Police Unions Produce Rules That Protect Bad Actors, That's How Public Unions Work


One of the important points to keep in mind as the protests over the killing of unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, over the weekend, is that many of the privileges now afforded the unnamed officer who shot him (such as the very fact that his identity remains undisclosed) come from the contracts police unions are able to negotiate with local governments. The officer likely wasn't required to make a statement for 24 to 72 hours after the shooting. Such a courtesy is extended in many police contracts. The argument goes that cops are not flight risks and would provide more accurate testimony outside of the "fog of war" of the moment. Almost every union-negotiated police contract in the United States includes rules preventing police chiefs and mayors from summarily dismissing problem cops. Instead, these "public servants" are offered an administrative "due process" pretty much unheard of in the private sector. Appearance of impropriety alone becomes insufficient cause for termination.
This is the way cop, and all unions, work. The union negotiates on behalf of employees, seeking higher pay, better work conditions, and more job protections. In the private sector, on the other side of the negotiating table is the employer, who is seeking, generally speaking, lower costs and higher profits. Both sides need each other in a specific sense: employers need capable employees to keep their businesses running, employees need profitable employers so that they can continue to have jobs. Absent government intervention, these two sides almost always reach a mutually agreeable conclusion. A decent contract benefits the employees and the employers.
That relationship is fundamentally different in the case of public sector unions. As is its role, the public union negotiates for higher pay, better work conditions, and more job protections. But on the other side, the "employer" (theoretically local residents/taxpayers) is represented by the local government. The local government may be interested in a modicum of fiscal restraint because it has a budget to more or less balance. But local government officials have other interests, like securing the support of politically powerful public unions to raise money and win elections. Public unions and government officials, then, don't have the kind of adversarial but mutually-beneficial relationship that makes private union negotiations work. Instead, they are incentivized to cooperate to each other's benefit, at the expense of taxpayers, who foot the bill for the contract goodies and later from any wrongdoing the contract demands is defended.
And so police chiefs and political leaders, like those in Ferguson, are powerless to fire cops who through their actions wreck community relations and compromise the perceived integrity of the police force. Whether Ferguson's police chief or mayor are actually interested in firing this cop is hardly known. But in the current situation, their hands are tied by an intricate system of legal protections built for cops around the country. Firing Michael Brown's killer would not make him guilty of murder. That's what jury trials are for in this free country. But cops, who are authorized by the government to use violence to attain their goals, ought to be held to a higher standard than everyday criminals, not lower ones. A job is a privilege, not a right. Much of the left has been pushing the opposite idea, especially about public sector jobs. The corruption and abuse of power that's cultivated ought to come as no surprise.
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many of the privileges now afforded the unnamed officer who shot him (such as the very fact that his identity remains undisclosed)
I thought Anonymous had outed him.
HnR posts this at 11:05. 24/7 has the Anonymous piece stamped at 11:02. I smell a rat.
What are you conjecturing here?
Clearly something to do with cocktail parties.
Either that or the authors don't just produce their articles fully formed at the moment they post them.
No, I literally smell a rat. I need to clean this dump.
ha!
I wonder if banning police officer unions (as a special case) would get traction with liberals at the state level. And could you still get conservatives (who like the idea in general) to support it?
I'm guessing not. Police and firefighter unions cross party lines and exert significant influence on both sides. Good luck finding politicians willing to cross them.
John Kasich tried it here. Didn't turn out so well.
Banning unions of any kind will never get traction with liberals, even though Saint Roosevelt opposed public sector unions.
What conservatives are in favor of police unions?!
What conservatives are willing to cross police unions?
Please draw a distinction between conservatives and conservative politicians. The latter, like any other group of politicians, will never let principles stand in the way of pandering for votes.
Police and firefighter unions are often exempted from republican efforts against public sector unions.
It's worth trying....
Come on, Ed. What do you have against Jimmy Smits and Ricky Schroeder? And are you including Dennis Franz? I never liked him. But don't you talk smack about Dennis Farina or Jerry Orbach.
+1 "Lets be careful out there"
This is what all unions do; protect the incompetent and pay the union leaders. Since the gov'ts refuse to go out of business like, oh, the auto mfgrs (don't we wish), the PE unions can continue to suck the money from taxpayers' pockets indefinitely.
Especially police and firefighter unions. Since they are unions, Democrats will blindly support them and since they are hero first responders/the thin blue line that protects civilization, Republicans will also support them.
..."hero first responders/the thin blue line that protects civilization,"...
Blegggh!
I know.
Yep, ass-suckage from both TEAMS.
So true. Im in a public union and the only way I could be fired is if I fail a drug test or commit a felony. Aside from that I could show up and be the most incompetent fool, not be good at my job, but still have guaranteed employment and a pension. I work with useless people like that every day.
How can you live with yourself?
The money's good.
Didn't this supposedly happen in front of a large number of witnesses in broad daylight? How is there no description that can be used to identify the officer? Tall, short, fat, skinny, facial hair, etc. The Ferguson police department isn't that big. Why doesn't the media track down these supposed witnesses? Apparently there isn't even confirmation of the gender and race, and it is just assumed to be a white male officer?
So according to wikipedia the Ferguson police department has 54 officers. Safe to assume they are split into three different shifts. Is there no record (or community knowledge) of which officers work which shifts? This really doesn't seem like it would be that hard to figure out with a little digging.
Well as I'm typing that Anonymous figured it out, OFFICER WILLMAN, BRYAN P. Not surprising they were able to scoop a large cadre of professional journalists who are basically just accustom to rewriting press releases.
I have yet to see any evidence to confirm that. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Twitter is saying he's not on the force.
Yeah, I wouldn't put too much into an unsubstantiated Anonymous revelation just yet.
But they did so well for the Boston Bombers!
I was literally just thinking about that guy.
and just like that Anonymous twitter account has been suspended.
Saw that. The other Anons are saying that one didn't cross check the name.
I would have thought that there would be more pictures and video of the actual incident or its immediate aftermath. Maybe I'm just not paying enough attention.
"Instead, these "public servants" are offered an administrative "due process" pretty much unheard of in the public sector"
Private sector.
Thanks!
Choir: Preached to. Check!
Yeah, I was thinking this needs to be on every OpEd page across the country.
Do the Union contract(s) prevent the City/county from releasing the officer's name, or is that a decision left to Chief Wiggums?
"protests" in ferguson
"The United States shall guarantee to every state in this union a republican form of government" - U.S. Constitution, Art. IV, Sec. 4
"Elected officials shall not be able to fire unionized public servants without seeking the approval of unelected arbitrators" - the FYTW clause.
Maybe we need some litigation like the teacher-tenure case in California, getting rid of these arbitrary job protections for those who are supposedly serving the public?
OFFICER WILLMAN, BRYAN P....
Wasn't there some speculation that the officer in question is not LE, but a Security Guard?
Dang! Of course! It's the unions' fault!
Municipal unions should be banned-the voters should decide what their employees get.