BHRC Meeting 2021-01-07 Beverly Human Rights Committee
Minutes - 2021 -01 -07
31:55 Caja Johnson:we're ready to get rolling. All right, so I'm gonna call the meeting to order.
roll call We are.
32:11 Leah Jones: here
32:13 Caja Johnson:Abu
32:15 Abu Toppin: here
32:17 Caja Johnson: Gabrielle
32:21 Gabrielle Montevecchi: here
32:23 Caja Johnson: chief
32:25 John LeLacheur. here
32:30 Caja Johnson: Paul Lindsay posts I don't see. Allison
32:42 Beverly Human Rights Committee: you
32:47 Caja Johnson:All right. We're getting anybody. I don't think so.
32:54 Beverly Human Rights Committee:All good when?
32:56 Caja Johnson:Yeah, you're here. Thank you. Good.
32:58 Beverly Human Rights Committee:You're welcome.
33:02 Caja Johnson:All right. So, um just taking a look at the agenda. if the Beverly bike
committee could go first that would be great. I just wanted to also say I'm just a couple things
that there are two open seats. um on the human rights committee. Just wanted to to say that
and say welcome to Mayor Cahill. It's good to see you here. Thank you for coming. And also
welcome Jonathan salt I can see that you're here. All right, so if you want to go ahead and start.
Jonathan were were all ears. Jonathan starts from The Beverly bike Committee in case quotes
didn't know.
33:57 Jonathan Salt. Okay. Yeah. Hello everyone. That's Johnson salt from The Beverly bike
committee Roger Woodbury is trying to get into the meeting. He's going to be presenting for the
Beverly bike committee. Are you seeing him?
34:07 Caja Johnson: Oh.
34:08 Jonathan Salt. Knocking on your door somewhere.
34:12 Beverly Human Rights Committee: I am I am not so it pops up if people are trying to get
admitted so I do not see him yet.
34:23 Leah Jones: I wonder if there are some folks
34:23 Jonathan Salt:Yeah, he
34:24 Leah Jones: trying to get in with the other link Casio. Is there do you think?
34:29 Jonathan Salt: Okay Rod Rogers Rogers saying to me
34:30 Leah Jones: They're friends. Send.
34:33 Jonathan Salt: now. It says I can join so he's he's close.
34:37 Caja Johnson: Okay. All right. It's good to actually see you.
34:45 Jonathan Salt: Hell, yeah, it's good to see you all.
34:47 Caja Johnson:We well we've talked several times and I haven't been able to to see
anyone, but I've never met you in person.
34:56 Jonathan Salt: Okay. Well, we've met over the phone cages. So I think I yeah, we're
good.
35:00 Caja Johnson:Yeah.
35:02 Jonathan Salt: but you know Roger Roger's going to be talking for the Beverly bike
committee today, but
35:07 Beverly Human Rights Committee: like
35:08 Jonathan Salt:While he's getting while you're trying to get him in the Beverly bike
committee's been around for about oh almost 10 years and doesn't awful lot about improving
the infrastructure for biking and Beverly. Reaches out to the community around biking safely in
Beverly. Tries to do events every year we've done things like the role and stroll where we shut
down Iowth up Street for a couple of summer days and let people ride walk wheel whatever it
takes on low trip Street up along the shore there. We do historic bike rides trying to get people
out in their bikes to see the history of Beverly. We've done events with the Boy Scouts around
that. We do Sunday rides on a monthly basis. We haven't done them this year, but we have
done them in the past where we get folks out to ride around Beverly. We're very much about
doing biking for everyone and doing it for not just in sort of like Elite bicyclists, but people just
want to Bicycle around Beverly and do it for recreation commuting whatever it's not about. being
in some big Bicycle Club and going off like you see folks on the Sunday and and like her and
going off into the countryside, but it's about getting out and enjoying bikes and Beverly and
really having a good time in Beverly on a bike and getting to work on a bike or going to the
shops and a bike or going down to the beach on a bike or whatever it is you want to do and
that's that's the the this the point of the Beverly bike committee. That's the the the focus we
take. So that's just us and a nutshell. as Roger come along in
36:56 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Now he has not yet. If you have a phone number for
him. I can give him a call and see if I can help him get in.
37:03 Jonathan Salt: yeah, I'm text.
37:03 Caja Johnson: Thank you.
37:04 Jonathan Salt: I'm texting him, but I'm not let me
37:06 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay. if you
37:08 Jonathan Salt: get his phone number.
37:09 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay.
37:11 Caja Johnson: Maybe maybe Jonathan you can put his phone number into the the chat to
Paul and then maybe Paul you can sort of connect with him and send him the link. But while
we're waiting just in just in the meantime, I just want it. Leah to say a couple things there has
been some recent events that have come up since the agenda was put out that I did want to just
reflect upon and talk about leer. If eat, that's okay with you if you're ready.
37:45 Jonathan Salt: So I'm going to go to Paul Lance ecos. Is that what you're saying Keisha?
37:49 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Paul Goodwin Paul Goodwin, please
37:51 Jonathan Salt: Paul Goodwin I'm looking
37:52 Beverly Human Rights Committee:Yeah.
37:52 Caja Johnson:Yeah. Yeah, there's two paws.
37:55 Jonathan Salt:Yeah, I'm looking for him on this.
37:58 Caja Johnson: Oh, he's actually comes up as Beverly human, right?
38:01 Paul Lanzikos: Beverly human rights
38:02 Jonathan Salt: Got him.
38:02 Caja Johnson:Yeah.
38:03 Jonathan Salt:All right. see if I can send him a not exactly.
38:08 Leah Jones: so please 1
38:08 Jonathan Salt: I'm not sure we had to get him the this phone number I owe I can I can
give it out Paul. It's it's 978. -590 -4503
38:27 Caja Johnson: Okay. Yeah, maybe he has the the link that they the Old Link and he's
trying to get in using that.
38:35 Jonathan Salt: Okay, I'll text him at the same time. Thanks.
38:40 Caja Johnson: Do should we wait? Or sorry Leah.
38:44 Leah Jones: you know, I'm comfortable with
38:44 Caja Johnson:What were you saying?
38:46 Leah Jones:whatever if you'd rather. We could do this first and then move to the bike
committee. I just don't want to interrupt them Midway or you know, if you'd like me to go ahead. I
just saw Sergeant Costa just joined to um
38:59 Caja Johnson: Nice nice.
39:02 Leah Jones: should I should I go ahead I don't this may lead in other discussion
39:03 Caja Johnson:Yeah.
39:05 Leah Jones: later in the meeting. But um, I just wanted to just first acknowledge that I
know a lot of people have been in different spaces throughout last night and today just
convening and having moments of silence and just kind of acknowledging some of the really
hard things that are happening that we saw on TV, but that unfortunately we know are and all of
our midst and they're something came up this week. Um, that was disheartening and then there
was some very heartening response already. So I wanted to just share both very quickly, but
over the over the past couple of years people have come to us with knowing that the chief is on
the committee and that others who were working to address these these core issues there.
There was some stickers put up by white supremacists. That's it's hard to talk about and I know
it can be triggering for some people. So I just wanted to Put it out there that that I know this is
hard for some people for all of us to talk about but um, there was some stickers put up around
Beverly, um and a concerned citizen took pictures of the stickers and sent them to our our
Facebook our human rights committee Facebook page and just wanted us to be aware of them.
And I hadn't it's it's a group called Patriot. I think Patriot Force I of us to talk about but um, there
was some stickers put up around Beverly, um and a concerned citizen took pictures of the
stickers and sent them to our our Facebook our human rights committee Facebook page and
just wanted us to be aware of them. And I hadn't it's it's a group called Patriot. I think Patriot
Force I hadn't heard of them. But he this this citizen this resident his name was there and
everything and shared it and said, I ripped them them to our our Facebook our human rights
committee Facebook page and just wanted us to be aware of them. And I hadn't it's it's a group
called Patriot. I think Patriot Force I hadn't heard of them. But he this this citizen this resident his
name was there and everything and shared it and said, I ripped them down and then he had
also gone to their website where they're somebody had boasted that they had done Outreach in
these following cities. So I mean whether they have somebody living around here or whether
they were passing through who knows and I just wanted to share that because it's not the first
time that something like that has happened and there's been stuff on stop signs and these are
kind of what I understand from and sergeant. Pasta is as biased incidents and I just I'll just
touch on maybe five points not really to this that that have come up in this group for discussion.
But one thing that was very
41:13 Jonathan Salt: you
41:14 Leah Jones: heartening was that this this resident took it upon himself and felt like it was
his problem to address and I think that's something that we've been talking about as a
committee that we really hope that the community sees these things as their problem not oh,
somebody else will see it and take care of it that people, you know, we hope that if somebody
writes something about a particular group on a stop sign that that the police get 30 calls not that
we want the line booked up for other things, but that they get that people respond. Like it's an
emergency if people are going to be hurt with words or um or this kind of hate that we respond
like it's like it's an emergency. Um, and it's making people feel unsafe. So the second very
heartening thing besides all of your wonderful and thoughtful responses on email. Was that
Sergeant Costa reached out and asked to talk and we just volleyed he like like a boo and
Keisha and others in this group want to meet with mayor Cahill, obviously mayor Cahill too and
just kind of talk more about what solutions could be but a couple things to just draw back to
previous meetings or that Sergeant Costa is the point person for the Civil Rights work that the
police have been designated to do over the past couple of years by by Governor Baker and so
he's I just really felt I wanted to just put Sergeant cost on the spot for a minute to say that I really
appreciated. I talked about this a little bit today the Longview that I felt like he was taking to
looking at okay, how do we code this as a bias incident? How do I share this information with
with the rest of the department so that they see these things as we've been talking about with
the chief like just keep this, you know, all of us are on this learning curve as these groups pop
up. But then also I loved Sergeant Costa had asked one of the things he wants to explore more
how to support the community like how if somebody's a personal victim of one of these things or
if the communities of victim of one of these things how do we support the groups that are feeling
threatened by these things? So that's just to share You know, I guess next steps would be how
do we you know in a boo maybe I can turn this to you or to, you know next and then we'd love to
hear from the chief and Sergeant Costa and the mayor but you had a couple ideas where we
might go in terms of action steps. But because this isn't the first time it would be really great if
we had some kind of protocol and maybe something we could do as a committee. To to maybe
we put out a statement with that protocol once it's established that a Community member who
may see something and not be sure if it's right could call it in and that we know that some of that
data could be turned back to the community just to say look the police are paying attention to
this. How can we Leverage The CAC meetings to just educate the community about what the
police are looking at and paying attention to because it does have that effective keeping people.
I hope feeling safer and just reaching out to communities to find out what people need but I think
Abu did you want to jump in you had some? really specific and great guidance, and and I'll turn
it over to anybody else on that on that list if you had any questions or Comments on that. So,
thank you.
44:42 Abu Toppin:Thanks, Leah. I yeah, I like all of you probably, you know, very disturbed by
by that
44:48 Jonathan Salt: you
44:49 Abu Toppin: information and and something that I have been talking with the mayor about
anyway and a couple of you about having. A group of group of us to address these types of
things these types of issues as they come up, um, you know in in my new role with the city, you
know, we're working with some Sergeant Costa and maybe another officer and a couple folks
from this from this committee that you know, we, you know have an opportunity to kind of form a
small working group. If you will that, you know, we are able to address these issues as they
arise or give our community an
45:32 Jonathan Salt: Okay.
45:34 Abu Toppin: opportunity to voice concerns and and direct when things like come up that
things like this come up that there's a place for them to go to express that and then there's a
group to follow up on on the issues that are presented to us where we can investigate, you
know, you know discuss research and then as you mentioned we have, you know, provide
feedback to the community about, you know, what's happening with that particular ISS. Or if it's
something that serious then that we you know are able to escalate it to you know, the proper
channels and as you know many resources in Massachusetts win, which we can do that. So,
you know, I briefly respondedly to Leah's email to say that you know, that's that's you know,
some of the things that I know I'm thinking about for us to do and in terms of next steps, you
know, I would talk to you know to Chief and Sergeant Costa and and and a few others offline to
really kind of shape this but I think that might be helpful for us to have and we can use you
know, the Beverly new revamped Beverly website as a place for people who can you know
submit, you know issues there to us or you know have a potentially have a dedicated email. Or
something to that effect, but you know we can we can shape this and kind of craft it the way we
see fit but I I think it would be beneficial for us to look in that direction to to do something. I did
also mention this to my my brother-in-law just so happens to be an FBI agent and I mentioned
this to him and just in a regular conversation, but I he asked me how things were going and I
brought this up and he was quite aware of this particular group and he brought it up to his
supervisor who was very interested in and having conversation with us about the about the
group.
47:32 Neil Levine: you
47:33 Abu Toppin: So again to take this offline, you know, there's something I want to talk with
Chief and and Sergeant Casa about but they are they are aware of this group. It's he indicated
to me that there is has been and continues to be a serious uptick in white supremacist group
activity. And this is one of the the newer groups, but but they've been active they are recruiting
and they are on
47:59 Neil Levine: you
48:00 Abu Toppin:their radar. So, you know, we do have another pipeline into and so this
another resource to help us address this issue.
48:10 Leah Jones:what can I just add one more thing to what you just said about you touched
on you touched on this and um one of the other things about at the last the the task force
meeting was data, and I wondered if there was something of I think maybe Sergeant Costa can
speak to this but
48:28 Neil Levine: you
48:28 Leah Jones: I feel like there is now attention paid to a code for hate crimes and then a
code to bias incidents, which I guess don't involve a crime to a specific or it involves a it doesn't
necessarily involve another crime to make it a hate crime, but maybe Sergeant Kosta could
speak to that and I just wanted to add that Rabbi Allison isn't here but she's long encouraged us
to report also to the ADL. So as part of any protocol maybe we could consider the different
levels of like data responding to the community like the supporting
49:03 Abu Toppin:you
49:03 Leah Jones: victims, you know Community Education police education just to like
awareness of what this stuff is and staying on top of it and then how we can educate use our
platform to educate community members about what they can do. But Abu that's so so great. I
didn't mean to jump back in but do you do you think Sergeant Kosta could jump in while he's
here and maybe speak to this a little bit too?
49:29 Caja Johnson:Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely.
49:34 Leah Jones: I think there's a
49:35 Dave Costa:Yeah, I'm here.
49:36 Leah Jones: oh.
49:37 Dave Costa: Sorry. So so yeah, so I honestly I was not aware of this group. Until until you
made me aware. which I'm kind of You know, it's one of those things. We don't see this very
often the groups around here per se so it's it's kind of interesting to see that but I kind of went
Looking a little bit on where these pictures were posted and they're all over the place. I mean
they posted everywhere Massachusetts Hamilton Salem North Reading. I mean everywhere in
in Massachusetts in around the country. So I mean they're You know, we don't know if it's if
they're really active here. If it's just one person who jumped on their website and is inspired by
them. I don't know but I'm really kind of looking. forward into connecting with the FBI because
that would give us a certainly a more knowledgeable. Connection to some of the stuff and and
things that we can kind of be how we can keep track of things and how we can be a more aware
of it and how we can respond. as far as the the data Yeah, the idea was I originally put a hate
crime code in our computer. But when we talked about it, you know hate crime is very specific. It
has to be a crime and then that has to you have to have that hate element to it. and to be a little
bit to try to Catch a few more incidents or more data. The idea was to say okay. Let's talk about
just maybe do a code for biased incidents so that you know a few thing few more things kind of
pop up on our radar and it's not just specific to to crimes so I don't know. Did I was there
another question?What was I that I cover everything?
51:36 Leah Jones: I guess just one of the thing you had mentioned Sergeant Costa was working
with how to take this information both for this specific thing. And because we've seen even just
from the news this week that little things that seem like all those are just a bunch of jerks. It
really becomes something so much bigger when small things over and over add up and so you
would talked about how to how to kind of like share these incidents with the other members of
your team or others on the
52:05 Dave Costa:Yeah, that's that's right.
52:06 Leah Jones: comment.
52:07 Dave Costa:We kind of talked about the support part of it the community support part of
it. And you know, I think that's kind of something. I'd like to sit down with with Cajun Abu and
maybe a smaller group for now just to kind of figure out what You know what?We want the
protocol to be. I mean, it's it's a again when I when
52:25 Jonathan Salt: you
52:26 Dave Costa: I kind of look at this I look at it from the aspect of how we've done other
things like, you know, how we support mental health people with mental mental illness and
mental health incidents and it kind of have a support group in place where I can say, okay. You
know, this is what happened we can get this group in or we can get that group in or this social
work or whatever and this is kind of the same ideas where it kind of want to kind of sit down with
you guys and figure out. You know how we can provide support to a victim of a hate crime what
maybe our specific protocol is maybe there's a group of us that go to the house and talk to
them. Maybe there's a group we can connect them to You know something like that. So I think
that's something we have to kind of figure out and then, you know an incident like this. That's
there's really No victim the victim is kind of society and everybody and how we get the message
out there that you know, the stuff is going on and and you know. We're here to support, you
know, the community in this and things like that. So I think it's just kind of, you know, Abu kind of
talked about sitting down and every you know, the Sitting down and kind of figuring these things
out and figure out what the protocols are gonna be. But that's kind of what I'm thinking is just try
to figure out hammered, you know, kind of figure out what our protocol is going to be and what
we're going to do depending on what happens so That makes sense.
53:49 Caja Johnson: Thank you. Thank you so much Sergeant Costa. Ideally. What I would like
to see happen is for the hate crimes task force to be every human rights committee meeting
with the data and just so that can just be a regular. regular thing that we're doing to be open and
really think about how we can Immediately sort of come up with an automatic resolution so that
it's you know, if this happens I think this was an email that Leah had sent but I really liked I think
in Salem they said you know, what if this happens and then what do you do? You know, what's
the response?What's the protocol so Thank you so much Sergeant cross. I think Roger
54:47 Beverly Human Rights Committee: He joined.
54:49 Caja Johnson: is okay.
54:51 Roger Woodbury:Yes, hi.
54:52 Caja Johnson: Hi.
54:54 Roger Woodbury: Hi happy to be here finally.
54:55 Caja Johnson: Happy New Year
54:56 Roger Woodbury: Finally. That's a Happy New Year, KJ. I know Jonathan from Blake may
I some of these most of these other faces are new to me, but I'm happy to be on the call. So I'm
on bike committee. and I wanted to talk about the by committee some statement that we put out.
I want to start off with talking about the bike committee statement on. Equity diversion and
inclusion, especially the equity statement some of the people on the call may have been on the
city council. Call us summer where one of our members read the statement, but I think it's worth
repeating. So I'll just read it right now. And this introduces us to people who don't know what the
bike May does as well. The Beverly bike committee is a local group focused on creating a safe
friendly environment for all cyclists through the education awareness address advocacy and
promotion of cycling for fun fitness and transportation. BBC is committed to learning and
understanding how to be inclusive and diverse and furthering its Mission with the goal of
advancing equity and bicycling in our community and thus contributing to a larger effort toward
Regional State and National Bike equity. Towards his end. The BBC is established like equity.
Subcommittee with the initial and critical focus on listening and learning from cyclists in a
community whose voices haven't yet been heard. We're committed to listening without
assuming what should be done and then taking action to advance bike Equity. We recognize
that we don't know what we don't know and that's that was our starting point. As of last July and
I have to admit that we haven't learned a lot yet, but we're really interested in learning a lot. We
are aligned with the National Organization. Advocacy organization the the league of American
bicyclists and we're also aligned with mass bike the Massachusetts advocacy group and we've
talked with discussed amongst ourselves how we feel about EDI and we're pretty much in step
with others National groups are and the national enlist State group are so we've I'm I'll send you
keija some information with links to websites with those statements later on like probably I won't
get to it today. So I'll send it maybe tomorrow. And the league lab is actually they revised. Their
their statement in the wake of the George Floyd shooting last summer. and particular around
their statements about enforcement because enforcement as being a potential way of profiling
came to the four as an issue last summer. So they revised their this statement and is it's quite
robust. We're just the small group in Beverly and we don't have the demographics or the the
issues of say Boston or Cambridge or Summerville or some of our neighbor cities to the South
but we want we still want to be cognizant of the possibility of we don't want to be reinforcing
systemic racism inadvertently. So for instance the way it applies to cycling is say for instance.
59:29 Terrence Date: you
59:31 Roger Woodbury:There's a A cyclist who works in Beverly but lives in one of the towns
south of here. Maybe they have used a mixed mode Transportation. They take the commuter
rail or bus the Beverly and the They were they work in Beverly and they might carry the bike
with them and then when they get to Beverly get off and Ride The Last Mile by bicycle. So when
we go when we do our advocacy work and advocacy for Say a laws and signage and bicycle
60:09 Terrence Date: you
60:12 Roger Woodbury: accommodations. We want to make sure that we take into account
people who?Are lower income people or people of color people who might not be even own a
cell phone for instance. And so when we do our we get our word out by we've been usually
social media extensively we want to make sure we're not sure that we're reaching everybody
equally and we're we like the LA B where an organization that is comprised. Mostly of older
white men. So this year we're undertaking a membership drive. That's event-based. We're going
to start with Online events initially and hopefully as the we progress in the pandemic will be able
to have in-person events, which we recognize as key to that. Now last summer two City
councilors expressed an interest and working with us. Stacy Ames was interested in having US
participate and do a Bike Rodeo as part of a neighborhood event in ward 3, which I think is a
very good idea. So trying to figure out how we can do that sort of thing. And during a pandemic.
I think we really need to wait until the vaccines are widely distributed, but we're looking forward
to being able to do that and partner with. All of the the awards and all the people they're not isn't
a It's the neighborhood for the Cove. neighborhood. So we wanted Reach out to people and get
our message out to all the neighborhoods and particular the education of safe cycling. Now
Sergeant Hanbury has been in touch with us with me and Jonathan South specifically. About
having a grant that they applied for and the idea is to do some education at the middle school.
So, I think that's a really good thing and we're hoping to be able to work with the Beverly Police
Department on that. I'm just going to go look at my my notes Here. I was rushing through this
and I don't know how much time I've taken up, but I want to at least some time for people to ask
some questions. So yeah, I mentioned commuting and infrastructure enhancements and also
people with disabilities. And our membership Drive I talked about that. The speaker series is
coming up. The speaker series is going to be really diverse and we're in terms of the speakers
area of expertise. One of the speakers is a former. Principal player on the bicycle committee. I
tall ball who wrote a book about Major Taylor a black cyclist in the 1800s from Worcester. And I
personally haven't heard his presentation play understand. He does a really interesting
presentation and it was an award-winning book. the so Let's see. I did. So getting back to that.
First point that I made about we don't know what we don't know. We asked us as a what's the
what's the demographics for Beverly?We don't know. We don't know how many people were
just starting to get a feel for how many people commute to Beverly and drive cars in Beverly and
if we can we have a goal of maybe you may making Beverly more cycle bicycle friendly so that
more people will be Taking bikes instead of cars or people who don't have cars will feel safe on
the streets so that they can feel that they can use a bicycle to get to their destination. We looked
at so I looked at the census and I found not surprisingly Beverly's 88.5% white or non-hispanic. I
was kind of surprised at the next one I said. This is the 2020 census 91% of households have a
computer. So it's surprised that it was. So low, I would expect it higher. and then I associate,
you know, I've lived in Beverly for 20 years and I didn't realize that. The next is 9.3% of the
people are living at the poverty level or below the poverty level. and interesting thing I found out
was 10.2% speak language other than English at home and that language is not Spanish
primarily. It's it's it's maybe one quart one quarter to half Spanish in there other. There's a lot of
northern European. people of that 10% the living Beverly immigrants so we trying to get I get to
trying to get to know what we don't know. And we're interested in the human rights committee
and being Partners so that really so you can we can learn more about doing our job as
advocates better and reaching people. more equitably for all cyclists
66:49 Terrence Date: yeah, but
66:50 Roger Woodbury: because that that is in our mission. It's it's right there at the top of our
mission is for for all cyclists and Beverly so I guess. I kind of rushed through my points, but the
people have questions about what were like committee is up to what we're doing why we exist.
Jonathan did you want to chime in with anything? Jonathan if you're speaking we can't hear
you. Oh. You need somebody to let him back in the meeting he had to. Leave the meeting and
he just texted me.
67:45 Terrence Date: I don't
67:45 Roger Woodbury: I don't know if
67:45 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay. I'm not saying it was time to get in
67:47 Terrence Date: I'm not.
67:47 Beverly Human Rights Committee: again, but I'll keep an eye out for him.
67:50 Roger Woodbury: okay.
67:50 Kirsten Lydic:Whose name?
67:51 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Hey Roger, if you couldn't a chat, I'd love for you to
share that author's name that you had mentioned. And then I noticed on your Facebook page.
You have a meeting coming up Monday
67:59 Roger Woodbury: Oh.
68:00 Beverly Human Rights Committee: night at seven o'clock.
68:02 Roger Woodbury:Yep.
68:03 Beverly Human Rights Committee: If anything would be interested in attending that.
68:05 Roger Woodbury: Okay, that's cool. I haven't posted the zoom link for that yet, but I will
and I'm going to make an additional post. So you see the event and they'll be a second post that
gives more details. But so I just need to find chat. I don't see it sit down at the bottom.
68:36 John LeLacheur: Up on the top right corner at a clock. You're gonna see the chat. It's like
a little piece of paper
68:45 Roger Woodbury: Okay. I'm going to turn it.
68:49 John LeLacheur:you see
68:50 Roger Woodbury:the other way
68:51 John LeLacheur:We'll see the sit up on the right body screen. You'll see the clock to see
32 participants and a little piece of paper looking with a little Green Dot. That's the check click
on that.
69:05 Roger Woodbury:You know what? I don't see it. So I'll just tell you his name is Todd
Todd. about b a I f
69:14 Terrence Date: you
69:17 Roger Woodbury: and he's a Beverly resident and if
69:17 Beverly Human Rights Committee:All right.
69:20 Roger Woodbury:you just you go on Amazon. See his book for sale. And I guess he's still
quite a few copies of it. It's very popular book. and Major Taylor was An incredible athlete and in
his day, he just dominated the sport. Of course. It was just a single speed bicycle racing track
bikes, but so a picture photo of him and he's really he looks like a real athlete. He looks like I I
wouldn't want to be trying to keep up with him. I'm like, you know. so
70:03 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Cajun I noticed in the chat. I think Stacy Ames wanted
to chime in
70:07 Caja Johnson:Yes.
70:07 Beverly Human Rights Committee: or ask a question.
70:08 Caja Johnson:Yeah, I noticed that too
70:09 Leah Jones: Sorry Paul,just real quick.
70:09 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay.
70:11 Leah Jones: I think Sergeant hennenberries trying to get into the meeting also. I don't
know if
70:17 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay. Yeah not getting any admit requests. So
70:21 Leah Jones: Okay, I'll go back to give him okay?
70:22 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Okay. Thank you.
70:26 Caja Johnson: I did put cards email and the in the chat and Roger if you would want to
send me.
70:37 Stacy Ames:you
70:40 Caja Johnson: Send me the link I can I can also forward that along.
70:47 Roger Woodbury: Okay, the links for I've got links for the league of American bicyclists
and mass bike. And what else? Do you need links for?
71:07 Caja Johnson:And I think that that was it. I'm not sure if there if you had said there was a
YouTube link or something. but if you want
71:21 Roger Woodbury: I said I can't remember what I said this through a lot of a lot of posts on
YouTube about something but
71:29 Caja Johnson: yeah, you just want to send it to my
71:29 Roger Woodbury: Don't remember.
71:31 Caja Johnson: email and then I can I can move it
71:33 Roger Woodbury:Yeah.
71:34 Caja Johnson: along so that it um, we're able to get it out to everyone.
71:39 Roger Woodbury: Okay.
71:39 Caja Johnson: If that okay.
71:41 Roger Woodbury:Yeah.
71:42 Caja Johnson: Okay, Stacey. Sorry about that.
71:46 Stacy Ames:Thank you.
71:48 Roger Woodbury: Hi, Stacy.
71:48 Stacy Ames: Good evening. Everyone. Yeah. Hi we um. a a bunch of folks in the
Gloucester Crossing neighborhood met with some bike committee people up at holcroft Park,
and I think we were talking about A Bike Rodeo up there, that would be fun for the
neighborhood kids and also offer some service in terms of just some bike tune-ups or or minor
repairs I think
72:19 Roger Woodbury: correctly
72:19 Stacy Ames: I think with the schools with the police department, you know, obviously for
the kids who want them to be safe on a safe piece a safe machine. with a helmet and that's why
this Grant from the police department so important but I I also I know for a fact that a bike can
also be an important economic component for a person's livelihood if you can't import a car. a
bike means a lot so he I think that there are places for the bike committee and concert with
other parts of the city city government to even try to get more bikes into people's hands of all
ages wherever possible and to keep them running and I think the work the committee does in
terms of making sure that we have safer roads as we plan is also, you know, really part of
economic Justice for the city.
73:19 Roger Woodbury:You great.
73:19 Stacy Ames: So that was all I really am looking forward to working with them and the next
year.
73:24 Roger Woodbury:Yeah, and there is some effort that we're launching on this year for two
of the things that you mentioned. The the repairs are teaching kids how to do their own repairs.
And also I'm looking into Free bikes or loan a bike or other programs which were this year were
just we're putting more energy into efforts. We've talked about this in the past. But hoping to
really get some enthusiasm and with our membership Drive get more people involved because
we realize it takes a lot of people to do these things and I'm excited that with the proposed
Program at the middle school that Sergeant Heber is talking about that will hit the users who are
actually just by an informal count of just going around on a school day and Counting the bikes in
the bike racks. The middle school on kids are the biggest users. They're not old enough to drive
cars yet. And it's a great way to teach them the rules of the road before they even get to be
driving a car and responsibility. and The kids teach kids and other kids and it just it's I think it's a
better they become better car drivers later. But if they learn the rules of the road from a bike So I
think it's a really good public safety issue. And yeah, it's an equity thing too economic equity,
you know. Come. Thank you.
75:13 Caja Johnson: Thanks for our drive. Just looking at the chat and I'm just seeing Paul and
zico's. How are you Paul? He's just asking I does the bike committee except donated used
bikes and good condition.
75:28 Roger Woodbury:Yeah, we will that's it. We'll be looking to do that. Exactly. Yeah, we in
the past we had supported an out-of-town group called by snot bombs. That did that but those
spice were not distributed locally. They would often there were since well the initial Charter that
was to send them to third world countries and we thought that what we want to do is accept buy
some good condition and you know give them a safety check and then I have a earn a bike
program. Perhaps the kids learn how to repair their bikes and they earn a bike. So That's the
the idea. So we're hoping to get that off the to join the committee and help out ground this year
and if anyone wants with that, that's awesome. Or if you know anybody who would like to join
us. We're you know, we are a bunch of old white guys, but we're open to working with anybody
who's some wants to Advocate this
76:31 Caja Johnson: Thanks. Thanks Roger.
76:33 Roger Woodbury:Yeah.
76:33 Caja Johnson: Um Paul that was a great question. Thank you for that and Stacey. I just
wanted to Echo especially right now. I think it's also important for people for livelihood and just
for people to to not be in their house in front of a screen and people aren't able to see each
other as we would normally and so I just wanted to to Echo that that is very important. Thank
you so much. Council And so I'm just looking at the chat and I Kirsten Christ Kirsten. Um And I
believe Jason.
77:15 Kirsten Lydic:Yeah.
77:15 Caja Johnson:Are just asking hi. Hi asking um to speak.
77:25 Kirsten Lydic:Yeah, is that right to introduce any topic now?
77:31 Caja Johnson:Yeah. You can.
77:33 Kirsten Lydic: Okay. Yeah, so I am a bit embarrassed about the blue lives matter flag on
low throat and hail in the cemetery crossed from a corner variety. And I just have to imagine.
That Beverly is not a very welcoming place to minorities who live here or are coming through
here. And yeah, I'm just hoping maybe I don't know. We can take down. Things like that that are
on public ground or ad. black lives matter or other You know. Yeah other more welcoming sort
of. Public materials on public grounds. I understand. There's like a the Beverly Police
Department like owns, I guess like its own grave there. Yeah, and that's where the flag is. But
it's right next to like an American flag and like the two flags are very prominent in the cemetery.
And I just think it's not a good look. Um, yeah, I think so. Hi. Um, You live on that corner, and
we've noticed, you know people who come to Dane Street beach a public beach from outside of
Beverly, you know, they drive, you know, probably across the bridge from Salem and see a
massive black or blue lives matter flag on their way in and then they come to the beach and
they walk up to the corner store and see a prominent blue lives matter flag and like no where in
Beverly on public ground or even like, you know,
79:23 Roger Woodbury: lot of yeah
79:24 Kirsten Lydic: argument and public spaces. It's There's no prominent sign.
79:27 Roger Woodbury: So I just I was going strong and I just I just mentioned you.
79:33 Caja Johnson: out project
79:34 Roger Woodbury: Oh, sorry. Okay.
79:35 Caja Johnson: you
79:35 Roger Woodbury:Yeah, I'll meet myself holding.
79:36 Caja Johnson: Okay, sorry.
79:38 Roger Woodbury: right Yeah.
79:41 Caja Johnson: Sorry about that Kirsten.
79:43 Kirsten Lydic: That's okay. Yeah, I think that's basically yeah, that's all we have to say.
We've noticed it and we wanted to raise it for for discussion as well. Yeah, we would like to live
here like forever maybe but like it's just hard to do that hard to like justify doing that as Yeah,
like a white person who like cares about the world. So yeah, it's not a very diverse area. I
attended some of those meetings on Race a few months ago. And I remember hearing that I
think there's only one black teacher Beverly Public Schools.
80:21 Caja Johnson: yeah, that's
80:22 Kirsten Lydic:Yeah, I I want. Sorry, I want to want to raise a family here. Like I love
Beverly I just like right now. I don't think it's good enough. Yeah, that's a lot of work to be done. I
think I'm that area. We've noticed just Within. You know, we haven't been living here for very
long and and we've noticed this is a serious issue that we clashed with our community about
and we know that you know, there are people who share the same values as us here and
they're just not a lot of clear Collective action that we know how to be a part of to help it
Blossom more.
81:00 Caja Johnson: Thank you so much Kirsten and Jason. I just want to say that I commend
you both for coming and speaking and and saying something because a lot of people don't have
the courage to do that. I just want to say that and I also want to say that I completely agree. This
has been um discussed. This is Ben brought up and I'm actually glad that the mayor is here and
I'm glad that the the chief is here as well in Sergeant Costa mayor Cahill. Did you want to
respond to Kirsten and Jason?
81:47 Michael Cahill: Sure. Thanks Kasia. folks it's good to see you and thanks for being here
and to share and what you're what you're thinking and feeling we've been engaged in this
conversation often on for a while now. You are right in that. The property is privately owned. It's
a plot in the cemetery that is owned by the Beverly police relief Association. They own both flag
poles in both Flags. there is a there's a lot of there's a lot of deep feeling. Kind of on several
levels here. There's a belief. of some in the police community that their Thin Blue Line flag was
unfairly appropriated by By white supremacists, there's a feeling of people in the community
who see the flag like you do and feel hurt by it and see it as a symbol of something that we
shouldn't have in Beverly. So I mean I can tell you that. We've had this conversation in the
human rights setting. Chief and I have had this conversation Chief and members of the
department and I and members of the department have and I you know, I thank you for bringing
it up because I think there are. You know, I want to join with our police officers in honoring their
colleagues and predecessors who are no longer with us and family members loved ones who
are no longer with us and my hope is that we'll at some point see a different way to honor them
than the flag. That's there now.
83:41 Kirsten Lydic:Yeah.
83:46 Caja Johnson: Thank you. Mayor, Cahill. Oh, I'm sorry Leah. Um.
83:52 Leah Jones: I just I heard our I I really appreciate um, I feel like some of these
conversations too need to be kept on the table. Um, we've had I feel like we're I hope you find
as residents. You know, I can say I think some things are getting better but it really is the people
who you know, we talk about something like these stickers that's not better, you know, and I
think some things we found that felt like National issues are really just about us in our neighbors
and their things that were really trying to work on and to listen to you know, black indigenous
people of color and we have some amazing leadership in Beverly that it'll be really cool if you
have a chance to I was just trying to think out loud when you said you weren't sure how to
participate and get to know like-minded people and I and I I think that is a great way to kind of to
keep some of those issues going is to get involved with groups and find groups that do that and
I think anybody here in this group is an open friend and is willing to talk to you about any of this
stuff and also maybe suggest a group or like a place where you can continue the conversation,
but I just wanted to also comment keija for keeping that conversation alive, you know, we still
Some of us are hanging black lives matter Flags in our yards because we'd love to see
something in the city and we feel like that conversation Still Still Alive. It is still ongoing. And I
you know, I thank the mayor for always being open and the door is truly always open. I mean
and the chief as well and it's it's they're busy, but the doors are open. So, um, I don't know I just
wanted to Say please do join those groups. Please do find, you know, we have leadership of
color black leaders in Beverly that are Helping us move in directions. We need to move and
we're having lots of difficult conversations and we're here in this group to have them and to keep
having them. So thank you for being here. I just wanted to say that.
86:02 Caja Johnson: Thanks so much Leah just to Echo what Leah said, this is a safe place.
And you know, I really like Jason that you said that and you two Kirsten not just about the
possibility of it being taken down, but that really when people are coming to this popular Beach
that it would be nice if they saw in addition to even like a black lives matter flag or a pride
Flagger something other than just that and I really like that, you know, you're looking at it from
different perspectives to say not just it needs to come down. But is there some is there anything
else that we can do just to offset these these emotions and feelings that people may or may not
have so thank you again.
86:56 John LeLacheur: Cases like can I speak to this for one second?
86:59 Caja Johnson:Absolutely chief.
87:01 John LeLacheur: So again, just some history to that again that is not owned by the police
department. It's a private organization. And that's why I came about as we all know back in 2014
when five Dallas police officers were murdered when they were protecting a black lives matter
March. That's when that flight was adult developed by a person in Dallas to use it as a memorial
for the five offices murdered and it has been you know, you know taken by the groups and it's
it's extremely unfortunate. The memorial flag is it was started to be so I've actually had
conversations today with some what members of the relief and and I'm still working on this as
we speak.
87:45 Caja Johnson: Thank you so much Chief. I'm glad that you did speak on that and this has
been a conversation that I have also had with the mayor and the chief and it it, you know, it's on
the table and I think that we're very fortunate to have the leadership that we do have in Beverly
because you know, they are listening they're paying attention and you know, the work is being
done. So um If you wouldn't mind, I'd like to reach out to the both of you. Regarding this issue
just so that we can. Continue to follow up and and and continue to to talk about it if that's okay.
88:35 Kirsten Lydic:Absolutely. Yeah, that'd be great.
88:37 Caja Johnson:All right, great. Great.
88:39 Kirsten Lydic: Thank you everyone for responding.
88:44 Caja Johnson: all right, so mayor Cahill, I know that we have the the use of force draft
that was released and given out and I didn't know if you or chief or the combination of we both
wanted to address that.
89:03 Michael Cahill: Sure. I'll I'll start up first if I could say Carol, I see a question you put in the
chat. I don't know the answer to that. Do you mind do you mind meet you now to me tomorrow
and I'll ask that? That's okay. Yeah, it's it's a it's a good and interesting question. So yes Casia,
we you all remember that. I made a commitment back in the the early summer that we would
review our use of force policy make any updates that seem needed and and and share it out to
the community for a conversation. Since that time we have spent a lot of time internally trying to
turn to work with it and and answer a lot of questions for ourselves and and then in in the
process the state debate around police reform really kicked in and so we can kind of trying to
refine the the some of the key We did finally put it out recently. points. I hope you've all the
chance to to look at it. If you haven't we can get at you a copy and I'm pretty sure it's on the
website, but we can get your copy too and your inbox of anybody anybody who asks. One of the
things we did was you know, we immediately looked to the eight can't wait measures that had
been much talked about in promoted and recommended. Several of them. We were already
doing in our existing use of force policy. And as I said, we've we've looked hard at everything in
addition. The state law was passed as as I think many of you have not all of you know,just in
the last week. Chief and our legal department have been spending time, you know trying to read
through the the new legislation and and Really kind of interpret and get on top of what it means.
And I also know and chief will give a little more information on this that among other things the
model use of force policy that is put out by the accreditation organization regionally is under
review. And so there may be some further changes in the model policy, which is the basis is
what of what local cities and towns police departments use for their own policy. So we we had
understood that this was a draft and even more so as Chief is getting really regular updates
from the mass Chiefs, you know, kind of reinforcing that there will be likely more language
changes in the model policy, which likely we want to bring into our policy that that said. On the
eight can't wait just a quick snapshot of this and then I'll turn to Chief to give you a few more
details in our policy the ban choke holds and strangleholds. Well that that has been passed as
part of the state law. So our draft now bans chokeholds requiring de-escalation all good, you
know all best practice in all departments already requires de-escalation efforts in all instances.
That's not to say that it's always possible but you'll see that reflected in our policy and it's also
reflected in the training that we do with our police officers on a regular basis. Require warning
before shooting you'll see language in hours. It's that that calls for a warning unless it's not
possible and there you can imagine instances where there's no time to give a warning or when
an officer might be on the receiving end of of an attack and so, you know, they it doesn't always
fit. But certainly it's a value to give a warning whenever it's whenever it's possible and safe to do
so requiring exhausting all Alternatives before shooting that also is already in our policy and I
think you know kind of it fits with the de-escalation efforts and it fits with the thrust of both our
local and and Statewide training both training requirements that come down each year from the
state and and trainings we choose to add to our to our mix a duty to intervene. Our policy did
not have that we have added that in the draft proposal. I'm an affirmative duty to intervene by an
officer who reasonably That I'll leave the language to Chief the duty to intervene if an officer
believes that a fellow officer is is unreasonable in the use of force. Band shooting and moving
Vehicles. There are a lot of nuances here and we may end up wanting to look at the language
together and chief will give you some some of the details there but where to go. Requiring a use
of force continuum that's a part of our draft and comprehensive reporting. I think these things
both already were and are and also just to kind of reinforce you folks. Not only is this still draft.
This is just the first conversation. We will we will schedule in the near future whenever it's you
know, most timely an additional Community conversation around the policy and we'll do our best
to make sure that it's a you know on a platform and at a time that we can have the maximum of
of community participation. So let me turn it to Chief for now and I know he has some things to
share. Thanks Kasia.
94:32 John LeLacheur:figure on yeah, basically all of the things that were in The police Reform
Act or the policy that's now put out a draft we were doing anyway and no one in Massachusetts
is ever been taught at Chokehold. I did a police officer was 40 years and gone through three
separate academies and it's never taught has never been taught. So somewhere else in the
country other parts of the country may have been taught but it's something that was never has
never taught and never utilized anywhere that I have ever worked so that that That's that the
shooting at a moving Vehicles is a is a tough one in the mirror. And I and this is Williams a city
school set of you know, I got a lot of conversation. I try to explain that. And try to take a look at
multiple scenarios if anybody remembers the terrorist attack in France a few years ago or a
gentleman got in a truck and decided driving down a roadway and ran over like 300 people.
Well a French police had a shoot into that vehicle to stop that act. So that that's a case would be
allowed. If someone had just you know committed a Multiple homicide was trying to flee the
scene and the office felt that the only way they could stop that person who could potentially
cause further death death Death That may be an instance where they would have to, you know,
try to take some type of lethal action to stop that individual. But if the vehicle is driven away from
and it's 30, 40 50 yards down the road you would not you know shoot at that vehicle because
the possibility of taking that person to custody then is really going away. So there's a lot of
different nuances and training that that we do scenario training. That we do to try to take in as
many situations we can as far as warning shots go. I've been shot at three times at no time that
anybody give me a warning that should they just shot at me and I was able to get out of the way
luckily so that many many police shootings the officers the second one involved in the incident,
they're fired upon first and there's this no time to give a warning you have to react So that that
isn't it obviously? Giving a warning is always preferred and when can be done we and we do
that. It's part of our training when we go to the range whether it be with the Firearms taser OC
spray the rifle training everybody is trained to de-escalate you give commands the person
dropped the weapon to back up to we're not stop resisting arrest whatever the case may be. It's
things we were doing now, it's just written harder to the policy. So that's that's very important.
You know, we we've certainly and I've read most of the kind of edits that that that came in from
from various people and looking at it and just understand we cannot edit the policy. There are a
lot of suggestions made on on different things that policy is written by the starts with the
accreditation for law enforcement Council which is which is a national agency. It's vetted
through the International Association of chiefs of police the Massachusetts occurred Nation
committee and it's written based on US Supreme Court decisions in Massachusetts and
Supreme Court decisions. These decisions are written by the the brightest men and women in
the world US Supreme Court judges, and that's why the language is the way it is and certain
things are put in the steps that they are. We just can't turn around and change the policy
because it's best practices if we go around and change a policy. It's best practice. It puts us out
of best practice and we wouldn't be able to go Accreditation but there are still things that we're
looking at in that policy that works some things that came up. There was suggested that we're
certainly going to look at. and again, I got an email late today from from Chief Kai's who's the
chief of Chelsea who's on the accreditation committee and language that they had put into the
policy prior to the Reform Bill coming out and then they made it a change after the police
Reform Bill was signed by the governor. And now they're going to make another change to that
because it when they start to vetted through the different Chiefs on the committee and the
lawyers they decide well, we have to change a little bit. So it's an ongoing process in part of
police accreditation, which we are going for. There's 83 separate policies that we have to
comply with and this being one of them and anytime there's a change to any policy every office.
It has to be made aware of the change that we trained on the change. They have to they have
to know there was a change. So these are the things we we've actually purchased a computer
program that's going to help us track all of these. So on a policies change an email goes to the
office that they have to Open up the policy. They have to acknowledge. They've read it. Some
policies will test them on they have to pass the test and and then it'll be marked in a computer
database so we can follow they've got the proper training. So that's that's what we're heading
with all of this and again eventually through accreditation a lot of our policies. Will be on the
website to be for people to review not all of them. Some of them may have to do a tactic. So
things to that effect How We Do investigations but a lot of the policies will be open for the
General Public.
99:57 Caja Johnson: Thank you Chief. I just I'm looking at the chat and I'm just wondering
Esther. There's there's some great. There's some great points that you have brought up. I didn't
know if you were available or willing to speak. We'd love to to hear from you. Esther I think if
you're if you're talking I think you're muted. Are you? Okay, so she said no. Thank you. All right.
Thank you Esther. Um Leah did you want to address?
100:41 Leah Jones: Um, I just I just thought Esther brought up a really good point that I think is
on the minds of a lot of people in our country today and kind of connects to the use of force
question is just Why we've seen such different and I I don't need to reiterate the way Esther
eloquently put it but why we saw such different approaches to the black lives matter protests,
which was standing up for human rights and then you know a gentle escorting of you know
something and I know that that doesn't reflect on what our police departments doing, but it is a
question. I think that our police forces uniquely positioned to help reassure the community and
talk to us about why that wouldn't happen here in Beverly and I'm you know, I don't want to
speak for Aster but I I think that was a point that is really timely and important to bring into this
101:39 John LeLacheur: you
101:40 Leah Jones: conversation. And I think she said it better than I could have but cage I saw
Carol asked to speak to this. um
101:51 Caja Johnson: Thank you Leah. Thank you so much.
101:55 John LeLacheur: connect
101:56 Caja Johnson: Oh, sorry.
101:59 John LeLacheur: hey, can I just really quickly so you know, I think that and maybe some
misconception if you saw a hundred days of riding in Portland. And and very few arrests there. If
you saw in Seattle 10 city blocks taken over a police station, totally vandalized and destroyed
very very few arrests there. I think the capital police were outnumbered. I think that there's some
leadership issues there but there were 52 offices injured in that they're still some in the hospital.
If you see some of the videos that have been released there was they they were fighting for
their lives and they were tremendously outnumbered now. You know. I think that both in all
these situations are horrific. I think that the attack on the capital terrific and I think that the you
know It certainly something we have to look at but I don't think that people necessarily treated
differently. I think that what happened yesterday one of things they're trying to look at is there
was a demonstration up on the eclipse. There were never supposed to go near the capital and
then they ended up going to the Capitol which was just you know, an outrageous thing that
happened. So I think there's a lot to look at in this whole thing, but It's I don't think any group
has been has been singled out. You know, I read an article recently of like I said the hundred
days of writing and Portland they were very few of any prosecutions and that whole city was
almost destroyed. So there's a lot of problems in the country. Nationally. I mean, I think this
region is totally different from other parts of the country. I just I get emails numerous emails from
intelligence sources in the Massachusetts is 75 people demonstrating in Boston right now
peacefully, they went from the capital and they're downtown. So I think I think things are
different here, but it's certainly things we have to look at this is gonna be a long National
conversation.
104:04 Michael Cahill: Keisha do you mind if I I know Carol's maybe after Carol, I'd like to just
jump in.
104:12 Caya Johnson: I'm sure thank you. Mayor Kahl for letting I'm Carol. Carol Carol if you're
talking we can hear you. Oh, you're muted. Okay.
104:34 Scott Houseman: here
104:37 Caya Johnson: can
104:39 Beverly Human Rights Committee:Yeah, Carol, you have to unmute yourself. I don't
have the unbilly ability to unmute or meet people from here.
104:48 Michael Cahill: Carol can you can you see the the the microphone I microphone icon at
the bottom of your screen? is if you can that that's
104:59 Scott Houseman: Move your cursor go to the bottom of your screen and it'll pop up. in
red
105:04 John LeLacheur:You can also hit you can also hit
105:04 Caya Johnson: I'm trying to.
105:07 John LeLacheur: control D on your keyboard control D. We'll turn your microphone on.
105:11 Caya Johnson: I'm trying to change my screen so I can see. Maybe the there's
something I can do.
105:23 Esther Ngotho:you
105:24 Caya Johnson: No, I don't think that there's nothing I can do. Um well Carol while you're
on muting mayor Cahill, oh, it won't work. She's saying it.
105:37 Michael Cahill: They maybe maybe failing that Carol can are you willing to type in in the
chat again what you would hope to settle out or? now
105:47 Caya Johnson: Um, Paul, would it be possible if you would I think you already? shared
your cell, but maybe we can if you could work with Carol to see if we can get our unmuted.
106:03 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Of course. Yeah.
106:06 Caya Johnson: Thank you so much Paul. I'm just while we're waiting a mayor Cahill. Did
you want to add a comment?
106:18 Michael Cahill: sure. Thanks Kasia. Chief a I want to go back to it. Esther had typed in
the chat.
106:26 Carole Rein: Oh, okay.
106:27 Michael Cahill: Oh Carol got good.
106:28 Carole Rein: now
106:29 Esther Ngotho: Okay.
106:30 Carole Rein: didn't attempt so somebody changed something. Okay, thank you. So a
couple of things Chief little later that I was one of the group of people who sent in all of those
suggestions. I want to tell you it looks like a huge number and it is but a lot of those suggestions
were for highlighting information that we really loved and wanted to see emphasized. Is that
something that you would be able to do so without changing the wording just emphasize some
things?
107:06 John LeLacheur: It actually that's something that we've that's going back and forth.
That's something we can certainly look at. Yes.
107:10 Carole Rein: Okay, and the one area where many people?Were I I'm going to use the
word upset. On page 8 the section that says dealing with emotionally disturbed persons or
physically disabled. So I want to mention a couple of things about that. first why would
emotionally disturbed persons and physically disabled be lumped together? concerning the
potential for violence that they seem to me to be too very different groups of people. also the
language with it using emotionally disturbed persons is very archaic. as opposed to using
people with whatever else you want you want to say. So I have a hard time believing that
language is up to date. And the words we use. Change how we think about people. That's
something that's very real. So the language is really important. Um, I hope that people get a
chance to really look through all of our comments. Many of us spent a long time looking at it.
And putting them together to send to you. So thank you for letting me speak. I will leave it at
that. Thank you.
108:58 John LeLacheur: Okay. Now that's one of the areas we've actually were looking at prior
to the mirror and I remember specifically talking about the language in the verbage. And again, I
did focus on a lot of those comments and it's it's certainly something we're going to look at in
revisions.
109:15 Carole Rein:Thank you.
109:18 Caja Johnson:thank you so much Carol, and I did look over those comments and very
very so much thought went into that and you did a wonderful job at not only pointing out things
that could be different or better but also pointing out things that are that were excellent and that
we could use more of so, thank you much Carol mayor Cahill.
109:50 Michael Cahill:Yes. Thanks Asia. And and I'll just add I also read through the all the
comments and you know went back to where they're referred to and and then I got the same the
same email sent to me several more times with the same comments. So I'm not sure I'll read it
every single time. But if we you know, I've looked at all over and we'll go back and look at it.
Again. The one thing I'll say on the the suggestions of highlighting different pieces of the
language. Chief and and Ms. Williams our city solicitor and I we had many different things
highlighted and then not highlighted and finally took all the highlights out before we put it out in
front of you folks and Really? The reason is, you know, we could all come up with different
language to highlight that the reality is our police officers are bound to learn and know every
word of that policy and to to implement it and so, you know, I mean I'm thinking aloud with you
here Carol. I'm not sure that we ultimately shorter will highlight but just think about that as we're
thinking about it as well. So any of that that's one piece. The other one is Chief. I want to ask
you to look with me at Esther's common in the chat because really at the end of the comment
she poses a question which you know for you, which I think is is something that you you know,
you probably answer frequently. You know just in terms of how our officers apply, you know, the
the components of the the use of force policy and how they utilize their training and and they
deal with situations on the job in the field. So the language here is Chief John, please tell us
byproduct how you will make your officers restrain themselves against using force on people of
color and the reason you know, I think it's it's something that is natural again. It's It's about it's
about utilizing. The tool they've been trained in the use of force policy. It's about utilizing their all
the training and all their knowledge in the field.
111:59 John LeLacheur:Well again, specifically it's it's every person we come in contact with
and one of the things I've emphasized. My entire time here in my entire career is for us to treat
everybody equally and it doesn't matter if the person is anything that'll be treated equally and
the least amount of force is used to affect an arrest and that's the way we train and that's how I
expect my offices to perform. We one of the questions come up. Why were you handicapped
copy a couple of compliant person because a compliant person's under arrest and they're going
to jail and numerous times over the years people realize, you know, taking him out of the crews
that are taking him into the station that they really going to jail and that's on the fight start the lot
of a lot of Kicking and head budding and things like that go on and and there have been times in
offices didn't handcuff individuals the Boston police officer shot and killed and the police station
booking a prisoner. He took him out of the car had him on handcuffs a new shot and killed so,
you know, there's a there's a million things that we do and my goal with this department. and all
the other committees 1
113:17 Michael Cahill: Keisha if I could follow up I see
113:17 John LeLacheur:with regionally is we treat everybody equally and we and we use the
113:18 Michael Cahill:there's another question from Naomi
113:19 John LeLacheur: absolute least amount of force to effect and arrest.
113:21 Michael Cahill: down there and and I do want to make a point and then and then ask
Chief to answer that question. This is not to Pat ourselves on the back in any way but we and I
Look to counselor Houseman and councilor Rand because they've been part of building these
budgets with us for the past seven years councilor Ames. She's going into her second budget
season. When when we took office. I I came in as mayor in January of 2014 the city at that time
was spending about 85,000 dollars a year on training for police officers. There was an additional
75,000 that came from the state every year that was called the 911 training funds. This year
we're spending it's either 210 or 215,000 as opposed to 85 in City funds and we get nut. We got
99,000 this year in state funds. And so the reason for that is is we've collectively had put a high
value on training for our police officers. And there is a there's a an annual program of training.
Some of it is mandated by the state. There are more mandates than there used to be there will
be and we're you know, we're working through the the language of the new law to see what's
coming with that and we can share we can share the Training, you know program that shows
what what how you know what was trained last year what's planning to plan to be trained this
year? Before we meet next because I think that that really kind of dovetails in with this policy as
well. And so so much of the training that our police undergo involves de-escalation techniques
and learning some of it involves working with particular populations. I know we did a training or
some of our officers did a training in how to interact with individuals on the Spectrum, you know,
who it may have trouble understanding a situation. Maybe it get highly stressed and how is
somebody going to present to Naomi's question the department didn't implicit bias training. I
think the year before last but Chief maybe you can touch on that and maybe a little bit more in
the training generally.
115:40 John LeLacheur: right, so every officer and even under the new standard has to have a
minimum a minimum of 40 hours of in-service training 24 of those hours are set by the state and
others and mandatory requirements such as CPR first responder, you know Firearms taser,
right all that, but there's 24 hours of training that's changed every year through the council. So
implicit bias training was was two years ago and it's actually mandated again this year. I actually
just took the course to yesterday. I finished mine yesterday. So every officer has to go through a
four-hour implicit bias training this year and also dealing with individuals with mental dismental.
from crisis and then there's a floral block on office of wellness and safety and I off the top. I had
I forget the other blocks of training that are set by the mptc but implicit bias training is
specifically in this year's training for all offices mandatory.
116:42 Michael Cahill:You touch mptc.
116:42 Caja Johnson: Thanks.
116:44 Michael Cahill: Chief just folks understand what your referencing there.
116:46 John LeLacheur: I'm sorry. It's the Massachusetts police training Council. It comes on to
the Executive Office of the Public Safety and Security I just want I didn't want to say eops.
116:57 Caja Johnson: Thank you. Thank you Chief. I am just Neil before I before I move on to
Neil. I it looks like Neil has a a comment, but I just wanted to say that I would like to see more of
the training on paper and data. It seems like there's a lot of training that that's going into the
police department and I would really like to see that training being. Utilized in everyday job
duties reflected with data and so as soon as possible, I would really like to see the data of the
arrests that are being made. You know, how many of how many of the arrests that we're making
in Beverly are people of color with a with a community that is predominantly white. Right. We
want to I want to look at numbers. I want to I want to see that the training is actually trickling
down to every day jobs. That's just a comment that I had and so
118:10 John LeLacheur: That's actually in case I just got the statistics for 2020 today. These are
physical custody arrests. These aren't just summons as with physical custody arrests. There are
128 White. Individuals arrested 15 black one American Indian one Asian 42 Hispanic and one
on one Middle Eastern and 16 unknowns.
118:34 Caja Johnson: Thanks Chief. That's on the whole year of 2020.
118:37 John LeLacheur: Great 20s.
118:38 Caja Johnson: Okay. and so um Neil I know that you've been wanting to say something
if you want to.
118:46 Neil Levine:Yeah, I'm also cultures of the time and understand from the mayor that
they'll be additional meetings. So I I don't want to hold Folks up. I can be brief. But what is your
pleasure?
119:02 Michael Cahill: I think Neil is asking what how long you want the meeting to go tonight?
119:07 Caja Johnson: um So we're supposed to end at 8:30 that's not gonna happen. And so if
folks have to go I can respect and understand that but I would like to give folks an opportunity to
make a comment and respond and to continue the conversation, but I I'd like I'd like nine o'clock
to be the that the ending point if possible.
119:37 Neil Levine: Okay, thank you. Okay, just first of all just to thank you and the committee
for making the space and thank the mayor the police chief and the council folks that are here for
being here as I had a chance to speak on this topic with the mayor about a month and a half
ago. And Ted said that every time we create spaces at Community for these kinds of
discussions, we we're the better for it. So and I think that's in the case tonight. I know I've
learned a lot. I don't in any way think of myself as an expert in these matters, and so just a few
observations. I would call attention to the first line of the policy that says that the Beverly Police
Department. places the highest value On the sanctity of Life Safety of its officers protection of
the public and respecting individual dignity and I think that's a wonderful place to start and
similar to what Carol said. There's a reason to emphasize that and I went to the and I think in a
similar spirit that Carol says is that wherever we can call those things out that we like I went to
the website of the police department and saw the following Is it very much in the same vein, but
language. even more expansive in its philosophy which is while maintaining respect for
individual rights human dignity cultural diversity and Community Values. We pledge to sustain a
working partnership with the community to protect life and property and maintain a safe and
peaceful environment for all so I encourage everyone to sort of is that if if that is truly the ethos
that we're looking for. I think it's there the mayor in the eight can't wait kind of called out the the
things that jumped out at me in terms of things that are really necessary in the policy including
the ban on chokeholds the affirmative duty to infer to intervene. I really thought it was good that
it talks about use of force. But what is Proper use of force of warning shots directing people with
with a or pointing a gun or prohibited practices. I think three issues that I would kind of frame up
for subsequent discussion when there's more time to hear from the elected officials. And from
the police is just to consider that the policy doesn't take place in a vacuum and I think you know
Esther's comments really speak to the broader kind of experience of the community. It's shaped
by the leadership the institutional history the Personnel who serve and the People Who oversee
the policy and so I'd be very interested at a broader public meeting. What from the from the
chief is your philosophy of policing under which this use of force comes by and you've alluded to
it in terms of equality of treatment fairness discretion of the officer and similarly from the mayor.
and the city council, what is your philosophy for policing and where does the use of force fit in
so I hope you'll take the occasion of that to to share with the community that philosophy
secondly in looking at the president's task force on 21 st century policing there's some really
interesting language about a philosophy that looks to police as Guardians and not Warriors and
I am thinking about that and looking at the Continuum of force where you have at the bottom of
the pyramid a compliant subject and you are a guardian in essence solving a problem. And then
as you move up that Continuum of force be careful to sustain as long as possible the philosophy
of the Guardian Even as risk increases. At the ultimate and lastly Force those Warriors and
even then it's a bad analogy because Wars war and this is not war and so I think the ethos of in
that philosophy of what is seen as best practice today of seeing police as Guardians warians
should be front of mind for this. The training I think the last things are about training and
accountability. And I think the question I had is, you know, I learned tonight that any change in
policy sworn to uphold immediately notified and trained on those. I just as a practical matter,
how long does it take folks to go through training? I know that if they're not on the if they're in
training, they're not on the street and just the Practical matter of how at what point would we
expect all members of the Beverly police force to be trained and up to speed on the use of force
and then lastly the comments about how do we know that this policy is working?And what
Milestones are you setting out to see that we're accomplishing the goal. I think the last
comments on you know numbers of officers strained and perhaps citizen surveys might be used
and then lastly I really want to associate myself with the comments that Carol made about the
Language on people with disabilities. I think this going back to Guardians versus Warriors the
the use of language at others people is the first step to moving from Guardian to Warrior and
that's something the I understand about the reasons why the policy is somewhat inviolate
because it has it's really written by other people and it seems to me the suggestion of an
accompanying document that is would be frequently asked questions that could be used as an
informational document that you might have more Liberty to address this particulars of the
Beverly community in a way isn't that would not be constrained by the authors who are really
responsible for writing Doctrine and I understand why that is the case, but perhaps there's a
creative way that for citizens to penetrate this information to become knowledgeable about it to
understand and hold folks accountable. There could be some accompanying document that
would address more specifically Of the issues that have been raised here tonight. Thank you all
very much.
126:05 Caja Johnson: Thank you so much Neil for your for your comments Chief. Oh actually
hello.
126:11 Michael Cahill:Yeah, I just kneel there's a lot there and some of it are questions and
some of it are suggestions and I'd love if you wouldn't mind sending it my way in an email
because well, there you go because you know, I do want to be responsive and you know and
like my colleagues and in government want to be responsive. I'm sure you know in preparation
for that next conversation that next public conversation and even in some back and forth with
you in the meantime if that makes sense. Thanks.
126:46 Caja Johnson: Thanks me. Okay how I just wanted to thank you again nail for your
comments and 1
126:49 Leah Jones: Oh.
126:53 Caja Johnson:just wanted to point out that Esther did. Put some more comments on the
chat and chief. I know you have a lot to respond to right now, but I just want to point out the last
comment that she made. um surround surrounding experience that she had and then if you if
you wanted to address the last Comment that she put in.
127:23 John LeLacheur.Yeah, so that's when I have talked about this before she would just the
car accident the officers arrived. They talked to the two drivers. The the mail driver was under
suspension had a warrant for his arrest he was taken into custody again. It's something that we
don't have any control over. We got a call for service to go to a call for service. The person had
warrants for their arrest. They had to be taken into custody. And then I knew when I've never
heard of before about an ambulance coming in and the person being intoxicating going in the
ambulance. That's that's what we do. If a person requests detox so we can get into the hospital
and go to the hospital. It doesn't matter who they are. It doesn't matter if they're a male female,
you know white black. We're going to get them to help that They need help. they need and on
the second part again. I think we're looking at the language like we've talked about, you know,
the Carol brought up and a lot of people brought up in the comments on that section. And again
they may and I remember specifically we talked about that when we read it, you know months
ago. I think it's something We have to look at the specific language in bring it up to date and
make it applicable to what we're trying to accomplish one of the thing. I did put in there. Also
K's, right I gave you the wrong numbers when I gave you the numbers. I gave you the summons
numbers and not the rest numbers. So for 2020 they're actually 214 total in custody arrests. 145
of those people white 34 black one age and 22 Hispanic three Middle East and nine unknown
and a question came up about what's the population of Beverly but you also have to realize it a
lot of people come into Beverly from outside the city to work to go to the different business and
stuff. So we're not always we don't just the rest people from Beverly. We at least we arrest
people that are in the city of Beverly commit crimes. So, you know, the statistics on percentage
of individuals may not be exactly what the City's population is. But we we deal with a lot of
people if you ever watch the train come up from Boston and all the people walk up to coming
soon if you look at Cherry Hill and all the people come into work, so it's not just people in the
city that we arrest we arrest people to commit crimes within the city.
129:45 Scott Houseman: Cajun
129:46 Beverly Human Rights Committee: a great pleasure muted
129:47 Michael Cahill: muted
129:48 Caya Johnson: Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry about that. I was I Sorry, so thank you Chief. Did
you hear anything that I said? No? Okay, so I was just looking at the numbers and I just wanted
to be clear when you say in custody arrests. I didn't know what what that meant and in
comparison to arrest in general.
130:12 John LeLacheur: So there are times when we come across a person say for driving a
driving this not having a driver's license. Technically they can be arrested and But a lot of times
they just summons taken to the police station. the court. So it's they end up going to court. It's a
misdemeanor case, but they're not actually brought into the station. There are certain cases
where there's mandatory arrests people that have warrants domestic violence cases, you know,
obviously, you know, serious assault cases felony cases. They're those people are arrested
brought in process to the system.
130:46 Caya Johnson: do we have numbers on just the arrest
130:47 John LeLacheur: So that's the difference.
130:48 Caya Johnson: period and not just in custody just a general number of people that were
put in cuffs whether they made it me
130:56 John LeLacheur:Yeah.
130:57 Caya Johnson:to the station whether they got into the police car and then we're just
summons into court and then I'm just looking at I'm just looking at the numbers and I just want to
make sure that I have it have it right and so it looks like there did you say they were 214 of us?
131:17 John LeLacheur: That 2014 arrest. Yes.
131:19 Caja Johnson: Okay, and then you said that?Was it 70 or 80 of those where people of
color?
131:27 John LeLacheur: now 34
131:30 Caja Johnson: But then you said there were 22 Hispanic, right?
131:35 John LeLacheur:Yes.
131:35 Caja Johnson: Okay, and then so that that's a dish because that's considered a person
of color too. So, I just want to we can talk more about this offline. What I would like to see ideally
is that at every human rights committee meeting Chief and I don't know if you're okay with this if
the data is public information, I would really like to take a look at the data.
131:56 Leah Jones:you
131:58 Caja Johnson: I'm just at every meeting if possible. I don't know if you're open to that.
132:07 John LeLacheur: Now we can say look we can certainly
132:07 Caja Johnson:fear
132:08 John LeLacheur: look at the data. That's not that's not a problem.
132:10 Caja Johnson: Sorry, Leah.
132:12 Leah Jones:And just to add just I guess to add another question or a request and I think
this just Builds on what Esther? Neil Cajun others have been saying I think some of it is is like
both with the data and the policy. I think what a resident of Beverly might might appreciate is
sort of an understanding like putting it into context because I hear you know, there was implicit
bias training and that sounds great, but it will be awesome to do more of the kind of small group
discussion where you're maybe at a CAC meeting or a human rights committee meeting if if
officers would be willing to say this is what it meant to me. You know, this is what it means to my
job to get implicit bias training. I don't really know, you know, I can guess what it is, but I don't
really know what it means and it is it just something that you've thrown in or is it something
that's really meaningful. Is it something that's eye-opening does it change every year? So I've
kind of interested in that and then same thing with the data. I could hear. You know and I think
having another interesting conversation with Sergeant Costa who is a data person. It'd be great
to have you know, when the data is presented to say and it's and it isn't mean that to be under
attack if the data isn't what You know, it'd be really nice to hear from from the maybe Beverly
Police Department. Look at this isn't what we want. And this is why or like this is a good number
and this is why or like this data compares to the rest of the state for this reason or kind of putting
it in context to not to tear it apart or to make a judgment on it. But just so we understand what
the numbers mean because I could say I could hear something and think it sounds great.
Someone else could think it sounds not great, but just to have a shared. Understanding of what
the data means and what the training means and kind of what it means to a human person.
Thank you.
134:04 Caja Johnson: Thank you Leah. Um, and so thank you chief for being willing to bring
that data to the human rights committee meetings because I do think that it's relevant and
important and I think that it ties hand in hand with the committee. So thank you so much for that.
And I know where we're pressed for time, but I just wanted to also.just take a second to talk
about what happened last night because I think that it is it is on a lot of people's mind mines.
And I know that Esther brought it up and I think that it's important that we reflect on that and and
that we call it exactly what it is. I think that if we can be truthful and we can be honest. I think
that we that leads to action and I think that's where we want to be in a place of action moving
towards unity. And so and you know so well for just for right now, I think that you know, it's not
really a time to there's a time and a place for everything and I think that to reflect upon officers
who have committed to a job and you know, unfortunately things do happen in that line of work.
I think that right now the time and places to reflect on the most vulnerable population, especially
after what happened and all of that hate and so I think it's important that I think that's what
Esther what the place that she was coming from is that you know, we really want to make sure
that we're being open and honest about that and and You know, I think that sometimes we can
we can separate these categories and we can get into well, well, you Well, you know black
people die, but no but well police officers died, but you know, we can we can keep doing that we
can just keep going with that. But I think it's really important to know that you know, when you're
when you're born black you just born black and so I didn't sign up to be black. Right? Like that's
just what I am and I think that you know, unfortunately and the line of work there there are
nurses every day. Unfortunately that are Contracting AIDs that are you know in these really
tough jobs that are that are that are dying, you know, and and that are putting themselves out
there firefighters that have signed up to put their life on the line and and their hard jobs their
hard hard jobs, but I think in terms of In terms of unity and human rights. I think it's important
that the time and the place now is to focus on focus on that. And so I just wanted to say that and
so Esther I don't know if you're if you're willing to respond to Chief, but it sounds like he
responded to your last two comments. Okay. All right. So lastly I just wanted to talk about the
MLK event. I know what's coming up fast. And so I know originally the deadline was today to get
videos in but that's not I don't think it's enough time. I guess I wasn't really thinking about how
kids are still remote right now. And so I was hoping that we could extend it the deadline to get
pictures and videos in in speeches in. for the 13th and I spoke with Tom Gallo who has diligently
volunteered his his wonderful expertise as well as Paul Goodwin. Thank you guys so much and
it seems as if that will work on Bev cam is is all set for that. So people having to the 13th if you
have any videos or if you have any pictures and mayor Cahill, I didn't know if you were I know
you usually go to this event and usually do speak. I didn't know if you were still planning on
doing that.
138:42 Michael Cahill: Um a blue and I were looking to do something together. He's done his
part and he gave me my homework and I've got it. I gotta get my part ready.
138:52 Caya Johnson: Okay, great. Great. Well, I'm glad to hear that. I'm glad to hear that that
it's in the work. So I did speak to Dr. Morgan. Also who is working on his speech with what the
superintendent as well so Just to let folks know so that gives us until Wednesday and Tom and
Paul you guys can. can chime in at any point, but 1
139:18 Tom Gallo: Hey.
139:18 Caya Johnson:we have until the 13th because we have to get the video to bedcam by
139:25 Beverly Human Rights Committee:Yeah.
139:25 Caya Johnson: Friday the 15th in the morning.
139:29 Tom Gallo: That that's
139:29 Beverly Human Rights Committee: That's right.
139:29 Tom Gallo: That's correct. Yeah Friday on the 15th.
139:30 Caya Johnson: Okay.
139:32 Tom Gallo:We have to get the video over to Kim so he can do some audio tests with it.
So if we can have the final video submitted by the evening of the 13th, I mean you could even
say midnight on the evening of the 13th that gives me Thursday to make the final edit get it over
to Kim do a couple of tests and we should be good to go to air on Monday morning.
139:52 Beverly Human Rights Committee:Yeah, so chemotherapy has been extremely helpful
and he was very impressed. By Tom because usually people just dump all these pieces on Bev
Cam and they have to string everything together. So he was very taken back that we were
handing in the whole thing in one package. So it just give him a little bit of time to he was a more
concerned with the audio levels because everyone's gonna submit their pieces and one's gonna
be louder than the rest and you know, we'll see what Tom can do with his magic to level things
off but then Kim can kind of help as well. Yeah. We have the site booked through the city Friday
afternoon for a run through and we also have it booked for that Monday morning. I don't think
we're gonna have to go there at all because we're just handing them the video and they're just
gonna put it out on the public access Channel and then also on YouTube So from our
standpoint, there's a committee. I think we really need to do the marketing piece at this point
and just kind of Point let people know this is happening through our social
140:56 Paul Lanzikos:the
140:56 Beverly Human Rights Committee: media through our friends through our website. If we
can push people to the website, we can embed the link to the YouTube stream and there's all
there's already already out the flyer out there that are amazing fire and they can just click on
that to access the event that Monday morning so we can go we can start now in promoting that
and letting people know where to go to watch that.
141:23 Paul Lanzikos:Yeah and Paul, this is Polynesia. That's exactly what I want to talk about.
This is I'm I can prepare the medium release that we can get out to to the papers and and and
actually to everybody else so you could distribute, but I need to chat with maybe cager and Tom
and you Paul just to get a little bit more details tomorrow so I can prepare the release.
141:47 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Sure, perfect. Yeah, I'm available anytime.
141:54 Caya Johnson:All right. Thank you Pauls both Paul's. and so If anyone else have
anything else? That before we wrap. Up all mayor Cahill.
142:09 Michael Cahill: Keisha hi, how do your family I don't know if counselor Copeland wants
to speak or just have everybody take a quick look at his message in the chat.
142:18 Caya Johnson: Oh you're here. I didn't even know that he was here.
142:24 Beverly Human Rights Committee: No reinforce city council is here today. That's
awesome.
142:26 Caja Johnson: Congratulations.
142:29 Dominic Copeland:Yeah, can you hear me?
142:30 Caja Johnson: I can hear you.
142:32 Dominic Copeland: I guess I'm here. I've been doing double duty. So, you know family
stuff as well, so I didn't want to you know interrupt on a call, but I just wanted to put that thank
you first off and thank you everyone for for doing the work that we're doing here. Thank you
Chief as well for being here and Mary Cahill as well. I appreciate the the work that we're doing.
It's not it's not easy to do but I appreciate us having these conversations to start to move
forward. It's not going to be easy process, but Like I said, we have to start the work somewhere
and this is a great place to be to do that. So all I was saying there is when it comes to we have
to start looking at not just the stats, but some of the the problems that we've been facing with
policing not even saying is here in our own Community, but overall profiling has been a big
issue I've had to deal with that personally as well then also. Just people that might be biased or
racist in the community as well who might be unjustly calling the police on people of color. So
we can start to figure out beyond the stats. What's bringing police into these situations. Is it
whether being caught into a situation?Where's the cost originating from? You know, how's that
process starting so we can start to see what with the trends and patterns are there and that
might give us a little more insight into the Fuller picture and we also have to keep in mind
whatever. The issues are between the the police and people of color historically. Make sure
we're looking into that as far as this the stats that we have to make sure that they're not issues
here that we're facing. so the biggest thing is As a community, we just want to be prepared that
if these things are here we can start to see them and start to address them. Because again, I
rather do the hard work. I'd rather have the tough conversations and I'd rather everyone be
protected. Now. I went to community prep to be protected. I went to police to be protected. I
don't want to unjustly criticize or put the police in the bad situation. I'd rather have the rules and
regulations in place that protect them and protect the community so we can all work together
and be safe. That makes sense.
144:52 Caja Johnson: That makes absolute sense. Thank you so much counselor Copeland
and thank you for being here tonight. I'm just looking here. Oh Leah. Yes, so there is an email
that will be going out just to give the opportunity to city leaders that are not speaking at the
event to release a statement if you would like. I know that it's usually a lot bigger and so there's
a lot more people that have an opportunity to be involved. But this year because of
circumstances it is, you know shorter so um, if you want to write anything or you have anything
to say There'll be the opportunity to do so.
145:47 Michael Cahill: Keisha can we do a group lullaby that help.
145:52 Caja Johnson: I don't know. This guy's he's pretty tired. I'm I don't know we can try.
145:56 Michael Cahill: Okay.
145:59 Caja Johnson:All right, we made it to nine o'clock we made it. So thank you all so much.
Meeting a drone 8:58 pm. Thank you all so much. The next meeting that we're having is on
March 4th at 7 pm and everyone if you could just go to the website. Paul Goodwin made it so
that there's just a link that you click and it'll just take you right to the meeting moving forward.
Thank you so much Chief.
146:30 Michael Cahill: It's great.
146:31 Caya Johnson: Thank you mayor. Thank you.
146:33 Michael Cahill: Thanks.
146:33 Caya Johnson: Thank you City councilors for being a part of this. Thank you all.
146:38 Gabrielle Montevecchi: Thank you, Kasia.
146:39 Michael Cahill: Thanks. Take care.
146:41 Gabrielle Montevecchi: Hi, babe.
146:42 Estelle Rand: Thank you great work today.
146:43 Caya Johnson: Bye.
146:44 Scott Houseman: Okay.
146:47 Carole Rein:Thank you all.
146:48 Leah Jones: Keisha do I need to make a oh the chief usually Chief usually makes a
motion to adjourn. Okay, that's okay. Thanks everybody.
146:58 Beverly Human Rights Committee:All right. I'll make a motion to adjourn if you want a
second earlier.
147:00 Leah Jones: Okay, I second.
147:02 Beverly Human Rights Committee:All right.
147:02 Leah Jones:Thanks.
147:03 Beverly Human Rights Committee: Good night, everyone.
147:04 Alison Adler. Thank you all.
147:05 Gabrielle Montevecchi: Thank you, everyone.
147:05 Leah Jones: Good night.
147:07 Alison Adler. Be well.