BPD Commissioner Michael Harrison Vows To Enforce Overtime Pay Limits
BALTIMORE (AP) -- Baltimore's police chief says he'll tighten up on the department's overtime issues as it struggles to enforce the 32-hour limit.
The Baltimore Sun reports some officers are working up to 70 hours a week, and cashing in checks that are ranking them among the city's highest paid employees, sometimes exceeding $200,000.
Police commissioner Michael Harrison says the department lacks enforcement of overtime rules, posing financial, health and safety issues for the city.
Officers are paid time-and-a-half for extra hours and are required to log it via an "antiquated" handwritten system despite other available technology.
The newspaper says overtime costs have risen to almost $50 million for a department of about 2,500 officers.
The say 2018 data shows seven officers even earned more than the mayor's salary of $178,000.
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