Indeed, according to the center's
website
, the stated objectives of the new facility include efforts to "embrace police reform and cultural sensitivity through an extensive training and educational partnership with the National Center for Civil & Human Rights" and to "set a national standard for community engagement, neighborhood sensitivity, and devotion to the civil rights of all citizens by law enforcement."
Despite claims by so-called environmentalists, the facility will not be built on an existing forest.
According to the
City of Atlanta
, "The training center will sit on land that has long been cleared of hardwood trees through previous uses of the site. Arborists have confirmed the existing vegetation on this land is overwhelmingly dominated by invasive species like brush, weeds, vines, and softwood trees. Much of the site contains rubble from old building structures and asphalt from old parking lots."
Further, the new facility includes plans for about 300 acres of "greenspace open to the public, featuring trails, ballfields, picnic areas."
Finally, the place the protesters derisively call "Cop City" will help meet the training needs of the Atlanta Fire Rescue Department (AFRD), which for several years has been relegated to training in unoccupied elementary schools across metro Atlanta and "burn houses" in places like DeKalb County, Gwinnett County, and Douglasville.