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8. Cutting social programs, tapping reserves, raising fees and taxes, and hoping for federal or state <br />bailouts won’t get us through this and set the stage for a real recovery. It didn’t work ten years ago and <br />it’s the wrong path now. <br />9. The best tool to dig us out of this ongoing manmade disaster and to build a better Santa Ana is <br />to defund the Police Department -- the primary driver of this deficit. Just returning the SAPD <br />budget to its 2018 (pre-Measure X) levels would be an instant savings of nearly $25 million -- <br />enough to fill this year’s budget gap with enough left over to adequately fund alternative <br />community safety measures such as youth programming. <br />Creating an Effective Civilian Oversight of the Police Department <br />1. Santa Ana needs to establish an effective Civilian Review Board with the authority to exercise <br />proper oversight and accountability of the Police Department and its officers. In order to have <br />meaningful oversight, it needs to have subpoena power; investigatory authority; disciplinary <br />authority; and the ability to hire and fire officers, including the Chief of Police. Even then, the <br />creation of such an oversight body is the bare minimum the city can do and needs to be part of <br />other efforts to approach public safety by divesting from enforcement and investing in positive <br />community programs that address residents’ needs. <br />2. Santa Ana Police Department (SAPD) is one of the deadliest police departments in the country, <br />and has the highest number of fatal shootings by police officers in Orange County, with 27 fatal <br />shootings in the period between 2006 and 2016. <br />3. What’s more, From 2016 to 2018, Santa Ana had 13 deadly use of force incidents, 70% higher <br />than all other California Police Departments. In most of these cases, officers did not attempt to <br />address the situation without lethal force. <br />4. Use of force incidents have cost the city millions in settlements. These settlements are another <br />example of the city’s subsidizing of a failed tough on crime approach to public safety at odds with real <br />community safety which would require robust investment in social services, including mental health, <br />youth programs, housing, and education. <br />5. The establishment for a police oversight commission has been long overdue. The first demand for <br />police oversight was presented by the Orange County Congress of Racial Equity (CORE) 1965. It's <br />been 55 years since then and the police department has continued to operate without basic oversight <br />and accountability, all while receiving the largest share of our tax dollars. It is time you listen to the <br />decades long demand for effective police oversight, and the current demand to redefine what safety <br />looks like by investing in robust social services, not more policing and suppression. <br /> <br />Sincerely, <br />Janette Stanford <br />2 <br />