Sunday, September 5, 2021

A Letter from Alderman O'Shea

 

Chicago’s public safety crisis threatens our whole city

Chicago cannot continue down this road, with a demoralized and understaffed police department and an under-resourced network of violence prevention groups.

Ella French funeral
Hundreds of Chicago police officers and other law enforcement officers gather outside St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel during the funeral for Officer Ella French on Aug. 19, 2021. 
Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

It is hard to look at the number of shootings and homicides in Chicago over the last 20 months and find a silver lining. By every measure, our city is in crisis and our efforts to keep our communities and our police safe are simply falling short.

One of us is an alderman who serves on the advisory board of the

Chicago Police Memorial Foundation and the board of the Chicago Police Chaplains Ministry. One of us is a former city official who helped develop and implement a community-based violence intervention plan for Chicago based on a strategy she led in Los Angeles. Despite our different roles, we both believe the people of Chicago are being presented with a false choice. 

Some Chicagoans want a law and order approach. Some want a violence intervention approach. In Chicago today, we need both — at full strength.

Let’s start with the Chicago Police Department. Our officers are stretched thin and demoralized. Vacations have been cancelled, shifts extended and overtime is skyrocketing. According to the department, the number of police shot at rose from 12 in 2015 to 79 last year. So far this year, at least 39 officers have been shot or shot at, including Officer Ella French, who died from gunshot wounds in August. Her partner is still recovering from bullet wounds.

The stress on our officers and their families grows every day. Tragically, at least 10 Chicago police officers have taken their own lives since 2018. Across the nation, applications to be a police officer are down, and CPD is struggling to keep up with a wave of retirements. This includes dozens of mid-career police officers whose experience and maturity are sorely needed.

Today, our police department is at least 600 officers short of full strength and likely to be even more short-handed by the end of the year. Additionally, CPD has redeployed more than 1,000 officers out of neighborhood districts into citywide teams that do not respond to 911 calls. This citywide deployment has compounded CPD’s resource shortages in neighborhood districts and impacted 911 response services for our residents. 

Simply put, we need more police officers, and we need them now. It’s not at all clear where we will find qualified candidates — especially when the prevailing media narrative inaccurately portrays cops as the enemy.

On the violence prevention side, we have seen laudable efforts on the part of street outreach organizations. Research from Northwestern University and the University of Chicago shows that this violence intervention approach is beginning to bear fruit. In fact, the latest research from Northwestern shows that participants in Chicago CRED’s program are half as likely to be shot or arrested compared to non-participants with similar backgrounds and characteristics. Clearly it is saving lives, but, as the report points out, it’s not nearly at scale: “For every CRED participant, we found more than 20 other individuals with similar risk profiles who were not receiving similar services.”

Other cities, such as Los Angeles, have seen success when effective, community-minded policing exists side-by-side with robust community-based violence intervention. As we consider how to invest federal relief dollars, let’s avoid the false choice.

More police officers are needed to respond to 911 calls in our communities to create a deterrent to criminals, investigate shootings and deal with high-intensity situations. More outreach workers and social workers are needed to reach young people at risk before they commit crimes, prevent retaliatory shootings and steer them into the legal economy.

So far this year, Chicago has had more than 3,000 shootings, including more than 500 homicides, and we still have four months left in the year. From a purely economic standpoint, gun violence is costing Chicago billions of dollars every year. Every shooting prevented not only saves lives but also saves approximately $1 million in policing, health care and related costs.

We’re in crisis and we can’t continue down this road with a demoralized, understaffed police department and an under-resourced network of violence prevention organizations. Our police department cannot continue with 12-hour shifts, cancelled days off and hundreds of millions in overtime. 

At the same time, the violence prevention community cannot succeed by reaching only one in 20 young men at risk. With both approaches at full strength, however, we can make Chicago safer for everyone.

Matt O’Shea is alderman of Chicago’s 19th Ward. Susan Lee is a former deputy mayor for public safety and now chief of policy and strategy at Chicago CRED.

9 comments:

  1. Anonymous9/05/2021

    How about letting the Police be the Police. How about holding the state's attorney and the crook county judges feet to the fire on letting violent offenders out on little or no bond. How about having a electronic monitoring system that works and any violations are automatically rescinded and make the crook county sheriff actually do his job instead of hiring all his buddies who have no actual law enforcement experience with six figure salaries. How about the city council actually support the police and have their backs. Unfortunately not gonna happen in crook county. There is too much money to fleece from the tax payers to do the right thing. SAD VERY SAD

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    1. Anonymous9/05/2021

      If this were the old Richard J Daley days. The power ward and township committee men would voice their opinion to Daley . They'd say this States Atty has to go and we need to reinstate the death penalty. Daley and the powerhouse committeemen would get 5 blacks to run against Foxx in the primary and they'd put up 1 strong Irish guy and that would be the end of the States Atty problem. Toni Taxtikle will never let that happen.

      Then Daley would tell the Speaker, time to bring back the death penalty and maybe make it mandatory that you have to have to serve 80% of your sentence like on federal charges.

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  2. Anonymous9/05/2021

    Dump this shitty mayor and useless Sup and SA, back the police and see crime drop like a rock

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  3. Anonymous9/05/2021

    Turn over all crimes involving guns over to the Feds. I understand that they have harsher sentences for crimes involving guns, makes sense to me but oh wait this is shitcago and prosecuting crime isn't allowed. My bust.

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    1. Anonymous9/06/2021

      We can't trust the feds to do the right thing.

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  4. Anonymous9/05/2021

    Why can't we be liberal but tough on violent crime both sides should be able to agree on this?

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  5. Anonymous9/06/2021

    Obviously bail reform is not working. Cheif judge tim Evans and Kim foxx have agenda to make mayor look bad, not too hard..Somehow Prekwinkle is behind this plan?

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  6. Anonymous9/07/2021

    Turn the clock back to 1968

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  7. Anonymous9/07/2021

    I've always found editorials so heartwarming. Can't wait to see what their replacements have to say. It's going to be a very exciting time watching the old guard trying to hold on.

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