The will establish a community board that will enable students, faculty and staff to provide guidance on campus policing and public safety policies and procedures.
The Community Oversight Review Board (CORB) is the outcome of amonthslongcollaborative effort among the Police Department (CUPD), student and campus leaders, and representatives of the campus’s shared governance groups.
CORB is also the key recommendation of a community safety task forcethe chancellor charged with evaluating campus policing policies, practices and training and recommending steps to ensure public safety works for the campus community.
According to the board’s established bylaws, its mission will be to create a formal structure “to ensure accountability and to provide an avenue for continued community review, feedback and regular communication with the police department.”
Board members will include representatives from student, staff and faculty governance groups and at-large student, faculty or staff members.
CUPD Chief Doreen Jokerst and outgoing CUSG Student Body President Isaiah Chavous, who worked closely on the project over the past year, acknowledged that the collaboration took a willingness to engage on the part of the campus police department and students through a process that was not always easy or comfortable for either side.
Chavous, who served on the chancellor’s task force, said each side arrived at the table with “opposing views on how police conduct should be handled, evaluated and held accountable.” In the end, he and Jokerst spent more than 100 hours in one-on-one meetings to come to an agreement on how CORB would be implemented.
“The hours spent negotiating and collaborating did not come from a place of initial animosity, but from the perspective of students calling for reforms to aid in the fight against systemic oppression and violence. CUPD wanted to change policy while the students and I wanted to have an active oversight mechanism,” he said.
Chavous, a senior who majored in political science and business, called CORB an historic agreement for the community in what has been a year of historic challenges due to the pandemic, a deadly mass shooting in Boulder, and the deaths of George Floyd and many others while in police custody around the country.
“Having led the implementation of the oversight board is one of my proudest achievements thus far,” he said.
Last summer, Jokerst began meeting with Chavous, Molly Frommelt, also a student body president and co-author of the board’s composition and framework, and other student leaders to discuss how to improve public safety at . Since then, Jokerst said everything she discussed with students had been implemented, including adding students to officer interview oral boards, posting reports of bias-based profiling and use-of-force data on the CUPD website, and involving students in police training programs.
Throughout the process, Jokerst met with her counterparts at the University of Chicago Police Department and other universities to gauge their work with their campus communities and asked for additional guidance from her partners at the . Thein Denver, where the CU Denver campus is located, and the University of California Berkeley andUCSan Diego are among the universities that have also established community advisory boards.
“We spent hundreds of hours over the past academic year to get where we are today with the creation of this community board,” Jokerst said. “We listened to each other, worked together in spite of vastly different perspectives when we started, but in the end, we conceived of a unique model that will benefit the campus community and the campus police department.”
Dan Jones, associate vice chancellor for integrity, safety and compliance, which includes CUPD, and the senior vice chancellor for diversity, equity and inclusion, once hired, will co-chair the board to ensure continuity and alignment with best practices.
Jones said it was a testament to the “commitment and leadership” of task force members that they were able to work closely with CUPD to bring CORB to fruition during an historic year of challenges and tragedies for the campus and the broader Boulder community.
“The work of our students, staff and faculty has and will continue to provide leadership for the campus and set an example for policing everywhere,” Jones said.
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2020
- June 26: Following a series of student-led protests across Boulder County, CUPD Chief Doreen Jokerst held an initial meeting with prominent student leaders to hear and understand their concerns about policing practices on campus and in the broader Boulder community. Attendees included members of the Black Student Alliance, the three branches of CU Student Government (CUSG), the Cultural Events Board, and a student who was part of the city of Boulder’s police oversight implementation team. Students asked for a more inclusive mechanism within CUPD to allow policing reforms to be implemented with community involvement.
- July 29: At a second meeting, Jokerst provided student leaders with a list of proposed action items that sought to increase transparency between CUPD and the student body. Student leaders agreed to meet consistently with CUPD and agreed that CUSG would act as an intermediary between CUPD and the campus community.
- Aug. 18: Chancellor Phil DiStefano announced the formation of aCommunity Safety Task Force. Members included representatives from student, faculty and staff shared governance groups and CUPD. The task force met multiple times during the fall semester, and members solicited feedback from their constituents.
- Dec. 2: The task force askedforcommunity feedbackbefore issuing its final recommendations.
2021
- February: The task force issued itsfinal recommendations, which centeredon howaCommunityOversight Review Board would be established and next steps to ensure its success.
- Feb. 25: Dan Jones, associate vice chancellor for integrity, safety and compliance, accepted and acknowledged receipt of the task force’s final report.