Ithaca mayor is set to propose a plan to replace the city's police with a civilian-led agency, report says

Svante Myrick mayor of Ithaca
Svante Myrick, mayor of Ithaca, NY. Andy Katz/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick plans to propose a plan to replace the city's police with a civilian-led agency, GQ reported.

  • The plan was created as part of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's executive order for New York cities to review their police departments.

  • The proposal includes an agency with armed "public safety workers" and unarmed "community solution workers."

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The mayor of Ithaca, New York, is set to propose a plan to abolish the city's police force and replace it with a new civilian-led agency, GQ reported Monday.

According to a nearly 100-page report reviewed by GQ, Ithaca mayor Svante Myrick will suggest abolishing the city's current police department and replace with a "Department of Community Solutions and Public Safety."

The plan would replace the department, staffed with 63 officers that costs $12.5 million a year to run, with an agency with armed "public safety workers" and unarmed "community solution workers," all under the helm of a civilian director of public safety rather than a police chief, GQ reported.

"IPD currently spends one third of its time responding to calls for service that essentially never lead to arrests," Myrick wrote in the report's introduction, according to GQ. "Those calls, as well as a majority of patrol activity, can and should be handled by unarmed Community Solution Workers well trained in de-escalation and service delivery. This will allow our new Public Safety Workers to focus on preventing, interrupting and solving serious crime."

The main goal of the plan is to reduce the number of encounters between civilians and armed officers, GQ reported. Service calls will be evaluated to determine whether an armed or unarmed respondent is necessary for the situation, or if it should be outsourced to a different public entity entirely.

GQ also reported that calls regarding mental health crises will be "outsourced to a standalone unit of social workers based on the CAHOOTS program pioneered in Eugene, Oregon."

In an interview with GQ on Sunday, Myrick told the publication that he acknowledged his plan is a "radical thing for a city and a mayor to do."

"Everyone wants the police to perform better when they show up, everybody wants that," Myrick told GQ. "What this plan is saying is that we also want the police to show up less - and that's a radical thing for a city and a mayor to do."

The proposal was made as part of an executive order signed by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo requiring New York cities to conduct comprehensive reviews of their police departments. Last summer, the Black Lives Matter protests prompted by the death of George Floyd renewed calls for police reform - namely, defunding and abolishing police departments.

Advocates for defunding the police demanded that funding be diverted from the police department and instead given to social programs and development, Insider's Ellen Cranley reported.

While some departments have seen large budget cuts in the wake of the protests - including $150 million in cuts for the Los Angeles Police Department and the Austin Police Department, respectively- the move of abolishing and recreating police departments has been more or less unprecedented prior to Myrick's proposal.

In order to move forward with implementing the plan, it would need approval from the city council, which the mayor said, he believes, will happen.

Myrick was elected as mayor in 2011, becoming the city's first Black mayor and youngest mayor at the time at 24 years old. Myrick, now 33, has been at odds with Ithaca's police union in previous years, raising the question if the union will support his plan to reform the department, which he hopes to have up-and-running by summer 2023.

"I do think it will be a big battle," Myrick told GQ. "Fox News will lose their s---."

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