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Oakland Diverts $17 Million From Police Budget

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Oakland Diverts $17 Million From Police Budget
A police officer walks by patrol cars at the Oakland Police headquarters in Oakland, Calif., in a file photo. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Ivan Pentchoukov
Ivan Pentchoukov
6/27/2021|Updated: 6/27/2021

The City Council of Oakland, California, approved a budget on June 24 that will redirect $17.4 million from its police department to other programs over the course of two years.

The Council voted 7–2 to adopt the plan, which will direct the funds to a violence prevention program, according to CBSN Bay Area. The council’s website wasn’t yet updated with the vote tally on June 27.

The funding diversion was approved amid a surge in violent crimes in the area, including a mass shooting at Lake Merritt the weekend before the vote.

The city’s mayor, Libby Schaaf, opposed stripping funds from the police department.

“Unfortunately, it [the budget] also cuts 50 police officers who respond to Oaklanders’ 911 calls and enforce traffic safety. It also cuts much-needed future academies, which will significantly reduce police staffing and delay response to Oaklanders in their time of crisis,” Schaaf said in a statement, according to CBSN. “It will force our officers to work even more overtime shifts, which are expensive and unsafe for officers and residents alike.

“I believe that until we have proven alternatives, we cannot destroy Oakland’s current public safety system at a time when we are losing so many to gun violence.”

The Oakland Police Officers Association (OPOA) supported funding the violence prevention program, but not at the cost of cutting funds from the police.

“The two no votes are from council members in districts that are most impacted by violent crime. The message they’re saying is, ‘We may support your programs, but we do not want less public safety at a time of skyrocketing violent crime,’” OPOA President Barry Donelan told CBSN.

According to Donelan, the $17 million cut means 50 vacant police officer positions will go unfilled, reducing response times to 911 calls.

Defund-the-police activists lauded the move.

“This historic budget ensures a comprehensive audit of the Oakland Police Department and a thorough examination of positions that could be civilianized, moved out of OPD, or a combination of the two,” the Anti Police-Terror Project said in a statement.

The $17 million from the police department will go to the Department of Violence Prevention, which hires “violence interrupters” and “community ambassadors” with the intent of preventing violence.

“We can make adjustments if we need to, but right now, we have to focus on our violence prevention, affordable housing, our homeless populations, and that’s what this budget helps us move forward and do,” Councilman Dan Kalb said, according to CBSN.

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Ivan Pentchoukov
Ivan Pentchoukov
Author
Ivan is the national editor of The Epoch Times. He has reported for The Epoch Times on a variety of topics since 2011.
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