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From YouTube: Human Services Committee Meeting 5/1/2017
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A
A
A
Ok
on
to
items
for
consideration
resolution
resolution
39
are
17
designating
that
portion
of
the
Sherman
Avenue
between
Greenleaf
Street
and
Lee
Street
with
the
honorary
street
named
signed
donald
baker
way.
Parks
and
Rec
and
Community
Services
Board
recommended
approval
of
narrowing
the
portion
of
Sherman
Avenue
between
Greenleaf
Street
and
Lee
Street,
with
the
Unrated
net
street
named
Don
facts
using
Donald
Baker
of
way.
This
is
for
action.
B
C
D
A
Opposed
the
resolution
is
best
I
have
obviously
our
scripts
and
comment.
What
I'd
like
to
do
is
have
people
come
up
to
speak
before?
The
item
is
discussed
as
an
as
an
item
for
consideration,
so
the
next
item
I
think,
is
going
to
be
held
ordinance
39,
oh
17,
and
the
next
city
code,
title
8,
chapter,
5,
sections,
1,
3,
&,
4
definition
weeds.
Is
that
correct?
A
F
D
Road
good
evening,
chair
attendant
ovando
Thomas,
Smith,
director,
Evanson
Health
and
Human
Services.
So
there
was
a
letter
submitted
in
opposition
and
when
I
reached
out
to
the
neighbor
that
opposed
the
neighbor
explained
to
me
that
the
opposition
was
for
another
neighbor
which
is
not
adjacent
to
the
applicant
and
so
therefore
based
on
the
language
in
the
ordinance,
we
recommend
it
to
have
a
licensed
applicant
considered
because
again,
the
opposition
is
not
related
to
an
adjacent
property
to
the
applicants.
G
Well,
when
we
first
approved
the
beekeeping
ordinance
about
10
years
ago,
there
was
no
even
notification
requirement
at
that
time
and
I
believe
the
ordinance
has
functioned
very
well
since
then,
and
when
we
did
add
the
notification
requirement
about
a
year
ago.
It
was
in
response
to
concerns
about
serious
medical
risks,
and
we
haven't
heard
about
any
thing.
Any
concerns
like
that
raised
in
this
application,
so
I
think
we
should
go
ahead
and
you
can't
approve
it
in.
H
B
Holloman
attend
under
mr.
chair
I.
If
we
could
change
the
agenda
a
little
bit
because
since
those
three
items
could
we
skip
to
those
two
at
the
end,
because
I
don't
think
they
will
take
up
a
whole
lot
of
time.
Sure.
B
A
D
A
So
we'll
skip
ahead
to
items
for
discussion.
The
first
is
banning
the
use
of
coal
tar.
Sealants
gave
us
an
environmental
would
recommends
the
pursuit
of
evidence
and
ban
use
of
coal.
Tar
pigments
sealers
is
someone
here
from
the
environmental
board
to
speak
to
this
and
anyone
else.
If
you'd
like
to
come
up
on
speak.
A
I
Hello,
I'm
Elizabeth
Kinney
I'm,
a
longtime
resident
of
Evanston
and
currently
the
co-president
of
the
League
of
Women
Voters
of
Evanston
and
I'm
here
tonight
to
express
the
League
strong
support
for
the
environment.
Hordes
recommendation
from
this
to
the
city
of
Evanston
that
city
banned
the
use
of
coal,
tar,
sealant
and
the
sale
of
coal
tar
sealant
in
the
city.
It
is
becoming
well-known
that
a
component
of
pavement
sealants
contains
a
chemical
compound
that
is
toxic
to
aquatic
life
and
a
probable
human
carcinogen.
I
These
sealants
are
applied
to
asphalt
pavements
such
as
driveways
and
parking
lots
in
residential,
commercial
and
university
properties
to
beautify,
and
also
to
extend
the
life
of
the
pavement.
Vendors
recommend
reapplication
every
one
to
two
or
three
to
five
years.
Currently,
most
pavement
sealants
used
in
Eastern
and
Midwestern
United
States
are
refined.
Coal,
tar
pitch
emulsion
coal
tar
pitch
is
the
residue
left
after
coal
is
burned
into
coke
to
make
in
the
steelmaking
process.
In
the
western
states
s
fault,
emulsion
sealants,
which
do
not
contain
coal
car
are
used.
I
Why
do
we
think
that
coal
tar
sealants
should
be
banned?
Colfra
sealants
contains
poly
CITIC
aromatic
hydrocarbons.
They
call
them
pause
over
time.
Coal,
tar,
sealants,
get
worn
down
to
the
Sun
and
fruit
driving
and
through
people
walking
foot
traffic
and
I
get
carried
in
the
homes
and
schools
the
particles
get
released
into
the
air
and
washed
into
the
lakes
and
streams
such
as
Lake
Michigan.
These
particles,
which
contain
cos,
are
then
inhaled
ingested
and
absorbed
through
the
skin.
I
I
The
US
Geological
Survey
has
found
the
coal
tar
sealants
are
a
major
source
of
pause
in
the
environment
and
in
areas
where
coal
subject
sealants
are
used,
the
level
of
pause
for
25
times
higher
and
those
living
next
to
the
sealant
coated
areas,
especially
children,
paradise
higher
risk
of
developing
cancer.
While
a
statewide
ban
would
be
preferable.
The
League
of
Women
Voters
of
Illinois
has
been
working
without
success
for
three
years
to
try
to
get
a
statewide
ban,
and
a
new
bill
has
been
introduced
this
year
by
representative
sign.
I
Fortunately,
our
environment
board
has
looked
at
the
effects
of
the
use
of
coal
tar
and
is
recommending
it
to
the
city,
while
the
city
itself
does
not
use
coal.
Tar
sealants
until
they
are
banned
contractors
will
pavement
steel
coatings
that
contains
much
lower
levels
of
cause
are
readily
available
at
comparable
prices.
Communities
around
the
country
and
locally
have
been
responding
by
encouraging
the
use
of
healthier
alternatives,
including
asphalt,
emulsion
sealants,
leaving
pavements
unsealed
or
using
permeable
pavers.
Mr.
I
Met
passed
abandoned
in
February
of
this
year
when
at
the
Highland,
Park
and
South
Barrington
also
banned
their
use.
The
state
of
Washington
and
Minnesota
have
also
ban
the
use
of
coal
tar
sealants
major
retailers
such
as
Home
Depot,
Lowe's
ace
and
United
Hardware
no
longer
sell
coal
tar
sealants.
The
league
supports
their
environment,
board's
recommendation
that
evidence
and
ban
the
sale
and
use
of
coastlands
in
the
city.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
A
G
K
A
E
J
During
the
process,
we
had
four
meetings
and
I
just
wanted
to
flesh
out
a
little
bit
one
of
the
follow-ups,
and
that
is
that
we
had
five
questions
put
to
us
as
a
quote
framers
group
to
determine
how
to
constitute
to
make
a
recommendation
about
how
to
constitute
a
working
group,
and
there
were
as
many
as
twenty
two
or
three
people
on
some
evenings
and
then
last
week,
I
think
there
were
only
a
about
15
of
us
or
so
and
well.
We
had
dressed
all
the
questions.
We
had
a
really
good
process.
J
There
are
still
some
things
that
need
more
needy
conversation
than
is
that
then
you're
really
able
to
manage
in
a
large
group
and
some
considerations
given
so
the
group
that
convened
two
weeks
ago
or
the
meeting
before
the
last
meeting
brought
up
the
idea
of
creating
a
task
force
of
a
smaller
group
of
the
people.
Who'd
been
engaged
and
eight
people
were
nominated
from
among
the
participants
at
the
last
meeting
to
form
this
task
force
and
continue
to
work
and
champion
the
issue
as
it
moves
toward
the
formation
of
a
working
group.
J
L
I'm
sure
you
are
all
aware,
a
group
of
dedicated
Evanston
residents
have
been
meeting
for
the
last
few
months
in
an
attempt
to
come
to
some
kind
of
consensus
on
how
to
move
forward.
With
regard
to
improving
the
police,
complaint
and
oversight
process,
we
met
a
total
of
five
times
for
about
two
hours
each
session
give
or
take.
L
This
is
not
to
point
out
the
obvious,
but
rather
to
stress
that
we
took
the
job
of
answering
the
five
questions
that
were
presented
to
us
very
seriously.
At
times
we
battled
personality
clashes
and
at
times
it
felt
as
though
we
were
moving
at
a
snail's
pace,
but
in
the
end
I
am
proud
of
the
collective
work
we
did
with
the
aid
and
assistance
of
our
group
facilitator,
Matt
Walsh,
who
did
an
excellent
job,
keeping
us
on
track
and
I
hope
that
you
will
endorse
our
suggestions
on
how
to
move
forward.
L
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
and
thank
Kim
Richardson
and
her
role
through
all
this.
She
was
given
a
challenging
task.
She
was
faced
with
a
difficult
set
of
circumstances
and
that's
putting
it
mildly,
but
she
kept
her
cool
throughout.
So,
thank
you,
Kim.
Wherever
you
are
I'm
asking
that
you
continue
to
support
this
process,
a
small
task
force
will
coordinate
and
manage
the
selection
process
for
the
working
group,
assuming
you
all
agree
to
that
whose
members
will
be
nominated
by
organizations
doing
relevant
work
in
the
community
and
will
include
some
seats
for
non-affiliated
community
members.
L
We
thought
long
and
hard
about
the
best
ways
to
get
the
most
representative
voices
into
the
room
together,
and
this
group
will
and
should
look
like
Evanston
in
closing
I
want
to
reiterate
that
the
most
difficult
work
lies
ahead.
However,
I
do
believe
that
we
as
a
community,
can
accomplish
the
task
of
over
overhauling
the
current
system.
That
many
of
us
feel
is
insufficient
in
its
present
state,
but
only
if
we
as
a
city
acknowledge
the
need
for
change
and
give
this
endeavor
the
resources
and
the
commitment
that
it
deserves.
Thank
you.
H
Please
don't
ask
me
to
name
a
few.
Okay
I,
just
hope
that
the
council
check
themselves
because
people
are
listening
and
they
are
looking
I'll
leave.
That
alone,
for
now
also
I'm
anxious
to
hear
about
the
citizen
complaint
working
group,
I
started
I
was
at
the
first
one
and
the
other
night
there
was
at
the
second
one,
because
the
board
this
group
is
meeting
at
a
time
when
there's
other
things
going
on
so
I
guess
you
have
to
make
a
choice.
I
also
would
like
to
comment
on
the
the
cold
car
sealant
I.
H
Remember
there
were
trucks
in
my
neighborhood
was
Mexican
trucks
and
they
were
pouring
hot
tar
if
I'm,
not
mistaken,
I
think
my
alderman,
who
still
my
Othman,
can
comment
on
that
I
think
I
caught
just
about
everyone
on
this
panel.
What
I
want
to
know
is,
is
this
to
stuff
that
you're
talking
about
that
was
in
my
neighborhood
and
we're
smelling
it
for
hours.
H
The
next
thing,
I'd
like
to
know
is
the
part.
The
children
do
not
know
where
twigs
parks
is
a
butler
Park
is
the
names
have
not
been
replaced?
Please
let
us
know
when
you're
going
to
replace
it
councilmembers
the
rabbit
crown
library,
I
am
very
disappointed.
I
know
we
have
to
replace
the
rabbit
crown
with
the
ice
skating
ring
and
so
forth.
One
more
thing
about
that,
while
I
mention
it,
let's
have
something
free.
Once
a
week
like
we
used
to
have
okay
for
the
children
for
them
to
do
something
free.
H
H
The
next
thing
is
the
rabbit
crown
lack
of
the
same
library.
We
have
been
waiting
for
our
library
and
the
fifth
Ward
for
many
many
years
we
couldn't
afford
a
annoyed
branch.
We
couldn't
afford
a
South
Branch,
but
now
we
can
afford
and
we
barely
could
afford
the
Big
Branch,
okay,
the
big
man
library,
but
now
we
can
afford
it
rich
people,
whatever
you
want
to
call
it.
It's
donating
money,
don't.
H
I
will
now
I'm
reading
about
a
bond,
the
city.
Are
we
paying
money
for
this
and
we
don't
have
a
library
right
here
in
the
fifth
Ward
something's
wrong
with
this
picture,
people
I
don't
want
to.
Thank
you
Mark
Denham
before
you
leave
us
I
want
to
thank
you,
because
you
have
done
a
lot
for
this
community.
Okay
and
I.
Thank
you.
A
C
Sorry
Thank
You
Ottoman
said
if
I
could
just
respond
is
how
they
miss
degree
before
you
leave.
She
shared
a
lot,
and
hopefully,
eventually
you
flushed
through,
but
just
for
those
that
are
listening,
I
think
it's
important,
because
our
beaches
are
getting
ready
to
open
that
mr.
Creed.
So
two
places
these
tokens
are
distributed
through
some
of
our
social
service
agencies,
so
for
those
families
that
are
income
qualified,
they
can
register.
For
a
beach
token,
in
addition
to
that,
residents
are
able
to
check
out
beach
tokens
at
the
Evanston
Public
Library
I.
H
M
H
H
C
H
N
O
Good
evening
my
name
is
Harriet's.
Alec
I,
too,
have
been
at
all
five
of
the
meetings
regarding
the
process
of
police
complaints.
I
believe
you
have
a
report
of
the
meetings
in
your
packet
I
think
there
are
a
lot
of
different
perspectives
on
these
meetings.
Some
of
the
older
people
have
attended
some
of
the
meetings.
I
think
there
were.
O
The
breadth
of
the
entire
process
expanded
far
beyond
far
beyond
the
original
topics
of
police
complaints
and
the
recommendations
for
the
specific
arrangements
on
how
to
devise
a
task
force.
Committee
I,
don't
know
if
some
of
the
committee
participants
did
don't
trust
the
competence
of
the
governance
of
the
city
of
Evanston,
whether
it's
Human
Services
or
the
City
Council
or
the
city
staff.
O
But
obviously
some
people
filtered
out
and
weren't
able
to
come
to
the
rest
of
the
meetings,
so
the
steps
of
the
process-
I,
don't
know
if
it's
wait
until
the
number
of
participants
dwindles
enough.
So
those
who
left
control
the
situation
but
and
then
arranging
for
a
subcommittee
to
complete
the
work
which
the
assignment
could
have
been
completed
in
the
big
meeting.
But
but
added
work
was
was
added
into
the
less
I
guess.
O
O
But
then
there's
a
special
committee
spun
off
to
determine
who's,
going
to
be
on
the
task
force,
to
set
up
the
new
procedures
and
to
invite
them
and
offer
the
positions
to
them.
I've
been
a
very
quick
I've
been
a
member
of
CPAC
since
its
inception
by
the
City
Council
appointed
by
the
mayor.
Maybe
nine
years
ago,
there's
been
some
fluctuation
in
membership
every
year
to
a
change
in
the
police
person
assigned
to
answer
questions
that
the
members
may
have
during
discussions
of
the
issues.
O
Members
have
always
been
conscientious
in
understanding
the
situation
and
reasons
and
options
for
the
very
diverse
circumstances
that
arise
along
the
way.
There
have
been
revisions
and
procedures.
Whatever
issues
have
been
raised,
they've
been
addressed
promptly,
efficiently
and
effectively.
There
are,
needless
to
say,
more
revisions
that
are
needed
to
refine
the
process.
Some
of
them
include
the
City
Council
changing
municipal
code.
However,
I
don't
think
they
include
removing
responsibilities
from
the
human
services
committee
and
the
City
Council
I
do.
O
P
Evening
my
name
is
Betsy
Wilson.
If
I
may
I'll
sign
in
after
I
speak
just
to
keep
things
moving.
My
name
is
Betty
Wilson
I
am
was
very
pleased
to
be
a
part
of
the
working
group
discussion
as
much
as
I
was
able
and
I'm
excited
about
the
energy
here
in
the
committee
and
on
the
council
and
in
the
community
to
move
forward.
P
I
just
want
to
highlight
one
thing
about
the
where
we
currently
are
in
the
process
that
I
think
is
so
important
and
I'm
just
so
happy
to
see
the
commitment
to
the
development
of
an
independent
task
force.
I
think
you
know
with
as
much
as
I
admire
the
dedication
of
the
members
of
CPAC
and
the
other
organizations
that
have
been
liaisons
with
the
police
department.
P
One
of
the
glaring
problems
that
we've
discussed
over
the
course
of
several
meetings
is
the
they
are
perceived
as
beholden
to
the
police
department
and
they
are
factually
linked
to
the
police
department
when
the
Human
Services
Committee
is
responsible
for
overseeing
the
police
department
and
were
the
human
services
committee
also
into
christen
secretly
linked
to
the
formation
of
the
task
force.
That
would
undermine
their
independence
and
undermine
the
perception
of
their
independence.
Did
that
make
sense?
P
No
it
didn't
what
I'm
saying
is
I
think
it's
important
Thank,
You,
Holderman,
okay,
I,
think
it's
important
that
the
task
force
is
seen
as
independent
from
the
police
department.
I
think
it's
important
that
it's
perceived
that
way.
I
think
it's
important
that
it
actually
is
that
way,
and
so
one
of
the
factors
that's
going
to
be
essential
to
that
independence
is
insulation
from
the
forces
of
insulation,
from
the
influence
of
the
police
department
itself
and
installations
from
the
council
and
the
Human
Services
Committee.
Is
that
make
more
sense?
Yes,.
P
You
so
I
was
really
pleased
to
see
in
our
working
group
a
real,
strong
understanding
of
the
importance
of
that
factor
and
the
commitment
to
developing
an
Independent,
Police,
Review
Board
and
the
other
things
I
wanted
to
mention
is
Alderman
attend
them.
I
was
really
excited
to
see
the
data
coming
out
of
your
inquiries.
I
don't
have
the
math
and
statistics
acumen
to
fully
analyze
them
all,
but
I'm
really
I
think
it's
an
important
first
step
and
I'm.
Looking
forward
to
seeing
where
the
analysis
of
that
data
takes
us
agreed.
Q
I'd
like
to
thank
the
Human
Services
Committee
and
the
city
staff,
who
arranged
basically
and
made
it
possible
for
this
group
of
citizens
to
keep
meeting
and
discuss
this
important
issue.
From
my
point
of
view,
the
meetings
went
very
well.
There
were
some
difficult
moments,
but
they
got
smoothed
out
and
I
felt.
Q
There
was
quite
a
lot
of
consensus
among
the
members
of
the
group,
even
though
it
was
rather
different
each
time
it
met
because
people
had
conflicts
with
other
meetings,
even
within
the
city
activities,
but
I
felt
that
essentially,
the
conclusions
of
the
group
were
pretty
much
agreeable
to
everyone.
Just
one
word
about
independence.
Q
Some
of
us
who
focused
on
independence
for
this
community
group.
That's
going
to
be
formed
to
look
at
policing
and
Evanston's
from
the
point
of
view
of
what
the
community
feels
it
needs
is
that
some
of
us
who
looked
into
the
literature
found
that
citizen
review
committees
that
were
not
independent
of
the
police
and
of
the
city
government
often
didn't
get
anywhere
significant
in
their
suggestions
for
a
forum
for
whatever
reason.
So
that
was
what
that
was
the
reason
for
the
importance
of
Independence.
Q
Another
issue
that
was
somewhat
contentious
was
this
issue
of
what
is
the
Mandate
of
this
citizens
group
that's
to
be
formed
to
take
a
look
at
policing
in
Evanston
and
those
of
us
who
were
here
as
basically
rabble
rousers
in
the
first
meeting
of
the
Human
Services
Committee
that
looked
at
the
policing
issue.
Recently
anyway,
we
talked
about
broad
issues
like
does
the
police?
Is
it
effective
and
doesn't
do
what
the
citizens
would
like
it
to
do,
or
are
there
things
that
the
citizens
would?
Rather
it
not
do
and
may
not
be
effective?
Q
Basically
a
rather
broad
view,
although
there
were
others
of
us
not
me,
but
among
our
group
who
felt
that
the
focus
should
be
narrow
on
citizen
complaint
processes
and
that
everything
broad
would
come
out
of
that
narrow
focus
so,
but
in
the
end
the
focus
was
allowed
to
be
broad
and
I
think
that's
very
important
about
the
subcommittee.
Finally,
many
of
us
could
not
go
to
a
meeting
last
Wednesday,
which
basically
selected
a
subcommittee
because
we
were
going
to
the
Harley
Clark
meeting,
which
was
the
same
time
and
I.
Q
Think
some
of
us
would
like
to
keep
our
hand
in
who
were
not
selected
in
that
meeting,
because
it
was
rather
a
small
group
of
people,
and
hopefully,
of
course
these
will
be
open
meetings,
and
so
many
of
us
would
like
to
keep
our
attention
on
this
very
important
issue
and
again,
very
big
thanks
to
all
of
you
who
made
this
possible.
Thank
you.
Thank.
R
R
The
process
mainly
would
be
trying
to
not
necessarily
been
identified.
People
because
and
you'll
see
in
the
report
that
really
was
going
to
be
left
to
community
organizations,
organizations
connected
to
the
mental
health
community
to
the
homeless,
communities
to
social
justice
agencies,
so
that
wouldn't
really
be
the
role
of
the
committee
or
the
task
force,
as
it's
described
in
your
report.
R
That
really
would
be
left
to
the
community
to
do,
and
we
would
just
help
again
reach
out
to
folks
and
just
to
make
sure
that
that
that's
the
folks
that
were
identified
met
other
criterias
that
we
came
with
whether
those
criterias
were
racial
or
or
gender.
Specific
or
whatnot.
I
also
wanted
to
say
that
and
I
can't
remember
anything
that
we
did
in
the
group
that
wasn't
that
didn't
have
consensus.
The
last
speaker
spoke,
and
it
is
right
that
certain
people
could
not
attend
every
meeting.
So
that
is
true.
R
But
again,
if
folks
can
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
I'm,
not
sure
we
made
any
decision
that
wasn't
consensus,
that
was
actually
Matt
washes
credit.
He
no
matter
what
we
were
trying
to
determine
you
put
up
a
number
5
through
I
think
zero,
which
was
the
fist
zero
was.
If
absolutely
you
cannot,
you
know,
just
you
know
tolerate
the
decision
that
was
made.
Five
was
you
know
absolutely
this
is
great,
and
then
everything
else
in
between
was
still.
You
know
that
that
you
approved
it
and
you're
willing
to
kind
of
move
on.
R
So
even
the
the
the
final
committee
task
force
that
you
see
was
was
done
on
on
what
the
consensus
results
so
I
just
wanted
to
thank
Matt,
Walsh,
Kim,
Hertz
and
everybody
else
that
was
there.
It
was
a
very
well
done
a
fair
process
and
I
just
also
wanted
to
add
nobody
on
that
list
nominated
themselves
to
be
on
this
task
force
of
this
committee
to
manage
this
process
moving
forward.
You
actually
told
not
to
nominate
yourself
to
nominate
others
in
the
group,
even
members
of
the
group
that
couldn't
make
it
to
that
meeting.
S
My
name
is
Jackie
aprile,
Prince
and
I.
Just
have
a
brief
comment
in
regard
to
all
these
committees
and
subcommittees
and
policing.
The
police
I
just
have
the
personal
belief
that
there
are
some
agencies
that
should
not
be
completely
transparent,
and
that
is
due
to
the
safety
of
the
police
themselves.
The
other
agencies
that
work
with
them
and
for
you
know
just
the
citizens
that
are
involved
in
any
type
of
crime,
I
happen
to
be
at
a
Starbucks
and
there
was
a
fight
at
a
McDonald's
and
in
the
newspaper,
I
think
is
Evanson.
S
Now
I
shouldn't
really
quote
it.
The
guy.
The
reporter
printed
out
the
ladies
pitcher,
who
was
in
the
fight
who
happened
to
be
arrested,
bring
out
her
picture.
Her
name
in
her
address,
which
I
understand
is
public
information.
But
you
don't
have
all
the
facts
and
you
don't
know
what
happened
there
and
if
somebody
wants
to
follow
up
on
that,
that's
just
not
a
really
great
thing.
S
A
K
Just
quickly
say
what
she
said
about
transparency:
it
was
in
the
90s
when
the
chief
Kaminski
asked
four
of
us
to
be
on
the
board
to
look
at
some
of
the
decisions
they
were
making
with
the
Office
of
Professional
Standards.
They
want
her
to
in
a
people
to
look
at
it
and
see
if
they
could
had
any
impact
on
it
and
they
did
ask
us
if
we
wanted
our
names
known
and
it
could
be
put
in
the
papers,
and
we
just
felt
like
well
in
a
small
community.
K
Some
police
don't
want
people
to
know
where
they
live,
especially
if
they
arrest
somebody
in
someone's
near
so
we
didn't
want
to
be
hassled
and
that
we
says
no,
you
don't
have
to
put
our
names
in.
It
doesn't
matter,
that's
part
of
the
transparency
that
may
not
be,
but
that
we
didn't
really
care
for.
But
let
me
just
mention
about
what
this
committee
was
all
about.
Before
of
us
when
I
went
to
the
meetings
they
were
talking
about,
I
was
at
the
first
meeting
and
someone
was
saying
something
about
a
secret
committee
and
I
thought.
K
Damn
secret
committee
we
have
here
and
after
about
ten
minutes,
I
realized.
That
was
my
committee.
The
committee
I
was
on
the
only
because
we
didn't
have
their
transparency
for
someone
to
say
that
it
was
in
the
late
90s
that
I
wrote
a
letter
to
chief
Kaminsky
about
how
I
saw
four
officers
deal
with
a
drunkard
man
behind
my
building,
where
I
had
him
as
Barry
and
Brummel,
two
uniformed
officers
came
and
this
guy
was
singing
and
he
was
drunk
and
he
was
sitting
in
a
parking
lot
and
they
treated
him
very
well.
K
K
He
says
I've
talking
to
those
two
officers,
and
that
won't
happen
again
and
then
apparently
he
liked
my
activism,
because
I
was
also
in
charge
of
a
neighborhood
watch
program
and
what
he
wanted
and
with
our
present
chief,
they
want
people
on
the
ground
in
their
neighbors
who
are
involved
to
help
them
and
give
them
ideas
and
wording.
We
need
help
in
the
Frank
Kaminsky.
He
asked
us
to
come
on
board
because
we
were
on
the
ground
dealing
with
our
neighborhoods
neighborhood
watch.
He
came
on
our
neighborhood
watches.
K
We
had
walked
every
four
five
or
eight
about
eight
years.
We
walked
every
weekend
in
our
neighborhood,
so
that's
how
it
happens
had
the
faith
that
we
wanted,
someone
to
see
what
we're
doing
got
some
ideas
given
to
us
and
if
you
go
to
a
police
advisory
board
meeting
with
chief
Reddington
he's
going
to
say
the
same
thing
that
Frank
Kaminsky
says:
give
us
your
ideas.
You
got
a
problem,
we
want
to
know
it,
so
we
can
handle
it.
Okay.
Thank
you.
Thank.
T
Yes,
good
evening,
honorable
chair
members
of
the
committee,
Alex
Macky,
with
the
law
department,
just
updating
you
on
assistant
city
attorney
Henry
Ford's
memo.
With
this
memo
update,
we
updated
the
statistics
to
provide
the
amount
of
rest
arrests
that
linked
to
the
ordinance
and
traffic
violations
and
those
were
included
in
the
memorandum.
We
also
discussed
the
expungement
records
and
how
a
person
would
go
about
expunging,
a
record
I
believe
there
was
a
question
inquiring
if
the
city
could
do
that
internally,
all
expungements
are
set
through
the
Circuit
Court
of
Cook
County
into
the
state.
T
A
T
Did
have
one
point
of
information
in
doing
our
research
and
working
with
the
police
department,
the
police
department
was
able
to
pull
some
additional
statistics
and
it
was
just
for
the
2016
ordnance
arrest
for
your
information.
67
out
of
the
117
ordnance.
Arrests
were
in
response
to
a
call
for
the
police,
so
that
wasn't
included
in
the
memorandum
but
felt
important
to
tell
you.
Thank.
A
You
thank
you
any
other
questions,
so
this
is
a
lot
of
our
recommends
of
this
committees.
Acceptance
of
this
update
and
a
vital
of
prosecution,
darkness,
violet,
violation,
statistics
under
s
of
those
all
those
in
favor
acceptance.
They
I
any
opposed.
Thank
you.
The
next
is
a
th
five
or
you
blue,
Police.
Complaints
staff
recommends
approval
of
the
review
of
Police
Complaints.
A
A
A
In
favor,
aye
opposed
thank
you.
It
is
for
two
so
review
Police
Complaints.
This
is
for
action.
Good
motion
to
approve
so
moved.
Second,
any
senior
lights
and
ink
questions
comments.
All
those
in
favor
approval
opposed.
Okay,
it's
proved
the
hh6
item.
Community
feedback
for
proposed
citizen
complaint
working
group
staff
recommends.
The
committee
received
the
following
recommendations:
developed
by
community
members
regarding
the
creation
of
a
citizen
complaint
working
group
following
several
community
meetings.
A
C
You
I
do
have
one
question
first
before
I
get
into
that.
Thank
you
to
our
city
staff
and
all
since
the
residents
who
are
here
representing
the
much
larger
group
to
get
us
to
this
point.
So
there
was
just
one
quick,
it's
on
page
169,
so
the
group
is
recommending
15
to
21
members
and
it's
also
I
think
a
facilitator
to
include
in
in
the
count.
C
B
Think
we
had
that
in
mind
in
the
beginning,
for
the
working
group,
so
I
think
the
number
is
is
absolutely
too
large.
I
was
fortunate
enough
to
be
able
to
attend
all
four
of
the
meetings.
The
last
meeting
was
not
on
the
agenda
was
decided
the
night
of
the
fourth
meeting
to
have
that
meeting
on
because
they
had
not
finished
some
of
the
things,
but
I
have
to
say
that
I
am
impressed
that
the
five
items
that
came
out
of
Human
Services
that
they
were
asked
to
frame
for
the
working
group.
It
did
end.
P
B
So
the
only
new
piece
for
me
was
this
new
role
that
I
can't
wrap
my
head
around
yet,
but
I
do
understand,
for
you
I
think,
I
understand
where
you're
coming
from,
but
I
think
that
that's
getting
into
the
work
of
the
working
group
I
think
the
working
group
has
to
have
a
chance
to
do
what
they're
going
to
do
just
too
many
layers.
I
think.
But
I
really
want
to
congratulate
you
on
ending
up
with
getting
those
five
points
taking
gear
out.
So
I
do.
G
G
Nominating
committee,
basically
just
reaching
out
to
the
various
organizations
in
the
community
that
they
identified
as
as
being
likely
to
bring
important
perspectives
to
this
process
and
and
then
giving
these
names
to
city
council.
So
I
I,
don't
I,
don't
see
because
alderman
Holmes
you
mentioned
I
thought
you
were
sort
of
seeing
more
into
what
they
were
expecting
of
the
task
force
than
that.
Well,.
B
I
know
I'm
looking
at
page
169
as
well
right
and
that's
the
but
I
had
looked
at
it
earlier
and
still
couldn't
I
wrap
my
head
around
where
this
was
what
this
would
lead
to.
I.
Just
think
that
maybe
and
I
understood
from
the
four
meetings
that
they
definitely
did
not
want
nominations
from
City
Council
from
the
mayor.
B
C
Opening
presberg
of
thank
you
all
in
attending
in
to
maybe
follow
up
on
what
alderman
Holmes
is
saying.
I
was
struggling
with
it
also
and
I
shared
this
with
one
of
my
residents
who
reached
out
to
me
the
normal
practice.
I'm
going
to
ask
Wylie
to
come
for
just
to
fill
in
the
gaps
where
I
miss
out
is
I
would
hope
that
you
would
want
to
see
this
as
a
standing
committee
as
from
City
Council.
C
Maybe,
yes,
maybe
no,
and
with
most
of
our
committees,
that's
the
mayor's
authority
to
appoint
members
of
the
community
and
I
would
assume
our
new
mayor
will
keep
in
tradition
with
our
old
mare
and
making
sure
that
the
committee
represents
what
the
city
of
Evanston
looks
like
so
I
I
could
see
where
this
committee
would
make
recommendations
to
the
mayor
who's
responsible
for
the
appointments,
and
then
you
would
want
you.
The
community
who
represents
these
thoughts
would
want
them
to
go
through.
C
An
apple
would
want
to
make
sure
that
there
are
no
conflicts
of
interest
and
all
of
that
takes
place
during
the
process.
In
addition
to
that,
we
create
term
limits
and
rules
around
how
and
how
this
committee
meets
and
who
they
report
up
to
so
I
think
to
go
outside
of
that.
Maybe
I
don't
know
if
that's
what
you're
wrestling
with
all
Wow.
B
The
groups
right,
therefore,
you
know
that
I
the
groups
have
already
been
identified
in
terms
of
who
they
would
like
to
see
represented
like
okay
right
so
I
you
know.
Are
they
looking
at
the
individuals?
You
know
that
kind
of
thing,
I'm,
just
not
sure
I,
just
as
I
said,
I
just
learned
quite
wrap.
My
head
around,
but
I
didn't
hear
the
conversation,
so
I
I'm
not
trying
to
pass
judgment
on
that.
B
C
N
Mr.
chair
members,
the
committee
good
evening,
I
think
alderman
Braithwaite
really
outlined
how
the
city
of
Evanston
appoints
Lords
committees
and
task
force's
I.
Think
the
residents
who
were
involved
in
this
process
have
a
different
thought,
and
so,
since
this
committee
gave
them
broad
latitude
to
make
whatever
suggestions,
they
thought
were
appropriate.
Their
suggested
coming
back
to
you
as
an
alternate
process
than
what
the
city's
process
normally
is.
N
So
I
think
it's
up
to
the
committee
to
make
whatever
recommendations
you
feel
are
appropriate
to
the
City
Council,
based
on
what
you
have
in
front
of
you.
So
if
you
think
this
idea
of
a
group
making
recommendations,
I
think
is
alderman.
Holmes's
mentioned
those
recommendations
under
the
process
that
we
normally
have
would
be
going
to
the
mayor,
and
so
if
this
group
of
eight
individuals
wish
to
make
recommendations
to
the
mayor
is
some
sort
of
formal
way,
they're
elected
sitting
here,
I,
don't
mean
to
speak
for
him,
my
senses.
Those
would
be
welcome.
N
But
again,
the
task
of
this,
a
group
that
has
met
five
times,
was
to
come
back
to
you
with
recommendations.
Your
task
now,
as
a
standing
committee
to
City
Council's,
to
make
recommendations
to
the
full
City
Council
as
to
how
you'd
like
to
proceed
so
I
I
think
that
you
have
information,
I,
think
olden,
Great
Lakes
outlined
what
has
been
a
regular
process.
If
you
would
like
to
recommend
an
alternate
process
to
the
full
City
Council.
N
Certainly
that's
within
your
right
to
do,
but
I
think
when
this
was
originally
brought
forward,
I
guess
back
in
February.
My
sense
was
that
this
was
a
regular
Committee
of
the
City
Council
that
would
be
appointed
by
the
mayor
and
he
were
just
looking
for
numbers
and
fixed-term
and
and
how
what
the
breadth
and
scope
would
be
and
and
again,
if
I
may,
mr.
chair
I'm
still
not
quite
sure
what
the
breadth
and
scope
is
on.
You
know
what
what
has
been
listed
here.
N
N
chair
I
think,
if
that's
something
you
wish
to
take
on
this
evening,
I
think
that
you
know,
if
you're,
going
to
make
a
specific
recommendation
on
number
of
members
to
the
City
Council
and
then
a
specific
recommendation
on
the
time
frame,
because
ultimately,
that
will
have
to
be
decided
if
you
would
rather
to
the
City
Council
debate
that
and
leave
the
this
as
a
as
a
arranged.
Then
that's
perfectly
fine,
but
ultimately
the
finite
decisions
that
have
to
be
made
at
the
City
Council
I.
K
A
Really
the
core
the
the
issue
is:
is
the
notion
of
Independence,
not
complete
independence,
but
the
as
one
speaker
mentioned,
D
perception
and
actual
independence
of
from
what
I
would
call
council
politics
or
the
police
department,
has
direct
oversight
of
this
group.
So
I
guess
that's
what
I'm
struggling
with?
How
do
we?
N
I
think
the
challenge
if
I
made
mr.
chair
members
of
the
committee,
is
that's
the
end
product
I,
think.
My
understanding
of
how
these
discussions
have
occurred
in
other
communities
is
that
the
City
Council's
of
other
communities
have
asked
residents
to
come
together
and
have
the
discussions
and
then
make
a
recommendation.
City
Council.
Ultimately,
the
power
and
authority
of
whatever
group
that
might
be
created
comes
from
the
City
Council.
The
City
Council
may
ultimately
decide
that
this
is
going
to
be
an
independently
created
group,
I
think
in
some
communities
with
different
state
laws
than
Illinois.
N
They
have
been
done
through
citizen
initiatives.
I,
don't
believe
that
that's
available
to
to
us
here
in
Illinois,
but
ultimately
it's
the
council's
decision
making.
There
is
no
mechanism
to
create
any
kind
of
independent
entity
without
the
Evanston
City
Council.
So
I
think
that
if
it's
ultimately
the
recommendation
of
the
working
group
back
to
the
City
Council
that
it
would
be
an
independent
group,
then
that's
up
then
for
the
full
City
Council
to
decide.
I.
Think
that
again
we
have
40
some-odd
boards
and
commissions.
N
Mayor
Tissot
has
been
very
diligent,
I'm
sure
the
mayor
elect
the
Hagerty
will
be
very
diligent
about
making
those
appointments
and
unlesss
committee
tonight
feels
that
that
process
is
not
working.
My
recommendation
would
be
to
you
know,
look
at
this
framework.
You
know
make
some
of
the
finite
decisions
on
numbers
and
then
forward
this
on
to
the
full
City
Council
or
if
you
feel
you
need
more
time,
hold
this
in
committee
this
evening
and
then
have
a
come
back
at
the
June
Human
Services
Committee
and.
A
It
does
seem
to
think
it
does
seem
to
me
that
there
are
some
basic
concepts
here
that
aren't
clear
to
me.
I
mean
it's
in
terms
of
the
next
steps,
and
you
know,
and
also
I,
don't
know
that
perhaps
I've
invested
as
much
time
as
I
could
considering
that
this
is
the
last
human
services
meeting
of
the
council.
A
We
could
make
a
lot
of
decisions
tonight
that
may
not
the
expectations
of
the
new
mayor
and
council
or
in
the
next.
You
know
Services
Committee
design.
What
I
feel
is
worth
holding
in
committee,
or
would
we
her
to
make
do
one
recommendation
that
I've
heard
so
far,
which
is
the
the
size
of
the
committee
and
forwarded
to
Council
all
results.
B
B
D
B
I'm
good
with
that
I
do
feel
that
there
and
I
keep
hearing
these
playing
politics.
Council
politics,
that
kind
of
stuff
I'm
not
even
sure
what
that
means,
because
I've
not
seen
that
and
I.
Don't
know
what
that
means.
I
know
that
I've
been
on
human
services
for
the
last
12
years.
I
know
that
we
have
made
great
leaps
in
terms
of
really
trying
to
listen
to
citizens,
about
police
complaints
and
and
looking
at
training
and
everything
for
the
police
department.
Is
it
enough?
Absolutely
not.
B
We
all
know
that
and
I
think
that
you'll
hear
that
from
the
police
department,
as
well
as
from
committee
members
and
from
staff,
but
it's
it's
much
better
than
where
we
started
out
from
I.
Think
that
we
have
a
system
in
place
with
a
pack
C
pack
and
as
I
said
it
and
in
February,
so
I
said
again.
The
Human
Services
Committee
is
where
the
buck
stops.
We
can
go
into
executive
session
at
any
time
to
go
in
depth
about
any
action
by
the
police
department.
B
That's
very
clear
and
I
asked
in
February,
since
there
was
so
much
about
being
independent
and
having
an
independent
investigator.
Would
it
be
possible
for
us,
the
Human
Services
Committee,
to
have
such
a
person
and
I
believe
he
managed
I
don't
want
to
misquote.
You
I
thought.
You
said.
That
would
be
something
that
the
Human
Services
Committee
could
do.
Is
that
correct?
Yes,.
N
And
I
and
I
think
chief
Eddington
later
in
the
agenda,
has
an
update
on
that
process
as
part
of
the
the
items
that
we're
tracking
and
reporting
back
to
the
committee.
So
he
I
know
has
been
working
on
a
request
for
proposal
and
is
sitting
in
the
back
of
the
room
and
I
will
cover
it
later
on.
Chief
engine
rights.
B
Yes,
so
all
I'm
saying
to
you
all
is
that
I
think
that
we
have
a
process
that
is
working.
Can
it
be
tweaked?
Can
it
be
enhanced
absolutely,
but
as
far
as
independent
is
concerned,
I
think
that
we
are
in
our
road
and
we
have
another
whole
Avenue
that
could
give
us
the
kind
of
independent
investigation
that
I've
heard
people
ask
about
I
know
about
the
training.
I
feel
very
confident
about
that.
Beginning
with
dr.
B
Thompson
I
can't
remember
the
year
he
came
I
want
to
say
maybe
11
or
12
I
can't
remember,
but
in
in
the
last
couple
of
years,
with
dr.
Logan
in
terms
of
our
department
on
moving
with
that.
B
So
I
know
that
we're
on
a
good
road
and
that's
not
to
say,
can
it
be
improved
and
I'm
not
trying
to
knock
anything
else
out,
but
I
think
that
we
have
to
look
at
the
good
things
that
it's
with
our
department
as
well
and
I,
really
do
appreciate
the
citizens
group
that
has
been
appointed
by
the
mayor.
There
has
been
disagreement
at
times,
and
we
see
that
in
the
report
we
know
which
groups
agree
with
everything
that
the
position
that
the
police
department
makes
on
those
who
don't
agree
it
fit
or
not.
B
So
we
get
a
chance
to
see
the
end
to
question
it
is.
It
is
a
question
for
us,
so
the
buck
stops
right
here
and
I
just
not
since
we
started
this
barrel
of
warm
so
to
speak,
I'd
like
to
see
us
clean
it
up
before,
at
least
for
me
and
mark
anyway,
before
we
get
off
of
the
council
that
we're
not
leaving
something
for
somebody
else.
So
I
don't
not
like
to
see
it
hell.
N
Sorry
yeah
I'm
just
going
to
say
so,
I
think
the
options
before
you
then
are
to
leave
the
report
as
is
and
forwarded
on
to
the
count
full
council
to
make
some
additional
changes.
As
far
as
numbers
of
individuals
length
of
time
looking
at
the
charge
and
then
if
holding
is
not
the
option,
then
I
guess
I
would
encourage
you
to.
You
know
narrow
down.
Some
of
these
ranges
best
that
you
can
this
evening
and
then
will
forward
it
to
the
full
council
at
their
first
regular
meeting
on
May
the
22nd.
My.
C
A
B
B
B
B
C
B
You're
headed
as
the
five
decide
questions
that
have
been
answered
by
them,
with
the
number
change
being
not
more
than
nine
and
to
establish
the
working
group
based
upon
the
number
of
people
that
were
the
group
that
they
have
suggested.
The
only
thing
that
I'm,
not
that
I'm
not
recommending
is
the
selection
of
a
eight,
an
additional
task
force
to
select
those
people.
B
N
A
And
that's
that's
a
lot
of
chocolate
because
on
one
hand
we
are
simply
referring
back
to
the
initial
five
questions
as
being
and
fulfill
and
recommend
buying
those
go
on
to
counsel,
as
is
except.
We
are
starting
to
get
into
the
details
of
what
the
committee
has
recommended
to
us
by
changing
the
number
of
recommended
pretty
much.
C
B
B
G
B
C
Think
it's
worth
just
an
explanation
to
the
public
again:
okay,
just
so
everybody
understands
we
can
go
and
we
can
chase
our
tail
around.
This
I
think
the
goal
of
the
group
is
to
move
forward
with
a
committee
that
can
actually
look
at
these
issues,
and
so
in
order
to
move
forward,
we
put
it
in
the
stream
of
the
other
committees
that
are
laid
out
on
the
city
of
Evanston.
Everything
is
transparent.
We
all
understand
how
we
got
here
with
the
two
actually
three
different
committees.
C
Now
it
was
what
you
did
over
the
last
five
meetings
is
to
make
everything
transparent
and
merge
it
into
one
group
out
of
your
committee
that
meets
within
the
same
structure
of
our
other
committees.
Other
recommendations
can
come
out
of
it.
We
just
need
a
starting
point
that
makes
sense
based
on
how
we
conduct
business,
so
I
mean
if
you
look
at
how
long
it
took
you
just
to
get
to
this
point.
Imagine
if
you
were
to
go
on
with
structure.
It
gets
a
little
bit
difficult.
C
So
it's
our
hosted
by
focusing
your
group
down
to
nine
members
and
you
can
still
make
the
recommendations
to
the
mayor
that
we're
able
to
move
forward.
So
that's
my
best
way
of
summarizing,
at
least
so.
You
can
understand
where
we
are
with
our
vote
and
if
anyone
else
wants
to
add
any
additional
language
before
or
comments
before
we
vote.
Please
do
so
would.
A
G
A
G
A
I
guess
I'm
opposed
to
I.
Think
we've
sort
of
you
know
on
one
hand
we're
going
ahead,
saying
that
the
five
criteria
are
met,
but
the
now
we're
starting
to
muddy
the
waters
with
you
know,
approving
some
and
in
making
some
strong
recommendations
about
mayoral
approval
and
all
that.
So
I
really
find
it
hard
to
accept
this
and
and
to
move
it
forward.
Element.
B
B
Trying
to
even
expand
it
by
saying
if
we
want
to
recommend
to
the
mayor
that
these
groups
that
this
group
has
discussed
and
want
to
recommend
where
people
are
coming
from
be
accepted
that
wasn't
even
in
the
five
questions,
so
that's
expanding.
That
I
was
trying
to
include
that.
The
only
thing
that
I'm
saying
is
they
want
to
be.
They
want
to
be
a
task
force
to
select
that
group
and
I'm
saying
that
not
what
I
I
can
vote
for.
That's
all.
B
A
A
D
U
Q
You
just
briefly
the
idea
of
mentioning
different
community
groups
to
put
forward
possible
members
of
the
final
Citizens
Committee
that
was
to
give
a
independence
and
a
community
grassroots
bottom-up
character
to
the
group.
I'm,
not
sure
that
those
of
us
who
are
harping
on
independence,
one
of
which
was
me-
meant,
therefore,
that
there
shouldn't
be
somewhere
in
the
city
process
of
the
elected
officials,
a
filtering
of
people
put
forward
by
each
each
citizens
group.
Q
So
I,
don't
know
if
you,
if
you
get
get
the
combination
of
independence
being
people
suggested
by
citizens,
groups
that
are
relevant
to
the
issue
and
then
the
City
committees,
Human
Resources,
saying
well.
We
can't
have
all
25
of
these
people
we
have
to
have
you
know
what
I
mean
so
that
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
and
I
guess.
Q
I
I
myself
wasn't
involved
in
the
decision
that
there
should
be
a
subcommittee
of
our
group
that
would
choose
those
people
I'm,
not
sure
that,
if
that's
to
be
done
that
it
would
be
right
for
a
subcommittee
to
do
that.
Maybe
one
out
the
whole
group,
but
I
still
I
still
feel
that
it
should
be
not
from
us
but
from
those
community
groups.
Okay,.
E
There
Terrell
Youngman
speaking,
so
there
is
a
little
bit
of
a
misunderstanding
about
that
about
that
small
group.
Basically,
the
work
is
it
really
done,
because
we
don't
have
a
specific
recommendation
to
come
forth
and
say
this
is
the
process,
but
we
really
thought
long
and
hard
about
it
being
an
independent
process,
and
so
those
those
groups
of
organizations
that
are
mentioned
are
a
representative
of
some
of
the
organizations
that
would
have
people
who
could
represent
Evanston.
E
So
this
little
group
of
eight
were
just
like
wanting
to
finish
creating
a
process
by
which
to
create
this
working
group
so
that
it
would
be
it
would
be.
It
would
be
coming
from
an
application
process
where
there
would
be
a
lot
of
representation
and
in
questions
to
consider
in
terms
of
who
should
be
on
it,
so
that
you
end
up
with
a
working
group
that
is
representative
that
that
that
has
expertise
on
it.
That
has
a
lot
of
vested
interest
in
it
and
that
that
group
could
actually
work.
E
B
V
Okay,
thank
you
guys
very
much
and
I
want
to
give
my
personal
thank
you
for
allowing
us
to
be
a
part
of
this
huge
undertaking
in
and
try
to
shape,
what's
going
on
next
in
our
city
with
our
community
and
our
police
partnership,
because
that's
truly
what
it
has
to
be
in
order
for
it
to
work.
The
way
that
we
wanted
to.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
R
I
just
want
to
say
that
this
process
is
not
a
challenge
to
the
work
of
the
Human
Services
Committee
City
Council,
any
current
complaint
process
police
complaint
process.
It
is
absolutely
not
a
challenge
to
your
work
into
your
service
to
this
community.
All
we've
tried
to
do
throughout
this
process
is
again
create
a
working
group
where
we
can
go
on
and
evaluate
our
current
citizens.
Police
complaint
review
process,
I
believe
part
of
the
issue
and,
while
there's
so
much
pushback
is
folks
feel
like
it's
a
challenge
to
work.
R
That
has
been
that's
been
done
and
that's
not
the
case.
What
I
would
ask
is
at
least
can
you
again
in
order
to
keep
the
independency
of
this
group.
Can
you
at
least
recommend
these
names
to
the
next
mayor,
thereby
he
can
see
if
there's
any
conflict
of
interest
with
the
names
that
were
came
out
of
this
independent
group.
Because
again,
this
group
was
not
ever
meant
to
select
the
members
of
the
working
group.
R
As
far
as
nominate
folks,
all
we
wanted
to
do
is
we
understood
this
was
going
to
be
a
lot
of
work
to
reach
out
to
all
those
groups
to
make
sure
that
every
voice
was
represented
as
far
as
the
seniors
in
the
health
community
in
the
homeless
community
in
the
after
Marikina
Latino
community,
in
all
these
different
communities
that
we
actually
group
to
nominate
certain
members,
we
couldn't
nominate
ourselves.
We
just
said:
hey
look.
We
all
know
everybody.
R
That's
come
to
these
meetings,
selects
people
who
you
believe
could
carry
on
this
work,
not
select
anybody,
but
just
carry
on
the
work
of
managing
this
process.
I
would
just
ask
again,
just
in
closing
that
that
you
at
least
again
pass
those
names
on
in
the
mayor.
The
next
mayor
can
decide
for
himself
if
he
wants
to
give
this
group
some
some
power
to
again
just
manage
this
process
moving
forward.
Thank.
A
C
A
C
A
V
B
A
B
B
C
C
C
A
G
G
C
B
C
C
B
B
C
A
G
D
G
C
G
A
A
So,
with
regard
to
hh6
community,
that
proposal
says
in
working
group
all
those
in
favor
to
recommend
to
council,
with
the
striking
of
number
five
and
revision
in
number
of
participants
in
item
six.
Please
indicate
by
saying
aye
aye
those
opposed
and
say
no,
no.
You
can
count
me
as
an
I.
It's
just
okay
lowered
the
motion.
The
recommendation
will
go
to
council
with
the
amendments.
N
Ask
Kimberly
Richardson
and
the
Betty
chief
of
Barnes
to
come
up
just
for
a
moment.
This
was
a
even
by
evanston
standards.
A
difficult
process
and
I
want
to
thank
publicly
both
both
of
these
fine
individuals
for
the
work
that
they
have
done.
I
think
I
gave
them
an
impossible
task
and
they
still
figured
it
out,
but
I
also
want
to
recognize
Matt
and
what's
Matt's,
last
name
Matt
Walsh.
So
if
you
recall
I
guess
a
couple
of
months
ago
now
there
was
discussion
about
a
moderator,
a
facilitator.
N
We
got
various
suggestions
from
various
people,
I
called
Eric,
Witherspoon
and
I
said
dr.
Witherspoon.
Is
there
someone
on
the
high
school
staff
who's,
not
a
part
of
any
of
this,
but
is
a
good
facilitator
and
he
did
not
hesitate
to
identify
mr.
Walsh
to
do
this.
Mr.
Walsh,
we
had
him
come
in.
He
was
a
Evanston
resident.
N
His
family
here
has
taught
at
the
high
school
for
a
number
of
years,
but
was
not
part
of
any
of
them
and
he
was
willing
to
take
this
on
so
I
want
to
publicly
thank
him
for
doing
this.
We
offered
him
at
the
end
of
the
process,
perhaps
a
stipend
or
a
gift
card,
to
thank
him
for
his
service.
He
wanted
none
of
that,
but
what
he
wanted
was
beach
passes,
so
we
have
provided
mr.
N
M
M
M
Moving
to
topic
number
seven,
the
dashboard
is
still
pending.
Some
of
the
descriptions
under
that
in
an
effort
to
transparency
will
include
the
number
of
contact
cards.
The
number
of
traffic
stops
the
number
and
type
of
use
of
force
incident
and
the
number
of
citizen,
complaints
and
commendations
item
number
10
reformatting
the
presentation
of
the
monthly
crime
statistics
data.
M
Currently
we
are
auditing
our
tough
numbers
due
to
a
change
in
the
Illinois
reporting
standards
for
identity
theft.
As
of
January
2017
identity
theft
was
made
a
part
one
crime,
so
we
are
reviewing
our
data
to
become
in
compliance
with
that
item
number
14.
We
have
discussed
the
development
of
issues
for
a
proposed
citizen
complaint
working
group
item
number
15,
independent
investigator
for
Human
Services
Committee
chief
Eddington
has
submitted
an
RSP
for
investigative
services
which
is
included
in
this
month's
HSE
packet.
M
Item
number
23:
the
use
of
force
policy,
adoption
of
the
national
consensus
policy
on
the
use
of
force
through
incorporation
in
general
orders.
The
revised
general
order
will
include
department
policies
on
de-escalation
that
policy
was
written,
approved
and
completed,
and
it
is
pending
staff
dissemination
using
lexical
implementation
in
Lexi
poll.
M
That's
also
pending
the
Lexi
pol
implementation
item,
26
equity
and
empowerment,
coordinator,
inclusion
of
the
city,
equity
and
empowerment
coordinator
in
the
weekly
review
of
the
use
of
force,
incidents
by
the
city
manager
and
Corporation
Council,
and
as
an
ex
officio
member
of
the
citizen
police
survivors
advisory
committee.
That
has
been
completed
unless
anyone
has
any
questions
or
additional
topics.
They'd
like
to
have
me
review.
That
concludes
my
report.
U
U
It
will
be
important
that
you
hear
from
DC
parrot
and
Commander
Dugan
tonight
on
two
topics
that
impact
on
this
is
our
D
decks
and
deployment
strategies
that
will
be
significant
to
this
evening's
conversation
in
one
of
the
issues
that
I
want
to
bring
up
is
context
is
extremely
important.
The
UNC
study,
which
gave
rise
to
all
of
intendant's
question,
was
a
complex
multi-state
study
and
I.
U
Think
that
when
you
take
a
single
data
point,
it
can
be
misinterpreted
or
projected
in
such
a
way
that
it
does
not
convey
the
full
picture
and
I
think
that
was
one
of
the
significant
issues
in
the
UNC
study
and
I
want
to
talk
to
this
in
it's
important
that
we
understand
the
complexity
of
traffic
stop
data.
This
is
not
my
first
go-around
with
traffic
stop
data.
U
The
next
couple
minutes
are
not
going
to
go
well
for
you.
On
the
other
hand-
and
this
is
one
of
those
rare
occasions
when
you'll
hear
these
words
Illinois-
has
this
right-
they
understood
what
they
wanted
to
measure
and
focused
on
consent,
searches
and
so
now
versus
the
UNC
study.
It
muddies
the
water
to
borrow
a
phrase
from
earlier
that
it
it
you're
mixing
apples
and
oranges.
U
You,
the
consent,
search,
really
focuses
on
an
officer's
applied
discretion
versus
a
search
post,
arrest
incident
is
mandated,
and
so,
when
you
mix
those
two
together,
it
can
become
a
confusing
data.
Point
I
think
that
further
as
you
look
at
this
volume
of
data,
it's
critical
that
you
look
at
some
other
pieces
that
were
in
your
package,
I.
Think,
first
of
all,
the
report
of
the
2015
traffic
stop
report
from
the
state
of
Illinois
is
a
critical
piece
of
information
that
you
need
to
be
aware
of,
and
come
to
grips
with.
U
It
is
is
a
significant
guideposts
and
what
we've
done
this
evening
to
further
that
context,
is
we
have
selected
several
communities
in
the
state
of
Illinois
that
we
are
suggesting
you
look
at
and
compare
our
data
to
and
once
again
we're
collecting
data
by
the
same
rules
once
again,
I
have
no
clue
what
the
rules
are
in
North
Carolina
for
collecting
data
I
know
the
other
jurisdictions
that
are
included
in
this
evenings.
Slideshow
follow
the
same
rules
that
that
we
do,
and
so
I
think
that
gives
some
some
further
context
we're
talking
about.
U
Additionally,
in
that
Illinois
traffic
stop
study,
one
percent
statewide
of
all
traffic
stops
in
the
consent
search
in
the
city
of
Evanston.
Only
a
third
of
a
percent
of
stops
result
in
a
consent
search
in
Illinois.
Forty-Four
percent
of
the
white
drivers
are
ticketed
after
the
staff.
51
percent
of
minorities
are
ticketed
statewide,
as
opposed
to
that
in
Evanston.
U
U
The
last
thing
a
couple
more
points
before
we
start
the
slides.
This
is
going
to
be
one
of
those
uncomfortable,
courageous
conversations
that
everybody
talks
about,
but
nobody
ever
has
the
concept
that
somehow
this
American
concept
that
everything
is
passed
out
on
an
equal
basis,
at
least
in
my
line
of
work,
just
ain't.
So
if
we
look
at
the
crimes
against
persons
in
in
the
city
of
Evanston,
in
2016,
56%
of
the
victims
were
African.
Americans
61
of
the
described
subjects
were
described
as
African
Americans
in
2015.
U
54%
of
the
victims
were
African
Americans
and
59
percent
of
the
subjects
were
African
Americans
I
bring
those
difficult
statistics
up.
Only
in
the
context
of
traffic
law
enforcement
is
law
enforcement.
We
are
engaged
in
a
violence
reduction
program
that
focuses
on
these
events
that
we
are
attempting
to
prevent
by
driving
down
the
number
of
victims.
U
With
that
what
we
will
start
and
begin
to
go
through
this
slideshow.
This
is
going
to
be
long.
We
can
get,
we
can
attempt
to
get
through
the
whole
thing.
One
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
suggest
to
you
is
based
on
the
complexity
of
the
data.
You
may
need
to
review
it,
especially
with
the
multiple
documents
that
you've
received
this
evening.
The
the
d/dx
summary
is
important.
The
entire
DDX
report
is
important
and
also
the
2015
traffic.
Stop
study
for
the
state
of
Illinois,
prepared
by
dr.
Alex
Wyse
is
of
significance.
U
Also
I'd
like
to
mention
that
dr.
Weiss
has
been
with
the
working
on
this
traffic
data
since
its
inception
in
2004,
he's
an
oven,
stone,
e'en
and
takes
these
things
extremely
seriously
and
as
a
nationally
recognized
expert,
so
I
would
give
that
report
some
weight.
It
is
significant
interpreting
this
extremely
complex
traffic
data.
Subject
with
that,
are
there
any
questions
that
I
can
feel
before
we
start
the
review
of
this
data
o.
C
U
C
Is
everyone
if
everyone
in
the
community
has
had
an
opportunity
to
look
at
the
130
pages?
The
only
statement
that
I
want
to
make
is
it's
unfortunate
that
so
many
members
of
this
collective
group
have
left
to
miss
this,
and
so
for
those
that
are
members
that
are
here.
This
is
this
is
where
the
work
begins.
In
half
your
group
just
walked
out
the
door.
C
A
C
A
U
A
Yeah
and
I
think
that's
that's
a
possibility,
because
effect
is
that
it's
a
lot
of
information
that
will
take
a
long
time
to
digest
and
to
apply
to
our
circumstances
and
I.
Think
if
you
just
go
to
Africa
days
and
when
there
are
questions,
we
can
ask
questions
and
just
keep
the
ball
rolling
that
way.
I
think
we
can
get
through
most
of
it.
Okay,.
U
And
this
has
all
been
based
on
the
regice
ssin
that
the
slideshow
will
work.
Okay,.
A
And
what
we're
waiting
I
would
like
to
say.
Thank
you
for
this
presentation.
The
amount
of
information,
the
depth
of
information
that
you
collected
is
truly
outstanding
and
there
was
a
lot
of
work,
but
I
think
it's
like
I,
said
I
think
it
will
be
a
good
reference
guide
to
a
lot
of
questions
we
have
about
neighborhood
and
other.
A
You
know
the
way
we
conduct
police
business
in
this
town,
comparing
it
to
other
communities
of
similar
nature
and,
like
you
said
this
is
the
way
we
do
business
in
Illinois
in
this
way
tricky
business
in
Evanston,
and
you
know
that
is
a
combination
of
both
of
your
policies
and
in
what
get
council
agrees,
and
you
know
how
we
work
with
you
as
well.
So
thank
you
for
all
this
information.
Thank.
U
You
alderman
and
would
like
to
good
reinf,
assess
the
contributions
to
Sarah,
Jones
and
Pandora
Pratt
in
assembling
this
information,
because
this
this
was
a
custom
report.
This
is
not
the
way
we
usually
measure
data,
but
I
think
it
is
quite
instructive
as
we
work
through
this.
So
one
of
the
first
questions
was
of
the
number
of
staff
each
year
were
up
about
a
thousand
stops
between
15
and
16.
U
Go
ahead,
Joe,
here's
a
breakdown
of
whom,
by
races,
getting
stopped
in
the
city
of
Evanston,
fragile
and
again
for
the
difference
between
2015
and
2016
is
invisible
of
those
that's
how
many
were
for
safety
violations
and
going
to
the
next
light
and
we'll
see
how
that's
broken
down
once
again.
The
primary
reason
for
our
stops
are
moving
violations
that
those
traffic
violations
and
only
a
small
percentage,
are
what
we
label
as
investigatory
stops,
and
it's
again
reflected
pretty
much
the
same
percentages
in
between
15
and
16
for
each
category
of
stop.
U
How
many
resulted
in
driver
passengers
or
the
vehicle
they
were
reading
and
being
searched.
Here's
the
search
data
there
were
777,
total
searches
in
15
and
2
and
938
in
64.
It's
category
of
stop
how
many
times
was
a
driver,
a
white,
black
or
brown,
and
here
here's
a
breakdown
of
those
divisions
and
please
go
on
to
16
Joe.
Thank
you.
Those
remain
relatively
consistent
over
time.
U
Equipment
violations
is
also
a
topic
that
comes
up
quite
often,
and
you
will
see
that
our
equipment
violations
are
relatively
steady
from
year
to
year
same
thing
with
registration
violations.
Both
of
those
areas
of
violations
are
there's
always
a
concern
that
they
will
fall
more
on
people
below
the
poverty
line
and
above
it,
and
so
that's
one
reason
why
those
are
reviewed.
U
Investigatory
stops
is
a
reflection
of
our
crime
suppression
efforts,
especially
in
the
area
of
violent
crime
against
persons
for
research.
How
many
times
of
the
driver?
Passenger
white
black
around
here's,
that
breakdown
over
both
those
years
and
those
once
again
in
the
context
of
the
efforts
were
engaging
in
the
suppression
of
violent
crime,
plays
a
part
in
how
the
search
data
comes
out
by
consent,
searches
and
well.
U
U
Want
to
indicate
the
positive
steps
have
been
taken
over
the
years.
Go
to
the
next
slide,
Joe
one
of
the
things
that
has
really
changed.
The
dynamics
of
consent,
searches
in
the
city
of
Evanston
is
mirta's
dolls
agreement
with
the
ACLU
back
in
2008
or
9
regarding
what
how
we
would
define
a
consent
search
or
what
the
ground
rules
for
in
Evanston
police
officer
asking
for
a
consent
search
now
it
is
legal
in
the
United
States
and
in
the
state
of
Illinois.
If
I
stop
your
car
for
any
reason,
I
can
ask
you.
U
Do
you
mind
if
I
look
in
your
car?
Ok
once
again
a
many
concerns
on
that
is
as
a
course
of
situation.
How
course,
if
is
a
situation,
people
not
being
aware
that
they
can
have
the
right
to
refuse,
makes
that
a
very
nebulous
area
for
police
work
or
early
on
in
her
tenure
merit
is
dole
received
the
concerns
of
the
ACLU
and
in
her
of
conversations
with
the
ACLU,
the
standard
was
established
for
the
Evanston
Police
Department
that
we
only
asked
for
a
consent,
search
based
on
reasonable
articulable
suspicion.
U
We
have
to
be
able
to
say
why
we
want
to
look
in
the
car.
The
officer
has
to
be
to
explain
it
to
his
supervisors
of
why
this
search
was
justified
under
that
standard,
and
so
I
think
that
is
a
huge
difference
than
many
Illinois
police
departments.
I.
Think
especially
if
you
look
at
the
other
agencies,
we've
collected
data
from
that
that
you
will
see
that
were
I.
Think
there's
only
three
that
are
even
close
to
where
we're
at
most
of
them
are
many
in
the
hundreds
exceeding
what
we're
doing.
U
U
Additionally,
the
in-car
video
review
processes
of
significance
of
the
supervisors
are
mandated
to
review
for
traffic
stops
per
officer
per
month.
This
is
a
random
selection
of
stops,
and
so
it's
not
only
a
complaint
basis
that
were
evaluating
our
work.
It
comes
from
the
supervisors
reviewing
what
the
individuals
officers
doing,
regardless
of
whether
there's
been
a
citizen
complaint
or
not,
and
also
I.
U
U
What
is
the
mean?
Number
of
traffic
stats
for
the
city
of
Evanston,
the
mean
number
in
2015
was
1502
and
the
mean
number
in
2016
was
1649,
which
beats
of
precincts
had
more
than
the
mean
number
of
stats
in
2015
and
2016
in
15.
These
four
beats
exceeded
the
number
of
stops
and
also
in
for
those
wanting
to
look
online
or
view
at
home.
U
Here's
a
breakdown
of
this
moving
violations,
equipment,
violation,
registration,
investigative
stops
and
crashes,
and
that's
broken
down
by
the
beach
71
through
78
next
slide,
you'll
reason
for
stoplight
police
beat
is
again
depicted
in
this
bar
Graham
bard
chart
and
so
once
again,
moving
violations
are
the
most
significant
reason
that
you
are
being
stopped
by
the
police
for
each
precinct
or
beat.
Where
were
the
number
of
stops
in
excess
of
the
mean?
Is
there
evidence
that
the
crime
rate
and
neighborhood
fell
from
the
prior
year?
U
U
U
Here's
the
data
that
we
believe
answers
those
questions
and,
while
you're
digesting
that,
let
me
speak
to
the
last
part
of
that
question
regarding
the
ability
to
obtain
warrants
for
our
residents.
There's
a
significant
body
of
case
law
in
the
United
States
that
carves
out
significant
exceptions
for
a
search
of
Motor
Vehicles
based
on
their
mobility.
The
courts
realized
that
once
we
released
the
car,
if
there's
any
evidence
in
there,
it's
most
likely
lost
forever.
U
Additionally,
that
translates
into
the
terms
of
a
lower
expectation
of
privacy
in
your
vehicle
versus
your
home
because
of
the
mobility
of
the
vehicle.
Consequently,
we're
able
to
search
vehicles
with
a
much
lower
level
threshold
of
but
the
information
we
need
to
search.
Additionally,
you
because
we
see
someone
out
and
about
with
a
firearm,
or
we
see
someone
on
social
media
displaying
a
firearm.
The
courts
are
somewhat
reluctant
to
provide
warrants
just
on
that
small
piece
of
information,
especially
for
the
search
of
a
home,
and
so
we
a
long
story
short.
U
D
U
Q
U
U
Go
back
the
next
slide.
You
may
think
this
is
a
summary
that
will
be
somewhat
instructive
in
compiling
all
that
data.
Also,
as
you
look
through
this
online
there's
indexes
that
you
can
go
back
to
if
you
prefer
this
information
in
the
chart
rather
or
in
a
a
table
rather
than
a
chart
or
graph
there,
that
information,
the
raw
data
is
there
in
that
format.
If
you'd
like.
U
Is
the
data
available
showing
crimes
from
the
communities
that
studied
post
lower,
stop
ratios
in
the
city
of
Evanston?
This
is
significant
in
the
police.
Take
a
look
at
the
communities
we've
selected.
Please
take
a
look
at
their
information
because
it
I
think
this
comparison
is
significant
to
evaluating
our
efforts
in
the
city
of
Evanston.
This
talks
about
consent,
searches
and
they
said
earlier
that
this
is
a
direct
quote
from
the
traffic.
The
2015
traffic
staff
report
is
that,
once
again,
all
searches
aren't
created
equal
consent.
U
It
shows
that
in
2015,
consent
stops
were
up
substantially
in
Illinois
that
once
again
is
not
the
case
in
the
city
of
Evanston.
This
paragraph
is
of
import
this
evening
that
we're
looking
at
now.
In
fact,
in
2015,
only
36
agencies
about
4%
of
the
participating
Illinois
agencies
performed
100
or
more
vehicle
consent,
searches,
interesting.
These
36
agencies
accounted
for
53%
of
all
the
vehicle
consent,
searches
conducted
in
the
state
agencies.
U
We
included
consent,
search
data
for
all
agencies,
and
readers
should
take
great
care
and
drawing
conclusion
when
an
agency
has
fewer
than
50
consent
searches
per
year,
I
that
only
accepts
complete
data.
I
think
if
we
get
hold
on
for
second
gel.
One
of
the
things
I
would
ask
you
to
do
is
take
a
look
at
that
2015
document
and
look
at
the
agencies
that
are
those
agencies
that
are
engaged
in
53
percent
of
those
searches
by
their
policies.
They
have
decided
that
consent,
searches
are
appropriate
law
enforcement
tool
to
be
used
rather
broadly.
U
U
Think
as
you
go
through
this,
you
will
have
a
sense
of
whether
or
not
you
feel
the
data
is
comparable
in
once
again
we
break
down
the
consent
search
data
in
other
things,
because
once
again,
I
think,
as
the
traffic
stop
study
says,
that's
a
display
of
what
were
the
most
discretion
occurs,
keep
going
Jo
and
I.
Let
me
see:
do
we
know
communities
with
pulse
top
search
data
ratios
or
closer
to
the
national
average
and
reject
the
geo-mapping
methodology
that
evidences
in
Chicago,
using?
U
If
so,
do
we
know
what
impact
they
have
a
decision
and
their
crime
rates
over
time
we
list
the
crime
rates
and
then
Joe.
If
you
get
to
the
slide
where
we
talked
to
their
deployment
strategies
and
if
you
could
come
up
and
say
a
few
words
about
our
deployment,
because
our
deployment
system
I
think
is
significantly
more
robust
and
well
thought-out
and
focuses
on
specifics
rather
than
generalities,
commander
Dugan.
W
Good
evening,
members
of
human
services
committee,
my
name,
is
commander
Joe
Dugan.
Thank
you
for
having
me
up
to
speak
about
the
Evanston
Police
Department
deployment
process.
Each
week
we
have
a
deployment
meeting
where
the
command
staff
from
each
unit
and
shift
get
together
and
need
to
address
recent
crime
trends
in
an
intelligence
lead
and
data
driven
manner
in
order
to
effectively
deploy
resources
for
the
upcoming
week.
The
meetings
start
out
with
a
crime
analyst.
W
She
presents
maps
with
the
previous
week's
crime
that
happened,
shows
crime
patterns
and
highlights
of
the
major
incidents
shots
fired,
also,
incidents
such
as
traffic
accidents,
the
crime
arrows
also
talks
about
vetted
intelligence
that
came
in
through
the
previous
week.
This
intelligence
comes
in
through
crime
reports
through
calls
for
service
through
the
community.
We
get
a
lot
of
information
from
elected
officials,
text-a-tip
social
media,
other
police
agencies,
confidential
informants
all
that
type
of
stuff.
It's
all
provided
and
discuss
at
the
meeting.
Next,
each
shift
goes
through
what
they
did
for
the
previous
week.
W
They
talk
about
their
successes.
They
talk
about
some
of
the
challenges
that
they
had
and
they
also
talk
about
some
of
the
problems
they
try
to
address
that
might
need
to
keep
going
that
keep
working
at
for
the
previous
upcoming
week.
Based
on
all
that
information,
each
representative,
each
shift
decides
on
what
they're
going
to
do
for
the
upcoming
week
in
order
to
address
the
problems
in
the
crimes
or
pattern,
crimes
and
incidents
that
are
going
on
so
that
they
could
effectively
deploy
their
personnel
to
the
proper
areas.
W
This
whole
process
there's
part
of
the
deployment
process
where
they
do
that,
ensure
that
every
unit
every
shift
is
taking
ownership
for
the
crimes
and
that
are
going
on
in
the
quality
of
life
issues
in
the
city
and
in
their
respective
tour
duty.
All
of
the
crime
Maps,
the
intelligence
information
and
the
plan
for
the
upcoming
week
is
then
packaged
by
a
crime
analyst
and
put
out
the
heavy
sworn
officer
in
the
department,
and
it's
also
discussed
at
various
shifts
in
a
roll
calls.
W
This
ensures
that
each
officer
is
front-loaded,
with
current
relevant
and
vetted
intelligence
of
specific
individuals
that
are
involved
in
specific
crimes
here
in
the
city
of
Evanston,
ongoing
conflicts
and
other
quality
of
life
issues.
You
know
having
this
information
and
the
officers
toolkit
is
very
important
and
it
provides
a
good
foundation
of
information
on
these
specific
incidents
and
individuals
that
are
involved
in
you
know
ongoing
criminal
activity
that
officers
might
come
across
during
their
tour
of
duty,
whether
it's
on
a
call
or
even
an
AR
during
a
traffic
stop
or
some
other
type
of
investigation.
W
This
intelligence-led
information
also
helps
officers
prevent
future
crimes,
especially
when
it
comes
to
say
crimes
of
some
type
of
retaliation.
If
we
have
some
incident
where
one
side
of
a
conflict
is
either
battered
or
shot
at,
or
something
like
that,
you
know
the
officer
knows
when
they
get
there,
who
a
possible
offender
might
be,
and
also
where
some
retaliation
might
take
place.
We
could
provide
some
extra
patrols
in
that
area
and
possibly
stop
at
a
future
crime
from
occurring.
All
this
information
is
very
beneficial.
W
The
officers
that
have
it's
up-to-date,
it's
relevant
and
on
these
specific
individuals
and
their
criminal
activity,
we're
very
proud
of
our
successful,
intelligence-led
and
painted
ribbon
the
player
process
and
be
improving
for
the
quality
of
life
of
the
residents
that
it
brings.
We
try
to
showcase
as
much
as
we
can
order
tech
community
meetings.
X
Excuse
me:
we've
incorporated
that
into
our
deployment
process.
That's
supported.
It's
a
supported
program
by
the
National
Highway
Transportation
Safety
Administration,
the
Bureau
of
Justice
Assistance
and
the
National
Institute
of
Justice.
It's
also
endorsed
by
the
IACP,
the
International
Association
of
Chiefs
of
Police.
So
what
we
do
with
the
deployment
meeting
is
our
crime,
analyst
overlays
maps
of
traffic
crashes,
both
injury
and
non
injury
crashes
that
occur
on
the
roadway.
X
If
there's
an
overlay
and
also
reduce
traffic
crashes
each
week,
the
command
staff,
when
we,
when
we
meet
at
the
deployment
meeting
each
unit,
discusses
their
availability
to
address
the
different
accidents
that
occur
and
how
they
occur
by
beat,
and
also
by
shift
since
motor
vehicles
are
a
component
of
a
lot
of
criminal
offenses
that
include
burglary,
robbery,
shootings
and
fest.
The
the
use
of
selective
traffic
enforcement
in
those
areas,
as
they
overlay
for
crime
and
traffic
crashes,
can
reduce
criminal
offenses.
X
As
we
talked
about
earlier,
we
want
to
reduce
victimization
of
from
crime.
What
part
of
that
victimization
is
also
if
you
are
injured
in
a
traffic
crash,
their
victims,
also
because
those
crashes
can
be
prevented
and
the
best
way
to
prevent
those
is
through
traffic
enforcement.
Some
data
I'd
like
to
talk
about
through
the
d/dx
application.
The
vast
majority
of
traffic
stops
are
for
moving
violations
and
moving
violation.
Offenses
when
they're
stopped
by
the
police
have
a
direct
impact
of
reducing
accidents
that
that's
found
to
be
the
best
best
approach.
X
As
we
don't
write
everybody
tickets
that
we
stop,
we
do
address
the
violation
and
looking
at
traffic
stops,
there
was
a
notable
increase
from
2015
to
2016
in
regards
to
traffic
stops.
They
went
up
by
about
a
thousand
and
twelve
hundred,
there's
also
a
correlation
in
that
we
looked
at
roadway
accidents
that
occurred
from
2014
and
2015.
There
was
also
an
increase
in
traffic
crashes
that
occurred
on
the
roadway
too.
X
So
our
goal
is
to
minimize
and
we
have
had
looking
at
some
of
the
data,
not
only
motor
vehicle
crashes,
but
also
accidents
that
involve
more
vehicles
and
pedestrians
and
petty
cyclists
for
2015.
We
had
54
pedestrians
involved
in
accidents
and
79
petty
cyclists,
so
we're
trying
to
ensure
safety
throughout
the
Evanston
community,
not
only
with
criminal
offenses,
but
also
reducing
accidents
that
involve
pedestrians,
making
it
a
bike
friendly
City.
We
want
to
address,
obviously
reduce
accidents
that
are
involved,
bicyclists
and
motor
vehicles.
So
any
questions.
U
C
C
So,
while
he's
pulling
that
up,
I
just
want
to
go
back
to
your
opening
remarks
and
to
a
number
that
we
received
at
a
fifth
Ward
meeting
with
all
them
in
homes,
and
so
before
we
got
into
the
topic
of
stop
and
frisk.
There
was
a
very
detailed
presentation
that
I
think
identified,
maybe
and
I
could
be
making
this
number
up.
Ottoman
homes.
Keep
me
honest,
maybe
about
50
potential
gang
members
just
from
the
top
of
my
head.
Does
that
sound,
correct
or
maybe
I'll
go
back
to
the
chief.
U
C
And
so
is
we,
you
know,
go
through
this
data
I
keep
that
number
in
mind
that
if
we
were
do
a
sum
total
of
all
the
air-quote
bad
guys
who
have
the
potential
to
shoot
or
conduct
that
that's
my
working
number,
okay,
fair
enough,
so
I
want
to
start
it
number
70
page
number
17,
and
what
gets
a
little
bit
confusing
and
gray
to
me.
Maybe
go
back
yeah,
so
we
have
61,
61
or
60.
C
So
if
we
have
over
80,000
residents
what
percentage
of
those
residents
are
whites
and
then
look
at
the
same
percentage
versus
black,
but
the
one
thing
I
can
do
is
and
you've
added
that
up
in
previous
slide
is,
if
I
add
up
the
people
of
color,
so
the
blacks,
Asians
Hispanics.
We
get
a
much
closer
number
of
looking
at
2015
61
to
58,
so
you
add
up
the
people
of
color
and
you
get
50
879
verses,
79
versus
the
61
and
44
whites.
C
So
it's
right
about
give
or
take
simple
math
50%
and
the
reason
that
I
asked
that
or
the
reason
that
I
am
making.
That
comparison
is
because
myself,
looking
at
this
data,
I
still
can
support
the
perception.
That's
not
only
a
city
of
Evanston
and
what
we've
heard
nationwide
is
bit
over.
All
the
black
community
by
percentage
is
still
over
policed
versus
our
white
counterparts,
and
so,
if
I
look
at
walking
through
the
slides.
C
U
C
We
see
again
a
very
large
number,
the
numbers
now
flip-flop
and
out
of
that
control
group
you're,
showing
that
over
I
don't
know
three
to
four
times.
Blacks
are
now
being
searched
more
than
the
whites,
even
though
there
are
more
whites
that
are
being
pulled
over
and
I
guess
I'm
trying
to
understand.
C
Now
why
the
total
number
of
whites
again
you
get
a
larger
number,
but
then,
when
it
comes
to
the
searches
or
up
to
579,
with
that
being
the
top
number
and
then
in
your
last
slide
and
I,
think
this
is
where
the
youngly
were
to
see
where
you
were
going
with
it,
because
I
had
the
same
question
and
out
of
all
those
stops
here.
Only
and
I
don't
mean
only
by.
C
U
I
would
say
it's
not
confusion.
It's
concerned,
all
of
it.
Okay
and
I
appreciate
that
commuter
Dugan.
If
you
could
go
to
the
victim
and
suspects
like
please
I'd
appreciate
it.
One
of
the
things
that
is
part
of
this
difficult
conversation
is
that
when
we
say
we
want
to
do
this,
all
math
based
crime
is
not
distributed.
That
way.
Also,
when
we
talk
about
hit
rates
for
searches,
I'm,
not
sure
what
standard
we
want
to
use,
do
we
have
to
bet
300,
so
we
get
into
the
Hall
of
Fame.
U
And
so,
if
we're
going
to
suppress
crime
shouldn't,
we
be
dealing
with
the
people
involved
in
those
events,
they're
defined
as
criminal
and
so
I
think
that
until
the
democratics
of
victims
and
offenders,
changes
I,
don't
think
our
stop.
Data
or
search
rates
are
going
to
change
and,
and
frankly,
sir,
this
is
the
difficult
part
of
this
conversation.
C
I
know
and
I
trust
me,
I
appreciate
it
so
from
a
public
standpoint
for
those
of
us
who
are
black
and
have
black
children
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
I
have
to
challenge
this
data
because
I
look
at
the
larger
number,
and
so
when
I
look
at
five
thousand
stops
versus
fifty
gang
members.
That
still
seems
a
little
bit
high,
oh
and
I'm.
Sorry
I
didn't
so.
This
I
mean
how
we
got
here
right,
so
this
has
been
going
on
so
I'm.
This
is
a
great
conversation.
These
are
axial
members
to
look
at
it.
C
Within
this
last
year,
we've
had
two
three
very
highly
visible
stops
that
I
still
linked
in
or
outside
our
community
standards,
whether
it
was
Devon
Reed,
the
northwestern
student
that
was
pulled
over
and
the
young
lady
again
that
was
pulled
over
by
the
officers
or
consequently
they
were
disciplined.
So
those
are
those
of
concerns
that
I
have
there's
not
no
one
of
us
would
would
trade
a
shooting,
but
here
we
are
with
these
really
lopsided
numbers
that
I
just
have
to
state
my
concern
and
and.
U
The
internal
reviews
that
are
done,
the
the
reviewing
of
the
videotape,
all
those
are
checks
and
balances
by
us
on
us
and
so
I
think
that
we
welcome
the
scrutiny.
We
want
to
tell
you
in
the
public
what
we're
engaged
in
and
how
we're
going
about
doing
it.
And
yes
to
that,
we
have
we
made
mistakes
in
the
last
year.
Absolutely
to
think
that
we
can
do
this
error
free
is:
is
it's
not
possible?
It's
not
possible.
I!
U
Think
the
issue
is,
do
we
do
we
address
the
errors
when
they're
made
and
do
we
react
to
them
and
take
corrective
action?
I
think
that,
even
with
the
twenty
seven
point
plan
that
has
been
put
forward
by
the
city
manager
and
myself,
I
think
you
can
see
that
there's
an
attention
to
detail
in
those
issues
that
is
continuing
and
so
as
we
grapple
with
these
numbers,
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
I
would
like
to
do
is
step
back
and
talk
about
what
the
entire
city
is
doing
to
more
balance.
U
Those
numbers
success
in
school
cradle
to
career,
our
truancy,
ordinance
that
we
passed
a
number
of
years
ago.
We've
never
arrested
anybody
for
truancy,
we're
much
more
focused
on
getting
the
child
to
help
to
stay
in
school.
So
we're
looking
at
the
precursors
to
these
police
interactions
and
attempting
to
create
an
environment
citywide
that
maximizes
the
probability
of
success
for
young
people
and
minimizes
the
probability
of
their
interaction
with
the
criminal
justice
system.
B
That's
all
I'm,
saying
in
terms
of
overall
stops
is
that
if
that's
what
you're
trying
to
compare
it
with
and
I
think
one
of
the
things
that
the
chief
is
alluding
to
is
the
hard
conversation
that
we
all
have
to
have
in
terms
of
owning
our
own
parts
in
our
community
that
we're
you
know
what
crime
might
exist.
You
maybe
some
of
those
stops.
Maybe
the
same
person
over
and
over
again
I
mean
I'm,
not
saying
that,
but
I
would
imagine
that
that
would
be.
B
You
know,
listen
earlier
that
I
had
a
discussion
with
someone
and
I
thought.
That's
a
great
idea.
It
just
might
be
so
that
those
numbers
increase
I
know
that
I'm
reading
the
paper
somewhere
about
in
Illinois
there
I
think
it's
a
bill
that
they're
looking
at
in
terms
of
now
in
Chicago
I
believe
it
is
that
you
could
be
because
you
were
associated
with
a
gang
member
and
they're
trying
not
to
change
that
I
think
it
was
city
of
Chicago,
I'm,
not
sure,
but
I
know
I.
B
Just
read
that
I
think
sometime
over
the
weekend
or
late
last
week
that
because
in
people
in
live
in
different
neighborhoods
and
you
have
relatives,
you
have
people
who
have
had
issues,
and
so
you
may
be
in
the
company
of
someone
who
might
have
a
record
who
might
be
tagged
as
a
as
a
gang
member
or
a
drug
dealer,
and
that
you
would
be
picked
up
just
because
you're
associated
with
them
at
least
I.
Don't
think
we
have
that
in
our
community,
but
I
believe
that
is
in
the
city
of
Chicago.
Currently.
K
U
It
and
if
I
may,
mr.
chairman,
to
go
back
to
alban
Braithwaite
one
of
the
things
that
I
would
request
that
you
take
a
look
at
is
the
estimated
minority
driving
population
numbers
that
are
included
in
these
charts.
I.
Think
that
lends
itself
to
a
description
to
up
putting
the
traffic
stop
figures
a
more
in
line,
and
it
addresses
your
concern
because
I
think
that
one
of
the
things
that
happens
is
we
start
off
with
this
perception
of
census.
U
Data
in
the
census,
data
isn't
the
driving
population,
those
those
are
two
entirely
different
things
and
I,
and
so
I
think
that
if
you
look
at
that,
that's
articulated
in
the
traffic
stop
report,
and
it's
also
in
depicted
in
these
slides
and
so
that
number
changes
from
our
our
resident
population.
Our
senses,
our
estimated
minority
driving
population
is
an
entirely
different
number.
U
Chairman,
thank
you
so
much
for
your
time
and
attention
in
the
opportunity
to
walk
through
this
difficult
and
complex
topic.
Please,
members
of
the
diets,
my
staff
and
I
are
available
to
discuss
this
further
with
you.
I
realized.
This
was
an
avalanche
of
data
displayed
in
multiple
different
ways
and
I
believe,
just
as
the
continuing
conversation
is
about
Independent
Police
Review
will
continue.
I,
think
conversations
regarding
what
these
numbers
mean
and
how
to
interpret
them
will
continue
again.
I
appreciate
your
time
in
tension.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.