The Christian Science Monitor

How do you ‘defund the police’ in Texas? Very carefully.

Leon Reed, a criminal defense attorney, during his 10-day walk from Fort Worth to Austin, Texas, to raise awareness for police reform. Amid a national debate around policing reform, local police budgets are coming under scrutiny from activists and local officials.

The mercury was around 102 degrees Fahrenheit when Leon Reed left the town of Jarrell for the last 40 miles of his journey. He had been walking for a week, mostly during dawn and dusk, to the state capital of Austin so he could talk to Gov. Greg Abbott about police reform.

Like other activists in cities across the nation, Mr. Reed, a criminal defense attorney, is pressing for policing in his state to change – from intangible aspects like workplace cultures and mindsets to the nuts and bolts of budgets and regulations. But just as in those cities, the “defund the police” slogan doesn’t fully capture activists’ demands.

“We need the police,” he said. “But the answer to everything isn’t ‘send a police officer.’”

Governor Abbott wasn’t in Austin when Mr. Reed arrived earlier this week. That afternoon he was actually in Fort Worth, where Mr. Reed had begun his

Potholes and barking dogsFinding potential savings A political backlash

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