Letter to the Hon. Matt Cartwright, Chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies, and Robert Aderholt, Ranking Member - Rutherford, Pascrell Lead 159 Members of Congress in Support of Police Funding

Letter

By: Jerry Carl, Mike Rogers, Tom O'Halleran, Paul Gosar, Greg Stanton, Mike Thompson, Ami Bera, Mark DeSaulnier, Eric Swalwell, Anna Eshoo, Salud Carbajal, Tony Cárdenas, Grace Napolitano, Raul Ruiz, Mark Takano, Darrell Issa, Scott Peters, John Larson, Jim Himes, Darren Soto, Gus Bilirakis, Frederica Wilson, Sanford Bishop, Jr., Jody Hice, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Marie Newman, Danny Davis, Brad Schneider, Rodney Davis, Cheri Bustos, Frank Mrvan, John Yarmuth, Clay Higgins, Julia Letlow, Richard Neal, Stephen Lynch, John Sarbanes, Jamie Raskin, Dan Kildee, Haley Stevens, Tom Emmer, Michael Guest, Kathy Manning, Madison Cawthorn, Ted Budd, Chris Pappas, Jeff Van Drew, Joshua Gottheimer, Tom Malinowski, Bill Pascrell, Jr., Mikie Sherrill, Steven Horsford, Andrew Garbarino, Nicole Malliotakis, Paul Tonko, John Katko, Brad Wenstrup, Bill Johnson, Mike Turner, Anthony Gonzalez, Suzanne Bonamici, Peter DeFazio, Dwight Evans, Fred Keller, Conor Lamb, Jenniffer González-Colón, Jim Langevin, David Kustoff, Lizzie Fletcher, Randy Weber, Sr., Eddie Johnson, Marc Veasey, Burgess Owens, Robert Good, Don Beyer, Jr., Peter Welch, Kim Schrier, Ron Kind, Alex Mooney, John Rutherford, Donald Young, Barry Moore, Terri Sewell, Raul Grijalva, Debbie Lesko, Jared Huffman, Doris Matsui, Jerry McNerney, Jackie Speier, Jim Costa, Jimmy Panetta, Julia Brownley, Brad Sherman, Ted Lieu, Karen Bass, Alan Lowenthal, Juan Vargas, Diana DeGette, Joe Courtney, Kat Cammack, Val Demings, Ted Deutch, Carlos Gimenez, Lucy McBath, David Scott, Bobby Rush, Sean Casten, Jan Schakowsky, Bill Foster, Adam Kinzinger, Darin LaHood, André Carson, Andy Barr, Mike Johnson, Garret Graves, Seth Moulton, Bill Keating, Anthony Brown, Chellie Pingree, Andy Levin, Debbie Dingell, Peter Stauber, Deborah Ross, Richard Hudson, Jr., Alma Adams, Donald Bacon, Annie Kuster, Andy Kim, Frank Pallone, Jr., Albio Sires, Don Payne, Jr., Dina Titus, Lee Zeldin, Kathleen Rice, Carolyn Maloney, Elise Stefanik, Steve Chabot, Joyce Beatty, Bob Gibbs, Steve Stivers, Frank Lucas, Cliff Bentz, Brian Fitzpatrick, Scott Perry, GT Thompson, Jr., Mike Doyle, Jr., David Cicilline, Diana Harshbarger, Steve Cohen, Michael McCaul, Vicente Gonzalez, Colin Allred, Filemon Vela, Jr., Donald McEachin, Abigail Spanberger, Stacey Plaskett, Rick Larsen, Bryan Steil, David McKinley
Date: April 29, 2021
Location: Washington, DC

Dear Chairman Cartwright and Ranking Member Aderholt,

As you begin to craft the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies (CJS) appropriation bill for Fiscal Year 2022 (FY22), we respectfully urge you to include increased funding for the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne JAG) Program and the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) programs, including the COPS Hiring Program. Together, these programs are critical to ensuring state and local law enforcement have the training, tools, and personnel necessary to protect and serve their communities. As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to strain police departments across the nation, ensuring these programs receive increased funding must be a priority.

The Byrne JAG and COPS programs are the cornerstone of our federal justice assistance programs. Since their inception, Byrne JAG and COPS grants have enabled law enforcement agencies to better protect their communities and promote community policing initiatives that form vital bonds between officers and those they serve. As Congress considers proposals to improve and reform policing, these programs will serve as critical tools to allow departments to fund trainings for de-escalation, use of force, implicit bias, and other initiatives to ensure officers are fully equipped to protect and serve consistent with community expectations.

The strength of the Byrne JAG program is in its broad impact across the criminal justice system. Byrne JAG grants are used in states and communities across the country for a variety of important initiatives, including improved tools and technologies, crime prevention and education, mental health and substance use disorder treatment, drug and other specialty courts, alternatives to incarceration, prosecution and indigent defense, crime victim and wellness initiatives, recidivism reduction programs and services designed to stop the cycle of crime, and trainings to improve community policing efforts.

The COPS programs provide invaluable resources to hire community policing professionals, develop and test innovative policing strategies, and provide training to community members and local law enforcement. Since 1994, the COPS Office has invested more than $14 billion to help advance community policing. Increased funding is critical to ensuring that law enforcement has the resources necessary to continue these important community policing efforts that build bonds and make our communities safer.

Support for the Byrne JAG and COPS programs is imperative to the safety of our communities and continued efforts to improve policing in our nation, yet funding for both programs have been cut over the past decade and must be restored to previous levels. These programs provide critical federal dollars to build upon successful crime reduction efforts and ensure officers maintain strong relationships with their communities. For these reasons, we respectfully request that you include increased funding for the Byrne JAG and COPS programs in the FY22 CJS appropriations bill.

Sincerely,

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