Baltimore City Council President Bernard C. "Jack" Young said Tuesday he will look to cut $10 million from the police budget and redirect the money to city schools.

Young, who first made that pledge to cheering education advocates outside City Hall, is among a growing number of city leaders who have suggested spending less on policing and more on education and other services — even as Baltimore grapples with unrelenting violence.

In her State of the City address last week, the mayor said she plans to fight an "unacceptable" crime rate by focusing on social services, not spending more money on police. Her position was applauded by some other elected officials and community leaders.

This week, Young specifically proposed taking money from the police to help the school system close its $130 million budget gap.

"A city that gives more to their police department than they give to their education system is a problem," he said.

While many welcomed the pledge, some neighborhood leaders expressed concern Tuesday about cutting the Police Department at a time when crime is on the rise.

Crimes of violence spiked in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray and the subsequent rioting in 2015. Violence has remained high ever since, while arrests have fallen.

During the first 21/2 months of the year, 68 people were killed, 191 shot, and more than 1,200 robbed, according to city data. Those statistics are all up by about 40 percent over the same period last year. One man was killed while riding a Charm City Circulator bus. Two teens were killed in the  fire-bombing of a home.

At the same time, arrests have continued to drop. There have been about 450 fewer this year than last year, when arrests were already at a modern low, according to city data.

"Cutting funding to the Police Department is not the way to go at this time," said Nathan Willner, president of Cheswolde Neighborhood Association. "Right now we're at crisis levels. The safety of our children has to come first."

Joyce Green, president of the Central District Police Community Relations Council, said....read more at Baltimore Sun