
City officials exploded in anger at each other Wednesday, with the police commissioner and city councillors accusing each other of disrespect and lies over the redirection of some proposed police funding toward human services. At the height of the argument, the mayor felt forced to call a 10-minute recess so people could calm down.
Ultimately, nothing was decided Wednesday. After the recess, councillor and author of the order Jivan Sobrinho-Wheeler exercised his โcharter rightโ to end discussion until the next council meeting, Monday. His co-sponsor on the order was councillor Quinton Zondervan. Both are people of color.
Their antagonists on the issue were police commissioner Branville G. Bard Jr. and councillor E. Denise Simmons, who are black.

The call to redirect $4.1 million from police funding toward public health and safety measures โ a nod to a nationwide call to defund police departments from responsibilities that neednโt be done by law enforcement โ drew a five-hour meeting Monday devoted just to public comment. Council discussion was delayed to the special, continued meeting Wednesday.
Thatโs when Bard gave lengthy testimony in which he accused Sobrinho-Wheeler and Zondervan of engaging in โflat-out bad governance,โ with the 3,000 emails that came in and nearly 400 people signing up for public comment โ all but a couple speaking in favor of redirecting the funding โ โnot true deliberationโ in which Bard โdidnโt hear authentic voicesโ but just โa bunch of people looking for their โIโm a black allyโ receipts, hoping they could somehow use it to pay off white guilt.โ
The Cambridge Black Pastors Association โbelieve that defunding the Cambridge Police Department would have an adverse effect on our community,โ Bard said, reading from a letter.
As a degreed expert on race in policing, Bard said he found it โbefuddlingโ that he wasnโt consulted in the writing of the order and said the makers of the motion displayed a โlevel of arrogance thatโs concerning.โ
Bard said the voices heโd heard Sunday at a protest against police brutality and institutional racism were โauthentic voices, many of whom were black and brownโ; a black co-organizer of the event ended it by exhorting those 3,500 people to turn their attention to Mondayโs meeting of the City Council, because it was โwhere the real work begins.โ
The agenda also included the start of a discussion on whether police should wear cameras, which was sent to committee for discussion, and a declaration that racism is a public health crisis.
Missing the motionโs point
Some of Bard comments dodged the text of the councillorsโ footnoted motion, which said it reflected a combined campaign by Black Lives Matter to โ#DefundThePolice and #InvestInCommunitiesโ and hoped to see the money โredirected toward measures that promote public health and safety in other departments.โ Bard spoke at length about the loss of services that would accompany losing the $4.1 million without acknowledging that those services would be led by โother departments.โ
โThis city has come to rely on the department to do so much moreโ than patrolling and responding to calls for service, Bard said. โYou need to look no further than the multiple roles that members of this [police] department took over for the city during the throes of the Covid-19 emergency.โ
Bard said cuts would also make it harder โto be prepared for large-scale events like July Fourth, the Caribbean Carnival or a visit by President Biden next year.โ
โNot factually correctโ

Zondervan grew increasingly upset during Bardโs testimony, including at the commissionerโs statement that โwe donโt get military equipment. We donโt have any โ at all. We don’t have tanks, we donโt have anything like that.โ The department has a vehicle called a BearCat, which is described by a police spokesman as a โrescue vehicle.โ The maker, Lenco, describes the BearCat as having all-steel armor construction that offers โhigh ballistic protection.โ It was funded in 2014 by the Urban Areas Security Initiative of the Department of Homeland Security, which required that 25 percent of the grant funding go to terrorism prevention.
Zondervan called a point of order for Bardโs โnot factually correct statements,โ including the allegation that Bard had not been consulted in the writing of the motion โย the councillor said Bard chose not to respond to several emails โย but Simmons began calling out her own point of order, and the two argued directly. At one point, Zondervan, Simmons, Bard and Mayor Sumbul Siddiqui were all talking over each other, with Siddiqui asking, โWhat are we doing here?โ
Bard was โtalking for 30 minutes,โ Zondervan yelled over the noise. โThat is inappropriate.โ
โYou started this,โ Simmons said.
While the city clerk polled councillors for the votes to recess, Bard asked the mayor: โIs there no way you can sanction [Zondervan] for this?โ
A video of the moments leading up to the recess:
When the council came back, Bard wrapped up his remarks, calling the motion a โhollow gesture that does nothing to promote reform or eliminate racismโ when his department already was suffering low morale from knowing that โAmericans are devastated, and that theyโve been let down by law enforcement again and again.โ
Simmons speaks
Then it was Simmonsโ turn, and she also was upset that two men of color had written the motion without including the โonly African-American personโ on the council, and one who had been on the council for more than 20 years. โI don’t need them to speak for me. I don’t need them to save me. And I don’t need them to, to exclude me. I respectfully ask for them to work with me, to collaborate with me, and above all, to respect me,โ she said. โBecause when you disrespect me, you disrespect my community.โ
She also expressed upset that the community had not been so anguished or energized by past deaths of people of color, citing the 2011 killing of former Cantabrigian Eurie Stamps Sr., 68, by Framingham police serving a search warrant for someone elseโs drugs; and the 2016 death of Anthony Clay in The Port in a shooting that Simmons admitted was committed โby another black manโ who was not a police officer.
โI just find it so interesting that this righteous indignation comes [now]. I just have to question the outrage, because it wasnโt there then,โ Simmons said.
โI agree with the argumentโ
Despite going on at length in seeming anger over the order, she summed up at one point that โI donโt understand the way this order suggests that the problem is only with the police department. I maintain we should take a critical look at all departments. Letโs start with the City Council office โ letโs talk about the bias that we have within. If thereโs a problem with this city, it starts here, with the policymakers,โ Simmons said. In addition, she said that โpolice departments are not identical across the countryโ and that reforms needed in Minneapolis had already taken place in Cambridge, with many of Bardโs reforms done unasked other than by people in her community who were scared by gun violence.
Yet despite the fury with which she spoke, Simmons returned a few times to themes of support for the principles underlying the motion.
โI certainly agree with the overall intent of the order,โ she said. โI do agree with those who say we have placed far too many roles upon law enforcement officers, turning them into peacekeepers, social workers, domestic violence responders, homeless outreach workers, mental health crisis counselors. Many of these roles used to be filled by other agencies and organizationsโ that have been defunded.
โI agree with the argument that this is not working in the best interests of the city. We must start to figure out a better path forward,โ Simmons said.
Offended by white support
She was upset with the speed with which the motion was proposed to happen and with Bard being cut out of the writing of the motion โ either missing Zondervanโs comment about reaching out to Bard repeatedly with no response, or deciding it wasnโt true.
Returning to a theme raised by Bard, she knew of โmany people of color who were a little alarmed at the seemingly disproportional number of white people speaking to the issue, rushing to announce their solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement,โ she said. โSome of the folks I heard from were offended at the number of white people speaking up on their behalf, when really this is not only a time for Black Lives Matter, but a time for black voices to be heard.โ
Sobrinho-Wheeler spoke last, saying mildly that the motion had been intended to begin a conversation, not end it, and that he appreciated the comments by Bard and Simmons. But the โdefundingโ of police departments was a goal of Black Lives Matter, he said, and the motion was made by two men of color who have had their own run-ins with police that left them fearing for their safety โย just like Bard, who told the council: โI canโt tell you how many times Iโve been pulled over and worried that the situation could go wrong because I carry a gun and I also carry brown skin.โ
Update on June 12, 2020:ย The city manager has updated the council with news that the city will be reappropriating a $2.5 million increase to the police department budget to hire positions on hold due to effects of the coronavirus lockdown, councillor Patty Nolan said. The positions include a director of equity and culture, housing case managers, social workers and early childhood education positions, who could all be hired as soon as July.
Sue Reinert contributed to this report.



Is Councilor Simmons really claiming to be the only true person of color on the Council, or that she alone is qualified to discuss race in America? Our entire City is rallying in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and holding the police accountable for their actions, and yet her she is once again attacking allies and trying to divide our City. Very sad.
^^^^^ Same could be said of the Police Commissioner Bard with his “white guilt” comment. Damned if whitey do, damned if whitey don’t apparently.
Meanwhile, last night until 4 am the fine young men of Area 4…oooppss I mean “The Port”…..bursting bombs in the air by the rocket’s red glare…gave proof through the night that the cops stood and stared.
Never mind the one report of a back pack reclaimed with bottle rockets, cash and drugs. Even hours after this “mission accomplished”, the aerial assault continued with cruisers parked a half a block away, officers distracted by what I can only guess was a rousing game of Candy Crush on their phones.
I mean it MUST have been that right….couldn’t have been the attitude of “you want to defund us, well we are gonna reFU…..”
I wrote a comment but it hasn’t been added. Why?
I’m not seeing any, Judy. Sorry about the trouble, but can you double-check that it went through? There’s nothing in the queue from you โ or any resident.
Reposting my comment. I am a 74 year old white woman who stood in Inman Square last Saturday holding signs with my neighbors that said BLM. Am I correct in understanding Simmons saying African-Americans are offended by white support? I am offended by her comments that separate us as a community. Her self-esteem was hurt by not being included in writing the proposal, so she divides us and causes dissension instead of support. Her personal feelings of wanting to be the only leader do not make for good cooperation in the council.