4 THE QUEENS COURIER • JULY 9, 2020 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Defunding the police means prioritizing  
 public services, investing in communities 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 aacevedo@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 Th  e months-long protests over police  
 brutality and systemic racism has mobilized  
 hundreds  of  thousands  of  New  
 Yorkers — and one of the main calls coming  
 from community members and elected  
 offi  cials is to “defund the police.”  
 But what does that mean?  
 Although it might be a confusing statement  
 at fi rst, advocates say the calls to  
 defund the police translate to directly  
 investing in communities and prioritizing  
 social services over a criminal justice system  
 that perpetuates the disproportionate  
 abuse of Black, Brown, immigrant and  
 minority communities.  
 Th  e goal is to provide people with the  
 basic resources they need to live better  
 lives, such as inclusive education, aff ordable  
 housing and accessible health care —  
 services many say are desperately needed  
 now more than ever due to COVID- 
 19’s impact.  
 “We need to direct cost-savings towards  
 the Department of Youth and Community  
 Development, education and adult literacy, 
  housing, housing the homeless, and  
 social services that keep our communities  
 safe and healthy,” Make the Road NY  
 wrote in their call to defund the police  
 and have police free schools.  
 Some may argue those social services  
 already exist and are adequate, but if that  
 were the case — why are schools overcrowded? 
  Why is there a housing crisis while there  
 are more than 90,000 New Yorkers who are  
 homeless? Why was the health and hospital  
 system overburdened once COVID-19 hit,  
 leaving low-income and minority neighborhoods  
 to suff er the worst of it?  
 When it comes down to city and state  
 budget negotiations, oft entimes it’s social  
 services working to address those issues  
 that either don’t get a budget increase or  
 are among the fi rst to get cut.  
 In the time of the pandemic, which  
 Mayor Bill de Blasio said has left  the city  
 with a $9 billion defi cit, there have already  
 been cuts to programs that have a positive  
 impact on the city’s youth — namely, 
  the suspension of the Summer Youth  
 Employment Program.   
 Th  e program was one of the fi rst to go  
 due to COVID-19 fears and the budget  
 crisis, but community members and City  
 Council members believe it was a mistake.  
 Councilman  Donovan  Richards,  who’s  
 the chair of the Council’s Committee on  
 Public Safety, addressed the issue during  
 a rally for the repeal of 50-A on June 4.  
 “Th  e mayor has the gall to want to cut  
 the Department of Youth and Community  
 Development’s budget by 48 percent, the  
 mayor proposed to cut the Summer Youth  
 Employment program,“ Richards said. “If  
 you’re a mayor who’s standing for justice  
 and inequality … you would only cut one  
 percent of the NYPD’s budget. Yet, the  
 mayor proposed to graduate a new police  
 class at the cost of $25 million.”  
 According to Schools Chancellor Richard  
 Carranza, the DOE’s budget was also facing  
 hundreds of millions in budget cuts.  
 Th  e DOE planned to cut the “Single  
 Shepherd” program, which placed 130  
 counselors and social workers in historically  
 underserved neighborhoods in the  
 Bronx and Brooklyn, according to the  
 New York Daily News.  
 During a Tuesday, June 30, press briefing, 
  de Blasio said the 2021 budget will  
 restore the DOE’s budget and fund the  
 “Single Shepherd” program. Activists and  
 elected offi  cials are calling for priorities to  
 shift  moving forward.  
 NYPD among top three city  
 agencies with largest budget  
 Expenses  for  the  NYPD  will  total  
 almost $11 billion in 2020, comprised of  
 the NYPD’s nearly $6 billion operating  
 budget and $5.3 billion of costs “centrally  
 allocated” of city funds, including $2.3  
 billion for fringe benefi ts, $2.8 billion for  
 pensions, and $215 million for debt service, 
  according to the Citizens Budget  
 Commission.  
 Th  e NYPD’s centrally allocated costs are  
 signifi cantly high since uniformed health  
 insurance and pension benefi ts are “more  
 generous than for other city employees,”  
 according to the CBC.  
 Th  e NYPD is among the top three city  
 agencies with the largest operating budgets, 
  aft er the Departments of Education  
 (DOE) and Social Services (DSS).  
 Th  e NYPD’s budget, including the centrally  
 allocated expenses, accounts for 11  
 percent of the city’s current $98 billion  
 budget. In April, while the mayor’s executive  
 budget for 2021 showed signifi cant  
 cuts to other sectors, the NYPD’s budget  
 was “mostly left  intact,” according to  
 Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.  
 Th  e City Comptroller’s offi  ce  recommended  
 the city cut $1 billion over four  
 years, with $265 million in cuts annually  
 by reducing uniformed headcount through  
 attrition, scaling back overtime and trimming  
 Other Th  an Personnel Services.  
 “Breaking  down  structural  racism  
 in  New  York  City  will  require  longterm, 
  lasting change — and that must  
 include  reducing  the  NYPD’s  budget,”  
 Comptroller Scott Stringer said. “If our  
 budget is a refl ection of our values, it is  
 unconscionable that services for Black  
 and Brown New Yorkers are on the chopping  
 block  while  the  NYPD’s  budget  
 remains almost entirely untouched.”  
 First steps to change policing  
 Th e City Council committed to cutting  
 $1 billion from the NYPD’s 2020-21  
 budget as a response to the marches and  
 demonstrations across New York City,  
 Photo by Dean Moses 
 which were sparked by the police killing  
 of Minneapolis’ George Floyd, Louisville’s  
 Breonna Taylor and countless other Black  
 people in the United States.  
 As a result of the Black Lives Matter  
 demonstrations — some of which have  
 been met with police violence and a questionable  
 curfew instated by the city earlier  
 in the month — the city banned the use  
 of chokeholds and Gov. Andrew Cuomo  
 signed into law a repeal of 50-A to grant  
 more transparency of the NYPD.  
 But these are just some steps that are  
 part of a bigger movement to fundamentally  
 change the way policing works, not  
 only in the city but the whole nation.   
 “It’s not just about police reform; it’s  
 about educational reform, mental health  
 reform, social service reform. It’s about  
 health care reform and environmental  
 justice reform,” said Jamaell Henderson, a  
 professor at City University and from the  
 CUNY Rising Alliance, at a press briefing  
 on the steps of Tweed Courthouse on  
 Sunday, June 28.  
 Some  ideas  to  immediately  address  
 those reforms include having professionals  
 trained in mental health, substance  
 and/or domestic abuse deal with people  
 who need intervention rather than police  
 — as people with untreated mental illness  
 are 16 times more likely to be killed  
 during a police encounter, according to  
 the Treatment Advocacy Center.  
 Advocated have also called for investment  
 in drug rehabilitation rather than  
 punishment as another way to address  
 those underlying needs. Th e months-long  
 demonstrations have culminated with a  
 sit-in at City Hall, or Occupy City Hall,  
 spearheaded by VOCAL-NY, to demand  
 the city follow through with at least a $1  
 billion cut of the NYPD’s budget.  
 On June 30, their demonstrators were  
 met with police in riot gear who detained  
 some of the protesters.  
 
				
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