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Add Yamhill County, OR #897

Closed becca-cs closed 4 years ago

becca-cs commented 4 years ago

Subject line for the email: "Reduce funding for Yamhill County Sherrif Department" (letter to Yamhill County Commissioners) Email addresses (at least one) of the government officials you’d like to receive the message: kullac@co.yamhill.or.us,starrettm@co.yamhill.or.us,olsonr@co.yamhill.or.us

Detailed message concerning the budgeting decisions at stake in your community: I wrote a quick draft, pasted below

Dear Yamhill County Commissioners Kulla, Starrett, and Olson,

My name is [YOUR NAME] and I am a resident of [YOUR TOWN]. As Yamhill County finalizes the 2020-21 countywide budget, I want to express a concern for the amount of funding that is currently being allocated to the Yamhill County criminal justice program. From my understanding, the 2019-2020 proposed budget allocated 23% of the total budget to criminal justice. Funding for the criminal justice department increased over $7.5 million in 2018-2019, and an additional almost $2 million in 2019-2020. Meanwhile, in 2019-2020, the Health and Human Services budget fell by more than $4 million and the community service program budget decreased by more than $500,000. How we spend our public funds expresses our values as a county, and I do not believe that our city should continue to over-invest scarce resources in the Yamhill County Sheriff's Office.

Especially at this time of unprecedented crisis, we must invest our scarce resources in the health and well-being of our communities. We must invest in life affirming solutions to Yamhill County’s needs by building up community-based and peer-led services and resources. This includes Veterans Services, the Health and Human Services Department, which provides important public health services--essential in the midst of a global pandemic--and drug prevention and treatment programs like Yamhill Valley Treatment (“Provoking Hope”), which divert those with substance abuse issues away from the prison system. We must also use resources already allocated to the sheriff’s department to invest in police accountability measures.

The economic impact of COVID-19 requires a complete reimagining of how we allocate county resources, and makes clear the necessity for prioritizing investments in communities’ health and well-being. The county can address any deficits by divesting from the violence of policing and incarceration. The systems of policing and incarceration have no role in public health or safety; prisons and jails are vectors for the spread of COVID-19 and have always been antithetical to public health. Existing racial and economic disparities will only worsen in the wake of this ongoing crisis. We know that this virus is disproportionately affecting Black and brown communities & that this disparity is caused by racist systems that affect how and when people receive care.

This moment of reckoning with our nation's history of racist policing practices is an opportunity to rethink public safety in this county and reinvest in services that more effectively benefit our residents. We know that meeting the basic needs of our communities is the only way to ensure their health and safety.

Thank you,

[YOUR NAME] [YOUR ADDRESS] [YOUR EMAIL] [YOUR PHONE NUMBER]

becca-cs commented 4 years ago

I did a bit of editing to update the budget!

Dear Yamhill County Commissioners Kulla, Starrett, and Olson,

My name is [YOUR NAME] and I am a resident of [YOUR TOWN]. As Yamhill County finalizes the 2020-21 countywide budget, I want to express a concern for the amount of funding that is currently being allocated to the Yamhill County criminal justice program. The current approved 2020-2021 budget allocates 23 percent of the total budget to criminal justice, an increase of almost $500,000 from the 2019-2020 budget. Meanwhile, the Health and Human Services (HHS) approved budget for 2020-2021 is decreased by almost $5 million relative to last year. The reduction in HHS funding is particularly concerning because HHS is responsible for emergency response to COVID-19, which disproportionately impacts non-White communities. I understand that some of this funding is provided through the federal government for specific projects. Nevertheless, how we spend our public funds expresses our values as a county, and I do not believe that our city should continue to over-invest scarce resources in the Yamhill County Criminal Justice Department.

Yamhill County’s efforts to redirect community members away from prison through the SMART sentencing project, and to reduce the impact of racial and economic status on release through the Pretrial Justice Program, are important first steps. However, these programs must be accompanied with investment in community-based and peer-led services and resources that address the root causes of crime like housing and economic insecurity. We must combat homelessness (which increased 47 percent in 2019) by reinvesting in programs like the Ending Homelessness Project. We must divert those with substance abuse issues away from the prison system by investing in drug prevention and treatment programs through Yamhill Valley Treatment and the Health and Human Services Department. Reallocating the Criminal Justice Program budget to programs like HHS, Community Services, and Culture and Recreation will improve public health and community safety.

The economic impact of COVID-19 requires a complete reimagining of how we allocate county resources, and makes clear the necessity for prioritizing investments in communities’ health and well-being. The systems of policing and incarceration have no role in public health or safety; prisons and jails are vectors for the spread of COVID-19 and have always been antithetical to public health. Existing racial and economic disparities will only worsen in the wake of this ongoing crisis. We know that this virus is disproportionately affecting Black and Brown communities and that this disparity is caused by racist systems that affect how and when people receive care.

This moment of reckoning with our nation's history of racist policing practices is an opportunity to rethink public safety in this county and reinvest in services that more effectively benefit our residents. We know that meeting the basic needs of our communities is the only way to ensure their health and safety.

Thank you,

[YOUR NAME] [YOUR ADDRESS] [YOUR EMAIL] [YOUR PHONE NUMBER]

ctneal91 commented 4 years ago

on it now