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OPINION: Patrick takes on police perk at his own peril |
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Written by The Enterprise
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Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
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BROCKTON — If Gov. Deval Patrick can succeed where every governor before him has failed — in breaking the police union hold on expensive work details — he will deserve a laurel and hearty handshake from the people of Massachusetts who have been victimized by this pricey police perk. There’s a reason 49 other states don’t require police to be used at every construction or repair site on public streets — they’re too expensive and they’re not necessary. In most states, civilian flagmen direct traffic and make sure the workers are protected from motor vehicles. The cost is generally in the $12 to $15 per hour range. But in Massachusetts, it takes a police officer in uniform to direct traffic — at up to $40 per hour (with a four-hour minimum). The companies, usually utilities, forced to hire these cops do what every other business does — they pass the costs onto consumers. Now Gov. Patrick has taken aim at the work details, which some consider the third rail of politics. Two decades ago, Gov. William Weld made a similar proposal and the police unions sneered at him and told him to forget about it. Weld forgot about it — and no governor since has had the guts to take on the powerful unions. But Patrick has strong allies this time, including House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi and Senate President Therese Murray. The three are motivated by a gaping hole in the state budget of $1.3 billion and a report outlining the need for $19 billion in transportation upgrades and repairs over the next two decades. Replacing the cops with flagmen — only on “quiet” streets at first — would save $5 million per year. That’s not much, but it’s a start. The minute the three state leaders made their joint announcement last week, the police unions began their well-rehearsed howling about how more police on the streets — even staring in the hole at a construction site — improves public safety. You get silly comments like this from Rick Brown, president of the State Police Association of Massachusetts: “I don't know how you put a flagman out there without endangering the public.” But if taxpayers wanted — and could afford — more cops on the streets, they would be hiring more police instead of laying them off. Replacing $40 per hour traffic directors with $15 per hour men and women won’t compromise public safety one bit — and will go a long way toward restoring public confidence in state officials’ commitment not to waste their money.
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Icelandic museum offers long and short of male organ
*Icelandic museum offers long and short of male organ*
HUSAVIK, Iceland (Reuters) - Sigurdur Hjartarson is missing a human penis. But he's not worried: four men have promised to donate theirs to him when they die.
Hjartarson is founder and owner of the Icelandic Phallological Museum,...
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'Sadistic' parents jailed for torture
*'Sadistic' parents jailed for torture*
A sadist who enjoyed devising new methods of torture to inflict pain on his children has been locked up for nine years.
A judge told the fanatical Christian preacher that his campaign of long-term, calculated cruelty was "almost beyond belief".
The...
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Son tried to fight off killer mum, jury told
*Son tried to fight off killer mum, jury told*
MUM struggled with her young son as she tried to suffocate him - stopping only to put the family's dog outside before returning to kill him, a jury has heard.
In a letter to a psychologist the day sons Thomas, 11, and Matthew, 9, died, Donna...
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Human cadavers used in auto crash tests
*Human cadavers used in auto crash tests*
Human cadavers were used in automobile crash tests conducted in the last year by General Motors, the US-based parent company of Swedish car manufacturer Saab.
Claes Tingvall, a car safety specialist with the Swedish Road Administration, told the...
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Parents want to flush N.C. school's potty policy
*Parents want to flush N.C. school's potty policy*
BURGAW, N.C. (AP) - Going potty without a partner can lead to punishment for students at a Burgaw elementary school, but parents want the policy flushed.
The Star-News of Wilmington reported that students at Malpass Corner Elementary...
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Cops say boy, 8, took car for ride, caused crash
*Cops say boy, 8, took car for ride, caused crash*
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Authorities said an 8-year-old Pontiac boy took a
stolen car on a joy ride and caused a three-vehicle crash. Pontiac police
said the boy sneaked out of his house Wednesday night and found an
empty and running car...
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Woman sentenced for having son dress up as Scout
*Woman sentenced for having son dress up as Scout*
EASTON, Pa. (AP) - A former Bethlehem woman will serve up to 23 months in prison for having her 7-year-old son dress as a Cub Scout to collect money for a nonexistent cause.
Sally Ann Gombocz, 51, told a Northampton County judge she wanted...
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Coast Guard PS Unit @Cape Cod looking for info
I am looking for any current members in this unit for info in regards to the reserves ????
My background is 20 years in DOC (Cpt.), former 972 MP (reserves) for six years, I have my BS/MS in CJ and also have taken numerous specialized LE training classes.
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Alligator Chomps on Florida Deputy
DELTONA, Fla. --
A sheriff's deputy was hospitalized after he was attacked and bitten by an aggressive 8-foot alligator that was menacing a Central Florida (http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=41427#) apartment complex.
Deputy Keith Baughman, 39, responded to calls of a...
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EMT refresher courses in the metrowest area?
Anyone have information on EMT refresher courses in the Metrowest area? Thanks everyone-
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