Aldermen demand police contract change to help restore trust of public
Corporation Counsel Steve Patton was admonished Friday to renegotiate a police contract that stands as an impediment to punishing police wrongdoing and restoring public trust shattered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald.
Wrapping up two weeks of City Council budget hearings, Patton said he expects the U. S. Justice Department to complete its investigation of the Chicago Police Department’s “patterns and practices” within the next few months.
The feds would then draft a report recommending specific changes to police training, supervision and operations as well as changes to the police contract. That would be followed by months of negotiations to hammer out a consent decree implementing the changes.
But Patton disclosed Friday that he’s already working hand- in- glove with the Justice Department when it comes to negotiating a new police contract to replace the one that expires June 30.
Already, the Emanuel administration has spent $ 2.6 million in legal fees as officials “busted our butts” to provide the mountains of documents demanded by the feds in record time, the corporation counsel said.
“We have shared with them the specific changes that might relate to police discipline and accountability that we hope to achieve and intend to negotiate for,” Patton said.
“It’s not gonna be rocket science. It follows very closely what was in the Task Force [ on Police Accountability] report.”
Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th), former longtime chairman of the City Council’s Police Committee, argued that it’s an “injustice” to ask Chicago taxpayers to shell out more than $ 500 million to settle police abuse cases over the last decade when there was “never any disciplinary action to back up those settlements” because the contract “gets in the way.”
The tab for police abuse cases this year was pegged at $ 28.3 million.
“If we’re gonna rebuild the trust, you can’t have a contract that means nothing if someone does something wrong and they’re not punished or held accountable for their wrongdoing,” Beale said.
“I’m just hoping that cooler heads prevail and we sit down and stop protecting wrongdoing. Ninety- ninepointnine percent of the officers out there are doing a helluva job every single day. It’s that 0.1 percent that taints the whole process. If that contract protects that 0.1 percent, that’s wrong. That 0.1 percent needs to be dealt with.”
Patton agreed. But, he reminded Beale that negotiations are a two- way street, and contract changeswill not come easily.
“The more you find out about it, the more you understand there’s two sides to every pancake. It’s not like somebody just woke up and came up with some really extremely wacko idea and said, ‘ Let’s put that in the contract.’ It was the subject of back- and- forth,” he said.
Fraternal Order of Police President Dean Angelo and FOP attorney Brian Hlavin could not be reached for comment.