Public comment round I has concluded, we are now moving onto agenda item #1 - Community Panel of #JusticeForFloyd demonstrators sharing their first-hand experiences of what they saw in response to demonstrations.
Powerful testimonial shared by our first panelist about his experiences of living while Black and a reminder that so-called progressive places like Seattle are not immune from the bias that harm Black people in other parts of the country.
Our 2nd panelists reminds us: Saturday's peaceful protest started peacefully, stayed peaceful, and ended peacefully. Shares there were bad actors who co-opted demonstrations and used them as a cover to behave poorly.
Our 3rd panelists starts their testimony by sharing a personal observation of how SPD shows up at Black-organized demonstrations: there are perceptions of aggression and living in a police state. Why is exercising our rights and speaking our minds met with tear gas?
Now we are joined by Coach Dom - he shares firsthand reports of people witnessing vans of people joining Saturday's crowds but not the actions that brought people together. Recalls seeing the person with the AR-15 and thinking "what would've happened if this kid was Black?"
Why are our kids being pepper sprayed? It breaks my heart seeing kids of all colors using their voice and to stand up and being pepper sprayed, pushed, gassed. They are brave and we should recognize that. I know good officers who should be taking the lead on all of this.
Our final speaker of this panel shares this is excessive, seeing children gassed. It's really intense, seeing everything that I've seen. Restraint can be shown for someone picking up a gun, all I could think about was Tamir Rice who had a toy in his hand.
They share what another panelist said: the City shut down. How were people supposed to get home or get out with no transit? We had to rely on mutual aid. City workers used their badges to help get us out. This feels like a police state.
Our community panel:
- Willard Jimerson, United Better Thinking
- Omari Salisbury, Converge Media
- Nestie Tjirongo, film maker/member of Seattle Film Task Force
- Dominique Davis, Community Passageways
- Evana Enabulele
Thank you all for your accounts and using your voices.
Thank you, Omari, for closing this panel with an important question of Council's role in determining what kind of City we will be and the leadership needed for that. I will take this question to heart.
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I intend to vote to override the Mayor's vetoes at tomorrow's special Full Council mtg.
This morning @ Council Briefing, I stated that I stand by what Council did this summer & I continue to believe these are the right policy choices. I will continue to support divestment. /1
b/c Council is required to follow the Open Public Meetings Act, I don't know the outcome of tomorrow's vote.
If vetoes are sustained, then the work we have collectively done is erased. This will mean zero dollars from 2020's budget for BIPOC-led community safety investments. /2
Today, I introduced an alternative bill that is a compromise between the Mayor and Council.
This bill will *ONLY* move forward if the vetoes are sustained by my colleagues.
Again, I plan to vote to override all the vetoes. /3
This weekend has been marked by great personal loss to those of us who knew and loved Rahwa Habte and Sarah Leyrer. Both from different walks of life. Both loved community, organized community and staunchly fought for what was right. Both gone too soon. Rest in Power. /1
I first met Sarah in law school. She was effervescent, quirky and had a heart pure as gold. I convinced her to work at Casa Latina and we often stood in store parking lots volunteering as legal observers to make sure day laborers were protected from ICE raids in South Seattle. /2
Like many of you, I have watched with dismay as the SPD has failed to demonstrate restraint or exercise the de-escalation principles that should be the hallmark of a truly reformed law enforcement department.
The culture change we are pushing for, and have been since 2010, has failed to materialize. The City Council has taken the initial votes to begin the process of transforming how the City of Seattle ensures community safety for everyone, particularly our BIPOC communities.
Meanwhile, the Mayor insists on sowing seeds of fear, intimidation and misinformation from a bully pulpit, further dividing our community in a time of unprecedented crisis. All the while, she calls for unity.
Today is a down-payment on community investments and an ongoing commitment to transform how we deliver community-supported public safety services across the city. /2
Our collective commitments now, plant the seeds and provide a blueprint for massive divestment from our militarized police force and reinvestment in community-based public safety #solutions. Phase 2 of this work begins in just 7 weeks. /3
This is great news for Child Care Providers across the Country, who are essential to our collective recovery from the #COVID19 crisis! Thanks to the House Members who voted in favor and many thanks to our Senator @PattyMurray, who needs our support to get this done! 💪/1
If passed, the #ChildCareIsEssential Act, "would provide grant money to child care providers in an effort to help the facilities reopen safely amid the coronavirus pandemic and stabilize the sector’s operations on Wednesday." /2
Additionally, the "Child Care for Economic Recovery Act, includes a number of tax provisions that are aimed at making child care more affordable for families and providing assistance to child-care providers." /3