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Vote NO on 2A: Prison Abolition Project’s Guide to the 2023 Election

November 2, 2023 | OPINION | By Tim Smith

Note: This article is written by a Co-Chair of the Prison Abolition Project at Colorado College

Content Warning: The following statement deals with violent themes such as police brutality, racialized oppression, and hate-based violence within the Colorado Springs community.


The members of Colorado College’s Prison Abolition Project firmly reject the Colorado Springs Ballot Initiative 2A. The initiative asks voters to permit the City of Colorado Springs to withhold $4,750,000 in Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights funds for “the purpose of acquiring property, planning, constructing and equipping a training facility for the Colorado Springs Police Department.”

Should 2A pass, the City of Colorado Springs will use the funds as seed money for a cop city that is predicted to cost between $45-60 million. We call on all voting members of the Colorado College community to vote “no” on such an amendment for a plethora of reasons.

  1. The Colorado Springs Police Department , like all police organizations, has a history of racialized violence. Since department officers murdered Devon Bailey in 2019, they have been sued 14 times for excessive force, surveillance and other dehumanizing tactics. In August of 2023, the ACLU sued the Colorado Springs Police Department and the FBI regarding the department’s surveillance and infiltration into local activist and housing advocacy groups. The department infiltrated such community groups, attempting to incriminate and incarcerate housing activists through the illegal solicitation of firearms.

Listed above are seven of the many reasons that Prison Abolition Project opposes initiative 2A. We encourage readers to oppose 2A for the aforementioned reasons, but also to reflect on their commitments to community well-being in Colorado Springs, their relationship (or lack thereof) with local policing and how they choose to engage with Colorado Springs as CC Students. Sources are available upon request, but we encourage students to research these phenomena themselves.

We encourage readers to critically examine their knowledge, or lack thereof, of Colorado Springs politics and policing at large, and to develop their relationships with, and knowledge of, the Colorado Springs community. We call upon Colorado College Students, particularly those who seldom depart from the Colorado College “bubble,” to engage with Colorado Springs policy and community in meaningful and respectful ways. The reasoning outlined above has come through face-to-face conversations and organizing with Colorado Springs residents – a perspective not often considered by Colorado College Students during their academic careers.

Beyond The Election:

We know that the fight to Stop Cop City in Colorado Springs does not end with voting (regardless of whether or not 2A fails). We ground our opposition to 2A in the vision and fruition of a police-free future. As such, the work of Prison Abolition Project will continue far beyond the election on Nov. 7. We call on Colorado College community members to pay close attention to the actions of the Colorado Springs City Government and the Colorado Springs Police Department following the election and to join the broad coalition of community organizing groups in fighting against a Colorado Springs Cop City.

Other Voting Recommendations:

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