Document Date: January 4, 2021
By Carol Rose, Rahsaan Hall, and Kade Crockford
On May 30, 2020, no one would have predicted that the Massachusetts state legislature would pass police reform or surveillance regulation before the end of the legislative session. The following day, thousands of people took to the streets and changed history.
The May 31 protests against police violence in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd shook the foundations of power in the Commonwealth. Lawmakers were finally listening to the people’s cries about policing and racial injustice. Overnight, police reform became the hottest topic on Beacon Hill.
It’s been a long and winding journey from those protests to the bill Governor Baker last week signed into law.
Since the early summer, advocates and activists throughout Massachusetts have worked tirelessly to pressure state lawmakers to do the right thing and send strong police reforms to Governor Baker’s desk. Throughout the summer, people called, emailed, and marched to convince House and Senate leadership to include police certification, limits on use of force and qualified immunity, and regulations on face surveillance in the police reform bills. After the House and Senate voted on legislation differing in these areas, a civil rights movement for police reform mobilized to pressure the conference committee to agree to the strongest possible language.
Meanwhile, the police unions launched a massive campaign to stop the proposed reforms. They bought high-priced ads in the state’s most influential newspaper, imploring legislative leaders to make only marginal changes to the law. They misrepresented the proposed changes with misleading suggestions that police would lose their homes or were otherwise victims of reform efforts, while ignoring the voices of actual victims of police misconduct. By flexing their considerable political muscle, the police unions tried to frighten lawmakers to back off of robust systemic reforms. There was a real risk that the police—the people who the reforms were designed to hold accountable—would have the strongest political hand in shaping those reforms.
But civil rights advocates weren’t going to go down without a fight. After the conference committee released its language last fall, movement leaders once again mobilized people to ensure the House and Senate would pass the compromise legislation, which they did in early December.
Unfortunately, the House did not pass the bill with a large enough margin to be able to override a potential veto. And Governor Baker—siding with police unions—rejected key elements of the legislation, promising to veto any bill that included language to place robust limits on police use of face surveillance or the use of force.
Despite these formidable odds, advocates and activists did not give up. We mobilized again, and thousands of Massachusetts residents contacted their legislators to urge them to reject Governor Baker’s amendments. The Boston Celtics roster even joined the fight, with every player on the team signing an op-ed in the Boston Globe calling on Governor Baker to get out of the people’s way, and to sign into law strong protections against misuse of face surveillance technologies, which data science has shown exacerbates racial disparities.
People power paid off: police reform was signed into law on December 31. We didn’t get everything we wanted in the new law, but we achieved far more than we thought possible just six months ago. Moreover, we’ve laid the groundwork for additional police reform in the year ahead. This advocacy campaign changed both the law and the public conversation—and we are just getting started.
In recent weeks, defense attorney Carl Williams obtained and published videos of Boston Police officers brutalizing peaceful protesters on May 31, 2020 in downtown Boston. Those videos, like the ACLU’s “Police Violence Happens Here” project, expose the lie that police in Massachusetts are somehow different from police in other states.
The myth that Massachusetts doesn’t have a police problem is precisely what advocates and activists have called out. In so doing, they have convinced voters, lawmakers, and the Governor to go deeper and wider in their police reform effort than previously thought possible.
The resulting law is far from perfect, but it lays the necessary groundwork for ongoing public actions to reimagine policing, public health, and public safety.
As we reflect on 2020, everyone who fought for police reform in Massachusetts should celebrate the important victories in this law, just as we remain clear-headed and strategic about the many fights to come.
In that spirit, here are five important pieces of the police reform law you might have missed, and which we should all take time to celebrate:
These are important victories, and we should savor them. But much work remains for us in 2021 and beyond. In many important areas, the legislature did not overcome the objections of the police unions, anti-reform lawmakers, and Governor Baker. But what we didn’t win this time we will redouble our efforts to secure in the coming years. Here are the top five things the law stopped short of getting right, charting a road map of the work to come.
We have much work to do in 2021 and beyond. But we are ready to build on this success—with gratitude to our friends, allies, and supporters, who have been shoulder to shoulder in the march toward a more just world.
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