Laserfiche WebLink
<br />Salas, Diana <br />From:Kelli <ksjule09@gmail.com> <br />Sent:Tuesday, June 16, 2020 5:51 PM <br />To:eComment <br />Subject:Yes on 75A & 85A with specific instructions per comment on reach item <br />I support the following items on today's City Council agenda: <br /> <br />Item 75A - Yes on Defunding Police and Investing In Community <br /> <br />1. The last month of protests have reminded us all, Black and communities of color as a whole need <br />more support, not surveillance and suppression. We call on you to recognize the errors of the <br />past and try out a new, more effective strategy for community recovery - start defunding the <br />SAPD now and use those funds to invest in what our communities truly need - housing, economic <br />and legal assistance, youth programming, and racial healing. <br /> <br />2. The city was drowning in deficits for a decade after the last recession because we couldn’t break our <br />addiction to expensive, unaccountable, and ineffective policing and incarceration hoping it would deliver <br />community safety. Measure X was an opportunity to fix this by generating revenues to rebalance our city <br />priorities, allowing us to invest in what really makes a community safe and prosperous. Yet, much of that was <br />squandered on more of the same -- more police officers getting bigger payouts and still incurring overtime and <br />without any clear metrics for success. <br /> <br />3. The City Council sold Measure X to voters as an opportunity to help Santa Ana finally invest in our <br />communities to make them truly safe, stable spaces that residents can thrive in. Regrettably, our elected <br />representatives squandered much of that opportunity long before this pandemic hit our city. <br /> <br />4. Taking a page out of an old, ineffective playbook, you handed out a lavish police contract that had little <br />to do with community safety -- leading us to the brink of yet another council-made deficit. Now we’re being <br />asked to bear the burden of “difficult choices” due to budget shortfalls while our police department skates by <br />with an 8% budget increase funded by our taxes. <br /> <br />5. The city was drowning in deficits for a decade after the last recession because we couldn’t break our <br />addiction to expensive, unaccountable, and ineffective policing and incarceration hoping it would deliver <br />community safety. Measure X was an opportunity to fix this by generating revenues to rebalance our city <br />priorities, allowing us to invest in what really makes a community safe and prosperous. Yet, much of that was <br />squandered on more of the same -- more police officers getting bigger payouts and still incurring overtime and <br />without any clear metrics for success. <br /> <br />6. After more than a decade of this failed approach that hasn’t made our communities safer all while <br />burning through our taxes, you’d think we’d learn our lesson. But it’s not too late, the lesson is this -- you <br />can’t balance the budget long term without defunding the police. Look at your projections, it simply can’t <br />be balanced by squeezing the rest of us. For this city to once and for all get its house in order, it must kick <br />the SAPD habit and begin making amends to the communities that have paid for it so dearly. <br /> <br />7. We’re in a racial justice, health, and budget crisis. Your own projections anticipate the city will be <br />running a deficit of $20 million next year, growing to a $35 million annual deficit in just two years. All of <br />this coming right after we passed Measure X to fix a decade of budget shortfalls. This mess can’t be blamed on <br />Covid or shutdowns, it’s a matter of misplaced priorities and principles. <br /> <br />1 <br /> <br />