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Baltimore, police union reach agreement to increase pay in effort to boost recruitment

The Baltimore Police Department has voted to accept a new three-year contract that will raise pay for new officers in an effort to boost recruitment.

The contract will raise starting salaries for new officers from $55,000 to $60,000 a year, and will make Baltimore the highest paying major law enforcement agency in the state.

“We are confident that this targeted approach is a smart investment that will significantly enhance our efforts in attracting new recruits, while also incentivizing retention for our experienced officers,” said Commissioner Michael Harrison in a statement.

“With this agreement, the city hopes to attract more recruits to the agency by offering higher pay in the first three years,” Mike Mancuso, president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, wrote in a letter to officers after Wednesday’s vote. “However, this tentative agreement does little to address the retention piece which we urged was necessary. We feel that the city needs to do more to retain its officers in the coming weeks, months, and years,” Mancuso said.

At least 206 officers have left the department so far this year, outpacing new hires despite recent efforts to increase hiring and recruitment. There have been 140 officers hired so far this year, leaving a deficit of 66 officers, according to the departmental data. The department statement said the contract focuses on officers in their first three years because since 2016, more than 66% of voluntary separations are with members with less than five years on the job.

Beginning in January, all officers with an associate degree, bachelor’s degree or master’s degree will earn an additional $1,500, $3,000 or $4,500, respectively, each year. Those in patrol will receive an additional $2,000 a year, or double the current rate, and those working evening and night assignments will also receive increases.

In July, all officers with more than 11 years of service will receive a 2% raise, and in July 2023, all will receive a 2% across-the-board raise. Those with 19 years of service will receive an additional 1% increase, for a total of 3%, the department statement said.

A final contract was not released because it is still in draft from, police spokeswoman Lindsey Eldridge said. But Mancuso, the union leader, said in an interview Thursday the city needs to do more to make veteran BPD officers want to stay. To defray costs of the new contract, the department will rely on “more than $8 million of operational savings,” the statement said.

“Our new agreement adheres to our administration’s commitment to fiscal responsibility, while making our police department more competitive in hiring and retaining officers,” said the department’s chief of staff, Eric Melancon, in a statement. The contract will be submitted to the Board of Estimates for notification and approval [Baltimore Sun].

MANAGING EDITOR: CARSON CHOATE

PHOTO CREDITS: CBS LOCAL

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