Police union contracts limit the ability of authorities to hold police officers accountable for misconduct, including the use of force and the killing of unarmed civilians.
Fortunately, various citizens, groups, and local governments are calling for changes to these police union contracts.
Many of these agreements limit officer interrogations after alleged misconduct, mandate the destruction of disciplinary records, ban civilian oversight, prevent anonymous civilian complaints, and limit the length of internal investigations.
The limitations placed on questioning officers accused of misconduct is especially problematic.
The District of Columbia Council recently passed legislation that bans the inclusion of all matters about the discipline of law enforcement officers in their police union contract.
Imagine if, before interrogating a suspect, police officers had to provide the suspect with written statements from all other witnesses with knowledge of the crime. Imagine if, before conducting interrogations, police officers were required to give suspects and their attorneys a full and truthful accounting of all the evidence against them. And imagine if police were required to provide all suspects and their attorneys with advance notice—anywhere from twenty-four hours to ten days in length—before conducting interrogations.
Police departments would resist that kind of limitation on their work and would proclaim, rightfully, that such restrictions would make it difficult for them to prosecute criminals. Yet, that is precisely what many of the police union contracts require. Thus, we have one set of procedures for law enforcement officers and another for other citizens.
The case of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge in 2016 is one of many instances of delays in interrogation affecting the prosecution of the case. Videos appeared to show Sterling being shot six times in the chest and back at point-blank range. The public had many questions. Was Sterling armed? Was the use of force necessary? However, under Louisiana’s LEOBR (Law Enforcement Officer Bill of Rights) and Baton Rouge’s police union contract, officers do not have to answer any question for thirty days. A result is that the officers were never prosecuted.
The strength of police union contracts has become absurd. For example, in Illinois, these contracts override state law. Thankfully, legislation introduced in the state legislature would overturn this policy.
The District of Columbia has reined in the outsized power of their police union contracts. The Council recently passed legislation that bans the inclusion of all matters about the discipline of law enforcement officers in their police union contract.
Police union contracts across the country have gotten so out of hand that other unions are calling for changes, apparently the result of the widespread protests after the George Floyd killing. Protesters called on the A.F.L.-C.I.O., the leading labor federation, to expel the International Union of Police Associations, representing over a hundred thousand law-enforcement officers.
Police union contracts across the country have gotten so out of hand that other unions are calling for changes … SEIU, with two million members, has pushed for holding public security unions like police accountable to racial justice.
The Association of Flight Attendants adopted a resolution demanding that police unions address racism in law enforcement and hold officers accountable for violence against citizens or suffer removal from the Labor Movement.
The Service Employees International Union, with two million members, has pushed for holding public security unions like police accountable to racial justice.
In Seattle, a labor union coalition has issued an ultimatum to the local police union to acknowledge and address racism or be kicked out of the alliance. A janitors’ union has also weighed in. The Twin Cities union representing thousands of janitors has suggested that community members join city officials at the bargaining table during police contract negotiations.
And a Harvard labor-law professor argues that the labor union movement has a responsibility to push for police reform, including amending laws to prohibit negotiations over anything involving the use of force. That is the position of a Virginia group, the Combating Racial Injustice – Police Reform Committee.
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Wornie Reed is Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies and Director of the Race and Social Policy Research Center at Virginia Tech University. Previously he developed and directed the Urban Child Research Center in the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University (1991-2001), where he was also Professor of Sociology and Urban Studies (1991-2004). He was Adjunct Professor at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine (2003-4). Professor Reed served a three-year term (1990-92) as President of the National Congress of Black Faculty, and he is past president of the National Association of Black Sociologists (2000-01).
This column first appeared online at What the Data Say and is shared here by permission.