The uprisings in response to George Floyd’s murder by the Minneapolis police marked a clear demand from communities across the country: defund the police. Amidst these uprisings, the ACLU co-signed efforts calling for police divestment and community reinvestment.
Building on one of the Movement for Black Lives’ primary goals to, “invest in the education, health, and safety of Black people, instead of investing in the criminalizing, caging, and harming of Black people,” the ACLU acknowledged that divest/invest efforts “are necessary steps to prevent further harm and to restore the promise of our Constitution for all people.”
This how-to guide is part of the ACLU of Alabama’s shift to police divestment and community reinvestment organizing. The guidance and resources below aim to support Alabamians across the state in acquiring and analyzing their local municipal budget in pursuit of their own invest/divest organizing efforts.
| City | Police Budget | Total Budget | Percent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Birmingham | $92,775,797 | $369,002,040 | 25% |
| Huntsville | $46,434,919 | $209,700,000 | 22% |
| Mobile | $51,947,102 | $173,874,563 | 30% |
| Montgomery | $49,303,904 | $259,930,195 | 18% |
For additional support on how to read a municipal budget, click here to download the Community Resource Hub’s guide, “How to Take Back the Budget.” The Community Resource Hub for Safety and Accountability is an online platform that works to ensure all people have access to resources and tools to advocate for systems change and accountability in law enforcement.
| Montgomery Budget Item | Total Cost |
|---|---|
| Police | $49,303,904 |
| Library | $3,716,873 |
| City Events | $1,331,526 |
| Street Maintenance | $8,640,224 |
| When you call the police to report...
(common scenarios) |
Police can...
(“lawful” policies + practices) |
Police have...
(violent + harmful practices) |
|---|---|---|
| Someone who is homeless and is existing on private/public property |
|
|
*In July 2019, the Montgomery City Council passed an ordinance requiring mandatory jail time for people who panhandle in the city. The ordinance was repealed in December 2019 after a lawsuit filed by Southern Poverty Law Center, ACLU of Alabama, and the National Homelessness Law Center.
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