Vallas sets 14,000- cop goal
Mayoral hopeful outlines plan to bolster Chicago Police Department personnel
Mayoral challenger Paul Vallas vowed Monday to rebuild the Chicago Police Department to 14,000 officers — with 1,200 detectives and one sergeant for every 10 officers — to erase years of “bad decisions” by Mayor Rahm Emanuel that, Vallas claims, contributed heavily to a surge in violent crime.
Four months after questioning the sustainability of Emanuel’s two- year plan to hire 970 additional police officers over and above attrition, Vallas upped the ante by 500 officers.
He also outlined additional spending — on everything from equipment, incentives and a new leadership academy for police supervisors to a return to five detective areas and the hiring of retired detectives to boost a 17 percent homicide clearance rate. The price tag for all that is well over $ 100million.
“The Police Department has been disadvantaged because of the lack of consistency in funding,” Vallas said Monday.
“Staffing. The lack of detectives. The lack of supervision. The lack of equipment. The lack of training. The lack of maintaining the officer strength at the beat level. Those . . . bad decisions in combination have contributed in a big way to the rise in crime. Other cities don’t seem to be having these problems.”
To pay for his wish list, Vallas trotted out several ideas, including:
Creating a Police Enterprise Fund to “secure funds from the confiscation of assets, new fines for gun violations and other incomegenerating activities.”
Using attrition to “gradually phase out” full- time and private security officers at the Chicago Public Schools and the CTA. That could easily cover half the cost of salaries for full- time Chicago Police officers who assume those duties.
Reducing police overtime by bolstering the force, maintaining beat integrity and using specialized units to “avoid robbing Peter to pay Paul,” as Vallas put it.
Following the lead of other major cities by inviting nonprofits and “other tax- exempt organizations,” city contractors or businesses that receive tax breaks, city subsidies or “other preferential treatment” to help fund police programs.
Ordering a review of a Chicago Police Department budget that now stands at $ 1.46 billion. Even a 2 percent savings — perhaps through “strategic sourcing and leases to cut costs and help maintain equipment” could go a long way, Vallas said.
Using stepped- up supervision, “redundant” training in use of Tasers, crisis intervention, deescalation tactics and the new “Staff and Command Academy” to dramatically reduce costly settlement and judgments stemming from police shootings that could have been avoided.
Forging a “partnership” with the Fraternal Order of Police to develop a “long- term financial plan” to “expand and sustain” police resources.
“I’m pretty confident that the items that I’ve identified will be able to generate enough money to basically fund it,” Vallas told reporters at the Union League Club, though he said he hadn’t finalized the cost.
Emanuel campaign spokesman Pete Giangreco said any public safety plan that is “all police and doesn’t include mentoring, youth summer jobs and after school programming is no plan at all.”
Ald. Carrie Austin ( 34th) chairs the City Council’s Budget Committee. In a statement released by the Emanuel campaign, she said the plan would “get laughed out of City Council because there’s not a single concrete way that he would pay for any of this.”
Vallas stressed the “carrots” he hopes to use to appease the police union would also come with a stick.
He supports civilian police review — without the power to hire and fire the police superintendent — and favors changes to a police contract that, the Mayor’s Task Force on Police Accountability said, turns the “code of silence into official policy.”
Emanuel balanced his first budget by eliminating more than 1,400 police vacancies, merging police and fire headquarters, reducing police and detective areas from five to three and closing three district police stations: Wood, Belmont and Prairie.
That started a downward spiral that, coupled with attrition, forced themayor to rely on runaway overtime when shootings and murders spiked.
Although the Emanuel administration’s aggressive outreach efforts have succeeded in recruiting African- Americans to sign up for repeated police exams, too many black candidates don’t bother showing up to take the exam.
To combat that problem, Vallas proposed creation of a “First Responders College,” presumably at City Colleges, that draws from a “pipeline” of 10,000 Chicago Public School students currently enrolled in ROTC programs.