Monday, April 29, 2024

Austin again suspends its patrol partnership with DPS


Photo by Michael Minasi/KUT. The city restarted its partnership with state police to patrol Austin 10 days ago. Now, the city is halting it again.

Thursday, July 13, 2023 by Andrew Weber, KUT

Lee esta historia en español

- Advertisement -

The city of Austin says it won’t forge ahead with its partnership with the Texas Department of Public Safety to supplement police patrols.

The plan was initially rolled out this spring but was met with pushback from Austinites who felt they were being profiled. It was then suspended when troopers were deployed to the border. The city restarted state police patrols on July 2 but announced Wednesday that it would, again, suspend them.

The pause on patrols comes after an early morning shooting Monday, when a state trooper shot a man in the arm while he was fleeing his vehicle after a chase. The Department of Public Safety told KUT the Texas Rangers were investigating that incident.

- Advertisement -

The move also comes after a Southwest Austin man accused troopers of pointing a gun at him and his son earlier this week during a traffic stop.

In a statement released Wednesday morning, Mayor Kirk Watson said the partnership was a stopgap intended to supplement the Austin Police Department’s “acute staffing shortages” but that he and interim City Manager Jesús Garza agreed to suspend the patrols.

Watson later told KUT the patrols won’t come back.

- Advertisement -

“Let me be very clear, as I sit here right now, I don’t anticipate that we would renew the partnership,” he said.

In the first wave of patrols, the partnership came under fire after arrest numbers showed Black and Latino Austinites were being disproportionately arrested. That raised concerns among City Council members, who never voted on the plan and felt their constituents were being unfairly targeted in the Rundberg, Riverside and Montopolis neighborhoods.

Watson and city officials promised to “recalibrate” the patrols when they started back up this month, in order to avoid those disparities. After this week’s incidents, the mayor said he didn’t feel confident in the plan.

“When we have incidents like we’ve had in the last few days where questions get raised as a result of those, that you can’t defend, we’ve had to make a decision to end the partnership,” he said.

District 9 Council Member Zo Qadri welcomed the news of the partnership’s suspension, thanking Garza and Watson for “listening to the voices” of Austinites.

“This partnership was not who we are as a city, and I am thankful for it ending,” he tweeted.

Austin Justice Coalition Co-Executive Director Chas Moore, who has opposed the plan from the outset, told KUT that state patrols were out of step with the Austin Police Department’s policing philosophy. Austin police don’t arrest people for low-level marijuana possession, while the Department of Public Safety doesn’t have that same policy.

Moore said that while the Austin Police Department isn’t perfect by his estimation, it does have more transparency and local accountability.

“We have this police agency that’s coming in to help, but they’re not abiding by the local way that we’ve been doing things,” he said. “So it’s a … misunderstanding of proper procedure and protocol, because they quite literally are not on the same page. They literally are not in the same book.”

Looming over all this is the city’s fraught renegotiation of a long-term police contract with the Austin Police Association. The union railed on Twitter today against the announcement to end the policing partnership, calling it “unconscionable” and claiming that “public safety is not a priority” at City Hall.

Watson pushed back against that statement, arguing the city has tried to retain officers by approving a pay raise earlier this year and giving bonuses to tenured officers. He told KUT he hopes the union will come back to the table soon “instead of standing on the sideline and criticizing.”

“Throwing stones is not helping get us to a contract,” he said. “So, I invite them, again, to come back to the table.”

This story was produced as part of the Austin Monitor’s reporting partnership with KUT.

The Austin Monitor’s work is made possible by donations from the community. Though our reporting covers donors from time to time, we are careful to keep business and editorial efforts separate while maintaining transparency. A complete list of donors is available here, and our code of ethics is explained here.

You’re a community leader

And we’re honored you look to us for serious, in-depth news. You know a strong community needs local and dedicated watchdog reporting. We’re here for you and that won’t change. Now will you take the powerful next step and support our nonprofit news organization?

This article First appeared in austinmonitor

More articles

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Latest article