用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Chicago police get first new contract since 2017, with 20% raises including back pay; passes City Council on 40-8 vote
2021-09-15 00:00:00.0     芝加哥论坛报-芝加哥突发新闻     原网页

       

       The Chicago Fraternal Order of Police’s first new contract in four years got its final approval during Tuesday’s City Council meeting, granting rank-and-file officers with a total of 20% in raises along with some accountability measures.

       In a 40-8 vote, aldermen cemented the deal between Mayor Lori Lightfoot and FOP Local 7 after years of tense negotiations over the contract for the union, whose members include more than 11,000 patrol officers, detectives and others in the Chicago Police Department.

       Though Lightfoot said during a post-Council news conference Tuesday that the road to an official deal took “way too long,” she touted the finished results and said there was more work to do — including an increasingly likely arbitration process on matters not covered by the new contract.

       “We’re going to continue our negotiations with the FOP,” Lightfoot said. “Obviously we have a difference of opinion, or we would have already agreed upon those (measures), but we’re not going to stop fighting for the reforms that are necessary to move our police department forward.”

       She added: “There cannot be any retreat on reform and accountability. And no, not everything is in the measure that was passed today, but that work continues.”

       [Most read] From booster shots to mixing and matching vaccines, 5 things to know for those who got Johnson & Johnson ?

       Before the vote, West Side Ald. Jason Ervin, 28th, called on colleagues to support the FOP deal, saying it takes steps toward greater police accountability, though it is not “a finished product on police reform.”

       “Granted, it is not where all of us would like to be,” but it’s “far from where we are,” said Ervin, who chairs the council’s Black Caucus.

       Ervin called the contract a “good deal for taxpayers.”

       But North Side Ald. Maria Hadden, 49th, said the city should stay at the bargaining table and keep pushing for more police reform.

       “I don’t think that this agreement, at this point in time, is benefiting the residents of Chicago to the best it can,” Hadden said.

       [Most read] ‘Saturday Night Live’ comedian Norm Macdonald dead at 61 after secret battle with cancer ?

       And Pilsen Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, said aldermen “have to get this right” to make sure police are held accountable for misconduct, and it doesn’t have enough teeth to do that.

       “When we vote, let’s remember we’re voting on the safety of our constituents,” Sigcho-Lopez said.

       After the vote, a protester in the upstairs council chambers gallery struck the glass partition and repeatedly shouted “You know that contract bogus!” before police led him out.

       Besides Sigcho-Lopez and Hadden, the aldermen who voted no were Daniel La Spata, Matt Martin, Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, Michael Rodriguez, Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez and Andre Vasquez.

       The contract grants officers 20% raises over eight years, 10.5% of it retroactive to 2017, when the last FOP contract expired. Police would get another 9.5% in raises going forward into 2025.

       Chicago police officers work in the Rogers Park neighborhood on Sept. 7. (Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune)

       The retroactive pay would cost about $365 million, according to the city. Lightfoot set aside about $103 million in this year’s budget to cover part of the police back pay. Her administration plans to refinance existing debt to pay for the rest of it.

       Among police accountability measures are the elimination of a requirement that police disciplinary records older than five years be destroyed; an end to allowing officers to change their testimony during disciplinary investigations after viewing video evidence; and recognition that officers who report potential misconduct are “acting in the highest traditions of public service.”

       The agreement, which has been ratified by the police union, also addresses how to deal with a new state law that allows anonymous complaints against cops and no longer requires complainants to sign affidavits attesting to the accuracy of their statements.

       Sign up for The Spin to get the top stories in politics delivered to your inbox weekday afternoons.

       City negotiator Mike Frisch has said Lightfoot’s office is still bargaining with the FOP to require officers to disclose when and where they work outside jobs and limit the number of outside work hours. That would be handled in a separate deal, he said.

       [Most read] Chicago Ald. Jim Gardiner publicly apologizes for ‘rants,’ one day after sources identify him as subject of an FBI probe: ‘I take full responsibility for my offensive words’ ?

       Tuesday’s vote capped off more than two years of heated negotiations that were often overshadowed by public feuding between Lightfoot and FOP President John Catanzara. The latest chapter of negotiations saw division between union and city officials over police discipline as the FOP continues to oppose a federal consent decree to overhaul the police force.

       The new contract also comes after another violent summer in Chicago concludes with soaring homicides, amplifying the pressure on Lightfoot to address crime. Lightfoot last month pledged the increase the Chicago police budget despite opposition from progressive aldermen who would rather that money go toward other city services.

       Chicago Tribune’s Jeremy Gorner contributed.

       jebyrne@chicagotribune.com

       ayin@chicagotribune.com

       Chicago City Council passes limits on plastic utensils for restaurant carryout and delivery; critics say they don’t go far enough

       1h

       Chicago Ald. Jim Gardiner publicly apologizes for ‘rants,’ one day after sources identify him as subject of an FBI probe: ‘I take full responsibility for my offensive words’

       1h

       Coronavirus From booster shots to mixing and matching vaccines, 5 things to know for those who got Johnson & Johnson

       3h

       Entertainment ‘Saturday Night Live’ comedian Norm Macdonald dead at 61 after secret battle with cancer

       3h

       Politics Chicago Ald. Jim Gardiner publicly apologizes for ‘rants,’ one day after sources identify him as subject of an FBI probe: ‘I take full responsibility for my offensive words’

       1h

       


标签:综合
关键词: rank-and-file officers     police     Chicago     contract     Lightfoot     aldermen    
滚动新闻