The 'David Dorn Back the Blue Act' Is Headed to Congress
By Erin Coates
The Western Journal
Sepember 9, 2020
Sen. Josh Hawley was planning to submit a bill to Congress on
Wednesday to give the Justice Department the authority to raise the
salaries of state and local police forces across the country except in
places that have chosen to defund their law enforcement.
The David Dorn Back the Blue Act would allocate $15 billion for the
U.S. attorney general to raise police salaries and hire more officers,
according to a news release from the Missouri Republican’s office.
“Police departments across the country are under siege — underfunded,
facing increased retirement, and struggling to make new hires,” Hawley
said.
“But as violence and rioting sweeps across American cities big and
small, our courageous law enforcement officers are more vital now than
ever.”
He added, “Our officers deserve a raise, not defunding. They deserve our unqualified support.”
Hawley’s bill
is named after David Dorn, a retired St. Louis police captain who was
killed on June 2 during the looting that followed George Floyd’s death.
Dorn was a 38-year veteran of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department.
The bill would amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to authorize the allocation of funds.
Hawley’s office cited decreasing morale among officers and a struggle
to retain law enforcement officers among the reasons why the bill is
necessary.
“I’m hearing officers who are probably the most phenomenal officers
in the country, they are by far the most professional I’ve ever worked
around, and they’re beaten. And they’re bruised. And they’re down,”
Robert Harris, director of the Los Angeles Police Protective League,
told KCBS-TV in June.
“I had one officer tell me that he feels like a Vietnam soldier
returning home to a country that hates him, and that’s not a good place
to be.”
Hawley’s legislation would provide departments that need more
manpower additional funds to hire more officers and retain those
officers.
“A law enforcement agency or organization that receives funds under
this part may use the funds for activities and programs to hire and pay
additional law enforcement personnel or to retain existing personnel,”
the bill reads.
Recipients of the funds would also be able to raise the salaries of
their officers up to 110 percent of the local median earnings.
The bill excludes cities that chose to defund their police department by not giving money to any law enforcement agency that has recently cut officer salaries.
“Democratic politicians are bending to radical activists who want to
defund the police,” Hawley said. “We should do just the opposite.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: A nice gesture, but Dorn must know that his bill doesn't stand a snowball's chance in Hell of passing in the Democrat controlled House.
1 comment:
Sometimes taking a principled stand is valuable for it's own sake.
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