Portland Cops Agree to Lose 48 Hour Waiting Period After Using Deadly Force in Exchange for 3 Percent Pay Raise
Shouldn't have had it in the first place, but it's the unsurprising product of allowing public employees to collectively bargain with government


The city of Portland, Oregon, and the local police union have reportedly arrived at a tentative deal on a new three-year-labor contract, one that would increase the top salaries for various positions by three percent a year for three years, bringing max pay to about $89,000, according to OregonLive.com. That's in addition to guaranteed annual cost-of-living increases police already enjoy. The deal could cost nearly $7 million. Its details have not been released because, the city argues, the deal is not yet final, although city watchdogs are calling on the deal to be released now for public input.
The pay increases reportedly come in exchange for a number of concession from the police union—namely, they promised to drop nearly a dozen labor complaints against the city, and agreed to lose the privilege of getting to wait 48 hours after the use of deadly force before having to speak to internal affairs investigator. If a resident filed a complaint against police, then told them he'd drop the complaint in exchange for, say, a permit, he'd likely be charged with filing a false complaint and extortion. But it's all s.o.p. for labor unions, and particularly public unions which, unlike unions in the private sector, do not even have to be concerned with the financial stability of their employers. After all, the government doesn't have to turn a profit or provide services people want, it can always simply raise taxes.
As OregonLive.com reports, other details of the deal remain unclear. The federal Department of Justice and the city reached a police reform agreement in 2014, and it remains to be seen how much of that agreement will be honored in the union contract. OregonLive.com also notes details about whether body cameras will be used and how use of force investigations might change are unavailable. The secrecy behind the deal is unsurprising—government agencies regularly insist they don't have to be transparent about "ongoing" matters—and also unhelpful. Such police union contracts will continue to propagate bad practices, with government negotiators inclined to support the employees that support them, until the negotiation process becomes far more transparent.
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Keep Portland weird.
The first thing I did when elected as Fuhrer was break the labor unions. Elect me in 2016, and I will solve the scourge of public sector unions once and for all.
once and for all
I've got some bad news about the longevity of your plans...
You're saying, you have a... Final Solution?
I have always been an enemy of half measures or weak decisions.
Mike Ermentraut?
Do you know who else changed their handle to troll the commentariat?
Eddie?
Troll? The Libertarian Party is currently represented by the weaking Garry Johnson. The concentration camps are coming. They can either be my own and service the trolls, or those of that filth American Socialist. I promise to exterminate all of Reason's trolls! I will personally shovel the remains of Tulpa, Mary Stack, and Tony into the ovens myself!
Isn't this what orphans are for?
Shreek?
Hitler?
At least this is funny. Tulpa and Eddie do it to trick people into interacting with them and to elude filters.
At least this is funny.
[citation needed]
Me every couple of weeks?
Crusty is Hitler?
No. Worse.
Mein Sockenpuppe
Sign me up! What could possibly go wrong?
...and agreed to lose the privilege of getting to wait 48 hours after the use of deadly force before having to speak to internal affairs investigator.
City negotiators don't normally like to give up monetary concessions in exchange for anything, much less something that doesn't gain them anything tangible, so I'm curious the motivation here.
"The federal Department of Justice and the city reached a police reform agreement in 2014"
Which apparently *didn't* include making cops available for internal-affairs interviews right after a shooting?
How can the 48-hour clause of their contract have survived an encounter with the police-reform champions of the Obama administration?
If you do all the reforms at once, the reformers won;t have anything to do.
The 48 hour clause never should have been interpreted to affect anything other than internal administrative proceedings, and certainly not a criminal investigation. Unfortunately the two are conjoined to the advantage of the union.
Every work rule should cost union members money. That's how bargaining should work.