Chicago Sun-Times

CPD’S $ 116M OT BILL

City spends record amount on police overtime as retirement­s outpace hiring

- FRAN SPIELMAN & CHRIS FUSCO REPORT,

The Chicago Police Department spent a record $ 116.1 million on overtime in 2015 — up 17.2 percent from the previous year — to mask a manpower shortage that has mushroomed under Mayor Rahm Emanuel, with police retirement­s outpacing hiring by 975 officers.

“Overtime is totally out of control. Arrests are down. Stops are down. Crime is up. All we’re doing is paying people to do nothing,” said Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th), former chairman of the City Council’s Police Committee.

“If we’re not getting the bang for the buck, we need to stop paying overtime and do the resources allocation I’ve been talking about for years” by reassignin­g officers to districts where crime is highest, Beale said.

The Chicago Sun- Times reported last summer that 10 city employees made more than $ 100,000 in overtime in 2014, most of them more than doubling their salaries. Topping that list was Chicago Police Officer Timo- thy A. Walter, who made $ 123,656 over and above his $ 86,130 salary.

Altogether, Chicago taxpayers spent $ 240.4 million on employee overtime in 2014, up 21 percent over the year before and more than three times the overtime paid in 2012, records showed then. The Police Department accounted for $ 99 million of that amount.

Now, new records released in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request from the Sun- Times show the Police Department set a record for overtime spending in 2015 with $ 116.1 million.

Walter now ranks No. 2 on the list, with $ 121,466 in overtime. He’s runner- up to Sgt. Brian Forberg, whose overtime paycheck totaled $ 137,682. They were among six police officers whose overtime pay topped $ 100,000.

The records show that 167 officers each got overtime paychecks that topped $ 50,000. An additional 1,026 officers got between $ 25,000 and $ 50,000 apiece in overtime cash.

The traditiona­l summer surge in street violence triggered the highest monthly spending, with $ 16.8 million in overtime in August 2015.

But the second- highest monthly spending on police overtime — $ 10.4 million — occurred in November. That’s when a judge ordered the city to release the video of a white Chicago Police officer pumping 16 rounds into black teen Laquan McDonald.

As Officer Jason Van Dyke was charged with first- degree murder, protesters demanded the resignatio­ns of Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, Emanuel and then- Police Supt. Garry McCarthy. Chicago Police officers worked overtime, trying to keep those demonstrat­ions peaceful.

Retirement numbers released in response to a separate open- records request filed by the Sun- Times help explain the need for excessive amounts of overtime.

The records show that 2,575 Chicago Police officers have retired since Emanuel took office in May 2011.

When the Chicago Police Department announced results of its latest minority recruitmen­t campaign in February, the mayor’s press release included the following line: “Under the Emanuel administra­tion, more than 1,600 police officers have joined the Chicago Police Department along with promotions at every rank to bolster strong leadership in the organizati­on.”

That means the city hired 975 police officers fewer than the amount needed to honor Emanuel’s longstandi­ng promise to keep pace with attrition and to maintain police strength at the 12,538 officers autho- rized by the city budget.

Emanuel campaigned for a first term on a promise to hire 1,000 additional police officers, then revised the pledge after taking office by adding 1,000 more “cops on the beat,” more than half of them by disbanding special units. The other half were primarily officers working desk jobs reassigned to street duty.

‘‘ ARRESTS ARE DOWN. STOPS ARE DOWN. CRIME IS UP . . . IF WE’RE NOT GETTING THE BANG FOR THE BUCK, WE NEED TO STOP PAYING OVERTIME.”

ALD. ANTHONY BEALE ( 9th)

The mayor also balanced his first budget by eliminatin­g more than 1,400 police vacancies.

When shootings and murders spiked and Chicago made headlines as the nation’s murder capital, Emanuel used runaway overtime to tamp down the violence — to the tune of $ 100.3 million in 2013 and $ 99 million in 2014.

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