NewsAmerica in Crisis

Actions

New York mayor promises to shift funding away from NYPD and toward youth services, social programs

Posted at 8:16 AM, Jun 08, 2020
and last updated 2020-06-08 08:30:08-04

NEW YORK — Mayor Bill de Blasio pledged Sunday to shift funding from the NYPD to youth and social services.

The mayor said the details would be worked out through the city budget process over the next three weeks.

"We are committed to shifting resources," de Blasio said. "The investments in our youth are foundational."

The mayor added that the defunding of the NYPD would be done in a way that does not compromise the safety of New Yorkers.

Defunding the NYPD and redirecting those resources to youth and community programs has been one of the demands of protesters amid ongoing peaceful demonstrations following the death of George Floyd.

When asked whether de Blasio would use some of the shifted resources to hire more attorneys for NYPD departmental trials against officers, he said it sounded like a "very good use of taxpayer dollars to make sure that the discipline is speedy and transparent."

The announcement was one of several de Blasio made during a Sunday morning news conference focused on police reform and accountability. NYPD Comissioner Dermot Shea was noticeably absent.

The mayor also voiced support for a push by the state Legislature to reform Civil Rights Law 50-a , which shields police disciplinary records from public view.

The de Blasio administration also plans to move street vendor enforcement out of NYPD control and to bring more community voices into the higher levels of the police department.

Over the next 18 months, de Blasio said additional reforms would be recommended and announced by a racial equity panel that was convened amid the coronavirus crisis.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo echoed the mayor later on Sunday. He said it is time for transparency of prior discipline records for all law enforcement officers.

He also called for a ban on chokeholds; said that the Attorney General should be used as a special prosecutor and said that false race-based 911 reports be prohibited.

"I figuratively stand with the protesters and this is about making change and action," Cuomo said.

Saturday marked the 10th day of demonstrations against police brutality in New York City.

Protesters across the country have been calling for police reform and racial equality following the death of George Floyd while in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.

This story was originally published by Magee Hickey on WPIX in New York.