{"id":131349,"date":"2023-02-17T07:27:42","date_gmt":"2023-02-17T07:27:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=131349"},"modified":"2023-02-17T07:27:42","modified_gmt":"2023-02-17T07:27:42","slug":"denver-mayoral-candidates-on-homeless-sweeps-hiring-police-advertising","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/politics\/denver-mayoral-candidates-on-homeless-sweeps-hiring-police-advertising\/","title":{"rendered":"Denver mayoral candidates on homeless sweeps, hiring police, advertising"},"content":{"rendered":"

The Denver mayor’s race is heating up as the April 4 election inches closer.<\/p>\n

For the second time in eight days, a cadre of candidates seeking to take the reigns from three-term Mayor Michael Hancock gathered on a college campus (this time Auraria) to debate some of the biggest issues facing a city dealing with major challenges when it comes to housing affordability, homelessness, rising crime and more.<\/p>\n

The debate, organized by 9News, Metropolitan State University of Denver and the Colorado Latino Leadership, Advocacy & Research Organization, or CLLARO, was broadcast live on KDTV and on 9News’ streaming app. Moderators Kyle Clark, Anusha Roy and Marshall Zelinger covered a lot of ground in two hours in a debate that was at times much more combative than its predecessor a week prior.<\/p>\n

Here were some key moments:<\/p>\n

Fundamental disagreements on homelessness<\/h4>\n

There is a deep divide between candidates on how to address homeless encampments.<\/p>\n

Most of the 13 candidates on the stage said they would continue the Hancock administration’s policy of forcibly sweeping homeless encampments in line with the city’s urban camping ban. Only Lisa Calder\u00f3n, Leslie Herod, Terrance Roberts, Ean Thomas Tafoya and Jim Walsh indicated they would not.<\/p>\n

Several said they would go further. Five candidates raised their hands when asked if they would arrest or involuntarily commit people to mental health institutions if they refused shelter or housing services from the city: Kelly Brough, Debbie Ortega, Trinidad Rodriguez, Kwame Spearman and Thomas Wolf.<\/p>\n

“It’s a clinical determination whether someone is a danger to themselves or others,” Rodriguez said of guidelines behind his plan to use involuntary mental holds when seeking to move unhoused people off city sidewalks and into treatment or shelter. “That is exactly the idea. This is a health question.”<\/p>\n

Calder\u00f3n meanwhile has advocated for stopping the sweeps in favor of crisis intervention at encampments. She said Thursday that 10 years of the camping ban shows it doesn’t work and said that many of her fellow candidates “don’t know what they’re talking about.” Calder\u00f3n was homeless as a teen trying to escape an abusive household.<\/p>\n

“I do have expertise they don’t have. I have experience they don’t have,” she said of her counterparts. “I don’t think people are intentionally trying to be mean, but that’s the impact.”<\/p>\n

Calder\u00f3n specifically called out Spearman for what she said was a misinterpretation of data around the percentage of unhoused people who prefer tents to the city’s shelter system. Spearman, the CEO of the Tattered Cover Bookstore, said that if the city does not enforce the camping ban businesses like his that frequently have encampments near them lose customers and can’t afford to pay employees worsening the city’s affordability crisis.<\/p>\n

How to attract more police officers<\/h4>\n

Several of the candidates advocated for growing the Denver Police Department’s authorized force and adding officers to the streets. But as Zelinger pointed out, the department has 148 openings today and only 70 recruits in its academy.<\/p>\n

Candidates were asked if they would support bringing back qualified immunity that insulates individual officers from lawsuits in instances where they violate citizens’ civil rights and instead shifts the financial burden to the city in those cases.<\/p>\n

Brough said she would support that.<\/p>\n

“Sometimes the city settles claims with no admission of fault. Sometimes you settle claims because the city had a bad policy the officers are just following. I don’t think our officers should be at risk and I think this is hurting our ability to recruit officers,” she said.<\/p>\n

Herod, who was the primary sponsor of the 2020 state legislation that peeled back immunity for individual officers, stood by the position.<\/p>\n

“Our people deserve to be safe in our cities,” Herod said. “We shouldn’t have law enforcement that feels like they can violate someone’s constitutional rights.”<\/p>\n

Mike Johnston, who said he wants to put 200 more uniformed first responders on Denver streets, said he thinks that can be achieved without decreasing educational or character requirements for those positions simply by shifting the focus on the jobs more toward community service and recruiting people who want to do that kind of work.<\/p>\n

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