Admiration and gratitude have rightly been showered on the civilian rescuers of Houston. Supporting their good work also calls for a deeper understanding of what they鈥檙e up against.聽
How do you like to see police outfitted in the streets?
The answer tends to quickly send Americans into one of two dug-in camps: one that thinks too much gear turns cops into bulked-up bullies, another that maintains it makes officers far less vulnerable and allows them to better protect and serve.聽(Consider the job of facing down armed right-wing militias, Va., this month.)聽
The issue may be too complicated to be just two-sided.
The 1033 Program, designed to let military surplus trickle down to state and local law enforcement, was launched during the Clinton administration. It drew heat after the lethal clashes in Ferguson, Mo., and was scaled down in 2015 by President Barack Obama. The limits that he placed on the program were by President Trump.
So what are its practical effects? If people in underserved communities see police as an occupying force, then perception can harden into reality and problems can worsen.聽Still, a new study by the Shorenstein Center at Harvard鈥檚 Kennedy School of Government indicates that in cities where ex-military gear is deployed by police, there have, in fact, been 鈥 robbery, assault, burglary, and car theft.
Notably, it鈥檚 not about weapons. 鈥淣onlethal equipment, including office supplies and IT hardware, have the largest effect on all types of crime,鈥 the report found. Vehicles help, too. But there it鈥檚 not all about armored-up war wagons. As police in Harvey鈥檚 wake, it鈥檚 high-axle trucks and flat-bottomed boats of military origin that are reportedly coming in handy.
Now, to the five stories we鈥檝e selected for you today.聽