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My buddy got his bike stolen in Mountain View. Not only did the police find his bike they also arrested the thief.

Another buddy was woken up one night by a drunken stranger pounding on his door. He called the MVPD and within 5 minutes 3 squad cars showed up.

I used to live in Dallas. One night an entire floor of cars parked in my apartment garage was broken into. I called the police and reported it. Then I asked when they're coming and if I should stick around to wait for them. They told me they're not coming. The next night, the thieves returned and broke into all the cars on the next garage level.

Funding really matters. Mountain View is one of the handful of cities in the country with a triple-A municipal bond rating.



> Mountain View is one of the handful of cities in the country with a triple-A municipal bond rating.

Having Google headquartered there probably helped their finances.


Mountain View implemented a business tax of $150 per employee per year in 2020, bringing in $3.3 million per year from Google.

It's a struggle for cities to pass/raise business taxes... the businesses threaten to leave, and the cities back down.


[dead]


As a Seattle resident: wat? No we didn't.


We're down hundreds of officers though. And we don't and haven't had a mayor interested in bringing up a new system to replace the completely corrupt one we have.

(The latter part reinforcing your argument that we didn't try "depolicing" so much as, uh, "unpolicing"?)


[flagged]


The very next sentence highlights that the same problem existed before the Pandemic and police protests from 2020;

> Covid may have accelerated this trend, but attrition and hiring issues predate the pandemic. In the 2019 budget, Council approved over $700,000 for hiring incentives, citing the police department's difficulty filling positions.

Actually the very first sentence in the article immediately refutes your claim -- what a bizarre source to 'back up' the argument that Seattle defunded the police;

> "Why has Seattle lost so many police officers?" The answer is not that the Seattle Police Department was defunded.


The person you are responding to is saying that Seattle did not defund the police. Literally the second sentence in your link is:

>The answer is not that the Seattle Police Department was defunded.

What do you think you are refuting?

Edit: And how on earth do you cite a hiring bonus as an example that they have been defunded?


Yes, I misremembered it and I was wrong about it which I discovered by googling it. But the number of police is way down, so it had the same effect as defunding. Part of the reason for the reduction is the Seattle City Council abused them by calling them murderers. The cops felt unsupported by the Council and unwanted, and they left.

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/defamatio...

https://www.bigcountrynewsconnection.com/local/seattle-counc...

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12656567/Seattle-la...

The suburb cities did not experience an exodus, so it has nothing to do with the pandemic.


>But the number of police is way down, so it had the same effect as defunding.

So we all agree that SPD wasn't defunded. Thank you.


Yeah, our police force has definitely been struggling - but funding isn't the problem.




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