TEXT NEWSTIPS/PHOTOS - 925-800-NEWS (6397)
Advertisement
Home » BART Board Declines To Reduce Funding For Agency’s Police Department

BART Board Declines To Reduce Funding For Agency’s Police Department

by CLAYCORD.com
34 comments

The BART Board of Directors on Thursday acknowledged the value in reforming its law enforcement agency but declined to reduce or eliminate funding for BART police in the agency’s proposed fiscal year 2021 budget.

BART has not been spared from calls across the Bay Area and the country at large to drastically reduce local police budgets following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis last month and the ensuing protests.

Criminal justice advocates argue that police budgets have ballooned out of control in recent years and reducing them in addition to demilitarizing law enforcement agencies and reducing their scope could help curb instances of police brutality.

While BART’s proposed fiscal year 2021 budget includes a one-year delay of new police hires, saving the agency about $4 million as part of a hiring freeze totaling $36 million in cuts agencywide, some members of the public demanded BART eliminate its law enforcement entirely.

Advertisement

Director Debora Allen said blame placed on BART police officers over allegations of unnecessary policy enforcement and racism is misguided and officers are only doing their job of enforcing established laws.

Allen also argued that riders criminalize themselves when they break systemwide rules and laws such as eating on station platforms and refusing to comply with orders from law enforcement officers.

“For those of you who don’t think BART PD does enough for public safety, wait ’til you see the result if they are gone or substantially diminished,” Allen said, adding that the system would become “a continuous place of mayhem” without BART police.

Board Directors Janice Li, Rebecca Saltzman and John McPartland all distanced themselves from Allen’s comments, with Saltzman urging all members of the board to be thoughtful and respectful of riders in the system, particularly people of color, who may feel victimized by BART police.

Advertisement

Later in the meeting, board President Lateefah Simon, the only black member of the board, issued the strongest rebuke of Allen’s comments.

“When I hear the dog whistles, that are consistent with a political agenda that uplifts structural racism, that black men and women who succumb to unlawful use of force by law enforcement were to blame, it is unconscionable and it is racist,” she said.

“You will not, in this meeting, as long as I’m president, blame the dead for the lack of responsibility of many law enforcement leaders for getting it right.”

Li, whose district includes central San Francisco, said that while she supports the agency’s proposed budget, she is rethinking the role BART police can and should play in the system, particularly in enforcing and punishing fare evasion and ensuring that riders feel safe in the system.

Advertisement

“I have a lot more work to do,” Li said. “I have to really listen to the needs of our community and I’m wholly committed to listening and acting upon the demands of the communities BART serves.”

Last month, BART General Manager Bob Powers called the proposed budget “precariously balanced,” with federal funding support shoring up the agencies losses in fare revenue during the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.

The budget includes roughly $190 million in total cuts compared to the $1.016 billion preliminary budget that the board reviewed in mid-May. BART officials have touted that the new proposed budget does not include layoffs or furloughs for any employees.

Criminal justice advocates in the Bay Area have argued that reducing the agency’s police budget could not only free up funding to balance the budget without making such harsh cuts but also allow BART to move toward eliminating the need to collect fares altogether.

Advertisement

McPartland suggested that while those suggestions may be well-intentioned, they could be coming from a place of emotion and pain in lieu of rationality.

“We need to have a thought-through response that summarizes the need for the law enforcement in relation to the fare gates,” he said. “The people that are speaking with so much anger and venom are also venting from the standpoint of their frustration.”

Saltzman suggested the board take a cue from members of the public who suggested modifying BART police’s scope of operation going forward.

“Some of what people were talking about, having police officers focus on the real crimes and figuring out ways to have unarmed people focusing on things like masks, that really resonated with me,” she said.

The BART board is expected to vote on the proposed budget at its June 25 meeting. The budget would then go into effect when the fiscal year begins July 1.

34 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

GOOD!!!

Bart has enough of a crime problem already!!! It’s scary on those trains.

I am delighted that the Bart Board refused to defund the Police.

The entire defund the police rhetoric is a political scam.

The fools who fall for that baloney are ill-advised and shortsighted.

Thank you Director Debora Allen for being a voice of reason. BART police are there to enforce established laws which everyone must abide by. Without those laws, chaos would ensue. Follows the rules and the police will have no reason to stop you. It is that simple.

This Janice Li is a real piece of work. “I have a lot more work to do. I have to really listen to the needs of our community”.

Translation: I plan to do nothing, and spend months doing it……

Community needs are pretty simple: A safe, clean, Choo Choo train.

What part of that does she not understand?

more like a poo poo train

Janice dear do enjoy the view with the moths hun.

I totally agree and support Deborah Allen.

BTW, I choose to live in the part of the City which HAS Police services. Good luck with your Autonomous Anarchy. ….you’ll be needing that 2nd Amendment.

Thank you Deborah Allen. Lateefah Simon is nothing but an agitator. How did she ever get elected to the BART board? /rhetorical/

@Gittyup…She has family in high places of the “SF Elite”. Her elder family were part of the old school Black Panthers. I’m acqainted with part of her family. Check her FB page.

@nytrmuvr I’m sure you are.

@Gittyup…you definitely got me all wrong. “Acquainted” as in her relative (my neighbor) that can’t keep their mouth shut when they’re liquored up, which is most of the time.

When it comes to defunding law enforcement, there’s only one phrase that comes to mind that accurately describes those repeatedly making such demands.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDQBLffpixU

The last time I rode BART was 1989, but I rode it regularly from 1983 to 1986, from Lafayette to Daly City and back 3-5 days a week. The cars were clean, the seats were clean, and the stations were clean, especially in Contra Costa.

Has BART changed for the worse in 31 years? How bad is it?

It has gotten awful! Scary even

BART did something right for once!

PHEW! Thank you for not cutting funding. Your common sense is appreciated. Hard to find anyone with it nowadays!

Excellent!!

NICE!!!

BART police getting paid for not doing their job anyway

We do not need anymore BART cop telling they cannot help protect us

Great!!!! I’m so glad. Blessings to the police department!

BART is nothing short of a sh*tshow. I won’t ride it unless I have no other choice. Get your act together. This is what happens when you hire unqualified people based quotas.

BREAKING: Pleasant Hill will hold a virtual meeting Monday, June 15 at 7 PM to discuss moving the temporary library from the Senior Center to City Hall:

https://www.ci.pleasant-hill.ca.us/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/3226

Hard to write this …

But GREAT JOB BART! Way to stay the course! Thank you for realizing that we need to protect our riders and that we cannot to this with feel good emissaries and well wishers!

Excellent observation!

Yes!!

The board and I finally agree on something.

You took the words right out of my mouth, Jimmy. And how does LESS law enforcement help? Many people need to get their heads out of their keesters.

Oh my god, can you imagine BART with LESS of a police presence? Thank god for Deborah Allen, the rest of these people are all crazy.

Most criminal behavior is driven by economics. Very poor people of all races, ethnicities, and religions are the main group involved in criminal behavior. For starters, they have little to lose and few prospects to better their lives.

The goal of defunding is to shift money away from law enforcement and into programs that better the lives of poor people to the point that they are less likely to engage in criminal behavior. In a sense, it’s similar to Trump MAGA idea and going back further to Hoover’s a chicken in every pot and two cars in every garage and Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.

For many cities and regions, law enforcement and the prison/jail system has become the largest item on the budget. People are starting to think about alternatives to that.

There is also rising concern that cops are running wild, or rather, the leaders that tell cops what to do are running wild. The Bill of Rights gives people the right to peaceful assembly and to voice their concerns. The deployment of militarized police to “deal with” protests is an illegal chilling effect.

Well said. Unfortunately there are wacky non-tax paying idealists who would call that a racist statement.

I’ve always considered a criminal to be a criminal. And if I am forced to defend my family they will be treated without regard to race.

@ Jimmy

Well said.

@ WC
Some, not most, in my opinion criminal behavior is driven by economics. Some criminal behavior is driven because some people have learned to take what they want instead of earning it.

Taking away law enforcement because of a couple of bad apples is like burning the orchard down to grow flowers if a couple of trees did not produce. We should be immediately removing the bad/corrupt officers without a second thought, not defunding the whole department.

People want to take away the military weapons, but how would they respond to an armed robbery such as the one in North Hollywood in ’97? The LA officers had to break into gun stores to help stop the shooting spree that followed the robbery.

We need to address the 1% issue rather than tarnish and destroy the whole profession.

I am STUNNED that for once BART made the right decision, never saw that coming. All of this defund the police, my God, we need ten times the number we have now. I felt this way before all the rioting and looting and it’s so much worse now, they tie their hands and let people run wild, we all end up paying for everything they stole.

Good for you BART. Defunding of the Police Departments is a crazy idea. If anything, there should be more money available to Police Departments for proper training, and more stringent hiring practices to weed out the bad candidates.

Director Allen is the only one with basic common sense on the BART board. Lateefah Simon is being her usual crack head self.

Worst idea ever, defund BART police! The person suggesting that obviously doesn’t ride BART. I haven’t been on BART since Nia Wilson, remember? Horrific nonsense! BART has a lot to fix before I ever plan to ride again!

Advertisement

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Latest News

© Copyright 2023 Claycord News & Talk