New York Daily News

Hike pay of Finest: state pols

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

ALBANY — A group of state lawmakers are calling on Mayor de Blasio to boost the pay of New York’s Finest.

Sen. Andrew Gounardes (DBrooklyn), chairman of the Senate’s Civil Service and Pensions Committee, and nearly two dozen fellow Democrats signed off on a letter Monday lamenting the relatively low wages paid to members of the NYPD when compared to neighborin­g department­s in Westcheste­r, Nassau and Suffolk counties.

“These pay inequities are particular­ly unjust given the increase in responsibi­lities that police officers have taken on,” the lawmakers write.

The letter comes as the de Blasio administra­tion and the Police Benevolent Associatio­n, representi­ng roughly 24,000 officers, prepare to enter arbitratio­n on a wage contract to replace an agreement that expired a year and a half ago.

As contract negotiatio­ns continue, the lawmakers called on the mayor to weigh the wages paid by surroundin­g cities and counties and to take into account the number of NYPD officers who choose to leave the city for other department­s.

A missive was also sent to City Hall from Assembly members led by Assemblyma­n Peter Abbate (D-Brooklyn).

The letters notes that NYPD officers earn an average of 40% less than the MTA Police, Port Authority Police, and state troopers, and almost 50% less than cops in police department­s in the city’s suburbs.

“This leads to increasing­ly severe attrition, as officers flee in droves to take jobs in other municipal or state-level forces that pay more,” the lawmakers write.

The Dems note that the NYPD’s top patrol officer salary of $85,292 pales in comparison to state troopers’ $103,159, or Suffolk’s $139,233. The pols claim that the pay is “not nearly enough to sustain a family or purchase a home in the New York City metropolit­an area within which officers are required to live.”

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