AGENCY
Policy Division
Our team makes policy recommendations to align police policies with the law, best practices, and community values.
AGENCY
Policy Division
Our team makes policy recommendations to align police policies with the law, best practices, and community values.
Resources
Policy Review of DGO 6.10: Missing Persons
DPA Table of Vehicle Pursuit Policies
DPA Survey of Vehicle Pursuit Policies (PPT)
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 3rd Quarter 2023
DPA SPARKS Report 3rd Quarter '23 (PPT)
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 2nd Quarter 2023
Amended DPA SPARKS Report 2nd Quarter '23 (PPT)
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 2nd Quarter 2023
DPA SPARKS Report 2nd Quarter '23 (PPT)
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 1st Quarter 2023
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 3rd and 4th Quarter 2022
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 2nd Quarter 2022
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 1st Quarter 2022
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 3rd and 4th Quarter 2021
List of all DPA policy recommendations from 2nd Quarter 2021
DPA and SFPD joint 2nd Quarter SPARKS report
About
The City Charter requires the Department of Police Accountability (DPA) to make police policy recommendations to the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) and the Police Commission.
Our division makes policy recommendations through:
- Quarterly policy reports to the Police Commission
- Working groups with SFPD
- SFPD’s Disciplinary Review Boards when we determine that a policy failure occurred during our investigations of officer-involved shootings or public complaints of police misconduct
DPA has the authority to propose new SFPD Department General Orders (DGOs), or revise existing DGO’s through SFPD Department General Order 3.01.
DOJ policy recommendations
The DPA makes policy recommendations to address the U.S Department of Justice’s (DOJ) recommendations to improve the SFPD.
In 2015 and 2016, the SFPD faced mounting public concern over a series of high-profile officer-involved shootings. Together with then-Supervisors London Breed and Malia Cohen, Mayor Ed Lee and SFPD asked the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) for a voluntary, top-to-bottom review of the San Francisco Police Department’s practices.
In the request to DOJ, the City sought “answers about how as a Police Department and a City we can build deeper, stronger trust between law enforcement and the communities they’re sworn to protect.”
The DOJ released a report which identified 5 areas for improvement:
- Use of Force Reforms
- Bias Reforms
- Community Policing Reforms
- Accountability Reforms
- Recruitment, Hiring, and Personnel Reforms
Today SFPD is compliant with 193 substantial recommendations of the 272 recommendations. Fifty-nine recommendations are in external validation.