all, any kind of public safety,’" Sharpton said. "It’s to reinterpret how we do public safety and to reallocate those resources in ways that solve the problem in areas that I just outlined. So I think that the slogan may be misleading without interpretation."

Kailee Scales, managing director for Black Lives Matter Network Action Fund and Black Lives Matter Global Network Inc., said the group was calling for a "divestment in police in order to support more teachers, mental health and restorative services, community resilience departments, social workers, and government resource liaisons."

"I know that sounds like a lot to take in," she wrote in a June 8 Reddit "Ask me anything" live chat, "but simply, it is the idea of creating the ‘American Dream’ for all — less cops on streets and better schools and social programming."

Deborah Ramirez, a law professor at Northeastern University, said there are things that police do that people who are not in law enforcement may be able to do — such as getting a homeless person off the street or responding to a call of substance abuse. But police also serve in capacities that others aren’t equipped for — like responding to the scene of a shooting or terrorist attack, she said.

Protesters who say they want to "defund the police" need a roadmap that directly addresses their grievances, Ramirez said.

Is Minneapolis getting rid of its police department?

Some Minneapolis City Council members say they plan to "dismantle" the city police department. But details and a timeline are unsettled.

Council President Lisa Bender tweeted that the police department would be replaced "with a transformative new model of public safety." She told CNN that the plan is to work with the community "over the next year to imagine what that looks like, to build that system, including everyone."

Bender said she doesn’t want to invest in more policing, but the idea of having no police department "is certainly not" in the short-term plan.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has said he does not support "abolishing" the police department. Council members say they have a veto-proof majority.

Signs are shown hanging on a police fence at 16th and H Street, June 9, 2020, near the White House in Washington, after days of protests over the death of George Floyd. (AP/Jacquelyn Martin)

How common is it for police departments to be dismantled?

"It is extremely rare," said Maria (Maki) Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City. A few police departments have disbanded in recent decades, generally as part of a regional reorganization and to save money.

The Compton, Calif., City Council in 2000 voted to disband its police department and hired the Los Angeles County sheriff’s office for law enforcement services.

In Camden, N.J., across the Delaware River from Philadelphia, the city police department was disbanded and replaced by the Camden County Police Department, formed in 2013. The move freed the city from expensive contractual obligations and redirected money toward a larger police force with more resources, said a feature story published by the U.S. Justice Department. Many former officers from the city force joined the county department.

The Philadelphia Inquirer in January reported that Camden had 25 homicides in 2019, down from 67 in 2012. Compared with 2012, violent crime also dropped 42% in 2019, the newspaper reported.

Haberfeld said communities that rush to cut police funding may end up with higher crime rates.

Police departments generally spend most of their budgets on salaries, and what’s left over is allocated for equipment, training and community-oriented programs, she said. Reduced police funding could cut directly into training and prevent police from engaging in community trust programs.

"Any change to the current funding will be perceived as collective punishment, unjustified, and certainly will have a huge impact on the officers' morale that is already very low due to the anti-police climate around the country that paints the profession with one wide brush," Haberfeld said.

RELATED: Joe Biden says he doesn’t want to defund police

What are the national politics on this issue?

President Donald Trump has cast himself as a law-and-order president and opposes this movement. He claimed incorrectly on Twitter that Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and other Democrats want to "defund the police."

"I don't support defunding the police," Biden told CBS News in a clip aired June 8. "I support conditioning federal aid to police, based on whether or not they meet certain basic standards of decency and honorableness — and, in fact, are able to demonstrate they can protect the community and everybody in the community."

Democratic leaders, too, say they support efforts to improve accountability and reexamine how community services are handled.

Congressional Black Caucus Chair Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., said in a June 7 CNN interview that she doesn’t want to disband police departments. "But I do think that, in cities, in states, we need to look at how we are spending the resources and invest more in our communities."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that Democrats want to work with police departments, "but there are many things we call upon our police departments to deal with, mental health issues, policing in schools and the rest that we could rebalance some of our funding to address some of those issues more directly."

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Our Sources

CBS News, Biden says federal aid to police should be based on meeting "basic standards of decency," June 9, 2020

Twitter, @realDonaldTrump tweet, June 7, 2020; @LisaBenderMPLS tweet, June 4, 2020; @Jeremiah4north tweet, June 4, 2020

CNN, Congressional Black Caucus Chair Rep. Karen Bass interview, June 7, 2020

Rev.com, Democratic members of congress press conference, June 8, 2020

MSNBC, Rev. Al discusses possible changes to Minneapolis police department, June 8, 2020

Justice Department, The Camden County (NJ) Police Department: An Agency of Empowerment, October 2019

CBS Minnesota, Minneapolis City Council Members Announce Intent To Defund, Dismantle MPD, June 7, 2020

CNN, Minneapolis City Council members intend to defund and dismantle the city's police department, June 8, 2020

Los Angeles Times, Police Dept. phaseout begins in Compton, July 13, 2000

Reddit, AMA with Kailee Scales, June 8, 2020

The Philadelphia Inquirer, Violent crime has dropped in Camden, but homicides are up slightly, Jan. 3, 2020

Phone interview, Deborah Ramirez, a law professor at Northeastern University, June 8, 2020

Email interview, Maria (Maki) Haberfeld, a professor of police science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, June 8, 2020

Phone interview, Dan Keashen, Camden County Division of Public Affairs, June 9, 2020

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