Groups host festival in support of divesting from police – GazetteNET

Posted: April 23, 2021 at 12:44 pm

NORTHAMPTON In traveling to Pulaski Park on Sunday, Ashwin Ravikumar, a volunteer with Northampton Abolition Now, said he noticed signs of new life, like cherry blossom trees.

But, the joy of spring was muted by the rage I feel, he told a crowd of about 100 people gathered in the downtown park on Sunday for the Spring into Abolition Festival. Ravikumar spoke about Daunte Wright, a Black man shot by the police at a traffic stop in Minnesota last week, and the killing of Adam Toledo, a 13-year-old recently shot by the police, in Chicago a city I call home.

Ravikumar asked the crowd, Are the Northampton Police miraculously an exception to these patterns? The group shouted in return, no.

But, Ravikumar said, here in Northampton, we have a tremendous opportunity. He called on the city to create a new Department of Community Care that is independent from the Police Department.

That was the top recommendation from the citys Policing Review Commission report, released last month. The commission recommended that the city create the new department to respond to some 911 calls, like sending peer responders to mental health and substance use crises.

Around the park Sunday afternoon, organizations sat at tables with signs and flyers talking to people about their work. Groups included Northampton Abolition Now, the Trans Asylum Seeker Support Network, A Knee is Not Enough, Touch the Sky, and the Wildflower Alliance.

A growing number of cities across the United States are transforming their municipal budgets to reduce their reliance on police and move towards meeting the real needs of people in their communities, a statement from the groups organizing the event read.

In Northampton, Mayor David Narkewicz is slated to present his proposed budget in mid-May, one week before the first anniversary of the murder of George Floyd by police, the statement reads. We have a historic opportunity, right now, to win a concrete local victory in defense of Black Lives by divesting from policing and investing in a bold new vision of community safety in Northampton.

At the event, a number of activists from different organizations spoke. Aya Mares, a member of Decarcerate Western Massachusetts, read a poem written by Josh, who Mares said is incarcerated in the Hampden County Jail. Mares read Joshs writing about the difficulty of re-entering society after incarceration. Theres no such thing as rehabilitation here.

Before Javier Luengo-Garrido, a member of the citys Policing Review Commission, played the guitar and sang, he spoke to the crowd. The Department of Community Care must be accountable to those it serves and led by those it serves, he said. There is no other way.

Alternatives to the police, need to be peer-led, said Ya-Ping Douglass, a member of Northampton Abolition Now. She told the crowd about the groups demands, which include reallocating the more than $800,000 cut from the police department budget last year, creating a department of Community Care, and cutting the Police Fepartment budget by 50% and reallocating the funding.

Douglass encouraged people to contact the mayor and City Council, and said the group plans to do door-to-door canvassing soon.

Greta Jochem can be reached at gjochem@gazettenet.com.

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Groups host festival in support of divesting from police - GazetteNET

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