The effort comes as Jacksonville has seen controversial police shootings, arrests of activists and calls to suspend pedestrian ticketing in light of racial disparities.
by Benjamin Conarck
by Benjamin Conarck
The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office will begin bias training for its
officers next week in what the office said is an effort to improve
relations with the city’s diverse populations.
The training will be conducted by Bethune-Cookman University, a
historically black university in Daytona Beach. It will be concentrated
on officers and residents of the Sheriff Office’s Zone 5, which makes up
Northwest Jacksonville. That patrol zone has among the highest
concentrations of black residents in the city. Research released by the
University of North Florida last year showed that the patrol zone has
the lowest level of trust in law enforcement.
Trainings for officers will focus on improving negative perceptions
and attitudes that exist between the community and police. The
university’s work with local residents will center on the community’s
role in neighborhood safety and how citizens can improve relationships
with police. The training will involve 135 Sheriff’s Office personnel
and 120 community members and 52 total hours of training. It will cost
about $23,500.
Undersheriff Patrick Ivey, the office’s second in command, said on
Wednesday that officers have had trainings in diversity and bias before,
but that there was a perception in the community that more was needed.
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Source: ProPublica
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