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DESCRIPTION:Stamper Appearance Energizes the Police Review Board Discussion\n\nForum 
 Raises the Level of Public Debate \n\n\nOn Saturday, April 29th from 1:30 
 to 4:00, the ACLU of Northern California, Santa Cruz County Chapter, will 
 host a forum at the Resource Center for Nonviolence on Police-Community 
 Relations. An outstanding panel will explore: “How do police officers and 
 community members forge an authentic partnership in policing the city?” 
 “How do police officers and residents of Santa Cruz build trust and 
 mutual respect?” “And how can police oversight agencies be used to 
 increase transparency and accountability of law enforcement?” \n\nThe 
 panel will include Samara Marion, staff attorney for the San Francisco 
 Department of Police Accountability (formerly the Office of Citizen 
 Complaints), current Santa Cruz City Council Member and former police 
 review board member Sandy Brown, local journalist and former police review 
 board member John Malkin and former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper.  The 
 forum, and particularly the appearance of former Chief Stamper, has 
 energized not only the local concern about the “warrior cop” mentality 
 and militarization of law enforcement, but has also raised the level of 
 public discussion on the issue of the reconstitution of a police review 
 board in Santa Cruz.  As I have written previously:\n \n“In my time as a 
 Santa Cruz resident, I have seen a growing concern for public safety, 
 coupled with an expanding public mandate for law enforcement to use 
 whatever means and methods they think best to curb the reported rise in the 
 local crime rate and particularly property crime. Indeed, one does not need 
 to be a social scientist to understand that the dynamic balance between the 
 community’s concern for public safety and the operational mission of law 
 enforcement to maintain public safety has shifted dramatically over the 
 past few years. I have watched our elected officials support a marked and 
 noteworthy increase in the number of sworn officers serving in the police 
 department, while evidencing little concerned about the chilling effect 
 that heightened police presence inevitably has on the community at large. 
 But it is not the expansion of the police department or the overarching 
 presence of law enforcement in our city that concerns me most. Rather, it 
 is the lack of citizen participation in the development of these policies 
 and the complete absence of citizen oversight of this ever-expanding aspect 
 of our community that prompts these observations.\n\nIt is often observed 
 that police officer training is almost entirely devoted to intelligence 
 gathering, weapons proficiency and police procedure. They are only 
 tangentially trained in nonviolent conflict resolution and community 
 relations. And here I will say that this is not entirely their fault. The 
 officer on the street is only as good as the training he or she receives. 
 And clearly, they are not receiving the kind of training and input that 
 would create not only an enlightened police force with a clear 
 understanding of the challenges of modern day law enforcement, but a more 
 efficient one as well. Every incoming police administration in recent times 
 has called for a policy of positive engagement to bridge the perceived 
 divide between law enforcement and the greater community. In point of fact, 
 if this chasm were not real and existing, there would be no need to call 
 attention to it as a matter of departmental policy. But what the police 
 department has failed to recognize is that we as citizens also know a few 
 things about public safety and the protection of individual rights. We know 
 that law enforcement alone cannot make the community safe and we know that 
 true public safety can only be developed and sustained in an atmosphere of 
 trust, accountability and inclusiveness.”\n\nNorm Stamper 
 observes:\n\n“In many American cities, the wall between community and 
 police might as well be made of poured concrete and rebar.  Instead, it is 
 constructed of paramilitary-bureaucratic structure-and mentality, as 
 rock-ribbed and impermeable as that new Zetix anti-car-bomb, blast-proof 
 fabric. Informed by a military-like anatomy and trappings-top-down, 
 ‘command-and-control’ decision-making, military titles, a reflexive 
 us-them mindset, an over reliance on SWAT, and arcane, military influenced 
 nomenclature-the archetypical law enforcement agency is designed to keep 
 citizenry as far removed from the inner workings of the agency as possible. 
 And its undeniable success in doing so will continue until such time as we 
 develop the wisdom and the will to change the system, fundamentally. Unless 
 the citizenry is willing to engage in a searching, systematic analysis of 
 the organizational influences that lead to the event-and to then work with 
 all stakeholders to reengineer that system-it’ll never change it.  A year 
 or two from now, we’ll be agonizing anew over how this “something 
 bad” could possibly have happened again.”\n\nMany members of our 
 community, including longtime activists like Simba Kenyatta, have 
 continuously called for a real discussion of the issues of police 
 accountability and transparency and the positive impact of a Citizen Police 
 Review Board composed of representatives of neighborhood groups, advocates 
 for people experiencing homelessness, mental and behavioral health 
 advocates and social service providers and charged with review of police 
 policies and procedures and tasked with oversight of our police department. 
 \n\nThe time is right for such a discussion. The Stamper appearance at the 
 ACLU Forum might be just the catalyst our community needs.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/04/23/18798717.php
SUMMARY:Former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper on Police-Community Relations
LOCATION:Resource Center for Nonviolence\n612 Ocean St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/04/23/18798717.php
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DTEND:20170429T230000Z
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