Meeting_Body
REGULAR BOARD MEETING
APRIL 28, 2022
Preamble
Motion by:
DIRECTORS MITCHELL, DUPONT-WALKER, HAHN, AND BONIN,
Use of Public Safety Data Motion
Last fall, the Metro Chief Executive Officer initiated a review of Code of Conduct citation data. The review revealed that more than half of citations for "taking up more than one seat" and "riding with excess baggage" were issued to Black riders year-over-year from 2018-2020. Further, while making up 16% of riders (Fall 2019 Metro Customer Survey), Black riders received 53% of fare evasion citations administered in 2020. These statistics reveal that Code of Conduct provisions result in outcomes that are not equitable across the boundaries of protected classes and have disparate impacts primarily on unhoused African-American males.
As such, the CEO requested a comprehensive evaluation of the Code of Conduct as a substantive step towards an equitable and inclusive transit system. Code of Conduct enforcement was formally removed from Metro's law enforcement partners' Scope of Work in January 2022, and is now handled by Metro's Transit Security Officers.
In tandem, over the last two years, the Metro Board passed multiple motions calling for a change in the agency's public safety framework, amongst them an audit of use of force policies and the creation of a Public Safety Advisory Committee (PSAC).
CEO Wiggins has led this transformative change with less than a year at the helm and created a culture of transparency in decision making. Over the last year, Metro has directed an additional $3.6 million in the homeless shelter pilot, a doubling of funding for homeless outreach services, and at least $40 million to stand-up a transit ambassador program and other programs.
The Metro Board and leadership's commitment to racial justice means using racial justice-centered language and establishing racial justice-centered policies that acknowledge the harm of policing practices on Black and Brown riders. Earli...
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