Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago mayoral hopefuls pitch changes to police union contract

- BY NADER ISSA, STAFF REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Five of Chicago’s 14 candidates for mayor proposed changes to the contract with the city’s largest police union at a Tuesday evening forum.

The mayoral hopefuls took stabs at ideas for working around an often dicey relationsh­ip between the city and the Fraternal Order of Police to reform a Chicago Police Department that is grudgingly moving toward correcting years of civil rights abuse accusation­s.

The debate came during round two of WTTW and the City Club of Chicago’s twopart forum, with five other candidates facing off the day before at the public television station’s studios on the Northwest Side.

Asked by moderator and TV anchor Carol Marin what concrete change he would look to make in the FOP contract, former Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy said its disciplina­ry process needs to be simplified and taken out of the Police Board’s hands.

“The FOP needs to really come into the 21st century and realize that policing has changed,” McCarthy said. “The police superinten­dent is not in charge of the discipline of the CPD, yet he or she is accountabl­e for all that behavior.”

Lori Lightfoot, the former head of the Police Board, said a proper disciplina­ry system has to include access to officers’ full complaint records, which the current police union contract does not allow.

Lightfoot said Mayor Rahm Emanuel has failed to “stand up to the FOP” and has allowed the union too much leeway in police decisions.

Gery Chico, former chief of staff to Mayor Richard M. Daley, said any changes to the FOP contract cannot hold precedent over the consent decree — a wide-ranging document meant to govern sweeping reform at CPD — that was approved last month by a federal judge.

FOP leadership had wanted a seat at the table in the consent decree discussion­s, but a federal judge — and later an appellate court — denied its attempts to intervene.

“We should take advantage of this consent decree and limit some of the things that the FOP would ordinarily ask,” Chico said. “If we insist and we scrupulous­ly implement it, it will cut back some of their power.”

State Rep. La Shawn Ford said his changes to the FOP contract would start with educating officers about race in an effort to curb racism in the department, a problem he says affects the South and West sides.

Amara Enyia, director of the Austin Chamber of Commerce, said the FOP contract needs to foster better transparen­cy on officers’ disciplina­ry records.

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