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People share their feelings as they pay their respects to the life of George Floyd outside his family’s memorial service in Minneapolis.

USA TODAY

Chivona Newsome remembers the lonely Black Lives Matter protests for Eric Garner in 2015 attended by only a dozen or so people. She spent five years pleading for lawmakers in New York to ban police chokeholds to no avail after the 43-year-old father of six was killed while being arrested for allegedly selling cigarettes. 

But weeks after George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, was killed by a white Minneapolis police officer on Memorial Day, Newsome was leading protests at Times Square with 25,000 people as other massive demonstrations erupted across the country. Lawmakers in New York and several other states and cities passed legislation to ban police chokeholds.

While the recent support feels good, Newsome is still waiting for more sweeping changes. 

“A whole lot more needs to be done in terms of investing in the (Black) community,” said Newsome, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Greater New York.  

Tuesday will mark three months since Floyd’s death, which sparked nationwide Black Lives Matter social justice protests that put pressure on city, state and federal officials to consider police reform and renew calls for racial equality. Many activists said the recent efforts by lawmakers — including plans to defund or disband police, empower civilian review boards, take down Confederate symbols, foster inclusion in the workplace and paint Black Lives Matter murals — show progress. But much more must be done to undo centuries of systemic racism, they argue.

Black Americans still face inequalities in housing, education, healthcare, food security and jobs, activists say. They argue addressing police brutality against Black people requires more than just banning chokeholds and making small budget cuts.  

Floyd’s death — which went viral after video surfaced of the officer kneeling on his neck for nearly nine minutes — magnified these issues as protesters of all races marched in the streets.

Demonstrators are now calling for reforms that would outlaw voter suppression, create jobs and close the wealth gap. They also want government officials to invest money into poor communities of color toward quality education systems, access to affordable housing and healthcare. 

“Politicians thought we would stop when they started talking about police reform,” Newsome said. “We truly believe that as much as we love to protest, as much as we love to fight, nothing happens to marginalized people unless there is legislation in place.”

Lawmakers have so far shied away from taking transformational steps to dismantle systemic racism. 

During the Democratic National Convention this week, the campaign for Joe Biden, the party’s presidential nominee, said little about the reforms protesters are demanding. Biden said he opposes cutting law enforcement resources and instead wants to allocate more funds to community policing. 

President Donald Trump has defended the police, while calling the Black Lives Matter movement a “symbol of hate” and suggested its protesters were “terrorists.” During the mostly peaceful protests, some people have looted stores and vandalized buildings and police cars.

Dana Fisher, a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland who studies protests, said lawmakers moved fast on proposing legislation this summer because the protests didn’t die down. But the changes, she said, aren’t aggressive enough and the nation needs action from federal leadership. 

“The problem is that what we are seeing is a patchwork response,” Fisher said. “And when you have a patchwork response, where you see varied responses from different municipalities, it’s very hard for that to do anything more than be a band-aid.”

Major reform is stalled 

Some lawmakers said the protests motivated them to move fast on police reform, but they are running into red tape. 

In June, the U.S. House passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which would end certain police practices, such as the use of no-knock warrants and chokeholds. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said the Republican-controlled chamber will not take up the legislation. 

McConnell has also resisted bringing the newly renamed John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, that looks to stop the racial discrimination of voters, up for a vote.

In Minneapolis, the City Council passed a resolution in June that promised to disband the city’s 152-year-old police department. The city would replace it with a Department of Public Safety and Violence Prevention that would have a law enforcement division.

But the proposal, which requires approval from voters, has been halted by the city’s charter commission, which extended its review by 90 days, meaning it won’t make the November ballot.   

Minneapolis Councilman Jeremiah Ellison said the council will now pursue the measure for 2021.

“We are committed earnestly to pursuing it,” Ellison said. “It might take years, but I think it’s worth it and I think we owe it to our constituents to make sure that residents like George Floyd aren’t murdered by our police department.”

Rashad Robinson, president of Color of Change, a New York-based civil rights advocacy group, said divesting and downsizing police and increasing funding for poor communities is key to ending systemic racism within law enforcement. 

“I think the movement has tremendous momentum right now and what we are seeing is us running up against entrenched power that would like to put band-aids on things so we go away,” Robinson said. “But the movement is very clear that we need structural change.”

In Seattle, the City Council approved a 1 percent cut, or just over $3 million, to its police department budget despite push back from police unions and Police Chief Carmen Best, who resigned following the vote. The budget reduction will eliminate as many 100 officers from the 1,433 on the force and cut salaries for the police chief and command staff.

Seattle Councilwoman Teresa Mosqueda wants to invest that money in affordable housing, childcare, food security and schools for marginalized Black and brown communities. Protesters have asked the city to defund police by 50 percent, she said. 

“We had to act with urgency,” Mosqueda said. “For decades we’ve been seeing Black men and women, people of color, dying on camera. We’ve been seeing month after month here in the city of Seattle and across the nation, excessive force used (by police).”

Lawmakers turn to civilian review boards

Some cities are empowering or reinstalling civilian review boards. 

Miami-Dade County officials will vote later this month on a plan to revive its independent civilian review board, which will investigate allegations of police brutality, misconduct and discrimination. The panel was eliminated during the 2009 Great Recession and proposals to reinstate it in 2016 and 2018 failed, Miami-Dade County Commissioner Barbara Jordan said.

Jordan said if Mayor Carlos Giménez supports it, the panel could be up and running by 2021.

“Without the community being home and seeing the effects of what happened to George Floyd, we would not have had the success that we have had even though we have had multiple setbacks,” Jordan said. “It’s because of what happened to George Floyd that the community is now demanding it, as well.”

The Atlanta City Council passed legislationto increase the Atlanta Citizen Review Board’s budget by $427,000; expand its membership to include young people ages 18-30; and mandate a third party to review disagreements between the board and the police department. 

“It was more than just the killings, I think that it was the community’s response to the killings,” the review’s board executive director Lee Reid said. “It’s just a collective ‘I can’t believe what’s happening,’ that everyone decided now is the time.”

Miski Noor, co-director of the Minneapolis-based Black Visions Collective, an organization that advocates equality for Black people, said many activists feel encouraged by all the conversations around police reform and Black Lives Matter across the nation. Noor said before Floyd’s death, it seemed only activists were talking about these issues.  

“All of these things are progress, they are moving us closer to the world that we deserve,” Noor said. “Whether it is the mural or the calls to defund the police all over the country that are helping to shift the narrative, I think all of these things are progress.”

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