Discourse regarding the management of downtown East Lansing continues to be a pressing issue for the East Lansing City Council as business owners and community members remain divided over the extent of policing. The debate follows weeks of deliberation over proposed changes to a city ordinance that mandates police oversight through the East Lansing Independent Police Oversight Commission, the public body responsible for investigating police misconduct.
At a regularly scheduled meeting Tuesday, the council delayed a second reading of the amended ordinance and pledged to release a “cross-reference” document showing reasoning for the proposed changes.
Ordinance No. 1533 lays out the functions of ELIPOC, advising ELPD on policy and overseeing cases of alleged police misconduct, but it holds no administrative authority. Amendments to the ordinance were introduced on Aug. 12 following the approval of a police union contract, which said the changes were “required.”
The motion to move the ordinance reading to Oct. 21 was proposed by council members Dana Watson and Mark Meadows. Watson had attempted to move the second reading at a previous council meeting on Sept. 9, over concerns that members of ELIPOC would not have enough time to discuss the proposed amendments.
The motion to defer the reading to Oct. 21 passed unanimously, although councilmember Erik Altmann questioned if the deferral would raise concerns among the labor council. The city attorney said the deferral has not been “raised as an issue.”
Altmann previously voted no to a motion deferring the reading to Oct. 21, causing the motion to fail 4-1.
A motion was also made to release a “cross-reference” document clarifying the source of the ordinance’s proposed changes to the public and ELIPOC.
“This is something we’ve been requesting since Aug. 12, and we very much hope that you will be able to take positive action on it tonight,” ELIPOC member Chris Root said during public comment. Root also requested council to respond to a list of questions curated by ELIPOC surrounding the implications of the language used in the amended ordinance before their meeting next Wednesday, Oct. 1.
Altmann was the only council member to vote no, stating that the legal situation is “complicated.”
The proposed changes to the ordinance will be revisited at the ELIPOC meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 1 for discussion ahead of the Oct. 21 city council meeting, where the second reading will take place.
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