Saturday, October 09, 2021

JUDGE RULES KANSAS CITY, MO. CITY COUNCIL VIOLATED STATE LAW BY CHANGING THE POLICE BUDGET

Judge rules Kansas City's reallocation of police funds violated state law

 

October 5, 2021

 

A Jackson County judge ruled Tuesday that Kansas City violated state law when it shifted more than $42 million from the Kansas City Police Department's budget to other crime prevention efforts.

In May, the City Council passed two ordinances taking $42.3 million directly out of the police department's budget. The measures committed $45.3 million to be used by the police department for crime prevention, community engagement and outreach.

Those who supported the ordinances explained that it was basically a transfer while increasing the police budget by $3 million.

But the judge disagreed, finding that the city violated state law and ordered the city to restore the funding to the police department.

The police department released a statement after the ruling:

"KCPD engages in the budget process six months ahead of when the budget year begins. The police department puts a great deal of effort into this process as does the city. This budget process directly affects not only the police department and the city, but the members in our community. We appreciate the court recognized the validity of the 2020-2021 budget process."

 

Judge rules Kansas City mayor & city council broke law in police defunding                                                             Mayor Quinton Lucas

 

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas also released a statement on the ruling:

"The mayor and a majority of Council have proven consistently our commitment to creating safer neighborhoods and saving lives by addressing all causes of crime, and shown our willingness to take bold action to achieve such a goal. That work continues. The decision announced by the Court today has provided a pathway forward for the City to require the Kansas City Police Department to engage in discussions related to crime prevention throughout future budget cycles, should the Department seek to receive funds in excess of 20 percent of the City’s General Fund Revenue. I imagine the Council will set the expectation that any dollar received by the Department over statutory requirements must be negotiated and focused squarely on preventing violent crime in our community. Discussions about next year’s budget have already started. I will continue working with the City and Department leadership to ensure every taxpayer funded entity in our City shares a role in working to prevent violent crime and create better outcomes for all people in all of our neighborhoods.

"The City will weigh all options going forward, including appeal. Given the negative implications of the decision on any mid-year budget adjustments, including those now before Council in the Department’s favor, I will continue to ask the Board of Police Commissioners to increase staffing of law enforcement based on the Department’s current fiscal year budgeting of 1,413 law enforcement positions, with only roughly 1,200 positions filled today. Council has supported the positions and there is no longer any excuse to be understaffed."

The Missouri Attorney General's Office released a statement on the ruling:

"Today, a Jackson County Judge sided with the Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners and the Attorney General's Office and struck down Kansas City's illegal attempt to defund the police. This is a huge win for the people of Kansas City and law enforcement officers who work every single day to keep their communities safe. I will always stand up for Missouri's law enforcement and fight back against craven attempts to defund the police"

2 comments:

bob walsh said...

Good.

Trey said...

I once refused to attend a LE conference in Kansas City because the crime near the area of the hotel/conference was near uncontrolled riots.