| 
April 23, 2008
Police Union To Advertise Non-City Jobs
BY CHRISTOPHER FAHERTY
Staff Reporter
The union that represents city police officers is offering to
advertise open and higher-paying positions with neighboring police
departments for free to its members in an in-house magazine.
“If the city of New
York won’t pay our members a fair and reasonable salary
for the dangerous job that we do, then we will have to help our
members find jobs in cities that will appreciate their work and
pay them fairly,” the president of the Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association, Patrick
Lynch, said in a statement released yesterday.
The announcement comes as the union is awaiting an upcoming decision
from an arbitration board on a new police salary that the PBA has
argued needs to include a significant raise.
Describing his constituency as “frustrated and angry,” Mr.
Lynch pointed out that veteran police officers in many jurisdictions
of Long
Island and New
Jersey are
earning between $20,000 and $40,000 a year more in salaries than
their counterparts in New York City.
“Our members are sick and tired of the rhetoric that praises
us for our work, credits us for making the city economically viable,
and then tells us that the richest city in America can’t
afford to pay its police as much as cities with smaller tax bases
and lower property values,” he said.
Mayor
Bloomberg responded to the advertising idea at a press conference
yesterday.
“It is a disgrace. Keep in mind, the low salaries that our
police officers get for the first six months and really for the
first five years are because the PBA wanted that so that they could
move more monies to the more senior people in the agency,” Mr.
Bloomberg said. “And then to go out and to hurt the city
that they supposedly love and — you know, I don’t think
that that represents the view of 99.999% of the police officers
who dedicate their lives every day to protecting this city. I think
that is an insult to them.” The PBA will advertise the positions
in its quarterly magazine, New York’s Finest, and on its
official Web site.
|