The Massachusetts State House in Boston.
The Massachusetts State House in Boston. Credit: FILE PHOTO

Aiming to find compromise with Gov. Charlie Baker over police accountability and oversight, senators agreed Monday to scale back restrictions they had sought to put on the use of facial recognition software by law enforcement and to limit the influence of a civilian-led commission over police training.

The newest version of the police reform legislation emerged in the Senate in the late afternoon and passed after an attempted parliamentary delay as Democratic leaders work to send a bill back to Baker before Christmas. With the House in session Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Baker said the governor would sign this new version if the House goes along with the changes made by the Senate.

โ€œTodayโ€™s Senate proposal reflects the amendments that the governor made to the bill two weeks ago. After discussing the governorโ€™s amendments with the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus, the administration believes this package addresses the issues identified by the governorโ€™s amendments and he looks forward to signing this version should it reach his desk,โ€ communications director Lizzy Guyton said in a statement.

Democrats likely do not have the numbers to override Baker in the House if the governor were to veto the police reform bill.

โ€œI believe this is a strong bill, and I wouldnโ€™t have put it before the members if I did not think that the House and the governor hopefully could be on board with it as well,โ€ Senate President Karen Spilka said Monday night after the 31-9 vote to approve the updated version of Bakerโ€™s police reform amendment (S 2981).

Facial recognition

The new language curtails some sections of the landmark bill that Baker threatened to veto over concerns with its strict limits on the use by police of facial recognition technology and the control over the development of police training programs that the bill would have given to a civilian-controlled Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission.

The original bill lawmakers sent to Baker banned almost all law enforcement use of facial recognition systems, only allowing police to ask the Registry of Motor Vehicles to perform a search with a warrant or if there is โ€œan emergency involving immediate danger of death or serious physical injury.โ€

Under the changes the Senate approved, police would be able to perform facial recognition searches to assist with criminal cases or to mitigate โ€œsubstantial risk of harmโ€ after submitting a written request to the RMV, Massachusetts State Police, or the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

A legislative commission, including members from both civil rights groups and police, would also study the topic of facial recognition and make recommendations for additional regulations by the end of 2021.

โ€œWhat we put on the governorโ€™s desk (originally) was a full ban of facial recognition techniques,โ€ Sen. William Brownsberger, a Belmont Democrat who helped craft the underlying bill, told reporters ahead of the vote. โ€œThis is a partial ban, or a limit, a regulation of them, and a study to explore the need for full regulation. Itโ€™s a pretty balanced thing. Itโ€™s not what everybody wants, but itโ€™s the kind of compromise that hopefully people can recognize is forward motion.โ€

Most other sections of the underlying reform are not touched by the latest amendment. When Baker sent the bill back to lawmakers on Dec. 10, he said he would accept some limits on qualified immunity for police officers and the creation of the majority-civilian licensing board, which would have police licensing and decertification power.

He said he would not, however, sign legislation that bans police from using facial recognition technology in response to crimes or takes oversight of municipal police training away from law enforcement personnel within the executive branch.

Baker met last week with the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus to discuss a possible middle ground on both topics, and developed parameters for a compromise that was shared with leaders in both branches of Legislature. Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, the Senateโ€™s lone member of the BLLC and one of the conferees who negotiated the original bill, said ahead of Mondayโ€™s vote that there were โ€œa lot of mixed emotionsโ€ about the package.

โ€œThere is a lot of mourning that I and others are doing for the things not included in this bill,โ€ she said. โ€œBut at the end of the day, when I zoom out and I look at what this bill accomplishes relative to what anyone would have expected twelve months ago or six months ago or even six days ago, there is a ton in this bill that is really going to set a new standard for the national policy landscape on police accountability that could potentially ripple through the other forty-nine states.โ€

Procedural issues

While the final amendment that now heads to the House matches what Senate leaders unveiled Monday, the route to its passage was bumpy. Senate Republicans at first attempted to delay the vote, citing a rushed rollout.

Another amendment filed by Sen. Diana DiZoglio, a Methuen Democrat, sought to make no-knock warrants more accessible in cases when a minor or elderly person in a home is in danger or may be a trafficking victim.

The procedural issues and rehashed debate underscored the bind in which supporters of the bill find themselves. By waiting until so late in the session โ€“ there are only 16 days until the process starts again from scratch for unfinished legislation โ€“ legislative leaders have given opponents an opening to delay it with parliamentary stall tactics.

If Democratic legislative leaders want to push through any police reform changes over Bakerโ€™s opposition, they may struggle: the conference committee report was accepted 28-12 in the Senate, just one vote above a veto-proof majority, and 92-67 in the House, which falls short of the necessary two-thirds margin.

That creates additional pressure to craft a version that can simultaneously earn Bakerโ€™s signature and please the advocates who led the push for change.

The vote came three days after The Appeal published Boston police bodycam video from racial justice protests earlier this year sparked by the police killing of George Floyd.

In the videos, The Appeal reported, Boston officers were captured โ€œbragging about attacking protesters, targeting nonviolent demonstrators for violence and possible arrest, discussing arrest quotas and the use of cars as weapons, and multiple instances of excessive force and liberal use of pepper spray.โ€

Flurry of activity

Mondayโ€™s vote was an opening salvo in what projects to be a flurry of Beacon Hill activity this week.

The House has formal sessions scheduled Tuesday and Wednesday, where the police amendment could surface for a vote. Lawmakers also plan to take votes soon to override Baker spending vetoes in the fiscal year 2021 budget, and representatives could be asked in the coming days to choose a new speaker as House Speaker Robert DeLeo, in negotiations for a job at Northeastern University, heads for the exit.

Four other major legislative packages concerning climate change, health care, economic development and transportation spending remain mired in private House-Senate negotiations, but will need to emerge for final approval before the session ends on Jan. 5 or get punted into the next two-year session.

โ€œI just believe we have so much other work,โ€ Spilka said. โ€œWe have health care, transportation, economic development, among other things, other bills we want to get done. We need to keep moving. This is something we should get to the House, give them an opportunity to pass and get it to the governor.โ€

The Senateโ€™s decision to compromise with Baker stands in contrast to lawmakers standing firm on abortion. Last week, both branches rejected the governorโ€™s amendment to an abortion access proposal, doubling down on their effort to make the procedure more accessible to 16- and 17-year-olds without parental or judicial consent and to include broader language concerning aboritons after 24 weeks of pregnancy.

Baker would effectively gain unilateral control over any legislation he receives starting Sunday. The governor has 10 days to consider any bill, so he could โ€œpocket vetoโ€ proposals once that window closes by sitting on them until the lawmaking session ends.

Sam Doran contributed reporting.