DC spends over $270,000 on BLM paint job as violent crime skyrockets
November 28, 2023 10:58 AM
Taxpayers in Washington are footing the bill for a $270,000 paint job to refresh “Black Lives Matter Plaza” as violent crime in the district has spiked 40% since last year.
The move to repaint the anti-police street art, which features 50-foot yellow letters along two blocks of 16th Street outside the White House, comes as the district has implemented millions in budget cuts to the Metropolitan Police Department over the past several years and crime has skyrocketed.
TEXAS SUPREME COURT TO HEAR CASE CHALLENGING STATE’S ABORTION LAW
“It’s insulting on multiple fronts,” Zack Smith, a crime and justice expert at the Heritage Foundation, told the Washington Examiner. “If the city council and the mayor’s office are serious about combating violent crime, protecting the lives hopefully of all citizens, but particularly black lives, then they would pour more money into public safety — particularly putting more police officers on the street.”
“Instead, it seems like the city is prioritizing performative gestures that really don’t have an impact on combating violent crime,” he said, adding it sends the “message that violent crime will be tolerated in the city.”
A large share of the 40% increase in violent crime comes from the 34% increase in homicides in Washington over last year, according to data released Monday. Robbery increased by 68% in the same time period.
In addition to violent crime, carjackings are up 93%, with thousands more instances occurring since last year.
“It’s no hidden fact about who’s being disproportionately victimized by violent crime in Washington, D.C. It’s predominantly young black men,” Smith said. “Whenever you see the number of shootings increase, whenever you see the number of homicides increase, unfortunately, that means that more young black men are being victimized by those crimes.
Those crimes come as millions in budget cuts have been made to the MPD since the 2020 riots inspired by George Floyd’s death, and police officers have been quitting the force in droves. The department lost 331 officers on average per year from 2018 to 2021, and it has roughly 400 fewer officers than it did three years ago.
While the Council of the District of Columbia approved a $526.1 million police budget for 2023, that number is a 1.7% decrease from last year but nearly $100 million less than the budget in 2020. While it is unclear where the cuts were made, the fiscal 2023 proposal cut millions from the Criminal Investigations Division and Narcotics and Special Investigations.
In 2021, Mayor Muriel Bowser, who originally commissioned the street art in 2020, promised to spend $4.8 million to “transform” Black Lives Matter Plaza, with an additional $3 million to follow. According to a recent public records request from Judicial Watch, $271,231 was spent on materials and labor for repainting the letters.
One of the most prominent demands of the BLM movement is to “defund the police,” which the district has done to the consequence of rampant crime.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
“This entire movement, unfortunately, has built around two false narratives: That our criminal justice system is systemically racist, and that we have a mass incarceration problem in our country that essentially too many young black men are being locked up, and neither one of those are true,” Smith said. “City leaders around the country, particularly city leaders in the District, have adopted those very problematic ideologies, and they’ve adopted policies based on them.”
Neither MPD nor Bowser responded to a request for comment from the Washington Examiner.