Supervisors reject calls to ‘defund’ Sacramento County sheriff in $6.4 billion budget

BY MICHAEL FINCH II

SEPTEMBER 10, 2020 06:39 PM , UPDATED 6 HOURS 18 MINUTES AGO

The Sacramento County Board of Supervisors has finalized a $6.4 billion budget that relies heavily on a one-time influx of federal money given to local governments to lessen the impact of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

In a meeting on Wednesday and Thursday, the supervisors faced a wave of skeptical residents and community groups, questioning their stewardship of federal money after many learned in recent weeks that most of the money was directed toward the Sheriff’s Office.

Sacramento County received $181 million in Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act money from the federal government. But the county used all the money in the previous year’s budget, which is why it started out with a $161 million surplus for the fiscal year 2020-21. Some $146 million of that was because of the coronavirus funding.

The budget includes large increases to health services related to COVID-19, including $71 million for testing and other related programs; nearly $7 million to feed homebound seniors; and $11 million to aid the homeless.

It also includes an additional $38 million for the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department for increased salary and benefits cost and to comply with a judge’s order to improve living conditions in local jails; and an extra $8 million toward the probation department.

Several residents took aim at the large funding bumps for agencies that support incarceration over human services, criticizing the county’s budget priorities. The budget meeting stretched into Thursday afternoon and the sheriff’s funding was not significantly changed.

“Our communities are facing five crises as we meet tonight: the pandemic, an economic crisis, an impending eviction crisis, a crisis of confidence in our current approach to law enforcement and a climate crisis that should be obvious to all of us,” said Rick Eaton, a resident of Carmichael and member of Sacramento Area Congregations Together, during the public comment period Wednesday.

“It is simply irresponsible and a failure of leadership to ignore these crises and adopt a business-as-usual without significant changes.”

THE PEOPLE’S BUDGET

The board approved the budget at a time when residents and organizers wanted more funding directed to health and social services programs and less for law enforcement and jails.

The idea grew from a similar movement in Los Angeles where organizers surveyed the community on what budget priorities should be. A similar survey is underway in Sacramento called the People’s Budget. The survey has garnered more than 2,000 responses as of Wednesday, said Katie Valenzuela, one of the organizers behind the effort.

Organizers say the survey results so far reveal that many residents favor other priorities over law enforcement, which accounts for an outside portion of county spending.

“Our mission and work are guided by this survey and what the people say they want. We’ve had 2,000 people fill out the survey in the two weeks it was out,” Valenzuela said, adding that they hope to reach 5,000 responses in a few weeks.“

What we heard overwhelmingly was that folks wanted more money to human services ... and prevention and less money going to law enforcement and criminalization.”

The city of Sacramento appears headed in the same general direction as the county. Although the city may create a new “participatory budget,” it likely won’t redirect money from public safety to the fund. The city’s two largest public safety unions sent a letter to the council on Tuesday opposing reductions to their budgets.

‘DEFUND’ EQUALS MORE CRIME?

During Wednesday night’s meeting, the “defund” effort was largely dismissed by Sheriff Scott Jones, who said he wanted to “provide a counterbalance” to the conversation around police funding. Jones’ budget presentation was intended to beat back the growing calls to redistribute his agency’s outsize share of the county money.

“We’re all familiar with the term defunding the police but it has many different names: abolition, realigning or reprioritizing police finding, reimagining police; and here locally there’s been quite a bit of traction gained on what is called the people’s budget,” Jones said in front of a podium.

“Importantly, it means taking money specifically from law enforcement as opposed to any other source and reallocating it for other purposes.”

He then rattled off a list of headlines about rising crime in Los Angeles, Austin, Baltimore, San Francisco, New York City, Washington DC and Portland. The news stories were mostly from a collection of conservative-leaning websites. And the upshot of Jones’ message was: Cut funding and crime rises.

“It’s important to note that none of these cities completely defunded their police departments.,” Jones said. “So these are the models that we have and, I think, as we go through each of these cities you will see that there is one outcome and one outcome alone. There is no alternative reality than what has occurred in each of these cities.”

Only Jones’ presentation was more simplistic than what researchers and experts say is actually happening in cities across the country. Crime in most cities actually fell during the pandemic -- and in some cases, after protests, according to data collected by a professor at the University of Pennsylvania.

However, homicides in some places, like New York City, have increased. William Vizzard, a professor emeritus of criminal justice at Sacramento State, said there are only theories but no solid data on why homicides have spiked.

Vizzard said the latest effort to reform police departments may be worthwhile but the messaging is still confusing.

“Although a few really militant individuals mean it literally, most mean redirect some police funding to social services and seek alternatives to (the) police for potential conflict situations,” Vizzard said in an email. “However, it is a slogan ready-made for striking fear in the middle class.”

Be Counted

BY: EDGAR SANCHEZ SEPTEMBER 10, 2020

Abelardo “Abe” Ruiz believes in the power of the census.

The proud Sacramentan has participated in every decennial population count since 1980, when he was a new immigrant from Mexico.

This year the naturalized U.S. citizen completed and mailed his family’s 2020 Census form five months before the September 30 deadline.

“It’s important that all Sacramentans be counted in the census, so our communities won’t lose federal funds for new highways, schools and parks,” Ruiz, chef/owner of Anthony’s Italian Cuisine Restaurant in South Natomas, said recently. “Filling out the census form is easy.”

But, he added, time is running out.

Unfortunately, some Sacramentans are difficult to count. By conservative estimate, Sacramento County and its cities lost at least $140 million in federal funds over the past decade because the 2010 Census missed thousands of local residents.

Getting a full count in 2020 is a priority. The census determines where billions of dollars in federal monies go to help build new hospitals, bridges and other infrastructure. It also shapes the federal budget for programs such as Head Start and Meals on Wheels. Lastly, among other things, the census establishes the number of congressional seats for each state.

To increase census awareness, the county created Sacramento’s Complete Count Committee in 2018, with members selected by the county and the Sacramento Region Community Foundation.

Reflecting the county’s diversity, the members include government partners such as employees from the cities and counties, plus more than 30 community organizations, some of them supported by The California Endowment.

“We’ve been meeting for over a year” to develop integrated outreach strategies for the 2020 Census, said Gabby Trejo, the committee’s co-chair and director of Sacramento Area Congregations Together. “What’s at stake is bringing the resources … for people to live in our community.”

One new tactic: Every Sunday, the faithful attending virtual services at Sac ACT parishes are reminded by pastors to “do” the census.

Besides the SCCC, the county formed 16 subcommittees, each of which has reached out to a specific hard-to-count group, ranging from refugees to the homeless.

The community-government partnership appears to be succeeding.
Despite COVID-19, which halted one-on-one gathering of census data for months, responses in local hard-to-count communities have risen dramatically, pointing to a successful census, said Judy Robinson, Sacramento County’s 2020 Census manager.

The census is confidential. Residents who haven’t responded to census surveys are being visited by census takers. The forms can also be filled out by telephone, with assistance in 14 languages, at 1-844-330-2020, or online at my2020census.gov. PLEASE RESPOND BY/BEFORE SEPT. 30.

In Sacramento, Youth Activists Push to Get Police Out of Schools

Several groups in Sacramento worked to eliminate SROs from school campuses and came close.

After the Sacramento City Unified School District Board voted in February to approve a $1.4 million contract for police officers in the district, groups such as Brown Issues and Sacramento Act were able to convince the board to cut the number of school resource officers on district campuses from eight to three while renewing its contract with the Sacramento Police Department in August.

Members of Sacramento Act had hoped the contract would be eliminated when the Board returned for a vote last month. But the board agreed in a 5 to 2 vote to spending $563,097 for three off-site officers who will oversee the schools. The contract also called for the police department to provide consistent data of arrests and other on campus activities.

Boys & Men of Color Summit Fosters Brotherhood

Thirty diverse young men—most of whom had never met—sat in a circle recently in a room at Sacramento State University, during the 8th annual Boys & Men of Color Summit.

The circle was just one of the activities at the pro-education summit organized by local youth with support from The California Endowment. About 200 youth, ages 12 to 23, from Sacramento and beyond attended.

Two adults, Raymond Garcia and Ryan McClinton, asked the youth in the ring who attended: “How many of you know who Stephon Clark was?”

The name resonated like gunshots in the night.

“I heard about him on the news,” one youngster said.

“He was killed in his grandmother’s backyard,” said another.

Decarcerate Sacramento Celebrates Victory Over Stalled Jail Expansion

Criminal justice reform activists won a huge victory this month, when Sacramento County Supervisors walked away from an $89 million plan to expand Rio Cosumnes Correctional Center (RCCC) in Elk Grove.

Opposition to the plan was led by Decarcerate Sacramento (DS), a grassroots group born in early July as a response to the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors’ April 23 decision to start accepting construction bids for the project.

Moving quickly, DS members first appeared before the board on July 16, with a warning: Expanding RCCC would aggravate the county’s addiction to incarceration, particularly of the poor and minorities.

Just as quickly, DS evolved into a coalition of private citizens and nonprofits, including Sacramento Area Congregations Together, which is supported by The California Endowment.

Sacramento schools approve new campus security plan

The Sacramento City Unified School District's board approved a new safety plan for the upcoming school year, which includes a reduction in the number of school resource officers for the district and takes the SROs off campus.

The $1.4 million proposal, called Reimagine School Safety, aims to increase training, specifically in the area of implicit bias, provide greater mental health support and reduce the number of school resource officers to perhaps three.

Sacramento faith leaders hold vigil of hope, pray for victims of mass shootings


SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Sacramento faith leaders, civic leaders, and members of the community grieved the lives lost in the recent mass shootings during a vigil held at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral on Friday evening.

The service also included the reading of community names and the number of dead, where mass shootings have occurred in recent years.

"I came tonight because the list of gun tragedies is just too long," said Cindy Friday. 

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg and Congresswoman Doris Matsui were among those who attended the vigil.

"We must not accept the common refrain that nothing will ever change," said Steinberg. "However long it takes to change the laws and the culture around gun violence, it will be too long but never too late." 

Monta Said, who attended the service with her son, told ABC10 she left feeling hopeful.

"It was a very cleansing feeling to know that so many people were on the same wavelength," Said said. "The point is that we are all suffering from this tragedy, and I think we all have this sense of hurting right now, as a nation, and as a people.  

How local advocates are bracing for potential ICE raids

As massive Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids across the country were expected on Sunday, fear ran high across Northern California. 

The supposed raids were said to target some 2,000 undocumented families who've gotten final deportation orders.

Sacramento was not one of the communities being targeted in this operation, neither was Stockton or Modesto, but that doesn't mean the news Wasn't frightening for a lot of people. Activists across these communities said for the immigrant communities they work with, the fear was very real.

"Everyday it's hard," Antonio Campos, a Sacramento Area Congregations Together Board Member said.

From Sacramento to Stockton, the fear in the region has reached a new high.