Public Media from Michigan State University

Whitmer Proposes $75 Million Public Safety Plan Amid Rising Crime Rates

The governor presented her proposal at a community center in Detroit.
Michigan Executive Office of the Governor

The plan includes more and better police training, getting illegal guns off the street and hiring more officers.

Governor Gretchen Whitmer offered some broad outlines Monday of plans to improve public safety.

That’s as crime rates have increased in Michigan and across the country.

The plan includes more and better police training, getting illegal guns off the street and hiring more officers.

“There’s not one solution to this complex problem,” she said. “It’s going to take a comprehensive plan that addresses every part of this complicated equation.”

The governor said she’d also like to offer incentives for officers to live in the communities that employ them.

“We know that when police have relationships with the people they serve, that it is better, and it is safer, and it creates a safer, more conducive environment to avoiding conflict escalation,” she said.

It's unclear whether that program would be legal under a 1999 state law mandating residency rules cannot be a subject of collective bargaining. But the law does not have any language related to incentives.

The governor presented her proposal at a community center in Detroit, where the city’s Interim Police Chief James White was on hand. He said no one thing will solve the crime problem.

“I recognize the fact that these are complex problems, so they’re going to require complex solutions,” he said. “This is not about some cliché of a war on drugs, a war on crime [or] a war on guns. They don’t work.”

The city’s former police chief, James Craig, resigned to pursue the Republican nomination for governor in next year’s election.

Whitmer said a return to draconian police and sentencing practices enacted in the 1990s are not part of her plans.

The governor wants to use $75 million in federal COVID-19 funds to pay for the proposal, but the Republican-led legislature must approve of the spending.

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Rick Pluta is Senior Capitol Correspondent for the Michigan Public Radio Network. He has been covering Michigan’s Capitol, government, and politics since 1987. His journalism background includes stints with UPI, The Elizabeth (NJ) Daily Journal, The (Pontiac, MI) Oakland Press, and WJR. He is also a lifelong public radio listener.