His golden badge
Hampton village’s top cop rakes it in
Meet the million-dollar cop. The police chief of tiny, lowcrime Southampton Village — population 3,307, with 30 sworn officers — makes more than NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea.
That would be the top cop of New York City, population 8.3 million, with about 36,000 sworn officers.
Chief Thomas Cummings was compensated $441,945.82 last year as head of the South- ampton Village Police Department, according to village documents. His annual base pay was $263,829, easily topping Shea’s $239,092.
The village is not exactly a hotbed of crime. It has not had a murder since 2008 and last year reported no rapes, robberies or aggravated assaults.
It did have two car thefts, one burglary and 42 nonviolent larcenies, according to state Division of Criminal Justice Services data.
Cummings’ compensation package included $86,256.66 in retirement contributions; $31,000 in extra vacation, a $23,893.02 night differential — and $4,000 for “cleaning/clothing/college.”
No one could fully explain what those three C’s were.
But that’s not all. Whenever Cummings, 57, decides to retire, taxpayers in the village — where the average household income is about $96,250 — will have to shell out well over a million dollars in post-employment costs, including $737,073 for health benefits and $503,828 in accrued leave.
The retirement package came to light at a contentious village board meeting on March 11.
“Perhaps the most egregious thing is that the previous administration inserted an evergreen or perpetuity clause into his most recent contract, basically making him chief for as long as he wants to be,” Deputy Mayor Gina Arresta said, according to a video recording.
Cummings and the former mayor, Mark Epley, were allies who “saw things the same way,” said an East End source.
Jesse Warren, the current mayor, said at the meeting that the village was negotiating Cummings’ next contract. (There are rumors that Warren wants to dissolve the police department, as reported by the Southampton Press, which first covered the meeting.)
“While I can’t comment on Chief Cummings’ contract since we are in the midst of negotiations, I do fully support our village police and will ensure they always have the resources to keep us safe,” Warren told The Post on Friday.
Cummings joined the department as a police officer in 1987 after graduating the year before with a fine-art degree from Syracuse University, according to his LinkedIn page.
He supervises his son, whose hiring as a police officer was green lit in a 2019 midnight vote despite ethics concerns, Newsday reported.
Messages seeking comment from the chief and Arresta weren’t returned.