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Bloomberg Gives With One Hand; Takes With the Other

Ezekiel Edwards,
Former Special Counsel,
老澳门开奖结果 Criminal Law Reform Project
Rebecca McCray,
Former Managing Editor,
老澳门开奖结果
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August 5, 2011

This week, New York City Mayor Michael that he would invest $30 million from his own pocket to uplift the young black and Latino men who are most excluded from New York鈥檚 civic, educational and economic life. While this proposal is generous, it fails to address the fact that the Bloomberg administration has supported policies that have led to staggering racial disparities in New York鈥檚 corrections system. While funding job recruitment and education programs is indeed important, there鈥檚 a critical missing piece in this grand plan: ending NYPD鈥檚 widespread aggressive stop and frisk policies that target communities of color at skyrocketing rates and contribute markedly to the marginalization of the very same communities Bloomberg now aims to help.

In 1990, the NYPD . In 2009, that number ballooned to 576,394. In fact, over the 3 1/2 years leading up to 2009, the NYPD initiated over 1.6 million stops of New Yorkers. Communities of color have had to bear the brunt of this intrusive and often humiliating police practice 鈥 in particular, the same young men the Bloomberg administration鈥檚 new plan seeks to assist. Of the stop-and-frisks that the police carried out last year, . Eighty-five percent. And most of these stops were of innocent people 鈥 from 2005 through the first half of 2008, only 4 to 6 percent of all NYPD-initiated stops resulted in arrest.

Not coincidentally, the percentage of African-Americans and Latinos who are stopped and frisked by the NYPD mirrors the racial disparities of our city鈥檚 jails. According to data from the Bloomberg administration, 84 percent of the people held in the city鈥檚 detention facilities are African-American or Latino, even though the populations of young white, black and Latino men in New York are roughly equal.

In addition to stopping tens of thousands of innocent people of color, the city spent over to arrest and charge over 50,000 people for possession of low-level marijuana 鈥 . Indeed, more people were arrested for marijuana possession in New York . Compare this to 1991, when . Bloomberg鈥檚 pledge to contribute to new programs aimed at helping minority youth is generous, but until NYPD鈥檚 counterproductive policies are addressed, taxpayers will continue to make their own hefty contribution to police practices that harm the communities that most need support.

If Bloomberg鈥檚 program is truly 鈥渋ntended to prevent young men from entering or returning to the criminal justice system,鈥 it should end its out of control stop-and-frisk policy of young men of color, and cease wasting the city鈥檚 precious resources on non-criminal behavior. Bloomberg is allegedly by the high rates of recidivism among young black and Latino men. He could help ease his anxiety by addressing the city鈥檚 own policies that unnecessarily act as an entry point into the criminal justice system for young men of color and unfairly subject entire communities to unnecessary police contact.

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