Berkeley Public Safety: Accountability, Community Input, and Life-protective Guardrails

Recent signers:
Daniel MARCUS and 13 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Dear Berkeley City Council members and Mayor Ishii,

This sign-on letter summarizes Berkeley resident concerns regarding recent actions of the Public Safety Policy Committee and the broader direction of public safety policy in Berkeley.

What Is Advancing Now:

The Public Safety Policy Committee has voted to advance proposals that would:

• Reduce local reporting and notification when pepper spray is used

• Reauthorize tear gas and smoke in limited circumstances

• Remove City Manager approval before requesting helicopter or canine support

Key Concerns:

1. No demonstrated necessity

• Pepper spray was used four times in 2025 and once the year before.

• No evidence has been presented showing that existing rules harmed public or officer safety.

2. Reversal of deliberate Council decisions

• In 2020, the City Council unanimously banned tear gas permanently after extensive public testimony and direct warnings from the police chief regarding officer safety.

• Those arguments were fully considered at the time.

3. Accountability reduced as force options expand

• The 2020 reforms paired limits on force with expanded reporting and transparency.

• Current proposals loosen both tools and oversight, upsetting that balance.

4. Removal of long-standing civilian checks

• City Manager approval for helicopters and canines has existed since 1982 as a civilian safeguard.

• No showing has been made that this system failed or caused harm.

5. Pattern, not isolated changes

Taken together — reduced reporting, reinstated chemical agents, and fewer approval requirements — these actions appear to weaken accountability incrementally without a data-based showing of improved safety.

Looking Ahead: Use-of-Force Policy:

Although not yet before the committee, residents are concerned that:

• The draft proposed to the Police Accountability Board would weaken post-2020 safeguards adopted to prevent foreseeable, high-risk encounters, including vehicle-related shootings and escalation failures.

• Recent rollbacks raise questions about whether the sanctity-of-life framework adopted after George Floyd will be preserved.

What Residents Are Demanding:

• Decisions grounded in evidence, not assumptions

• Preservation of life-protective guardrails adopted deliberately after 2020

• Meaningful collaboration with civilian oversight before proposals advance

• A pause before further rollbacks that could erode public trust

Respectfully submitted by concerned Berkeley residents

 

337

Recent signers:
Daniel MARCUS and 13 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Dear Berkeley City Council members and Mayor Ishii,

This sign-on letter summarizes Berkeley resident concerns regarding recent actions of the Public Safety Policy Committee and the broader direction of public safety policy in Berkeley.

What Is Advancing Now:

The Public Safety Policy Committee has voted to advance proposals that would:

• Reduce local reporting and notification when pepper spray is used

• Reauthorize tear gas and smoke in limited circumstances

• Remove City Manager approval before requesting helicopter or canine support

Key Concerns:

1. No demonstrated necessity

• Pepper spray was used four times in 2025 and once the year before.

• No evidence has been presented showing that existing rules harmed public or officer safety.

2. Reversal of deliberate Council decisions

• In 2020, the City Council unanimously banned tear gas permanently after extensive public testimony and direct warnings from the police chief regarding officer safety.

• Those arguments were fully considered at the time.

3. Accountability reduced as force options expand

• The 2020 reforms paired limits on force with expanded reporting and transparency.

• Current proposals loosen both tools and oversight, upsetting that balance.

4. Removal of long-standing civilian checks

• City Manager approval for helicopters and canines has existed since 1982 as a civilian safeguard.

• No showing has been made that this system failed or caused harm.

5. Pattern, not isolated changes

Taken together — reduced reporting, reinstated chemical agents, and fewer approval requirements — these actions appear to weaken accountability incrementally without a data-based showing of improved safety.

Looking Ahead: Use-of-Force Policy:

Although not yet before the committee, residents are concerned that:

• The draft proposed to the Police Accountability Board would weaken post-2020 safeguards adopted to prevent foreseeable, high-risk encounters, including vehicle-related shootings and escalation failures.

• Recent rollbacks raise questions about whether the sanctity-of-life framework adopted after George Floyd will be preserved.

What Residents Are Demanding:

• Decisions grounded in evidence, not assumptions

• Preservation of life-protective guardrails adopted deliberately after 2020

• Meaningful collaboration with civilian oversight before proposals advance

• A pause before further rollbacks that could erode public trust

Respectfully submitted by concerned Berkeley residents

 

The Decision Makers

Cecilia Lunaparra
Cecilia Lunaparra
Berkeley City Council - District 7
Responded
Thank you. I strongly oppose efforts to deregulate and militarize the Berkeley Police Department. Best, Cecilia Cecilia Lunaparra (she/they) Vice Mayor, City of Berkeley Councilmember, District 7 Note: The Change.org Civic Engagement Team reaches out to decision makers to let them know about petitions in their community and to help facilitate engagement with supporters. The above was an email response we received regarding this petition.
Berkeley City Council
6 Members
Rashi Kesarwani
Berkeley City Council - District 1
Brent Blackaby
Berkeley City Council - District 6
Mark Humbert
Berkeley City Council - District 8
Igor Tregub
Igor Tregub
Berkeley City Council - District 4

Supporter Voices

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