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Disability justice activists are joining grassroots efforts to shut down Atlanta鈥檚 Cop City, the largest police training campus in the U.S.
When then-Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced in April 2021 that a new law enforcement training complex would be built in the Weelaunee Forest, or South River Forest, in Dekalb County, near Atlanta, Georgia, a diverse coalition of organizers, activists, and other community members formed to oppose the project under the 鈥溾 banner. For Atlanta-based disability justice activists who are part of the coalition, the movement to stop Cop City is a disability justice issue.
鈥淚t is critical for us to bring a disability perspective when we talk about Cop City,鈥 says Atlanta-based Dom Kelly, co-founder of the nonprofit (NDS), 鈥渂ecause the construction of this facility will disproportionately harm disabled people.鈥
Almost three years after Bottoms鈥 announcement, Cop City, officially titled the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, is under construction on an 85-acre plot of forested land owned by the City of Atlanta in DeKalb County. If completed, the campus will be the , equipped with military-grade facilities and a mock city for urban police training.
Many who have mobilized against the project have highlighted the adverse environmental effects of clearing dozens of acres of the South River Forest to make way for the development. Indigenous-led groups also and its wildlife habitat.
Meanwhile, racial justice groups foreground the fact that police violence disproportionately harms communities of color, and abolitionist organizations reject any expansion of policing and incarceration. They argue that Cop City would further militarize the police force. 鈥淧olice here have already responded to protests with militarized tactics, chemical weapons, and domestic terrorism charges,鈥 Atlanta organizer Micah Herskind . 鈥淐op City would only further provide police with training and equipment to suppress dissent and terrorize Black and working-class communities.鈥澛
According to disabled organizers, each of these issues affects their community in unique ways. The framework of disability justice helps reveal these intersections.聽
鈥淒estroying any portion of that forest is going to have an impact on our ability to fight climate change, and then that will disproportionately impact the disabled community,鈥 says Kelly. Disabled folks are by climate change, including experiencing worsening health conditions due to changing weather or being left behind .
Many disabled people also live on fixed incomes, making it equipment to help navigate the effects of climate change, like air conditioners to survive a heatwave or backup generators to get through a blackout.
Disabled people are also especially vulnerable to police violence and are overrepresented in the nation鈥檚 incarcerated population. 鈥淒isabled people, especially disabled people of color, are disproportionately harmed by police and the carceral system,鈥 says Kelly.
NDS, which works across the southern United States, partnered with in six Southern states including Georgia, examining sentiments on law enforcement encounters for disabled people in the region. The survey respondents agreed that disabled people experience discrimination during law enforcement encounters due to their disabilities.
Among Black and disabled respondents, rates of agreement were higher than among White and non-disabled respondents, pointing to the important difference between lived experience and outside perception of law enforcement encounters. Over 50 percent of Black survey respondents said they believe disabled people experience discrimination when interacting with law enforcement. About 34 percent of White respondents agreed that disabled people face discrimination in these encounters. More than 46 percent of all disabled respondents and about 37 percent of all non-disabled respondents agreed that disabled people experience discrimination when interacting with law enforcement.
Further, according to data from the Survey of Prison Inmates, in the U.S. report having a disability. Studies have also found are disabled.
Black people are already three times more likely than white people to be 鈥揹isabled or not. Additionally, they are and less likely to have access to .
Often, become violent because officers make assumptions about so-called normal behavior. If an individual does not speak, move, or behave as an officer expects or demands, rather than considering that they might be disabled, the officer may assume noncompliance and react with force.
鈥淎 lot of the Black men that Atlanta police or [those from] other police departments in the metro area have killed were disabled,鈥 says Susi Dur谩n, chair of the Atlanta chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, another group .
In 2015, police in Chamblee, Georgia, just northeast of Atlanta, , a Black man with bipolar disorder who was experiencing a mental health crisis. In 2021, in a similar incident, a DeKalb County officer killed . His family later told reporters he was having a mental health crisis, and they wished the police would have gotten him help.
Experts suggest that a training facility such as Cop City would worsen the criminalization of disabled people rather than lessen the issue. Studies show that training programs, even those intended to reduce implicit biases against marginalized groups, with those communities. Research also shows that the increasing militarization of the police .
Kiana Jackson, Research and Coalition Organizing Manager at NDS and a co-author of the recent NDS and Data for Progress survey, says people have been connecting the dots between the discrimination they鈥檝e seen in their communities and police militarization. 鈥淚t is important for disabled people to get out on the forefront of these issues and say, 鈥楬ey, we are victims of this. We are the ones being killed,鈥欌 she says.
Many disabled folks in Atlanta and DeKalb County have been doing just that as an outspoken contingent of the Stop Cop City movement. When the Atlanta City Council on an ordinance for funding Cop City at a council meeting in June 2023, hundreds of community members showed up to make their voices heard at a public comment session that .
鈥淒isabled people are a part of the Atlanta community,鈥 said Barry Lee, an Atlanta-based disabled artist who spoke at the meeting. Lee then urged the council to 鈥渁llocate the proposed funds toward creating better accessibility for the city of Atlanta.鈥
The city consistently for its disabled residents, partly because of , inaccessible transportation, and lack of health care facilities. 鈥淭here are parts of the city where it is difficult to walk on some sidewalks,鈥 says Dur谩n. 鈥淧lus, we lost our Level I trauma center when .鈥
When to the recent NDS and Data for Progress survey were asked whether their state had adequate resources, such as medical or mental health resources for disabled people when interacting with law enforcement, only 31 percent said they thought so.
People are frustrated, Dur谩n says, because rather than the Atlanta City Council allocating funding for repairing infrastructure or shoring up the city鈥檚 health care, 鈥淭hey鈥檙e spending it on policing.鈥 Slogans like 鈥淒efund the Police鈥 and 鈥淐are, Not Cops,鈥 heard at Stop Copy City protests capture this sentiment. Like Lee, many others who spoke at the public comment session also called on the City of Atlanta to allocate funding to infrastructure, housing, or youth programs rather than policing.
Despite the mass opposition at its meeting last June, the Atlanta City Council in funding for the construction of Cop City.
When the Stop Cop City movement launched its next front, disabled organizers were again at the fore. The referendum campaign began soon after that council meeting, aiming to get a vote on Cop City鈥檚 construction on an upcoming ballot. One of its two fiscal sponsors was (NDRS), NDS鈥檚 political arm.
Kelly says backing the referendum campaign 鈥渁ligned with the work [NDS was] already doing鈥 as part of the organization鈥檚 mission to support efforts decriminalizing disability and ensuring disabled people have access to the democratic process.
As fiscal sponsor on the campaign, NDS worked behind the scenes processing and disbursing contributions. Kelly says the organization also helped ensure that communications and canvassing were inclusive of disabled Atlantans.
Between its launch in June and September 11, 2023, the referendum campaign collected and submitted . That number is well over the threshold needed to get Cop City on the ballot. But the City of Atlanta has questioned it and made a , which Stop Cop City organizers claim are stalling tactics undermining Atlantans鈥 right to vote on the issue.
As the referendum petitions and direct action to stop Cop City鈥檚 construction continues, disabled organizers say they鈥檙e committed to continuing their work. 鈥淚f we want to see collective liberation in our lifetimes, we have to fight back against the further militarization of police and destruction of our already precious forest environment to ensure that future generations have a planet to live on and won鈥檛 be murdered by police,鈥 says Kelly. 鈥淐op City is one piece of that struggle.鈥
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Marianne Dhenin
is a 猫咪社区! Media contributing writer. Find their portfolio and contact them at聽mariannedhenin.com.