As nationwide protests decrying police brutality against people of color enter their third week, the mayor of Camas is using his platform to speak about racism and police use-of-force policies.
In a video posted June 6 to the city’s YouTube channel, Camas Mayor Barry McDonnell says the protests — which stem from the May 25 videotaped death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black father killed during an arrest in Minneapolis after a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while three other officers watched — have sparked needed conversations about systemic racism and excessive use of force by law enforcement officers.
“People need to approach (these conversations) with an open mind. We need to be willing to accept the hard truths and … change for the greater good,” McDonnell said. “How can we change? By connecting to each other.”
In the video, which had been viewed 566 as of Tuesday, McDonnell shares his own experience of moving to Atlanta, Georgia, from his home in Ireland as a pre-teen.
“In ’78, in Dublin, there was not much diversity where I grew up,” McDonnell says. “My family moved to America in 1990 … to Atlanta … and everything — the landscape, the people, everything — was so amazing and so different from anything I’d experienced before.”