Public Safety
Everyone deserves to feel and be safe. Across the country, localities can build real safety by investing in communities and addressing the root causes of instability

Our Work and Vision

Real safety is when people have everything they need to thrive — a place to live, a dignified job that provides economic security and access to opportunities, and the resources to care for themselves and their loved ones. For too long, we’ve relied solely on policing and punishment while at the same time underinvesting in public housing, infrastructure, schools, and healthcare – which has caused decades of harm in Black and Brown communities. It doesn’t have to be this way. 

For decades, communities have been modeling and investing in ways that address root causes of harm and violence without criminalization and incarceration. Now, local governments across the country are pushing for and investing in these community-led strategies so their impacts can be widely felt.

Public Safety Steering Committee

As a membership organization, we believe our work is most impactful when it is informed and guided by members. Bringing a diverse range of expertise and local experience, our Public Safety Steering Committee advises and shapes our work in this area:

KENDRA BROOKS

Philadelphia City Councilmember, PA

TIFFANY CABÁN

New York City Councilmember, NY

NICK DEMSKE

Former Racine County Supervisor, WI

EUNISSES HERNANDEZ

Los Angeles City Councilmember, CA

WILL JAWANDO

Montgomery County Councilmember, MD

MARY LUPIEN

Rochester City Council Vice President, NY

JALEN MCKEE-RODRIGUEZ

San Antonio Councilmember, TX

Elliott Payne's headshot

ELLIOTT PAYNE

Minneapolis Council President, MN

MILLICENT ROGERS

Durham Public Schools Board Member, NC

ROSSANA RODRIGUEZ-SANCHEZ

Chicago Alderperson, IL

GABRIELA SANTIAGO-ROMERO

Detroit City Councilmember, MI

ARTI WALKER-PEDDAKOTLA

Former Oak Park Village Trustee, IL

MONICA WILSON

Antioch Councilmember, CA

Featured Resources

CREATING TRAFFIC SAFETY

This policy memo supports local elected officials to pursue policies to create traffic safety that prioritizes public health and racial equity.

CREATING A COMMUNITY RESPONDER PROGRAM

This tool will help local elected officials create and scale community responder programs that help build real safety. It provides concrete steps, strategic considerations, and recommendations from experts in the field. It supports local leaders to utilize their strategic position as power brokers within government and organizers within their communities.

REFORM / TRANSFORM

Reform/Transform: A Policing Policy Toolkit is a framework and policy roadmap supporting local elected officials in making exactly these types of changes. The toolkit provides a simple, user-friendly framework for cities to evaluate policies across a dozen metrics ranging from oversight and change to department policies to limiting ICE collaboration.

INVESTING IN REAL SAFETY

Investing in Real Safety is a how-to guide for policymakers is a new budget analysis microsite meant to supplement Reform/Transform‘s comparative budgeting tool with in-depth guidance on how to examine how police budgets are structured and how to make investments in the resources that truly create safety.

LET'S TALK REAL SAFETY

We succeed when we collectively and consistently drive a shared vision of community safety. Let's Talk Real Safety is a messaging guide that provides local elected officials and their staff with shared language around community safety. It is grounded in the latest research, polling, and nationally-tested messaging.

More Resources

Blogs And Featured News

New Resource Helps Local Electeds Create Real Traffic Safety

To support local elected officials in taking action to create real traffic safety the Local Progress Impact Lab created a new resource: Creating Traffic Safety: A Policy Memo for Local Elected Leaders.

We Can Create Real Safety One Step At a Time. Here’s How.

To support our collective work and continue building the world we want to see, we have a variety of communications, budgeting, and policy resources available. Check them out!
Photograph of police sirens in the dark (Photo by Michael Förtsch / Unsplash)

Traffic Violence Is Up. Policing Isn’t the Answer.

Traffic enforcement has a place in reducing traffic violence. But LP Legal Fellow Kat Kerwin explains that without a comprehensive, evidence-based strategy, it will fail to reduce fatalities and only put Black and Brown drivers in harm’s way.

How Localities Use Community Responder Programs to Keep People Safe

This new video from Local Progress and Local Progress Impact Lab focuses on three specific localities: Durham, Oakland, and Albuquerque to explain what community responder programs are, how they work, and why hundreds of localities are starting to adopt them.