DC Fiscal Policy Institute: Visualizing the DC Police Budget
A transparent look at how public money is spent on policing in DC.
The data
This tool visualizes trends over time from fiscal years 2012 through 2022, as well as information in the proposed fiscal year 2022 budget, adjusted for inflation and presented in fiscal year 2022 dollars.The data used for this visualization was collected from a number of publicly available sources including: DC’s Budget and Financial Plan, Quarterly Revenue Forecasts, Budget and Performance Oversight Resources, DC Council Committee Reports, the CFOInfo Interactive Dashboard, and the DC Fiscal Policy Institute Budget Toolkits. When needed, supplemental information was provided directly from DC Council Committee staff.
The visualization
The goal of this resource is to increase accessibility and transparency of how public money is spent on policing in DC. This visualization highlights budget information from fiscal years 2012 through 2022 in a single database and includes data on the MPD operating and capital budgets, funding sources, and resource allocations. The visualization also provides a deep-dive into how police in schools are funded in Washington, DC. We use narrative around the visualization’s numerous bar charts, tables, and graphics to contextualize the content of the data and to ensure the information is accessible to a diverse set of stakeholders.
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The historical context
Policing in DC has long had a disproportionate impact on Black residents, who are more likely than White residents to be stopped, searched, arrested, injured, or killed by the police. The uprising against police violence in 2020, which in DC included public responses to a series of high-profile local instances of police violence and killings, sparked an unprecedented level of interest in policing in DC. Over 500 people signed up to testify in the budget hearings that year; and 15,000 submitted statements, with the overwhelming majority calling for a decreased reliance on police and investment in new public safety approaches. At the same time, advocates and policymakers alike were struggling to access and interpret DC’s technical budget documents, which are published each year in dense PDFs that provide little context on how to engage with the information on how DC tax dollars are spent on policing. This visualization brings that information into the light so that residents and policymakers can engage on how public safety is funded in DC.
The current implications
Advocates can use the tool to understand where money for the DC police budget comes from, how it is used, and how those decisions have changed over time. The tool also provides an overview of the budget process, explaining key terms that are critical for interpreting the budget data. This information is crucial for connecting the dots between investments and public safety outcomes, and democratizing budget data so that residents who are impacted by policing in DC can weigh in on how public safety is funded.
Data Deep-Dive
Key takeaways to guide analysis