Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Financial
  • Technology
  • Home
  • Education
  • Construction
  • Business
  • Services
  • Non-profit
Washingtoner

Tacoma City Council's Joint Statement on Actions Underway to Address Community Safety
Washingtoner/10137014

Trending...
  • "They Said It Was Impossible": This Bottle Turns Any Freshwater Source Into Ice-Cold, Purified Drinking Water in Seconds
  • Tacoma City Council Announces City Manager Finalists
  • Spokane: 2026 Safe Streets For All (Traffic Calming) Updates
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 19, 2021

MEDIA CONTACT
Tanisha Jumper, Media and Communications, tjumper@ci.tacoma.wa.us, (253) 591-5152

Claire Goodwin, Council Assistant, claire.goodwin@cityoftacoma.org, (253) 591-5164

Tacoma City Council's Joint Statement on Actions Underway to Address Community Safety

We acknowledge this has been an extraordinary and difficult time for our community in many respects regarding public safety. The City Council is unified in our desire for Tacoma to be a city where everyone feels safe to live, work, and play, and to be responsive to those constituents who have raised concerns with levels of service when reporting a crime. For some in our community those concerns have been coupled with a call to increase the size of our police force. At the same time, we know that community safety needs vary in our community. We hear the fear our Black and Brown communities feel around issues of policing and bad outcomes with law enforcement nationally and locally. Addressing the concerns expressed by community members, whether as organized groups or as individuals, is of utmost importance to us. We hear all perspectives.

As elected leaders, we are responsible for incorporating these perspectives as we establish the vision for the City and articulate, through policy direction and our budget, where we want to end up as a community.

Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the death of Manuel Ellis, this has been an unprecedented era in defining policing and public safety. As a body, we guide the City Manager and Interim Police Chief in making high-quality decisions that reflect the will of the City Council, and ultimately the residents of Tacoma. We support these city leaders as they strive to address community safety and increases in violent crime while also being called to implement transformation and address a wide variety of complex administrative issues, including:
  • Successfully deploying body-worn cameras to every officer on patrol and now implementing dash cameras.
  • Integrating changing state laws related to policing.
  • Implementing 128 recommendations resulting from three City-commissioned reports.
  • Recruiting officers to fill roughly 40 fully-funded vacant positions during a time when jurisdictions across the country are struggling to recruit police officers.
  • Executing ongoing major projects vital to the City and policing.
  • Adapting to COVID-19 protocols.

Nationally, the COVID-19 pandemic has intensified the impact of the gun violence crisis, resulting in 3,906 additional firearm deaths and 9,278 additional firearm injuries in 2020, compared to 2019. Locally, some reported crimes are trending down from the prior year, and while the Tacoma Police Department has a reputation for successfully resolving homicide cases, there have been notable and disturbing increases in serious crimes such as assault, homicide, burglary, robbery, vandalism, and arson.

More on Washingtoner
  • CCHR: Decades of Warnings, Persistent Inaction; Studies Raise New Alarms on Psychiatric Drug Safety
  • PRÝNCESS Builds Anticipation With "My Nerves" — A Girls-Girl Anthem
  • Arbutus Medical Raises C$9.3M to Accelerate Growth of Surgical Workflow Solutions Outside the OR
  • From Sleepless Nights to Sold-Out Drops: Catch Phrase Poet's First Year Redefining Motivational Urban Apparel
  • Now Live on Kickstarter: The Bottle That Chills and Purifies Any Freshwater — and Donates One for Every 10 Backers

We, the Tacoma Mayor and City Council, fully support Interim Chief Mike Ake as the administrative director of the Tacoma Police Department, and we applaud his efforts to address co-occurring challenges and the need for transformation while executing the Department's strategic plan to address the rise in violent crime. Specifically, at the City Council Study Session on September 28, 2021, Interim Police Chief Ake provided an overview of calls for service and violent crime analysis and presented a holistic violent crime reduction strategy with short-, medium-, and long-term action items. Short-term strategies to be deployed in the next six months include:
  • Carrying out special emphasis missions.
  • Increasing patrol visibility in identified "hot spot" areas.
  • Re-assigning five detectives and a sergeant to be fully trained and dedicated to the apprehension of persons responsible for violent crime, separate from and in addition to the current homicide unit.
  • Partnering with community groups to reduce youth violence.
  • Partnering with the Human Resources Department to reduce hiring process time and recruiting women of color officers using targeted outreach.

In our role as policymakers, we approved a budget for the 2021-2022 biennium which allocated $172 million (34% of the General Fund) to the Tacoma Police Department. Our approved budget also includes funding that would allow the City Manager to establish an Office of Community Safety.

On October 12, 2021, the City Council Study Session included a presentation with proposals for an additional $5.6 in funding for 12 initiatives related to violent crime reduction, adding hiring incentives and staff focused on recruitment and retention efforts, and technology upgrades. As part of the mid-biennium budget modification process, we will have the opportunity to approve these additional resources in November. Previously, we funded a divertible calls study that was completed in May of this year and the City Manager has been working hard to implement the recommendations, including actions around increasing capacity for the homeless outreach team.

More on Washingtoner
  • How Specialized Game Development Services Are Powering the Next Wave of Interactive Entertainment
  • Don't Settle for a Lawyer Who Just Speaks Spanish. Demand One Who Understands Your Story
  • Dan Williams Promoted to Century Fasteners Corp. – General Manager, Operations
  • Ski Johnson Inks Strategic Deals with Three Major Food Chain Brands
  • NIL Club Advances Agent-Free NIL Model as Oversight Intensifies Across College Athletics

In addition to the focus on policing and calls for service, we as your Mayor and Council understand that a sense of safety can be influenced by our environment as well. We remain unified in our desire to have clean public spaces, and this is why we directed $500,000 of the American Rescue Plan Act funding support the Tidy-Up Tacoma initiative and have expressed our desire for ongoing funding to address litter, right-of-way maintenance, and graffiti. We expect to see budget proposals for continuing these efforts during our budget modification process in November.

Addressing crime, increasing the sense of community safety, and engaging in transformation are areas where progress will rely on sustained effort and attention. As your elected leaders, we remain committed to this vital and important work, and we will continue to prioritize a Tacoma that feels safer for all.

More information about the City's transformation efforts is available at cityoftacoma.org/transform.

Filed Under: Government, City

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • Angels Of Dirt Premieres on Youtube, Announces Paige Keck Helmet Sponsorship for 2026 Season
  • "They Said It Was Impossible": This Bottle Turns Any Freshwater Source Into Ice-Cold, Purified Drinking Water in Seconds
  • Patron Saints Of Music Names Allie Moskovits Head Of Sync & Business Development
  • Dave Aronberg Named 2026 John C. Randolph Award Recipient by Palm Beach Fellowship of Christians & Jews
  • General Relativity Challenged by New Tension Discovered in Dark Siren Cosmology
  • Unseasonable Warmth Triggers Early Pest Season Along I-5 Corridor
  • Bug Busters Expands Service Footprint With New Carrollton, Georgia Branch
  • Why KULR Could Be a Quiet Enabler of Space-Based Solar Power (SBSP) Over The Long Term: KULR Technology Group, Inc. (NY SE American: KULR)
  • Why Finland Had No Choice But to Legalize Online Gambling
  • High-Margin Energy & Digital Infrastructure Platform Created after Merger with Established BlockFuel Energy, Innovation Beverage Group (NAS DAQ: IBG)
  • iFLO Pro Launches Its Groundbreaking iFLO Pro Mini At The 2026 AHR Expo In Las Vegas
  • TL International Group Becomes First Global Operator to Fully Migrate to Pulsant's Dedicated Car Rental Cloud
  • Diveroli Investment Group Files 13D in PetMed Express, Highlights Strategic Value, Asset Floor, and Multiple Takeover Pathways
  • Deep Learning Robotics (DLRob) Announces Pre-Launch of Zero-Teach and Teach-by-Demonstration Technology for Kitting Applications
  • The Quasar Dipole Phenomenon is likely just a complex systematics artifact
  • The Rise of Comprehensive Home Water Treatment Systems
  • Yazaki Innovations to Introduce First-Ever Prefabricated Home Wiring System to U.S. Residential Market in 2026
  • Bisnar Chase Named 2026 Law Firm of the Year by Best Lawyers
  • Ace Industries Welcomes Jack Polish as Controller
  • Senseeker Machining Company Acquires Axis Machine to Establish Machining Capability for Improved Supply Chain Control and Shorter Delivery Times
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • Spokane: Council to Hold Press Conference to Discuss Further Information on Department of Justice Grant - 168
  • TBM Council Appoints U.S. Department of Transportation CDIO Pavan Pidugu to Board of Directors - 127
  • Spokane: Male In Custody After Puppy Is Thrown From Moving Vehicle During Argument; Puppy Located By Neighbor Unharmed
  • OneVizion Announces Next Phase of Growth as Brad Kitchens Joins Board of Directors
  • Tacoma: OMWBE Certification 201 Workshop on February 12
  • Tacoma Police Arrest Suspect in Series of Robberies Targeting Elderly Women
  • Spokane: Coffee With Council District 2 Council Members
  • 2025 Top Lawyers - ELA Awards by Expert Law Attorneys
  • Daniel Kaufman Launches a Vertically Integrated Real Estate and Investment Platform
  • Home Prices Just Hit 5X Median Income — So Americans Are Buying Businesses Instead of Houses

Similar on Washingtoner

  • Tacoma: Street Closures Projected to Start the Week of February 23 for Residential Street Restoration Program Maintenance Work
  • City of Tacoma Expands Garbage Can Program in Response to Community Feedback
  • CCHR: Decades of Warnings, Persistent Inaction; Studies Raise New Alarms on Psychiatric Drug Safety
  • Quality Expert Daryl Guberman Shatters Boeing's AS9100 Lies: 25 Years of Evidence Ignored by Media, Governments, and Legal Teams
  • Spokane: 2026 Safe Streets For All (Traffic Calming) Updates
  • Amy Turner Receives 2025 ENPY Partnership Builder Award from The Community Foundation
  • Finland's €1.3 Billion Digital Gambling Market Faces Regulatory Tug-of-War as Player Protection Debate Intensifies
  • Why Finland Had No Choice But to Legalize Online Gambling
  • Municipal Carbon Field Guide Launched by LandConnect -- New Revenue Streams for Cities Managing Vacant Land
  • Tacoma City Council Announces City Manager Finalists
Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute