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3/10/2022 - Meeting Materials Racial Equity in Policing Commission Agenda 1 3/8/2022 6:04 PM Racial Equity in Policing Commission Salt Lake City, Utah Regular Meeting Agenda Thursday, March 10, 2022 5:30 p.m. This meeting is a discussion among Commissioners and select presenters. The public is welcome. Items scheduled may be moved or discussed during a different portion of the meeting based on circumstances or availability of speakers. This meeting will be an electronic meeting pursuant to the Chair’s determination that conducting the meeting at a physical location presents a substantial risk to the health and safety of those who may be present at the anchor location. The Commission Meeting will not have a physical location and all attendees will connect remotely. Members of the public may provide public comment by joining through Zoom: Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89239702531 Meeting ID: 892 3970 2531 One tap mobile +16699009128,,89239702531# US (San Jose) +12532158782,,89239702531# US (Tacoma) Dial by your location +1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose) +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma) +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston) +1 646 558 8656 US (New York) +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC) +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago) Meeting ID: 892 3970 2531 Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kc5dgBcmme You may also watch a recording of the meeting on the SLC REP Commission Meeting YouTube Channel. 1. Welcome and Public Meeting Guidelines Read the determination of the Commissioners to meet electronically because meeting at a physical location presents a substantial risk to the health and safety of those who may be present at the anchor location. 2. Open Dialogue (5 minutes) During this portion of the meeting, Commissioners may raise topics and discuss current events that may impact or influence the Commission’s overall work , discussions, and deliberations to Racial Equity in Policing Commission Agenda 2 3/8/2022 6:04 PM provide recommendations to the Mayor and City Council regarding the Salt Lake City Police Department’s policies, budget, and culture. No action will be taken during this section of the meeting. Matters discussed during this section of the meeting may be scheduled on a subsequent agenda for follow-up. 3. Public Comment (limited to 15 minutes) ● Attendees may be provided one or two minutes of time, determined by the number of attendees and the time available determined by the Commission. Please observe the time limit stated at the beginning of the public comment period so everyone may have a chance to speak. ● Per the public meeting guidelines, keep comments free of discriminatory language referring to a person or group based on their religion, ethnicity, nationality, race, color, descent, gender, sexual orientation, disability, age or other gender identity factor. Items or comments that disrupt the meeting, intimidate other participants or that may cause safety concerns are not allowed. 4. Approve and Adopt Minutes February 2022 Minutes 5. SLCPD Community Diversity and Inclusion Training Update (15 minutes) Chief Brown and Lt. Zayas will briefly update commission on the SLCPD Community Diversity and Inclusion Training process. 6. New Education Senior Advisor for Salt Lake City Mayor’s Office (5 minutes) Jennifer Newell will introduce herself to the commission and her scope of work as it pertains to the commission. 7. School Safety Resource Officers and the Memorandum of Understanding Update (20 minutes) Sgt. Teerlink will provide updates on SRO team and the status of the MOU. 8. Legislative Update (~ 6:15pm; 15 minutes) Mark Kittrell will provide an overview of 2022 Legislative Session and its impact on policing and Salt Lake City. 9. Subcommittee Chair Updates (5 minutes) Priorities for 2022 Policy & Practices – Second Monday of the Month at 4-5pm Training – Needs to Change School Safety – Third Monday of the Month at 4-5pm Application Review – Meets as needed 10. REVIEW NEXT Meeting AGENDA (2 minutes) Review the tentative schedule for next meeting. 11. TENTATIVE Closed Session The Commission will consider a motion to enter into a Closed Session. A closed meeting described under Section 52-4-205 may be held for specific purposes including, but not limited to: Racial Equity in Policing Commission Agenda 3 3/8/2022 6:04 PM a. discussion of the character, professional competence, or physical or me ntal health of an individual; b. strategy sessions to discuss pending or reasonably imminent litigation; c. discussion regarding deployment of security personnel, devices, or systems; and d. investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal misconduct. A closed meeting may also be held for attorney-client matters that are privileged pursuant to Utah Code § 78B-1-137, and for other lawful purposes that satisfy the pertinent requirements of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. CERTIFICATE OF POSTING On or before 5:30 pm on March 9, 2022 the undersigned, duly appointed Equity Manager, does hereby certify that the above notice and agenda was (1) posted on the Utah Public Notice Website created under Utah Code Section 63F-1-701, and (2) a copy of the foregoing provided to The Salt Lake Tribune and/or the Deseret News and to a local media correspondent and any others who have indicated interest. MOANA ULUAVE-HAFOKA SALT LAKE CITY MAYOR’S OFFICE Final action may be taken in relation to any topic listed on the agenda. People with disabilities may make requests for reasonable accommodation, which may include alternate formats, interpreters, and other auxiliary aids and services. Please make requests at least two business days in advance. To make a request, please contact City staff at REPCommission@slcgov.com or 385-707-6514 or relay service 711. Racial Equity in Policing Commission Minutes 1 4/14/2023 1:44 PM Racial Equity in Policing Commission Salt Lake City, Utah PENDING Regular Meeting Minutes Thursday, February 10, 2022 5:30 p.m. The Racial Equity in Policing Commission met in an electronic meeting pursuant to the Salt Lake City Emergency Proclamation and determination of the Chair. Minutes are provided in conjunction with the video/audio file. Meeting Materials _________________________________________________________________ Commission Members in Virtual Attendance: Commissioners Romero, McDonald, Salazar-Hall, Anjewierden, Johnson, Davis, Hawkins, Eldridge Commission Members Absent: Commissioners Oommen, Sagato-Mauga, and Solovi. City Staff in Virtual Attendance: Moana Uluave-Hafoka, Equity Manager; Mike Brown, Salt Lake City Police Chief; Yvette Zayas, Salt Lake City Police Lieutenant; Allison Rowland, Salt Lake City Council Policy Analyst; Scott Mourtgos, Salt Lake City Police Deputy Chief; Lance VanDongen, Salt Lake City Police Deputy Chief; Hassan Abdi, Salt Lake City Council Liaison. Guests in Attendance: Director Jonathan Puente and Public Outreach Coordinator Valeria Jimenez The meeting was called to order at 5:38pm 1. Welcome and Public Meeting Guidelines Chair Salazar-Hall conducted the meeting and read the determination. 2. Open Dialogue C. Davis asked for subcommittee information. 3. Public Comment (limited to 15 minutes). Beverly Hawkins asked how to support the two budgetary items from December meeting Allison shared the budgetary process and points public can enter comment. 4. Approve and Adopt Minutes December 2021 Minutes -- Adopted January 2022 Minutes -- Adopted 5. Mayor’s Staff Update Moana Uluave-Hafoka, Equity Manager, will provided update from the Mayor’s Office. Jennifer Newell selected as Senior Education Advisor for the Mayor’s Office and will Chair Salazar-Hall noted bipartisan support on bill sponsored by Senator Iwamoto. Racial Equity in Policing Commission Minutes 2 4/14/2023 1:44 PM 6. City Council Update Allison Rowland, City Council Public Policy Analyst, provided an update of City Council’s work relevant to the commission. - Introduced Hassan Abdi who will be a liaison for this Commission. - FY21-22 Budget (ask Allison and Hassan for list) o Chief Lieb o 2 Resolutions: Ceremonial Juneteenth Freedom Day 22 and Racism a Public Health Crisis - Park Rangers – still in budget amendment 6 o Hassan Abdi answered C. Davis’ question: Last December, the Council funded the creation of a park ranger pilot program with 19 new full-time employees in the Public Lands Department with nearly $1.65 million. This includes two sergeants, 16 rangers and one support position. The goals of the program include the following: Serving as law enforcement officers in parks (not POST-certified like police officers); Providing services and information to park users; Assisting with homeless outreach efforts; Making people feel welcome and safe in parks; Deterring inappropriate activity; Gaining voluntary compliance of park codes and rules; Reducing the number of annual vandalism incidents and associated costs for repair/replacement. 7. Utah State Courts Office of Fairness and Accountability Director Jonathan Puente and Public Outreach Coordinator Valeria Jimenez provided a presentation about their Office in the Utah Courts. - Utah Task Force on Racial and Ethnic Fairness in Legal System in 1996-2002 - Shelfed since 2002 - Office of Fairness and Accountability (OFA) established in 2020 out of this report - Task Force Report major findings: Racial and Ethnic Disparity & Perception of Bias - Weak Points: District and Justice Court unreliable but Juvenile Court is reliable - Getting Around Gaps: Algorithms and Self-ID through MyCase app and worked w/Community-based Organizations (demographic) markers i.e. not AAPI conflated experience and separate to NHPI; demographic info not be part of public record and not impact their case—this information provides a better understanding of who is going through the Utah Courts. - Director Puente formed committee to address systemic issues: district court, justice court, CCJJ, law enforcement, sentencing. - Community Engagement and Voice—identifying community-based organizations to sit on working group; limited large engagement due to pandemic - Where do the juvenile courts fit into this? Juvenile courts started this process a year ahead of OFA and other courts. - What about Civil Cases? On the criminal law side, we had a starting point but on the civil side, we do not have demographic information and will start to work there after this first phase. - OFA seeks to provide fairness - C. Eldridge – How are indigenous groups identified in this? Disaggregated and not categorized as Other. How are you identifying people who are part of more than one group? – OFA uses the same ethic and racial identifiers as the census and Indigenous is one of them. Racial Equity in Policing Commission Minutes 3 4/14/2023 1:44 PM - C. Davis is delighted that the report is finally ‘un-shelved’ and creation of the OFA. He also asked, How are you defining community-based organization? Director Jon Puente states the list he presented was of the internal working group and agency in the institutions because he believes the responsibility to change the system must come from within. -Director Puente asks if there are missing Community-based organizations in their list. C.Davis offers to help. -Director Puente’s contact info 801-578-3974 and email jonathanp@utcourts.gov -Utah is 1.5% African American—6.5% of prison population, indigenous and Latinx communities as well. - OFA has only five FTE including the director 8.Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown Update Chief Brown updated the REP on these three topics from the Phase I Report: 1.Recruitment 1.The Commission was very pleased to see in the most recent cohort that there are many women and BIPOC trainees. 2.Training – working with HR and Mayor’s Office to hire local BIPOC trainers and curriculum builders. 3.Community Relationships – meeting with local faith leaders and listened to their concerns. 9.Subcommittee Chair Updates Policy & Practices – Second Monday of the Month at 4-5pm Training – First Monday of the Month at 4-5pm School Safety – Third Monday of the Month at 4-5pm Application Review – Meets as needed 10.Schedule for 2022 Reviewed the tentative schedule for the year. 11.TENTATIVE Closed Session The Commission will consider a motion to enter into a Closed Session. A closed meeting described under Section 52-4-205 may be held for specific purposes including, but not limited to: a.discussion of the character, professional competence, or physical or mental health of an individual; b.strategy sessions to discuss pending or reasonably imminent litigation; c.discussion regarding deployment of security personnel, devices, or systems; and d.investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal misconduct. A closed meeting may also be held for attorney-client matters that are privileged pursuant to Utah Code § 78B-1-137, and for other lawful purposes that satisfy the pertinent requirements of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act. Item not held Meeting adjourned at 6:50pm Minutes approved through consensus: March 10, 2022 MOANA ULUAVE-HAFOKA SALT LAKE CITY MAYOR’S OFFICE Racial Equity in Policing Commission Minutes 4 4/14/2023 1:44 PM This document is not intended to serve as a full transcript as additional discussion may have been held; please refer to the audio or video for entire content pursuant to Utah Code 52-4-203(2)(b). This document along with the digital recording constitute the official minutes of the Racial Equity in Policing Commission Regular Meeting on February 10, 2022. Commission on Racial Equity in Policing Chief Mike Brown Update on Consultant Training –Phase I Recommendations •Letter of Intent has been drafted for local organizations to review to become consultants. •Deadline for consultants to submit training proposal is May 27, 2022. •SLCPD hopes to start consultant training ASAP and will incorporate it into in-service department training. CALEA Update •SLCPD was awarded a basic Law Enforcement Accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) on March 21, 2020. •SLCPD successfully reaccredited in April 2021 and is working toward a second-year reaccreditation in May 2022. •The reaccreditation program is a 4-year program that consists of 3 remote/digital assessments and a remote/digital and onsite assessment in the final year. •SLCPD has 162 applicable standards that cover nearly every aspect of policing that must we must demonstrate compliance annually to remain accredited. Recent Funding Requests •SVU Sergeant position. •Thank you, C-REP, for support. •City Council approved this position. •Thank you to the C-REP support on V-CAT. •Thank you, C-REP, for support. •We are waiting on City Council Decision. •Community Outreach Officer •SLCPD seeking C-REP support and funding for a Community Outreach Officer