A group of students and community activists were ejected from a hearing room in the Maryland House Office Building in Annapolis where lawmakers were voting on bills to establish a private police force on the Johns Hopkins University campus in Baltimore.
The students from Hopkins and the nearby Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, said they are frustrated that lawmakers don鈥檛 seem to be giving their position much weight.
As the Baltimore City legislative delegation met to vote on the plan to establish a private campus police force at Hopkins, the students stood, clapping and shouting and called out 鈥淣o justice, no peace! No private police!鈥
Students protesting against bills to create a private police force on the campus are ejected from an Annapolis hearing room The Baltimore City Delegation was meeting on the issue.
鈥 Kate Ryan (@KateRyan草莓传媒)
A member of the Capitol Police escorted the students out of the hearing room and out of the building where they then pounded on the door of the building, continuing their chant for a few moments. Police told the students that they were disturbing the peace and moved them off the sidewalk in front of House Office building as they were interviewed by reporters.
Here鈥檚 that video
鈥 Kate Ryan (@KateRyan草莓传媒)
Hopkins student Andrea Fraser said students want a safer campus, but she said she thinks approaches other than adding police should be considered.
Referring to lawmakers, Fraser said, 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been disregarding our concerns and placing this on us when we鈥檙e all saying no 鈥 it鈥檚 against our consent,鈥 she said of the plan to create a private campus police force.
Chris Bilal, who lives in Baltimore City and is a member of the Washington Hill Community Association near the Hopkins campus, said he thinks other approaches are needed.
鈥淲e need community-driven safety mechanisms which could include things like mediation and de-escalation鈥 instead of a beefed-up police presence, he said.
Bilal said if Hopkins is interested in crime reduction, the university should be more involved in the community. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking for more solutions around Hopkins actually funding community-driven initiatives,” he said.
Supporters of the bills to create the campus police force say added security is needed in an area where crime is a serious problem. Among those asking Maryland legislators to vote yes on the issue: Democratic Congressman Elijah Cummings who lives in Baltimore and whose nephew was killed near the campus of Old Dominion University in Virginia in 2011.
草莓传媒’s Kate Ryan reported from Annapolis.聽
