On February 14, 2023

Police accountability is a public safety issue

By James Lyall

Editor’s note: James Lyall is the executive director of  ACLU of Vermont.

The Vermont affiliates of the NAACP and ACLU this month invited to Montpelier five family members whose loved ones were lost to police violence, and who are a part of the Love Not Blood Campaign. Their stories are a powerful reminder that our ongoing work to bring more oversight and accountability to policing is a matter of life and death, particularly in overpoliced communities of color. 

  They also remind us that Vermont is not an outlier or an exception. Our criminal legal system has some of the worst racial disparities in the country, and police data from across the state confirms what so many Black Vermonters continue to tell us: year after year: people of color are stopped, searched, ticketed, and prosecuted at much higher rates than their white counterparts.  

  Take Burlington, for example, where Black people account for 6% of the population, but 21% of arrests. Burlington police last year were twice as likely to keep Black people in custody than white people, and half as likely to send Black people to diversion as an alternative to incarceration. Studies of Vermont police data released in 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2020 all reached similar conclusions. 

Unfortunately, as in years past, law enforcement officials continue to insist that police should be left to police themselves, while denying or downplaying the extent of racial profiling in Vermont communities. Some go so far as to suggest that improving police oversight could deter police recruitment, as if we can’t expect new officers to be held accountable to the laws and values of the communities they serve.  

It’s a cynical argument and a false choice, and Vermonters should reject it. 

The fact is, we can have both safer communities and more accountable police. As the Love Not Blood Campaign reminds us, true public safety—encompassing all community members, including those who are overpoliced and discriminated against—requires more police accountability, not less. 

The good news is that Vermonters have ample opportunities this year to win overdue police reforms. Towns like Bennington and Burlington—both with long histories of biased policing—are considering whether to empower civilian oversight of their police departments.  

Related citizen oversight legislation is up for consideration in the State House, along with several other police reform proposals. One would limit police enforcement of minor vehicle infractions that are often used as pretexts for traffic stops, and could drastically reduce profiling and racial disparities in traffic enforcement. Another would prevent police from lying to children in interrogations, a practice that is still allowed in Vermont and has been known to contribute to false confessions and wrongful convictions.  

As our state considers ways to enhance police accountability and reimagine law enforcement’s role in our communities, it is imperative that we prioritize racial justice and center the voices of those who are impacted by unjust policing practices. 

Vermont voters and their representatives have some golden opportunities to do that this year.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Chris Brown announces candidacy for Vt House

May 1, 2024
Dear Editor, I’m Chris Brown and I’m running to represent Castleton in the Vermont House of Representatives. I’m proud and excited at the prospect of representing the citizens of my hometown in the Legislature. I’m a lifelong resident of Castleton and a 10 generation Vermonter. I feel my decades of business experience and my Republican…

Joys of being outside, fishing

May 1, 2024
Dear Editor, Yesterday was so magnificent. Found myself again spiritually through the power of being in nature. Plenty of places along the way to stop and throw a line but fell to the wanderization of what lay ahead. Just curious if I could get to the bend that I could see ahead. I wondered about…

Why we should all supportAct 127

May 1, 2024
Dear Editor, In Vermont we hold the belief that every child should have access to an equitable education. Though this promise is a constitutional right, in reality it’s been challenging to fulfill given the outdated funding mechanisms that have historically governed our schools. As a member of both the Burlington School Board and the Coalition…

Taking a beat on education funding reform

May 1, 2024
By Jack Hoffman Editor’s note: Jack Hoffman is Senior Analyst at Public Assets Institute, a non-partisan, non-profit organization based in Montpelier. He is a resident of Marshfield currently living in France. A projected jump in school taxes next year has everyone’s hair on fire in Montpelier. But before taking drastic action, legislators and the administration…