VOA: Obama: America `not even close` to healing people-police divide

After a nearly four hour-long meeting at the White House Wednesday with leaders in law enforcement and prominent members of the black community, President Barack Obama said that America is still nowhere close to healing the decades-long build up of mistrust between the two sides, according to Voice of America (VOA).
”We`re not there yet, we`re not even close to being where we want to be,” Obama said. ”We`re not at a point yet where communities of color feel confident that their police departments are serving them with dignity and respect and equality and we`re not there yet where police departments feel adequately supported at all levels,” VOA reported.
A large and diverse group participated in the exchange of ideas, including Attorney General Loretta Lynch, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, NAACP President Cornell Brooks, other elected officials, police chiefs from several major cities, activists representing the Black Lives Matter movement, and several faith leaders.
The president said he wanted to bring people into the room with different perspectives to listen to each other.
The meeting was called in response to events last week that have many Americans concerned. Two black men were shot by white police officers at point-blank range in the states of Louisiana and Minnesota; five white police officers were then shot at a rally in Texas protesting against those shootings, by a black gunman who said he wanted to kill white people.
After the White House meeting, which went on much longer than planned, the president said the good news is that progress has been made in many police departments across the country. He said Wednesday`s conversation would build off his administration`s ”Task Force on 21st Century Policing,” and would share solutions from communities that have already found ways to build trust and reduce racial disparities.
But he added this sober assessment: ”There is no doubt police departments still feel embattled and unjustly accused. There is no doubt that minority communities – communities of color – feel it just takes too long to do what`s right. The pace of change is going to feel too fast for some, too slow for others.”
Because this is a big country, he added:  ”I think it is fair to say we will see more tension between police and communities this month, next month, next year, for quite some time.”
The president said progress on preventing shootings like last week`s incidents will not happen overnight, because the roots date back not just decades, but centuries. He said ”what we can do” is to set up a series of respectful conversations to make sure we hold ourselves accountable for getting better.
”As a country,” Obama said, ”we have to sit down as a country and just grind it out.”
The meeting produced a list of priorities that Obama said everyone at the table agreed on, which included working with police departments to improve training and de-escalation techniques and creating a ”system of accountability” that would grant citizens greater access to data on law enforcement actions.

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