Amendments S and U Pass!

Thank You, Dallas!
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PASSED CHARTER AMENDMETNS

Proposition S: EMPOWERING RESIDENTS TO FIGHT BACK

 

The question is simple: Who holds city government accountable when it refuses to enforce its own ordinances and state law?

Today, the average citizen is powerless in the face of blatant disregard for the law. But with Proposition S, we are leveling the playing field and giving the people back their voice!

How? By giving legal standing to any Dallas resident to sue the city for failure to follow local and state law. In a sane world, we shouldn’t need courts and judges to uphold the law with our own government, but Dallas leaders have made it clear that we must balance the scales of justice and bring accountability back.

 

Proposition U: ENSURING OUR POLICE DEPARTMENT HAS THE MANPOWER TO KEEP US SAFE

 

Did you know that in nearly every year of the past decade, Dallas has lost more police officers through attrition and retirement than it has gained? In 2015, DPD had a goal to increase from 3,600 officers to over 4,000 to get to the minimum ratio of 3 officers to 1000 citizens, but instead Dallas lost nearly 600 officers, and we barely have 3,000.

Did you know DPD response times for murder, shooting and stabbing are nearly 12 minutes on average and 107 minutes for other violent crimes with the risk of loss of life? The slowest nationally accepted response time is 8 min.—when Dallas had 3,600 officers the response time was 6.3 minutes. Now, most property crimes have to be reported online and will get no police response, no charges and no prosecution. Dallas used to have police presence and deterrence to crime.

Did you know Dallas Police Department starting salary and benefits are the lowest in the greater metroplex even though its one of the most difficult and dangerous cities to police? No wonder we can’t retain officers who get training and a little experience and leave.

It is time to restore Dallas Police Department to historic ratios of officers to citizens, which means hiring roughly 1,000 new police officers with priority—not 500 police officers over the next decade as our interim city manager currently proposes.

Dallas city leaders have prioritized pet projects and wasteful spending while public safety has eroded, collapsing whole communities and making victims out of our residents.

We need more police and we need to give them the resources needed to do their job and do it safely.

BE A HERO.

Dallas city leaders are afraid of our agenda for change and have done everything imaginable to defeat this effort, including unlawfully using public resources to campaign against reform.

City Council knows many voters abandon their ballots early, so they placed Dallas HERO propositions at the very bottom.

Games instead of leadership. The city council’s attempts to silence nearly 170,000 residents who signed petitions to force these propositions onto the ballot is par for the course. We need law enforcement that applies to our leaders and accountability.

But you can be a Hero by going to the bottom of the ballot.