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Friend -
By now, you've heard me talk about how much of a priority public
safety is for Ward 6 and across the District. And you've also heard me
talk about how the approach we have to take needs to fully fund public
safety, rather than falling into "either/or" arguments. We need
both action and accountability when harm is
committed, and we need to invest in proven strategies
to prevent, interrupt, and break cycles of violence. As the Chair of
the Council's Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety, I've moved a
budget forward today that does exactly this, and it was unanimously
approved.
As the budget process advances over the next few weeks, I'll share
more about our many investments in Ward 6. But given the challenges
we've faced with crime and violence, particularly in the past year, I
want to dedicate this entire email to the public safety budget.
There's no way to include every detail of a $1.7 billion committee
budget in a single email, but I wanted to share the highlights with
you.
So what does fully funding the District's public safety
strategy look like? Here's a snapshot:
- Strategically investing in and expanding the Office of
Neighborhood Safety and Engagement's
community-based approach to public safety by expanding violence
interrupters into 25 communities across the District that have
experienced the highest levels of gun violence. Also funding the
agency's successful Pathways
Program to serve 200 residents at risk of committing or being
victims of gun violence with intervention, training, support, and
employment. This budget also supports the Attorney
General's Cure the Streets violence interruption program
with 10 sites across the District.
- Approving the Metropolitan Police Department's full request
for 347 additional police officers to serve
our communities, including new recruitment and retention
tools for the Department: $5.5 million in signing
bonuses for new recruits and cadets, tripling the Police Officer
Retention Program to subsidize tuition reimbursement and ongoing
education, and more than doubling a housing incentive program for new
recruits to encourage them to call the District home.
- Expanding the District's network of Hospital-Based
Violence Intervention Programs where medical
professionals and credible messengers work with survivors of violence
in the emergency department to meet their needs and break cycles of
violence and retribution.
- Funding more than $40 million to support
victims through the Office of Victim Services and
Justice Grants, including millions set aside for emergency and
transitional housing for victims of domestic violence, emergency
shelter housing for LGBTQ+ survivors of violence, mental health
services for victims of gun violence, and grants for direct services
to survivors of domestic and sexual violence.
-
Expanding the District's 911 Call Center by
hiring more call takers and dispatchers for District residents in
need, including new training for call takers to provide telecommunicator
CPR (t-CPR).
- Growing the capacity of the Fire and Emergency Medical
Services Department with additional
firefighter/emergency medical technicians and firefighter/paramedics,
staying on track with purchasing and replacing our fleet of
ambulances, ladder trucks, and pumpers, and making significant
investments in our fire houses, fleet maintenance facility, and a new
fire boat to work on our rivers.
- Saving the successful LEAD Up! and LEAD Out! Programs at the
Department of Corrections; these programs work with residents before
and after incarceration to provide leadership, education,
and development opportunities to reduce recidivism and prepare them
for successful reentry. The budget also identifies new
funding for reentry services grants to help returning citizens with
housing, transportation, and other emergency needs.
- Approving a transformational $251 million investment to begin the
process of building a modern and safe new corrections and
rehabilitation facility, which is decades overdue. This
money will build a new annex to the current Correctional Treatment
Facility to serve as a reimagined treatment and residential facility.
The budget also approves $25 million in capital investments
to maintain safe, secure, and humane conditions for residents at the
D.C. Jail and Correctional Treatment Facility until the new annex can
be completed.
- Rebuilding community trust and transparency by adding new
requirements to make basic Metropolitan Police Department budget,
hiring, attrition, staffing, and overtime reports public.
-
Protecting residents and consumers by
funding new attorneys at the Office of the Attorney General to fight
price fixing, bid rigging, and antitrust behavior, to enforce
residents' paid family leave rights, and to take on public corruption
and workers' rights cases.
- Most of our residents walk through the court doors without a
lawyer because they can't afford one, and the consequences can be
devastating. This budget invests more than $25 million in
civil legal services, eviction defense and
diversion, and new coordinated legal intake systems to
help residents navigate the complex and intimidating legal system with
the support of an attorney.
- Creating a new pilot program within the Department of Behavioral
Health’s Crisis Services team to provide counseling to
survivors of natural and human-made disasters, like
house or building fires, structure collapses, public transit crashes,
and other small- to mid-size incidents. This idea came out of my staff
working with Southwest neighbors displaced during the fatal and tragic
fire at 301 St., SW, earlier this year. My team recognized there
weren't immediate, rapid response resources for lower-income people
who endure traumatic events. It's my hope this pilot program can pave
the way to offering these services more broadly moving forward.
This is only a snapshot of the investments that we just
unanimously approved, but I believe they highlight the comprehensive
and strategic approach needed to keep DC residents and communities
safe and healthy. This is a "both/and" budget that reflects the shared
priorities of our residents. We're a resource-rich city with a lot of
programs - but the coordination to bring the full weight of our
efforts to bear is more important now than ever. If you'd like to read
a longer summary of the report, click
here.
As always, thank you for your support, for your engagement on so
many issues with us - but especially on public safety, and a special
thanks to all those who joined my Ward
6 Budget Town Hall and have continued to weigh in. If I can answer
any questions for you, please let me know.
Charles Allen
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