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The Dripby Fern Shen9:19 pmOct 29, 20180

Five vote “no” as City Council approves $21 million for police overtime

“We’re supposed to believe that because the Council has been holding oversight hearings that somehow we have made our point, and the BPD and the administration are going to act better,” asks Councilman Ryan Dorsey

Above: Councilmen Zeke Cohen (left) and Ryan Dorsey (center) at tonight’s Council meeting. (Fern Shen)

Without discussion or debate, the City Council tonight gave preliminary approval to a $21 million appropriation to cover the Baltimore Police Department’s latest shortfall in its perennially over-budget overtime costs.

If there was debate, it had taken place earlier.

Supporters of the spending bill have argued that the measure (unanimously defeated in committee in July) could be okayed now because the Council and Mayor Catherine Pugh had begun oversight and reform.

Critics, like Councilman Brandon M. Scott, have expressed little confidence in the administration and said the runaway OT problem was far from solved.

Voting “no” on Council Bill 18-0265 tonight were Scott, along with Kristerfer Burnett, Zeke Cohen, Ryan Dorsey and Shannon Sneed.

Voting “yes” were John T. Bullock, Mary Pat Clarke, Eric T. Costello, Bill Henry, Sharon Green Middleton, Leon F. Pinkett III, Edward Reisinger, Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer and Robert Stokes.

A final third reader vote on the bill will take place at the Council’s next meeting on November 19.

On Twitter earlier today, Dorsey said he was “100% voting no” and called the measure “entirely unnecessary.” (As The Brew explained, the $21 million was approved by Pugh and the Board of Estimates last June and had already been spent by the time the “supplemental” budget measure came to the Council.)

“It is presented as something we should shrug about, since the money is already spent. I’m not about to shrug about twenty-one million dollars,” Dorsey tweeted.

Here’s the rest of the thread.

@ElectRyanDorsey

Complete Streets, Affordable Housing

In other action, the Council passed Dorsey’s “Complete Streets” bill, which requires the Department of Transportation to ensure that roads are useable not just by automobiles but by buses, cyclists, pedestrians and all users.

Also receiving final approval was a bill that increases property sale taxes with a goal of generating a $20 million fund for affordable housing.

Both bills had supporters in the chamber, who cheered and clapped as the measures were approved on third reader.

Another measure approved by the Council would require newly built businesses with public restrooms to make diaper-changing facilities available for both women and men.

Slaughter in Pittsburgh

Several speakers during the meeting denounced Saturday’s fatal shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue.

In his remarks, Councilman Cohen described some of the online postings of the shooter charged in the case, Robert Bowers, including his reference to “filthy, evil Jews bringing filthy, evil Muslims into the country.”

“The death of these 11 Jewish Americans in a synagogue on the Sabbath is the logical conclusion of a rhetoric that permeates our political discourse and festers online,” Cohen said. “It is deployed against Muslims, refugees, immigrants, women, LGBTQ Americans, people of color and Jews. It is wielded by craven profiteers in online forums and on the radio, on TV and in the halls of power in Washington DC.

“Its goal is to divide, devalue and dehumanize,” he continued. “To create an ‘us’ and an ever-expanding ‘them.’ It is the normalization of white supremacy and white nationalism. The dog whistle has become a bullhorn. And people like Robert Bowers are listening.”

Looking over at his colleague, Councilman Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer, Cohen added this:

“I just want to say, as one of the two Jewish members of this Council, we will not be afraid and we will continue to do the work of Baltimore despite this act of terrorism.”

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