Page 8 - Sonoma County Gazette July 2020
P. 8

  OPINION: Evelyn Cheatham Effective IOLERO Ordinance
By the Committee for an Effective IOLERO Statement on Board of Supervisors’ Proposed Process to Consider Amendments to the the IOLERO Ordinance
Please contact your supervisor and let them know that you don’t want an ad hoc committee; you want the Evelyn Cheatham Effective IOLERO Ordinance. (contact information at the end of this message - Sonoma County residents only, please - you do not need to be registered to vote)
Why We Remain Insistent That Our County Supervisors Place the Evelyn Cheatham Effective IOLERO Ordinance on the November Ballot
You Can Help Heal Racism
We are pleased that the Board of Supervisors is finally responding to the numerous calls from the community to strengthen the IOLERO ordinance and provide effective oversight of our Sheriff’s Office. We are very concerned that the process being proposed will paper over the
6,000 community members have signed an electronic petition urging our Board of Supervisors to put these amendments on the November ballot. At the same time, local protests have brought even greater attention to the need for independent, effective oversight of local law enforcement, and especially our Sheriff.
towards Blacks in America is a sickening one of brutality, murder, torture, disenfranchisement of
the most awful variety, rape, imprisonment (slavery) & then after slavery was abolished in 1865, Jim Crow laws (to promote segregation and discrimination).
real needs for reform and is designed to avoid the real transformation that is needed around law enforcement accountability and out Sheriff’s Office.
In this context, our Supervisors have now announced they plan to study the Evelyn Cheatham ordinance
and will work with the Sheriff to decide what changes should be made to strengthen the IOLERO Ordinance. The chosen advisors have a demonstrated history of not supporting effective, independent and transparent oversight of law enforcement.
Even with the Civil Rights Movement, endemic racism was never rooted out. It shows in dramatic housing, financial, health & education disparities between White and Black communities. It shows in the chronic police brutality so graphically revealed in recent weeks towards protesters, after
IOLERO was established in 2015 following an unprecedented public process held by a task force of 21 community members meeting weekly for more than a years. Even then, the county government worked hard to limit the proposals that resulted from that process. IOLERO as enacted in 2015 by the Board of Supervisors was a compromise with the Sheriff that limited both its effectiveness and independence.
This is the same process that led in the past to a compromise that prevented IOLERO from being independent and effective. Our committee is very concerned that this process will have the same result and a unique opportunity to implement effective oversight will be lost. This is one reason we sought a ballot measure to enact these amendments. The process of direct democracy is threatened unless our community is given an opportunity to vote on the proposed amendments on the November ballot.
the gruesome police murder of an unarmed man, George Floyd.
After more than 3 years of experience with IOLERO, it is clear that the initial model of civilian oversight of our Sheriff is inadequate. It lacks real independence and is not equipped to be effective in meeting its missions. These deficiencies were clearly identified in the 2017-18 IOLERO Annual Report, which proposed strengthening the IOLERO ordinance.
Why? Because racist attitudes, beliefs, policies & actions are built into our country, into the minds & hearts of the White culture in the USA. White people tend to be blind to this because they’re not affected by the discriminatory practices that Black people face. They usually have no idea it’s even happening. But it
Consequently, IOLERO currently cannot effectively monitor uses of force, including deadly force, by Sheriff’s deputies in the jail and on patrol. It cannot effectively suggest needed changes to Sheriff’s policies, practices and training. And it cannot effectively provide the transparency around these matters that was envisioned.
The Committee for an Effective IOLERO therefore calls on our county supervisors to place the Evelyn Cheatham Ordinance on the November ballot for a vote of the people. Should the supervisor wish to make changes to this proposal and enact it legislatively, our committee demands that this happen only after robust imputes from the public, oversight experts, and only
is. It’s been going on for 400 years since the first slave was brought to American shores.
The Evelyn Cheatham Effective IOLERO Ordinance proposes revising the IOLERO ordinance so that IOLERO can realize the Principles of Effective Oversight that
are considered necessary to the task by the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement (“NACOLE”). That is why the NACOLE Board of Directors, and many county public officials, have endorsed these needed amendments to the IOLERO Ordinance. It also is endorsed by the ACLU, the North Bay Labor Council, the Sonoma County NAACP, and
the Sonoma County Democratic Party, among others. https://socoeffectiveoversight.org/endorsers
if those changes make improvements to the proposal consistent with the NACOLE Principles of Effective Oversight.
What YOU can do to change this:
First: Learn the history of African Americans in the USA; there
are many books, films, blogs & documentaries for you to explore.
The Committee for an Effective IOLERO collected thousands of voters signatures to put this measure on the November 2020 ballot before the COVID-19 pandemic halted signature gathering. Consequently, the committee shifted its efforts to convincing our Supervisors to put the measure on the ballot directly. They ignored these requests.
as community mental health, low- income housing & education. Help pass bills to change the laws that allow violent rather than peaceful means of restraining people.
District 1 - Susan Gorin (Board Chair) - susan.gorin@ sonoma-county.org
District 2 - David Rabbitt - david.rabbitt@sonoma- county.org
District 3 - Shirlee Zane - shirlee.zane@sonoma- county.org
District 4 - James Gore - district4@sonoma-county.org District 5 - Lynda Hopkins - lynda.hopkins@sonoma-
To find your district - https://sonomacounty. ca.gov/Board-of-Supervisors/District-Lookup/
Second: Get politically involved in your community to reform your local police and sheriff’s departments. See that some of their funding is shifted into social action programs such
county.org
Third: Speak out & protest whenever you hear racist talk! Don’t let it pass you by! Support our Black brothers & sisters!
HEAL cont’d on page 9
By Gail Raborn
The history of endemic racism
 https://socoeffectiveoversight.org/
8 - www.sonomacountygazette.com - 7/20
























































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