Dear Residents,

My heart breaks over the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and Ahmaud Arbery in recent weeks. Their deaths catalyzed protests for racial justice and police reforms that are long overdue across the nation, and here in the District of Columbia. Tragically, law enforcement has too often met those protests against police violence with more aggression. Our city has been in need of a new approach to policing for some time—a transformation of the Metropolitan Police Department into an agency whose highest priorities include non-violence, community engagement, internal accountability, and intervention when officers see misconduct. 

This outrage at the injustice of racism comes at a time when the nation is in the midst of a once-in-a-century pandemic and record unemployment, all of which have been felt disproportionately by Black Americans. Our nation is in great pain and our future uncertain, especially as these concurrent crises are overseen by national leadership that at best seems uninterested in bringing about change and at worse intent on stoking the flames of racial animus.  

Unfortunately, police reforms are not enough. The recent killings are merely symptoms of the systemic racism that runs through our country’s veins. This nation was built on the idea that Black bodies should be controlled, and Black lives are expendable. Though we have made progress, racism and white supremacy have not been stamped out and have been perpetuated from generation to generation.  

White supremacy has been encoded in each of us, in every stage of our development. Most importantly, it is baked into our institutions.  To have true racial justice in our country, we can’t only focus on it when another Black American is murdered. Our Black neighbors experience racism every day, when walking down the street, when at work, and even with friends. As white people, we must all take a hard look at ourselves, recognize that racism is a part of our world, and actively seek to confront it. It isn’t comfortable, but it is necessary, and it is a question of life and death.

Currently, the budget proposal before the D.C. Council expands our police department and continues the trend toward greater police militarization. The District of Columbia already has more police officers per capita than any other city in the nation, and yet our city is not any safer. What we truly need is an approach to our city’s safety that focuses on ensuring the economic security and physical and mental well-being of our residents. Investments in those areas go a lot further than continuing the failed approaches of the past.

I encourage all who have been tweeting, posting, and marching to get involved in our local government NOW. Make your voice heard at the Council’s hearings on the Metropolitan Police Department’s annual budget, and on the budgets that affect the health and economic security of our residents. D.C. is also in the midst of selecting the next leaders of our city.  With tomorrow being the last day to vote in the D.C. primary, I urge you to voice your thoughts on how D.C. approaches policing and racial justice through the ballot box as you weigh the names seeking elected office.

With love,


David Grosso
Councilmember, At-Large

Comment