Maui voters may be asked to beef up police oversight in the 2022 election with that seek to create a more independent board overseeing the Maui Police Department, give more power to that board to discipline officers, and provide better access to police records.
Those are just some of the proposals put forward by several Maui residents and a former Honolulu police commissioner to the , which reviews the charter once a decade and finalizes any proposed amendments.
Meanwhile, the is taking another look at what it can do better to oversee the MPD at a time that citizens nationally are calling for greater police accountability. The commission is also trying to get a grasp on what the proposals for a new oversight panel might entail.
鈥淚 thought that鈥檚 what we are, but maybe it鈥檚 not,鈥 Stacey Moniz, a police commissioner, said during a meeting Tuesday. 鈥淪o are there things we can easily fix rather than start a whole other commission.鈥
The is like a constitution for the county government. The document gives the police commission some powers to review the MPD鈥檚 budget, investigate allegations of police misconduct, discipline the police chief and annually review his performance.
However, it differs from other commissions in that it doesn鈥檛 appear to have the power to subpoena witnesses for hearings or require the police chief to follow up on misconduct investigations like the other counties do.
Loretta Sheehan, an attorney and former chairwoman of the Honolulu Police Commission, combed through the Maui County Charter and identified several areas where the Maui commissioners could be given more control over the department.
On Thursday, Sheehan presented those ideas to the charter commission.
鈥淎ny police commission should be as independent as possible,鈥 Sheehan told the commissioners during a meeting Thursday.
Among other things, her that the commission is independent of the department, allow the commission to review department policies, require the chief to follow-up on misconduct investigations, give the commissioners the ability to overrule the chief on disciplinary actions, allow the commission to subpoena witnesses and evidence, and require department heads to comply with inquiries made by the commission.
That last point seeks to address a line in the Maui charter that says commissioners can鈥檛 鈥渋nterfere with the administrative affairs of the department.鈥
鈥淎sking for and giving information is not interference,鈥 Sheehan said. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 kind of a baby step in the right direction in terms of giving the Maui Police Commission more authority.鈥
The commission is still early in its process, and has until July 2022 to finalize charter amendments.
Other proposals pending before the commission would have the mayor appoint the police chief and increase the minimum requirements police chief candidates must possess.
There are also several proposals to create an independent citizen oversight board in lieu of or in addition to the police commission.
As the charter commission considers those policy changes, the Maui Police Commission is also looking at what it could be doing better.
At a meeting Tuesday, the commissioners decided they would look into community oversight of police. The commissioners tapped Stacey Moniz to lead the initiative and present her findings at the commission鈥檚 July meeting.
The commission is also trying to get a better grasp of what charter amendments are being proposed.
Frank De Rego, the commission chairman, said he has been considering the commission鈥檚 limits since he joined the panel.
鈥淲hen I got on to the commission I was very aware that there was change necessary and needed, but I鈥檓 not quite sure how long it鈥檚 going to take,鈥 De Rego said, noting that those broader policy discussions still need input from the police department and the State of Hawaii Organization of Police Officers, the statewide police union.
The nine Maui commissioners are all volunteer civilians. But the idea of having a board with the power to take up complaints against officers and enforce disciplinary measures has caught on in other states.
In November, voters in San Diego, San Jose, Portland, Philadelphia and Columbus decided that new civilian boards should oversee their respective departments.
Keisa Liu, a Maui activist and one of the residents who proposed an independent civilian oversight board for MPD, said she also has concerns over the Maui commission鈥檚 rules that require the commission secretary to be an MPD employee.
Liu hopes the proposals for more oversight of MPD open up a broader conversation about how much power the commissioners should have. In particular, Liu wants the commission to have greater power to discipline officers.
鈥淧olice are our community members, and I care about them,鈥 Liu said. 鈥淢aking someone accountable for their bad actions should never be considered a threat. It should be considered a growth opportunity. I have a 4-year-old. If I just let him do whatever he wants, you think he鈥檒l grow up to be the upstanding citizen we need?”
Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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About the Author
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Blaze Lovell is a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blovell@civilbeat.org.