DAROC Letter

DAROC is a coalition of orgs in Broome County, NY
working to divest from the carceral state, reinvest
in community, and hold police accountable.


Dear Honorable Members of City Council,

We offer the following for your consideration in response to Mayor David's announcement on January 8, 2021 establishing (at this late date) the Binghamton Police Reform and Reinvention Collaborative Steering Committee as directed by Governor Andrew Cuomo in his Executive Order 203 issued last June.

In his Executive Order, Governor Cuomo requires that municipalities review "the needs of the community served by its police agency" and that these discussions “involve the entire community.” We also believe that it is critically important that City of Binghamton officials listen to the entire community as it reforms its approach to community safety -- especially those who are most often the victims of bad policing. The Order also states that the process must include "fact based and honest dialogue." We agree with this as well. And to that end, this letter offers a recent history of police reform efforts in our community, highlights the significant work that has already been done over the past year to engage the community on this topic, and provides a set of proposals for reform that have come from this year-long, community-driven, inclusive effort.

Some History

As many of you know, the goal of reforming law enforcement practices is not new. Many of our residents, community leaders, and former elected officials have been working on these issues for almost a decade (and some even longer). In 2015, in response to the growing number of acts of racist police violence nationwide and the need to take proactive steps to improve policing practices, ensure public accountability, and solidify trust between our law enforcement officers and city residents, a group of concerned citizens working together with the Binghamton Human Rights Commission, proposed a piece of legislation called the Police Modernization Law. This legislation was intended to do the following:

Mayor David chose to undercut those efforts, vilifying both the residents and coalition members who backed the legislation. He then retaliated by disbanding the existing Binghamton Human Rights Commission and pressuring City Council to limit the Commission’s ability to independently review discrimination cases in the future. Then, to provide himself with political cover, he issued his own set of so-called “reforms” through an Executive Order that failed to even mention racial profiling or the numerous instances of police violence against people of color. Instead, he issued an insensitive statement, not only attacking those who sought to reform policing and advance racial justice, but also choosing to focus on several murders of law enforcement officials (each undeniably horrific and tragic) instead of the ongoing epidemic of the murder of people of color by the police. (Note: We intended to provide the link to the Mayor’s own statement and press release, but it appears this administration has recently and inexplicably eliminated the entire archive of Mayor David’s news releases, which is just another example of a troubling pattern by this administration in making City Hall less transparent, not more.)

Given this history, we hope our skepticism of the current effort is understandable. The David administration has a long history of demonstrated animosity toward police reform efforts. Even with this mandate from the Governor, as our nation is finally reckoning with systemic racism and police violence, Mayor David has dragged his feet and done little to inspire confidence. For example, many Mayors across New York showed true leadership on this issue and launched their own local reform panels in August and September--and are months into the process. On the other hand, Binghamton has just now started the process. Because of the Mayor’s delays, our Police Reform Panel will have about only 60 days following their first meeting to engage in an inclusive listening process, discuss current practices, study and debate reforms, develop a plan, solicit community feedback, incorporate community feedback, present a final plan to City Council for approval, and then submit the plan to New York State. With so little time remaining, it is unlikely that a good faith effort to engage the community in the sort of discussion necessary for real systematic information-gathering (and of the sort mandated by Governor Cuomo) is even possible. Again, please allow us a healthy dose of skepticism.

Consequently, we struggle with our decision to participate in what is clearly a flawed process -- one that is likely to lead nowhere and provide even more political cover to those who prefer inaction over reform. And we remain significantly concerned about our participation being perceived as validating any plan that fails to address the concerns raised by residents of this community whose voices are traditionally left out of these sorts of forums. Nevertheless, we believe it is necessary that members of the Binghamton Police Reform and Reinvention Collaborative Steering Committee and our elected city leaders have the opportunity to consider these findings from our year-long effort to solicit input from the local community about the reforms they want to see. We offer this summary with the hope that reading it will make a difference.  

A Year-Long Effort at Community Engagement 

Over the past year, a series of community conversations have taken place in venues across the City of Binghamton, including Recreation Park, Center City, the Northside, and Webster Street. More than 700 residents responded to questions about Police Accountability and what would make our community safer, reflected on city spending on law enforcement, and brainstormed on other possible places to allocate those funds. Comments and survey data were also collected during the City and County Budget Hearings in October, Juneteenth, and the July 4 Speakout. Results from these community events and the survey data were then compiled into the set of recommendations discussed below. 

Proposed Reforms to Ensure Police Accountability 

Any plan produced by this committee must demand the equal treatment and respect for the inherent life, liberty, dignity, and worth of all individuals by the police. This requires the following: (1) identifying and eliminating all instances of racial bias in law enforcement; (2) increasing transparency and accountability in policing practices; (3) ending efforts to militarize law enforcement and efforts to acquire military equipment; (4) reviewing, revising, and where needed creating new policies that minimize harm and prohibit the unnecessary use of force by police; and (5) reviewing our law enforcement budgets with the goal of shifting tax dollars to invest in the needs of individuals as part of a systemic, more humane approach to reimagine community safety.

Eliminate Racial Profiling

Racial profiling has been uniformly condemned at the highest levels of government, our legal system, and by our own Police Administration as illegal and unconstitutional, in addition to being inefficient and increasing community distrust. In order to stop the use of racial profiling by law enforcement, this legislative package will mandate the following:

Increase Transparency and Accountability

In order to increase the transparency and accountability of local law enforcement, this legislative package will mandate the following:  

Eliminate Militarization of Law Enforcement and the Acquisition of Military Equipment

There has been a nationwide trend to militarize local law enforcement. Police Departments across the country have outfitted their officers with military grade weapons and equipment. This increases the chances of violent encounters with the public, and it has transformed law enforcement into an occupying military force. This has been accompanied by the expansion of local surveillance. Street cameras and license plate readers have already appeared in predominantly poor communities of color (with plans to roll out facial recognition tools as well), effectively ghettoizing these populations. In order to reverse this trend, this legislative package will mandate the following:

Minimize Physical Harm and Unnecessary Use of Force

In order to minimize physical harm and unnecessary use of force by local law enforcement, this legislative package will mandate the following:

Reinvest in Our Community

In the past six years Binghamton has added 12 additional police officers, which based on the City’s own 2009 report (Commission on Personnel Costs), costs approximately $1.2 Million per year. We believe that reforming policing is only a part of what’s needed to truly reimagine community safety. We must also stop criminalizing individual and social challenges--like addiction, homelessness, poverty, and mental health issues--and invest in alternative approaches that not only are more humane, but have been proven through evidence-based research to actually make our communities safer. Based on the tremendous community feedback garnered through a year-long inclusive engagement process, here are some ways to reimagine community safety that residents felt would be much wiser investments, year over year, than adding 12 additional police officers:

Finally, many of our recommendations are also included in Police Use of Force: An Examination of Modern Policing Practices issued November 2018 by the U.S. Commission on Human Rights, which we highly recommend you read. The report is available here (a summary of findings starts on pg 139): https://docplayer.net/113129307-Police-use-of-force-an-examination-of-modern-policing-practices.html

We encourage Binghamton residents who support the intent of this letter and many of the recommendations above to please add your signature. We will deliver the full list of signatories to the Panel, Council, and Mayor's Office in March.

If you have any questions or would like us to provide additional information, please contact Maliyka Muhammad at (607) 677-6972 or Tina Chronopoulos at (607) 760-1366.  

To add your name as a signatory on this letter, click here.

Signed by: