luhizo luhizo
Luhizo Luhizo in custody in a Burlington Police Department cruiser on Oct. 6, 2018.

The Burlington Police Department arrests Black people at a rate 3.7 times that of white people, according to a city report. 

Of the 1,594 arrests the department made in 2019, 17.3% of those arrested were Black. The arrest rate is 123 arrests per 1,000 Black residents compared to 33 arrests per 1,000 white residents.ย The report says 5.3% of city residents are Black.

Mayor Miro Weinberger asked city staff to prepare the report on race and arrests as a follow-up to the cityโ€™s 2019 equity report. The Police Commission received and discussed the arrest report at its Tuesday meeting after Brian Lowe, the cityโ€™s chief innovation officer, presented the data.ย ย ย ย 

The data shows a decrease in arrests in the past five years, with a total of 1,594 arrests in 2019, down from a peak of 2,324 arrests in 2016. The racial disparity has fallen slightly during that time, down from a peak of 5 to 1 in 2012 to 3.7 to 1 in 2019. 

Black residents were overrepresented in four types of arrests: drug-related arrests, assaults, domestic violence, and disorder-related crimes. Black residents made up 28.9% of violent felony arrests and 14.6% of non-violent misdemeanor arrests. 

โ€œIn 2019, arrests where officers have a higher level of discretion, which is lower-level, non-violent crimes, show less disparity,โ€ Lowe said. 

The disparities for Black adults is 5 to 1, which is higher than Black juveniles, which is 3 to 1. 

The disparity used to be higher for Black juveniles. Interim Police Chief Jon Murad said he believed the decrease was a result of school resource officers prioritizing engagement and education over enforcement, a change made in a 2015 agreement between the school district and the police department.

โ€œIt is the presence of the SROs, in a delineated, specific way as determined by that MOU that makes certain they are changing the way they are dealing with juveniles in the schools,โ€ he said. 

The City Council voted to terminate the school resource officer agreement with the school district at the end of the 2020-21 school year after more than 1,000 people called into public meetings in June demanding the removal of the officers from the cityโ€™s schools.ย 

The report reflects similar racial disparities that were shown in the departmentโ€™s 2019 traffic stop data, which showed that Black drivers were stopped, ticketed and arrested at a rate higher than whites.ย ย 

The report recommended that the department continue to provide yearly reports on traffic stops, use-of-force data, and overall arrest rates by race to the Burlington Police Commission. 

The report also recommends that a third-party evaluator conduct an independent evaluation of race and arrest data and look for other areas of interest. It also recommends that the cityโ€™sย  health equity manager โ€” a recently created position โ€” lead a process to create strategies to improve the communityโ€™s understanding of how underlying inequities influence arrests more broadly.ย 

Aidan Quigley is VTDigger's Burlington and Chittenden County reporter. He most recently was a business intern at the Dallas Morning News and has also interned for Newsweek, Politico, the Christian Science...