St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter on Friday criticized his police chief's proposal to hire 50 more officers over the next two years, arguing that it would not be an effective way to improve community engagement.
Police Chief Todd Axtell proposed the increase to the City Council on Wednesday. His plan would bring the number of sworn officers from 626 — already the most in the department's history — to 676.
Carter wrote that he has "concerns about this proposal" in a message posted on his Facebook page about 7 p.m. Friday.
"The philosophy that more police officers, tougher prosecutors, and bigger jails equal a safer city has failed," Carter's note said. "Our driving goal shouldn't be to hire as many officers as possible but to reduce the number of times we have to call police in the first place."
More officers are needed to work with the residents as the city grows, Axtell told the council. Under his plan, new hires would spend six months in the department's community engagement unit before responding to emergency calls.
But Carter said that instead of hiring more officers to respond to emergencies, more work should be done to prevent emergencies in the first place.
"Community engagement isn't simply a temporary assignment for rookie officers, nor an add-on for after we've hired 50 new officers; it must be the underlying culture of our entire police department — every day, every officer," he wrote.
Axtell's proposal comes as the council begins work on its 2019 budget. Council members expressed support for his request earlier this week.