Slog

News & Arts

The Stranger Suggests

Critics' Best Bets
Music Arts & Food


Line Out

Music & the City
at Night

Friday, February 25, 2011

Council Makes 11 Pointed Recommendations for Police

Posted by on Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 4:01 PM

In the most concrete directive on the issue in the last several years, the Seattle City Council's public safety committee sent a letter to police officials and sat down with union leaders today to outline 11 proposals for restoring public faith in a police department soiled by controversy. The specificity of the agenda—from mandatory drug testing after using a firearm to beefing up training with in-car camera footage—strikes a different approach from Mayor Mike McGinn, who has repeated that "We need to do better," but hasn't specified policy or procedural changes at SPD that would make it better.

"We need specific policy solutions to stop the erosion of public trust and confidence in our officers," says Council Member Tim Burgess, who signed the letter along with council members Sally Clark and Sally Bagshaw. "We have a dual purposes to support our police by strengthening public trust."

Among the recommendations: mandatory steroid testing after an officer has used deadly force (even if nobody died); hiring preference for recruits with a college degree; simultaneously referring criminal investigations of an officer to the county and city prosecutors for possible felony and misdemeanor charges, respectively; county-wide protocols for all officer-involved deaths; and monthly reports on officer-discipline investigations.

The full letter is in this .pdf.

Some of the council's recommendations would require the two police unions—the Seattle Police Officers Guild (representing all uniformed officers) and the Seattle Police Management Association (representing lieutenants and captains)—to approve the terms as part of their labor contract. Burgess won't specify which terms must be negotiated, except to say, "I don’t believe most to them are subject to bargaining." Burgess believes the recommendation can be incorporated into the contract currently under negotiation.

The council members consulted with the City Attorney's office, officers, and organizations to form their recommendations. Burgess would not comment if they consulted with any personnel under the mayor's purview, which actually oversees labor negotiations.

 

Comments (8) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
1
Does McGinn remember we voted the last guy out over snowplows?

I like him a lot at the end of the day but this guy is cooked.

This is the first good news out of the SPD since the horrible decision not to bring charges against Birk. I hope some of it actually gets implemented -- drug testing in particular.
Posted by Swearengen on February 25, 2011 at 4:04 PM
Joe Szilagyi 2
Re #2 on the PDF--why not have a cilivian voting member or two? Why just observers?

Re #4 on the PDF--I suspect SPOG will fight this.

Re #7 on the PDF--I suspect SPOG may fight this but based on precedent elsewhere they have less than no leg to stand on.

Still nothing on removing the extremely inappropriate ability of the police chief to summarily overrule OPA and still, we have OPA with no binding teeth. The entire document is a failure because of that.

Why can't we have a totally independent oversight of the SPD?
Posted by Joe Szilagyi http://www.joeszilagyi.com on February 25, 2011 at 4:12 PM
Baconcat 3
You'd think there was an election this year or something
Posted by Baconcat on February 25, 2011 at 4:16 PM
Will in Seattle 4
What Joe said @2.

Followed by what Baconcat meowed @3.

Gutless Council for the #epicfail ...
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on February 25, 2011 at 4:29 PM
5
The new Portland police department drug testing is random drug testing, not the "after a deadly force incident" drug testing that Burgess, Bagshaw, and Clark propose.

The idea is to PREVENT deadly force incidents.
Posted by raku on February 25, 2011 at 4:49 PM
Baconcat 6
@5: And their idea is to survive the primaries.
Posted by Baconcat on February 25, 2011 at 4:54 PM
7
Sure would be nice if we could address the problem head on with a serious and mandatory De-escalation Training Program. There's experts in town that do just that. Many police departments and first responders over the country use Deescalation as a primary approach. It's how you get closer to a "peace-keeping" force instead of what we've got in Seattle.
Posted by Christi S on February 25, 2011 at 5:05 PM
8
This is a huge statement by the Council, and it makes it obvious that McGinn's team is completely botching the SPOG contract negotiations.

Mayor Mike - please drop the tunnel issue and start running the City. You've lost on the DBT. We need you to pay attention to the other really important things happening under your watch. You're supposed to run the whole city. You're starting to make Paul Schell look like a genius.
Posted by whoknows on February 25, 2011 at 10:26 PM

Add a comment

Advertisement
 

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC
1535 11th Ave (Third Floor), Seattle, WA 98122
Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Takedown Policy