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Pennsylvania Lawmakers Urged To Make Police Discipline Records Public

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS/AP) -- With some states taking a fresh look at strengthening measures to hold police officers accountable, lawmakers in Pennsylvania are being urged to join states that make police department records of discipline accessible to the public. Thus far, no such legislation is part of a reform package put forward by Democratic lawmakers, and a bill advancing in the House of Representatives would require some department-to-department disclosure of discipline records during the hiring process for a police officer.

But, it would leave those records out of the public's reach in Pennsylvania, and the state's largest police unions are against making those records public.

Kenneth L. Huston, president of the Pennsylvania state conference of the NAACP, said his organization supports making police disciplinary records public so that people know the records of the officers who are policing them.

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In Philly, City Council approved a preliminary budget on Wednesday that cuts $33 million from the Philadelphia Police Department and adds plans to implement police reform measures like more body cameras and implicit bias training for officers.

The drastic cuts come in the midst of ongoing demonstrations throughout the city, demanding police reform and calls to defund the police.

"I want to thank the thousands of people that rallied and sent emails and reached out to us on social media regarding this budget. I think today's first step in getting the budget done reflects the calls for change," Councilman Derrick Green said.

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David Harris, a University of Pittsburgh law professor who studies police behavior, told a joint state Senate committee hearing Thursday that the department-to-department disclosure of police discipline does not take transparency far enough and leaves the disciplinary process a "black hole."

Amid protests over George Floyd's killing in Minneapolis, members of the Legislative Black Caucus in Pennsylvania's Legislature have pushed majority Republicans to hold votes on police reform bills that have languished since an officer fatally shot Antwon Rose in 2018 in East Pittsburgh.

(© Copyright 2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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