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	"provider_name": "Action Network",
	"provider_url": "https://actionnetwork.org",
	
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	"author_name": "Progressive Mass ",
	"author_url": "https://actionnetwork.org/groups/progressive-mass",
	"title": "The House Can Strengthen Its Police Reform Bill",
	"thumbnail_url": "https://can2-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/letters/photos/000/123/330/normal/Black_Lives_Matter_-_canva.png",
	"description": "Yesterday, the MA House released its police reform bill, and needless to say, we’re disappointed. Although there are some improvements on the Senate bill (stronger language on facial surveillance and chokeholds), the House punted on reforming qualified immunity, weakened language on reducing the school-to-prison pipeline, eliminated the Justice Reinvestment Fund, and dropped a whole section devoted to controlling the transfer of military equipment to police forces. The House will be voting THIS WEEK, so your state rep needs to be hearing from YOU that you want a stronger bill. We’ve outlined some key amendments below. Making Sure that Schools Are Safe &amp;amp; Welcoming Spaces #1 (Sabadosa): Ensuring Public Accountability for School Policing, which provides school districts with discretion about whether or not to hire school resource officers #88 (Elugardo): Protecting Students From Profiling, which disrupts the school-to-prison pipeline by preventing the transmission of student information to law enforcement agencies Centering Public Safety around Community #46 (Keefe): Justice Reinvestment and Workforce Development Fund, which would reallocate money from the Department of Corrections into a fund for job training and workforce development for communities disproportionately targeted by the criminal-legal system #71 (Sabadosa): Alternatives to Policing, which establishes a Community Emergency Response Team consisting of trained social workers under the Department of Public Health to divert certain 911 calls to #99 (Barber): Work and Family Mobility, which ensures that immigration status is not a barrier to obtaining a driver’s license Demilitarizing Police &amp;amp; Strengthening Regulations on the Use of Force #92 (Elugardo) Pre-Emptive De-Escalation, which requires police departments to make plans for de-escalation in advance of protests #97 (Robinson): No-Knock Warrants, which bans the use of no-knock raids #131 (Lewis): Restrictions on the Acquisition on Military Grade Controlled Property, which imposes limitations and democratic oversight requirements on the procurement of military weaponry by state and local enforcement #194 (Robinson): Use of force tactics, which bans the use of rubber bullets and attack dogs by police #200 (Connolly): Tear Gas, which bans the use of tear gas Increasing Police Accountability #176 (Hecht): Reforming qualified immunity for law enforcement officers, which enables victims of police brutality to sue for civil damages #210 (Malia): Officer identification, which requires all officers to have a badge with their name, identification number, and agency visible, with violations subject to suspension or other discipline Independence of the Police Standards &amp;amp; Accreditation Commission #95 (Robinson): Makeup of POSAC, which ensures that the civilian members of the commission are not family members of law enforcement #96 (Robinson): Designation of POSAC Chair, which takes away the Governor’s ability to appoint the commission’s chair and allows the commission to appoint its own #202 (Decker): Police Standards Commission, which eliminates the guaranteed law enforcement seats on the commission Preventing a Gross Misallocation of Funds #86 (Miranda): Prioritizing Social Equity Spending of Marijuana Revenue, which stipulates that if any money is redirected from the Marijuana Regulation Fund to the Police Training Fund, an equal or greater amount must be transferred to a social equity training and assistance fund #94 (Robinson): Police Training Fund &amp;amp; #211 (Vega): Marijuana Regulation Fund, which strike the language redirecting funds from the Marijuana Regulation Fund to the Police Training Fund Protecting the Human Rights of the Incarcerated #2 (Sabadosa): Use of Force within the DOC, which would require the Department of Corrections and sheriffs’ offices to provide a commission on the use of force within prisons and jails with necessary documentation to conduct oversight #98 (Sabadosa): Decarceration, which would require the release of individuals who are currently in pre-trial detainment or under incarceration if they are a member of a population deemed especially vulnerable by the CDC, are eligible for medical parole, are almost finished with their sentence, or are only being detained due to inability to pay bail or due to minor violations of parole",
	"url": "https://actionnetwork.org/letters/the-house-can-strengthen-its-police-reform-bill"
}

