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Sunday, November 29, 2020

Defund-police supporters tell Biden they're 'not going away'


 Supporters of defunding the police say they are "not going away" just because Joe Biden will be the next president.

"What we’ve heard so far from the Democratic Party is what they’re not going to do," defund advocate Andrea Ritchie told Mother Jones. "I don’t expect they will be supportive of the main demand from the streets ... It's gonna be a fight. We're not going away."

Biden embraced some calls for police reform during his presidential campaign, such as a ban on chokeholds and the creation of a national police oversight commission. But he opposed far-left efforts to defund the police, a catch-all term for anything from reducing police budgets to abolishing law enforcement completely. Biden instead pushed for $300 million in additional police funding, mainly for improved training.

"I’m very pessimistic about what we can expect, at least initially, from the Biden administration,” said Alex Vitale, a professor and author of a book about police abolition. “He’s made it very clear that he wants to put more resources into policing, that he supports the kind of superficial and ineffective procedural reforms that the Obama administration proposed.”

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Thursday, November 5, 2020

Portland police union files legal challenge against civilian police oversight board


 PORTLAND, Ore — The union representing Portland’s police officers has filed a legal challenge against voter-approved Measure 26-217, which is set to establish a civilian police oversight board.

In a press release, the Portland Police Association (PPA) called the measure “terrible public policy.”

“The PPA is committed to open discussions on police reform and accountability, but this measure has been flawed from the very beginning,” the statement said.

That committee would have the power to subpoena officers to testify and impose discipline, including firing. Right now, according to the Portland Police Union contract, the only person who can fire an officer is the police commissioner Mayor Ted Wheeler.

That contract is up for negotiation in January, and PPA president Daryl Turner has argued the Measure thwarts any ability of the city to bargain in good faith.

"From a legal standpoint, the city’s move is fatally flawed," Thursday's press release stated. "Under Oregon law, the very existence of a disciplinary board must be negotiated with the PPA before being sent to the voters. That is a basic, labor law principle."

The measure, which would create an oversight board independent of any existing city bureau, was spearheaded by Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty. Hardesty is called out by name in the statement from the police association.

“This measure was constructed by Commissioner Hardesty without a full and proper discussion, behind closed doors, and without any communication or bargaining with the PPA,” the statement reads.

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