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The Platform · A Safe City

A City That Is Safe

It's hard to feel good about your city when you don't feel safe in it. Wes spent years as a prosecutor, and his own family has navigated mental health and addiction challenges — so he knows the work is real, the answers are not simple, and we cannot arrest our way out of every problem.

The bottom line

Wes's plan for a safer KC

Wes Rogers's public safety plan for Kansas City rests on three things: community policing that rebuilds trust neighborhood by neighborhood, focused deterrence that concentrates resources on the small number of people driving the most violence, and mental health services that break the cycle of crisis and incarceration. As a former prosecutor, Wes has seen what works — and what doesn't.

  • Plank OneRebuild trust, neighborhood by neighborhood.
  • Plank TwoFocus on the few driving the most violence.
  • Plank ThreeCrisis care, not an endless cycle of jail.

Wes rose to Chief Deputy prosecuting violent crime in Clay County, and he served as a public defender. He has stood on both sides of the courtroom, and he understands public safety as something we build together — not something we can simply police our way into.

Why this matters to Wes

Safety you can feel, from someone who's done the work

Public safety isn't abstract to Wes. As a prosecutor he saw the human cost of violence up close — and as a public defender he saw how often the system pulls in people who need treatment, not just punishment. That experience taught him that real safety comes from holding the people who do harm accountable while breaking the cycles that produce harm in the first place.

It's also personal. Wes's own family has navigated mental health and addiction challenges, so he understands — not as a talking point but from life — that we cannot arrest our way out of these challenges. A city gets safer when it pairs accountability with prevention, trust, and treatment.

We will hold the people who do harm accountable — and we will stop treating a mental-health crisis like a crime.

The plan

Three ways we make KC safer

A serious public safety agenda does three things at once: it builds trust between officers and the neighborhoods they serve, it focuses the city's resources on the few people driving the most violence, and it gets people in crisis the help they need before they ever reach a jail cell.

  1. Plank One

    Community Policing

    Safety is built on relationships. Wes will increase police presence in neighborhoods in a way that builds trust — officers who know the blocks they patrol and the people who live there.

    • Work with the Board of Police Commissioners to revive the Community Action Networks (CAN Centers) so neighbors and officers can solve problems together.
    • Recruit a police force and first-responder corps that reflects our city — actively bringing more women and minorities into policing.
    • Treat presence as partnership, not just patrol: an officer who is known and trusted is an officer who can keep people safe.
  2. Plank Two

    Focused Deterrence

    A very small number of people drive most serious violence. Focused deterrence concentrates the city's attention and resources on those highest-risk individuals — offering a real path out, with clear consequences if the violence continues.

    30–60%Reduction in gun homicides that peer cities have seen by adopting focused deterrence.
    • Champion focused deterrence as a core KC strategy — the approach behind those documented drops in gun homicides elsewhere.
    • Pair credible accountability for those who keep driving violence with genuine off-ramps: jobs, services, and support.
    • Measure what works and stay with it, so the strategy is judged by results on our streets, not by slogans.
  3. Plank Three

    Mental Health Services

    Too many Kansas Citians cycle in and out of incarceration because of a mental-health crisis the system was never built to treat. Wes will amplify the mental health services we already have and make KC a national leader in de-escalation and crisis intervention.

    • Strengthen and expand existing mental health services so help is there before a crisis turns into an arrest.
    • Make Kansas City a national model for de-escalation and crisis intervention training.
    • Break the endless cycle of incarceration for people whose real need is treatment — because we cannot arrest our way out of mental-health and addiction challenges.

Help us build a safer KC

A safer Kansas City takes more than a plan — it takes neighbors who believe in it. Join the campaign or chip in to help make it real.