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Dallas City Council Wrestles With Budget

Exterior of Dallas City Government Building
Library of Congress
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Wikimedia Commons

It's the Dallas City Council's first attempt to set spending levels since protests against police brutality rocked the city and the U.S. over the summer.

The Dallas City Council faces a deadline later this month to approve a budget, and council members spent Wednesday offering amendments. Many would shift how the Dallas Police Department (DPD) uses money and staff.

The conversation around the police budget comes after national and local protests against police brutality in response to the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in May. The Dallas-based group Our City Our Future has made budget demands to highlight their argument for more social services and reform of what they consider racist policing practices.

Council member Lee Kleinman, who represents parts of North Dallas, proposed several amendments to reassign uniformed officers out of administrative roles and back onto patrol as a way to fight crime without hiring more officers. He also tried to reduce recruitment costs by using an outside firm and move away from a DPD-run police academy.

Those amendments failed by large margins.

Kleinman got more traction with an amendment to eliminate military-style weapons.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get rid of this military grade equipment,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is where we would do it.鈥

Kleinman pointed to the police response to the recent protests and looting as an example of DPD 鈥渂ringing out the troops against our community.鈥

鈥淚 just don鈥檛 want us to have that,鈥 he said.

Dallas Police Chief Rene茅 Hall pushed back on Kleinman鈥檚 assertion that some of the department鈥檚 equipment is excessive, saying it鈥檚 often used to keep officers safe.

鈥淥ur SWAT team is responsible for responding to multiple incidents of barricaded gunmen, when there鈥檚 an active shooter and/or school shooting,鈥 Hall said. 鈥淎nd so we need to ensure that we have the equipment that they need.鈥

Council member Cara Mendelsohn, whose district is at the northern edge of the city, wanted to keep horses for police officers, something Kleinman's amendment would eliminate.

鈥淚 support all of the mounted uses,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a really good way to police, even if it is old fashioned, and I can鈥檛 imagine Texas without a mounted patrol.鈥

Council member Omar Narvaez of West Dallas referenced the tear gas used against protesters over the summer.

鈥淭o be able to use this at any given point on folks that were just [exercising] their First Amendment right in this country ... that鈥檚 something that I just can鈥檛 be for,鈥 Narvaez said. 鈥淚f this is the way we got to do it, then I鈥檓 going to vote for [the amendment].鈥

It wasn鈥檛 clear Kleinman鈥檚 amendment had enough votes to pass. Several council members wanted a more detailed breakdown in costs for armored vehicles, tear gas, mounted police, and other controversial police equipment. Kleinman said he would revise the amendment to be more specific on what each line item costs the city, and bring it up again.

Separately, Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson鈥檚 proposal to cut salaries for non-uniformed city employees making more than $60,000 a year failed by a wide margin.

Johnson鈥檚 amendments presented different options for where to apply the savings: public safety, infrastructure or a property tax cut.

There鈥檚 a chance Johnson鈥檚 amendments could be resurrected in the ongoing budget negotiations. The full council meets again September 9th. A final budget plan will be approved by Sept. 23.

Bret Jaspers is a reporter for 四虎影院. His stories have aired nationally on the BBC, NPR鈥檚 newsmagazines, and APM鈥檚 Marketplace. He collaborated on the series Cash Flows, which won a 2020 Sigma Delta Chi award for Radio Investigative Reporting. He's a member of Actors' Equity, the professional stage actors union.