Civilian oversight for Chicago police wins final approval after yearslong fight

Opponents say the oversight panel will make cops’ jobs harder and hurt recruiting

Mayor Lori Lightfoot

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

Terrence Antonio James

By John Byrne
Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — Chicago’s City Council approved a controversial civilian oversight panel Wednesday, giving the public more control over Chicago police following years of protests over law enforcement misconduct as well as stalled talks between Mayor Lori Lightfoot and grassroots activists who pushed competing proposals.

The 36-13 vote capped more than two years of anticipation over whether Lightfoot could finally say she delivered something she first promised to accomplish during her first 100 days in office.

Meanwhile, community activists supportive of the compromise can tout a victory in police accountability, calls for which grew louder after the Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd last year, as well as fatal shootings by Chicago police.

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th, who was aligned with activists during the negotiations and helped broker the final deal, said Wednesday prior to the vote that he wished the final version provided stronger oversight. But he also said grassroots organizers should be proud of it.

“This ordinance is predicated on the belief that when you empower our communities, that when you give them a real seat at the table and you give them a real voice, that we can make our policing system better and we can have a safer city in every single neighborhood, on every single street,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

And North Side Ald. Andre Vasquez, 40th, who joined other aldermen in last-minute negotiations with the Lightfoot administration on the deal, said police officers he’s spoken to know they need better oversight. “They don’t write the laws. That’s us here in this council,” Vasquez said.

But Northwest Side Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, said there’s enough Police Department oversight already.

“We don’t need police reform; we need family reform,” Sposato said. “Families need to take ownership and start watching over their children.” Sposato wore a CPD lapel pin, along with a grey “Defend the Police” T-shirt under his suit coat with a white American flag with a single blue line.

Sposato acknowledged he didn’t have the votes to stop the ordinance from passing: “You’re going to win, we’re going to lose. The Police Department’s going to lose. The city’s going to lose.”

The City Council session followed two hours of heated debate during a Tuesday evening Public Safety Committee meeting, which advanced a compromise ordinance by a 12-8 vote after last-minute wrangling.

The ordinance establishes a citizen panel to oversee Chicago police — but not with all the powers asked for by the grassroots organizers. For one, the oversight board would only have the ability to pass a non-binding no-confidence vote on the police superintendent. That concession was decided after activists dropped their demand for a commission that could fire the superintendent. That idea failed to gain sufficient aldermanic support.

Lightfoot also walked back her competing oversight proposal, giving the final body more authority to set Chicago police policies than she would have liked. But ultimately, the proposed ordinance retains the mayor’s ability to veto such decisions.

Despite some concessions by the mayor and activists, the head of the Chicago Police Department’s Fraternal Order of Police blasted the plan as “absolutely absurd and dangerous and reckless” and said it hands oversight to “the squeaky wheels who made this city into anarchy last summer.”

Far Northwest Side Ald. Anthony Napolitano, 41st, a former police officer, said accountability should be directed to “all our communities,” in light of 6,700 people shot in the city in the past 18 months.

Napolitano said the initiative “isn’t going to have people come out to talk to (police) any more.” Rather, it will make it harder for police to do their jobs, he said.

And it’s going to make it tougher to recruit new officers, he said.

“This new committee, this 12th layer of police oversight, is going to make every potential police officer think about going in another direction,” Napolitano said.

Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, 11th, said the city should let current police oversight bodies and new police training protocols take hold rather than creating another level of government.

“I don’t oppose reform. I just don’t think this ordinance is the way to handle it,” he said.

Speaking in favor of the ordinance, Ald. Jason Ervin, 28th, chair of the council Black Caucus, said the debate shows the different experiences with police in struggling Black neighborhoods compared to elsewhere in Chicago.

“Kids in my neighborhoods’ first interaction with police should not be on the hood of the car,” Ervin said. “It should be in a community setting. And we need proper people working, community involvement. Because sometimes we need to understand this, that the Police Department may not see it in that way. It is up to us as policy makers to let them know that, hey, this is where we need to move.”

North Side Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th, a co-sponsor, said it can help establish trust between Chicagoans and police because residents will have a hand in crafting policy.

“We, as a city, cannot have safety, true safety, in every neighborhood unless there is trust between citizens and police,” Osterman said.

Lightfoot made a case for the compromise plan before the vote Wednesday. She noted that she prosecuted both gang members and corrupt police officers as a federal prosecutor, and that she was head of former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s Office of Professional Standards, and former Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s police accountability task force that called for civilian oversight.

“This ordinance, should it pass, will not solve all problems. It will not make every challenge that we face on public safety and accountability go away,” she said. “There is much more work to be done.”

The process for staffing two tiers of proposed civilian panels created by the ordinance is complicated.

While elections would be held to name members to 22 district council across the city, those bodies would be largely advisory. A seven-member Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability would have slightly more power, and the mayor would retain a great deal of the authority to decide who gets to serve on that body.

At the outset, Lightfoot would get to select the members of an interim commission from among 14 nominees chosen by the City Council Rules Committee. The president of the commission would be paid $15,000 per year, and the other six members would get $12,000.

In 2023, elections would be held in each of the city’s 22 police districts, to name three-member councils in each district. Those panelists would get $500 per month.

Each district council would name a member to serve on a nominating committee, which would submit the names of nominees to the mayor to fill the seven-member Community Commission.

The mayor would be free to accept the nominees or reject them. The nominating committee would then keep submitting nominees until the mayor accepted enough people to serve on the commission.

So if Lightfoot or any subsequent mayor worried a nominee would operate as too much of a free agent on the commission, she could simply decline to name that person to the panel.

Once in place, the commission would be able to vote to remove the chief administrator of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability that investigates police shootings and reports of wrongdoing. If two-thirds of aldermen agreed, the chief administrator would be removed.

The commission would also be able to vote to remove the police superintendent, but the mayor could accept or reject that recommendation.

The commission could adopt new Police Department policies, but the mayor could veto those rules. A two-thirds vote of the 50-member City Council would be needed to override the mayoral policy veto.

The ordinance itself needed two-thirds majority, or 34 votes, to pass the 50-member council Wednesday rather than a simple majority, because it sets regular citywide elections to let voters pick members of district police oversight councils.

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