Daily Breeze (Torrance)

City, police union reach tentative contract

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CHICAGO >> The city of Chicago and its police union on Monday announced they have reached a tentative contract agreement after four years of negotiatio­ns.

The tentative contract is aligned with the consent decree entered into in 2019 that calls for reforms to how the Chicago Police Department operates, according to officials. The 236-page plan negotiated between Illinois and Chicago officials calls for more community policing, more data collection on how officers work and expanded training on the use of force. One provision will require officers to file paperwork each time they point a gun at someone, even if they don’t fire.

The reforms in the contract includes the end to a ban on investigat­ion of anonymous complaints and the changing of officer testimony after viewing video. In addition, officers can now be rewarded for reporting misconduct of other officers.

FOP negotiator Paul Vallas said what he calls “core accountabi­lity issues,” are dealt with in the tentative contract, more controvers­ial disciplina­ry changes must still be negotiated.

The tentative contract calls for rank-and-file police officers to receive a 10.5% retroactiv­e pay raise and 9.5% more through January 2025. The proposal represents an average annual increase of 2.5%.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the agreement contains new accountabi­lity and transparen­cy reforms needed to create trust between police and communitie­s.

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