Boston Herald

State Police union elects new president

- By Flint McColgan flint.mccolgan@bostonhera­ld.com

With nearly ¾ of all members casting a vote, the president of the State Police union has been replaced.

The State Police Associatio­n of Massachuse­tts, or SPAM, Election Committee reported on the union’s public-facing communicat­ions website that Brian Williams, a member of the certificat­ion unit of the State Police Standards and Training division, had won election as the associatio­n’s president. He will replace Patrick McNamara, who had served as president for two years.

A total of 1,540 votes were cast out of the eligible pool of 2,078, representi­ng a 74% turnout by Associatio­n members, according to the results page. Williams earned 764 votes to McNamara’s 650. Peter Levesque came in third with 112 votes.

SPAM Vice President Luke Bonin kept his seat with 1,107 votes to challenger Seth Peterson’s 388. Secretary Matthew Kane ran unopposed so kept his seat. Conversely, Treasurer Christophe­r Donahue, with 575 votes, lost his seat to challenger Brendan Murphy’s 934 votes.

Williams, in a letter to the union’s members on

why he was running for president, stated that “The morale in our Department and our Associatio­n is in a steady decline. Our profession­al relationsh­ips have suffered, and the Department continuous­ly violates our contractua­l rights.”

“We have fallen for the

“free lunch and longer recess” campaign too many times, it is time to elect representa­tives who are going to represent the interests of the Associatio­n rather than their own,” he added.

McNamara, in his own letter, said that over the

two years he has served as president, the associatio­n “has met the challenges of our times.”

“We weathered the storm and came out even stronger. We were able to settle a contentiou­s contract with retroactiv­e pay, raise our detail rate, update contractua­l

language such as bereavemen­t leave and family and medical leave, create detainee observatio­n protocols, etc.,” he wrote, highlighti­ng a recent contract agreement that provided a more than 8% cost of living adjustment.

Both letters highlighte­d a planned fight for more education incentive for the associatio­n’s members.

McNamara, according to his letter, was assigned to the State Police’s Norwell barracks, had served on the MSP Special Tactics and Operations Team (STOP), and had served as an MSP detective in Plymouth county. Prior to joining the State Police, he was a Plymouth Police officer, a commission­ed officer in the state Army National Guard and had been deployed to Iraq and Afghanista­n with the Army’s 101st Airborne Division. He served as the union’s vice president from 2020 to 2022.

Williams, according to his letter, spent a decade in the MSP’s Division of Field Services before transferri­ng to the Division of Investigat­ive Services as a member of the Firearms Identifica­tion Section before finally transferri­ng to his current post.

He served as SPAM Barracks Representa­tive at all his assignment­s except for one and had previously been a member of the executive board. The former U.S. Marine and Iraq War veteran wrote that he is on track to receiving his law degree from Massachuse­tts School of Law this month.

 ?? NANCY LANE/BOSTON HERALD) ?? State Police Associatio­n of Massachuse­tts President Patrick McNamara, speaks at a press conference in August.
NANCY LANE/BOSTON HERALD) State Police Associatio­n of Massachuse­tts President Patrick McNamara, speaks at a press conference in August.

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