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April 25, 2005
For Immediate Release |
Contact: Albert O'Leary
212-298-9190
or Joseph Mancini
212-298-9150
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PBA OPPOSES WEST SIDE STADIUM FINANCING
PLAN
With 4,500 fewer police officers on city streets than in 1999
and with the department’s inability to retain veteran officers
and attract qualified new ones, the New York City Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association opposes the use of PILOTS (payment in lieu
of taxes) that support the city’s operating budget to build
a stadium on the West side of Manhattan, PBA president Patrick J.
Lynch announced today.
Lynch said: “Given the severe recruiting and retention problem
that exists in the NYPD because NYC doesn’t pay competitive
wages to its police officers, there are better and more urgent uses
for PILOTS funds than building a football stadium on the West side
of Manhattan.
“Mayor Bloomberg and his administration have consistently
said that the city would use capital program dollars that cannot
be used for the city’s operating budget for the construction
of the West side stadium. Today we know that such a statement is
not entirely true and that PILOTS, which are regularly funneled
into the city’s operating budget, will be diverted to this
pet construction project.
“New York City’s 22,700 police officers have been working
without a contract for 32 months because the city claims it can’t
afford to pay a fair salary. The Mayor’s complete control
of the use of funds to the city in the form of PILOTS demonstrates
that the city clearly has the ability to pay its police officers
a fair and competitive wage but lacks the willingness.”
More than 800 members of the NYPD resign from the department each
year to take better paying, less stressful and less dangerous jobs.
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