Equitable Policing Amendment
Equitable Policing Amendment
Equitable Policing Amendment
Explanation: This brings the Brookline Police Department funding to a 10% cut from the
original FY21 budget request, in line with the cuts proposed to other Town departments, and to
the best of my ability matches the allocations proposed by the Chief of Police in the 10% cut
requested by the Town Administrator, as described in his budget letter of June 1, 2020. It
restores funding to schools, funds the Community Engagement Plan passed by Town Meeting
in WA 30 last Fall, adds Domestic Violence prevention to the Health department, repairs
Brookline Housing Authority buildings, and makes the first contribution to the Racial Equity Fund
established by Town Meeting in WA 29 last Fall.
It is impossible to create positive change without first knowing where we are, and I’d like to
recognize Officer Casey Hatchett, TMM-12, and the others involved with securing federal JAG
grant funding to track and publish statistics on how race affects various categories of policing.
The results of this work are in the Annual Reports of the Police Department. Unfortunately, the
published results show that 52% of the non-residents stopped and questioned by our Police
Department (“Field Interrogations”) were Black -- but our neighbor Boston is only 23% Black and
Brookline is only 3.4% Black. Worse, as a Black resident of Brookline, you are 5.5 times more
likely to be arrested by our Police Department than you would be as a White resident of
Brookline. We need to address this, and not by arresting more White people -- we need to
reduce the number of arrests. Ultimately, the strongest predictor of the number of arrests by a
Police Department is the size of the department.
The Brookline Police Department is the largest single Department in our town, accounting by
itself for 22% of the total FTE salaries paid by our Town. The Police Department budget is 1.8
times the Administration and Finance budget, 4.4 times the Library Budget, 11.2 times the
Health and Human Services budget, and 67 times the Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and
Community Relations. Yet it was trimmed by only 2.8% in the Town Administrator’s budget,
while Schools were cut 3.5%, Libraries were cut 9.5%, and Veterans and the Council on Aging
were cut 10%.
Ultimately a budget expresses our priorities as a Town, and this amendment attempts to bring
the Police Department more in line with the cuts made elsewhere in Town. Tweaking the
budget doesn’t solve discrimination or the systemic issues with policing. The Select Board Task
force will consider more fundamental reforms. These necessary steps include removing
discretionary traffic enforcement from the Department, revisiting the Civil Service requirement
on our officers, and aggressively renegotiating the police union contract this summer. But the
first step is to act as Town Meeting to make a statement that reform is needed and policing
ought to fairly share in the cuts made Town-wide.
The Brookline Early Education Program (BEEP) offers 22 classes throughout the town and
serves children with a range of developmental levels and from diverse cultural backgrounds.
Due to COVID-19, the BEEP budget has a predicted shortfall for FY21 of $110,715 to reopen at
50% capacity, as presented at the School Committee meeting on June 11, 2020. BEEP will
provide 25 low-income spots.
Warrant Article 30, passed by the November 19, 2019 Special Town meeting, established a
Community Engagement Plan. An equitable, inclusive community engagement approach to
public decisions ensures that everyone, especially those who have been historically left out of
these conversations (e.g., low-income people, people of color, recent immigrants, speakers of
English as a second language), has a say in the decisions that affect their lives. The
Community Engagement Plan was not funded by the Town Administrator or Advisory
Committee Budgets.
This article implements the Community Engagement Plan, by hiring a Community Engagement
Specialist and providing them with the operations funds needed. The cost (benefits included) of
this FTE is that provided by the Brookline Fiscal Advisory Committee in Appendix L (“Fiscal
Impact of 2019 Town Meeting Actions”) of their February 5, 2020 Final Report, prorated for 10
months (assuming 2 months to hire the new position). The operations costs to fully implement
the Community Engagement Plan have been provided by Lloyd Gellineau, Chief Diversity
Officer of the Town. It was suggested that, in addition, each of the 17 other Town departments
would have $2,000-$5,000 allocated to support Community Engagement efforts within that
department; we regret we were unable to fund this but hope that each department head may
find discretionary funds to support their own part of the Community Engagement Plan.
The Domestic Violence Advocate FTE is intended to increase Town support for victims of
domestic abuse. Salary ($66,822) is equal to that of the civilian Domestic Violence Advocate
employed by the Police Department in the FY21 budget, with an additional $11,765 allocated for
benefits as advised by Melissa Goff, Deputy Town Administrator. The new position is in the
Health and Human Services department.
High Street Veterans is a Brookline Housing Authority family development consisting of 177
units of one, two and three-bedrooms in three story, garden-style apartment buildings with
mostly six units per entrance. There are also nine wheelchair-accessible, ranch-type units. The
cost of repairs and renovations includes $57,000 for painting and patching front hallways,
$52,000 for painting and patching rear hallways, and $461,000 for new front entranceway floors
and stair treads, for a total of $570,000. These projects were selected by Michael Jacobs, chair
of the Brookline Housing Authority, and the budgets were supplied by him. Only $501,756 has
been appropriated for this project, and we urge the Housing Advisory Board to make up the
difference from the Affordable Housing Fund.
Egmont Street Veterans is a Brookline Housing Authority family development consisting of 114
units of one, two and three-bedrooms in three story, garden-style apartment buildings with
mostly six units per entrance. There are also six wheelchair-accessible, ranch-type units. The
apartments are set on St. Paul, Egmont and Pleasant Streets. The cost of repairs and
renovations includes $36,000 for painting and patching front hallways, $33,000 for painting and
patching rear hallways, and $299,000 for new front entranceway floors and stair treads, for a
total of $368,000. These projects were selected by Michael Jacobs, chair of the Brookline
Housing Authority, and the budgets were supplied by him. In addition, the units in both
developments could use kitchen upgrades at $10,000/unit, which unfortunately we could not
fund in this amendment.
The Racial Equity Advancement Fund was requested by Warrant Article 29 of the November 19,
2019 Special Town meeting. The fund is managed by the Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and
Community Relations in collaboration with the Commission for Diversity, Inclusion, and
Community Relations, which jointly develop funding guidelines and recommend specific projects
for approval by the Select Board. The Fund has been created by the Select Board but has not
yet been funded, and neither the Town Administrator nor Advisory Committee budgets
appropriated any funds.