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Address: Continuing Work to Improve Community Policing
The White House
August 15, 2015
Hi everybody. It’s now been a year since the tragic death
of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
His death – along with the events in Cleveland, Staten Island,
Baltimore, Cincinnati, and other communities – sparked protests and soul
searching all across our country. Over
the past year, we’ve come to see, more clearly than ever, the frustration in
many communities of color and the feeling that our laws can be applied
unevenly.
After Ferguson, I said that we
had to face these issues squarely. I
convened a task force on community policing to find commonsense steps that can
help us drive down crime and build up trust and cooperation between communities
and police, who put their lives on the line every single day to help keep us
safe. And I’ve personally met with rank
and file officers to hear their ideas.
In May, this task force, made up
of police officers, activists and academics, proposed 59 recommendations –
everything from how we can make better use of data and technology, to how we
train police officers, to how law enforcement engages with our schools. And we’ve been working with communities
across America to put these ideas into action.
Dozens of police departments are
now sharing more data with the public, including on citations, stops and
searches, and shootings involving law enforcement. We’ve brought together leaders from across
the country to explore alternatives to incarceration. The Justice Department has begun pilot programs
to help police use body cameras and collect data on the use of force. This fall, the department will award more
than $160 million in grants to support law enforcement and community
organizations that are working to improve policing. And all across the country – from states like
Illinois and Ohio, to cities like Philadelphia, Boston, and Nashville – local
leaders are working to implement the task force recommendations in a way that
works for their communities.
So we’ve made progress. And we’ll keep at it. But let’s be clear: the issues raised over
the past year aren’t new, and they won’t be solved by policing alone. We simply can’t ask our police to contain and
control issues that the rest of us aren’t willing to address – as a
society. That starts with reforming a
criminal justice system that too often is a pipeline from inadequate schools to
overcrowded jails, wreaking havoc on communities and families all across the
country. So we need Congress to reform our federal sentencing laws for
non-violent drug offenders. We need to
keep working to help more prisoners take steps to turn their lives around so
they can contribute to their communities after they’ve served their time.
More broadly, we need to truly
invest in our children and our communities so that more young people see a
better path for their lives. That means
investing in early childhood education, job training, pathways to college. It means dealing honestly with issues of
race, poverty, and class that leave too many communities feeling isolated and
segregated from greater opportunity. It
means expanding that opportunity to every American willing to work for it, no
matter what zip code they were born into.
Because, in the end, that’s
always been the promise of America. And
that’s what I’ll keep working for every single day that I’m President. Thanks
everybody, and have a great weekend. |
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