Cayuga County Sheriff Department

The Age of Hypocrisy: Understanding Our Truths in a Divisive National Atmosphere-

an opinion essay by bill berry, jr.

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To put what I am sharing in its proper perspective, if you do not know about; are not from, or even if you live in Auburn, New York, here are a few basics. {Of course, our local tourism board can provide a more in-depth analysis.} https://www.tourcayuga.com/

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        Auburn is a small and only city in predominately rural and basically agricultural Cayuga County. This upstate New York State city is sited within the Finger Lakes region  and is noted for its legacy of being “home” to American heroes Harriet Tubman and William H. Seward. The city’s population of  27,687 residents is 86% white, 8% Black, 3% Hispanic, 3% bi-racial, and less than 1% Asian and Native American. The County’s population is similar with a population of 76,576 neighbors. Whites account for 92%, Blacks 4.4%, Hispanics 3.1% Bi-racial 2.3%, Asians .07% and Native American .05%. These demographics may help frame and put into perspective what a small city and upstate county can  achieve to start to address issues involving the 21st century dynamics of law enforcement while being cognizant of the simple fact that no community’s thinking is homogeneous or purposely single-minded.

           It is not necessary to re-iterate all the societal complexities that are faced as local communities, regional areas, and the nation grapple with current events and historical realities steeped in American racism and inequality. George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Jacob Blake, BLM, armed militias, neighbors existing in their tribe solely based on deeply-seeded politics, race, and culture. Society is beginning to better comprehend that opportunities for success and family wealth have been for some and not others. The ladder of equity has been hampered by a legal system that renders a distinct brand of law to a majority group and has been totally oblivious to the unequal, unfair and often times brutal treatment of others permeated by law enforcement and the judicial system. The result continues to be the planned subjugation of an essential working class that all too often are people of color. And then, whether it is covert or overt, there is what is becoming increasingly routine, senseless killing of, or unprovoked assault on Black men, women, other peaceful white protestors. The harrowing mental impact of subjecting young African American children to the same vicious assault placed on their parents has shocked the nation and is indicative of a callous disregard for protecting the safety of Black children. (And note, the police’s use of less lethal weaponry, without appropriate training, since 1990 has led to over 300 people becoming disabled with at least 50 deaths according to the journal, BMJ Open, a “peer-reviewed open access medical journal that was established in 2011.”)

          Black lives are now measured in minutes, seconds, the number of bullet holes, body bags and caskets and no longer predicated on life insurance actuarial tables. The bended  knee once seen as disrespect for the flag, military service and a signal of “how dare they” black arrogance fueled by the blatant ignorance of elected national leaders is now a global multi-racial symbol of courage, peaceful resistance, and willingness to do the work for planned and systemic social justice change. 

          Now, it may be common-sense to appropriately cast dispersion on those rogue police officers who are sworn to serve and protect yet they miserably fail to do that basic exercise for people of color. There are significant numbers of American and global citizens who are beginning to better understand the proposition that not everyone is served or protected equally under the law. Unfortunately, the majority of “those in blue” are cast as agents of forced containment and keeping certain people in their generational  place as being “less than.” However, the majority of law enforcement officers are decent individuals who want those things in life that are guaranteed for all by the U.S. Constitution. They have been stigmatized and cloaked in nefarious actions by reprehensible uniformed police criminals who remain protected by the “blue wall of silence,” wily defense attorneys, unyielding unions that have only one consistent, never changing message, reluctant and tardy prosecutors, and juries that do not adequately represent the diverse fabric of who we really look like as a unified people belonging to one nation.

          Auburn/Cayuga, like other communities, is influenced emotionally and in its collective and individual mindset by national events. More notably, as a local community, we continue to strive to better manifest the community we aspire to be, inclusive and equitable. Truth be told, we are not there; yet, planned change is not an instant mix of ingredients for immediate gratification. It is hard work that must be consistent and unrelenting.

“Connecting Bridges” first public forum held on November 18, 2019 at the Westminster Presbyterian Church, Auburn NY.  A second forum was held at the Booker T. Washington Center, Auburn, NY on December 3rd, and on December 10th, the third and final f…

“Connecting Bridges” first public forum held on November 18, 2019 at the Westminster Presbyterian Church, Auburn NY. A second forum was held at the Booker T. Washington Center, Auburn, NY on December 3rd, and on December 10th, the third and final forum of the fall series was held at the Apostolic Church of the Lord Jesus Christ, Auburn, NY.

            A few years ago, the Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace (HTCJP,) which was  organized in 1996 to address social justice issues in all its various stages in the Auburn/Cayuga community, started to work proactively with the Auburn Police Department (APD,) the Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) and Auburn Fire Department under the leadership of Chief Shawn Butler, Sheriff Brian Schenck and Fire Chief Joseph Morabito, respectively. The long-range goal was to develop strategic plans to diversify the employment ranks of those agencies, as well as to build a better relationship between law enforcement, uniformed services and the community. With a focus on people of color, as well as other residents who were not represented in policing ranks and often on the receiving end of a different level of public safety engagement, an increased number of applicants were platformed on enhanced applicant diversity in 2019. (Interestingly, the son (Jack Hardy) of Auburn’s first Black fireman is now the leader of the City of Auburn Civil Service Commission.)

[Left to Right] Chief Joe Morabito, Auburn Fire Department, Jack Hardy, Chair, Auburn Civil Service Commission, Deputy Chief, Roger Anthony, Auburn Police Department, and Lieutenant, James Slayton, Auburn Police Department. Photo taken at the “Conne…

[Left to Right] Chief Joe Morabito, Auburn Fire Department, Jack Hardy, Chair, Auburn Civil Service Commission, Deputy Chief, Roger Anthony, Auburn Police Department, and Lieutenant, James Slayton, Auburn Police Department. Photo taken at the “Connecting Bridges” second of three public forums held on December 3, 2019 at the Booker T. Washington Community Center in Auburn, NY.

        Partnering with the City’s Civil Service Commission and in collaboration with the Auburn/Cayuga branch of the NAACP and the City of Auburn’s Human Rights Commission (HRC,) a long range, measurable strategic and assessment oriented plan was developed to position the community, law enforcement and uniform services as one community with shared values, respect and the willingness to be partners at a time where many communities were becoming or continuing to be disjointed. This Auburn effort was initiated in a national limelight when efforts to tear down separateness and obstacles between residents and officers sworn to protect and serve were locked in a Sisyphusian dilemma. 

          The Auburn approach was simple in its goal but complex and arduous in its execution.

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          Build community where different opinions could be heard, valued, and respected; where everyone recognizes that compromise is a stance to achieve in order to reach an agreed upon end game of true partnership and cooperation. To embrace a person beyond the artificiality of a uniform, job title, or social standing in the community. To see a person beyond the perceived confines of race, class, culture, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. To value and empower the unique features that make each person who s/he is. To cease, whenever possible, pre-determining a person’s worth. To tackle the difficult task of appreciating commonalities, shared goals, common dreams of living a life worth living, of preparing a better future for one’s children and grands.

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          “Connecting Bridges,” a 2019 collaborative initiative between social justice agencies spearheaded by the HTCJP, city and county law enforcement, propelled leaders to sit down, listen to and engage community residents in frank discussions that were sometimes difficult. While community attendance at these three forums were low, there was the shared realization that change cannot be manifested without sowing the seeds for such change. And often that is a learning process, an objective cemented in trial and error… Missteps became needed learning lessons. Adaptation and evolution were critical to keep one’s eyes on the end goal.

          Operational changes were made in how the community bridges would continue in 2020. With a focus on audience specific forums that would pinpoint residents in housing complexes, students in educational institutions, and the membership of other organizations, HTCJP and uniformed services recognized that “captivated” audiences were better suited to the investment of social justice time instead of the open to all public forums that kicked started the initiative.

          And then Covid-19 reared its nefarious shadow; hidden; invisible; deadly, and still relentless in its pursuit of rampant world-wide sickness and untimely death.

          The “connecting bridges” concept had to adapt, to mutate towards another route that could serve the community during the restrictions developed to combat “19.”

On August 10, 2020 the Auburn, N.Y. Police Department (APD) executive team provided a community presentation to the leadership of Auburn’s social justice organizations. Led by Chief Butler, the goal of this gathering was to enhance understanding of …

On August 10, 2020 the Auburn, N.Y. Police Department (APD) executive team provided a community presentation to the leadership of Auburn’s social justice organizations. Led by Chief Butler, the goal of this gathering was to enhance understanding of APD’s policies, protocols, operational procedures, and other issues. This event was co-sponsored by the following partner organizations: the Harriet Tubman Center for Justice & Peace, Inc. ; the Auburn Cayuga Branch NAACP; and, the City of Auburn Human Rights Commission.

        The resultant thinking centered around presenting statistical and current data, as well as protocols and policies that govern law enforcement by each policing agency in a transparent and informative manner. The rationale was driven by the community’s need to better understand what law enforcement did and how. With this approach, community folks could better define and articulate their opinions based on facts. Collaborative partners wanted the community to take law enforcement to task based on its data sets; recognize achievements and outstanding service based on departmental policies and hard data. Hot button issues regarding use of deadly force, as well as  arrest records by race and gender, training issues, the philosophy behind the departmental mission statement, programs designed for community engagement and officer wellness, governmental funding and the rationale behind the operational budget, and other issues.

        The Auburn Police Department (APD) via its entire leadership command presented a live streamed and recorded session in the City Council chambers at Auburn Memorial City Hall. (And it should be mentioned that through all initiatives, some that I have not mentioned, were routinely communicated to governmental leaders and encouraged their participation to listen, learn and be engaged.) The “Auburn Cayuga Approach” continued to move forward.          


The Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office will host and present its live streamed presentation on September 14 in the auditorium of Cayuga Community College. The HTCJP will also live stream this event via its Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/htcjpauburn

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        And while these events enable the larger community to grasp the intricacies of public safety and policing, the partners (law enforcement and social justice organizations) recognized this was not enough. We had to start to tackle who we are as people While the data driven information and protocols would help frame the more difficult conversations to come as we started to focus on the actuality experienced by community members, a piece was missing.

          We needed to know each other as people.

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“Getting To Know You” was a private event for leadership of law enforcement and local social justice agencies to engage each other in a fun, social way similar to speed dating over lunch with timed conversations. Eight distinct physical distancing tables with two chairs enabled participants to focus on a simple goal. Get to know something about the person you were talking to and not get into what the person did for a living. The photo montage (below) gives you a glimpse that personal group conversations between individuals who really need to start to know one another is possible even with the regulations related to keeping everyone safe during the pandemic.


Enjoy the Slide Show below of the “Getting to Know You” event held on August 28, 2020:

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         Hosted by the chair of the Harriet Tubman Center for Peace and Justice with members of that organization involved, the leadership of the Auburn/Cayuga branch of the NAACP, Auburns’ Human Rights Commission, Auburn Police Department and the Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office rounded out the participants.

          The bottom line take-away or what I routinely refer to as “aftershock” is restively simple and not that complex.

          If you are able, with minimal organization and time allotment, identify a small group of neighbors or co-workers who want to move past the artificiality of  knowing who our public safety officers are and are ready to get to know them as people. I am confident there will be officers who would welcome (depending on assignment and schedule) to get to know residents as long as there is no discussion of what someone does career-wise so perceptions and long held beliefs are not part of the person to person engagement.

I stand ready to advise such grass root initiatives and share with you what was learned from the first “Getting to Know You” initiative. At its essence, the “Auburn Cayuga Approach”  attempts to identify and build a viable and specific platform to be the action plan when community  demonstrations, marches, speeches, signs and other efforts to sway public policy start to recede in the public’s mind and folks look to figure out what is next. In a small way, all collaborating partners involved in the social justice milieu will continue to chart a plausible path. The community’s ideas and concerns are welcome.  

~ bill berry, jr. 

bill berry, jr. is the CEO of aaduna, Inc. and publishes the Auburn-based global literary and visual arts journal called aaduna. He serves as chair of the HTCJP and from his perspective, this essay is a profoundly personal assessment of where he feels social justice in Auburn is headed, evolving and its need for further community engagement.

 

JOIN US! Monday, September 14th @2PM for a LIVE STREAM Event presented by the Cayuga County Sheriff's Office

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JOIN US Via LIVE STREAM

You may also JOIN US Via Facebook: @htcjpauburn


Due to NYS pandemic regulations and County guidance, the event will not be open to the public, and those attending in person will be present by invitation only.

Participate and Learn...pathways to understanding the Cayuga County Sheriff's Office 

(left to right) Undersheriff Steve Smith, HTCJP Chair, bill berry, jr., and Sheriff Brian Schenck (photo credit Lisa Brennan) August 19, 2020

(left to right) Undersheriff Steve Smith, HTCJP Chair, bill berry, jr., and Sheriff Brian Schenck (photo credit Lisa Brennan) August 19, 2020

bill berry, jr. (chair, Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace, Inc.) and Lisa Brennan (secretary, HTCJP) participated or more pointedly observed the Cayuga County Sheriff's Office (CCSO) "Active Shooter" training on Wednesday, August 19, 2020. There were two training exercises that they witnessed. Afterwards, they had an enhanced understanding of the split second decisions that must be made by officers when there is an active shooter in a facility whether it is a school, hospital, office building, movie theater, another venue, and especially where there have been innocent people wounded or killed in the facility.

After firing a few rounds of the ammunition training gun – not real, the HTCJP chair inadvertently pointed the gun towards the Sheriff and Undersheriff (also where Lisa was standing supposedly out of harms way) and panic quickly spread with multiple shouts of "point the gun downwards." Embarrassed, the voices still rung in bill's ears well after he left the county's vacant nursing home located adjacent to the Cayuga County Sheriff's Office, currently being utilized as a CCSO training facility. So, bill did NOT shoot the sheriff or even the "deputy." Bob Marley is now further embedded in berry's consciousness.

Many thanks to the graciousness of Sheriff Schenck and Undersheriff Smith, as well as the officers in training and the training officer for their time and answering a variety of questions. Their answers and subsequent discussion increased the understanding of what law enforcement does in dire situations that we hope will never be manifested in Cayuga County. 

For those who may be interested in experiencing this exercise or other aspects of public safety training, please send an e-mail to  bschenck@cayugacounty.us

 

Message to the Auburn/Cayuga County community from bill berry, jr., Chair, Harriet Tubman Center for Peace and Justice

My fellow Board members of The Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace and I thank you for your words, for your presence, for your listening, for your willingness to engage in the challenging task of planned change witnessed at the Town Hall/Listening event convened at the NYS Equal Rights Heritage Center, Auburn, NY this afternoon, Saturday, June 27th.

Our colleagues at the Auburn/Cayuga branch of the NAACP, along with other social justice organizations, private businesses and activists, join with the HTCJP. We {and the newly formed embryonic "social justice task force"}  understand the task ahead will require difficult conversations as we seek measurable change with a timetable for action that can be evaluated.

We must dissect and analyze organizational/institutional/non-profit agency/corporate words, mission statements or proposed actions that may be deficit in its intent to achieve real institutional change.

Inspiration and aspiration is no longer enough.

Meaningful action is required.

Difficult conversations will happen.

People may have to confront long held assumptions that have relegated some folks to the side of the road to look at opportunities and not have a place at the table of equity in economic, educational and the full range of social interactions. However, as a community, we have the ability to make planned change a reality. Action not words. You helped fuel that action this afternoon. Thank you.  Your words and your presence was and will continue to be empowering.

In appreciation,

bill berry, jr., chair, Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace Board of Directors

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Be George Floyd's Legacy

bill berry, jr., Chair, Harriet Tubman Center for Justice & Peace, Inc., speaks at a Demonstration of Solidarity for Racial Injustice Event held at the NYS Equal Rights Heritage Center, Auburn NY on Saturday, June 6, 2020. Organized by the Socia…

bill berry, jr., Chair, Harriet Tubman Center for Justice & Peace, Inc., speaks at a Demonstration of Solidarity for Racial Injustice Event held at the NYS Equal Rights Heritage Center, Auburn NY on Saturday, June 6, 2020. Organized by the Social Justice Task Force, partners for this event included: Auburn Cayuga Branch NAACP, Auburn Public Theatre, Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace, Harriet Tubman Boosters, Human Rights Commission, Auburn Enlarged City School District, Gwen WebberMcleod - Gwen, Inc., Celebrate Diverse Auburn, City of Auburn, Auburn Police Department, Cayuga County Legislature, Cayuga County Sheriff Department, and Beverly L. Smith Empowerment Initiative.

George Floyd

Say his  name.

Louder.

George Floyd stands as testament to the countless African Americans whose lives have been taken by overt and covert racists who always state that they are not driven by race, not driven by their hate, their indifference. But they are driven.

 George Floyd’s death is a testament to systemic racism and that disease is worse than  covid-19. That disease’s history spans over 400 years and society has not rushed for a vaccine. That racial disease is also silent. You may think you are disease free. You are not. You are asymptomatic. And in this moment, recognize that two pandemics are killing Black people right in front of our eyes. So…

This is my charge to each of you.

Please understand hope without action may make you feel good, but it is killing people who look like me. 

Hope without action is a temporary feel good moment and makes you think you did something…that you stood up.  Hope is not enough…not anymore.

Good intentions fail to embrace the insidious nature of generational racism and that  characteristic is in the DNA of most Americans. All too often, those feel good moments do not evolve into strategic agenda that question the lack of economic opportunities, educational equity, diversity-driven hiring initiatives for African Americans; however, our culture is appropriated by those who want to be like us but not of us.

Demonstrations are singular moments that have become repetitive activities. We shout out each time that the demonstration of the moment is the pivotal catalyst for societal change, for a new beginning, and then the next moment comes along. So, I humbly say take your passion and self-enlightenment and transition those understandings to an activity that challenges, respects but holds accountable those in authority who have been unable to change the racial history of America and your specific community. 

As chair of the Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace, we ask you to become a social justice warrior and not just a bystander. Create a legacy for your children and grandchildren’s so they will not have to march and continue to demonstrate in their future. 

As you depart this sacred space grounded in George Floyd’s memory, if you fail to take progressive action; to demand significant change from those you vote for or vote out; if you fail to understand that your demonstration is the first step and not the end goal. Are you then part of the problem or the solution?

Change is difficult. And yet, you must challenge and not wait for good intentions to become your reality. This is your community. Seek strategic action. Make Auburn and America better for everyone

Be George Floyd’s legacy.

Say his name.

Louder.

Thank you. 

bill berry, jr.

June 6, 2020 Equal Rights Heritage Center Demonstration Statement

 

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‘Be George Floyd’s Legacy:

Demonstration for racial justice held in Auburn

Kelly Rocheleau, Reporter The Citizen Newspaper 6/20/2020

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Our view: Progress is real, work remains for racial justice in Cayuga County

The Citizen Editorial Board 6/7/2020

An excerpt from the Sunday, June 7, 2020 The Citizen’s “Our View ,“ ‘Progress is real, but work remains’

….And make no mistake that the spirit of understanding, support and unity on display at Auburn rallies did not just magically appear. Auburn Police Chief Shawn Butler and Cayuga County Sheriff Brian Schenck have been working to address longstanding concerns. A series of community forums called “Connecting Bridges” last fall brought people together for respectful but honest conversations. That program was an offshoot of a collaboration between local public safety agencies and the Harriet Tubman Center for Justice and Peace to look at how to recruit and hire more people of color in local police and firefighting positions. Community night out programs and “Coffee with a Cop” have been held multiple times in recent years.