Community Members Call for True Police Reform Regarding Traffic Enforcement

The Buffalo Police Department recently announced that it will eliminate its Traffic Unit effective January 2021. The Fair Fines and Fees Coalition wants residents in the city of Buffalo to know that This is Not Reform.

This action by the Buffalo Police Department does not remove the police from existing traffic enforcement practices. The traffic unit that will be eliminated merely handles traffic control for parades, festivals, and other special events. This means that disbanding the traffic unit will not stop excessive ticketing or biased traffic stops in Buffalo’s Black and Brown communities.

The Fair Fines and Fees Coalition also challenges the Buffalo Police Department’s claim that this action will save the city money. While Traffic Unit officers will be reassigned to other divisions, this does not mean they will be removed from the force. Regardless, outside organizations traditionally pay to secure traffic detail from the BPD for special events such as walks, runs, rides or parades. If organizations other than the BPD typically shoulder the cost of traffic control themselves, then where is the cost savings to the Department? Real cost savings and true reform would be realized by moving the officers of the traffic unit into vacant positions in other city departments, or through layoffs.

Under Mayor Brown, the Buffalo Police Department’s budget, which now stands at $143 million, has increased by 54%. The press statements made by the Buffalo Police Department about disbanding the traffic unit sound like reforms to decrease spending on police, but in fact they are not. The Fair Fines and Fees Coalition believes this unit is being disbanded because of a shortfall created by COVID-19, which has caused widespread cancellation of events throughout the year. Elimination of the BPD’s traffic unit is clearly not a step toward defunding the police, or any meaningful police reform in Buffalo.

The City of Buffalo must make real reforms by defunding the police, including by eliminating traffic enforcement from the duties of the patrol division of the Buffalo Police Department. This division excessively and disproportionately tickets, targets, stops, and brutalizes Black and Brown Buffalo residents. Our pandemic-stricken city is facing millions of dollars in projected budget cuts. If the city truly wants to save money and promote public safety, then the City of Buffalo must reduce the police budget and instead invest in the community.

What does this look like? It looks like disbanding other units within the Buffalo Police Department that have a history of disportionately stopping Black people, excessively

ticketing for minor traffic infractions, and brutalizing community members. It starts with eliminating traffic enforcement from the patrol division, taking the resulting cost savings, and reinvesting it into unarmed, non-police traffic safety jobs for Buffalo residents in underserved communities. It includes using the savings from disbanding other units in the BPD to redesign Buffalo streets into Just Streets. Just Streets, can also move the city of Buffalo away from traffic safety by surveillance, like the School Speed Zone Camera program. Just Streets: streets that are designed with race, culture, class, disability, and community safety in mind. Just Streets are those reclaimed by people of color and made safe and accessible for marginalized racial groups, without the police.

Please join the Fair Fines + Fees Coalition tomorrow for our virtual press conference via zoom at 10 am, as we discuss the disbanding of the traffic unit and how we can create Just Streets in Buffalo.

Topic: FFFC press conference

Time: Dec 17, 2020 10:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

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A reckoning awaits these out-of-touch lawmakers hopelessly in denial



Last month, some House members publicly acknowledged that Israel has been committing genocide in Gaza. It’s a judgment that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch unequivocally proclaimed a year ago. Israeli human-rights organizations have reached the same conclusion. But such clarity is sparse in Congress.

And no wonder. Genocide denial is needed for continuing to appropriate billions of dollars in weapons to Israel, as most legislators have kept doing. Congress members would find it very difficult to admit that Israeli forces are committing genocide while voting to send them more weaponry.

Three weeks ago, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) introduced a resolution titled “Recognizing the genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza.” Twenty-one House colleagues, all of them Democrats, signed on as co-sponsors. They account for 10 percent of the Democrats in Congress.

In sharp contrast, a national Quinnipiac Poll found that 77 percent of Democrats “think Israel is committing genocide.” That means there is a 67 percent gap between what the elected Democrats are willing to say and what the people who elected them believe. The huge gap has big implications for the party’s primaries in the midterm elections next year, and then in the race for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination.

One of the likely candidates in that race, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), is speaking out in ways that fit with the overwhelming views of Democratic voters.

“I agree with the UN commission's heartbreaking finding that there is a genocide in Gaza,” he tweeted as autumn began. “What matters is what we do about it – stop military sales that are being used to kill civilians and recognize a Palestinian state.”

Consistent with that position, the California congressman was one of the score of Democrats who signed on as co-sponsors of Tlaib’s resolution the day it was introduced.

In the past, signers of such a resolution would have reason to fear the wrath — and the electoral muscle — of AIPAC, the Israel-can-do-no-wrong lobby. But its intimidation power is waning. AIPAC’s support for Israel does not represent the views of the public, a reality that has begun to dawn on more Democratic officeholders.

“With American support for the Israeli government’s management of the conflict in Gaza undergoing a seismic reversal, and Democratic voters’ support for the Jewish state dropping off steeply, AIPAC is becoming an increasingly toxic brand for some Democrats on Capitol Hill,” the New York Times reported this fall. Notably, “some Democrats who once counted AIPAC among their top donors have in recent weeks refused to take the group’s donations.”

Khanna has become more and more willing to tangle with AIPAC, which is now paying for attack ads against him.

On Thanksgiving, he tweeted about Gaza and accused AIPAC of “asking people to disbelieve what they saw with their own eyes.” Khanna elaborated in a campaign email days ago, writing: “Any politician who caves to special interests on Gaza will never stand up to special interests on corruption, healthcare, housing, or the economy. If we can’t speak with moral clarity when thousands of children are dying, we won’t stand for working Americans when corporate power comes knocking.”

AIPAC isn’t the only well-heeled organization for Israel now struggling with diminished clout. Democratic Majority for Israel, an offshoot of AIPAC that calls itself “an American advocacy group that supports pro-Israel policies within the United States Democratic Party,” is now clearly misnamed. Every bit of recent polling shows that in the interests of accuracy, the organization should change its name to “Democratic Minority for Israel.”

Yet the party’s leadership remains stuck in a bygone era. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), the chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, typifies how disconnected so many party leaders are from the actual views of Democratic voters. Speaking in Brooklyn three months ago, she flatly claimed that “nine out of 10 Democrats are pro-Israel.” She did not attempt to explain how that could be true when more than seven out of 10 Democrats say Israel is guilty of genocide.

The political issue of complicity with genocide will not go away.

Last week, Amnesty International released a detailed statement documenting that “Israeli authorities are still committing genocide against Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip, by continuing to deliberately inflict conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction.” But in Congress, almost every Republican and a large majority of Democrats remain stuck in public denial about Israel’s genocidal policies.

Such denial will be put to the electoral test in Democratic primaries next year, when most incumbents will face an electorate far more morally attuned to Gaza than they are. What easily passes for reasoned judgment and political smarts in Congress will seem more like cluelessness to many Democratic activists and voters who can provide reality checks with their ballots.