City
Epaper

Seattle Mayor signs order to evaluate police dept functions

By IANS | Published: October 03, 2020 10:00 AM

Seattle, Oct 3 Seattle Mayor Jenny A. Durkan has signed a new executive order to evaluate the functions ...

Open in App

Seattle, Oct 3 Seattle Mayor Jenny A. Durkan has signed a new executive order to evaluate the functions of the US city's police department and identify areas of response that can be transitioned to civilian and community-based responses, her office said in a statement.

The statement released on Friday said that the Mayor's 2021 Proposed Budget also creates a Seattle Emergency Communication Center (SECC) and a new Safe and Thriving Communities division in the Human Services Department (HSD).

The SECC is the first step towards unifying emergency response across the City and addressing the goals of reducing dispatches for the Seattle Police Department (SPD) and substituting alternate responses from other departments or community-based organizations, it added.

In the statement, the Mayor said that "with this executive order and real community investments, we're committing ourselves to a rigorous, transparent, and community-led discussion on issues of policing and community safety".

"The roots of institutions that have historically marginalised Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour (BIPOC) communities run deep... My budget reflects a historic $100 million investment in BIPOC communities and continued investments in alternatives to policing.

"With 800,000 911 calls in our City, it will take thoughtful analysis and deliberate action to truly transform policing," Durkan added.

The Mayor further said that "investing in community wealth and strength is in part how we reduce the need for emergency 911 responses", adding "we can and willinvest meaningfully in civilian public safety alternatives".

Meanwhile, Seattle police Chief Adrian Diaz has said that he was on board with Mayor Durkin's new executive order to re-envision policing, the Seattle-based KIRO-7 TV station reported.

"We will succeed at restoring the trust that has been diminished for some of our community... I'm prepared to make changes," he was quoted as saying.

Other changes detailed in the executive order identify different areas that will be removed from under SPD, including Parking Enforcement, the SPD Victim Advocates Unit, the Office of Emergency Management, and the 911 Communications Center.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: OctopusSeattle emergency communication centerAdrian diazusSeattle
Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsWho Is Parvej Khan? All You Need to Know About the Indian Athlete Secure 1500m Final Spot in 2024 SEC Championships Relays

InternationalNew York Horror: Man Strangles Woman With Belt, Drags Her Between Cars To Rape; Disturbing CCTV Video Goes Viral

InternationalPower Outage in Mexico: Widespread Blackout Reported in Multiple Cities (Watch Video)

InternationalUS: 12-Year-Old Boy Receives World's First Commercially Approved Gene Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

Social ViralTornado in US: Dashcam Records Terrifying Video of Cyclonic Storm Devastating Warehouse in Nebraska

International Realted Stories

InternationalRussia expels UK defence attache from Moscow in a tit-for-tat move

InternationalSouth Africa urges International Court of Justice to order Gaza ceasefire, halt Israel's Rafah Op

InternationalUS imposes sanctions on entities 'transferring' military equipment between North Korea and Russia

International​UN raises India's 2024 growth rate to 6.9 pc; remains world's fastest-growing large economy

InternationalPak: Islamabad HC seeks report on alleged abduction of Kashmiri journalist by security agencies