COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE COMMISSION - COMMUNITY SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
Regular MeetingMilwaukee, WI · June 9, 2021
Minutes
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Minutes
COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE COMMISSION - COMMUNITY
SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
Paul Mozina, Chair.
Deborah Blanks and Steve Jansen
Wednesday, June 9, 2021 1:00 PM Virtual
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/845841085
You can also dial in using your phone.
(For supported devices, tap a one-touch number below to join instantly.)
United States: +1 (872) 240-3412
- One-touch: tel:+18722403412,,845841085#
Access Code: 845-841-085
Join from a video-conferencing room or system.
Dial in or type: 67.217.95.2 or inroomlink.goto.com
Meeting ID: 845 841 085
Or dial directly: 845841085@67.217.95.2 or 67.217.95.2##845841085
1. Minutes Discussion and Approval
Call to order at 1:00 p.m. Present Steve Jansen, Deborah Blanks and Paul Mozina.
Also Present: Jack D. McNally FPC Compliance Auditor, Edgar Mendez Neighborhood
News Service.
Minutes from the April 28th meeting not available.
2. Discussion of Committee Chair (Volunteer and Appointments)
Steve Jansen explained that Dr. Pam Malone would no longer be the Chair and
thanked her for seeing the need for the Committee and getting it started.
3. Choosing a new Committee Chair
Deborah Blanks nominated Paul Mozina to be the Chair. Paul Mozina asked if it was
necessary to be a member of the Commission to be a Chair of one of its Committees
(he is not a Commissioner). Steve Jansen thought it would be fine and seconded the
nomination. Paul Mozina accepted and mentioned that he will endeavor to make a
video of the meetings publicly available going forward.
4. Short Discussion of Research Survey Thoughts
Paul asks if everyone can access the spreadsheet we are using to organize and review
City of Milwaukee Page 1
COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE Meeting Minutes June 9, 2021
COMMISSION - COMMUNITY
SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
the survey questions that he shared from Google docs. He explains how the
spreadsheet is organized and reminded the Committee of their mandate: “Conduct an
annual survey of Milwaukee residents belonging to communities that are statistically
more likely to interact with member of the Police department about the resident’s views
on police-community relations.”
Paul reminded the Committee that Dr. Pam Malone had suggested that we refer to the
2 MPD surveys that were commissioned by the Common Council (available attached to
CC File 200315 https://milwaukee.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?
ID=4576426&GUID=470F90D4-A224-4B00-B9DD-96B5DE83ED4A&Options=&Search
=), one in 2017 and the second in 2019 and he listed all of the questions asked in
these surveys in the first column. He explained that for every question in the Common
Council’s survey, we could list the similar questions submitted by the Committee to
see where the overlap was. The spreadsheet can also be used to show the similarities
between questions asked by different Committee members.
5. Beginning the process of approving survey questions
Steve asked if Paul had added his questions to the spreadsheet and he confirmed that
he had. They are of a slightly different nature seeking to find out what the community
knows about the DOJ Collaborative Reform Initiative, the Charles Collins et al., vs.,
City of Milwaukee et. al. Settlement Agreement and the history of the Community
Collaborative Commission. He wondered if they were appropriate questions given the
survey mandate. Steve suggested that the survey be divided into themes:
background, feelings about police etc...
Deborah suggested that we look into hiring or contracting with someone who is very
experienced at developing surveys. We could provide short paragraphs providing
background information for each category of questions. And she suggested we explain
what the purpose of the survey is and make sure all of the questions are aligned and
that we get people skilled in performing surveys to review and fine tune what we
propose to ask with the goal of making it a credible, valid, reliable tool.
Paul agreed with Steve’s suggestion to organize the survey questions into themes and
with Deborah’s suggestion to enlist the help of people skilled in formulating and
conducting surveys. He asked if the questions he had suggested were legitimately
within the scope of the original mandate and both Steve and Deborah confirmed that
they were. Regarding the scope of the survey, Steve emphasized the importance of
getting it done, and started, by the end of the year, so we cannot stray too far afield.
He thought we could accomplish our goal within the current mandate and stressed the
urgency of proceeding and beginning to talk to folks on the street.
Paul continues the review by reading Deborah’s questions. Deborah reminds us that
questions that ask the person to rate something should have a scale by which they
can do so. She had in fact included a scale for her first two questions, but Paul did
not include them in the spreadsheet (added now). Paul thought Deborah’s 4th and 5th
questions were similar: What is one thing law enforcement could do to improve
community-police relations? What is a major issue that affects your perception of law
enforcement? We concluded that they were both valuable and we proceeded to begin
reviewing Dr. Pam Malone’s questions, which also help differentiate them.
Paul did not include the scales that Dr. Pam had suggested for her questions and
Steve pointed that out. The spreadsheet has been updated to include her suggested
City of Milwaukee Page 2
COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE Meeting Minutes June 9, 2021
COMMISSION - COMMUNITY
SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
scales for responses.
We relate Dr. Pam’s first two questions (I am stopped by law enforcement when I do
not believe I had broken any laws, including traffic laws. and, A friend or family
member was stopped by law enforcement but did not believe any laws were broken.)
to the three new questions that Steve added regarding factual information about a
person’s encounters with police (Since Jan 1, 2020, have you been stopped and
questioned by a city of Milwaukee police officer? If yes, above, were you frisked? If
Yes above, did you get a ticket or were you arrested in that stop?) Deborah thought
Steve’s questions would provide useful factual information whereas Dr. Pam’s
questions were more focused on a person’s perception. Deborah questioned whether
we were trying to get to whether every person had a certain perception of police or
whether we wanted to know if the respondent was speaking for a larger group. Does
the person feel like they were discriminated against or does the person feel like people
of color are discriminated against more?
Steve reiterates the difference between his questions, which are factual, versus Dr.
Pam’s questions, which are more feeling based. He said both the facts and feelings
are important. Deborah questioned whether we want to focus on the individual’s
experience or their perception of how people of color in general are treated. Steve
thought it would be better to focus more on how the individual themselves was treated
rather than have them attempt to extrapolate their personal feelings to a broader
community.
Paul asks Steve about his reasons for asking specific factual questions about
people’s experiences with police and Steve explains the importance of gathering more
data and refers to a recent discussion at the last full CCC meeting. Paul offers to
share some Dashboards he has created based on the data that the MPD has provided
to the FPC per the Collins Settlement Agreement which show a huge disparity between
how many times Black people are searched during a traffic stop versus white people.
The Crime and Justice Institute did mention this in their “City of Milwaukee Settlement
Agreement Six-Month Report on Non-Compliant Items March 2021” page 14: “Recently,
MPD reported that after a recent internal audit revealed potential bias and disparate
treatment in the way some patrol officers used the smell of marijuana to search
vehicles in communities of color, members of the Executive Staff took a closer look at
the data. As a result, a directive was issued mandating that additional factors must be
present beyond the smell of marijuana in order to justify the search of a vehicle. We
hope additional proactive measures are taken as a result of this requirement in the
Agreement and will continue to track these efforts.” In fact, the Dashboards that Paul
shared demonstrate a remarkable reduction in the number of times Black people were
stopped and searched and nothing was found that coincides with the timing of the MPD
Executive Staff’s directive. See
(https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/paul.mozina/viz/2019Q3-4and2020TrafficStops
WithSearchesResultingInWarningandNoContrabandFound/2019Q3-4and2020TrafficSto
psWithSearchesResultingInWarningandNoContrabandFoundDashboard)
Meeting adjourned: 2:05 P.M.
Minutes provided by Paul Mozina.
City of Milwaukee Page 3
Agenda
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Agenda
COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE COMMISSION - COMMUNITY
SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
Vacant, Chair.
Deborah Blanks, Steve Jansen, Paul Mozina, and Jamaal Smith
Wednesday, June 9, 2021 1:00 PM Virtual
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/845841085
You can also dial in using your phone.
(For supported devices, tap a one-touch number below to join instantly.)
United States: +1 (872) 240-3412
- One-touch: tel:+18722403412,,845841085#
Access Code: 845-841-085
Join from a video-conferencing room or system.
Dial in or type: 67.217.95.2 or inroomlink.goto.com
Meeting ID: 845 841 085
Or dial directly: 845841085@67.217.95.2 or 67.217.95.2##845841085
1. Minutes Discussion and Approval
2. Discussion of Committee Chair (Volunteer and Appointments)
3. Choosing a new Committee Chair
4. Short Discussion of Research Survey Thoughts
5. Beginning the process of approving survey questions
In the event that Common Council members who are not members of this committee attend this meeting, this
meeting may also simultaneously constitute a meeting of the Common Council or any of the following
committees: Community and Economic Development, Finance and Personnel, Judiciary and Legislation,
Licenses, Public Safety and Health, Public Works, Zoning, Neighborhoods & Development, and/or Steering
and Rules. Whether a simultaneous meeting is occurring depends on whether the presence of one or more of
the Common Council member results in a quorum of the Common Council or any of the above committees,
and, if there is a quorum of another committee, whether any agenda items listed above involve matters within
that committee’s realm of authority. In the event that a simultaneous meeting is occurring, no action other than
information gathering will be taken at the simultaneous meeting.
City of Milwaukee Page 1 Printed on 6/8/2021
COMMUNITY COLLABORATIVE Meeting Agenda June 9, 2021
COMMISSION - COMMUNITY
SURVEY & RESEARCH COMMITTEE
Upon reasonable notice, efforts will be made to accommodate the needs of persons with disabilities through
sign language interpreters or auxiliary aids. For additional information or to request this service, contact the
City Clerk's Office ADA Coordinator at 286-2998, (FAX)286-3456, (TDD)286-2025 or by writing to the
Coordinator at Room 205, City Hall, 200 E. Wells Street, Milwaukee, WI 53202.
Limited parking for persons attending meetings in City Hall is available at reduced rates (5 hour limit) at the
Milwaukee Center on the southwest corner of East Kilbourn and North Water Street. Parking tickets must be
validated in the first floor Information Booth in City Hall.
Persons engaged in lobbying as defined in s. 305-43-4 of the Milwaukee Code of Ordinances are required to
register with the City Clerk's Office License Division. Registered lobbyists appearing before a Common
Council committee are required to identify themselves as such. More information is available at
http://city.milwaukee.gov/Lobbying.
City of Milwaukee Page 2 Printed on 6/8/2021