Update of Support for Full Byrne Grant Funding
WHEREAS, federal programs designed to assist local, state, and tribal law enforcement agencies have played a vital role in reducing the nation’s crime rate; and
WHEREAS, local, state, and tribal law enforcement agencies are on the front lines in confronting the most powerful and sophisticated organized crime groups ever to challenge domestic law enforcement agencies, i.e., the international drug trafficking organizations; and
WHEREAS, the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) acknowledges that the Byrne Formula Grant Program was created by the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988; and
WHEREAS, the IACP recognizes that the Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance Grant Program is a partnership among federal, state, and local governments to create safer communities; and
WHEREAS, the problems presented by the unprecedented flow of drugs into this country by these international criminal syndicates continues to be a threat in many areas of the United States, particularly middle- and smaller-sized cities and rural areas; and
WHEREAS, the 50 States, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands are eligible to apply for formula grant funds; and
WHEREAS, the IACP supports efforts to improve functioning of the criminal justice system with emphasis on violent crime and serious offenders and the enforcement of state and local laws similar to those in the Federal Controlled Substances Act; and
WHEREAS, the lack of Byrne Grant funding will severely affect the ability of state, tribal, and local law enforcement to continue drug enforcement and demand reduction efforts; and
WHEREAS, since state, tribal, and local police are often the first responders to a terrorist attack; and
WHEREAS, the IACP believes that it is important to distinguish between the assistance funds that are provided to state and local law enforcement from programs administered by the Department of Homeland Security and those provided from the existing programs at the Department of Justice; and
WHEREAS, effective anti-crime programs are effective anti-terrorism programs, and evidence indicates that terrorist organizations and transnational gangs that are funded in part by the sale of illegal drugs add a new dimension to the need for continued investigation of narcotics-related crime; and
WHEREAS, the Byrne Grant Funding Program has proven itself an invaluable resource for cooperative federal, state, and local anti-crime policing strategies, funding multi-jurisdictional drug task forces and D.A.R.E. training, which are critical to state, tribal, and local law enforcement responses to the drug threat; and
WHEREAS, in Fiscal Year 2005 the Byrne Grant and Local Law Enforcement Block Grant were combined into one program—the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant, resulting in a significant decrease in funding; now, therefore be it
RESOLVED that the IACP Annual Conference strongly urges Congress to restore full funding to the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program.