Connecticut Stasi (State Police) want a raise
Before 9/11 these scumbags were, and still are, involved in domestic spying and abuse of the public. They are armed revenue collectors and lie so you can be processed in the system, get arrested, need to hire a lawyer, lose your home, job, break up your family, and have your kids taken away. It is fun for them and they'll laugh in your face. [More]
The below is cut and pasted from the ctnewsjunkie.com:
The End Is Near For State Trooper Contract Negotiations
by Hugh McQuaid | Jul 17, 2013 4:00pm
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Posted to: Health Care, Jobs, Labor, Legal, Pension
(5) Comments | Log in to Post a Comment
Posted to: Health Care, Jobs, Labor, Legal, Pension

CTNJ file photo
State Troopers protest at state Capitol in 2011
State troopers’ labor contract with the state expired in July 2012. A few months later, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s administration and the Connecticut State Police Union reached an impasse in the process of negotiating a new deal. The case was sent to an arbitrator to be resolved.
State Labor Relations Director Linda Yelmini said that reply briefs are due from both sides by Friday. Then it will be up to the arbitrator to make an award. After a decision is made, the legislature will have a 30-day opportunity from the next time they gavel into session to approve or reject the new contract. If lawmakers take no action, the contracts will go into effect, she said.
Yelmini said the language of the expired contract remains in effect until a new one is established.
Connecticut State Police Union President Andrew Matthews said the expired contract does not cover any wage increases for troopers.

CTNJ file photo
Connecticut State Police Union President Andrew Matthews
The union also asked a court to force the administration to adhere to a previously-ignored statute requiring a minimum number of state troopers. The case prompted Malloy to propose and later sign a bill which removed the requirement from statute.

CTNJ file photo
Public Safety Commissioner Reuben Bradford and state police Col. Danny Stebbins.
In May, Matthews testified before a legislative panel investigating the agency’s staffing levels and told lawmakers that he was concerned the state was trying to remove off-duty use of patrol cars from troopers’ contracts.
Matthews said state police often respond to emergencies while they are off-duty because they hear calls broadcast over their vehicle’s radios. He told lawmakers he had a similar experience when he stopped to help a man having a medical emergency while he was using his patrol car off-duty.
“I would not have been doing CPR on the side of the road as my wife watched if I was in my personal vehicle going to the airport,” he said.
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